Saturday, January 26, 2013

Shopping for Free

So it's January 26, and I finally gathered all the things together from Christmas that I needed to bring back to the stores...and then some. You see, I consider the Christmas grace period for gift returns kind of an amnesty for all the other items I bought during the year that I can't find the receipt for, or found in a closet in a bag with the receipt - but that somehow never made it to my car.

Today was Return Day. I had all my bags organized, and knew which ones had receipts and which ones I had to feign surprise about: "Are you sure  that's not in the bag? I could have sworn I had it in there." Among the things from the holiday I was returning (woolen accessories, age-inappropriate presents and indeterminate household items) were two pairs of summer pants, three pairs of sandals, a decorative pillow I got for a sofa I no longer have and two children's aprons.

I promised myself I was on a returns-only mission; no shopping. I kept thinking that all the way into the first store, when I discovered that I was too late to have the charges reversed and the money put back on my card, and would have to have STORE CREDIT. Ah, store credit! That guilt-free shopping spreeelectronically transferred to a gift cardthat feels so clean and good and right, because nothing's coming out of my wallet. Except, of course, for the money I spent the first time. Duh.

There's a kind of dance that goes on in my head when I have that unexpected windfall-that's-not-really-a-windfall. The practical, fiscally responsible me says "Keep your eyes down. Don't look around, Anita. Save this to shop for someone's birthday." And the fun-loving, financially carefree me says, "Look, you work hard. You deserve this! And how smart are you to return summer stuff and be able to buy winter stuff with it?"

I'm not saying the responsible me never wins. She does, most of the time. But today, that other me just made so much sense. And I have a new jacket and shoes to prove it.


©2013 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie  

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Playing the Kindness Card

#26actsofkindness has got to be the best hashtag ever created.

After the unspeakable sorrow of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, there was the inevitable feeling of powerlessness for all of us who watched and heard and knew not how to help. But news anchor Ann Curry communicated an idea after the tragedy that has taken root: she tweeted the concept #26actsofkindness, to prompt people like us to do a kindness for each of the 20 children and six adults who lost their lives. Thousands of people have tweeted back to her about the things they’ve done for others as a result. Last week, I caught a program where Curry was being interviewed about the effort… and it struck a resonant chord in me.

I like to think I live my life like this anyway – seeing where a kindness would help someone and just doing it. But there was so much more to this movement that I made a vow to do this, too. I loved the idea of being more mindful, of knowing that these 26 acts I will send out into the world early in 2013 are in honor and memory of those beautiful Newtown souls that left this earth too soon. I floated the idea to my staff, and asked if they wanted to join me in this effort – and, wonderful people that they are, they committed without hesitation. When we each have our 26, we’re going to share our favorite one with each other. Between us, over the next few weeks, we will be sending 130 more acts of kindness out into the world that might not have happened were it not for this prompt from the universe. That’s amazing! And it’s just a small piece of what could happen if most of the people in the world played the kindness card even one more time than they might have done otherwise, to pay tribute to someone they know (or know of) who deserves a legacy of love.

So here’s my challenge, friends – can we share this out even further? Can we compound the interest on this incredible notion to make it richer and more meaningful, and help it touch more people? I think we can. And then we’ll have to create a new hashtag: #100trillionactsofkindness


©2013 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie  

Monday, January 7, 2013

Well-traveled Words

Last April, a news story on NPR caught my ear: debris from the tsunami that devastated Japan in March 2011 had navigated to North American coasts. Soon, more wreckage from the storm: a Harley-Davidson motorcycle found off the shoreline of British Columbia, Canada; and a 66-foot, 160-ton concrete and metal dock that lumbered onto the beach in Newport, Oregon.

But this one piqued my interest the most: the soccer ball that traveled more than 3,100 miles to the shores of Alaska.  It was retrieved by a radar technician, who recognized the language of the handwriting on the ball and brought it home... to his Japanese wife, Yumi.  She discerned that the ball belonged to a student named Misaki Murakami - the writing reflected his classmates’ signatures and the name of his school. Through Yumi’s efforts, the now 16-year-old Misaki, who had lost all of his possessions in the devastating storm, was found. The ball was the only personal item he could reclaim.

Even in our connected world, even with the loss and sadness that the tsunami recalls, stories like this one about a boy's returned keepsake inspire awe and a sense of balance. The words on that soccer ball made it special, solved the mystery of its origin and owner, and brought joy - again - to a young man who needed to know that sometimes what we lose comes back again. And it showed all of us how very small the world is after all, no matter what language we speak.

©2013 A Bit of Brie/Anitabrie   
Reprinted from my editor's letter in Mobility Magazine,  August 2012.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

All Juiced Up

Breakfast: Two carrots, two apples, one stalk of celery. Lunch: rinse and repeat, but with an orange in the mix, carried handily to work in my new stainless steel Thermos. Yes, folks, I'm juicing! And to make sure I keep it up, I'm going to write about it here from time to time. 

After just one day (yesterday), I woke up this morning with memories of one of the most vivid dreams I've had in years. I won't bore you with the details, but it involved an extra Christmas tree someone brought into my house and left in my dining room, a high wind that kept blowing my front door open, and a guy from high school I kept calling an unsavory name. I don't know if at this point he deserves it - I hope not - but he sure did then, and in my dream he was still 18 and a jerk. (Hey, I just realized HE was 18 and I was... more than 18. Not fair!) I can only attribute it to the juice, which, according to my extensive research (I'm not kidding - I really checked this out) helps you absorb most of the nutrients from fruits and vegetables, makes you think more clearly, adds energy, boosts positivity, revs up your immune system, blah blah blah more good stuff. What none of my research said is "makes your dreams so real you have to fight off a monsoon to close your front door, and then run down to your garage to get tools to fix the door, and then you fix the door, and it blows open again, and you say to yourself, 'I really need to call Boo to get that door fixed.' " (Boo is my house doctor. He's brilliant.) 

So now I'm wondering: if I change the fruits and vegetables, can I control my dreams? Will beets make me feel more grounded (you know, because they're a root vegetable) and will grapes make me a more "raisinable" person in my sleep? (This is getting really bad. I'm going to stop soon, I promise.)  One thing's for sure. I'm going to keep changing up the ingredients until I start having dreams where I'M the one who's 18. 

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Embrace Your Inner 13!

We're going to have an entire year that holds this number, so if you've got triskaidekaphobia (extreme superstition regarding the number thirteen), read this! For years, multi-floor builders and airlines and countless other customer-facing businesses have worked around the number 13. But now we can't ignore the fact that every single day this year will have a 13 in it. (There are two additional challenges for triskaidekaphobics, too: on Friday, September 13, 2013 and      
Friday, December 13, 2013!)    

There's no stopping it - we have got to find a way to love 13! If you're Italian, or want to adopt one of the aspects of this amazing culture - which I just happen to be a bit partial to - you'd know that 13 is considered very lucky. I knowingly bought a condo on the 13th floor of a building (can't fool me - even though my address says it's on the 14th floor, the elevator doesn't stop between 12 and 14). It's been a place of beauty, peace and joy for me - not a speck of bad luck in the place. Give me a good old 13 any time, and I'll find the luck in it.

Don't forget that the American flag has 13 stripes in honor of the first 13 colonies. Colgate University has positive roots in the number 13, too - according to Wikipedia, the school was "founded in 1819 by 13 men with 13 dollars, 13 prayers and 13 articles."  And remember how exhilarating it was to move from twelve to earn the magical "teen" on your age? 

I'm more interested in what this year brings me than what it might take away. I know that I may feel a little differently in a few weeks, a little less exhilarated when I'm back to a routine that isn't broken up by holidays and celebrations. But for now, I'm reveling in the start of a shiny new year that makes me feel totally loving and hopeful. I'm going to take full advantage of this feeling to tell my friends and family something I don't say enough: you make a profound difference in my life - you really do. I'm embracing my inner 13, and wishing you a year that is spectacularly surprising, productive, delightful, connected, compassionate, warm, purposeful, enriching, educational and healthy.

(Still having trouble with the number? Feel free to pretend you're Italian for the next 12 months.)