Holidays are important to celebrate. It reminds us of what is truly important. Holidays such as National Drink Beer Through a Straw Day, National Bob Dylan Day, and National Chocolate Cake Day....
Okay, the first two are only observed in the Geiger household but the last is the real McCoy. A day set aside for our collective love of chocolate cake. We celebrated this nationally important occasion with my favorite chocolate torte recipe from a Moosewood Cookbook served, of course, on the pedestal I gifted Grace for Christmas.
-Jon
Friday, January 27, 2012
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Chilly Morning
It was a sleepy morning at the Geiger household. Marthy snuggled whilst I made steel cut oatmeal. Yum!
-Jon
Why get married?
A few weeks ago, we had a couple of old time friends over
for dinner. They are roughly the same age as us and have been dating for three years.
Being the curious cats we are, we began asking them leading questions about
their future and their relationship.
They mentioned potentially moving in together next year and
perhaps marriage somewhere down the line. Jon and I talked about how, for us, moving
in together was a much more noticeable commitment day-to-day than actually
getting married. With a good deal of nonchalance they said, “why get married
then?”
I was 20 years old when we first got engaged. At that time,
I had about 100 sound reasons that I could spout off at the drop of the hat as
to why I should get married. After settling in to a long engagement, a gorgeous
wedding, and one and a half years of wedded bliss, the thought of “why” we had
gotten married had all but evaporated from my memory. I was a little stunned. After
thinking about it for a minute, I said, “because we want the same things.”
Those 100 reasons I used to have could be boiled down to that single statement.
From dinner tonight to retirement, I can’t envision my
future without Jon. He is as much a part of my life as I am. We don’t believe
in soul-mates; we’re just a good fit.
Does any of this require a marriage license?
Not at all, but since we had
already made the commitment to one another, why not enjoy the legitimacy (from
both institutions and people) that comes from having the piece of paper.
As anyone will tell you, marriage
is not all moonlight and roses, and it is definitely not for everyone. Our relationship is great because it is
honestly our first priority. We invest the time and give it the respect it
requires. Answering the “why” of marriage makes me even more confident that it
was the best decision I’ve ever made.
I love you, Spouse.
-Grace
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Cocoa Remix
I noticed a photo of Lavender Hot Cocoa on Andrew (of www.andrewandcarissa.com) Gallo's Twitter feed yesterday. I had to make it my own. What followed was Salty Caramel Hot Cocoa w/ Marshmallow Fluff & Crushed Lavender Buds served in our favorite mugs. It was delicious, rich, thick and fragrant. So rich in fact, it required washing down with an equally fragrant IPA.
Lavender Cocoa: Perfect drink for a night that was 20° and snowing after a day in the high fifties with mixture of rain and sun. Ohio can't make up its mind if it's participating in winter this year. Oh well.
The new Wes Anderson Trailer looks amazing on the other hand. Any one else seen it?
-Jon
Lavender Cocoa: Perfect drink for a night that was 20° and snowing after a day in the high fifties with mixture of rain and sun. Ohio can't make up its mind if it's participating in winter this year. Oh well.
The new Wes Anderson Trailer looks amazing on the other hand. Any one else seen it?
-Jon
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
99% Invisible
Earlier this year I discovered, or rather was introduced to, a wonderful design podcast titled 99% Invisible (produced by Roman Mars... coolest name ever). It was featured on Radiolab (one of my other favorite podcasts) last month and the feature was enough to make me fall in love. Since then I have been racing through the episode archive. Mars' stories feature the often unseen, unnoticed aspects of design and architecture. Once seen however, you realize that they are the things that make life worth living. Please check this podcast out as it is wonderful.
The video below was produced by the podcast's sponsor, LUNAR, a design group. I discovered it on Mars' Blog that accompanies the podcast. I loved the the uncertain method of making without a product in mind.
Behind the Design of SANDBOX from LUNAR on Vimeo.
-Jon
The video below was produced by the podcast's sponsor, LUNAR, a design group. I discovered it on Mars' Blog that accompanies the podcast. I loved the the uncertain method of making without a product in mind.
Behind the Design of SANDBOX from LUNAR on Vimeo.
-Jon
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Exquisite Corpse
In art school some professors used the
game exquisite corpse as an ice breaker on the first day of classes. The basic concept of this game involves participants of a group working on a collective piece without knowing what the other members of the group have contributed to the work. Confusing to explain (though this website does a better job than I and they have a wonderful slideshow of examples), dreadfully easy to do. The drawings that we as students created for these exercises were rarely very good, but were good for a laugh.
I saw an installation from the Beijing Design Week featured on Design Boom last week that blew me away. Not because the work was phenomenal (most of it was very good) but because the entire installation was an adaptation of an exquisite corpse. Two-dozen individuals took part in telling the story of a day in the life of a fictional man named Ernesto Bones. Each participant created work to tell the story of one hour from Mr. Bones's day. Exquisite corpse may have provided for me moments of fun but this form of collaboration made for one of the most interesting exhibitions I've read about all year.
More pictures of the other collaborators' works at the link below.
-Jon
I saw an installation from the Beijing Design Week featured on Design Boom last week that blew me away. Not because the work was phenomenal (most of it was very good) but because the entire installation was an adaptation of an exquisite corpse. Two-dozen individuals took part in telling the story of a day in the life of a fictional man named Ernesto Bones. Each participant created work to tell the story of one hour from Mr. Bones's day. Exquisite corpse may have provided for me moments of fun but this form of collaboration made for one of the most interesting exhibitions I've read about all year.
More pictures of the other collaborators' works at the link below.
'2 pm to 3 pm' by david tanguy, graphic designer, london from designboom |
-Jon
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