Tuesday, May 12, 2015

TueDuesday: "I'm Wide Awake": Make Yourself a Morning Person

Welcome back to TueDuesday: A Weekly Series on Self Improvement (and Self Preservation), where I’ll share some of the hard-earned tips and tricks that have made their way up my sleeve after well over a decade of living alone in the city. 

TueDuesday goes out to all of you who have ever bravely moved into your very own apartment, only to encounter a cockroach the size of a well-fed hamster.  Barefoot.  In the middle of the night.  To all the ambitious drinkers who ever wanted to score the bartender’s number (and to the many of us who have failed, only to bravely try again).  To the pasta fiends.  To the Facebook lurkers.  To the happy, the hopeful, and the possibly hung-over guys and gals like me, navigating the city streets – or the country roads – without benefit of a map or a significant other.  Whether you’re chronically single, newly separated or happily coupled up and just looking for a way to make the occasional table for one a little more fun, there’s something here for you.

Like what you see?  Pass it along!  Strongly disagree?  Say so in the comments!  (Respectfully, please; after growing up with the last name Blewett, my ego can only take so much.)  Have an idea for a future TueDuesday post?  Send it over!  And keep in touch, via Twitter @LeahKBlewett and Instagram @leahkblewett.

Happy TueDuesday!

TueDuesday, May 12, 2015

"I'm Wide Awake": Make Yourself Into a Morning Person

It occurred to me recently that I haven’t talked a lot here about my recent career change.  I’m not sure how much any of you really want to hear about the decade-plus process of removing “-slash-waitress” from my job description, but I’ve learned a few lessons along the way that relate to more than suckering strangers into paying you for your words.  Today’s TueDuesday, then, is dedicated to one of the most important adjustments in my day-to-day life: here’s how to become a morning person.

Some of you are already bright-eyed and bushy-tailed when the sun rises.  This post is not for you, and kindly am-scray, because you’re making the rest of us feel lazy.  Overachievers.  You can come back next TueDuesday.  This post is for the restaurant warriors, the college seniors, the touring musicians (Hi, Dad!), and the copyeditors.  For all of us who, for one reason or another, have had to forego traditional sleeping habits and who are now struggling to reform them.  If you’ve ever found yourself on your couch at 3 a.m. watching Planet Earth for the umpteenth time, unable to sleep even though you know you have to be up in four hours, this post is for you. 

Those birds of paradise are SO COOL.
I’ve been mostly successful at rehabbing my sleeping patterns, mostly, although my many friends in the hospitality industry have done their level best to thwart my evolution from nocturnal to normal (you know who you are).  Without further ado: here are a few of the sneaky, self-sabotaging tactics I turned to when it was time to start waking up with the day-jobbers.

Pick a song you Capital-H Hate and make it your alarm.
For the price of a one-time download from the App Store, you, too, can be jolted violently awake by Katy Perry hooting “I’m wide awake!”  (See what I did there??) 

I will FLY out of bed to make this stop.
There’s a second critical step to this trick, though:
Put your phone somewhere that demands you get all the way out of bed to shut it up.
Tapping the snooze button is a lot less appealing once you’re already vertical, so move your phone as far from beside your head as the confines of your domicile (or the cohabitants thereof) will allow.  Best case is putting it in the bathroom, which gets you critical steps closer to another favorite tactic of mine:
Get in the shower, and get your hair wet.
You and I both know that you’re not going back to bed with wet hair.  You’ll feel clammy, and when you do finally get up, it will have dried into something resembling a sea plant from the giant kelp forests off California’s coast.  If you shave your head, well, lucky you – this one won’t work.  But this will:
Buy a coffee machine with a timer, and set it for 10 minutes before your alarm.
The sweet, sweet smell of coffee brewing is God’s little reminder that mornings aren’t entirely hostile, after all.  

“But Leah,” you whine, “it’s summertime!  I don’t want hot coffee!”  To which I say: put today’s pot in the fridge, take out the pot you put in there yesterday, and BOOM: iced coffee.  God, I’m good.  Still, even this entire sequence doesn’t always do it, in which case:
Bribe an early-rising friend to call you and wake you.
And change their name in your phone to “The Boss” or “David Duchovny” or whatever name will make you most inclined to answer despite your foggy morning brain.


As for getting to bed the night before, well, that can be even more of a challenge.  My brain still thinks it’s supposed to be entering tips and logging sales at 2 a.m., and I stopped waiting tables five months ago.  The most important start is to get up early (um, see above), so that you’re tired at your new bedtime.  Failing that, have a glass of red wine or chamomile tea.  No judgement; and either one will help lull you back from the insomniac edge.  This next one is tricky, but it really does work: stop staring at lighted screens.  Yes, that includes your phone (which should be in the bathroom with the alarm set by now anyway; are you not listening to a word I’m saying??), your computer, and your TV.  Pick up a book.  Open it.  Consider reading it.  Finally, make your bed your favorite place to be.  Pick out new sheets, or wash your favorite set and put them on fresh.  Choose pillows that suit your sleeping habits.  Get your partner a Breathe Right (or yourself a set of ear plugs).  Splurge on air conditioning on hot summer nights, and a humidifier in the dead of winter.  Some people are averse to strong smells, but to my mind, sweet-smelling sheet spray is a necessary luxury.  Try to set a bedtime routine and stick to it.  On evenings when I know I have to be up for work, I have a glass of wine, then wash my face and brush my teeth (and leave the phone in the bathroom, plugged in and alarm set).  Next, I feed the cat so she’s not all up in my business at 5 a.m.  I take the decorative pillows off my bed and use one to block the bright “on” light on my computer, arranging the other three at the base of my window to thwart the sun’s earliest rays as they crest the buildings outside.  And then I tuck in and hope like hell I’ll be able to sleep, because that goddamned alarm is not going to shut itself off in the morning, and I have had just about enough of Katy Perry, coffee or no coffee.  

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Skirt Collective: Woman of the Week (!!!)

7. Regardless of beliefs, if you’ve existed before this lifetime, what do you think you might have been?

I’d like to think I was someone awesome, like a professional baseball player or Hemingway's second wife, but I was probably something more along the lines of a hyperactive squirrel or someone's extremely feisty pet hamster.


Holy crap, you guys, I'm the Woman of the Week (how's that for a #WCW??), via Skirt Collective...

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

TueDuesday: Hangover Helper, in Honor of Drink-o de Mayo

Welcome back to TueDuesday: A Weekly Series on Self Improvement (and Self Preservation), where I’ll share some of the hard-earned tips and tricks that have made their way up my sleeve after well over a decade of living alone in the city. 

TueDuesday goes out to all of you who have ever bravely moved into your very own apartment, only to encounter a cockroach the size of a well-fed hamster.  Barefoot.  In the middle of the night.  To all the ambitious drinkers who ever wanted to score the bartender’s number (and to the many of us who have failed, only to bravely try again).  To the pasta fiends.  To the Facebook lurkers.  To the happy, the hopeful, and the possibly hung-over guys and gals like me, navigating the city streets – or the country roads – without benefit of a map or a significant other.  Whether you’re chronically single, newly separated or happily coupled up and just looking for a way to make the occasional table for one a little more fun, there’s something here for you.

Like what you see?  Pass it along!  Strongly disagree?  Say so in the comments!  (Respectfully, please; after growing up with the last name Blewett, my ego can only take so much.)  Have an idea for a future TueDuesday post?  Send it over!  And keep in touch, via Twitter @LeahKBlewett and Instagram @leahkblewett.

Happy TueDuesday!

TueDuesday, May 5, 2015

Hangover Helper, in Honor of Drink-o de Mayo

Happy TueDuesday!  I missed you last week, but I hope my feminist ranting re: Meghan Trainor and Bud Light were a sufficient Leah Fix.  If you missed them, click the links above or head over to Skirt Collective and dose yourself with a little self-righteous indignation.  It’s the breakfast of champions.  And speaking of Bud Light (see what I did there??), this week’s Cinco de Mayo TueDuesday is all about something else that turns my stomach, in the most literal way: let’s learn how to beat a hangover!

Perhaps you over-did it at Sunday’s season-opening softball game in Central Park.  Maybe it was your buddy’s birthday and howling along to Toto’s “Africa” at the bar at 3:30 a.m. sounded like a good way to celebrate.  Or could it be that Friday’s happy hour with friends turned into Saturday’s wee hours heart-to-heart?  No matter the cause, we’ve all been there: you drank too much, went to bed too late, didn’t hydrate, or all of the above…


First things first.  If you’re drunk enough to be hungover, chances are you’re going to sleep like a rock for the first few hours, blissfully drooling away, and then wake up with a start about five hours before you’d actually like to get out of bed.  It feels like hell (probably because it’s the first thing you’ve actually felt in hours), but: this is a good thing

Get out of bed.  Just do it.  It’s only temporary, I promise.  Good!  Now, make your way to wherever you keep your ibuprofen, aspirin, or other painkiller of choice.  (No judgement.)  If you’re waking up in a strange place, this can be more of a challenge (again, no judgement!) but the bathroom is probably a good place to start.  In a hotel?  Call room service.  Still at the bar?  Send a coherent friend to sweet-talk the bartender into letting you raid the first-aid kit.  Whatever you do, get your hands on a couple of pills and, at minimum, a pint of cold water.  Consume them with all available speed.  Now, as promised, you can return to bed.  This is what’s known as a pre-emptive strike.

You’re going to wake up again.  Maybe it’s when your alarm goes off; maybe it’s when you startle yourself with a juicy ol’ snore; maybe it’s when the setting sun makes it way beneath your blinds and reminds you that you’ve let the entire day pass you by.  Whenever it is, you’ll know it’s time to get up.  You’ll probably feel alternately famished and nauseous, and it’s likely that your tongue will taste like a tampon soaked in muddy puddle water and left to dry in the August sun.

You’ve never looked lovelier!

If you don’t have to leave your house, skip these next few steps, but if you need to make yourself presentable to other humans (even just the clerk at Duane Reade, the counter guy at your local slice joint, or – hell – the deliveryman dropping off your breakfast sandwich), you’ll need to do something about that smell.

Oh, come on, you know that smell.  You’ve noticed it wafting off both your college-aged niece and your well-pickled uncle during the holidays.  The smell that says, “I overdid it last night, and possibly this morning, and the alcohol is now beating a hasty exit and evaporating from my very pores.”  Eau de Two Dollar Liquor Cabinet.  It’s coming off your skin, and probably out of your hair.  Only time will truly make that smell go away, so for now, you have two options: rinse off in the shower (which can be daunting in your fragile state) or camouflage it with whatever’s on hand: body splash, mouthwash, chewing gum.  In a real pinch, even a wedge of lemon or orange will do the trick: discard the fruit, bend the peel backwards towards itself, and swipe the oils that emerge from the skin behind your ears and through your hair.

There, now.  That’s a bit better.

The next step is controversial: you’ve got to eat, but opinions diverge wildly about what makes the best hangover food.  I’m partial to white fluffy carbs and dairy fat, but then, I’m always partial to white fluffy carbs and dairy fat.  This can be anything from a bagel with a tennis ball-sized hunk of cream cheese in the middle to a bowl of elbow noodles with butter and grated parmesan to a diner grilled cheese sandwich (no artisanal bird seed bread or luxe imported cheese here: we’re talking Wonderbread and Kraft singles, with bonus points for margarine instead of butter on the grill).  I have friends who swear by Gatorade, but there’s something about the lingering saccharine-citrus aftertaste that reminds me of Robitussin, so I steer clear.  

Remember that pint-plus of water you drank before?  Do that again.  Twice.  Has it been at least four hours since you woke up and dosed yourself with painkillers?  Do that again, too.

Eventually, you’re going to stop feeling like you swallowed a hyperactive guinea pig and the fiberglass installation between your brain and your eyes will dissipate and you’ll start to feel almost like yourself again.  This is the perfect time to have another drink.  Mimosas and Bloody Marys are traditional hangover fare, but the crusty old Italian nonna that lives inside me prefers inexpensive white wine on ice, ideally out of a box, possibly with canned peaches in the glass. 


Whatever your morning-after beverage of choice, once you’ve had a meal, it’s time to pour one down the hatch.  This not only takes the edge off your hangover, it reminds your uppity liver just who the heck is in charge around here.  By the time you finish your cocktail, you’ll be ready for your day – even if “your day” consists of going right back to bed and trying again tomorrow.


Note: The author is not a doctor, or even an especially proficient provider of first aid.  Readers assume full risk for their actions, including taking her advice or giving themselves hangovers in the first place.  Now get off my lawn, ya crazy kids with yer music.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Skirt Collective: Objects in Mirror Are Exactly as Large as They Appear: On #dadbod

"Men get #dadbod, and women get the spectacularly offensive "FUPA," an acronym that I will not dignify with an explanation (ask Google, if you must, but at your own risk)...

"Then, I had another thought: 'What if I'm looking at this all wrong?  What if #dadbod is just about doing exactly what I've always professed to do: loving your body for the amazing things that it can do, instead of punishing it for the way it looks -- or doesn't look?'

"If #dadbod empowers the lovably less than cut men in my life to feel the same appreciation for their bodies that I have for mine, well, hell: I'm Team Dadbod.  And what's more: other women [and men!] should be, too."

I'll show you mine if you'll show me yours...
Now *that's* a #dadbod...
Show me your #dadbod, via Skirt Collective...

Note: I'm serious!  Post a photo of your own #dadbod -- or just share what you love about it -- via Instagram or Twitter and tag me @LeahKBlewett and @SkirtCollective for a chance to be a part of our forthcoming #dadbod collage.

Seth showed James his #dadbod, and look how well that worked out!