30 July 2012

Childishness

“When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.” 


C.S. LEWIS

indoor skydiving and dinner in Denver


SUITED UP AND READY TO GO!

I was having so much fun...
The smile on my face as proof... and the slobber also... 



After a day of flying..
time for dinner with Mom, Laura and my Pato (Daniel)
Dinner on Market street downtown Denver
love.these.people.







Ho Hey

25 July 2012

Masters in International Administration

As part of the Masters International Program
Daniel and I completed our required classes by the end of 2009
then entered into our 27 month peace corps service in El Salvador starting in February of 2010
Once both classes and PC were complete, we wrote a SRP (significant research paper) and BAM
we are walking away with our name on a Diploma with fancy robes and Peace Corps Sash to boot!
Only took 4 years... no biggie.
But could not have done it without the help of my Mejor Amigo Para Siempre (MAPS!)

Mimosas at our breakfast social morning of graduation,
Keeping it classy!


the Pioneer, great nachos and margs!
one of the few gems found near DU campus

Favorite nachos at the Pioneer in Denver
Combined with CHALULA! my favorite hot sauce

Before getting suited up for the big walk
photo op with two awesome women
Tia y Mi mami

Just call us Master Tigra and Master Pato

My awesome supportive parents happy to see I finally received my diploma!


Cellllebrate Good Times, Come On!
Now time to break bread, indulge in vino, and fill our bellies at the best italian restaurant in Denver
Check out Shells and Sauce. 






GRILLIN'


Cerveza

Authentic Simpsons Grill

Pollo and veggies

Oh yeah, grill up some PiƱa

Tada! a fantastic feast in the Mile High

Just one of many wonderful meals shared with old friends and family over these last couple months.
loving it.

Big Thanks for this one Matt!




23 July 2012

dancing with wild animals with diamond-coated wings



If you start a sentence off with “I’ve always wanted to …”, you either

  1. aren’t going to do it, which means it’s not really your dream, or 2. just haven’t done it yet.
Procrastinating, putting it off is fine as long as you’re 100 percent sure that you’re not going to die in the next year. Because you’re going to die someday, and if you’re honest with yourself, you will admit that you never once as a kid said to anyone, “When I grow up I want matching drapes, or a riding lawnmower that mulches too or a cozy living room.” You wanted to be a cowboy or a polar explorer or Amelia Earhart. So…?

Full article HERE

22 July 2012

Possible.

I came across this awesome interview with Angella Nazarian. 
Felt instant inspiration, 
Looked up the book, 
and what do you know... 
my girl Frida is on the cover! 
Its a sign. 
Enjoy the Lara Shriftman's interview below. 
I got it off of the Positively Positive website (good stuff!)






In “Pioneers of the Possible: Celebrating Visionary Women of the World,” Angella honors twenty of the world’s most visionary women from the last century—every one driven by passion and an ability to imagine and aspire to what did not yet exist. By celebrating their lives, she believes, we carry on their collective, fearless spirit and encourage one another toward greater and deeper lives.
“Live Generously. Live Your Passion” is not just a catchphrase for Angella. As you will see in this interview, she lives and breathes this message.
Lara Shriftman: What is the most important thing to you in your life?
Angella Nazarian: My family and these next couple of years are especially important as our kids are being launched into the world. One son is already a sophomore in college, studying philosophy and public policy at Stanford, and the other just finished his junior year in high school and is applying to colleges next year. They both are in the middle of figuring out what they want to do in their lives and being a source of support to them is so rewarding and important at the same time.
LS: What are you most passionate about?
AN: Living a life that brims with vibrancy and fullness. We are all works in progress, and our ideas of whom we want to become changes with time and experience. So I let my curiosity for learning lead the way for me.
Right now, I am very excited about sharing with my readers the experiences of women all over the world and finding the universality of their message.
LS: Based on your experience, what advice would you give to someone who is currently in need of hope?
AN: We—and I really mean we—all have gone through stages in our lives where we may feel smaller than the challenge in front of us. One thing that has helped me the most is focusing on the next step rather than overwhelming myself with the end result or grand plan.

I keep reminding myself,  “I have faith that I will know what to do next when the time comes.”

Just last month, I was having this very intimate conversation with a friend who had gone through a major life transition. She told me that at major cross sections in her life, where she has felt as if she were standing at the edge of a cliff, she would think about Olive Oyl in the Popeye cartoons. I was surprised to hear this from a high-profile, super-intellectual woman. She said, “You know, Angella, in the Popeye cartoons, when Olive Oyl would sleepwalk, she would climb up construction sites. And, when you would think she would fall off the ledge of a T-bar, another platform would magically appear underneath her with her next step. She would never fall. This is the way I feel about my life: that when I am at my lowest point and unsure of myself, life will somehow support me in my next step and that I won’t fall.” Nowadays I am using that image when I feel unsteady and unsure of myself.
LS: Can you share with us a bit of your journey?
AN: My journey, like many who have immigrated to the United States, is one of transformation. I lived the first eleven years of my life in a cocoon-like existence in pre-revolutionary Iran. I came for a two-week vacation to visit my older brothers who were studying here and never went back. So, all I came with were two luggage bags, and my parents weren’t able to join my siblings and me for another five-and-a-half years. I haven’t seen many of my loved ones since my early teens, and it was really tough to adjust to a new way of life on my own.
Being raised in a traditional eastern culture and then coming to a western culture, I have always been working on what aspects of each culture I want to integrate in my life.

My motto is that we need to be big enough to admit any possibility.

First, I was a professor of psychology for eleven years, then I became a best-selling author penning my family memoir, and now I am an author and speaker for women’s issues. Each transition point brought it’s own lessons, and I am sure I have a few more up my sleeve. Isn’t it what life is really about—to become who we are at the very core and honoring it?
LS: What’s one of the greatest obstacles you have overcome?
AN: With all of the ups and downs in the earlier parts of my life, one would think my greatest obstacle was presented to me in my early teens. But not so! It was in my thirties, when life on the outside was really wonderful, that I noticed these subtle ways I minimized my worth. To put it in simple terms, I just didn’t feel I was “good enough.” Finding my way through these feelings was the first step in becoming more authentic in my life and connecting at a deeper level with those around me.
LS: For what challenge or adversity are you most grateful?
AN: Through dealing with the difficult feelings that I was experiencing in my thirties, I found my next calling. I started a women’s group that lasted for seven years and found that so many of us grapple with the same challenges and think that we are alone in our experiences. I realized what a blessing it is to be surrounded by a network of fearless, likeminded people in our lives—that a support system really helps us in our growth.
LS: Are there any challenges you are going through now?
AN: As I am building a business, I am learning how to deal with uncertainty and make the best decisions from the information I have.
LS: What is the greatest lesson you have learned from your fans over the years?
AN: I have learned that there is great power in dialogue and exchange. So often I have written pieces that seemed more interesting to me because it was about something I was going through. It was these pieces that have gotten the most interesting responses. I am lucky that I feel like I am in a conversation with my fans, and they write back to me with their thoughts. And, of course, their thoughts spark something new in me.

I really have learned there is great power in the collective.

LS: What’s the best advice you have ever been given?
AN:

You can’t judge another person’s decisions until you have really walked in their shoes. And, “life is too short not to have dessert!”

You must have figured it out by now that I don’t skip dessert.
LS: What are you most proud to have manifested in your life?
AN: I am most proud of manifesting a multidimensional life—one that speaks to different sides of me and makes me feel whole. I have always wanted to lead a life that blurred on the edges, that was not solely defined by one role or one way of being.
LS: What is your favorite way to unwind?
AN: I started taking up Flamenco three years ago, and it is one of the biggest gifts to myself. I simply get lost in the music, the poetry in the lyrics, and the movements in the dance.
LS: What are you most grateful for right now and why?
AN: I am most grateful for my health. It sounds corny but true. I lost one of my dear friends to breast cancer last month, and it was both a privilege and a real heartbreak to see what she was going through these past few years. Good health is a real gift.
LS: What is your biggest regret?
AN: I don’t have regrets. It is an energy drain to second guess ourselves over things that are in the past. Besides, I think we do everything in the best way we knew at the time.
LS: When is the last time you laughed at yourself?
AN: I laugh at myself every day. It’s easy; I have kids that poke fun of me. If they aren’t around, I just have to show up to my flamenco classes. I swear I try to be graceful, but there are times I catch myself in the mirror, and I start laughing. It is contagious; the rest of the class cracks up with me.
LS: What do you think the three biggest keys to manifesting are, from someone who obviously has manifested a big dream?
AN: Start with an idea or image that really resonates from within (it should make you feel excited, alive, and most probably scared), take small steps toward your goal (action is important in achieving dreams), and develop a network of friends who can help you in your goal (studies show that support and guidance from others is key to achieving your goals).
LS: What are you manifesting this year?
AN: I want the message of my recent book, “Pioneers of the Possible: Celebrating Visionary Women of the World,” to reach more people through organizing a women’s conference. Having spoken at many conferences, I feel there needs to be a space for women to really talk and exchange ideas rather than to be a passive audience. I would love to explore different issues of interest for women, whether it is creating women’s entrepreneurship panels or talking about how women have successfully weathered life transitions or made an impact in their world. I am practicing my three keys to manifesting on a daily basis.

15 July 2012

greatly



"Every calling is great when greatly pursued."


~Oliver Wendell Holmes