Monday, February 25, 2013

In New York State

I know this blog is called Sandy in NYC. But sometimes I do things outside of NYC. I've been debating (since this morning) on whether I should keep it NYC focused only or incorporate the other parts of my life that happen outside of Manhattan.

Sidebar: I live in Astoria, which clearly is not Manhattan. In fact it is Queens. However, I do pay NYC city taxes and am a NYC resident so this blog name does count!

I realize that I'm updating this blog at about an average of 2 times a month. At this point in my life, sustainability, in terms of it's actual meaning, is most important to me at the moment. If I can maintain over a period of time, that's better than going crazy with one blog post everyday for 2 weeks and nothing for the rest of year.

Now onto the main part of this post!


Over President's Day weekend, I took a trip upstate to the Catskills. I've never been but I love excursions to nature. The Catskills is the perfect, long weekend getaway, it's just far enough to feel removed but it's not 5 hours in the car. I stayed at lodging via VRBO near the cute town of Phoenicia (which I kept reading as Phonetica).

View from the kitchen dining window
The place I stayed at had sugar bushes aka maple trees! But before you get too excited about tapping your own sap for breakfast, please note: maple sap is not the same as maple syrup. I might have been a little naive about this as well... But I did get to enjoy glasses of maple sap which tastes a bit like sugar water and is apparently very good for you. The property owner was wonderful enough to explain the sap/syrup collection and purification process to me and provided a sample of fresh syrup which was perfect for breakfast.
Meditation Hall- Zen Mountain Monastary
I visited the Zen Mountain Monastary and participated in Sunday morning service. It was extremely refreshing and interesting. Part of it included seated meditation or Zazen for 35 minutes. It is a very inclusive, interactive refresher course for anyone curious about exapanding his knowledge on spiritual cultures. I highly recommend it. I'm not sure if I would be able to meditate as determinedly (ironic, I know) if I had not bin a room full of monks but I do have a better understanding of meditation and believe that the right practice can be very beneficial to physical and mental health.

Making use of materials on hand to roll out a pot-pie crust.
Don't worry, I haven't gone all hippie granola on ya'll.


Other activities included antiquing and hiking. It was COLD but very invigorating to take a walk through nature. Honestly, I love hiking in the winter. It might be cold at first but there are no bugs, you don't really sweat and the snow-lined paths are something I still find a novelty because I didn't have such scenes growing up in Texas.



Monday, February 4, 2013

Patience 2013

Last year I decided to stop with New Year's Resolutions and to start setting themes. One theme--something to draw all my actions back to. It can be infinitely applied to everything that happens to me and serves as a guide to choices.  Experiences was the theme of 2012--and did I experience!

An extremely brief recap of all the things experienced last year that I can think of if I take 30 seconds:

  • Europe for the first time with my roommates + Nhu
  • Turkish Baths
  • Sailing in Santorini
  • Attending an NFL football game
  • Designing and building furniture on my own
  • Having some of my best friends move to the city
  • Learning how to ski correctly
  • Hiking with 30lbs on my back
  • Sleeping outside in sub-20 degree weather
  • Surprising my mom for her 50th birthday
  • Showing my dad around NYC for the first time since I moved her and his first time back in 25+ years
  • Seeing glaciers in Montana
  • Biking around NYC as a main form of commute

After morning practice at the Yoga Agora studio

For 2013 the theme is Patience.

In alignment with that, I have started upping my yoga practices to 2 a week. I love yoga. It's like one big stretching session for me. But sometimes when I think about the fact that class is 1-1.5 hours, I start thinking about all the 'other' things I could be doing instead. So I eventually end up not attending.

When I do end up in class, the 'mindlessness' I experience as I focus on my breathing and asana is so liberating. I'm not thinking about what I'm going to eat, make or do (okay, it does take like 15 mins into practice before my mind is cleared). Living in NYC inherently puts minds into overdrive as the sense are constantly stimulated by the sheer amount of things just happening...all the time.