Monday, May 27, 2019

Ideas for Kitchen Gadgets


Greetings all! 

Here are 10 single-use kitchen gadgets as imagined by Anna Maltby and Elisabeth Sile in the April-2019 issue of Real Simple magazine:

1)      Miracle Filter: A Brita attachment that turns water into wine.

2)     Cookiecam3000: A device that snaps a photo of the person who takes the last cookie.

3)     23andmush: A swab test that identifies mysterious ancient items in the back of your freezer and also tells you if they’re related to anyone in Lithuania.

4)     Pad Thaimer: A gentle alarm that reminds you that you have five-day-old pad thai in the back of the fridge and automatically orders pizza when you inevitably decide the pad thai is too old to eat.

5)     Moo-Rig: Joey drinks almond milk, Mom prefers 2 percent, and Dad is newly obsessed with pea milk. This K-Cup-inspired machine dispenses everyone’s favorite with the push of a button. [MY NOTE: Pea milk actually exists!]

6)     Guac O’Clock: An alert that goes off as soon as your avocado reaches peak ripeness.

7)     Sponge Genie: A hands-free clamp that squeezes water out of gross, wet sponges left (not by you, of course) in the kitchen sink.

8)    Burrito Wizard: A salad spinner that transforms leftover Chipotle into a beautiful, healthy, but still delicious kale salad.

9)     Jar Jail: A cage that goes down around the recycling bin when someone puts an empty peanut butter jar on top of a too-high pile, shaming them into taking the whole lot out.

10) Scan’N’Tan: A handheld device that instantly removes pigment from colorful veggies to make them more appealing to children.

Which one was your favorite? Drop me a line!

Monday, May 20, 2019

Game of Thrones Locations Around the World


Greetings all!

Game of Thrones might be over but you can relive your favorite moments by visiting the locations where the iconic show was filmed. Here are just a few of them!

1) Dubrovnik, Croatia: Home of the King's Landing and the Iron Throne.

PHOTO: SAMANTHA T. PHOTOGRAPHY/GETTY IMAGES

2) Doune Castle, Scotland: Many Winterfell scenes were filmed here.

PHOTO: THEASIS/GETTY IMAGES

3) Downhill Strand, Northern Ireland; Itzurun Beach in Spain; Spain’s San Juan de Gaztelugatxe in Basque Country: The winding staircase that leads to Daenerys’s home.

PHOTO: OLIVER STREWE/GETTY IMAGES

4) Hverfjall Volcano, Lake Myvatn, Iceland: If you wanted to explore north of the Wall.

PHOTO: STOCKWITHME/GETTY IMAGES

5) Girona, Spain: Your destination to visit Braavos, home to the House of Black and White.
PHOTO: RAMON ROURA/GETTY IMAGES

6) Fort Manoel in Gzira, Malta: This is where Eddard Stark was beheaded.

PHOTO: RUDOLFT/GETTY IMAGES

7) Northern Ireland's Tollymore Forest Park: The place to look for direwolf companions.

PHOTO: COURTESY NORTHERN IRELAND TOURIST BOARD

8) Hotel Belvedere, Dubrovnik, Croatia: Oberyn Martell died here.

PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK

SOURCES (with more images):

Which one is your favorite? Drop me a line!

Monday, May 13, 2019

A Happy Life According to Albert Einstein


Greetings all!

How much does good life advice cost? Life coaches might charge $100-$1,000 an hour but how about advice on happiness from Albert Einstein? Read on!

In 1922, Einstein traveled from Europe to Japan for a lecture series and was staying at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo. There, he learned that he had been awarded the Nobel Prize in physics. The bellboy was making a delivery to Einstein, and Einstein either did not have small change for a tip or the bellboy refused the tip (as customary in Japan). Instead, Einstein gave the bellboy a handwritten note. 

In 2017, this note was sold at an auction house in Jerusalem for $1.56 million. The note read:

"A calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success combined with constant restlessness."

Now, almost a century after Einstein's words of wisdom were put down on paper, they still ring true. We can all aspire to “a calm and modest life” and we do not have to pay millions for this advice!

SOURCES:

What did you think? Drop me a line!

Monday, May 6, 2019

“I don’t have the time!” [Stop Multitasking and Learn to Chunk Time]

“I don’t have the time!”

Do you say this often? Do you also happen to be a multitasker? 


Greetings all!

Did you know that when you constantly switch gears from one task to another, you actually lose time? Multitasking (or to be more precise, task-switching) is an enemy of productivity. One of my favorite sayings whose origin I no longer recall is, “I was not created a Swiss Army knife to multitask like this!”

To combat multitasking, I use a productivity technique called task batching: you schedule one task at a time and focus only on that task during the designated time chunk. This is how I do it:

1) Make a to-do list (see my "Listful Thinking" post).
2) Group similar tasks.
3) Schedule a dedicated time window (see my "Pomodoro Technique" post on allocating time blocks) and focus just on that task.

Example: How often do you interrupt your day to check emails? If possible, designate several daily time blocks just for emails, instead of getting distracted every time a new email message shows up in your inbox. Or go radical and check your inbox only once a day!

Of course, life might interfere and you will have to make adjustments - but why not give batching a try?

If you have some extra time today, keep on reading for the excerpt from Pedram Shojai’s book The Art of Stopping Time that I am currently enjoying. If not, thanks for stopping by and I hope you will try batching and let me know how it works out for you!

********************

I am currently reading Pedram Shojai’s book The Art of Stopping Time. The book provides helpful tips on how to feel in control of your schedule and find more time and peace. Here are my favorite passages from the chapter “Chunk Time”:

“One of the most powerful ways of leveraging time and feeling in control of your schedule is learning how to chunk time. This means assigning segments of time on your calendar for specific activities and keeping to those. E-mail time is for checking and writing e-mail. Family time is just that – no other distractions then. If you’re working on a report, that’s all you do, and if you’re on a date, be there with her.

The key to getting this is to let go of the false notion that multitasking somehow makes us better. It doesn’t work. It makes us more distracted, fragmented and anxious. The most effective people do one thing at a time; they stay focused, get it done, and then move on to the next thing... When you’ve committed to one thing at a time, you can then shut out all other tasks or distractions and stay focused. Knowing that you’ve scheduled the important stuff of the day means you don’t have to worry about running out of time...

Today take a look at how you run your schedule. Are you trying to do too many things at once? Are you overcommitted throughout the day and find yourself struggling to plug up holes in a sinking ship? That’s common. Time scarcity goes hand in hand with attention scarcity. If your focus is fragmented, you can’t do anything well; you’ll likely find yourself getting stressed out as new items come up when old ones are still incomplete.

Today organize your day into chunks of time for the things you have to do in your life... Commit to staying focused on items at their allotted times and see what happens...

Make sure you schedule chunks of time for rest, recover, food, family, and fun; if you only schedule work and obligations, something will break. We need dynamic balance in our lives, and adhering to a healthy schedule allows us to have that. Once you get the hang of this, you’ll find yourself more relaxed and happy. There is a spaciousness in knowing that you’re doing exactly what you need to be doing right now...

One thing at a time will get you there faster and give you plenty of time to enjoy the ride.”

With practice, I think we can all find that spaciousness - one task at a time! What did you think? Drop me a line!