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Graduating? Ask 5.

Q: I graduate from college in roughly 3 weeks with no marketable skills.  I'm giving myself 2 years and two-thousand dollars to get my life on track.  If you were in a similar situation what would you do?



One (Been There!): Do what I did in a similar situation...  go to grad school!!  Of course, being not at all practical, I wrote a thesis about 19th century Lithuanian-American Socialist fiction.  Which probably did absolutely nothing to further my eventual (relatively short-lived) career in corporate America. Come to think of it, maybe you should listen to my sisters on this one.  Or Mr. One.... 

Two (Bizarrely Employed): You want to be employable?  You've gotta show them you're worth it.  What do you care about?  Go volunteer at a museum, on a campaign, for your state party.  Get involved in your community.  Go to neighborhood meetings.  Get involved with a cause.  Ask your Congressman if you can come in and volunteer a few times a week.  Show others how committed you are and when something opens up, they'll want you.  It means you can't be half-hearted about it.  Throw yourself into whatever you decide to do and do a great job.  The more people you get to know and the more people you have the opportunity to serve, the more likely that they will see you as a valuable asset who they want on their team full time.


Three (Nike spokesperson?): Once upon a time *cough* two-years-ago *cough* I was in a very similar situation, and I'm gonna give you the parental "do as I say, not as I do" advice.  Get a job, any job, just do something, to stay engaged in the world around you, BUT use your free time wisely.  You say you don't have any marketable skills (a statement I highly doubt) use your free time to CHANGE that.  Don't be an observer in your own life, if you don't like who you are, or where you're going do something different.  Take a course in statistical analysis, and do some research.  Volunteer for a local organization that you believe in.  Are you crafty?  Start an Etsy shop!   But also savor this time.  Having a job is nice, but it also kind of sucks.  You are at a delicious point in life where people won't judge you (too much) for just figuring out who you are, and who you want to be. So, I guess the Cliff notes version is: Just do it, in moderation of course. 


Four (Totally useless): 
Err. My answers are very personalized, meaning: I'll tell you exactly what I plan on doing in two years when I get to a similar place. I will either a) serve a mission for my church, or b) apply to a bunch of joint JD/MPH programs. Yeah. That's probably not helpful. at. all. But that's why you read this blog, right?
You could also pursue a career as a pharmaceutical sales rep--I hear it's very lucrative (please don't kill me, Two)....


Five (Intended Philosophy Major): Dude, I'm paying as close of attention to these answers as you are.

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European Sodas Make for Happy Mommies



Ingredients:
sugar
water
extract
mineral water
milk

Heat equal parts water and sugar in a saucepan. Add a lot of extract, and let reduce until syrupy -- but not too syrupy, because then it doesn't mix as well. Pour into bottles and let cool.
Mix syrup with cold fizzy water for Italian soda, or cold fizzy water and milk for French soda.

We liked all of the syrups both plane and mixed. Some of our most winningest combinations follow, but everything was pretty much delicious with everything else:

fizzy + milk + mint
fizzy + milk + almond
fizzy + milk + orange + anise
fizzy + raspberry
fizzy + raspberry + lemon
fizzy + mint + lemon

These were really excellent. You should probably make them.

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Bubbles, bands, and baked goods


Don't be deceived by my look of apathy 
I had a truly sublime weekend, and  on the inside, I was bursting with glee

How could I help it when I was surrounded by the joys of Vaccarro's cannoli "chips & dip?"


Out-door concerts with perfect weather...


Bubbles and Blue nails!


  
 and some pretty awesome company

  
Yeah, that's more like it. 

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Dusk in Tuscany




There was a strange wind blowing in from the west.  It was warm and indicative of some cosmic shift in the universe.  The golden light was dropping and we were leaving Tuscany for my next opera house in Umbria.  We had come to love being there, in the apartment over the farm house.  There was just one bedroom, but the six of us fit just fine.  Though something was changing, we were not going to let the night escape us.  We put on white dresses and pants and went out into the olive orchards, to capture the magic before it moved on with the wind.









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Julius Meinl

You may have noticed that my sisters and I have a weakness for destination grocery stores (like this one and this one).  Well, on the tail end of the One Family Road Trip, we made a pilgrimage to the place that got it all started, the Mother Ship, that grocery store to shame all other grocery stores, the shrine to all things that should be eaten (and a few that probably shouldn't but are anyway): Julius Meinl.  It sits on one side of Vienna's grand pedestrian thoroughfare, and when time is limited or tummies are growling, TD's have been known to walk right past Schonbrunn or the Opera in favor of Julius Meinl's cheese counter.

Doesn't it look elegant?

Hello, five zillion kinds of jam, sorted by color, flavor and country of origin.

Hello, organic French sodas.

These little fellows had a 6' twin perched on top of one of the mahogany-and-glass elevators.
Not tofu.

Yes. Please.



Fresh-picked marzipan.



Yummy.

Among all this splendor, the Princess became inconsolably attached to this
jar of honey mustard.

P.S.  I'm going to be running around all day and won't have a chance to pick a winner for our Hungarian giveaway until this evening -- so you still have a chance to enter!

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