Showing posts with label austin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label austin. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Things I love about Austin


Things I love about Austin:

  • Everything is bigger than Texas.  Seriously.  Even the sky feels bigger.
  • Most hotels have Texas-shaped waffle irons.
  • Cookies are also Texas-shaped.
  • You see stars everywhere.
  • The Texas flag (I don't know why I love it so much, but I do! But to give you an idea of how much my opinion means ... I also think Mississippi's Confederate flag is pretty.)  I see it on the side of the highway and my heart starts pounding.  SO WEIRD.  Also, you can fly it as high as our national flag!  GO TEXAS.
  • People saying "y'all" and "blessed" and having that adorable drawl ... even the receptionists at the doctor's office!
  • How friendly everyone is.  Mom said, "Even the Asians smile at you!"
  • Bluebonnets
  • Tex-Mex
  • Texas BBQ
  • Food in general.  Especially here in Austin (it's not all just about the music!) there's a lot of variety.  Just like Utah.  Only not everyone here is white. =p:
  • The birds.
  • Swimming pools.
  • Monster Texas thunder and rain storms.


I think part of the reason I love it here is because it reminds me so much of Arizona, only it's not as hot, it rains more and is greener, it's in the South not the West (so the people don't all secretly wish they were Californians?), the locals have funny accents, and football is The Shiz.  It also seems flatter to me, but then they've got hill country.  It feels so much like home.

LOVE.

(sorry for the lack of pics.  Here, have some bluebonnets.)



Oh, and one thing I think is funny.  Last week, a good friend of mine said something along the lines of, "Well, Texas is pretty much unlivable except for Austin..."  HAHAHA.  She lives in San Antonio and likes it well enough. ;)  Too bad I can't convince her to move here!  Austin is a pretty awesome town.  Definitely.  I'm sure there are some people who like Houston, or Dallas, or San Antonio, too.  They're only the 4th, 9th, and 7th most populous cities in the United States.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Moving to Austin

Honestly, I haven't written much in this blog lately because ... I love Texas!  This has been the most amazing move and the easiest adjustment I've ever had to a move ... with the possible exception of Colorado Springs.  It's easier to adjust when you go to school every day and get to hang out with people.  Then suddenly you're a grown-up and you have to (gasp!) coordinate your own social outings to make friends!!

So I guess I will start out with a quick summary of our moving experience:

We moved out shortly after the Fourth of July.  Mark's new company hired a moving company to move us, so we didn't have to do any of the packing or heavy lifting.  Woohoo!  The bad thing is that you never know who the moving company is going to hire, so we got a whole bunch of whiny guys in their mid-30's who moped and complained about *everything* the whole time they packed up our house, and I believe one of the guys was drunk.  He puked on our front lawn.  Lovely.

We made sure to be in Austin by the first day they said they "might" be here with our stuff, but of course they had contracting issues with the person who was supposed to drive our stuff out here and we ended up staying at a hotel for an extra week.  Luckily, it was a really nice extended stay hotel with a little kitchen, fridge, and dishwasher, (and free sketchy slow internet!) so it wasn't *too* bad!  Carmen and I spent most of the time playing down at the pool, where she tried telling all of the other kids she was 4.  (She had just turned 2 in May.  HAHA.)

Then we moved into our apartment, and the managers forgot (?) we had asked for a garage with a parking spot in front of it.  They also miscalculated our rent, so we had to bring in the papers from when we visited in May to show them what rent we had agreed to. -_-  We had a big pile of stuff in the middle of our dining room for another 2 weeks before someone moved out of their garage and we moved in.  It's actually a really sweet set-up ... our garage is in our building next to the stairs!  Getting everything together in this apartment involved a lot of waiting.  We scheduled Time-Warner Cable to set up our Internet, then the *day* before we were scheduled, they were like, "Just kidding, we overscheduled ourselves, we'll come give you Internet in two weeks!!"  (so we kind of got the garage and the Internet at the same time ... and by this point we had been in Austin for about 4 weeks.)

I think I have the best, friendliest ward in the UNIVERSE.  The first time we visited, we felt welcome.  The second time we visited (right after we moved in) so many people seemed to remember us.  It really meant a lot to me.  I love our Relief Society president and think she's really concerned about all the women in the ward.  Everyone is really friendly.  As soon as we moved in, someone got in touch with us and said, "Hey, a bunch of people get together with this guy named Donny on Tuesday nights at this pizza place called Double Dave's."  So we went there on our first Tuesday in Austin and made half a dozen insta-friends.  Then a bunch of people said, "Hey, we have a book club, we have a play group, we have this, we have that, want to get involved?"  And I was like HECK YES.  So I felt like I was immediately immersed in this active group of friends.  I just gave a few people my email list and suddenly I was in on all the stuff people were doing together. <3

So I joined a play group and a book club, which is pretty much all you need if you want to be able to get out and see people, right?  Play group is great because then I can get to know all the people who have kids Carmen's age and thereabouts, and book club is great because ... dude ... I LOVE BOOK CLUBS.  It's fun to read new books and get together and discuss them with people and get ideas for the next half-dozen books I need to check out from the library and read at the gym.

Speaking of gyms, I tried transferring my Gold's Gym membership to Austin.  Dear universe: Avoid Gold's Gym at all costs if you can.  I was with them for 5 years and I hate the company with a passion.  Every time I tried to do something a little different (put my gym membership on hold because we didn't have a car and I didn't want to walk 2 miles to the gym, or put an extension on my personal trainer sessions because I was pregnant and had a baby, or transfer my membership because WE MOVED TO AUSTIN ...) they would run me around and throw all sorts of "policies" at me that CLEARLY weren't in my contract.  In fact, one of my friends told me that Gold's Gym pretty much loses every time they get sued because their paperwork is so bad.

Anyway.  So I tried transferring my membership to Austin and I had 5 months or so left on my contract.  Gold's Gym Utah sent the new gym a check to pay for my membership and it was, like, $50 and they told me it was enough for a month and a half.  Then I would have to sign some new contract for an expensive crappy membership if I wanted to stay, but I could get a discount (oh joy!) if I only wanted to sign up for the one location.  Where the air conditioning doesn't work.  Right.  So I sat in the manager's office and cried because Utah was treating me so terribly ("we only gave you that much because we don't pay for hold time.  It's our policy."  WTF.)  Gold's Gym advertises that you can go to or transfer to *any* of their locations, but good luck going some place out of state.  They lie.  They're actually owned by different companies in each state, so you tell them you're a member and they say, "Actually, you're just a visitor, but we'll let you skate this first time.  Next time, you'll pay a visitor/day care/whatever fee." and then you just decide you're not going to work out at all during this vacation.  Anyway, the manager felt sorry for me and offered me a free membership until my Utah membership would've expired.

Then I started a quest to find a NEW gym.  One that wouldn't suck and one where I could just go to the gym, drop Carmen off at the day care, and read on the elliptical.  Instead of finding a cheap no-frills gym, though, we ended up finding one called Lifetime Fitness.  It has, like, three or four pools; a huge day care with a baby section, a toddler section, a computer lab, something that looks like a McDonald's playland, a basketball court, and an outdoor play area (and you get TWO HOURS of day care!!); several places where you can take fitness classes and yoga; a health spa; a cafe; gorgeous locker rooms ... It's like a gym, but gold-plated.  I want to go.  Carmen loves it.  After I work out, I sit on the couch and read, cross-stitch, or watch TV until my 2 hours is up.  IT IS AMAZING.  It is so worth what we pay for it.  It is better than preschool.  Except maybe for the fact that I have to be at the gym while Carmen is in the day care.

I also became a member at the Austin children's museum.  They have a train, a cow, pigs on parachutes (so they can FLY, DUH!), stuff to build, golf balls to drop down ramps, story time, bubbles, fish ... The membership pays for itself (with just 2 people going on a "4-person" membership) after about 6 visits.  And I can bring friends for free- they don't have to be family!  So I get to bribe my friends to come on Children's Museum dates with me. ;)

So yeah.  I pretty much love everything about my life here.  I love my friends and what I have the opportunity to do and I haven't blogged because I've been too busy having fun and being pregnant and having a newborn.  I've already written too much; I'll start another entry for later.  Some time I'll even get around to pictures. =p

Monday, June 6, 2011

Looking forward to Texas

I promise to have a real blog update some time soon, but I somehow managed to accidentally delete all the pictures from Carmen's birthday party and I've been too embarrassed to post since then.  I've also been busy doing things like apartment-huntinrg in Austin, playing lots of video games, watching Sadie, planning vacations, etc.  I have another blog I write in that's more like a personal journal in which I ramble about my life and thoughts and opinions and stuff, so this blog kind of gets last priority.

Anyway, in case you haven't heard, in May, Mark got a job offer in Austin!  They originally wanted him to start June 6 (haha, no way!) and we managed to get them to push back his start date to July 11th.  We went apartment hunting over Memorial Day weekend and found a great two-bedroom apartment to live in.  It's about 1.3 miles from Mark's work, about a mile and a half to the gym, and about 2 miles to go to Mark's work via the gym.  Score!  It's also a mile from the mall and across the street from the backside of Wal-Mart.  Could life get any better?  Maybe only if Costco were next to the mall. ;)

After going to James' wedding in Rhode Island last month, I've decided I could never live out East.  It never really occurred to me before that there could be a place I wouldn't enjoy living.  But I guess I truly am a Westerner.  Out East, it's too flat and there's too much traffic and the people are rude and the culture is different and they don't drink tap water ... but their accents are awesome!  There's a lot of neat history.  It's a fine place for a vacation.  But I no longer wish to live in Boston or Baltimore or Washington, DC.  I like it here, with the mountains and the wide open spaces and the genuinely friendly and easy-going people (who may or may not drive like retards, but hey!) and the non-accents.  I was once told that people from Colorado don't have identifiable accents and that tends to be what the national newscasters sound like.  SWEET.

But when we were in Austin, there were some definite accents going on.  It's not as bad as what I hear out of people from eastern Texas ... I guess it's because they're close to Louisiana and Mississippi and those other Southern places where they've got REAL strong Southern accents.  So cute, but ... yikes!  What if my kids grow up with Southern accents?!  Would that be better than a Utah Valley accent?  Anyway.  I've been having Carmen practice saying "y'all" and I've been trying to get myself to replace "you guys" with "y'all" in my head so I sound less out of place. ;)

We also almost moved to Austin instead of Seattle when I was a junior in high school.  How different life might've been ...

A few things that make me really excited about moving to Austin:
-I've always been a t-shirt and jeans kind of girl.  Now I will never feel under dressed around my friends!  But I wear flip-flops, not cowboy boots ... hopefully that will be okay. ;)

-I love the genuinely friendly "I just met you but we're gonna be real friendly and pretend we're already friends" attitude everyone has.  It's like I'm surrounded by a bunch of people a bit like me!

-I can finally admit I like some country music without shame!!
Mom and Dad like to tell the following story:
When my little brother Logan was a baby, he would turn the radio knob until it was just off a rock station and you could hear the beat through the static.  When I was a baby, I'd always turn the knob to country.  My parents were convinced I was either a) not theirs, or b) genetically mutated.  My self-proclaimed childhood theme song was "She's A Wild One" by Faith Hill ... you know, the one that goes, When she was 3 years old on her daddy's knee/He said, You can be anything you wanna be/She's a wild one runnin' free.

-I still think the accents are adorable.

-FRONTAGE ROADS

Things that scare me:
-I keep feeling like we're going to end up staying and my kids will grow up Texan.
-It's far away from my family (in Seattle).  It's far away from EVERYTHING.
-I grew up in Phoenix, where it is also hot ... but dry.  Will I be able to handle the humidity?  The epic hair battle continues.

Speaking of hair, I've been growing it out for a while and now it's about halfway down my back!  I love it!!