Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Tips for a Productive Break

Taking a planned
1–2 week break from fitness every 6–8 weeks improves performance, repairs tissue, and prevents burnout. It allows your body to recover from intense training without significant loss of strength, often leading to better results upon returning thanks to muscle memory and reduced fatigue.
Key Aspects of a Fitness Break
  • When to Take a Break: Signs include persistent fatigue, plateauing, reduced performance, poor sleep, or new aches and pains.
  • Active Recovery vs. Total Rest: A "deload" week (reducing weight/intensity by 50%) is often better than complete inactivity, as it keeps you in the habit while resting.
  • What Happens: Within a week, muscles may feel "softer" due to lower glycogen levels, but significant muscle loss takes roughly 3-4 weeks.
  • How to Return: Do not jump back in at maximum intensity. Ease back in over 1-2 weeks to avoid injury.
Tips for a Productive Break
  • Focus on Mobility: Use the time for yoga, stretching, or walking.
  • Prioritize Sleep: Ensure you are getting 8+ hours to maximize recovery.
  • Nutrition: Maintain good nutrition to support body repair.
A short break will not ruin your progress; rather, it is a necessary part of a long-term, sustainable, and successful training plan.

 

Disfruta de las deliciosas Galletas de Coco Nestlé, crujientes y con un toque dulce de coco que las hace irresistibles. Perfectas para acompañar con café, té o como snack en cualquier momento del día.

 

Airborne pollutants such as those that cause allergies can trigger mucus build up and sinus pressure.

Paper Dolls

 I loved playing with paper dolls until I started drawing my own. Then it was really fun.

If You Want it You Can't Have It

This was a lesson from my mother. Anytime I wanted something she made sure it didn't happen because if I got what I wanted I would be officially spoiled. 65  years later and I am still battling this. My husband regularly says, Don't take that away from yourself, if you want it you can have it.

cabal of cowardly clowns

article

and the foot fetish article

“This truly has been such a gift to me! Seeing the students show up, week after week, excited to share their homework, tell me about their weekend, and ready to take on the day’s activity is such motivation.” —Jen Frost, Oceanside READS

“I don’t want to just be my students’ teacher; I also want to be their friend. I make them feel loved and welcomed when they come to class. I ask them about their families and what’s going on in their lives.” —Melody Ruddell, Prestige Learning Institute

“I have learned that my energy is bolstered by the work of others as they make positive changes in their lives and the lives of those around them. I am also determined to maintain that growth mindset, which our students model for us each day.” —Heather Tovey, Butte County Library Literacy Services

“I do love it when I get an unexpected phone call in the middle of the day saying, ‘Miss Suz, I was just able to read the street sign for the address I’m looking for!’ This was from a truck driver doing daily deliveries for years by following GPS and laboriously matching letters on the invoice to the street signs. He and I both couldn’t have been prouder!” —Suz Hall, Neuhaus Education Center

“I [have] a general feeling of satisfaction when my learner’s improved language skills enable her to navigate her community—communicate with her child’s teacher, initiate conversations with her neighbors, feel confident talking with her business customers.” —Marcia Katigbak Church, Whatcom Literacy Council

“I love it when a student takes something they learned in the class and goes with it! For instance, one of my students was fascinated by our Native American unit. She then took her family to Cherokee, NC, for vacation last year and this year visited the Native American Museum in D.C.” —Deborah Alvarez, Shelby Literacy Center

“My students feel comfortable with my teaching style and often tell me that I am the best teacher they have ever had.” —Russell Joy, Literacy Mid-South

Instructors tell us all the time that they had no idea how much working with adult learners would impact them personally and how much watching someone improve their skills would give them a new perspective of the world around them.

 https://www.proliteracy.org/news/12-quotes-from-adult-literacy-instructors-to-inspire-you-in-2024/

“Be relaxed and honest so that the student isn’t tense. Converse and listen to the student, and don’t teach at them. Be interested in your student.” —Doug Cook, Center of Hope

“One of my first students … was incarcerated at the local jail and studying for his high school equivalency exam. He was really nailing the material, so I posed the question: What’s next? What do you want to do when you get released? He looked stunned, got a little teary, and then quietly replied, ‘No one has ever asked me that before.’” —Anne Larsen, Literacy Volunteers of the New River Valley

Homework: A Memoir (It's sooo good!)


Named a most anticipated book of 2025 by Vulture | The Guardian | Financial Times | The Observer | The Times (London) | Literary Hub

"A picture of postwar England unlike any other . . . A highly original memoir that will provoke, amuse, beguile―and endure." ―Antony Quinn, Financial Times

"
Homework is wonderful Geoff-Dyer writing, which we've all learned to crave; something to delight and to move us and to edify us on every page. I find him an irresistible writer." ―Richard Ford

A portrait of a young boy, who keeps passing exams―and of a changing England in the 1960s and 1970s.

The only child of a sheet-metal worker and a dinner lady who worked at the canteen of the local school, Geoff Dyer grew up in a world shaped by memories of the Depression and the Second World War. But far from being a story of hardship overcome, this loving memoir is a celebration of opportunities afforded by the postwar settlement, of which the author was an unconscious beneficiary. The crux comes at the age of eleven with the exam that decided the future of generations of British schoolkids: secondary modern or the transformative possibilities of grammar school? One of the lucky winners, Dyer goes to grammar school, where he develops a love of literature (and beer and prog rock).

Mapping a path from primary school through the tribulations of teenage sport, gig-going, romantic fumblings, fights (well, getting punched in the face), and other misadventures with comic affection,
Homework takes us to the threshold of university, where Dyer gets the first intimations that a short geographical journey―just forty miles―might extend to the length of a life.

Recalling an eroded but strangely resilient England,
Homework traces, in perfectly phrased and hilarious detail, roots that extend into the deep foundations of class society.

Bench Repair or a Sign

Every year I threaten to rebuild the rotted slats in my park bench. This is a photo of someone else's bench but you get the idea. Will I do it this year? Someone on my street is throwing away a small stack of thick narrow boards from a broken Venetian Blind that would be perfect.

CDN media

Soul Food of All Nations

I think we'd have world peace if every culture shared food and music. I have felt this since I was a child.

Music food spiritual traditions of the world can be a sources of enlightenment, not a fight. 

Fusion not confusion. 

Wild Rice

I saw the package and cooked it up for my step dad. He yelled at me. Do you know expensive this is? He never said thank you or understood I was giving him a gift. This was the way my parents hated me for everything I did after I turned 15.