Saturday, July 15, 2017

[2 Smart Point] Breakfast Cookies

I made breakfast cookies today.


2 Smart Point Breakfast Cookies - LydiaClink The best part? They're only two smart points, so I can enjoy them while doing Weight Watchers!


I was looking for breakfast alternatives to Pop-Tarts. Not that I have anything against the pastries or brand, but my boyfriend eats them almost every day, and I think a little variety would be good for him.


Someone on Facebook recommended breakfast cookies.


I'd never heard of them before, so I hopped on over to Pinterest and saw so many different varieties of wholesome cookies that could be eaten as a breakfast food!


Sweet Drops Vanilla Creme Liquid Stevia - LydiaClink I decided to personalize the idea of breakfast cookies to match the ingredient I have.




One big change was the use of liquid stevia instead of sugar.


This was because my dad had just given me some liquid stevia for my birthday. 

Did you know this magical stuff has no calories or fat or carbs in it?

It's also a 0 smart point sweetener on the Weight Watchers diet, which is awesome!




Hazelnut Spread with Cocoa - LydiaClink

The other big change was using Nutella instead of peanut butter.


But doesn't nutella have a lot of fat and sugar?

Yes, but I had four jars of it before I started Weight Watchers and I've been trying to find a healthy-ish way to use it.


Also, I didn't have any peanut butter.



Long Story Short: I was looking for fun breakfast food for my boyfriend but, after some tweaking and personalizing, I found myself with breakfast cookies that are actually healthy enough for me to enjoy as well!




Lydia's 2SP Breakfast Cookies

Makes 24 medium-large breakfast cookies

Ingredients:

1/2 cup unsweetened applesauce
1 egg
1 banana
4 tsp liquid stevia
2 tbsp Nutella
2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp baking sida
1 cup flour
2 cups old fashioned oats
1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips


Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 350.

Mash the bananas in the bowl, then mix in the applesauce, egg, stevia and Nutella until fully combined.

Add in the flour, baking soda and cinnamon, then fold in the oats and chocolate chips.

Roll or drop cookie dough onto baking sheets in the size you want. They don't spread, so you can put them fairly close together.

Bake for 7 minutes for small cookies or 10 minutes for large cookies. Let cool on baking sheets, then you can eat some now and store the remainder in the fridge or freezer for future breakfasts.



Hope you enjoy!
The Purple Writer

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Free Star Wars Office Decorations

I love Star Wars.


I love a variety of shows, but Star Wars will always be one of my favorites.  Who better, then, to plan a Star Wars party for my company on this May the 4th?


I created several designs, including food cards and a Jedi training quiz, that you can check out in this blog post.

This post is dedicated to collecting some of the amazing & free Star Wars images and posters that I found on Pinterest to decorate my office.

https://bysamantha.com/blogs/blog/91226823-6-8x10-free-star-wars-minimalist-printables

To start off with, I absolutely adore these posters put together by Samantha Ranlet. 

You should definitely check out her blog and download the free posters: link


They're clever and iconic, and even my coworkers who couldn't care less about Star Wars enjoyed seeing these posters pop up around the office.


http://www.digitalmomblog.com/free-star-wars-printable-star-wars-day/I also downloaded the icons for free here and used them for my potluck food cards.


This bold Star Wars-themed Keep Calm poster has stayed on our walls for over a month since our office's May the 4th party. 

When people get upset, we direct their attention to Darth Vader and his Jedi advice.


This design is a free printable from Digital Mom Blog. 

She also has some star wars facts, kids costume ideas, and links to other Star Wars blog posts.

 Check it out here.




It's dangerous to go Solo.




Now, I've seen this poster all over the internet, not to mention at game stores and college campuses, so I don't know who to attribute this to.

Whoever it was, they know their fandoms and made an adorable poster.

The wookies didn't last more than about an hour once I put them on the wall, so I had to print out the poster two more times that day.


Just do a Google search and you too can provide wookies for your lonely friends.



https://www.kristendukephotography.com/star-wars-lunch-box-jokes/


Now, it may seem a little strange, but I've actually been printing off lunch box jokes and giving them to my coworkers for the past couple months. 

Why?

Because I like to give them a joke/pun on Mondays to help their weeks start out with a little laugh.

Also, lunch box jokes generally have the cutest illustrations and are the perfect size to cut out and put on someone's desk.



For the week of the Star Wars party, I printed out these free Star Wars lunch box jokes by Kristen Duke, and they were a huge hit!


There are also several other themed lunch box jokes on her blog, so whether you have kids with lunch boxes or adults who enjoy puns, you should head to this post.



https://maythefourthbewithyoupartyblog.com/2015/09/23/downloadable-yoda-soda-and-darth-pop-labels/

For the actual party, we used these Yoda Soda and Darth Pop soda labels.

They're free, they're clever, they perfectly cover up the label underneath, and they use the Force to make the soda inside have 0 caleries!

If you want to hold a Star Wars party, you should absolutely hop over to the May the Fourth Be With You Party Blog



Spreading the Star Wars love,

The Purple Writer

Monday, June 12, 2017

Star Wars Party!

This spring, I was asked me to plan a Star Wars party for our company. 


This was the perfect project for me and I had a blast!


Created by Lydia Clinkscales
I hopped right onto Pinterest and into Photoshop to find and create designs that could help spread my enthusiasm for Star across our two Texas offices.

I'll add a post later with some of the images/posters by other people that I came across and printed off to decorate the Plano office I work in. 

This post, however, is all about the fun designs I made for the event!



The first steps to hosting a potluck are to invite people and have them agree to bring food.



Created by Lydia ClinkscalesI found all the adorable/fantastic images I used as backgrounds for this event on Unsplash.

I love the variety of amazing quality photographs that can be found on Unsplash. 

(Bonus points for Unsplash's great copyright rules which mean these photos can be used for anything!)

Check out the people who made these awesome images: Ciprian BoiciucDaniel Cheung & James Pond.

Once everyone has put down the dish they'll bring, it's time to make some food cards!


Created by Lydia Clinkscales
(I sent a list of Star-Wars inspired foods to my coworkers, but some of them made me proud with their own creations.)

I downloaded these super cute Star Wars icons here



So now I had invited everyone, had the food ready to go, and just needed another element - Star Wars activities!


I had basic cards with character/item names (Darth Vader, lightsaber, pod racer, etc.) and everyone had to act out or describe the card they drew. 

Since several of my co-workers hadn't watched Star Wars, this turned into more of a team cooperation game, but everyone had fun.

Created by Lydia Clinkscales

My favorite design of the event, however, was my Star Wars quiz! 


I used Google to find some different questions/answers and then made it all fit into a format on top of beautiful background images from Unsplash.


If you'd like the PDF or editable Word document of this quiz, the PSD file of the food cards, or the word document for the sign-up sheet, just shoot me a message or email, and I'd be more than happy to send them your way.

My new motto is: The more Star Wars parties, the better!

Print/Download my free Star Wars stuff:




Loving the Star Wars enthusiasm,

The Purple Writer


Tuesday, July 5, 2016

The Tourist Gaze

*Written as a final project for the summer 2016 Texas Tech Univeristy course EMC 4301-261: Media, Tourism & Culture in Scotland and Northern Ireland 

What is the "Tourist Gaze?"

This is the idea that tourists see places differently because of media and pictures they've already been presented with of that place. 

For example, if you have the chance to visit the setting of one of your favorite TV shows, you expect that place to look like it did on TV, right? 

Well, oftentimes the reality of a location is different from what tourists expect, so they are often either left disappointed or they purposefully ignore those differences, only photographing or paying attention to features that are similar to what they expected.

There are several things that can interfere with the tourist gaze, such as the removal of TV props, environmental damage, the existence of touristy shops, or even weather conditions.

But sometimes, tourists themselves interfere with the tourist gaze and can change the appearance of a location with their very presence.


This effect of tourists upon each other's perception of a location is what I will document and examine with the ten photographs of this blog post.
























The existence of The Kelpies statues in Helix Park Falkirk, where there isn't much but a road and a boat dock in the Caledonian Canal, led to the construction of a visitors center to make visiting The Kelpies more convenient. This building contains information about The Kelpies, toilets, a cafe and a gift shop, while a food and drink stand is maintained even closer to the sculptures. While the Tourist Gaze prepares visitors for no such structures around The Kelpies, the needs of visitors have changed the landscape.


Standing along the beach of Loch Ness, a couple takes a selfie of themselves to prove that they visited the lake. This simple act is repeated at almost every tourist location, with visitors often struggling through crowds to find the perfect location that would make it appear as though they are the only ones at the location. This beach area alongside Loch Ness had several groups of tourists taking pictures, sometimes walking a while down the rocks to find a better view, without people who would taint their Tourist Gaze idea of how it should look.


With the William Wallace Monument barely visible on a hill behind them, these tourists sit on a wall facing the Stirling Castle and talk amongst themselves, talk on the phone, take a picture of a William Wallace statue, and wait for the rest of their group to be ready to leave.  Surrounded by impressive architecture and beautiful, rolling hills, tourists often get tired of the beauty in front of them because they have fulfilled their duty to the Tourist Gaze by visiting, seeing and taking pictures of the important features.


The Eilean Donan Castle is the world's most photographed castle, but it's impressive structure, bridge, and surrounding water are hard to photograph without people in brightly colored jackets getting into the frame. As a well-known castle, often seen in photographs with impressive lighting without people on the bridge or grounds, the Tourist Gaze prepares visitors to be the only ones exploring this beautiful, Scottish castle. As it turns out, thousands of people visit the castle every day, crowding into small rooms, filling the walkways, forming lines for several features, and getting into each other's photographs and selfies of the no longer untouched castle.


With a beautiful view of both the mountain ridge above and the loch below to be earned from a decently long hike, the path up to see the Old Man of Storr is also filled with tourists. Whether you set out on a foggy morning or a warm afternoon, the hike is long and filled with groups who are hiking for the fun of hiking, hiking to get a good picture with the large rock, or hiking because your group members want to, you will come across several other groups of visitors, pausing to take pictures of themselves and often including you in the frame. 


Have you heard of Scotland's Fairy Pools? These are a set of waterfalls and pools, of which numerous, perfect photographs have been taken, allowing the Tourist Gaze to prepare people for an oasis in the middle of Scotland of pure beauty and tranquility. While these photographs are taken of a real location, the reality of the Fairy Pools is a bit different, with groups of people hiking a winding path and climbing over wet rocks to see increasingly smaller pools and waterfalls the higher they go. 


A woman sits on the base of a statue in George Square in Glasgow. Across the square from a large monument to fallen soldiers, it becomes harder to distinguish residents from tourists. In the middle of the square and next to the monument, nobody sits on the statues and a majority of everyone present take several pictures and selfies, while the residents continue walking on their normal paths and ignore everyone whose Tourist Gaze encourages them to take clear pictures without other people in the frame.


The Carrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge allows visitors to cross from the mainland to a tiny, unfenced island in the Irish Sea. Originally used by fisherman, the rope bridge is now a large tourist attraction maintained by the Irish National Trust, with people standing watch to make sure too many tourists don't strain the bridge by walking across at the same time and maintain the queues on either side as tourists wait to walk across and then need to return to the mainland. The Tourist Gaze presents visitors with images of a lonely bridge leading to an isolated island, while the reality is filled with crowds and queues.


The Giant's Causeway may be one of the most well-known locations in Northern Ireland, with people entranced by the hexagonal stones and pillars that the Tourist Gaze has presented them. As such, buses regularly bring people down to the edge of the mainland for people to climb over the volcanic rock and take pictures of each other. Visitors regularly climb to the highest point or the furthest rock they are comfortable with to try taking a picture without including the hordes of people who regularly flood the area.


The Dark Hedges are two rows of very old beech trees on either side of a small road that are featured in the second episode of Game of Thrones as "The Kingsroad." The trees are impressive on their own, but being a part of a popular TV show heightens the Tourist Gaze which presents them without people or modern cars or carvings in the wood. The reality is rather different, with large buses pushing large crowds of visitors to the side of the road as they fail to get pictures of the trees without the pollution of people and cars that they were not expecting.

It is almost impossible to avoid the effects of the Tourist Gaze and the resulting disappointment when tourists get into each other's way and changing how the locations look. 

Monday, July 4, 2016

Day 47: Travels

It was sad to leave Europe today.


I don't have a whole lot to say for today's blog post. I might add pictures later, but then again, I might not.

We had a long flight to Newark and then I hopped down to Atlanta.

I spent the night with my dad in Atlanta and then jumped over to DFW.

It feels unnaturally warm in the United States after spending five months in 50-degree weather.


I'm going to spend a week here in DFW to catch up on sleep, hang out with people and spend time with Stephen before heading back to Lubbock until I graduate in December.


Hiding in air conditioned buildings,
The Purple Writer

Day 46: Presentations

Today was our final day of the trip.


We went to the office of Tourism Northern Ireland and learned about what they do, how they do it, and what their goals are for the tourism industry in their country.

After that, we had about two hours for lunch and souvenir shopping before our presentations.

We presented some of our final projects to each other and then went out for our farewell dinner, which was a pretty great, last dinner. 

I didn't take any pictures, but here's a couple pictures of Northern Ireland for you:




Not ready to leave the UK,
The Purple Writer

Day 45: Game of Thrones (Part 2)

Today was our second day of Game of Thrones tours!

This tour was a lot more interactive, and our guide was a GOT extra and had lots of extra details and stories to share along the way, which was pretty great.

This is the setting for the first GOT scene ever - it's the White Walkers Circle, where all the dead bodies were laid out in a circle.

This is the tree that John Snow and Tyrion Lannister sat under and talked about reading on the way to the Wall.

This is the bridge that the Stark family found the dying elk by,

This is the place where the Stark family found the dead Dire Wolf and its pups.

This is the place where Robb was named King of the North

We also met two of the dire wolves! They're owned by a family of GOT extras, and we got to pet the big dogs and look at a scrapbook with pictures of cast members and all kinds of cool things.



Continuously humming the GOT theme song,
The Purple Writer