Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Falling off the Wagon
Getting off the wagon is soo easy. For the last 3 days, I have not seen either the inside of the gym or the pool, and as guilty as I feel about this, I am still alive and quite well. I mean, yes I know I am not the fittest person in the world, but I try, and I do exercise regularly. Anyhow, maybe the Argentine's plan is working better than we expected.
Today tho, I am going to attempt to do spinning at 12:15 and then go swimming in the evening before project runway. We shall see if that is possible, because I need to finish a sock I have been "working on" for 3 weeks now and there has not been too much progress. Yep, I am sorry to report, not a lot of progress has been made. The class is tomorrow, and we are supposed to start the heal - we have already done the toe - so I might have to skip swimming ans stay home and knit.
Now that is quite the conundrum, and a very appropriate one for this blog.
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3 comments:
Well, there was no swim practice Sunday or Monday, and last night the water was 89 degrees--so honestly, you were better off knitting.
But tonight there's no excuse, heel or none! (FYI, one would "heal" a sick person but knit a "heel" in a sock or run in the High Heel Race. These are known as homophones: words that are pronounced the same but spelled different. One of many reasons why English is a retarded language.)
Well, there was no swim practice Sunday or Monday, and last night the water was 89 degrees--so honestly, you were better off knitting.
But tonight there's no excuse, heel or none! (FYI, one would "heal" a sick person but knit a "heel" in a sock or run in the High Heel Race. These are known as homophones: words that are pronounced the same but spelled different. One of many reasons why English is a retarded language.)
Well, there was no swim practice Sunday or Monday, and last night the water was 89 degrees--so honestly, you were better off knitting.
But tonight there's no excuse, heel or none! (FYI, one would "heal" a sick person but knit a "heel" in a sock or run in the High Heel Race. These are known as homophones: words that are pronounced the same but spelled different. One of many reasons why English is a retarded language.)
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