Author Archives: Jo Hawke

Evernote: Amp Up Your Notes

When I was reading through the comments on this Happiness Project post about note-taking last week, I realized that I need to write about Evernote.

It’s basically a website, a desktop program, and a mobile app that all sync so you can access your info anywhere anytime.

And it’s free! Up to a certain amount of space.

I’ve been using it for…

1. Song lyrics. I tag all of them “lyrics” and then tag the recognizable ones by their original artist. The songs Kevin and/or I wrote, I tag “originals.” Oh, and I ‘ve also been attaching audio clips of what I call my pieces, those lines, verses, choruses that are still forming. (If I don’t record them, either the melody or words will sometimes evaporate before I’m back to them. :()

2. Recipes. When I find I’d maybe like to try cooking sometime on GoodHousekeeping.com or Pinterest or Facebook, I can click on a little Evernote button on my browser toolbar and add the link, a highlighted section of the page, or the whole page to one of Evernote folders. I tag them “recipes,” “main courses,” “desserts,” etc. so I can access them easily, even from an aisle in Walmart!

True story: The other week I was running late and hadn’t added the ingredients to “my” “famous” Mexican Shells to my shopping list yet. So I picked up my phone and took a picture of the page in the cookbook. Then I went to my Evernote in Walmart and zoomed in on the picture to purchase those ingredients.

3. Trip planning. If I come across a website or picture or anything that looks like something we may want to explore sometime, I save it to Evernote. You can set up “notebooks” (like folders on your computer) to hold notes on specific trips and add text files (like a list of your planned itinerary or things you want to do) to your notebooks.

In my “NYC 2012” notebook, for example, I have 14 files right now. One is an itinerary that lists each day and what we were planning to do. Another is a “Things we want to do” file where we brainstormed the activities we most wanted to experience. There are three websites for Broadway shows saved (Porgy and Bess, Once the Musical, and Spider-Man on Broadway). There’s a link to my NYC Google Map, where I’ve pinpointed landmarks, places we’ve been and want to go, and subway stops over our years of exploring the city. And there are assorted websites, links, and details on concerts in the area when we planned to be there, and churches, museums, and other places we wanted to visit.

I’m sure we’re just scratching the Evernote usability surface.

Have you used Evernote? Tell us what else we’re missing!

Diigo Bookmarks (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Reading & Reflection: Rooted & Grounded in Love

From the Daily Reading for June 15, 2012

Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus
Lectionary: 171

Reading 2
Eph 3:8-12, 14-19

Brothers and sisters:

To me, the very least of all the holy ones, this grace was given,
to preach to the Gentiles the inscrutable riches of Christ,
and to bring to light for all what is the plan of the mystery
hidden from ages past in God who created all things,
so that the manifold wisdom of God
might now be made known through the church
to the principalities and authorities in the heavens.
This was according to the eternal purpose
that he accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord,
in whom we have boldness of speech
and confidence of access through faith in him.

For this reason I kneel before the Father,
from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named,
that he may grant you in accord with the riches of his glory
to be strengthened with power through his Spirit in the inner self,
and that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith;
that you, rooted and grounded in love,
may have strength to comprehend with all the holy ones
what is the breadth and length and height and depth,
and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge,
so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.

Happy 19th Birthday to Ryan!

Ryan with Kevin in 2006

Nineteen years ago yesterday, I was waiting for the contractions to come.

And come they did, faster and stronger and faster and stronger, until by the end of the day, I was lying in a hospital bed discussing the very large baby inside me who’d somehow turned himself around in the previous day or two.

Yep, you were breech. And you were so very large that Dr. Ellis said he didn’t see any hope in turning you in utero. I’d have to have a C-section, rendering all those Lamaze classes to naught.

We waited until just after midnight to start the surgery, since the doctor hoped that insurance would pay for the extra day that way. He sat with us, talking and laughing (myself included, after the epidural).

And then, at 12:38 AM, you were born — my firstborn, my beautiful Ryan Andrew. <3

Atticus Sings ‘Old Man’

May 2011: Atticus & his lifelong best friend, Puppy

What a difference a year makes! Especially to a little kid!

Last year in May, Atticus recorded this version of his favorite Neil Young song at the time, “Old Man.”

He was four at the time. His birthday’s in September, and he turned five last year.

Wow! He’s grown up a whole lot since then! Preschool summer camp, kindergarten, YMCA afterschool daycare, Bible class at church… No more staying at the babysitter’s all day. He’s in (the little kid version of) the real world now.

It’s remarkable how much his pronunciation, tone, and delivery have improved. He has a greater maturity and control over himself in so many ways in addition to his voice.

My baby’s not a baby anymore, but he’ll always be my baby to me. 🙂

Podcast: The New Yorker Fiction

My latest favorite listening treat is The New Yorker’s Fiction podcast, which asks writers to read and discuss short stories and novel excerpts.

This morning, I heard author Nicole Krauss reading one of Bruno Schulz’s stories: http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/downloads.newyorker.com/mp3/fiction/120217_fiction_krauss.mp3