So I have a confession. I don't have time to blog. With a wedding in less than 10 months, a fulltime job and helping out my fiancé's race team with sponsorships life is pretty hectic. I would love to blog more and hope I will in 2014 (I say that every year).
With that said I did something bad...
I guest blogged on another site. *gasp* I know... just call me a trader.
I just couldn't miss this opportunity to talk about being a young professional and the struggles you have while falling into that category.
Here is an excerpt:
"During my first year on the job I wish I would have kept track of the number of times I was asked straight out “How old are you?”, “Are you the intern?” or “So, what year in school are you?” It was a track that just kept on playing. (Disclaimer: A couple times this happened I was on the UW-Madison campus… but not every time.)
There are some things I think you can do to help yourself if you ever find yourself in a position like this. I have put together five tips and I hope you find them helpful."
To read the read of the post and the five tips I gave go to http://www.brandingchloe.com/2014/01/20/day-life-communications-coordinator/.
*trinkets*
Try to keep up. I have random thoughts.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Why I Do What I Do
On my way to Farm Technology Days in July I found myself in a interesting spot. As I pulled up to a stoplight I looked to my right and just had to smirk. There sat a farmer, probably in his mid-fifties in a beat up Chevy truck. He reminded me of my dad, grubby hat, holes in his old t-shirt and dirt on his cheek. He was pulling a trailer full of what looked like Holstein heifers. Still having a red light in front of me I looked to my left I saw a family. The couple in the front was probably in their late twenties and in the back was a car seat with a baby sleeping. The car looked brand-new and expensive. The women was wearing a dress and the man was in a suit. As the light turned green I thought while I drove ahead, I have to be the middleman to these two people. It was like a calling... (kind of scary I know.)
I have been an "Ag"vocate my entire life. Plain and simple- I just want people to know where their food comes from. I want people to not hate farmers, to respect the work they do and understand how much hard work goes into producing food for the world. It's easy to get beaten down in the public relations ag world. With talk of GMOs, animal cruelty, HSUS and disease how do you spread the truth about agriculture and show people the positive light that they usually refuse to see? It's not an easy task, let me tell you.
Every job has its battles and ag PR has it's fair share and more, but to really succeed in a job like mine you have to enjoy what you do and I do.
I have been an "Ag"vocate my entire life. Plain and simple- I just want people to know where their food comes from. I want people to not hate farmers, to respect the work they do and understand how much hard work goes into producing food for the world. It's easy to get beaten down in the public relations ag world. With talk of GMOs, animal cruelty, HSUS and disease how do you spread the truth about agriculture and show people the positive light that they usually refuse to see? It's not an easy task, let me tell you.
Every job has its battles and ag PR has it's fair share and more, but to really succeed in a job like mine you have to enjoy what you do and I do.
Friday, June 7, 2013
Monday, April 22, 2013
Food For Thought
Growing up on a
farm I have a sense of what feeding the world means. I have seen the labor that
goes into planting, growing, and harvesting the raw products but usually don't get
see the aftermath of processing, packaging and selling. Last week I had a
chance to work at the Second Harvest Mobile Food Pantry for the first time.
Always on the list,
but never getting crossed-off, I have had images of what working at a food
pantry would be like. Consider me naive, but I couldn't help the Hollywood-embraced
images of a diverse, unclean group of people flashed in my head as I rode in
the van to Second Harvest.
After setting out
the donated items, a steady stream of people worked their way through the
blustery rain and biting cold. As the people packed their soggy cardboard boxes
and carts and as I restocked the supply of potatoes and onions I couldn't help
but take a moment to think about how much I overlook food.
Even being emerged
in agriculture I don't always take time to think about how fortunate I am to
have a steady food supply available to me. Americans only spend 10 percent of
their income annually on food. That is quite remarkable considering other
countries' percentages.
While I pondered my
food gratitude I watched a woman decline the organic milk she was offered. At
the same time a man rummaged through the potato bin in search of the red ones
because he didn't care for the regular baking ones. After we finished the
volunteers who had been on the other side of the bus said the ham and salami
were the meat variety that "no one seemed to want".
I enjoyed
volunteering at the Food Pantry. I really do like helping people who need it.
It fascinated me though that even in a Food Pantry line there were choices for
what kind of food people could choose to eat. I guess in a way it’s ironic. A
good problem to have in the U.S.; choices in your food no matter your income.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Good People Give You Gladness.
In the last 6 months I have lost two childhood heroes. I
call them heroes not because they saved people’s lives while wearing caps and
funny face paint, but rather because they helped better my life.
Piano Wonderwoman: Mrs. Sanders was my piano teacher. She
was an older lady who had a very fat cat. Piano lessons were never my thing but
going to Mrs. Sanders was one of my favorite parts of the week. She listened to
everything I had to say, which sometimes took 20 of the 30 minutes of my
lesson. (Whoops.) She laughed at my jokes and family tales but also gave the
best advice. Every Tuesday for years I spent my afternoons sitting on her piano
bench chatting and occasionally playing. When she passed away last summer I
felt like part of my childhood died with her. Even though I hadn’t seen her as
much since leaving for college, she had been such a big part of my life for so
long. I had written her a note when I heard how ill she had became. The card
arrived the day after she had passed.
Super Pastor: In the fourth grade my family switched churches.
Growing up in a believing household we had been going to my mom’s childhood
church since I was born. After grimacing and grueling about starting confirmation
classes at our current church we looked for a new church with a better program.
We ended up at a small rural church. The church was in a process of a
transition. A new pastor was being called for.
When I met Pastor Diener, who stood about 5’3”, I remember
how friendly he was; so inviting and welcoming. I took my confirmation classes
with him and his wife and although he never said it I knew he appreciated my
jokes and begs for forgiveness when I didn’t know my memory work. For years I
was in the church choir. Pastor approached me with the idea of having me do a solo
for a Fourth of July picnic. He had me do solos for other services and encouraged
the beginning of a teen choir at our church. When he announced his retirement
in 2011 he asked if I would sing at his last service. How Great Thou Art rang through that church while the members sat with
bittersweet thoughts of Pastor not coming back. This past summer a few weeks after
getting engaged I called Pastor to tell him the news and ask him to do the honor
of marrying Jon and I. He agreed and I was ecstatic.
The past few months Pastor had been having numerous health
problems. He passed away a couple months after baptizing his newest grand-baby.
Neither of these people were family. Neither did I spend
holidays with or call often. But both helped me grow into the person I have
become. It’s hard letting go of pieces of your life.
Last thought: You never realize how much people influence
your life until they leave it. Everyone you come across gives something to you:
take it and cherish it.
Monday, February 4, 2013
The Door Has Been Opened.
The Super Bowl drew millions of viewers. Between the
blackout, the close ending and the commercials, honestly, I think it was one of
the most entertaining Super Bowls I have ever seen. I always watch to see the
commercials as I am what you might call an advertising nerd. I find it fascinating
what techniques the big leagues pull out to get attention in the market.
My post today isn’t a rant about how awful the Go-Daddy
commercial was, how Beyonce rocked the half-time show or how freakin’ hilarious
and entertaining the twitter-verse was during the blackout, but rather it is
about one commercial that to me changed the world just a little.
The God Made A Farmer
commercial was hands-down the most talked about commercial. The surprise
element, the tone, the simplicity, the placement in the game… everything about
it was perfect.
As a born-and-raised farm girl I have grown up in
agriculture. Drowning in work, covered in dirt and living off the land I
watched my mom and dad work endless hours doing something they loved. Never
complaining about the hard work, never giving in to the burdens of winter weather
or rainy springs and never taking no for an answer they still truck through the
days working to feed people and themselves.
I have always been a Chevy fan, I even drive a Silverado
myself, but what Dodge did here is quite awesome. Agriculture is overlooked.
Farmers and ranchers are overlooked. This commercial however, was not
overlooked. Whether you loved it or hated it… you saw it. That’s half the
battle of getting people to think about their food, just getting them to see
who is behind it. A hurdle has been jumped thanks to Dodge. I sincerely think
that even though most people are FIVE generations removed from production agriculture
that there is a little farmer in us all. Farmers are who feeds us, farmers are
our history and our future. It is a common ground every single person can and
should support.
The commercial opened the door. I think it is now time for
people in the agriculture community to jump at this opportunity to educate and
gain support. Doesn’t matter your religion. Doesn’t matter your race. Doesn’t
matter if you like Taylor Swift or not. We all eat. We all need farmers and
agriculture. Share this video and share your love for hardworking farmers and
ranchers all over the world.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Here Comes the Not-Detail-Oriented Bride...
Over the course of the next 18 months I will be planning a
wedding.
That statement has and still makes me shutter time-to-time.
Every girl, since birth, has dreamed of her wedding; her
dress, her choice of flowers and decorations, even what venue would be chosen. FALSE. (At least for
me.)
Of course I have thought about my wedding, literally
everyone has, but I have never gotten to the details. I knew I wanted my family
there, I wanted to have fun and last, but not least, I wanted it to be unique, but
that sounds like every wedding I have ever been to, so my previous wedding planning
thoughts don’t help much.
I struggle and have always struggled with details. I am a
big picture thinker. I don’t spend hours
picking out colors or caring what time an event should be. I don’t even worry
about using a level when I hang photos. I usually eyeball it and hope for the
best. My thinking is hey, at least it finally made it up on the wall.
The wedding planning process shall prove to be an interesting one,
especially with an organized and detail-loving fiancée. Let the stress begin and the memories
be made while planning the family-oriented, fun and unique wedding of 2014. If
I have bloopers along the way, I will be sure to share them. I mean I have seen
Bridesmaids… something is bound to happen, let’s face it.
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