Skip to main content

Filling Up My Bucket List



A few people have mentioned to me that I should have a bucket list now that I'm 50.  As a lover of lists, that makes sense to me. I've already admitted to enjoying a bit of selfishness these days, and a bucket list is All About Me.   So I've been thinking about it, and here is the beginning of my list.

Bucket List for Jill's Next 50 Years

1.  See U2 in concert with my favorite U2 friends again
2.  Hike to all the waterfalls in the U.P.
3.  Stay a night at the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island
4.  Find the perfect underwear (I laughed when a friend included this on her list, but now that my favorite underwear has been discontinued, I am looking for a perfect replacement!)
5.  Sleep in a yurt
6.  Recreate with my husband our Epic Camping Trip of 1993 through Iowa, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, and Montana
7.  Go to Austria with Abby for the Sound of Music tour
8.  Go backpacking in the Porcupine Mountains again

What does your bucket list look like?  Do you have any suggestions for what I should add to mine?

Comments

  1. I love your #2 (on the list-not a Robert interpretation of #2😉). Apparently on my bucket list is learning how to change my google name from Griffith to Stevens...I am shooting for Botanical Gardens in every state. And #1 on my list is sitting in a field of grapes (would that be a field?) in Cahors France while enjoying a glass of French Malbec. Mid list is going to the Living Church in New Zealand. This summer I am knocking off Alaska.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I love all of these! Especially the vineyard in France. I’ve always wanted to travel to Alaska. I was born in Anchorage and it would be nice to visit as an adult.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Mitten House

Summer is over.  My husband is back in his fifth grade classroom, my daughter is in grad school and my youngest- the baby!- is a senior in high school.  The return of the school year, along with the increasingly chilly nights, is a sure sign that fall is peeking around the corner.  I've mentioned in a previous post that my husband is eligible for an early retirement incentive in two years.  That is somewhat earlier than we were planning on his retirement, but the opportunity is too good to pass up.  We have committed to spending these two years paying off all our debt, except for the house, which will be paid off in a few short years. One of the reasons this somewhat unexpected retirement is even possible for us to consider is that we never moved out of our "starter home".  When we were looking to buy a house in 1994, we had a small baby, my husband was at the bottom of the pay scale, and our only requirement was that it be the cheapest house in town. ...

25 Things I've Learned in 50 Years

Things I've Learned in 50 Years 1.  You never feel your age.  I still feel the same as I did at 15 or 30.  I don't feel 50.  I just feel like me. 2.  Nobody cares how messy your house is.  They just want to sit and drink coffee and talk.  Don't  not invite someone over because it isn't clean enough. 3.  That said, I enjoy coming home to a clutter-free home.  It feels welcoming and restful at the end of the day.  I've learned to spend a few minutes before bed or before work straightening up so I can come home to a peaceful environment. 4.   It's hard to find clothes I love at this age.  I don't want to look like my daughter and I don't want to look like my mother, although they are both lovely.  I think my style could creatively be described as "Michelle Obama Goes Hiking."  I rely on lots of cardigans, ballet flats and slim jeans, with some Patagonia and Chacos thrown in.  I would like to be more stylis...

January Challenge

It's a snowy day here.  So snowy, in fact, that nobody in my house went to school or work today. I've spent the morning sipping coffee, and making progress on the sock I'm knitting, and thinking about the year ahead.  I am by nature a planner and a lover of lists, so a new year feels like an exciting time to me.  A time to start over, to be a better version of myself, to make new and better habits.  I know a lot of people hate the idea of New Year's Resolutions.  They feel like they are setting themselves up to fail year after year, but I think that's much too harsh.  If you didn't run the marathon you wanted, did you at least run more than the year before?  That's success!  My goal last year was to try a new recipe every week.  I absolutely did not achieve that.  I could feel like I failed, but in truth, I made almost 30 new recipes last year!  And my family liked most of them!  How is that failing?  I feel pretty damn...