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If getting engaged wasn’t enough, my little baby, Jameson, has graduated from Puppy Headstart Class. According to Omar, I can now die a happy woman. Otherwise, I can look forward to the day she finds that special someone to settle down with and have children of her own. On second thought, she will have to adopt.

Back to being serious, she did follow in her mother’s foot steps to become the valedictorian of her class of three. Paris gave her a run for her money in the beginning of the class, but when it came down to the final exam and Paris couldn’t do any tricks, there was no argument who was the smartest puppy.

From seeing the picture, I am sure that you can tell that Jameson was excited for this day to come. She looks like she should be on the brochure for one of the great PetSmart Puppy colleges. Both Quinn and I are very proud of her. She hasn’t made any plans yet, but we do see the next level of education in her future. Why waste a brain like that?

If you haven’t guessed it or heard it already, Quinn and I are engaged! That’s right, I finally tied him down. Now I can finally let myself go…..no more exercise or watching what I eat, no more trips to the tanning bed or hair salon. Those of you who made it over for dinner at our place, please know that you are now one of the lucky few who got to enjoy the old Jodi, the domesticated Jodi. Now I can release the “inner me,” who lays on the couch all day watching Law and Order and spills food in her lap and doesn’t even clean it up (oh wait, the Law and Order part of that might already be true…oops). Anyway, you get the point. Either Charles Brian Quinn is a really brave man or a very naive one to fall for that trick.

Just kidding everyone, I will pick up the food that I spill on myself. And FYI, we are very excited about this new and exciting point in our lives and relationship; therefore we would like to enjoy it for awhile. Please don’t expect any wedding plans to be made any time soon.

A picture of the ring may follow in a couple of days, once I find a lense that can handle this kind of stunning beauty and sparkle. This picture was taken in June 2003 at the wedding of my friend, Julie. I believe it was the first wedding that Quinn had ever attended, and hopefully, not the last.

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I read this articled in my NY Times this morning, and I suddenly wanted to email it to several people that I know it could help. Then I realized that I would help more people if I just posted it, so please enjoy:

‘French Women Don’t Get Fat’: Like Champagne for Chocolate
By JULIA REED

Published: February 6, 2005

When I was 15, I studied in France, at the University of Strasbourg, for six weeks. On weekdays, my fellow American students and I ate lunch in the school cafeteria and discovered the wonders of braised rabbit and coq au vin, followed always by an apricot tart or napoleon (my first ever!) at the nearby patisserie. On weekends we toured the country by train, fortified by bread and (real!) cheese, along with copious amounts of cheap red wine. Already weight-obsessed, I was sure I’d put on at least 10 pounds. But when I stepped off the plane, the jaws of my waiting parents and my best friend literally dropped. It turns out I’d lost 10 pounds — I’m not sure I’ve looked as good since.

Mireille Guiliano had quite a different teenage experience abroad. As an 18-year-old from a small town in eastern France, she spent a year as an exchange student in the well-to-do Boston suburb of Weston, Mass., where she discovered the distinctly American joys of bagels, brownies and chocolate chip cookies and gained 20 pounds. When her own parents met her ocean liner in Le Havre, they were as stunned as mine were, but for a different reason — her father told her she looked like a sack of potatoes. ‘’I could not have imagined anything more hurtful,'’ she writes. ‘’And to this day the sting has not been topped.'’

Never fear — Guiliano’s story has a happy ending. After a few miserable months during which she gains more weight, cries herself to sleep and hurries past mirrors clothed in shapeless flannel shifts, her mother brings in the family doctor, a k a ‘’Dr. Miracle.'’ He detoxes her with leek broth for a weekend, teaches her to become a master of both her ‘’willpower'’ and her ‘’pleasures,'’ and supplies her with recipes, including one for apple tart without the dough. She learns to love walking, finds her ‘’equilibrium'’ and goes on to become C.E.O. of Clicquot Inc. and a director of Champagne Veuve Clicquot. Most remarkably, despite the fact that she dines out 300 times a year and enjoys two- and three-course meals for lunch and dinner every day — always accompanied by a glass of Champagne — she has remained thin.

Guiliano recommends Dr. Miracle’s plan as the French way, but it is not unlike the advice that American nutritionists on Web sites and at spas and clinics across the country dispense every day. It is exactly the advice I got last year at Dallas’s Cooper Clinic during my annual physical: if you want a glass of wine with dinner, don’t eat the bread or skip the baked potato. Do some aerobic exercise; if you’re over 40, lift weights. Keep a food diary and cut out the processed junk. Slowly changing your eating habits is far more effective than any crash diet. You don’t have to deprive yourself if you learn to make trade-offs. And on and on.

Somehow, though, these sensible stratagems are more palatable coming from Guiliano, who was once fat herself, and who now happily lives in America, where she first fell victim to our bad habits. She knows we eat too fast in front of the TV or with newspaper in hand, while French women make a ritual out of every meal. She knows we eat portions that are too big and food that is too bland. French women, on the other hand, stress flavor and variety over quantity and, therefore, are more satisfied with less. (Bland food and too much of one kind, a big bowl of pasta for example, breeds boredom, which leads you to alleviate it by eating more.) She knows our tendency to gorge ourselves on Snickers bars rather than savoring a single piece of fine dark chocolate. French women eat slowly and ‘’with all five senses.'’

Indeed, much is made of the superiority of French women in all things, from chewing to ‘’using the same scarf to create a different effect'’ to ‘’preserving spark and mystery'’ in long-term relationships. Apparently, they’re even better at being happy — ‘’the French woman understands intuitively that one does not laugh because one is happy; one is happy because one laughs.'’ This gets a tad tiresome, but I forgive Guiliano her patriotic fervor and her endless aphorisms because she is on to something. After all, I lost 10 pounds by walking off my daily pastry and eating small portions of once exotic dishes (at the university cafeteria they never filled your plate). Also, who can blame her for branding? If a lot of what she dispenses is universally sound advice with a French label, she’s smart to apply it. We may profess to despise her compatriots in all their arrogance, but secretly we still find Paris far sexier than South Beach.

I think our problem with the French has always been jealousy. We have an inferiority complex, at least stylewise. French women can do more with a scarf. We wish we had their innate chic, their effortless discipline, their easy appreciation of all things sensual — their impossible thinness. When I begged my parents to send me abroad, it was not to, say, Germany that I wished to go. Desperate to be sophisticated, it was French that I wanted to learn, France that I wanted to know. (Now of course, I wish I’d studied the far more useful Spanish.) Despite all our achievements in what used to be the exclusively French provinces of fashion, food and wine, the real milestones for many of us remain our first Chanel suit, our first sip of Petrus or Chateau d’Yquem, our first time at La Grenouille or La Tour d’Argent. And then there is the fact that while close to two-thirds of American adults are either obese or overweight, French women really don’t get fat.

The reason behind that most enviable difference, says Guiliano, is that ‘’French women take pleasure in staying thin by eating well, while American women see it as a conflict and obsess over it.'’ Put another way, ‘’French women typically think about good things to eat. American women typically worry about bad things to eat.'’ She says she is constantly appalled that American cocktail parties are filled with chatter about diets, a subject that shouldn’t be deemed proper conversation. She says eating in America has become ‘’controversial behavior'’ and that our obsession with weight is growing into nothing less than a ‘’psychosis'’ that she believes adds stress ‘’to our already stressful way of life,'’ which is ‘’fast erasing the simple values of pleasure.'’

She urges us to relax. Walk to the market, breathe in the fresh herbs, cook a good dinner, have a glass of wine or champagne (preferably Veuve Clicquot). Just sip it slowly (she makes hers last through a meal). She rejects the ‘’American rule'’ of ‘’no pain, no gain'’ and describes exercise machines as a ‘’vestige of Puritanism: instruments of public self-flagellation to make up for private sins of couch riding and overeating.'’ By all means go to the gym if you really love it, she says. Otherwise take the stairs and pick up some weights in the privacy of your own home. She finds walking an indulgence that allows time for ‘’freedom of thought,'’ and says French women walk an average of three times as much as American women do. She proudly reports that during the 2003 blackout she easily made it past the younger people in her building who were huffing and puffing on the stairs.

Sometimes these ‘’simple values'’ seem perhaps too simple. Many of us need the discipline of the gym and don’t have time to stroll to the open-air market (which probably doesn’t exist where we live) or set a proper table twice a day. My own early lessons in the civilized life sadly didn’t take. The summer I returned from France, a McDonald’s opened in our town and a Big Mac suddenly seemed as exotic as a nicoise salad. I failed miserably at what Guiliano calls ‘’recasting,'’ emphasizing quality over quantity in both meals and exercise.

But, armed with her book, I am willing to try again. There is no scientific ‘’food plan,'’ just suggestions and seemingly indulgent recipes, including one for fingerling potatoes and caviar. Guiliano reminds us that a half-dozen oysters contain only 60 or 70 calories, that soups fill you up and supply much-needed water to your body ('’The theory goes that the French, who eat soup up to five times a week for dinner, eat better and less.'’) Her mother’s ‘’soupe aux l�gumes'’ is worth the price of the book alone, but I am less sure about her own ‘’Chicken au Champagne,'’ which requires you to pour a cup of champagne over some chicken breasts and then broil them. After tasting one, I can say with certainty that I’d rather have the Champagne in the glass and that I would definitely not serve the chicken to company along with, as she suggests, brown rice and mushrooms. I’m also not entirely sure about Dr. Miracle’s apple ‘’tart'’ with its cabbage leaf ‘’pastry'’ (not for eating, necessarily, but ‘’for presentation'’). Still, sans cabbage leaf, it’s a good idea, and her snapper with almonds is good full stop, as is the delicious tagliatelle with lemon.

Guiliano ends the book with a list of more observations about French women. They don’t weigh themselves, they don’t snack all the time, they eat more fruit but would never give up their bread or other carbs. They dress to take out the garbage, they understand the importance of a good haircut and expensive perfume, they know love is slimming. Part of me wanted to throw the book across the room, while the other part was memorizing the list. I actually found myself resolving to learn to eat with all five senses — or at least to try to turn off ‘’All My Children'’ during lunch breaks. I did not even throw up when I got to the line that encouraged me to savor ‘’all the little things that make each day a miracle,'’ so that I may not need a shot of Scotch (French women don’t drink hard liquor) or a quart of Haagen-Dazs to get me over the top. At the very least, we would all do ourselves a favor to make like Colette, for whom the table was ‘’a date with love and friendship ‘’ instead of the root of all evil.

I know it’s been awhile since I have updated my website. So much has happened since my last entry. In the past year I have gotten a new car, a new Volkswagen Jetta (except it’s not new anymore since the 2005s came out). Quinn and I finished remodeling the kitchen. He has before and after pictures on his website. Hopefully soon I will have some pictures too. We will soon begin renovating our bathroom and closet as well. The most exciting development in my life,though, which exceeds the ones I just mentioned, is becoming a parent, and for the most part, a single parent. Quinn and I were blessed with our first child at the first of August.

It all began when Roselyn and James’s dog, Frisket, escaped from the backyard. Evidently in the dog world, Frisket is a head-turner, and she milks it for all it’s worth. She travels into every corner of the neighborhood to get the attention of every male dog she can find. Because of her promiscuity, we have been unable to determine who our child’s father is, and no one has come forward to claim her or her siblings.

When we decided to adopt Jameson, we were presented with the pleasure of naming her. We had already told James that we would name our first born after him. Since our puppy was a girl, we had to adapt it a little. Soon after we decided which of the puppies was ours, Wes decided that he wanted a puppy too. Just like some girlfriends have matching handbags, Wes and I have matching puppies. At least that’s how we pictured it to be….going to lunch at a restaurant with a patio with our well-behaved puppies sitting calmly at our feet. As you can probably imagine, that’s not quite how it has turned out.

As we have learned, puppies need a lot of attention. They do not come potty-trained. In fact, they can’t hold their bladders until at least 12 weeks old. They love to chew on everything, even money. Mine and Jameson’s relationship first developed to be sort of a love/hate connection. I could only sleep 3-4 hours at a time before needing to wake up to let Jameson potty, or clean up where she had already pottied. She has had a hard time differentiating between her furry chew toy and my furry rug. As I tried to teach her discipline, Quinn quickly defined his role as the spoiler who sweeps in on the weekends to let Jameson rule the house.

Through the good and the bad, I think Jameson is turning out to be a semi-trained dog with a lot of personality. To Quinn’s defense, it’s hard to look at these puppies and then punish them for doing something mischievous. They’re just so cute! These pictures were taken the first week we got them. They were six weeks old at the time. Now they are at least 3 months older and 6 pounds bigger. The short story is that it’s rough being a single mom, but I wouldn’t give it up for anything. There will be more pictures to come.
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When I was growing up my mom was a little strict about the exposure that my sister, my brother, and I had to vulgar media. As a result we owned every Disney movie known to humankind, and we were only allowed to watch movies with bad language, violence, or sexually explicit scenes once (it was usually during that first viewing that she realized it was something that we shouldn’t see). As a result, I developed a sneaky trait. I learned how to hide things from my mom, watch movies that I wanted when she was not at home, or just take them to my dad’s house since he was unaware of these rules that she was trying to implement. Well, I have to admit, many of the movies or TV shows I didn’t really like anyway, such as Jaws, The Simpsons, Dirty Dancing (oh wait, I did like that one) , so it was kind of a waste. But there was one cassette in particular that I loved that really brought out my rebellious side. I actually hold it in my mind as the key factor that developed my ability to like what I wanted and do what I wanted despite what anyone else thought. It was Madonna. I write this because last night I hit a milestone in my life that was more noteworthy for me to write about than my new car, our new kitchen, my job promotion (by the way, these are all things that have happened since my last entry about my trip to New York). I went to my very first Madonna concert - The Re-Invention Tour. As I watched the performance and danced and sang along at the top of my lungs to Vogue and Material Girl, I realized what an impact Madonna has had on my life and the person I have become. No longer do I have to sit in my room with the door locked with my little boom box turned down really low and pressed to my ear so I can whisper along to the lyrics without my mom hearing me and taking my beloved Madonna tape away from me again. No longer do I have to believe that something is distasteful, inappropriate, and thus not worth hearing, if it has bad words or vulgar messages. In fact, I have found that I like vulgar messages because they provoke thought and action. I loved the Madonna show because it had several political messages that are currently very controversial. I love her attitude and her ability to confront a situation regardless of whether she may offend others. This is what I have always loved about her, even though I could not verbalize it at the age of five. I feel liberated, like I have overcome an ever-weakening internal obstacle that tried to plague my development and turn me into a person who I’m not. I have finally seen Madonna in concert and I, Jodi Bell, loved it!

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Unfortunately I could not find a free picture of Madonna online that was from this decade, but I thought this was a good alternative. Her name is Madiva, and evidently she bought tickets to 35 shows on this tour and is wearing a different outfit to every one of them. Very ambitious, don’t you think?!

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As many already know, I took Quinn to New York City for his Christmas present. It was his first trip and my first time doing all the touristy stuff. We had a wonderful time and mostly great weather, except for the snow blizzard on the first day. Our hotel was so cool and trendy as it should be, since it was designed by Phillipe Starck. The rooms were super small, but very efficient.

From the pictures you can see that it was very windy on top of the Empire State Building.
It took several takes for us to get decent pictures, but the series of pictures really show what I mean when I say windy. The girl in the pictures is my friend Casey, who went to school with me at Georgia Tech. This was the first time I have seen her since we graduated; she decided she couldn’t handle us southerners anymore, and she moved back to Connecticut. She has the convenience of being able to not show up for work whenever she wants (which still isn’t very often, but at least she skipped a day to hang out with me). We had so much fun catching up.

Other than this trip, not much has been going on. I am still working too much, but soon we will get our priorities straight and get rid of the night job. We had a great Christmas, and I must say we were really good this year. We could hardly fit all of our presents in the car to come home. We are very lucky.

Oh yes, one more thing has happened recently. On December 23, 2003, my best girl friend, Jaclyn Berry, actually tied a man down for good. And he’s actually a really great man. So I am now preparing to be in a second wedding. At least my friends are nice enough to space out their weddings by a year or so. My sister could have made a full-time job out of being in weddings. I have always told her she should open her own bridal shop with all the gowns she owns. But I am very honored to be in Jaclyn’s wedding and also very proud of her for snagging such a great catch.

Until next time, congratulations Jaclyn!

I have been reluctant to update my website because I didn’t have anything interesting to say or any pictures to show. But after a quick browse through my computer, I found some from the beginning of summer that I never posted.
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Quinn took all of the photos except for the one with him in it. That explains why no one in the pictures was actually prepared to have their picture taken. By the way, these are from a “french kids” party that Wes had at the beginning of the summer. It was actually just a get-together of friends with lots of good food. Quinn and I have been planning to have one of these so-called get-togethers, but the closest we have come was a pre-Matrix Revolutions party. Considering that I was the only girl and also the only person who didn’t really understand computer-speak, I didn’t have much to contribute to the evening. The Matrix Revolutions was pretty good though, except for that nauseating love scene.

I still haven’t posted pictures from my friend Julie’s wedding, so I will save them for some time soon…just to heighten the level of anticipation.

As some of you MAY HAVE or HAVE NOT noticed, jodibell.com was down for a short while, while Quinn was in the middle of changing servers and whatnot. Georgia Tech deleted our accounts from existence, which also deleted Quinn’s access to run his server through Georgia Tech. Enough of this technical talk….

I know my website following has probably dropped dramatically since I never update it with any exciting news anymore, but hey! I had to join the real world at some point in time. While I am still here making comments about how exciting my life used to be, Roselyn (Quinn’s mom) and James are in Italy this week on vacation. So far they are having a blast, and Quinn and I are house-sitting and dog-sitting……coincidentally we haven’t seen one of the dogs for two days (whose idea was it to leave the two of us in charge?!)

By the way, my life still does have exciting points in it, so don’t let me fool you - I got my hair cut yesterday, Quinn and I are gonna catch a couple of flicks at the Decatur Independent Film Festival this week, and we both got off work next Saturday and Sunday to enjoy a real weekend. Oh yeah, we are also car-sitting for Roselyn and James, and we have fallen in love with the ‘92 BMW convertible. We fight over who gets to drive every day, and I am sure life without the top down just won’t be as exciting once Roselyn and James come back and pry the keys out of our hands.

Until next time…..Ciao!

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Alana is here right now getting help from CBQ with setting up her weblog since she is leaving for Paris soon. Gosh, has it been that long since I was getting ready to go to Paris. And it has also been that long since this picture was taken the last week I was in Paris. For those of you who don’t know these people, these are my friends Annie and Catie. We were at a going away party for ourselves the last week we were in Paris.

Alana will be moving into my old apartment so you can read about her experiences soon. Life here is treating me really well right now, but I guess I will always miss Paris. By the way, I got a new job. I just finished my first week. I must say that it is a pretty cool job, besides the full work week and driving in rush hour traffic, which are pretty much the qualities of a “real” job. Quinn and I are doing well and looking for places to live, so there’s not much here to complain about.

Oh yeah, also, congratulations to my friend Colin who got married today. The wedding was so touching that I cried before the bride even walked down the isle (so did Colin…..hee hee).

Until next time……

As some of you already know (from the email I sent out), Wes and I are participating in Aids Walk 2003. We have both set a fundraising goal of $200, and so far I am the only person logged as donating money in my name, or even viewing my webpage. If anyone is interested in even looking at the site, here is the link: https://www.kintera.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=26298&lis=0&supId=7049646

Hope everyone is doing well….as for me I am interviewing with a company called Poliform. I am very interested in what they do, and would love to be a part of it. I hope they feel that way too!
Other than that, I have been working on my new website design, which should be in the works soon. Quinn and I have been, and will be, very busy with other projects for awhile, so the new website doesn’t have priority right now, but it is coming.
Cheers.

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