My CHOICE Campsite

My CHOICE Campsite
Where it all got started!

Saturday, October 9, 2010

RELAXCATION at my favorite CHOICE campsite!

It's been a great weekend here at the Comfort Inn on Secor Road in Toledo, Ohio. Last night I relaxed watching Bill Maher's "Real Time" on HBO, then went to sleep in the newly decorated room that is often my room when I come here. Before retiring to watch cable and go to sleep, I informed the members of "Urban Campers on Tagged" that I'm urban camping this weekend to rest up before starting a five-day work week Monday for the first time in two years. Sure, they're only half-days, but the point is there are five of them!

This morning, I woke up early as usual. Watched television until seven, the took a quick shower and went to the breakfast buffet to make my waffle! I love that waffle machine. I can honestly say that I do more "cooking" while urban camping that I do any other time. Wonder if that waffle iron could make 'smores? Of course, I had coffee, and sausage (extracted from sausage biscuits) with my waffle. I also brought back a boiled egg, an apple, a banana, a roll, and some Frosted Mini-Wheats to my room for lunch and snacks later. But before I left the lobby, I talked to the hotel staff, all of whom know me well, "people watched" (and was also the object of a "people watch" of a shy lone man whom I swear I've seen on Tagged!), and just listened to CNN's quack doctor talking about some subjects even I had to admit were rather interesting - what sane man would turn down a cabinet post just because he makes more money being a "network" medical expert?

Back in the room, I went back to sleep for a few hours, then woke up, watched TV and checked my email and Tagged messages. One message inspired me to meditate. So, at 2:00, I went into deep meditation, plotting my next "self-help" book on spiritual ascendance. The next thing I knew, it was 5pm! So, I ordered my favorite steak burger from the Ramada next door and ate it while working on the computer. I'm finishing up my computer time now, so I can settle down to some more relaxing time with the television before retiring for the night. This is my idea of relaxing. In the morning, I'll wake up early, take a long, hot bath, have breakfast, then come back and pack up to go home. Monday morning, I'll be at work bright and early AND refreshed and rejuvenated!

Why I won't be blogging from Hometown Inn in Flint, Michigan

I thought it was a good idea. I saw the expertly laid out profile page promoting Hometown Inn in Flint, Michigan, on Tagged and, since I've had absolutely no response from ANY Choice Hotel to blog from any of their hotels, I decided to offer the owner, manager, or representative of Hometown Inn in Flint that opportunity. I sent several messages and thought perhaps I was making some headway when whomever joined Tagged to promote Hometown Inn in Flint joined my group, "Urban Campers on Tagged."

Then I got a message from the creator of that beautiful promotional profile asking me for over $6,000 to pay off his credit card debt. See, Tagged is a dating site and the underlying message in that request was, "I'd never date YOU and the only thing you can do for ME is give me money!" Had I approached this person as if interested in him as a love interest or even flirted with him, I'd understand the rebuff. But mine was merely a networking move trying to connect with someone to propose a mutually beneficially arrangement: invite me to your hotel for a weekend and I'll promote you in my blog.

Now, I wouldn't stay at Hometown Inn in Flint (or anywhere else, for that matter) unless someone paid me quite a hefty sum there. As I recently conveyed to the creator of the Tagged profile, if that's how he treats people on a site where he's trying to promote his hotel, I can only imagine how he treats CUSTOMERS he finds less than appealing! Besides, when I called the hotel to try to contact him directly when I got no replies to my initial messages, whoever answered the phone was so unprofessional, I thought I'd dialed the wrong number.

MY RECOMMENDATION: Avoid this hotel like the plague! So far, the only thing I've been impressed with from Hometown Inn in Flint is its profile page on Tagged.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Effortlessly Moving My Hotel Room from Crash Pad to Spa Retreat/Think Tank OR Going from “Stay”cating to Urban Camping in My Favorite Urban Campsite

[Excerpted from How I Became an Urban Camper available at lulu.com]

I love watching television, and cable TV and I are on really good terms. Due to financial considerations, I went from having every cable channel available to just basic cable as cable costs continue to soar. So, staying at a hotel where I can watch HBO is always a treat. There’s always at least one movie that I want to see while there, as well as some of HBO’s other programming and specials. However, when I first started actually staying in my hotel room instead of just using it as a place to sleep and change clothes, rest and relaxation were the main reasons for my stays. I’d bring all of my spa products – shower gels, lotions, nail care kit, shampoos – and favorite snacks and beverages.

I also stopped going out to the local restaurants in the area and getting food delivered so I could spend every minute possible in my hotel room. I have developed a relationship with my Cottage Inn delivery guy who gets my order to me in record time due to my generous tips. I’m partial to their hot wings, Greek salad, and subs. I know most of the hotel staff, also, and they seem to be glad to see me when I arrive. I started taking a class for work and found out I could get a lot more work done researching and writing papers at the Comfort Inn in a quiet room with no ringing telephone, street traffic from the busy thoroughfare where I live near downtown Toledo, and sounds of the neighborhood children playing, which I actually enjoy when I’m not trying to think.

I was at the Comfort Inn writing a paper for class on Valentine’s Day in 2007, when the whole city closed down due to a huge snow storm. I got an “A” in my class. The next year, I had to take another class and got a laptop to take an online course. Of course, I spent many hours at the hotel using its wireless network to participate in discussion threads and complete assignments for my marketing class at the University of Phoenix. When I retired in 2008, from both my week day and weekend jobs, I started working part time as a consultant and using my writing talent to re-write a play I’d written two decades earlier and to write a curriculum guide for professionals in my field.

I completed both the play re-write and the curriculum guide at the Secor Comfort Inn. I also used the wireless service to create a website, start several blogs, including one in OpenSalon on salon.com (I’m FrogTown Diva), and publish my curriculum guide on scribd.com. Finding my home away from home the perfect place to create and write, I finally did something I’d wanted to do for years. I wrote a novel New Year’s week 2009. It took only four days because I’d been plotting the story in my head for over twenty-five years. I also wrote a couple of inspirational books(“Finding God’s Secret Place: A Spiritual Journey,” published on scribd.com and “Ten Cent Faith,” published on lulu.com as is my novel, all under pen names).

While at breakfast in the lobby, I struck up a conversation with a guy from Mississippi who was in town on a work assignment and when he found out I’m a writer, he told me about an online publication that was looking for reporters. He had been unable to find the publication’s website, so I gave it a try since I have fierce googling skills. I found the site and submitted an application. I got a job with the publication and wrote my first half dozen or so articles at the Secor Comfort Inn. I also wrote more plays there, including some one-act dramas I submitted to a theatre festival for inclusion in a readers’ theatre series, and created some proposals for my consultant job.

Now, if I have work to do that requires time, focus, a quiet setting, and intense thought, I just check into the hotel. I’ve even used my ChoiceRewards points whenever I need to do a project. It works every time. Only sometimes I go to the hotel to work and end up just resting and relaxing because I’m so tired. Who knew retirement would be so busy? There are still times when I go to the hotel just to rest and relax, but either way I always enjoy my stay. I even stayed at a Comfort Inn when I visited my home state, Texas, to go to my 40th Class Reunion July Fourth weekend in 2009, and spent a couple of nights there while in Houston. Unfortunately, I didn’t pay for the room so I didn’t get any rewards points. But I did get some when I stayed in a Quality Inn in Winston-Salem, North Carolina the next month while attending a theatre festival there.

How Toledo's Secor Comfort Inn Became My Second Home

[Excerpted from How I Became an Urban Camper, available for purchase at lulu.com]

I live in the Great Lakes region where camping is a way of life. Every weekend during the summer months, thousands travel from urban areas to the countryside to camp out in RV’s, mobile homes, cabins, weekend homes, or the dozens of resorts clustered around the lakes. Lake Erie is nearest Toledo and there is a thriving camping industry that centers around our local Great Lake and its tributaries.
I actually belong to a resort located on the Portage River that leads directly to Lake Erie. It’s only forty minutes from my house to a nice little cottage close to the water; however, when not working I was rehearsing with a music group I sang with for the first six and a half years I lived in the city, then attended the local university for two years to work on a post-graduate degree and after that, joined a theatre group that rehearsed on the weekends, and then became a weekend reporter for a local weekly newspaper and for six years worked seven days a week, unable to get away for the weekend very often.

So, I found another way to “get away” without leaving town. Instead of staying in a cottage or the resort’s hotel, I started to take short “staycations” in a local hotel. Initially, I chose one close to home, a Comfort Inn on Alexis Road in Toledo, Ohio. It’s close, convenient, reasonably priced, and offers a continental breakfast. It’s also located on a street that has a number of restaurants where I could have lunch and/or dinner.

I enjoyed getting away from home while remaining in town so I could rehearse on the weekends. Then, I moved to another hotel in the same chain on Secor Avenue that was within walking distance of a movie theater. There are also several restaurants nearby, including one at a hotel next door.

It was great! I could go to a movie, have dinner, and walk back to my hotel. Unfortunately, the theater closed; but by the time it closed, I was hooked on my new Comfort Inn that’s smaller and friendlier than the one close to home, and is also located in a more central location to get to other places I needed to go, including the library at the university where I was enrolled and where I needed to go on weekends to do research. Another phenomenal thing happened after the theater closed. Eventually, I cared less and less about leaving the hotel and it became first, a place of refuge, then a work place.

Once my hotel stays graduated from using a hotel room as a place to crash after going other places to my primary destination for either rest and reflection or work and inspiration, I found myself spending more and more time there.