Our week in Wisconsin was wonderful. Laura's first plane trip wasn't exactly a disappointment as much as ninety minutes of nothing, each way. We departed in dense fog, we returned in dense snow. Our trip home was delayed so long by two de-iceings and concurrent closure of the Milwaukee airport for runway plowing I was afraid the flight would be cancelled. It was merely late. Pilots want to be home as much as passengers.
If you've been here a while, you know Pat and Ann. They help people and rescue dogs. The former is their nature; the latter came their way their first winter in Wisconsin, twenty years ago. Pat realized half a dozen huskies kenneled behind a barn he passed going to work actually were abandoned, no humans left.
A veterinary friend helped him free the dogs and move them to a kennel erected at Pat and Ann's old farm. The huskies had several more good years, though never socialized. The last year they presented their saviors a litter of pups, one of whom survived. Fluke became a house dog, and has been gone only a few years now.
All the dogs in the house learn their place in the pack. Some go to the outdoor kennel, which has become an eight pack unit with insulated dog houses and heated water bowls. Let's just say they failed at living in the house, though some Malmutes, huskies and Samoyeds only came in to say hello and gratefully return to Wisconsin winters outdoors.
Probably my best group portrait of some house residents. Back left, Shotzy, back right, Chica. Front left, Sawyer, front right, Freija. Shotz and Chica are border collie mix. Sawyer is a shaved to the scalp golden, Freija is a husky mix.
For the last ten years Pat and Ann own a commercial kennel and grooming business. Shotz was boarded there, and abandoned by her owner. Freija was found along a road several years ago, injured and pregnant. She was rescued by the ASPCA, but failed several adoption attempts. Saved by Pat and Ann.
Sawyer is a golden retriever with textbook ADHAD to an elevated degree. He has flunked out of three aide dog schools. According to Pat, he is brilliant and unfocused. The last school that sent him back was Cadaver Dog school. He could find them, call for assistance, then leave to chase a butterfly.
Chica is an ASPCA reject. Pat and Ann occasionally fostered for them. Chica was returned from her adoptions. Ann says "she's a border collie; what do they expect?" Of course she herds anything that moves.
Here we have Henry, Sawyer and Freija. Henry is a full bore Springer. Another "what did they expect?" story. An old couple owned a Springer from their younger days. He grew old and sedentary; they thought they'd get him a companion. They forgot their old guy was strong and on the go in his younger days. They couldn't handle the new pup. Henry is probably five or six now, and I make sure I am fastened to something when he comes by.
Here are Chica, who you're already met, and Shikera, a Yorkipoo. She's likable, but I've never grasped the attraction. Shikera also was not reclaimed from boarding. All these dogs are in constant re-training, through no fault of their own. In the picture with Henry, Pat is giving a hand signal to one or the other of the dogs.
The dogs earn their place in the home and the pack through good behavior. It is their misfortune the original owners acquired them for the wrong reason. It is their great good fortune Pat and Ann will see them through to the end, or find them a suitable adoptive family.
Pat and Ann used to say to the dogs, five hundred dollars and you're gone. Do you remember the beautiful silver husky, maybe five years ago? He had osteoarthritis at a young age, broke a hind leg that did not knit well. Eventually it was amputated. Pat or Ann helped him up and down the steps for another year or two. The ledger pages apparently disintegrate at five hundred dollars.
If you take in an animal, the responsibility is until death do you part.
Shikera spent the week with Laura, on the sofa, while Laura and Pat watched (or re-watched) Pat's extensive collection of everything cinema.
Miscellaneous left over dog pictures. I never had a head on opportunity with Henry; always in motion unless commanded to sit. I never got in front of him. He is fifty pounds of muscle and steel, waiting to be sent on a job.
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Sunday, December 31, 2017
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Winter
I wonder how I will deal with winter this winter. I don’t like
it. I looked at the weather map to ascertain Christmas in Wisconsin. Christmas
in NE Ohio should be quite nice and thirty-ish. Wisconsin is a longitude
higher, and colder. Stuck in there between two giant, cold bodies of water,
where the soil is thinner and the growing season shorter.
Ann lives in the midst of a lot of farmland, and I must say,
the crops look mighty fine in the summer. You can perhaps see, I’m close to the
end of Prairie Fires. It draws
together close to a century of research and history of the geography of the Great Plains. The impact on natives of western expansion is treated, though
lightly. However, that was not the intent of the book, or those were the
sections that caught me dozing. I will be reading it again. I’m taking Seedtime on the Cumberland to Wisconsin to
read.
The good news about winter; it is the zenith of fall, the
apex of the roll to green leaves and spring flowers; the beginning of getting
through January and February. That makes the news from Washington no better,
and does not lighten our responsibility to resist and protest. I read a small
bit about a resister getting through to his congressional office to lodge his
protest, being heard and having his comments written down.
Perhaps we are past the days of Paul Ryan shutting down his
devices of communication, resulting in postcards to his driveway. But, no time
is a good time to lighten up on DACA, tax overhaul fallout, continuing sexual
misconduct allegations. I thought about
America First, the other day, as America leading the way among a bunch of
rutting deer, banging heads, tangling anglers and leading a world display of
strutting, pardon the diminution of nouns, cocks.
Civility, decency, diplomacy are diminished or discarded.
This country once set a better standard for behavior. Now we seem to be leading
the charge of oafs. Holding our cell phones, I might add. Let’s all have a nice
Christmas and New Year, and then start the roll again. Let every representative know our collective
opinion of this tax bill, and ACA repeal.
That seems to be my holiday wish, lucid or not. We will
enjoy Laura’s first plane ride and have a good week in Wisconsin. Along with my
new book, perhaps I’ll learn how to use my tablet. And, remember my Blogger
password.
I could not invent a metaphor for winter that involved a ground level snowball in Washington, D.C., so enjoy Frazz for the intrinsic meaning you always find.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Almost out of our hands
Blocks laid out on the floor yesterday
Pressing seams
Pinning
More pinning
Sewing
Finished top
Backing
Cutting, pinning, ironing, sewing. That's all it takes. This will go to Jan this week, for quilting on Friday.
I sewed all the long rows to their lavender headers and footers. Laura pinned and sewed all the rest. I ironed a lot, and that's really tiring. Last picture is Kay, folding the fabric that will be the back of the quilt.
So, who sees the one block that is a sewing mistake in the first picture. I saw it as soon as I looked at the picture, and went to tell Laura. But, she had already spotted and fixed it.
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Lucky
Invariably I’ve found myself on the right side of lucky. It’s
what happens when you expect the best and deal with the worst. This is a light
hearted post, but I want to say one more time, a resounding YES to the women of Alabama.
We all have
been making and using luck for close to a year now.
Luck can’t be used up, only used. I love the stuff.
I’m descending here, as in a balloon. From the big concept
of luck to little bits that can be pieced together. How lucky I have nothing
much to do and all day to do it. Have a granddaughter who began at age seven to
piece quilts, knows how to match points and iron seams. How lucky for our
friend who is a charming scatterbrain that she mentioned in the nick of time
she wanted to make a quilt for her mother for Christmas.
The best luck of this quilt is that Kay can sit on Christmas
day, as the household bustles around her, and chat with her mother and sew down
the quilt binding.
I stopped to write this, waiting for Kay and her boys to come
work on the quilt. Laura is leaving for a day with her mother, and maybe
siblings, so the little house will only be close to bursting at the seams. The
blocks all are sewn, trimmed, pressed, laid out as they will be sewn together.
After Kay sees the proposed layout, we will stack up and label each row, 1, 2, etc. But, more sewing than already done lies ahead.
Each block
will be separated by a strip, called a sashing, a half to an inch wide. We
haven’t decided yet. It will affect the overall size of the quilt, of course. A
block will be set at the intersection of the sashings around each block. My
sister calls these the cornerstones. It’s part of the process of keeping a
quilt square, a solid piece that can be quilted without shifting.
A quilt is a piece of construction, like anything else. Do
it right, it’s done forever. It will be admired for generations, and folks will
say, “How lucky you are to still have this.”
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Amused, and actually laughing
Awhile back I swabbed my cheek and sent it off to find out
who I am. Well, let me tell you. Forty percent of my genes originated in Kenya.
Less than ten percent are Western European. The majority of the rest of my maternal DNA is
Eastern European. Latvia, Slovenia. Hungary, Croatia. And on and on. And my
mother-in-law thought she married a Bohunk.
This all is my “motherline”. Lacking a Y chromosome, my
father’s ancestry cannot be traced. I would need to persuade a male relative to
contribute a swab of cheek cells, too. I
am totally out of brothers, and down to three nephews, one of whom might be
willing to participate.
My mother was two percent Irish, half Ulster and half
Cork. My Dad was all Irish. I think. It
may be worth asking my nephew to participate, simply to learn where those
ancestors migrated from, to Ireland.
And, how about Sweet Home, Alabama. I am so proud of all the
African American women and men who sent Doug Jones to the senate to fill
Jefferson Davis Sessions’ vacated seat. A lot of groups reclaiming their voice.
I went to breakfast this morning with the friend I first
made in the counselor’s offices; the one who got a sweet note from my brother
Mel, when they were fifth graders. Most of my friends are like minded, and Linn
and I exchanged a happy high five across the table this morning. Mel reveled in
politics; Watergate was his specialty. Were he alive today he probably would be
constantly apoplectic. Mel had one daughter; Walt had the three boys.
The quilt we commenced last night apparently is a “meant to
be”, too. You know how some things just fall into place. Simple pinwheels
though they be, Laura is setting the blocks so nicely that it hurts my heart to
quilt this with a sewing machine. My sister quilts professionally, but I know
full well her schedule is booked six months in advance.
Laura, sewing blocks last night
I also know things happen, so I called her today and told
her about the quilt that deserves professional quilting—before Christmas. I
explained Laura’s beautiful sewing (Jan expected no less; Laura was the
meticulous student!), and said my plan was to ask Kay to present the quilt top
only to her mother and then bring it back from Texas to be quilted, or, was
there the teeniest, tiniest possibility Jan had time to squeeze in a not
difficult queen sized quilt before Kay and her boys left for Texas.
Finished pile right, a few left to do, left
If we deliver the quilt next week, before Friday, Jan can do
it on Friday. We certainly can deliver it in good time. Laura and I fly to
Wisconsin that Friday, but Kay can find her way back to Jan’s studio, in plenty
of time before she leaves Saturday to drive to Texas. I do like this sort of present.
Why we cover potential cat futons
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Yesterday yields tomorrow, which is today
For the first time in six years, Laura was sent home from school yesterday. I could tell you, for not wearing enough clothes, but that's not the real picture.
The phone rang at 8 a.m., when I am barely considering being up. The kid was sick, and number nine to be sent home, before first bell. When I picked her up, she was wearing those stupid leggins. Possibly the fleece lined pair, otherwise, they're thin. A summer tee. The plaid blanket she received for her birthday. No coat. Less than twenty degrees out. Apparently delirious when she left, but was reprimanded for thin thinking, nevertheless.
Laura went back to bed until supper time, and so did I. In case I was catching something. After supper, Kay came over and, in her inimitable way, made my day.
She wants to make a quilt for her mother for Christmas. Math equals 25-12=13 days, if she gets up early to wrap it. Or, a day on the plane to Texas. Whatever. She thinks she and Laura can construct and quilt it in two evenings and one weekend. She might as well be a daughter of mine!
Today I started putting together the pinwheels. I'm not strong enough to rotary cut them, but I can sew them this far and then work on the cut pieces.
It is snowing something fierce, too. I have to get Laura after school to stop at her sponsor's house (academic year abroad) to get her paperwork signed. No, my steps are not shoveled, my car not cleared. I think I'll start at 2 to leave by 2:30. I need to engage a snow shoveler.
12:30. I have ninety minutes to sew some more blocks.
Leftover picture of Laura's cheesecake.
I bought her a spring form pan several cheese cakes ago.
Brilliant.
The phone rang at 8 a.m., when I am barely considering being up. The kid was sick, and number nine to be sent home, before first bell. When I picked her up, she was wearing those stupid leggins. Possibly the fleece lined pair, otherwise, they're thin. A summer tee. The plaid blanket she received for her birthday. No coat. Less than twenty degrees out. Apparently delirious when she left, but was reprimanded for thin thinking, nevertheless.
Laura went back to bed until supper time, and so did I. In case I was catching something. After supper, Kay came over and, in her inimitable way, made my day.
She wants to make a quilt for her mother for Christmas. Math equals 25-12=13 days, if she gets up early to wrap it. Or, a day on the plane to Texas. Whatever. She thinks she and Laura can construct and quilt it in two evenings and one weekend. She might as well be a daughter of mine!
Today I started putting together the pinwheels. I'm not strong enough to rotary cut them, but I can sew them this far and then work on the cut pieces.
It is snowing something fierce, too. I have to get Laura after school to stop at her sponsor's house (academic year abroad) to get her paperwork signed. No, my steps are not shoveled, my car not cleared. I think I'll start at 2 to leave by 2:30. I need to engage a snow shoveler.
12:30. I have ninety minutes to sew some more blocks.
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Birthday party survival plan
Our neighbor Cathy recognized my distress, and offered to organize it. Back when my girls were in school, every birthday was celebrated at a restaurant of their choice with friends of their choice. They thought it was really cool, and you know what this teen-age inept mother thought.
This is what Cathy did. But, wait, it gets better. And, keep an eye on the helium balloons that go missing.
The party. Edibles were East of Chicago pizza, which we highly recommend. It's almost as good as Laura's homemade. And, root beer and cherry coke. And, thank God, water. And, Laura's fab cheese cake. Gone, gone, gone. No pictures.
Some of the prezzies.
We (the young women) saw Coco in one theater, and the organizer and her grateful neighbor saw The Orient Express in the theater next door.
Orient ended fifteen or so minutes before Coco, and Cathy and I stood in the lobby looking for a current picture of Kenneth Branaugh. Well, Cathy was all over her phone; I was amused. He did come up looking OK, though.
Then, Coco began exiting. First, a hall of adults, moving quickly and looking backward, followed by such howling and wailing. Literally, a sound chamber of banshees. The Coco adults were gone before our six teens arrived, some supporting others.
Laura, Lexie and Meredith were holding up Anneka, Annie and Kayla, the howlers. That was so SAD, the three wailed in unison. Cathy and I had splitting sides and sore ribs, both from holding it in and losing our composure.
It was dark and it was snowing, and it was time to get back, so three teens with composure and two adults with some composure, herded the three sad-o's to our cars. I had Meredith, Anneka and Annie. Before the door was shut, Anneka swooped up the balloons from the floor. "They're still here," triumphant and recovered.
"How will you get a hole in it?" Annie's little voice. "Just like that!" Alvin's chipmunk voice rejoined. "Oh, My, God," pass it to me. Don't let any out. Three chipmunks travelling home. Grandma (Jo by now) in the front seat, ribs aching, eyes streaming, Bob Dylan, Everybody Must Get Stoned...
Say ON-A-Kuh. It makes the story even better.
Saturday, December 9, 2017
Rangers
I was behind a car with an interesting logo that took me a
couple of stop signs to make out. It was in honor of, a memorial to a Ranger,
dead in the line of duty. I glanced down and saw the license plate announced a
Gold Star family. I wished them peace.
There always have been rangers, in the definition as
the men ahead, finding the way, forestalling trouble, mediating. I realized
that definition when I was eight or nine, and allowed into the “adult” section
of our public library. Having no idea how to assimilate all those books, I
decided it best to start at A and read them all.
In short order I reached Altscheler and his series on the
Ohio and Kentucky frontiers. Astounding to learn Ohio was wooded across,
buffalo (bison) were here when the French priests came to proselytize the
natives as long ago as the sixteenth century. I devoured every book I could
find, and followed the exploits of mostly white men conquering the country. Jim
Bridger, a hero, John Fremont not so much. Probably because Fremont was a
politician, too.
The flip side of settlement didn’t escape me. I especially
followed the history of natives in my state. Ohio has fascinating local
history. The Delaware tribe was a loose association of smaller tribes that
intermingled freely. One young man fell out with his clan and joined another.
He rose to be that clan’s chief, but always was the newcomer, and Ohio has a
town named for him, Newcomerstown.
The history of our natives, people too, was heart wrenching.
Those of us past middle age know the story of the Trail of Tears or the Battle
of Broken Knee, which was the same kind of massacre as the shooting at the
Florida night club, but not preserved in history as a terror attack by our
government.
I was much longer understanding what the movement of peoples
did to the land. The prairie sod had to be broken, a job unlike tilling most
anywhere east of the Mississippi. The “breaking plow” broke the farmers who set
out to claim the west. That migration was relentless. One of Laura Ingalls
Wilder’s books dealt specifically with Pa, realizing he’d homesteaded in a
reservation portion of Nebraska, and moving the family back to Minnesota.
The damage to the land didn’t occur to me until junior high
school, when we learned about contour plowing, to conserve lands from wind and
rain. I think that was the aha moment
that set me rethinking what I knew. So, plowing caused the dust bowl!
If I had it to do over, my ideal life would be anthropology,
archeology, history, ruminating over what I know. Then I had a family to care
for, and so I’ve come out the other end, older, probably wiser. I think back on
that first book, reading about the fictional ranger, Henry Ware, and his
exploits in my part of this country. A simple little book, but it set my
pattern of reading all these years.
I wondered how long “Rangers” have been a branch of our
army, and looked it up. Wickipedia says the United States Army Rangers were
established in 1943 (the year I was born), and are headquartered out of Fort
Benning, Georgia, home of my dad’s army career. But, their history predates the
Revolutionary War. There is mention of Army Rangers as early as the French and
Indian Wars (another fascinating chapter of our history.)
The first name of the young man on the memorial logo was
Benjamin. I wish his family peace.
Friday, December 8, 2017
A surprise look back
A card from my neighbor, Cathy, came in the mail yesterday.
It’s our year captured in a picture on the 4th of July. We were
invited by my friend to watch Fairlawn’s parade from the comfort of the front
yard of her husband’s office. My friend and her husband have suntanned faces because
they eschew social media, but the smiles started with Cathy, and went all the
way down the line.
The card made me smile, and not because I have more than
half a head of hair now. It’s the blazing smile from Laura, on the 4th of July. Six months ago. At her therapist
appointment this week Laura mentioned Grandma had been angry with her one time
the whole year, and it was because her clothes were all over the floor.
How I laughed. Her clothes have been ankle deep on her
bedroom floor since we moved in. I could not care less. I was “angry” that day
I could not pull her back from social media. “Oh, Grandma had a flashback,”
said Mrs. A. “What’s a flashback?,” from Laura.
I took a big breath and said “Driving an hour to see you in
a locked ward. No shoe laces, no belt, and, God forbid, no chap stick.”
“Oh,” said she. “I don’t remember that. Was that the
hospital where they gave me Vaseline to use? They were pretty nice there.”
Laura thinks it’s OK her phone lives in my room half of
every day, though she also says she’s busy enough now to only use it when she
needs it. Knowing she puts it up to go to work and turns it off to go to
meetings makes me think the same.
Tonight the birthday girl is in the kitchen with her friend
Victoria, making pasta alfredo for supper. Then they will make cheesecake for
the birthday party tomorrow. Victoria can’t make the party, so she came along
tonight. The two of them can be up most of the night, laughing. That’s what
sixteen year olds do.
Thursday, December 7, 2017
After lunch with Ruth
Monday I took Toby to the vet for booster shots to allow him
a week at camp while Laura and I fly to Wisconsin. On tip toe I nudged the
carrier down from the top shelf, and landed it on the washer. I found the cat,
stashed him, and left the laundry room, to his howls, to finish up to
leave. Went back to retrieve the cat, and found him glaring at me from the
kitchen floor.
I told him what will happen to his special, and expensive
cat carrier. He walked away. Getting him to the vet in half a carrier was no
picnic.
Tuesday Laura’s psychologist asked me into the session at
the outset, intending to schedule out a dismissal program for Laura. But, we
told her about spending a year abroad, commencing in six or seven months, and
Mrs. A was as pleased as I am. We worked out everything I should know about a
support system wherever she may be. We’ll see Mrs. A monthly, until Laura goes,
and all will be well.
Yesterday I saw my lovely rheumatologist, who now has an
x-ray of my decrepit shoulder, so she “would know what to do.” After discussion
of all the failed options to date, I now have an appointment with a shoulder
orthopedic surgeon to discuss his take on arthroscopic removal of one large and
many small bone spurs in residence in my shoulder socket.
Today I had lunch with Ruth. Ruth would make a bad week good
and a good week over the moon. We had so much catching up, we were in the
restaurant almost two hours. It’s a new one for both of us, Lager & Vine. How about that for two
old ladies, though I know Ruth will have her martini at four. I miss lager,
but that’s the price of decent drugs. Al Franken is on the television,
resigning. My clay footed god.
I took my first selfie with the new camera. Far easier than
the last phone, after I found where not to put my fingers. Next time I’ll work
out the glamour part.
On the way home I stopped at Ace, the Place with the
Friendly Hardware Man, and bought a bottle of gorilla glue with an applicator
brush. Tonight Laura and I will modify Mr. Razor Toes’ travel abode. I’m
thinking a strip of gorilla glued fabric, inside and out, and you know who will
not get through the old slit. If he keeps slitting the screen, I have lots of fabric
and know where to buy glue. He’ll wish he never planned an escape from
Alcatraz.
Speaking of Laura, tomorrow is her sixteenth birthday. What
a difference a year makes! All the egg shells I walked on last year are gone; a
whole new person lives here, now. I spent the rest of the afternoon at Cathy’s,
planning pizza and a movie for six. The six will see Coco; Cathy and I will be next door, watching Murder on the Orient Express. Cathy gave me three napkin choices; I
picked the one on top. It seems so right.
Monday, December 4, 2017
A word or two about slogging on
Perhaps the real methodologists among us will throw up hands and leave at the end of the next paragraph--or not.
I have resigned myself to seeing no more spectacular results
until this time next year. But, fifty six weeks down, forty eight to midterm
elections is a sterling hall mark; a continuing rally cry for the way forward.
This business of inching forward, carrying on, moving up seems relentlessly
slow.
In spite of our gains in the November ballot, the GOP mowing machine moves on. Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryon did stick with Trump’s
coat tails just to get the tax bill passed, and it was done. The bill will be
reconciled and effected, and no matter the small concessions to humanity, the
huge scope of the bill is not for decency, but strangulation of the middle
class on down, to their last penny.
It will be another year before we can go back to the polls
and regain our ability to begin a decade of cleaning up. But, the year will
send even more to the polls who find they must repeal Trump’s tax cuts and use
the revenue to expand Medicare, strengthen Social Security and revitalize the
social security net. Those last words are straight from Slate magazine, together with the notion the Republicans have delivered,
and now will pay their piper.
No question I am sending up the same flag, singing the
old song. But I do want to add a personal note to why I know we can finish
this.
In the last seven years I suffered two major, potentially life
ending brain injuries. Life ending. Final curtain. Hasta la vista. And I’m
still typing today. The reason: medical intervention, medical
treatment, and, finally, dogged determination, complete resolution to reach a
reasonable outcome.
I know it is possible to regain speech, thought, physical coordination,
balance, mobility. It doesn’t happen overnight. In fact, it is an
inch by inch by inch, never ending struggle. In fact, it never ends. In fact, I
still struggle for words and look up synonyms for a word I hope is close, until
I find a good one. If this were twenty years ago, believe me, I would be
looking in Webster’s, not on line. But, I would be looking.
The day after the day after the last presidential election,
I quoted Woody Guthrie and Joe Hill. “I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night,
alive as he could be. ‘But Joe,’ said I, ‘you’re ten years dead!’ ‘I never
died,’ said he.” Organize!
Keep up our good work of calling, writing, protesting,
supporting our elected representatives. Just don’t quit. Some of us may not get
to the finish line of this long recovery, but most of us will. Don’t quit.
Carry On.
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Whirlwind for a week or two
It’s Sunday night, I understand. We just had supper, and are
grateful. Both had mighty slim pickin’s for lunch. Last week a whirlwind. The
upcoming week spinning faster. Today we
were dropped into the interviews for Laura’s year abroad.
Saturday generally is peaceful, collected. Some shopping.
Some cleaning. Some interesting other stuff. But yesterday I decided, time to
bite the bullet, go to the phone store and pay a bazillion dollars to replace
Laura’s broken phone.
She dropped it and shattered the top, which she kept
together for months with clear packing tape. However, the phone loses charge
quickly. Actually, that works well, since the phone lives in my room twelve
hours a day, because with absolutely no other diversion, Laura sinks into the
phone.
Social media is a siren song, and I bet the worst problem
parents deal with. After my last scare, early this summer, when I couldn’t
think my way through either of our problems, I simply confiscated her phone
twelve hours a day. She gets it from six a.m. to six p.m. I’ve been told it was
brilliant. I know it saved both our sanities.
The phone needs replaced, and sooner rather than later. Saturday was the day. I had her research what she wanted. I relinquished my card first to buy out the remainder of her phone. That hurt. The young man came from the stock room with her heart’s desire. Oh, yes, and mine, too, as my old phone is out of contract, and I figured I might as well upgrade to a MotoZ. Oh, yes, and the Hasselblad, too.
Laura’s new phone is like hobnailed boots. Apparently three
interlocking cases and a gorilla proof screen protector is the new teenage
rage. That plus ten extra dollars a month will prevent future problems. The
extra money doesn’t sit well with me, but will replace the phone.
We cleared that store with exactly enough time to drop Laura
for her ride to an overnight of Outbounds and Inbounds, at the Rotary Camp. Who
knew the Rotary had a camp! It’s on Turkeyfoot Lake in southern Summit County,
and it’s lovely. When I was young, and we all know how long ago that was, my
parents brought us there for all sorts of picnics.
The Outbounds are going next year. The Inbounds are regular
students who spent a year abroad and were there to share their experience.
There were some foreign exchange students on hand, too.
Today was interview day. I’d told Laura she should be thinking of everything she might be asked and how she would answer it. The couple of times I checked in, she seemed quite prepared.
Today was interview day. I’d told Laura she should be thinking of everything she might be asked and how she would answer it. The couple of times I checked in, she seemed quite prepared.
We compared notes on the way home, and found we answered identical
questions, different points of view. Our answers were the same, but our chat in
the car about homesickness potential put a little twist in my heart. Our answers,
essentially, she’s never had a “home sweet home” home. Her answer included “grandma
is my home.” Don’t be teary; that just means grandma will be there for her and
take care of her.
Thursday, November 30, 2017
What to do, what to do
Administration
officials see Trump as incapable of coherent thought and rational action. World
leaders agree, and despair or seize the advantage of the dysfunction of this
country. Leaders of his party continue to patch the dyke. Affairs are shoved
back to some clown version of normal on a daily basis. It’s a charade. There is
no normal.
This country can impeach, or invoke the 25th amendment.
Or, continue to do nothing, and wait to rectify the implosion.
In the meantime, I
took the ball peen hammer that must have been my dad’s, and walked around the
house, rectifying the hinges that have annoyed me for several months.
The hammer had to be
heavy enough to get the job done, but not so big as to hit woodwork. I’m glad
this was in the basket of tools scavenged from the old house. I wish I had the
knuckle busters that came from my Mentor house, and can grip and rip off any
one of those damn sealed on foil or plastic bottle or can covers. Oh, well.
I hope Laura hangs
on to the tools. She’s been taught to appreciate and use them. Well, appreciate
is interesting. First she has to try her way, then take the tool from me and
use it. Thank you all for Kahn Academy; she wouldn’t hear it from me, but you
all convinced her.
Here’s a fun look
around. My Uncle Hank repaired the Westclox Big Ben for me to take to college
in 1961. I used it, probably until the nineties, when Uncle Hank couldn’t take
care of it any more.
Who knows how old
that ball peen is. Perhaps from the thirties, when my dad bought tools, not food. I wove the scarf on the table in the early eighties, on the
warp my Aunt Laura left on the little LeClerc four harness counterbalance loom.
My Grandma Rolf made
the vase in her last year of school, eighth grade. She was fifteen, and decided
algebra was enough math for her. She went to work at Higbees’, downtown Cleveland.
I crocheted the
little pineapple doily for her, and got the vase and the doily back as a
package, when she went to a nursing home. I think everything here just will go
to auction someday, probably excepting the tools.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Fractional exponents
An exponent is the believer of some truth. One person; some perceived
truth. In math, an exponent is the power to which a number should be raised.
The old squares. Two times two times two is two to the third power, is two
times two is four times two is eight. The truth is the third power, the
exponent is two. Two believes its third power is eight.
It gets worse. Fractional exponents. Why isn’t the exponent
a whole number? Who did this! We must understand the fraction to get the truth.
There are rules. Find the least common denominator, for instance. But, enough!
I don’t have to do this anymore. It’s Laura who must, and who does not
understand.
She is so frustrated. She claims to have studied it in
Google, on You-Tube, and, especially to have asked her math teacher. “But, he
just knows it; he doesn’t teach it,” she groans. The school year is almost half
over. I explained to her the math teacher’s job is to teach as well as know,
and she must be student enough to say that to him. Today.
Don’t make me do this again, please. Don’t make me tease out
all the little chunks that must be solved to find the exponent. Because the
real truth is, I don’t know what the answer to all the chunks tells me, except
all the rules were observed. This is far more algebra than I ever bargained for.
Why would you have twenty five over nine, let alone want to raise it to the one
half power.
Test: derive a fractional exponent from the example shown.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Identity theft
I threw away my paper calendar. I no longer can write small
enough or legibly enough to get a day’s activities on one block. I “migrated”
to Google calendar. Like that? Big move. Migrated!
Now, after breakfast, I check my Google calendar. If I
oversleep, it chimes on my phone, to let me know some task is undone. No escaping responsibility!
Recently I scrolled over the Christmas trip to Wisconsin and
wondered if I scheduled boarding the cat? It was the weekend, so I put it on a
week day page: schedule boarding the cat. When I did, I found Toby must arrive
with papers for his annual feline booster. Sigh.
My sister and I had some interesting arrangements, all those
years we lived together. I took care of all the cat bills. Jan had all the dog
bills. But, all the animals had her last name, so Tom would know which animal
name to put with the worm pill he was asked to pick up.
When I moved here, I represented myself as my sister, to
take Toby to the vet. The women at the counter, Dr. Mike, Dr. Wendy, everyone
knew it was me, and the animals had my sister’s last name. I called the vet
this morning, said I was me and asked to make an appointment for Toby K.
“Dr. Mike’s next appointment is….”, and the receptionist
gave a date next year.
“Toby doesn’t care who he sees,” I interposed.
“Toby only is allowed to see Dr. Mike, owner’s orders.”
I like Toby, and I even pay extra for him to get shots, not
pills, since he and I don’t agree on pills. Only Jan could give him pills, and
she doesn’t live here. Toby has always been on my payroll, and I didn’t issue
that order. I like Dr. Mike, too. I’ve known him for thirty years. I asked to
change the order. She couldn’t.
While she went off to see if Dr. Mike will fix the owner
protocol, I mused on the state of veterinary medicine. I think the state of
human medicine is a mess. Think again.
Memo to my sister: Effective earlier today, Toby K.’s owner
has her own account, and a cat named Toby Noragon. Dr. Mike came on the phone
and said all these years of catnip laundering by cats using your identity, in
secret offshore accounts in my name will end, so help him valerian.
Monday, November 27, 2017
Immovable objects meet unstoppable force
As I stood up from the MRI this morning and disturbed
everyone else in the room with a fine display of disorientation, a new post
formed in my mind.
MRI’s disturb my body. The resonance in the tube, in my body,
and today in my head, for it was a brain MRI, confuse my body, sometimes for
days.
I told the new neurologist I would not have another. He
offered a sedative. I’m not anxious; it’s the magnetic waves bouncing off my
heart, my lungs, my brain, my muscles, confusing them. I couldn’t drive after a
sedative, I said. He shrugged and handed me the order to schedule the MRI.
I had to find a new neurologist, as mine threw up his hands
at the current state of medicine and went to Ohio State to teach and do
research. I understand his frustration, and sympathize completely. But I still
need a neurologist to follow the effing brain injury.
The neurologist recommended to me has no openings until
February, and I still need (or not) anti-seizure meds filled by a neurologist. You don't just quit those things. So, I settled for another member of the practice, and will play the immovable
object/unstoppable force game until I am satisfied or ask to go to the top of
the practice.
Every brain doctor since George Washington Medical Center in
DC was convinced I have seizures. Except Dr. DeRen, but he threw up his hands
and quit patients. So, I’ve had innumerable cat scans, an EEG, two MRI’s, three
neurosurgeons and one neurologist signing off on the lack of seizures, but here’s
a new neurologist, who has to have his own pristine set of findings. He and I
have now met the impasse.
He said, to end
the visit, “Well, I still haven’t
cleared you to drive.” Ask google. Look in a text book. Apparently this brain
injury precludes driving. No matter every authority has ticked the “drive” box.
The new man on the scene must have an opinion weighed, too.
I told his back, as he left the room, “I parked my car in
your lot this morning.”
There is a more lighthearted immovable object in the
kitchen; my granddaughter, the cookerer. A while back she tried biscuits. I
watched her plop butter from the butter dish to the flour in the bowl. In
passing I remarked she should try to use cold butter. The biscuits were a
little chewy, but OK.
Several weeks later she made biscuits to die for, and I
remarked to that effect with every one I ate. “Yes,” she said, “google
recommends using cold butter and I put a note to do that in my ‘cooking notes.’”
Don’tcha love it.
Last week I tackled the kale question. Kale has its place, but
an exclusive two year run is long. I suggested chard. Putting away groceries Saturday, I
stowed kale in the fridge, but no chard. “They didn’t have any,” Laura
rejoined.
Yesterday we stopped at Kreiger’s for a small item. On the
way out I took a good look at the greens. I poked Laura in the ribs and
pointed. She looked, shrugged and headed out the door. A couple of years ago I made
a rule: there will be a vegetable with every meal. Time to make a “less kale,
more chard” rule, too.