We have a local author, David Giffels, who has published
several national books, and remains local. We all know him, at least by sight. He
teaches at Akron U and has one less degree than I have. I wouldn’t want his
job, though we seem to have the same hard scrabble attitude. He scrounged all
over Akron’s rust belt as his childhood activity, absorbing it and thinking
about what it could be.
I’ve published pictures of BF Goodrich, transformed into
important offices and medical suites, but with an atrium to the roof cut
through the massive concrete floors, the halls featuring the massive concrete
supports. We succeeded in remaking this town because we succeeded, the hard
way, on purpose. Not me; I just moved back. Giffels has an attitude about that,
though not bad. We’re acceptable.
Giffels has out a new book, Furnishing Eternity. I re-bought his old book (I gave my massive book collection to the local
library two years ago), The Hard Way on
Purpose, to put it back in my head. Perhaps I relate to Giffels because I’m
doing much of my recovery work both the hard way, and on purpose. I can be
really snotty with doctors and lawyers and adjusters when I tell them I cannot
live long enough to re-learn what I lost, let along regain full use of a leg,
an arm, a hand. “Think about that, you self-righteous SOB, and give me a righteous
answer.”
This post is only about stuff. I’m up to Thursday on my
calendar. It’s only eleven in the morning. Lynn and I were going to breakfast,
but her cat is sick and she’s particular and the cat has a vet appointment. We
go to Michael’s in the valley. Its owner is my age, single and looking for a
datable person.
I don’t know why this is such an issue for me, except that
Les died, and if I wanted to continue to share lunch and world views with
someone who also put air in my car tires, I’d have to look around, or get
lucky. I’ve not done the former because the latter just continues to appear. I’d
have to call the average fifty percent. An overqualified former Goodyear
engineer and I won’t describe the zero who fleshed out the percentage.
Giffels nailed it: “…they think we’re average. And we are…as
average as a watershed. Some of us have more and some of us have less; some of
us think this way, and some of us think that. If you add it all up and divide
by two, you get something in the middle.”
Laura seems to read the blog on the way home from school.
She knew about Roku’s when she came in the door last night. The Secret life of
Grandma continues to blow away. Breakfast cancelled, I spent the morning on the
phone with Spectrum, my ISP. Bored. So are those people in cubicles, solving
problems. Often I get a knowledgeable young woman, always a pleasure. This
morning I had Bob, from North Carolina. We pinged and tested and concluded the
problem is Blogger; Spectrum is not dancing to non net neutrality—yet.
I switched to a person who could cancel my TV service.”You
can save a lot of money over cable,” according to Miss Tenth Grader. I could
save six dollars a month. The cable goes down, the internet goes up. Of course
it does.
Someone who can put air in your tires is a useful thing...I've been married for 43 years and still don't have someone who can put air in my tires. But, at least I don't have to date him lol.
ReplyDeleteDear Joanna, the more postings of yours that I read, the more my admiration for you grows. You stay active in so many ways, but the paths of your mind intrigue me. To explore questions and to be curious about answers is a fine and wonderful thing. Peace.
ReplyDeleteI call myself the person who has to know everything. I can't help it. It's best when I get it right. :-) Peace.
DeleteDear Joanne. We have blogged for a long time now and I feel I know you quite well. One thing I know for sure is that you will continue to expand your mind and to fight your disabilities forced on you by ill health. Inspirational is the word that springs to mind.
ReplyDeleteYour writing is a joy.
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDeletesounds like the day has been getting filled, one way or another. Today I have been noticing a lag when making comments direct into Blogger pages (such as this one); it isn't happening with 'pop out' comments boxes. It will right itself. Eventually. YAM xx
Yes; the pop up's are OK; the directs are not. But, that's all I know. Limitations are so limiting.
DeleteNoticing the same problem at my end.
DeleteSame here...
DeleteHere too and worried at first that it might be a fault in my computer.
DeleteYour turns of phrase are quite striking. " An overqualified former Goodyear engineer and I won’t describe the zero who fleshed out the percentage."
ReplyDelete:D
He was OK, but he never quit talking about his seven patents.
DeleteI enjoy your eclectic posts, Joanne. Always some nuggets of wisdom and news.
ReplyDeleteSigh on the comment front.
ReplyDeleteAnd hooray for another delightful post from you. I will not learn all I want/need to know - but intend to die trying.
Everybody else seems to understand what you write. Sometimes I struggle. But I like you. lol
ReplyDeleteNot bad for an empty day.
ReplyDelete"someone who also put air in my car tires" - always good to have a practical fall back position.
ReplyDeleteYou make me chuckle with your descriptions and way with words. It is good to have someone else to share the work load with concerning certain things but it is also nice to be self sufficient if possible. I'm glad you've got the Roku stick. I just wish I could get my internet upgraded soon and follow in your footsteps though as you've found out there isn't a whole lot of savings between the different services. The savings might buy a nice dinner out once or twice a year for you. I guess that isn't anything to sneeze at.
ReplyDeleteI also spent Thursday doing not much of anything. Today of course was a whole different story.
ReplyDeleteIt's good to see you reading again and such interesting books. Well they look interesting from here.
And I'm glad you get snotty with doctors who tell you what you don't want to hear. They need to learn that not everybody fits the mould just because they've had the same injury.
The secret life of Grandma!
ReplyDeleteMy kids have Roku but I am not exactly sure what it is. I figure that it gives you more channels and then one can opt out of these channels on Cable. I am not sure I want to relearn everything at this point, however, with the cost of watching TV escalating, I, like you, need to find alternatives.
ReplyDeletere blogger commenting...here too. long delay before it posts and sometimes I have to just click somewhere on the page before it will upload. weird. you may not live long enough to relearn everything you lost but you will continue to learn new stuff until the end. boredom is not something I generally encounter, always so much to do. when I don't feel like doing any of it, I be lazy and unproductive. it's called a rest day for me.
ReplyDeleteVery slow me has just discovered you. We have Netflix but rarely use it. Mea Culpa.
ReplyDelete