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August 31, 2007

Cuteness wins out over tidiness

I've been paring down the boxes in our lives, one box at a time.  At least I did until I found the remains of the Playful Penguin Race.  I came across it mixed in a box of 70s-era toys.

Only a piece of the track was broken. There was not a penguin to be found, but it looked incredibly cute to me.  I showed it to W. and gave him the box, when I found that we had it.  He thought it so cute that he wanted to find an intact version for sale. Turns out -- they are still made! He ordered one from Amazon for $12.99. The main differences between the 70s version and now is that their patent was granted, the pictures are different, and they improved the battery area.

It's totally worth it, even though it means an incoming box instead of the other way around.

July 14, 2007

Meditative practice of the week

My father teases me by asking frequently, "Started any new hobbies this week?"

Back in May, I went to a kendo class. Kendo is the Japanese practice of sword fighting. Actually, it's more of a meditative practice than I realized -- and a great workout. It's great for aerobic fitness and is a excellent for the upper body.  Almost right away, I bought a shinai (bamboo sword) and a bokuto (wooden sword)Kendo2

I ordered the first set of clothing yesterday, namely my hakama (pants) and keikogi (shirt). Next, I need to order the rest of my gear, like my bogu for my middle and all the padding. What happened to all that roller hockey gear I had five or six years ago? Maybe I could use that in the interim.  At least the carrying case would come in handy.
So, I forgot to mention this new development when we spoke today, Dad.  Now you know I'm getting serious.

November 20, 2006

First steps toward clearing floor space

So far, I have managed to get rid of two boxes in two weeks. The first box was a box of papers related to a committee I'm no longer chairing.

The other was a stack of Time magazines from earlier this year (most of them, anyway) and a year's worth of the Economist magazine, the year 2000, that is.

Reading about my redistribution of junk makes for just specatularly boring prose, I'm sure.  So, sometime soon I'll post photos from my recent hike in the lovely and remote Sutter Buttes. At least I'll have pretty pictures (and tales about poison oak) to share.

November 12, 2006

Fifty ways to leave your clutter

Back a while -- has it been nearly three years already? -- when I first started blogging, I was charmed quite a lot by an idea on Sketch Blogs. The author there had a pledge to get rid of 10 things every week and would share what those things were.

It has gotten to the point in our house where the clutter has recently made a few too many inroads.  We don't suffer from lack of light because the piles of stuff stacked in front of the windows block out the light of day, but still, things are a bit more tight.

My latest goal, inspired by Sketch Blogs, is to clear out one box of stuff per week (10 items is just not enough) and to hold myself accountable to blog about it.  Many weeks, it will likely go something like: "Cleared out another box of old campaign fliers from last year," but that's okay.

I may even give myself extra credit for weeks with such easy boxes to cover me for weeks of harder boxes, like those that contain mementos from my childhood or personal correspondence.

If only I could get W to make the some commitment! We'd be 100 boxes lighter after a year instead of just 50! I'll have to work on that.  What do you think, W?

October 05, 2006

Disabled training paid off

While I was on disability over the summer, I did nothing much but sit on the couch in a drug-induced mental fog.  I tried reading literature, but I couldn't focus on anything more complex than James Rollins or Dan Brown novels. Crossword puzzles and sudoku were too tiring, so I bought a bunch of word search books.

I went through dozens of word searches.

Soon after I returned to work, the payroll department commemorated National Payroll Week by having a table set up in the company cafeteria. As part of this, they offered a word search puzzle like this one. They told me that there would be a prize for the person who found the most words. 

Over the next few weeks, as I was waiting for my computer to crunch through large printing jobs that are part of my daily existence, I'd work on the puzzle.  After I went a week or so without finding any, I turned it in with 13 words marked.  That was enough to put me on top!

Today, when I went to payroll for an urgent W-4 adjustment, the payroll people gave me my nice prize, a large black tote bag with a discreetly sized company logo on it. 

I did not expect any time spent during my disability to pay off in any way, other than maybe let me catch up on movie watching and beauty sleep.  Today brought a nice surprise, a memento more pleasant than the hardware I accumulated from the treatment of my injury.

June 01, 2006

Midwest places, including nostalgia-land

(or new places for the week of May 21, 2006.) I stepped off the plane into the soup people in the Midwest call a typical Midwestern summer day. Never mind that it is technically still late spring.`

My father met me at our usual meeting spot near the escalator down to the baggage claim area. As usual, he parked as close to the terminal as he could find (he's really getting quite good at it). Also as usual, it took him less than two miles from the airport till he found something to complain about my handling of his car. Usually, this has to do with my desire to drive in fourth gear rather than overdrive in heavy city traffic. I told them that once we got to the country, he could remind me to shift as much as he wanted. I rather wished his car had air conditioning other than rolling down a window from time to time.

I told him my story about how a black cat crossed our car's path as W. took me to the airport that morning. The flight itself went fine, I said, but I spilled orange juice on my laptop keyboard As I type this, I can assure you that spilling OJ is pretty much among the worst things you can spill on a computer keyboard. The best is probably distilled water, or maybe rubbing alcohol. OJ is very bad and this computer is barely usable once the chassis heats up and the dried OJ turns to sticky syrup that crackles as I force the keys down against it. On the plus side, I heard that some spies can tell what you type by analyzing your keystrokes. A good way to defeat that is to spill various liquids on your keys. Beer, OJ, apple juice and mango juice would be especially good at altering your typing patterns and your computer's inner acoustics. That, and the fact the computer seems find for the first half an hour of use, are the only bright spots in an otherwise very black moment in this computer's history.

This week was also bleak in terms of new places. Because I was planning an extended trip to the Midwest, I spent a lot of hours working and packing and not much time exploring. On the way to the family homestead, I suggested my father pick a place to eat. He picked the big brand chain store with the excellent cheese rolls that we usually pick. As we ate our lunches, I confessed that I needed a new place this week. I suggested that any one of dozens of stores in the mall across the parking lot would do the trick. Besides, I explained, I wanted to find a camera store.

We drove over the mall and, by chance, I picked the entrance where we used to come all during our wedding preparations, the side with the tuxedo rental store. To my absolute shock, the store is still there even though the name has changed. There was no camera store, so my new place was a Claire's store in yet another Westfield mall.

Claire's caters to customers who are thirty years younger than I am. I considered getting W. some rub on tattoos with Chinese ideograms that he studies in Japanese language (the Japanese "borrowed" the symbols and meanings, but changed the pronunciations). I settled on two very small jars of nail polish, an excellent size for traveling. I would have bought some Daisy perfume, but they were out. I did not even sample the Britney fragrance (shudder). I'm so no 12 years old anymore and even my nostalgic mall memories are about getting married nearly 20 years ago.

March 27, 2006

Snoopy, the geriatric, wrinkled, arthritic 27-year-old

Week of March 26, 2006 new place -- One weekend, I'm wandering the streets of Chelsea after midnight and the next, I'm gripping a saddle between my thighs and wondering how W. and I ever wound up on horseback. One weekend, I'm standing on a sunny, sandy beach fantasizing about galloping along the shore with my sweetheart and several months later, I'm standing in horse shit and pouring rain learning how to pick mud from a horse's hooves.

It all started last Thanksgiving. W. and I wandered a nearly deserted beach on a bright, clear Gulf Coast day when we encountered a horse-rental place. I said, "Oh! Wouldn't that be fun, to rent horses!"

W. agreed but said he just wasn't comfortable managing a horse because he'd never learned to ride.

"That's easy to fix, I'm sure," I replied. "We live in a horsey area."

Indeed. Soon after we got back from our holiday travels, I found a riding class in our local community college catalog. Classes actually started March 12th, the week before my trip to NYC. We met our instructor and other class members in the tack building. J. gave us an overview of what kind of clothes and footwear and headgear we should outfit ourselves with. That first week, I didn't parse any details of the place other than one corner had shelves with sweaty beat-up helmets we were required to wear and that the rest of that wall was stacked floor to ceiling with pungent leather saddles. On the other a desk held some water bottles, and both permanent and dry erase markers and someone's car keys.Afterward, she started our lesson on grooming and saddling the horses, which was cut short because the pouring rain made the horses too wet to groom. J. bugged me a bit because she seemed especially complimentary of and attentive to the men in our class. I was so irritated, I didn't feel at all bad about fibbing a little on the required paperwork and waivers J. asked us to fill out.

The next week, I was in NYC, but two weeks later the weather was decent enough to ride. Even though I had my own pony as a youngster, I never saddled or groomed him on my own and I usually rode bareback. I was very nervous, not only because I had missed the basics week before, but also because I was actually 10 pounds over the weight limit (even though I really, really don't look it, I was worried they would put me on a scale before I could ride.)

The first thing I did when we arrived at the stable was to trek up a hill, past the rental stable and private tack building to the bathroom tower.  A tall wooden observation tower sits at the highest point of the stables property.  It looks down on a large corral on one side and on the other side over the parking lot, the tiny ring right next to the parking lot and the two rings where we have lessons. The largest ring is filled with obstacles that riders and horses jump over.  The obstacles are easily collapsible posts with cross bars the horses could knock off just by brushing a careless hoof over them. Most were set low, only a foot or two off the ground. Many of the obstacle posts were filled with brightly colored plastic flowers.  The whole thing gives the impression it could be a circus ring because the poles and the holders and the flowers are bright yellow, neon pink, day-glo green and bright blue. The ring just next to it is smaller and less cluttered.  Instead of twenty obstacles, there are only six dark green bars and a couple of white holders.

I find the bathroom at the base of the tower. As I washed my hands, I inspected the photos and drawings of horses that decorated the facilities.  I realize that my teenage infatuation with horses never reached anything close to the level of the people who use the restroom. I wondered if horse fever is contagious.

Much to my relief, no one weighed me. Also much to my relief, picking hooves is no big deal and in the eight to ten lessons I've had since the first one, I have as yet to saddle a horse. W. has had to saddle a horse almost every time we come. My horses have always been under the control of riders in the sandy ring. All I have had to do is wait for the previous rider to bring one by. Most horses expand their chests when you put a saddle on them. The trick, that I didn't know as a very young pony owner, is that they don't keep their chests expanded forever. As a young kid, my saddle would always fall off to the side because I didn't cinch it tight enough.  It was yet another thing I worried about that first week.

For many weeks the horseback riding scared me almost as much as the ice skating lessons, maybe more.  For one thing, riders are perched four feet above the ground.  A fall could be seriously painful. Horses are large, intimidating and stupid creatures that are easily spooked by things like plastic bags.  You factor these things in with people who also jumpy and you could have disaster.  In fact, the first week I heard that one of the horses had bucked one of the students. (Oh, yeah, riding is relaxing and fun. Right.)

Actually it has been.  Each week, I have enjoyed it more and more. That first week, I rode Snoopy, a geriatric reddish-brown horse with actual wrinkles on his face. (W. rode Ranger that week, I think. W. has fallen in love with Ranger, a former race horse.)  Snoopy seemed perfectly happy to walk around the ring, but distinctly unwilling to break into a jog, the Western riding word for "trot." Our instructor, J., told us to make a clicking noise with our tongues against the roofs of our mouths and at the same time kick our heels into the sides of the horse. A Western jog, J. told us, is actually slower than an English riding trot. This was easier to notice at first when you watch someone else in the class riding around. It was hard at first to tell the difference in your own horse's steps.

J. reviewed what everyone else had learned the week before. We each walked our horse in a back-and-forth pattern criss-crossing the ring to get the idea of controlling the horse. She had us walk around the ring counterclockwise, then clockwise.  Walking a horse around a ring for nearly an hour is not my idea of excitement. Things got more interesting near the end of class when J. had us line up our horses by the edge of the ring and, one by one, we'd "ask" our horses to jog around the ring. I clicked and kicked and kicked and clicked and, finally, Snoopy started jogging.  Jogging on a horse feels like you are sitting on top of a piston getting slammed up, then down, then up, then down.  I knew from before that you can cushion the roughness of the gate by holding some of your weight off the saddle with your legs.  I did this from force of habit.  J. complimented me on my posture and easy manner, but told me to keep my heels down and to keep my hand near the saddle when Snoopy jogged.

The next time around, the jog seemed a little more fun, a little more easy, and actually a little harder to control. 

After class, we left the ring and all us riders took our horses on the trail circuit. It is tradition to ride around a dirt path that circles the property. We rode around the perimeter of the property, between the ring and some metallic-fenced corrals, along a road, then across the open slope where the observation tower bathroom was. We came back downhill next to the high-rent stables and back to the grooming station. One of J.'s assistants told me that I had to remove both feet from my saddle and dismount by swinging my leg over and jumping off the horse.  This is so very different than how I used to dismount that I'm embarrassed even now to think how clumsy I was. Once I managed to fall off the horse, practically, I clipped Snoopy's halters with two tie ropes to hold them while we unsaddled them. In these ropes, the horses really cannot move their heads much.  It feels both safe and a bit mean to tie them in.

I left the lesson feeling dusty, sore, yet exhilarated and feeling that I had a lot more to learn. W. and I gave J.'s assistants the apples we brought as treats for Snoopy and Ranger. Because it was muddy, we didn't have to groom the horses that first day. We only unsaddled them, took their bridles off and put up the tack in the prescribed manner.  We unclipped the tie ropes, clipped on a lead rope and walked the horses to a corral up a hill. We did not get the satisfaction of giving the horses treats directly. One of the assistants added the snacks to a feed trough in the corral. In later sessions, we got the knack of giving our horses treats ourselves. The trick is to use the "red snack bucket." Feeding the horses from your hand is forbidden because the horses start biting children's hands looking for snacks.

At my last lesson, I finally figured out that the leg signals tell the horse's back end what to do (I rather thought that it affected the front end at first).  By our next lesson at the end of June, I will have forgotten everything again.  Everything except that my favorite horse so far is Junior, a nearly all-white piebald former roping horse with pale blue eyes.  Horses don't get more Western or more responsive than roping horses. He's butt ugly, but he's fun to ride.

February 27, 2006

Freedom and pain -- a winning combination

My ice skating instructor showed our group a trick we can play on skates. We start by standing still with both feet evenly under us with the skate blades resting on the ice. We hold our right hands in front of us and we hold our left hands behind us so that, if our hands were twice as long, we would look like large peace signs. We don't hold our arms out very high, but our upper torsos are turned so that our right shoulder is facing straight ahead. When we rotate our shoulders so that our torso straightens and we pull our arms across our chests, we start to spin on both feet. How did I never notice this about ice skating before? I can make myself spin only by rotating my shoulders? How does it work that I can spin on two feet at once? Astonishing!

I get an insane amount of pleasure from just spinning during my practice sessions. This exercise probably has no aesthetic value. In fact, I suspect it is mainly used to give new skaters the feeling of where on the blades our bodies rotate easiest.

Sure, everyone knows ice is slippery. This is no great revelation, but before spinning myself around like a carefree five year old, I had no idea how close a body on ice skates is to having no friction whatsoever. I did not realize before last week how little effort it takes to spin around on the ice.

We adult students are supposed to practice mohawks and outside three-turns. We even have a little routine where turn and jump and lift our legs off the ground as we glide more-or-less gracefully backwards. The mohawks are easy and fun for me. Even the jumping poses no issues (We are using both legs to jump for now). The one thing I dread are the outside three-turns.

We are to work up a bit of speed by skating around in a tight circle, our right legs carefully crossing over our left legs as we skate in the prescribed counterclockwise direction with our arms in the prescribed peace-sign position. When we have crossed over three times, we are to lift our right legs, rotate our shoulders in a clockwise direction. This, in theory, spins us around smoothly so we glide backwards on our left legs without losing any momentum. I execute this maneuver successfully about one out of every four attempts. Most of the time, I try to do a little hip wiggle to help things along. Bad idea. When I do that, I sometimes land decisively on my back side. Tonight, for example, I had to get a band-aid from a cut on my hand from landing hard on a rough icy surface. At least this time, I didn't need a bag of frozen corn like the young rink workers gave me a couple weeks ago.  Other times, I am afraid of falling, so I set my right foot down mid-turn to keep myself upright. Sometimes, I make the turn successfully, but my balance is off when I start. My skate skids and scrapes across the ice so that I nearly come to a complete stop.  That one time in four I do it right is worth the price of admission, though.

The mohawks, by contrast, are just fun, easy, and satisfying. Since they are no challenge, my sense of accomplishment not so intense when I do them right. I always manage to gracefully switch my weight from right to left, from skating forwards to skating backwards. I love how I can lift my right leg confidently after turning, how I can rotate my shoulders a little more as I switch my torso around and, in so doing, cut a really tight, fast circle backwards. What a rush! I feel like I am flying. Flying backwards very fast and a bit out-of-control, but flying.

If I practice too many three turns, I seize up and make mistakes. Then, I practice the two-foot spins to loosen up and get the feeling of the skates, but these make me dizzy. Already, I am forming weird superstitions about what works and what does not. I feel I am more prone to fall if I practice tough moves on certain parts of the floor and I think I am bound to succeed if I practice on other parts.  How silly.  But still, it is how I feel.

No wonder world-class figure skaters like Sasha Cohen are a bit high strung. They really do almost fly but, if they fall and injure themselves, they much come to associate certain parts of the rink with intense pain and bother. What a dilemma -- to circle a place endlessly that brings such freedom and such pain. The pain already makes me afraid, but the pleasure keeps me going back.

January 06, 2006

Forty dollar countdown

Last Christmas, in 2004, my father gave me a $40 gift card for a well-known craft store.  We had taken a chip carving class at Thanksgiving and his idea was for me to buy bass wood for chip carving.  However, I've become more interested in a nearby woodworking store and workshop combo that opened up recently.  The price and expertise combo there should be a heady mix (not that I would know -- I haven't quite made it over there yet). 

If not on wood, how do I spend the money?

Today, I wandered around the local store for over an hour waiting for inspiration to strike.

I could buy wood for carving anyway. At $3.50 for a small, thin plank, I can't help but think that the wood shop would offer a better deal.  Near the very end of my visit, I finally found a bass wood plaque.

I could take up framing.  I dabble in photography, an ingrained and perpetual hobby and not one I dabbled in once and dropped for good.  If I learn to frame my pictures, I'd be set when I join the local photography club.

I rejected cake decorating, knitting, and beading. The perfume in candle making sets made me sneeze just to walk by them.  The latch-hook sets are so 40 years ago!

I looked at scrapbooks.  I wanted to give my father a well-organized account of my campaign with photos and newspaper clippings. The array of materials for scrapbooks is so beyond confusing, it's dizzying.  Again, a class would be nice, or at least a mininum list of needed supplies.

I also want to make my own cookie cutters, but the only way I could do so with materials for sale there is to buy some already made up, disassemble them and reshape them.

Even though I tried not to hover around the book section, that is where I gravitated toward the end. Looking at the books inspired me in several directions. 

Altered Books Workshop makes me want to get out my acrylic paints and tear up all those magazines etc....  Looks like a lot of fun, but I'd have a HARD time defacing most books.  Crafting Your Own Heritage Album and  Artists' Journals and Sketchbooks also caught my interest.

I have been thinking, especially after seeing Narnia, that embroidering handkerchieves (using a machine, of cource) might be fun. After looking at these books, I visited the needlework section. I looked at the acrylic and oil paints, and again thought it might be fun to take a class.  I have a nice set of acrylic paints at home, but it's 25 years old and the paints might need some refreshing.

I fled home to reconnoiter and try again another day.

To test that the card is actually still valid and to not leave completely empty-handed, I bought something I wanted for Christmas -- a single "candle" to go in the window.  I thought about getting a Christmas tree spiral like my close female relative likes, but this gift is supposed to be about things I like. The $2.50 battery-powered "candle" rang up just fine.  When I asked about classes, I had to wait 10 minutes while they figured out the schedule enough to explain it to me. Yes, the card would apply to classes as well as supplies.

Last year my father said a few weeks after sending me the card that he should have just gotten me a money card.  I initially agreed, but now I think it is a challenge to get my creative juices flowing, not just in new directions, but at all.

I'm planning to look at my piles of junk in new ways. I'm determined to do something rather than just buying another book about doing something.

October 06, 2005

Solitary numbers

It works!  Someone donated money on my new campaign website!  That is so cool!  Now I just need to get more friends and supporters to do that!  Excellent.

So, my father may be interested to know how I have been handling the stress of the campaign trail.  Lately, I've been working crossword puzzles from time to time.  Usually, I work one or two a year, but lately, I've work three or four a week.  More accurately, I try to work them.  Sometimes the words rise easily from the clues and other times I can barely remember my own name.

Now, when I get blocked on crosswords, I sometimes work sudoku puzzles.  Recently, I bought a sudoku book thinking it would make a nice Christmas present for my father.  My reasoning was that he likes puzzles in newspapers and sudoku is a puzzle in the newspaper.  When I asked him about them, though, he seemed unconverted.  So, I started working the puzzles in the book for practice that first week.

I spent about a week trying to learn the ropes.  After about a week, I could actually solve some of the puzzles now and then.  Because my husband studies Japanese, and because "sudoku" sounds Japanese, he wanted to know what kanji went into the name "sudoku."

I looked it up in that book I bought for my father.  "Su" means number and "doku" means single person or bachelor.  Last night, I asked my husband what that meant in English.  He said, "It means something like 'number solitaire'."

So, I now have a solitary on-line donation and I play number solitaire now and then.  This morning, I decided to write something in my blog each a.m. before I kick in with my day's work to see how that does to relieve stress.

PS  To all you people searching for "Nick Flynn" -- stay tuned because I have more to say about his book.