Category Archives: Editorial

Welcome to the blog

You say Hello, I say Goodwill

Great Beatles song, backwards, I know. Someone wrote me today that I would welcome all the stuff we haven’t seen in over three years.

Furnishings and art, yes, we’re minimalist. Clothing, no. Anything that doesn’t fit will go immediately to charity. I’m talking about interview clothing for tall men. And I’ve asked the source of this piece about the better charities in town, where our gift will do the most good for those in need. And I called the volunteer coordinator at the local volunteer center to find out who needs things.

They have been very helpful and I’ll just have to have boxes ready to take things to our local charity for resale or gifts. It helps to know the right folks in town to do our best for our new community. Thanks y’all for helping us prior to the move. Cheers! Dee

Facing West

I’ve loved the West. I met my husband there, lived in So Cal 15 years, in the Rockies for three. Pacific Northwest, we’ve visited and love it and have gear for snow, rain, anything so would go there in a heartbeat.

Right now we’re up high facing west. I see the weather coming in. I know that if the roof on Miller Stadium is closed it’s probably going to rain. Just saw a gaggle of geese fly by our windows. Often we see and hear individual seagulls just outside.

Later this week we move to a NE view, with the Lake. And hopefully shades will be in by then because 5:08 a.m. is when the dog is trying to get me to take her out these days. “Hey, I’m bored, lets go out and see some squirrels!”

It’s going to be even brighter, earlier facing East so please get our shades in asap!

As to living, this is my husband’s first Northeast experience, he’s a Texan born & bred. I’m a great lakes gal but don’t want to slip back into the accent I lost at age 12 surrounded by military brats near D.C.

He’s still got a bit of drawl going on but nothing like his parents and brother. For the first few months we were together if his dad or brother called, I had never met them and couldn’t understand a word! So I knew that when we lived in Scotland, folks from Edinborough and Glasgow became easy to understand right off the bat, but the further out of town you go, if you’re in a taxi and can’t see the driver’s face, if you get every third word you’re lucky!

That said, I do love the American West. There’s something about mountains and bad weather that attracts me. All I can say for now is that my husband has a good job, we’re meeting neighbors, moving and my fingers aren’t cracking due to living 6,500 feet above sea level with zero humidity.

Utah Formal (our term) clothing will be reserved for weekends and I only hope that the bankerly clothing we have had in storage for over three years still fits my husband. Luckily as it’s around 60 degrees today he’s changed from his cossack hat (wind and snow) to Indiana Jones (keeps sun off his face).

I will miss seeing the weather come in and looking at all the trees that are finally green, but we’ll gain a guest room/office and have a view of a really big lake that is not man-made (sorry, Texas joke). And we’ve guests for two weeks right after the move, in shifts. I have to menu plan and find places and events. After the move! Cheers to looking East! Dee

Leaving on a Jet Plane/Longest Move Ever

I couldn’t decide. Give me a break. Our stuff arrived at the local terminal from Dayton OH on Sunday and was delivered early this morning to sit there two days.

It’s been over three years since we “cocooned” all of our stuff and put in in A/C storage in Texas. What’s two more days?

This is my moving board. We’re not really leaving on a jet plane, only feels that way. We’re moving next door but also from 1,500 miles away. Best, Dee

Dee’s Kan Ban Board

Rich Man, Poor Man

Dear readers.

I’ve always been rich. I’ve had family, friends, an education, jobs, a loving husband and dog. If you want to be rich in life you need family and friends. A job would also be helpful. Thus the education. Get through high school, go to college and figure out what you want to do with your life.

Grad school, doctorate, whatever you can do. Whatever you’re capable of intellectually and what you want to do with your life.

After you do all that, you might want to settle down and have a family. Have a couple of kids. You’re rich. You may come home from your job having fixed an A/C system and you’re rich if you come home to spouse and family.

You’re rich if you’ve spent an hour teaching an adult, who is illiterate, how to read. You’re rich if you’ve helped a differently-abled person ride a horse to help their balance and help with self-esteem. Or to pet a cat who has been abandoned and in a shelter. You’re rich, yes siree.

We can’t have kids and are happy to see our dog, who is even happier to see us, when we get home. We are rich in love, talent, education, friends and family. Dee

Casa Beach, San Diego

http://www.lajollafriendsoftheseals.org/controversy.html

The new seal pups are being harassed by locals who want that 200′ of beach back, and by tourists. Everything is done by multiple agencies who don’t care about the seals or people, only their power. Feds, State and multiple local agencies and many judges and politicians have battled this out over years against advocates of the seals.

If you want to do something about it please contact the site above. For me, what the officials have done is close the sluice gates because someone was killed decades ago so no-one swims there though it was endowed as a Children’s Pool, and it has become a rookery for seals. Tourists come to see them but local politicians don’t get the environmental and tourism tolls of calls to eradicate the seals.

Let them know what you think. Cheers, Dee

Moving & Spring Dinner

Yes, we’re moving this week. All the way down the elevator with a few things, a few hundred feet to another elevator, and upstairs. But the Big Move is everything we’ve had in TX for over the past three years that is on a truck and 2/3 of the way here already from a big Friday move.

No, we weren’t there. Jim was at a conference and I was on the phone coordinating and following through for about 12 hours. We could’ve really used eyes on the ground but none of our old friends in Houston would spend two hours for us, no matter how many times they’d been over for free meals or even to visit us to ski multiple times. Yeah, same as when I took out everyone’s dog for years and no-one ever reciprocated for one weekend. I’ll remember, guys & gals.

Now we have to move on this end and arrange for movers et al. Then Jim’s family is coming into town in shifts for two weeks early next month so that requires some planning and a new futon for our new guest room as well.

There is much to do. In the spirit of Spring and shutting down moving work for the day before this hectic work week begins in earnest, I looked for something festive. I found three small lamb chops that I seasoned and pan-seared. Also rosti potatoes, sauteed cherry tomatoes (just salt, pepper, olive oil and dried oregano), and fresh asparagus blanched then sauteed simply.

I’m trying not to have too much perishable food because we’ll have to take out our cooler from storage and take several loads ourselves to the new frig.

We’re moving because we got a 740 sf place for three months because we’re new in town and didn’t know where to live. We chose next door (next building) because it has a lovely view and more room for an office for my husband/guest room. It doesn’t really have a place for me, but I’ll work it out.

Once the move is done I can concentrate on unpacking and decorating, and my m-i-l will bring the two quilts she’s been storing for us for these years. One, she made, and we (mostly she) crafted the squares into a seasonal quilt that is quite bold in color and texture. The other was by her great, great and possibly one more great grandmother, Civil War era that is a hexagonal quilt with a flower motif. Both are reminders of the craftiness of our elders and ancestors and priceless pieces of art to us.

Then I must plan menus and things to do for family members, who I think will enjoy their time here next month.

Right now it’s all scribbled lists, which must be contained and correlated, perused and added to so that they are complete. Then it’s work work work until every i is dotted and every t is crossed.

It doesn’t make it easy that I can set up an account, say for cable, and pay the bill for $19 because it’s a short-term deal and the bill arrived late, but then when I call to do a change of address they are not willing to talk to me because I am not my husband. Ladies, put both your names on all the accounts, especially if you pay the bills. It took three hours while moving last Friday from an offsite location just to allow the cable company to allow me onto the account to change our billing address to next door!

We’ll be able to cook more easily with a grill, and we’ll have a lame one starting Friday but will get something more powerful soon. We look forward to entertaining family and friends once our furnishings are out of their “cocoons.”

Cheers and excuse my continued absence. Dee

 

I AM Glee Club

I just started watching Glee and see who I really wanted to be in high school. Yes, I was in choir and led the gymnastics team but if we had such a club, if I had the guts I’d have been in it.

Not that I’m competitive, more of a team-builder but they have to be off the charts and so talented because they’re tv professionals.

The words to all the songs are familiar to me, like family, well, not. When I hear an intro I know from my great prof in American Musical History what song it pairs with. Please do Someone To Watch Over Me.

Ballet, violin, piano, guitar, choir. Did they help in my adult life? YEA! I grew up when the arts were there in public school and am still in touch with my grade school music teacher where we sang The Happy Wanderer.

Another teacher who is gone now called me in after school (first and only time in my life) and asked why I didn’t audition for solos. She tested me, told me I have perfect pitch and gave me the lead on Bridge Over Troubled Waters.

And my violin teacher needs her space here, she took me on at age 6, my father is a violinist. So do my guitar teachers, a Mormon then a drummer. Yeah, I took that up at age 50. But even after not picking it up in 18 months I can lay in bed and not look at it and have lyrics bring the music up and I just make up the chords.

There’s no talent talking here, just that if I would have had a Glee Club in high school my voice may have been heard. But then I wouldn’t have had my career or met my husband or gotten our dog. We make choices.

Here’s to my, our (husband is physics/software) fellow geeks everywhere! I’m with you, always. Dee

An Institutional Vision

Sometimes the sins of the father are passed along… to me.  After of decades of not speaking up, I have followed in my father’s footsteps.

I create change. I am hired to do it and get beat up, metaphorically, every time I do it. It is exhausting work. Sometimes I do it for free.

People hire me to create change, but they don’t want it. This stasis is what brings companies and non-profits down. If all you get is grant money from the government or agencies on a contract basis, you can never change for the better.

For companies, how can you do your jobs better and easier due to technology and management mindsets? For non-profits, many are still using old methodologies to do everything from management to tech to fund raising. You’re probably still using my recycled 386 and are on dial-up.

It’s the thinking that is flawed. We’ve always done it this way. That’s the way it’s done. They won’t let us do this. We like the little box we’ve let ourselves be placed in.

Jump, leap out of that box and think of new solutions that exemplify your organization’s mission and vision. If that mission and vision are no longer viable, sound a call for change.

Many folks just want to keep a job and hate to get up in the morning to go to it. YOU can make a difference. Think about how you’d like to be treated and treat others that way. If your job doesn’t let you do that, sound an alarm. Make a change. Make a difference in just one person’s life. Don’t be institutionalized. This is my motivational speech for the day. Cheers! Dee

I Miss Y’All

Happy belated Mothers’ Day first and foremost. My mom and grandmothers are gone but to M and Nanny, thank you for all you’ve done for the kids.

We miss our families and friends as we’re in a new city with new people but some are breaking down barriers to get us all together.

We had a lovely dinner last night, out by the terrace grill area. We brought steak with chimichurri, and others brought chicken tikka masala kebabs, salads, guacamole, salsa, and here’s the kicker.

There’s a date set for the next get-together, and the challenge is to do a wine tasting from all the countries we picked from a hat. One white, one red, one dish.

Let’s hope we’ve moved and have enough for me to work with. Oh, I picked Greece. No, you guys don’t need to know what I’m planning to buy or cook! Shame on you for peeking!

Everyone did a great job at our dinner. We have some very talented cooks out there and hope this doesn’t become a competition, just a companion-oriented event. Cheers! Dee

ps To Israel, I’ve some Israeli couscous you can have for a salad, if you’d like. d

The Job Jar

When I was eight my parents instituted a “job jar” for my younger sister and me. It was a Chock Full of Nuts coffee can with eight pieces of paper in it, folded. Each Saturday morning we took turns taking our four weekend tasks.

Our reward was fifty cents a week allowance, that was basically our reward for being on the planet. Fold diapers. Dust. Vacuum (ugh), weed (ugh). We actually had a country house incinerator put in by the previous owner so burned most of our trash, sorry, carbon footprint supervisors.

The most feared were the ones that said “Ask Mom,” and “Ask Dad.” Getting both was a double whammy because who knew what their projects were that weekend.

Just as I find shortcuts to the grocery store or through town everywhere I live, we were tricky. If one was unlucky enough to get both feared tasks, do Mom’s first. It’ll last 3-4 hours, like weeding her entire garden. Then with sweat on your brow and dirt on your face go see Dad and say “I just weeded the entire garden, what would you like me to do?”

We were little kids! He would say “See that screwdriver over there? Hand it to me. OK, you’re done.” My boyfriends used to call him Old Eagle Eyes. He can have quite a stern demeanor but he’s a softie underneath that Germanic crust.

A job jar may be a good way for a large family to operate. I’m seven years older than my brother and 11 years older than the youngest sister so they couldn’t do chores. We could and this unfinished house was a HUGE project that took us three years.

Alongside the job jar came whatever house project was on deck for that week. Paint the house, we used creosote as that is what was there. That cancer-causing substance is not allowed anymore but we used it. We dragged rocks for weekend after weekend to build a retaining wall.

When the septic tank backed up the plans didn’t show where it was. The former owner who built the place knew the general area but no specifics. So we had our work cut out for us.

One story people love is that my Dad wanted to build a front stoop. It was actually the back door, the one we used, because the front door was twenty feet from a 150′ cliff.  Which we climbed after the first week and Papa got us a solid rope with knots every foot so we wouldn’t get hurt.

So we got several hundred pounds of sand. Portland cement. He said 4x3x3 for the base, then build the step from brick. My father thought he meant three FEET deep. If that house blows away in a tornado the stoop will still be there.

I was the “chef” mixing cement with sand and water in our wheelbarrow, load after load after load. Then we started tossing in rocks and whatever we could. We went to the hardware store several more times for cement and found out what was wrong but it was too late to fix it.

Luckily we had extra sand so built a sandbox with railroad ties to hold in the sand. A year later I was taking horseback riding lessons from our high school neighbor on an unruly pony named Pickles, who would lay his ears back then do something to rattle me, like jump the creek.

It was our final lesson and we went along our back 40 at a walk, then my instructor told me to trot, on the diagonal, alone. He cantered, got to the end of the line and stopped dead in his tracks. I was thrown over his head, and landed in the sandbox and only my pride was hurt. He ran home and my instructors’ parents (he taught at the university) were having a dinner party and they all walked down the 1/4 mile driveway to see who Pickles threw. Was my face red?

I’m a believer that everything happens for a reason. Someone had a load of sand they couldn’t sell, we got it, built the stoop and I didn’t get killed or break any bones. Pickles is long gone now but I haven’t been on a horse since. Cheers! Dee