Don’t go around saying the world owes you a living. The world owes you nothing. It was here first.
–Mark Twain
Category Archives: Quotes
A Nifty Tool
Ever since Husband and I decided to curtail spending, especially book purchases, I’ve been using WorldCat. WorldCat is the world’s largest network of library contents and services. Look at the treasures available:
You can search for popular books, music CDs and videos — all of the physical items you’re used to getting from libraries. You can also discover many new kinds of digital content, such as downloadable audiobooks. You may also find article citations with links to their full text; authoritative research materials, such as documents and photos of local or historic significance; and digital versions of rare items that aren’t available to the public. Because WorldCat libraries serve diverse communities in dozens of countries, resources are available in many languages.
I use this site to look up a book title I’m interested in and to see what libraries around my zip code have them. This spares me the effort of having to go to each library’s website and look the book up on their catalog (and it saves me time and gas by not having to go to the libraries directly). When I find the item I want on the list, I can find out if it’s sitting on the shelf or circulating.
I like WorldCat so much that I’m going to install a search box in my sidebar under the list of books I’m currently reading, so that if you learn of a title I mention here, you can easily look it up to see if you can get it from your local library. If your local library doesn’t have it, you can often get the book via Interlibrary Loan. (When I mention books here, I usually link to Amazon since it provides an attractive user interface.)
Being Friendly Doesn’t Hurt
Another one for the library and Amazon wishlist: I Sold My Soul on eBay, by Hemant Mehta.
When Hemant Mehta was a teenager he stopped believing in God, but he never lost his interest in religion. Mehta is “the eBay atheist,” the nonbeliever who auctioned off the opportunity for the winning bidder to send him to church. The auction winner was Jim Henderson, a former pastor and author of Evangelism Without Additives. Since then, Mehta has visited a variety of church services — posting his insightful critiques on the Internet and spawning a positive, ongoing dialogue between atheists and believers.
I Sold My Soul on eBay tells how and why Mehta became an atheist and features his latest church critiques, including descriptions of his visits to some of the best-known churches in the country. His observations will surprise and challenge you, revealing how the church comes across to those outside the faith. Who better than a nonbeliever to offer an eye-opening assessment of how the gospel is being presented — and the elements that enhance or detract from the presentation.
Mehta announced prior to his churchgoing odyssey that he would watch for any signs of God’s existence. After spending Sunday mornings in some of the nation’s leading churches, what happened to the man who sold his soul on eBay? Did attending church change his lack of belief? The answers can be found inside.
–Amazon.com Book Description
I was led to this book from a contemplative post at Dale McGowan’s Meming of Life blog. Dale basically takes the adage “you can catch more flies with honey than vinegar” and considers how atheists and agnostics might apply that wisdom to their interactions with people who are religious. The post also contains an interview with Mehta, an atheist who also holds to the above adage. I plan to check out Mehta’s blog too, called The Friendly Atheist.
A Daunting Problem
No wonder we’re importing dangerous and potentially lethal products from China. Consider how Chinese citizens live.
Environmental woes that might be considered catastrophic in some countries can seem commonplace in China: industrial cities where people rarely see the sun; children killed or sickened by lead poisoning or other types of local pollution; a coastline so swamped by algal red tides that large sections of the ocean no longer sustain marine life.
–Joseph Kahn and Jim Yardley, New York Times
The article mentions that the leading cause of death in China is cancer from pollution, and that almost half a billion people have no safe drinking water. Only 1 percent of the 560 million city dwellers breathe air considered safe.
The article explores the juggernaut of China’s economic progress and the massive use of polluting natural resources (such as coal) that drives it, and how the Communist government is vulnerable to social backlash because people are suffering horribly. The article provides some interesting if grim statistics about the impact of environmental degradation on human life and on the stability of China’s government and economy. In a country so populous, it seems that all forms of life are considered expendable.
Here’s the entire article: As China Roars, Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes, by Joseph Kahn and Jim Yardley
We are all inextricably linked to this and directly contribute to the problem, because we purchase items produced in China. Yet it seems impossible to avoid Chinese-made goods. I look on packaging to see where an item is made and usually only see that it’s “distributed by” an American company. What can we do to protect ourselves? What will we do? And can that have any impact whatsoever on the quality of life in China?
Time For Fun
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass on a summer day listening to the murmur of water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is hardly a waste of time.
–John Lubbock
So while my daughter rests suspended in her dark, cozy, warm room listening to the rhythm of my heart and being nourished through her belly, I too will be sure to rest. I came home from my doctor appointment and slept for several hours.
In the past week I’ve softened a little bit but not dilated, and my babe still hangs high. We’ve scheduled an induction for September 6 (I’ll be 41 and 1/2 weeks). I was assured that if by next week I’m no riper and she’s not lower, we can change that to a planned C-section. By waiting until the 6th we give her more opportunity to initiate labor on her own.
So I have two more weeks to be with her in this way — and two more weeks to take the advice of the wife of Husband’s coworker to have some fun (some of these made me laugh out loud):
- Go to Safeway and buy a pregnancy test. If anyone asks, tell them you have some suspicions.
- Go out to lunch all by yourself — someplace with cloth napkins and no crayons/coloring page placemats. Eat whatever you want. Linger over dessert.
- Watch a whole movie from start to finish in one sitting without interruption.
- Change your answering machine message to: “Yes, we had the baby and we didn’t tell you. Don’t you feel foolish for not calling to find out more often?”
- If people ask when you are due — tell them November, triplets.
- If you find yourself in a long line, crumple forward and moan — presto! New line opens just for you.
- Pedicure, pedicure, pedicure — this is the time that you can get the extra leg massage for free.
- The notion that sex induces labor is lie perpetrated by husbands.
Millions Long
Millions long for immortality who don’t know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.
–Susan Ertz
Spoiling a Pleasure
The surest way of spoiling a pleasure is to start examining your satisfaction.
–C.S. Lewis
Doings
The following is a random brain-dump.
On my way to check my mailbox I crossed paths with a neighbor who, I had observed from a distance, has a cute little boy. We began chatting. Her son is three now, and it turns out that she was 44 when she had him. Elation! Another middle-aged mother to befriend. I enjoyed chatting with her and plan to follow up on this.
At my local yarn store last week I met a woman and her six-month-old son. We struck up a conversation and discovered that our husbands work for the same company. In fact, they know each other! We met today at a coffee shop to become better acquainted; there’s an immediate rapport between us.
I joined Las Madres, and once baby is here, I’ll find a neighborhood playgroup.
This whole pregnancy/motherhood experience is like an induction into a huge club of millions of women. It provides easy conversation fodder and a basis for some very interesting chats with any other woman who has been through the same. Even if you have nothing else in common, you can easily connect. It’s pretty remarkable to be “on the inside” of something.
My friend stopped over Monday night to discuss with me and Husband the logistics of how she’ll assist with my labor. I feel that I’ll be in good hands overall. Actually, after the conversation I felt pretty jazzed about the experience rather than anxious.
We did go see The Bourne Ultimatum last weekend. I think it’ll be the last in-theater movie we see for awhile. Throughout pregnancy I’ve felt hot often, and lately I feel as though I’m burning up. In the air-conditioned theater I began sweating and feeling dizzy; at one point I pulled my shirt up from my belly to tuck it under my “shelf” and rolled my jeans down to my hips (so my belly could get cool). What I really wanted to do was just take the damn shirt off, but even in a darkened theater that would simply not happen. On the way home is was 60 degrees outside but Husband ran the A/C in the car. My husband likes it cold. When I want it so cold that he’s chilly, that’s extreme!
The movie, by the way, was all right, but not my favorite of the series. I could have used less of the metal-crunching car chase, and the weaving-through-the-crowded-market-to-avoid-the-assassin scene went on a tad long.
We are “all growed up” now; last week we signed the legal papers for our living trust, will, legal guardians for our daughter, and health care directives. We each got life insurance policies. It’s sobering business to deal with, but now we’ve confronted the mortality issues and done our best to responsibly provide for each other and our child if something terrible happens. We can tuck it all away and get on with living. The next task (after she’s born) is to establish a college savings fund for her.
I find myself resisting non-fiction lately. I’ve set aside the book on aging. I’m attempting to read No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam, but I haven’t settled into it. However I did devour the novel I was selected to read and review: Gifted, by Nikita Lalwani. I need to write the review for LibraryThing.
I can barely write with my laptop on my lap anymore. Bending over to put on shoes is also near to impossible.
I read a New York Times article on Silicon Valley millionaires who feel poor:
“I know people looking in from the outside will ask why someone like me keeps working so hard,” Mr. Steger says. “But a few million doesn’t go as far as it used to. Maybe in the ’70s, a few million bucks meant ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous,’ or Richie Rich living in a big house with a butler. But not anymore.”
Silicon Valley is thick with those who might be called working-class millionaires — nose-to-the-grindstone people like Mr. Steger who, much to their surprise, are still working as hard as ever even as they find themselves among the fortunate few. Their lives are rich with opportunity; they generally enjoy their jobs. They are amply cushioned against the anxieties and jolts that worry most people living paycheck to paycheck.
But many such accomplished and ambitious members of the digital elite still do not think of themselves as particularly fortunate, in part because they are surrounded by people with more wealth — often a lot more.
By this criteria, we are screwed. Not that we live by this criteria, but the quote is a good example of how skewed perceptions of “enough” are here in the valley. I suppose if you want to “keep up with the Joneses” — a new Ferrari every two years, a nanny, a full-time housekeeper, vintage wines, summer camp for the kids, private music/dance/etc. lessons, country-club membership, new furniture for your new million-dollar home — then even a couple million in your portfolio isn’t enough. Fortunately, we don’t even want to know the Joneses, much less care about keeping up with them.
One of the most common topics of small talk in the valley here isn’t about the weather (which hardly varies) but about housing: Are you renting? Where did you buy? How much are the houses in [insert city] going for? Do you think you’ll be staying in California? How’s your ARM doing? Did you refinance? Friends who were able to purchase because they had dual incomes and are now starting a family are suddenly faced with the challenge of how to afford their mortgage if one parent stays home. When 40% of your gross income goes to taxes and 40-50% of your net income pays for rent or mortgage, those big numbers don’t mean much anymore. It’s crazy here. We periodically talk about moving back to Austin, but it’s not in the cards at this time — probably not for several years, if then.
Well, I guess my brain is now cleared. I just need to figure out what to do with myself for a few more hours, until I fall asleep. I’m like clockwork these days, but I’m shifted. I’m usually awake until 4 a.m., then awake sometime between 10:30 a.m. and noon. Some days I get an afternoon nap, and other days not. Lather, rinse, repeat. I bet I go into labor in the middle of the night.
The Countdown
Today was the first of my weekly OB visits. So, when is Little One making her debut?
According to my doctor (who gave me an exam), it’s not likely she’ll arrive before her due date on August 27. There’s no dilation. She is head down, but she hasn’t dropped. Once she drops into the pelvic opening, she’s kind of “locked in” and won’t flip. Here’s hoping she doesn’t get all excited about something and flip herself laterally or upright. So, my doctor said, “You’ve got time. Make a getaway to Santa Cruz, or San Francisco. Enjoy it!” This means when my brother comes to visit during my 39th week, he won’t have to deal firsthand with his sister raving through labor pain. One caveat from my doctor, though: things can change. I’m rather enjoying this period of wondering.
We also reviewed my one-page “birth preferences” document. I don’t put much stock in a birth plan — in fact I think the concept is rather amusing — it’s a natural event and has too many variables to really plan. However, I decided it was worth noting my preferences for labor positions, pain management, postpartum care, and so on, all of which are flexible if other measures are needed. The doctor made helpful suggestions about some things to change and was generally satisfied with it. She was especially pleased it was only one page. She’s seen birth plans that are six pages long, and she said, “Believe me, the nurses don’t read beyond page one. There’s so much going on.” Fortunately for us, a friend of mine has offered to be a coach alongside Husband. She’s had two children before, and I appreciate her willingness to assist, especially since she’s in the second trimester of her third pregnancy. She’ll be able to look after me, make suggestions to Husband on how he can comfort me, and they can help each other take breaks as they need. If I’m really lucky, my labor will be like my mother’s — with her first child it took about eight hours, and the rest of us were also pretty short.
One change to note: in the past two weeks, I lost 1.5 pounds. Little One is growing bigger and her heartbeat is good. It’s just too hot to eat a lot, and I don’t have much room. Doctor said there’s no need to be concerned; I have ample reserves!
In general I feel fine, except that the heat really sucks my energy out, and then I feel crabby and as though I’m wearing lead weights. Several people suggested I try swimming, and I finally took their advice. Our community has a small pool; this evening I immersed myself for 40 minutes. (Glory be, my bathing suit fit, although it, um, looked rather like it’d been spray-painted on me.) It was delicious to be in the water.
Tomorrow we’re hosting the final “Last Chance to See” dinner with friends. We also aim to get to The Bourne Ultimatum this weekend, which might be the last theater excursion for awhile. We’re just following a friend’s advice: “Go see a movie in July. Select it carefully. Remember that it could be up to a year and a half that you say this picture’s name every time you speak the words, ‘The last movie we saw was…’ And this is important: see something better than Mark Wahlberg in Planet of the Apes.” 🙂
Sunday Scribblings: Phenomenon
Inspired by the Sunday Scribblings topic this week, Phenomenon, I will attempt to articulate my thoughts on two phenomena — two transitions — that are dovetailing in my life: motherhood and blogging.
As my pregnancy has progressed, I’ve had time to begin the process of learning just how much my life will change. I know I won’t comprehend this completely until I’m in it. But as Karen Maezen Miller writes in Momma Zen:
Many of us consciously schedule motherhood for a time when we think we are done changing. We have arrived. We are stable. We’ve figured it all out. No more uncertainties or ambiguities for us. These are the years when we are likely to affix to a career, a partner, a home, and a hairstyle. With enough willpower and self-discipline, we can seem to forestall change for years on end — maintaining our chosen looks and pastimes, our precious privacy, our patterns and preferences, our way.
On the surface I don’t fit all the parameters Karen describes. My hair is a barometer of my moods and changes often. I’ve had a patchwork quilt of a career, having only begun the one I really wanted in 2000 at age 37 only to abandon it in the move to California in 2004. I’ve moved every few years since fledging my parents’ nest at 20. I didn’t want to be single parent, and it wasn’t until age 36 that I met my husband. (In fact, I avidly did not want children in my 20s; I sensed they would blow my life wide open.) I was gung-ho to have kids by age 38, but by then I was no longer the only one controlling the schedule; Husband needed to feel ready as well.
Anyone who knows me well knows my beliefs about life and my self-concept weren’t obvious to me until my late 30s — except the period where I immersed myself in a fundamentalist religion where I was told what and how to think. I depended upon others (often to my detriment) to define and validate me. It wasn’t until my late thirties that I could identify the values I hold most dearly, the words that describe the passion running like a gold thread through my life: education, community, creativity, expression. It wasn’t until I met my husband that my life became stable enough to pay attention to things other than survival. I began creating art in 2002. I relaxed into myself. Poor to nonexistent self-confidence was my major obstacle, and while it remains, it’s much diminished.
Despite all those differences, I am well-acquainted with driving my own life. While my goal in life was not to “arrive” — I didn’t postpone children until I’d reached some ideal state or lofty goal — and while change has been at the core of my life, I often chose the change. There were many things I could not control in my life, but I controlled how I responded to them. With crappy living situations, I went out for walks. I hated my job, so I took classes toward a long-term goal. My finances were tight, so I ate less. I had no money for a social life, so I saw few friends and devoted myself to a pen pal. I wanted better opportunities, so I moved 1800 miles to an unknown city and started over. And now that life is comparatively easy, I still have a sense of control: if I don’t feel like cooking, I don’t, and we eat out or fend for ourselves at home. I can shower when I like. I read for pleasure. I sleep when I want. I come and go as I please. I have plenty of time for my hobbies.
And then, in 2002 I discovered the ideal hobby for me, a writer who doesn’t seriously care about being paid and published: blogging. In my teens I journaled, but this waned in my 20s until I began my pen pal/journal relationship. When I have an audience in mind, writing has more appeal. Blogging provides the instant satisfaction of expression where many eyes will see it and in a format that looks appealing and official. It provides a sense of community with other disembodied “voices” and ego gratification from comments.
It is also a giant black hole for time, and it is my addiction. I spend more hours than I care to admit or are healthy on the Internet. At first blogging felt meaningful, and I developed friends. Periodically I feel compelled to adjust the balance of living online and living in real life (toward less online). But I do much less living than ever. Since finding stability and love, I seek out my cozy home life more; I don’t feel a need to get away (I used to walk for hours, go places, meet people, attend events). This reclusiveness has been compounded since the Internet/blogging phenomenon; I’ve lived increasingly in my mind in abstraction. Inertia roots me. I’m not alone; many people complain they do this too. I justify the time spent by saying, “I’m a writer.” Bullshit. When you’re reading Perez Hilton or TMZ or frittering time at 43 Things, you’re not writing. And increasingly I’m aware that the sense of relationship with others whom I regularly read is harder to maintain. Without occasional shared real life experiences, these relationships are just words on a screen with maybe a photo to give the mind’s eye a visual context.
Soon my life will change dramatically. Karen also writes:
The mother of a teenager once said to me, “I remember when they’re about eight months old and their ego begins to develop. It’s not pretty.” Neither is your own ego, and you don’t have to wait eight months for it to appear! I can see now how much of motherhood, from the very first hour, carries the early warning signs of ego warfare. I want to sleep. She wants to eat. I need to do this. She needs to do that. Not again. Again. It can feel as though someone were eating you alive. And what is being eaten is your ego.
It seems ridiculous to talk about infant care as combat. Your baby’s needs are pure and uncontrived. They are not manipulations. They are not strategic assaults. They are just assaults, relentless and evolving, against the way you want things to be. You love your child, yes, and yet you flail and roar, you cry and whine and tremble with the terror of life beyond your control.
This is what awaits me! Yep, I’m a bit frightened by it. Yet I’m also curious and engaged. I want to give myself to this experience. Will I want to write about it? Perhaps. Then again, maybe I would rather just live it. The blog is not a child, and the world does not need me, simply another voice on a screen. If I gave up blogging, my dedicated readers would miss me, but not much and not for long, because they, too, have real lives.
I always find it amusing when bloggers feel a need to explain an upcoming absence, or to apologize for not writing, or to apologize for “inconveniencing” readers by not writing. But I’ve done this too.
I wish I didn’t have a blog, that I’d never been bit by that bug. I wish I didn’t feel the need for the ego gratification of the pretty blog format and instant ability to share and show off (Look at me! Look at me!). I wish I wasn’t such an information hound, easily beguiled by trivia, hungry for more ideas. Let me be honest: increasingly I read less and comment less often on other blogs. I don’t really care about the other writer as much. Blogging has become, for me, mostly an avenue of expression and is no longer very reciprocal. But oh, it is so very easy to piss away hours of my life; self-employment was difficult for me because it takes a kind of self-discipline to structure one’s life, and I lack that trait. When I had a job, I squandered less time. The external schedule gave my life a spine.
Well I’ll soon have a job, but one without regular hours, and one that will demand more hours than any job I’ve ever had. I don’t know if I have enough energy or interest to give to this hobby any longer. Recently other bloggers I’ve read have also called it quits, because they felt the time spent blogging could be put to better use achieving their dreams. So maybe I’ll write, or maybe I won’t. It will be interesting to see what impact the phenomenon of motherhood has on the phenomenon of blogging in my life.
Okay, I Was Wrong
Remember I wrote that it never rains in the summer here? I ought to know better than to use an absolute. From the San Jose Mercury News:
In more than 70 years of record-keeping, it has never rained in San Jose on July 18.
Expect that streak to keep going.
Rain did fall as far south as Mountain View this morning.
San Francisco made weather history today by recording one-hundredth of an inch of rain, the storm system “is weakening rapidly” and will exit in the late morning hours, according to Dan Gudgel, a forecaster with the National Weather Service.
“I think it’s opportunity may have passed,” Gudgel said of San Jose’s chance for rain.
Still, the cold front will leave unseasonably cool temperatures around the South Bay, Gudgel said. San Jose is expected to have a high of 74 degrees today — about 10 degrees below normal — with southwest winds at 10 mph.
Overnight lows are expected to drop to 56.
Gudgel said the downtown climate station in San Francisco recorded a measurable amount of rain — at least one-hundredth of an inch — for the first time on this date in more than 150 years.
It is raining here in Santa Clara, very lightly. And last week, we did have an odd sprinkle in the middle of the night.
So I will amend my statement: it rarely rains here during the summer, although the rain we do get is a pittance compared to what we need.
On Tact
Tact is the knack of making a point without making an enemy.
–Isaac Newton
An Attempted State of Mind
I had no idea what I was going to make when I started. It seems now that it was an attempt at self-soothing or balance. I drew this while watching Eugene Jarecki’s movie, Why We Fight — a provocative, disturbing, multifaceted analysis of the U.S. military-industrial complex. There’s an interview with Jarecki via the link that will summarize the documentary better than I can. I learned that the term “military-industrial complex” was coined by Republican President Dwight Eisenhower in his 1961 farewell address to Americans. His warning, it seems, went unheeded.
Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United States corporations.
This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence — economic, political, even spiritual — is felt in every city, every state house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society.
In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.
–Dwight Eisenhower
You can read the entire speech here.
Mushball
I swear, it doesn’t take much to make me all soppy and weepy. Some examples:
- The nurse teaching the childbirth prep class mentioned that it’s such an overwhelming, momentous event that women often burst into tears when the baby is born. She said the fathers do too, and just wait, we will. Well, I had news for her. I tear up and can barely control myself when we see videos of live births. We watched a movie about epidurals last night; they showed several mothers laboring differently (with and without) and the final outcome. Yes, it’s messy to watch, but I can’t help but feeling such awe seeing the little body emerge, hearing the parental exclamations of joy, and watching the mothers burst into tears as they hold their child for the first time.
In the breastfeeding class, I struggled for composure watching a video of a mother learning to get her child to latch on and suckle for the first time after three days of difficulty. Hell, in the infant CPR class, I teared up watching a video simulation of a grandmother discovering her grandson (a plastic doll) in the crib not breathing and providing CPR.
- I read the following and smiled through my tears at the end.
AN ACT OF KINDNESS THAT SHOULD OCCUR MORE OFTEN
My 17 year old daughter and I were standing in line at our local Pharmacy. Earlier in the day, we had, by chance, had a discussion on the high cost of medications for the elderly.
It happened that an elderly gentleman was in front of us in line and was discussing his wife’s prescription with the pharmacist. He seemed sad and somewhat agitated when he inquired as to the cost of the prescription. When the pharmacist shared that it was not as bad as could be at only $38.40. The elderly gentlemen nodded and said he would wander the store while the prescription was filled.
My daughter turned to me with tears in her eyes and asked if we could help. Of course we could! While by no means wealthy, we were not on a strict budget and could certainly do without a movie or lunch out that week. We quickly asked the pharmacist if we could pay for the prescription and he smiled and agreed to allow us to do so. We asked that he tell the gentlemen that it was a “random act of kindness.”
We completed our shopping and happened to be leaving the store at the same time as our new “friend”. We were further blessed with getting to see him greet his wife, who had been waiting in the car, with a box of chocolates. (Presumably his act of kindness…passing it on.)
It is not possible that he was given more joy than we were that day!
–Submitted by Debbie, in an email from the Random Acts of Kindness Foundation
-
There’s a song by Colbie Caillat, Bubbly, that’s a happy little love ditty. It’s got a catchy tune, too. Her voice is sweet. When I hear the song I feel cheerful and teary all at once. It’s hard to appreciate the song unless you’ve actually heard it; however, it begins:
I’ve been awake for a while now
you’ve got me feelin like a child now
cause every time i see your bubbly face
I get the tinglies in a silly placeIt starts in my toes
makes me crinkle my nose
where ever it goes I always know
that you make me smile
please stay for a while now
just take your time
where ever you go
I’m going to buy stock in Kleenex.
Reasons to Stay Home
I hate air travel since 9/11. I’ve been pulled over for extra inspection almost every time I’ve tried to board an airplane. On top of that, changes in airline business practices make flying odious. I never wrote about our Christmas trip, but leaving San Jose was nearly impossible due to massive airline screw-ups and delays (due to a recent merger of one airline with another). We arrived two hours early to the airport; we stood in line for two hours just to check our bags and get boarding passes. We barely made the plane, but then it sat for another 45 minutes. This late start on the first leg of our flight made us miss our Las Vegas connection, which caused us to have to re-book our second connection through Pittsburgh while our luggage went to the original connection point of Atlanta. We did arrive in Syracuse, finally, but it took our luggage another day. Due to the time-zone shift, flying east is hard on the body. So it was, in all, an unpleasant flight experience. At least the trip home was smooth.
So in addition to the fact that air travel is expensive and our budget is tight right now, there are more reasons to stay on the ground. Here’s a sampling. Those of you who have the patience and fortitude to fly, more power to ya.
Over all, this could be a dreadful summer to fly. In the first five months of 2007, more than a quarter of all flights within the United States arrived at least 15 minutes late. And more of those flights were delayed for long stretches, an average of 39 percent longer than a year earlier. … If a flight taxies out, sits for hours, and then taxies back in and is canceled, the delay is not recorded. Likewise, flights diverted to cities other than their destination are not figured into delay statistics.
Right now, it’s far cheaper for airlines to screw over their passengers and say “Sorry, your flight is canceled, please come back tomorrow” than it is to maintain enough staff and equipment to run their operations. After years of cost-cutting, they are running so close to the bone that they can’t deal with problems when they occur.
If airline executives want to run lean, that’s their business decision, but passengers should be adequately compensated when that system fails. This is something that simply switching carriers won’t fix — the problem pervades the entire industry, and in many cities, one or two carriers control most of the flights anyway.
If you cancel your reservation or don’t show up for a flight, the airline charges you a penalty all the way to the full price of your ticket. It’s only fair that when the airline fails to deliver on its side of the bargain, it should pay you.
—As summer air travel horror begins, Congress should give passengers more rights
Debbie Chaklos of the South Side booked a four-day Father’s Day trip to Paris with her father and 17-year-old brother for June 13. Due to bad weather elsewhere, they were still on the tarmac in Pittsburgh when their flight from Philadelphia to Paris took off. No other flights were leaving that night. After failing to get their bags back, Ms. Chaklos said, she called some 25 Philadelphia-area hotels before finding a vacancy.
A US Airways attendant re-booked them on an Air France flight the next day, but, on getting to Paris, they found their three bags were missing. They spent days haggling on the phone with Air France and washing their clothes in the sink before two of the bags finally arrived — 10 hours before the trio was set to fly back to the States. Once back, they realized the bags were lost again.
After three hours of sitting on a runway at LaGuardia International Airport the night of June 19, and the single glass of water and the mini granola bar issued to her long gone, Alice Norris got off her US Airways flight to look for another plane back to Pittsburgh. None was available. She returned to her seat and sat for another two hours before the pilots announced the federal limit on their flight time had run out and the flight had been canceled.
It was now around midnight. The Butler County woman waited through the crowded customer service line, saying she was an inexperienced flier and didn’t know what to do. The customer representative shrugged.
“I’m tired,” Mrs. Norris said.
“I am too,” the rep replied.
“I’m 70,” Mrs. Norris said.
Such experiences are becoming more and more common this summer, with passengers facing mounting cancellations, delays, lost bags, ruined vacations and emotional scenes at the ticket counter. A product of dangerous summer weather and systemic industry problems, the situation is poised to get even worse as the traveling season gets into full swing this week.
Passengers are finding the trade-offs offered for canceled flights — such as hotel rooms — are not as readily offered anymore, and when they are, rooms are sold out. Free ticket offers aren’t as desirable either — why come back to the airport and face a delayed flight again?
That night, while walking around the darkened terminal, Mrs. Norris joined another increasingly common sight at American airports: a group of strangers huddled together for the night. Finding she couldn’t sleep, she returned to another crowded ticket line after 5 a.m., was erased from a 9 a.m. flight before finally finding another close to 11 a.m., all the while thinking of her treatment.
And now, for your viewing pleasure (?) (If the embedded video doesn’t work, click here):Thanks to Jen for pointing out the video.
If You Want Explosions
When we lived in Austin, we were outside the city limits, so every July 4 we didn’t have to go anywhere to see fireworks. Our neighbors on either side, along with dozens of others in the subdivision, put on quite a show. They used serious fireworks. The first year it upset us; we worried about our house burning down. We couldn’t fight it though, so we relaxed and enjoyed it. Boys (even man-boys) like the drama of pyrotechnics, so in our last year we actually purchased a few and set them off ourselves. I was very tense about this, and we were very cautious. That was the only time we ever played with fire, so to speak.
With July 4th, there will be a lot of celebrating. If you plan to set off fireworks, I encourage you to explore Bruce’s Bombs, Explosives, and Ordnance Pages. He explains the risks of playing with explosives, especially homemade M-80s and cherry bombs. He provides federal and California legal information which explains how one can go to prison for playing with explosives. If you need visual evidence to convince you, he also provides links to gory photos of victims of explosions (especially hand injuries). (Don’t worry if you click the link, because you won’t immediately see the photos. You can choose to view the ones you think you can tolerate.) I did view them all, and they provide great incentive to be cautious. Bruce’s website is offered as a public service to educate people, especially children, about the risks. He writes:
Most of the people who are injured by explosives are injured because of what they do not know, not by what they do know. Simple fireworks injure more people than high explosives. Each year, more than 10,000 injuries are caused by the use of fireworks in the United States. Seventy percent of those injuries are in children and young adults between the ages of 5 and 24 years. Half of all injuries are incurred in the week of the Fourth of July.
If you want to play with explosions, there are actually summer camps that you can attend where experts guide you. From the New York Times:
A group of high school students stood at the edge of a limestone quarry last month as three air horn blasts warned that something big was about to go boom. Across the quarry, with a roar and a cloud of dust and smoke, a 50-foot-high wall of rock sloughed away with a shudder and a long crashing fall, and 20,000 tons of rock was suddenly on the ground.
The upshot: if you value your health and life, leave the fireworks to experts.
The Produce Basket of the U.S.
I was talking with my sister yesterday about the climate here, and the fact it does not rain (at all) from about April through September/October here. It is bone dry. She mused that there must not be much agriculture grown in the summer, but I assured her otherwise. I got curious about how much produce California supplies to the U.S. and spent a couple hours surfing for information. Below is a smidgen of what I found.
- California grows more than 90 percent of tomatoes used in tomato-based products in the United States and nearly half the tomatoes processed worldwide.
- California grows about 60% of the nation’s Bartletts (pears).
- Over 99% of the olives grown in the United States are grown in California.
- California grows 90 percent of all the broccoli in the United States.
- California grows about 80% of the U.S. supply of garlic.
- California grows more than two-thirds of the U.S. medium grain [rice] crop.
- California grows all of the nation’s commercial pistachios on 60,000 acres.
- California grows nearly eighty-three percent of the strawberries for the marketplace in the United States.
- The state is the largest producer of fruits and vegetables in the country, accounting for 49 percent of the total U.S. value. Tree and vine fruit production in California is 58 percent of the U.S. value, and vegetable and melon production is 39 percent of the U.S. value. California accounts for more than 99 percent of national production of artichokes, Brussels sprouts, dates, figs, kiwifruit, cling peaches, persimmons, prunes and raisins. It accounts for at least 50 percent of U.S. production of table grapes, wine grapes, lettuce, strawberries, broccoli, plums, celery, carrots, avocados, fresh-market oranges, cauliflower, honeydew, cantaloupes and processing tomatoes. While it produces less than 40 percent of total U.S. production of spinach and asparagus, California grows more of these commodities than any other single state.
As a result, agriculture accounts for 83 percent of all water used in California.
Sensibility
This brought a chuckle. I’m not a fan of opera, and perhaps this is why.
No opera plot can be sensible, for people do not sing when they are feeling sensible.
–WH Auden
Old Door in Port Townsend, Washington
I’m Not Convinced That I Agree
What do you think? Do you agree?
It is a paradoxical but profoundly true and important principle of life that the most likely way to reach a goal is to be aiming not at that goal itself but at some more ambitious goal beyond it.
–Arnold Toynbee


