Monday, December 26, 2022

How It All Went Down - Part I

Before I get started, I'm afraid this may sound like whining, but that is not my intention. I'm trying to write up how this Christmas weekend went.

I know we were lucky - no one died, the cattle are fine, and we didn't get 43 inches of snow - but it was still one of the worst Christmases I've ever had. But it will definitely be memorable, and in some ways, it was possibly the best Christmas I will ever have. Who knows?

The problem was I had anticipated a great Christmas weekend. I expected Friday to bake, make a cheeseball, all of that holiday stuff that makes the house smell good and that gives the tummy the yummies.

Usually, my father and stepmother come by on Christmas Eve. Later, my brother comes over and I enjoy those visits. We've opened our presents from one another on Christmas Eve since we were small children; it's a tradition, one of the few we have, really.

Some years I have an open house and lots of people come by, though we haven't done that since the pandemic began. Then Christmas Day is generally quiet. My husband and I open presents, we visit with his mom, maybe go to my father's house.

That's what I was expecting. My father and stepmother had Covid, so I knew we wouldn't see them, but I was looking forward to time with my brother.

None of that happened, except my husband and I exchanged presents Christmas morning.

This write-up will be a long narrative. It's writing practice, really, an effort to convey how things were for us this weekend. It's just a slice of life. Feel free to critique. Or not read. Whatever.

Thursday night, December 22, the winds began to howl. Around midnight, the noise woke me. I lay listening to the sound of pinecones or small sticks hitting the siding of the house. Eventually I drifted back to sleep. When the alarms went off, the bed was warm and we snuggled a bit too long before getting up. I wasn't ready to send my husband out into those cold temperatures and that wind, but I knew he would have to care for the cattle.

I took my medication and my husband took his. He ate some sausage for breakfast. The lights blinked once. "I'm going to get a shower," I told him. 

I stepped in the shower and began to get wet.

Then the power went out.

I was drenched but not soapy. I hurried to turn off the water to preserve what was in the tank. "The power's out!" my husband helpfully yelled as I tried to find my towel in the darkness of the bathroom.

"Bring me a flashlight," I shrieked.

"What?"

He came toward the bathroom. I could hear the backup battery in my office beeping. "Turn off my computer for me," I said. I heard him plod down the hall and into my office. I realized he'd already put on his work boots and knew there would be dirt all over the hall.

He went back to the kitchen.

"Goddamn it, APCO doesn't have a customer service number in the phone book!" my husband said. He continued to mutter and rant about the power company and its unreliable service.

I dried off without a flashlight. "I'll call them, go check on the cattle and the watering troughs," I called out.

"You'd think as much as they keep raising the rates, they would have a number in the phone book!" my husband yelled back. We were shouting at one another from opposite ends of the house.

"I'll put the outage in on the app on my phone," I called back. "Or find a number in my 2012 book I have in my office."

"I bet you don't find a number, they don't want you to report an outage," he snarled.

By this time, I'd dried off and put on my clothes. My hair was wet, and I toweled it dry.

I looked in the hallway and sure enough, there was dirt. "Go feed the cattle, I'm going to have to sweep the floor," I told him. "I'll report the outage."

He left, slamming the door and cursing the power company as he went. I picked up my phone and went to the power company's website and reported the outage. Then I swept up the dirt he tracked in.

The thermometer said 9 degrees. The winds were blowing about 45 mph. I wondered how long it would take the house to cool down.

I ate a bowl of Cheerios without milk (which is how I always eat them), and then made the bed. I picked up the dirty clothes and carried them to the laundry room. I emptied the clean dishes from the dishwasher and put the dirty ones in it.

The house grew colder.

My husband returned and reported that a line was down about 100 yards from our driveway. Time to pull out the generator. This was going to be a long outage.

The portable generator is heavy, but he had brought it to the back door the day before because we had anticipated a problem.

I had to back the car out of the garage so he could have space to run extension cords. We used these to power the refrigerator, freezer, and a small space heater. After I looked at the outage map, I suspected we might be without power until the next day.

Our house is wired so that, once the mains are off, we can run the generator through the circuit breaker box. It won't run the heat, the hot water heater, the stove, or the washer and dryer, but it will run lights, the small TV, space heaters, and the microwave. It also gives us water to flush the toilets. Just not hot water.

The last time we'd ran the generator through the circuit breaker box, my husband blew up an air purifier and the electric box on one of the sofas, so I went around and unplugged everything I could before he hooked the generator up.

People were checking on us by this time, too. My brother and my friend T. texted to see if we needed anything. We were ok so far, but I asked my brother to come by to help my husband connect the generator, since he was in the area. He stopped by but we did not talk much, since they were working and doing guy things.

My husband asked me to go to Bellacinos and get hot sandwiches. I agreed and pulled on my heaviest coat. I had only a little pair of knit gloves, and no hat, though the coat had a hood. I had to sit in the car for a few minutes to let the ice that had built up on the windshield melt. Where did the ice come from? The car had been in the garage where there was some humidity, and as soon as I pulled it outside, it did a flash freeze over the windshield.

Once I could see, I drove to Daleville, dodging tree limbs and icy spots in the road as I went. At Bellacinos, I went to the restroom, hoping for soap and warm water; I had the water but not the soap and no towels. I dried my hands on my jeans, fetched our food, and went back outside for the return ride home.

The winds had diminished some, but the frigid temperatures left me wishing I had on more clothes even with the car heater going full blast. My winter attire leaves something to be desired, since I try not to go out in bad weather anymore.

After I returned home, we ate our sandwiches. My husband had tried to convince his mother to go to his sister's house, but it was nearly dark before she agreed to go. I had worried about her all day because I knew the house was cooling off. Plus, she'd probably lost all of her food in the refrigerator.

Our house was down to about 60 degrees. Cool, but tolerable. I kept walking around, moving, because it was warmer to do that than to sit under a blanket.

Dinner that night was cold chicken with a side of broccoli that I heated in the microwave.

I had no internet, and we have a very low data plan on my cellphone, which I used up by constantly checking the power company's website for updates. We were in an area with 65 people out, including my mother-in-law, my nephew, and my cousin.

My nephew also went to his mother's, so my sister-in-law had a houseful with her son, his wife, their two children, and her mother. I could only imagine what it was like over there. At least they were warm and safe.

For a while, my husband and I sat and looked at one another. I read a magazine. He talked on his cellphone to various people. He checked in on his cousin, who, like us, was staying with the house to ensure the pipes didn't freeze. They made a plan to try to hook up this tractor PTO generator to my husband's mother's house Saturday morning if the power had not returned.

Around 7 p.m., my husband decided to go to his mother's to see if she had another space heater we could use. He returned, and then needed to put gas in the generator.

"Go turn on the lights on the car so I can see what I'm doing," he said.

I went out to the car and the dashboard was lit up like a rocketship control panel, including, I noted with dismay, the battery indicator. 

The car wouldn't start, nor would the headlights burn.

"Did you not turn the car all the way off?" I asked him. "The battery is dead."

There was much cursing then that I will not repeat. My husband hopped in his truck and went to the shed to retrieve the battery charger, which he hooked to my car when he returned.

By then it was about 0 degrees, and the winds were still blowing, though not as hard. I was freezing. He was cold and angry. The battery charger indicated a cell in the battery was dead. I went inside and found a number for the local Advanced Auto Parts to see what their hours were. As I hung up, my husband said he had the car running.

"Advanced closes at 9," I said. 

"Good girl," he said, because I'd had sense enough to call.

He left then to have a new battery put in the car. I worried that the generator might run out of gas before he returned, but it didn't. 

I took off my coat, sat down, and had a good cry, one of those that alternates between laughing and crying. It was crazy, the car dying on this day, when the power was out, and absolutely nothing was going as expected. I was cold and I wanted a hot shower, which I knew I wasn't going to get. I finally hiccupped and pulled myself together.

He came back and filled the generator tank with gas.

By this time, it was about 8:30 p.m.

It had been a very long day.

And we still had to get him clean so he could get in the bed.

We are both rather fastidious people, to be farmers. We take lots of showers, change our clothes a lot, and wash our hands frequently. He had been around the hay and the cattle. He wasn't going to bed dirty.

I heated water in a glass dish in the microwave and carried it to him in the bathroom. He took what he called a whore bath, otherwise known as a sponge bath, while I ferried bowls of hot water to him from the kitchen. He then bravely put his head under the sink and washed his hair with cold water, until I returned with a bowl of hot water that I promptly dumped over his head.

Generally, I take a bath before bedtime, too, a quick jump in and out to wash the day out of my hair so that it doesn't upset my allergies and asthma, but I passed. I couldn't be but so dirty, right?

To Be Continued

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Merry Christmas!

We lost power on Friday, December 23 about 8 a.m. and didn't get it back until Sunday, December 25, about 2:30 p.m.

So Merry Christmas and I'm sorry I didn't get around to visiting blogs - but I had no internet and I have only a low data plan on my phone!


Saturday, December 24, 2022

Saturday 9: Happy Holidays!

(From the archives)
 

1. When Sam Winters (meme author) was a little girl, she loved giving her annual wish list to Santa. If you could ask Santa for anything at all, right now, what would it be?

A. I'm pretty sure world peace is out of the question, so I would just like for everyone to be comfortable, however they define that. Whether that's more to eat, a place to sleep, or being able to turn Twitter into a rat's nest, may all of humanity be comfortable in their skins and in their lives.

2. Are you currently on the Naughty or Nice list? How did you get there?

A. I'm on the Nice list, because I don't do anything naughty anymore. I do swear, so maybe that keeps me off of the Nice list. I'm pretty sure f*ck is my favorite word. I'm nice because I donate to charities, I look after people I care about, I check on people, blah blah, stuff like that. I don't do anything special, but I also am not a scrooge.

3. Are you traveling this Christmas? If so, are you going by car, plane or train?

A. We aren't moving from our house. The weather outside is frightful, and we've cows to watch over during a freezing blizzard or whatever is coming.

4.  Did you send any presents out of town? If so, what was it and how far did it travel?

A. I sent a present to England. I shan't say what it was because it's not Christmas yet!

5. Did you buy yourself a gift this year?

A. Not exactly. I saw iPads on sale (the 64 gb ones) at Staples, and it reminded me of reward points we had on a credit card that I'd been hoarding. I checked and we had enough to get an iPad. I asked my husband about using the rewards for that (it was his business card; I don't think he even knew there were rewards on it), and he agreed and with a small amount thrown in, he bought me an iPad with 256 gb on it. It is here but I haven't opened it yet.

6. What's your favorite holiday-themed movie or TV special? Have you seen it yet this year?

A. We must always watch Rudolph, The Red-Nose Reindeer, and we have seen it. We also like Jeff Dunham's Christmas special, which we have not yet watched. I highly recommend the DVD version of that; the one on Comedy Central is cut all up and the best stuff is on the DVD.

7. Which do you prefer: a hollow chocolate Santa or a chunk of fudge?

A. A chunk of fudge.

8. Close your eyes and tell us the first carol that comes to mind.

A. Silent Night.

9. What's your favorite winter beverage?

A. Cider, but the people who made my favorite cider went out of business. Nothing tastes like Murray's Cider used to taste; there is no comparison to that. I shan't settle for second best. (Besides, it upsets my stomach.)

_______________
I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.  

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Thursday Thirteen

Since a star led the Wise Men to Bethlehem, I thought I'd do some star theory today.

1. Our sun is a star! It took it 50 million years to mature to adulthood, which is where it is now. It will stay in this phase for 10 billion years.

2. Stars are fueled by the nuclear fusion of hydrogen, which forms helium deep in their interiors.

3. The smallest stars are called red dwarfs. They may contain as little as 10% the mass of the Sun and emit only 0.01% as much energy, glowing feebly at temperatures between 3000-4000K. Red dwarfs are the most numerous stars in the Universe and have lifespans of tens of billions of years.

4. The most massive stars are called hypergiants. They may be 100 or more times more massive than the Sun, and have surface temperatures of more than 30,000 K. Hypergiants emit hundreds of thousands of times more energy than the Sun but have lifetimes of only a few million years. 

5. When a star has fused all the hydrogen in its core, nuclear reactions cease. Deprived of the energy production needed to support it, the core begins to collapse into itself and becomes much hotter. Hydrogen is still available outside the core, so hydrogen fusion continues in a shell surrounding the core. The increasingly hot core also pushes the outer layers of the star outward, causing them to expand and cool, transforming the star into a red giant.

6. Stars are the most widely recognized astronomical objects and represent the most fundamental building blocks of galaxies.

7. Stars are responsible for the manufacture and distribution of heavy elements such as carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen,

8. The majority the stars in the Milky Way are paired or in groups of multiple stars.

9. For average stars like the Sun, the process of ejecting its outer layers continues until the stellar core is exposed. This dead, but still ferociously hot stellar cinder is called a White Dwarf.

10. If a white dwarf forms in a binary or multiple star system, it may experience a more eventful demise as a nova.

11. Main sequence stars over eight solar masses are destined to die in a titanic explosion called a supernova.

12. In a supernova, the star's core collapses and then explodes. In massive stars, a complex series of nuclear reactions leads to the production of iron in the core. Having achieved iron, the star has wrung all the energy it can out of nuclear fusion - fusion reactions that form elements heavier than iron actually consume energy rather than produce it. The star no longer has any way to support its own mass, and the iron core collapses.

13. Some astronomers think The Star of Bethlehem was an alignment of Jupiter, Saturn, the moon and the sun in the constellation of Aries on April 17, 6 B.C. This conjunction fits with the story for a few reasons. First, this conjunction happened in the early morning hours, which aligns with the Gospel's description of the Star of Bethlehem as a rising morning star. The Magi also lost sight of the star, before seeing it come to rest in the place where baby Jesus lay in the stable. This could have been the result of the retrograde motion of Jupiter, which means that it appears to change direction in the night sky as Earth's orbit overtakes it. 


Check out NASA's site for more information on stars.
Check out space.com for more information on space stuff, including the proposed explanation for The Star of Bethlehem.


__________________
Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 787th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

The Shortest Day of the Year

Today is the Winter Solstice. The sun sets here at 5:03 p.m., and after that, the daylight will slowly begin to last a little longer.

In ancient cultures, this day marked the death and rebirth of the Sun; it's always been a time of festivals, bacchanalias, and ritual. Some of the most fascinating old monuments were built around the Solstice, such as Stonehenge.

Often on the Solstice, I do a tarot reading at tarot.com, just for the fun of it. I don't take these things seriously, but sometimes they give me something to think about.

Today's reading was rather eye-opening:


There are some major cards in this reading - The Hermit, The Devil, The Sun, The Emperor, and The Empress in particular.

The Hermit is familiar to me - I draw that card a lot - but I don't recall ever drawing The Devil and certainly not in conjunction with other major cards. I don't think I've ever drawn The Emperor and The Empress in the same spread, either.

The Empress card indicates there is someone in my life - or someone coming into my life - whom I should strive to emulate, while The Emperor card indicates that someone with power and influence may soon be interested in my abilities.

The Devil, however, throws a big rocky rock into the pond of my life. This card demands raw energy and suggests drastic change. Some force will both attract and repel me at the same time. This card indicates a creative and chaotic time, provided I have the courage to move forward.

The Sun card indicates I can fulfill a dream, maybe even change my world. 

Given the cards thrown here, it looks like forward movement is going to require some strength on my part to withstand the forces that want to hold me back.

The Hermit in the position of Higher Power is particularly important, for it indicates I'm trying to wean myself of addictions and distractions. Oddly, I have already begun this, most especially by trying to rid myself of my video game addiction. I've told all of my fellowships I will no longer be playing after the first of the year. I am working to set aside something that part of me holds dear and another part kind of loathes because it is non-productive.

The other cards support this view that I am in a time of change, but one where I will need downtime to recharge before I hustle back into the game. It looks a bit like a battle of three steps forward, two steps back, but that means that I will eventually reach a goal.

I'm just not sure what goal it is I am going for, though I think I may have an idea.

We'll see if the Solstice brings me a bunch of brighter tomorrows.

Happy Solstice to all!

P.S. If any of you are tarot readers and want to chime in on what you see above, feel free!



Monday, December 19, 2022

Christmas Lights














Sunday, December 18, 2022

Sunday Stealing


1. My plans for December -

A. To get the holiday thing done, deal with the upcoming wintry weather, and try to keep my spirits up.

2. How energized I feel at this point in the year -

A. Today I'm having my holiday blues. Hopefully I will shake it quickly.

3. The best things about the holiday season -

A. When it's over.

4. Something that changed my perspective on life -

A. This month? Nothing. But last year my friend passed away, and that changed my perspective on a lot of things.

5. What I seem to get the most comments about -

A. I get the most compliments on my skin. Nobody is going to compliment me on being fat and old, so they tell me I have nice skin. I basically do, I've never been a sun worshipper.

6. The changes I’ve made to my style -

A. None, except I've let my hair grow out some.

7. What gets in the way of my success -

A. Myself.

8. News sources I trust the most -

A. CBS, NBC, ABC, PBS, NPR, plus Reuters, the Associated Press, and locally my CBS news station. I read The New York Times, The Guardian, The Washington Post, and The Roanoke Times. 

9. Fictional characters that would easily fit into my life -

A. I need a cook and a personal assistant, whoever that might be in a book. One of those detectives who also has a bakery shop or something.

10. My relationship with spirituality -

A. Is my own business.

11. How I feel when I’m being retrospective -

A. Sad, usually. 

12. My thoughts on AI technology -

A. It is what it is.

13. The odd/weird things I do when nobody else is around -

A. Talk to myself? Adjust my underwear? I don't know.

14. What I do when I can’t sleep -

A. I meditate, count backwards, and if none of that works, I get out of bed and read a while.

15. The winter/holiday season tasks I enjoy -

A. I like buying presents for other people.

__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Saturday 9: The Christmas Song


Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
 
1) While this song was published as "The Christmas Song," many people refer to it as "Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire." Have you ever roasted chestnuts (in an open fire or in the oven)?

A. I don't think so. We used to eat chestnuts raw when I was young, but I haven't had a chestnut in years.

2) Ricky Nelson sings that turkey helps make the season bright. Many of us just had turkey last month for Thanksgiving. Do you enjoy turkey all year around? Or do you consider it a seasonal dish?

A. I am not a fan of turkey. I consider it a seasonal meat.

3) He wishes "Merry Christmas" to kids from 1 to 92. Who is the youngest person you will celebrate the holidays with? Who is the oldest?

A. I expect my brother's girlfriend may be the youngest, and my mother-in-law the eldest. If I get to see my great nephew, then he would be the youngest.
 
4) "The Christmas Song" is a perennial favorite and gets lots of play this time of year. Is there a holiday song that you think is overplayed, and that you hope to not hear again (at least not until December 2023)?

A. Last Christmas I gave you my heart but the very next day, you took it away. That's Last Christmas by Wham! and if I took a drink of alcohol every time I heard it, I'd stay drunk through the holidays. All I Want for Christmas is You by Mariah Carey would be a tie with that one, I suspect.

5) This version of the song is from The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, the sitcom that ran from 1952 to 1966. There were 435 episodes in all. Is there a series whose every episode you've seen?

A. The Big Bang Theory, Babylon 5, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Xena: Warrior Princess, Cagney & Lacey, Band of Brothers, Six Feet Under, Game of Thrones, Downton Abby, Victoria, His Dark Materials, Gentleman Jack, and probably many others that I can't think of right now.
 
6) Life magazine coined the phrase "teen idol" to describe Ricky's popularity. In your younger days, did you have a crush on a teen idol?

A. Keith Partridge would have been my young-girl crush.
 
7) Do you have a funny/ugly holiday sweater?

A. I do not.
 
8) Have you received many holiday cards this year? Did you send many?

A. I sent out about 50; I have received about 20. I can remember when I sent out and received almost 200 cards.

9) If you were Santa, what cookie would you like kids to leave for you on Christmas Eve?

A. Nestle Toll House Cookie, still slightly warm from the oven. Yum.

_______________
I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.  

Thursday, December 15, 2022

Angels We Have Heard on High

Sam the Snowman from Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer, assists me with a Christmas carol.



Thursday Thirteen

Let's see if I can think of 13 holiday songs - I'll see how far I get before I have to go look some up.















Well, that wasn't so hard. I didn't even have to look any up. I should add videos though. . . click on the song and you can hear it. The link will take you to a youtube video.



__________________
Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 786th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Possibilities

Rain and possibly freezing rain, meaning ice, are in the forecast for tomorrow. 

Not my favorite kind of weather.

One year, some time ago, we had inches of ice. The entire area glistened and twinkled.

Then it started cracking. I opened the door to hear the trees breaking. I listened - and sometimes watched - the limbs crack, the trees fall to the ground under the dead weight of the ice.

Snap! Snap!

It was terrifying, a bit like a gun going off. The world was still because the wind hadn't picked up yet, and the sounds of the trees breaking echoed off of my hill. It was unnerving, and unsettling, because I like trees.

I didn't want the trees to be hurt.

Mother Nature has to do a bit of pruning sometimes, though, to make way for new growth and climate changes. I've seen the microcosms of eco systems around me change. All it takes is the removal of one tree - sometimes one limb - for the things growing beneath to change. Add sunlight and heat because the tree no longer gives shade, and the ferns won't grow.

It doesn't take much, really, to change the landscape.

A bit more rain. Or a bit less. More clouds, less sunshine. Or vice versa. 

Something dies. Something grows.

Change is coming.

I can feel it in the air.


From 2007.


Monday, December 12, 2022

When the Internet Goes Down

Addicted. It's an appropriate word for the way I've felt most of the weekend.

It rained, and my internet first became spotty, then died only to occasionally revive itself.

I couldn't blog, couldn't play video games, couldn't look up answers to questions. Oh, some of it I did on my phone, but I have a very low data usage plan, so I couldn't spend a lot of time on that doing things I'd otherwise do with the wi-fi.

There went my plans to watch the new Louise Penny series, Three Pines, on Amazon. No streaming without the Internet.

So too my plans to write blog posts in advance, although the main thing that stopped me there was anxiety and nerves. I could have written the posts in MS Word and saved them to cut and paste later, if I'd really been desperate.

Mostly it was knowing I couldn't do things that made me want to do them.

Strange how that works, eh?

We still have a landline, and that also went dead. Old fashioned, I know, but my husband had to have one for work - it was in his contract - and the landline number is the one on his business cards, still. So, we keep it, and many things are tied to it.

I had medicine called in for refills, so I couldn't get the call from my pharmacy to know when to pick things up because it's tied to the landline. I couldn't look it up online, either, to see if it was ready.

Some online shopping awaited my attention too - a pickup order for Sam's Club, a little something I thought about for my husband (and no longer remember because I didn't write it down and couldn't order it the moment I thought of it). 

The internet has us all tied to a way of life that is very different than it was 25 years ago. It's amazing how much it has changed the way we function and operate.

Being old, I knew how to entertain myself - there's always house cleaning and a book - but still, I noticed the lack of internet in my routine.

I felt off kilter. It also frustrated me to think I'm so dependent upon a computer and access to the outside world.

It really is a time suck, and my husband, who seldom is online, is probably far better off than I am, addicted as I am to my online reading and adventures.

Thank heavens it's fixed. Now if I could only get a fiber line and stop using DSL.


(I tried to visit Saturday 9 and Sunday Stealing blogs during the small windows when I had service. If I didn't get around to you, I'm sorry!)



Sunday, December 11, 2022

Sunday Stealing


1. List some wintertime comfort foods, habits, hobbies.

A. I like to read more in the winter. My favorite comfort food is Cella's chocolate covered cherries, but I am careful not to eat too many of them anymore because of digestive issues. I don't know that my habits change that lot, except perhaps I cook a little more. I make fudge or cookies. 

2. What are your favorite seasonal/holiday music and songs?

A. Do You Hear What I Hear? is my favorite Christmas song. I also like Winter Wonderland

3. Whare are the people you want to spend more time with next year?

A. Same people as always, my husband, my family, my friends. 

4. How much could you change in your life in 1 year if you focused?

A. I don't know. Maybe I could get a job. 

5. What are the valuable lessons you learned this year?

A. I can't fix the world. 

6. How would you describe 2022 in 10 words?

A. Kindness and democracy still have a toehold in the USA. 

7. What were your favorite reads of 2022?

A. I read a lot of Louise Penny's Three Pines series. Other books I enjoyed include Richard Marxx's autobiography, fantasy by Genevieve Cogman, The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon (great book but incredibly long), The Four Winds, by Kristin Hannah, a couple of Nora Roberts fantasy books, and several books by David Sedaris.  

8. What were the best movies you saw in 2022?

A. Nothing comes to mind. I am not sure I watched a new movie in 2022, at least, nothing that wasn't a rerun of something I've already seen.

9. What was your favorite TV shows/episodes of 2022?

A. My husband and I both like La Brea, a fantasy/science fiction show. We also enjoyed Rings of Power, Amazon's treatment of Tolkien's world.

10. What are your memorable experiences from 2022?

A. Helping my husband through his hip replacement surgery was the highlight of the year.

11. Name three people you enjoyed spending time with this year.

A. I enjoyed my letters from my pen pal, I enjoy my phone conversations with my friend T., and I have enjoyed exchanging emails with a former professor from my alma mater. 

12. How did you handle challenges this year?

A. I geared up for my husband's surgery by reading about it as much as I could, as well as preparing myself to stay healthy by getting my Covid shots and wearing masks as suggested by my doctor. I failed miserably at some personal goals but hopefully I will do better next year. 

13. What are you leaving behind in 2022?

A. Hopefully something I do that is a big waste of time (video games).

14. How have you changed from the beginning to end of the year?

A. I'm just older. 

15. What do you want to tell yourself before the New Year?

A. I'm not a failure, I'm a good, kind person, and I belong in this world.

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I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Saturday 9: Just Because


Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

1) In this week's song, Elvis complains that his girl has confused him with Santa Claus. This time of year, Santa is prominent. Did you more recently hear Santa referred to in a song, see him in a holiday decoration or ad, watch him in a film or TV show, or maybe even met him in person, ringing a bell or asking kids if they have been naughty or nice?

A. I saw him in an ad on Facebook.

2) Finally, Elvis just can't take it anymore and breaks up with her, just because. Is there anyone in your life who has a way of pressing your buttons and getting on your nerves?

A. Of course. Who doesn't have people like that in their life?

3) "Just Because" is one of the last songs Elvis recorded at Sun Studio in Memphis. TripAdvisor recommends a Sun Studio tour as one of the top things to do in Memphis. Have you ever been to Memphis? If yes, what did you do?

A. I have never been to Memphis. I have sang songs about Memphis and wrote a guitar song that I called Memphis Dance, but I've never been there.

4) Elvis left Sun for RCA, a much bigger record label. As part of the deal, RCA negotiated for the rights to all his unreleased Sun songs. "Just Because" is one of them, and it was included on Elvis' first RCA album. Have you gotten a good deal on anything lately?

A. I found a cape (the kind you throw over your shoulders to go outside) marked down from $29.99 to $15.99. Seemed like a good deal.

5) In 1956, when "Just Because" was released, non-stick cookware was first introduced. Do you have any Teflon in your kitchen right now?

A. Probably, although I think most of my "real" Teflon flaked out on me at some point and I tossed it. So, I have whatever the newer version of Teflon is on a few things.

6) Elvis thought peacocks were beautiful and commissioned stained glass peacock panels for his living room. Do you have any stained glass in your home?

A. I have a little fire truck made of stained glass that hangs in my kitchen window.

7) He tried to keep peacocks at Graceland. One of the birds saw its reflection in Elvis' gold Cadillac and started pecking, ruining the car's expensive paint job. Elvis donated the peacocks to the Memphis Zoo. Have you ever had a bird as a pet?

A. No, I have not.

8) Elvis decorated the long Graceland driveway for the holidays with blue lights. His father teased that with the airport nearby, pilots might confuse their driveway with a runway. What airport is nearest your home?

A. Roanoke-Blacksburg Regional Airport, also known by us old timers as Woodrum Field. It's about 30 miles away. Speaking of airplanes, a small plane crashed on the farm long ago (late 1960s), and the pilot and passenger were killed. I have the newspaper photos; they are rather gruesome.

9) When Elvis was alive, he kept the holiday lights up until January 9, the day after his birthday. That tradition continues at Graceland today. Conventional etiquette tells us Christmas decorations should go up the day after Thanksgiving and come down before January 6 (the 12th day of Christmas). Do you think it's ever too early, or too late, for Christmas decorations?

A. This is one of those "live and let live" things. If somebody wants to do Christmas all year, it's not my problem. They can do what they wish. For me, Christmas starts the day after Thanksgiving and ends when I take the tree down, which can either be before or after New Year's Day.

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I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.  
 

Friday, December 09, 2022

The Cold Moon

I shot these photos Thursday morning as the full moon was setting.





Thursday, December 08, 2022

Thursday Thirteen

I thought I'd list some things I remember receiving from Christmases past, although it appears many of the toys I recall were actually my brother's, for some reason. I was never much on dolls. These are in no particular order.

1. Rock 'em Sock 'em Robots

2. Erector set

3. Baby Tender Love

4. A vacuum (my husband gave me this our first year of marriage; he was promptly informed that household items were NOT Christmas presents unless specifically requested)

5. Cowgirl boots

6. A ventriloquist doll (looked like a cowboy and had freckles)

7. Batgirl doll

8. A blue girl's bicycle with training wheels (my first bike)

9. A rocking chair

10. A set of luggage.

11. Books (multiple years)

12. A guitar

13. Santa Mouse


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Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 785th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, December 07, 2022

Every Time We Go Away


 

I found this amusing, but also sad. Subscriptions to newspapers are dying - we're dinosaurs, my husband and me, who subscribe still to the print editions.

But without the journalists watching the town, ensuring the local government doesn't slide its way into fascism or some other unwanted form of governing, who will keep the officials on their toes? Citizen journalists with blogs? 

The local officials aren't scared of citizen journalists with blogs. They aren't scared by online newspapers, either. Online copy is ephemeral. It can be easily changed, removed, deleted. It's easy to say it didn't happen, even if the online article states it did.

Print, though - that's permanent. When the print articles say something happened, it happened.

I am part of the local news media, even though I do not write as much as I did. My medium now is an online one, where I write government stories. The print paper that I used to write for still exists but does little in the way of real journalism. There are no hard-hitting news stories there, no small bomb-drops of information that make the public take note.

The online paper is free; the print paper is also online but behind a paywall. I don't know how many digital subscribers it has. The online paper I write for says it sometimes gets 20,000 hits on an article. Other times, not so much.

My work in the online paper sometimes aggravates the local officials because I pull no punches. I don't sugar coat, but neither do I offer opinion. I simply state what happened at a meeting. If someone says something outlandish that I think the public needs to know about, I report it. If the local officials are doing things that I think the public needs to know about, I report it. I don't exaggerate or minimize; I leave it to the reader to decide if this issue is important or not.

Most of my long-time readers know if I report on something, I think it is important and something they should know about.

I am the one who watches the local officials for Freedom of Information Act violations; the one who questions the number of closed sessions they take, the information that comes out of those sessions, and any number of other things. Even when I was writing for the print paper, many times I questioned but the public never knew I was making inquiries, protecting their interests to the best of my ability.

As best I can tell, the less drama for the print paper, the better.

My inquiries with government officials are taken seriously, in part because I've been doing it for so long, but not as seriously as they once were (or so it seems). 

Without a good newspaper, a community suffers from lack of information. As the comic strip notes, where do the people who fuss about things on social media sites actually get their information? From local news reporters, whether that's print or TV media. 

Or an online community journalist.

Subscribe to a paper, even if it's digital. It supports democracy, and we all know that needs all the help it can get.

*Edited