Tuesday, April 25, 2023
Biden Announces
Sunday, April 23, 2023
Sunday Stealing
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, April 22, 2023
Saturday 9: I Won't Be the One
Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
1) Barbra Streisand begins by singing about dreams and wishes. What are you wishing for this morning?
2) Barry Manilow sings that "anytime you need me, you'll know where I am." If a friend needs you, what's the best way to reach you (text, phone call, email, knock on the front door . . . )?
3) Both of this week's artists are from Brooklyn. In addition to Barry and Barbra, Brooklyn is home to Coney Island, where America's first roller coaster debuted in 1884. Do you enjoy amusement park rides? If yes, do you have a favorite?
4) Barbra and her husband, actor James Brolin, have lived in the same Malibu home for more than 25 years. How long have you been in your current residence? Do you think you'll be moving anytime soon?
5) Barry Manilow once lived in luxurious Bel Air. His neighbors were former President and Mrs. Reagan. At first, he thought it would be great to have the Reagans nearby but quickly changed his mind because he disliked the Secret Service helicopters flying overhead. Tell us about one of your neighbors. (No pressure; we don't expect to hear about historic figures.)
6) As a teenager, Barbra worked as a switchboard operator. Her job consisted of connecting calls by inserting phone plugs into the appropriate jacks. As telephoning became automated, these jobs were phased out and by 1983, the switchboard operator was obsolete. Can you think of another occupation that used to be common but doesn't exist anymore?
7) Loyal Fanilows can subscribe to ManilowTV. For $9.95/month, fans can watch exclusive content, like interviews and concert performances. Do you more often watch live broadcast TV or streamed content?
8) In 2002, the year this recording was released, the Sears Wish Book offered seven different collectible Barbies. According to Mattel, the doll's manufacturer, there are more than 100,000 Barbie collectors all over the world. Do you collect anything?
Friday, April 21, 2023
Dandelions and . . . Daisies?
I took these pictures in the yard the other day before my husband mowed. Dandelions are common and most folks try to irradicate them from their yards. I tend to leave them alone. They aren't hurting anything.
Dandelions are flowering plants that belong to the family Asteraceae. They are native to Eurasia and North America but have been introduced to other parts of the world. They have many uses as food, medicine, and ornamental plants. (Bing AI)
The white flower I think many people would call a daisy, but it's actually fleabane. Fleabane belongs to the aster family. Some of it is native to North America and some is not. The flowers bloom from spring to fall and utilize a variety of habitats. Fleabane can be cooked as greens and is used to treat various ailments. (Bing AI)
One of my most hurtful memories involves dandelions. When I was quite small, I thought them beautiful, and I picked a handful to take to my mother. She immediately declared it a weed and threw them in the trash. I don't recall ever picking another flower for my mother again.
I still find dandelions beautiful. They're so happy looking, with their yellow color, and then they are fun when they've gone to seed. One hardy blow upon them and the seeds fly through the sky like magic.
Thursday, April 20, 2023
Thursday Thirteen
Which of these things are important to you? Are they all important? Equally important?
1. The need to support and honor American veterans.
2. The importance of protecting national security and keeping Americans safe from terrorism and other threats.
3. The value of education and the need to invest in it for future generations.
4. The importance of maintaining a strong and growing economy.
5. The need to improve infrastructure and invest in transportation, energy, and other critical areas.
6. The value of free speech and the importance of protecting First Amendment rights.
7. The importance of individual liberty and personal responsibility.
8. The need to address climate change and protect the environment.
9. The importance of reducing the national debt and addressing government waste.
10. The need for immigration reform and securing America's borders.
11. The importance of maintaining a strong military and supporting our troops.
12. The need for healthcare reform and improving access to quality healthcare.
13. The importance of addressing mental health issues and improving access to treatment.
This is a list that ChatGPT provided when asked to give a list of 13 things that Democrats and Republicans agree on. (This is also the order in which it gave me the answer to the question.) Is this a true list, do you think?
Wednesday, April 19, 2023
Chasing the Ladies
| Here are the turkey hens he was after. |
Feint of Heart
Last week could have been worse.
Not only was I threatened over a silly article by a silly person, I was battling a problem with my blood pressure.
The numbers were running very high - stroke level high, actually. My doctor was telling me to take half of this pill or that to try to bring it down. I didn't know whether to exercise or go to bed.
Would that very last Baked Lays Potato Chip be the thing that threw me over the edge? I wondered.
And of course, things like having to phone the police to report said threatening phone call only upped my blood pressure. It certainly did nothing to ease it.
Finally, I saw my doctor on Thursday. She detected a new heart murmur. She's been listening to my heart for over 15 years so surely she would have heard it before were it not new.
She also said she heard a carotid bruit, which is a vascular sound over the carotid artery in the neck.
This is new, as well.
Add this to the pain in my calf that seems to be varicose veins, and it's starting to look like I have some kind of heart issue. Plaque buildup, probably. Too bad I can't brush my veins out like I do my teeth.
Isn't learning that you are having heart problems just what one wants to hear to end out the week?
My doctor did not do bloodwork as I have terrible veins and the nurse that can easily do that was not in the office. She made a referral to a cardiologist but warned me not to expect to hear from the facility any time soon. Apparently, the days of making a referral and then seeing the expert with a few weeks are long gone. She said it may be months before I see a cardiologist, "but you'll be ok," adding that if she were really concerned, she would have sent me on to the emergency room.
In the meantime, she doubled one of my medicines, and the blood pressure numbers are lower now. Not great, but better than they were, and enough that I feel I have some breathing room.
Her notes on my chart indicate she is concerned about aortic stenosis. Aortic stenosis (AS or AoS) is the narrowing of the exit of the left ventricle of the heart (where the aorta begins).
However, I do not have the symptoms of this, which include loss of consciousness, shortness of breath, and chest pain. (Yes, I looked it up. Wouldn't you?) I have two out of 5 risk factors - high blood pressure and high cholesterol, and my cholesterol, while not great, is not running at really high levels. In fact, it was in the normal range 30 years ago when a doctor first checked it.
I'm one of those people who think the numbers for cholesterol lower so the pharmaceutical companies can sell more drugs (I think the same thing about "A1C," which no one ever heard of until there was a drug available to "fix" it.).
Cholesterol medicine did not agree with me when I tried it some years ago. I had cognitive issues with it and at one point could barely put two sentences together. That cleared up as soon as I stopped the medication. No one in my family tolerates cholesterol medication well, and since it seems to be a familial problem, I doubt seriously that there is little to be done about it.
My doctor told me once when I said something about being concerned about dementia since one of my medications is a suspect for that, that I shouldn't worry. "You'll die of a heart attack long before you get dementia," she said.
Comforting, eh?
Tuesday, April 18, 2023
The Craven, the Crazies, and the Rest of Us
Over the weekend, an Oklahoma newspaper with no online presence printed this as its front page of its weekend edition:
You can hear Rachel Maddow discuss this at this link, if you want.
I have written local journalism for 39 years. My first article was published in 1984. I've written for nearly all of the local publications, including many that no longer exist, and for statewide magazines. I estimated once that I've published over 2 million words in multiple publications.
My editor at The Fincastle Herald always told me if I didn't have someone angry at me, I wasn't doing my job.
Suffice to say, I did my job. Over the years, I have been threatened by various and sundry people, including a sheriff in nearby county. He stopped me as I was entering the courtroom to listen to a board meeting. "How do I know that's water you have in there?" he demanded, nodding toward my ever-present water bottle.
I took a drink and held it out to him. "You're welcome to the rest of it. It's just water."
"I could haul you in right now for having liquor and who'd know different?" he said. He banged his hand against his pistol on his thigh for emphasis.
"Everybody knows I don't drink alcohol," I replied, and I walked past him to my seat. I could feel him glaring at the back of my head.
Later that same night, I nearly wrecked my car on the way home as I drove over Caldwell Mountain and the tire went flat. In the shine of a flashlight, I discovered my tire had been slashed with a knife.
Yes, someone in the next county over had tried to kill me. Caldwell Mountain is a dangerous drive, over twisting, winding roads. My car could have gone off the pavement and down the mountainside, not to be found for possibly years.
That happened about 25 years ago. So, while this is nothing new, the rhetoric now has been taken to a whole other level.
It was not unusual for me to receive phone calls from people complaining about stories I wrote. "I didn't say that" was the usual complaint. I carried a tape recorder and I'd play it back to them, if I had to.
They backed down then.
Sometimes, though, the complaint was not that I wrote what they said, but that I didn't write what they said.
Sometimes people simply sound so stupid to me that I paraphrase or leave it out completely if it's not relevant to the main part of the article. It is my job to tell a story that is truthful, but that doesn't mean I have to use ignorant, racist, homophobic, fascist, or antisemitic language. Paraphrasing is allowed.
But some people want their words - no matter how ignorant they sound - in print. They want their opinions, word for word, stated. That's how sure they are that they're right. That's how sure they are that their closed-minded world view is the one that should rule the day.
So it was that last week I found myself listening to someone rant about how I hadn't printed exactly what this person had said at a supervisors meeting.
The person threatened me. I hung up on this person, and I called the police and reported the phone call. I also blocked the number.
Twenty years ago, I would not have done that. I'd have ignored the call. But these are different times, and people feel mean and emboldened, and being a bully is now in fashion.
I was taken aback by the phone call because it was literally over nothing, as far as I was concerned.
These are the times we live in. People feel emboldened in their fascism and narrow-minded thoughts. They have no room in their brains for open-minded thinking. My way or the highway, as my parents used to tell me.
However, we are all adults, not children in need of being sent to our rooms. And if someone can't have an adult conversation with me that doesn't involve threats, screaming, or insults, then that is not someone I care to talk with.
And as for the report above, it just shows how low people can be. To call these people snakes would be an injustice to snakes. The people in the article/photo above are lower than a snake's belly in a wagon rut. They're so low, there is no bottom for them.
I hope they all lose their jobs.
Monday, April 17, 2023
Not the Moon
Here are some of them based on web search results:
- Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest in the Solar System. It is more than twice as massive as all the other planets combined12.
- Jupiter is a gas giant with no solid surface. It has a thick atmosphere of mostly hydrogen and helium, with clouds of ammonia and water134.
- Jupiter has a powerful magnetosphere that produces intense auroras and radiation belts. It also has a complex system of rings made of dust and debris14.
- Jupiter rotates very fast, about once every 10 hours, but orbits very slowly, about once every 12 Earth years24.
- Jupiter has more than 75 moons, including four large ones called Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Some of these moons may have oceans or volcanoes that could support life24.
- Jupiter is famous for its Great Red Spot, a huge storm that has been raging for centuries. It is bigger than Earth and can be seen from space234.
Sunday, April 16, 2023
Sunday Stealing
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, April 15, 2023
Saturday 9: Danny's Song
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Thursday Thirteen
I live in a rural community and mostly love it. But it's not always lovely cows and flowers here. Living in a small, rural area does have its downside. Here are some possible things that are bad about rural living, although the same can be said for many places on some of these, I think.*
1. Isolation and lack of social interaction with neighbors and friends. While I have neighbors whose homes I can see, for the most part, I don't know them. I know family members who have built on or near the farm, but the newer folks, not so much.
2. Poor access to health care, education, and public services. Health care is a 15-minute drive and the probability of dying from a heart attack is much greater for me than for someone who lives in a city, mostly because care is so far away. By the time emergency services arrives, it could be 20 minutes. Then it's another 20 minutes to the hospital. That "golden hour" of survival is now whittled down to another 20 minutes. Odds aren't good I'll survive.
3. Limited job opportunities and lower income. The pay around here is not good, and the places to work are limited to agriculture or industrial, unless one wants to teach in the public schools.
4. Difficulty in traveling and commuting due to distance and weather conditions.
5. Slow internet and cable services that affect work and entertainment. I still have DSL. I don't see anything faster or better in my immediate future.
6. Higher exposure to wildlife and pests that can damage crops and property. Lyme Disease along with Alpha-Gal, both tick-born illnesses, are rampant around here.
7. Higher expenses on gas, groceries, and utilities. I'm not sure what electric bills run in the city, but out here, they're in the hundreds of dollars.
8. Lack of privacy and anonymity from family and community.
9. Difficulty in finding a romantic partner or breaking up with one. That's because everyone talks. Nothing like gossip to keep the neighborhood stirred up.
10. Lack of diversity and cultural experiences. We have history museums, but no art galleries. Most socializing around here is done at church, and if one doesn't go to church, the opportunities are slim.
11. Lack of shopping options and recreational activities. We have a Dollar General. That's not much.
12. Stress from environmental problems such as pollution and deforestation. We have a lot of pollution from our industrial factories. I live in between the two largest polluters in my county. This is why I have two air purifiers in the house.
13. Boredom and drug and alcohol abuse among teens. This applies to adults too, I think. On Mondays, one only need look in the recycling bin to see what kind of alcoholics live around here. The glass and tin bins are full of liquor and beer bottles. Overflowing, even. I guess the folks go to church to socialize and then drink and talk about it later in the day.
*List curated with assistance from the Bing AI.
Wednesday, April 12, 2023
Listening to David Sedaris
Tuesday, April 11, 2023
His Majesty's Raised Garden Beds
We have seeds, though. I guess they will make it into the dirt eventually!

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