I have not been writing.  There is a big post on a very painful (but not too personal — do not worry) subject.

I could post about inconsequential things — how the cat has bombed the bed again; how happy am I Sherlock has come back.  There are the slightly more consequential things — Downtown Abbey has been almost unwatchable thus far this season, seeing as it has two story lines involving danger to two of my most favorite characters.  Thankfully, one of the story lines has been resolved more or less happily, but the arc about Anna… God, it’s too painful. (Oh, and Wikipedia — the spoiler about Lady Edith in the character section is sloppy and you should collectively be shot.)

There are the really consequential things: my niece had her baby, who my sister cannot visit because she is recovering from a nasty flu, which would have been worse had she not been vaccinated, (Yes, it is still sometimes possible to get the flu even after you are vaccinated — does not mean you should not be.) Or that the Red-Headed Menace had an interview for one of his reach schools which started at one o’clock and was supposed to last half-an-hour, but ran until 2:30.

I open tab after tab of interesting links and don’t write about them.  Well, there’s hopefully tomorrow, when I’m off. As long as the low-grade fever I’m running doesn’t turn into something nastier.

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I am sitting in a sports bar waiting for the Niners-Seahawks game. The AFC championship game came to as satisfactory conclusion as possible given that it was between two teams I don’t like. I ended up rooting for Peyton. As annoying as the Broncos are, the Patriots are the Yankees of the NFL.

I am not a big Niners fan, but I am a huge Colin Kaepernick admirer.

I just had my first – and last – deep fried Twinkie. It’s deep fried, I’m a Southerner, so that’s to the good, but at the end of the day…. It’s still a Twinkie. Frying it makes it better, but not by much.

Do NOT “sweetheart” me, sir, especially when you are dead freaking wrong about whether a penalty should have been called on that hit. (Here’s a hint: you are allowed to go after the ball, or the receiver who has the ball, but not the receiver when the ball has sailed three feet beyond him. The refs blew it.). I may be a woman, but I do
know a little about the game.

It is really annoying to watch football with people so invested in their team that they can’t admire smart play by the other side or admit that some of their team’s penalties were deserved.

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Railfan rocks.

My middle son wrote this.

Also, Railfan?  You have the ability to write as well as your brothers do.  You capitalize and punctuate better than they do. Just so you know.

Love you, kid.

Posted in KIds | Tagged | 1 Comment

Sentiment against GMOs has been described by scientists as the equivalent of climate-change denialism on the left. (Anti-vaxxers cross political spectra.)  Whether or not you agree with that, this NYT piece about one Hawaiian councilman’s attempt to get the facts about GMOs in the face of hysteria is well worth reading.

For me, it comes down to this: in general the science does not support the position that GMOs cause harm. There has been a lot of cherry-picking and misrepresenting of studies by people who are trying to ban GMOs. Either we trust the scientific community or we don’t:  if we decide that they are untrustworthy on the issue of GMOs, why should we be any more willing to trust that climate-change is going on?

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I have been looking around for sources of amusement online, because really, how many Cracked.com articles can a single person read?  (I’m not sure, but I think I am getting close to the limit. And I do not even dare to click on a link to TV Tropes.) I am soliciting suggestions.

Here are some of my favorites: Campaignsick Tumblr (which has a lot of inside baseball, but is still general enough that some of you may find it amusing); then there is Whenyouworkatamuseum Tumblr (which is great even if you do not work at a museum); the Twitter feed #overlyhonestmethods (favorite tweet: “field site was chosen because I had a friend in town and there was a good pub”); and the absolute best…

lolmythesis.

The idea is simple: students (originally seniors but later graduate students) summarize their thesis in one sentence.  The results can be hilarious — and often painful, which does not make them any less funny.

Some of the ones I love:

“Water war; what is it good for? Absolutely nothing.” International Relations/Environmental Resource Management, Australian National University

“Phrases like “democratic imaginaries of femininity” and “docile bodies of militarized masculinity” are real crowd pleasers at your conservative relatives’ holiday parties.”  Political Science, Bryn Mawr College

“Minimalism: still a thing.” Music Composition, College of the Holy Cross

“You will not get sick or die if you eat vegetables grown in the city of San Francisco, but all of the community farms got shut down after I collected samples anyway.” Earth Systems, Stanford University

“Heidegger says: yolo!” Philosophy, University of Helsinki

“If you want people to make good decisions about climate change policy, tell them about it when it is really, really hot.” Geography, University of Colorado – Boulder

“My biggest issue with death is that it’s inconvenient. Does that make me practical or sociopathic. Let’s explore this.” Psychology, Iona College

“Honestly? We are not that great. Not even close to the TV show.” Crime Scene Investigation, The George Washington Univeristy

And my very favorite,

“It depends.” Law, Harvard University.

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There are days….

… when the best you can say is that you didn’t quit.

I hate dealing with people who, just as they are foaming at the mouth about Obama, let slip enough information to make it clear that if they could just step back from their blind hatred they might be able to learn something to their advantage.  I don’t argue with them anymore.

Today, I had someone tell me that I was a nice person but very deluded about what the ACA will do to the country.  Hey, man, at least I care; not to mention the fact that, no, there was no way I could know that your wife was a Certified Educator (if she is — I think you were lying).  There are a lot of us out there. Also, there was no way I could have known you watch Fox News: if they have that information, the NSA certainly does not share it with some lowly phone banker working for a nonprofit which has a grant from a union. Although, quite frankly, I would have guessed after twenty seconds talking with you.

I get tired of people keeping me on the line just so they can yell at me.  I am too polite to hang up on people, unless they are obscene. Other people have no qualms about hanging up on me, though.  The only advantage to calling the Central Valley is that people tell you they aren’t interested before they hang up on you, giving you a chance to wish them a good evening.  It’s almost like they recognize that you are *gasp* a human being!

I do a good job.  I do.  I do. I do…

I just need to keep reminding myself of that.  This job makes political calling seem like a walk in the park.

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The holidays are over. Rats.

Today is Epiphany, which means that the holidays are over — I leave for work in about half an hour, which means I really need to stop writing this and go away and get ready — and once again, I feel that they went by too fast.  I did not enjoy them as much as I used to.

Part of this is, admittedly, nostalgia.  Things always look rosier in hindsight.  Nonetheless, the holidays are less enjoyable than they used to be because I am not now in a church.

Churches — especially Episcopalian churches — are wonderful at celebrating the holidays  in ways that are meaningful.  Advent (the season before Christmas) provides events that mark the passage of time, slowing it down and ensuring that you stop and experience the season.

Advent brings Advent wreaths.  We sued used to have an Advent wreath: for years, we would light the candles before each evening meal and say the prayers for the week. We stopped doing that when it became clear that I was the only one who was interested in keeping the tradition alive.

Advent brings that most wonderful of holiday traditions: the Episcopal church service known as Lessons and Carols. I always loved this service, my second favorite in the liturgical year after Easter Vigil Mass. I was once fortunate enough to be in London the weekend that Lessons and Carols was celebrated in Westminster Abbey.  It may have been the most beautiful service that I have ever experienced.

I used to take all these seriously.  I used to read at Lessons and Carols.  I used to help decorate the church the day before Christmas Eve.  I don’t anymore, and my life is poorer for it.  Now the  month of December is much like any other month, except with more stress.

I want my holidays back.

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The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug.

Note to self: in the future, do not EVER go see a movie in IMAX 3-D which contains huge freaking spiders. Curling up in a ball whimpering is really undignified.

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One of my stories.

“We were somewhere outside of Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold.”  This is the opening line of Hunter S. Thompson’s Gonzo journalism epic, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.  What is the first line of your story? What would be the journey that follows?  Writing prompt submitted by the Red-Headed Menace to the University of Chicago.

Ghosts are poor companions.  Death, even the death of someone you never knew, makes life difficult.

My sister died when she was five.  I was two at the time, small enough to have no memories of her or the illness that took her life.  I was old enough, though, that the grief and pain that wracked my parents reverberated through my childhood like darkness spreading from an overturned inkwell.

My sister died of an inoperable brain tumor, spending most of her last months at home. I have been with someone I cared about in the last stages of brain cancer, and it is profoundly painful. To watch a child go through this would be absolutely devastating.

She was not talked about, that I remember: her name was rarely mentioned, and once when I was older and I found one of her favorite books (with pictures of angels, yet), my mother cautioned me not to let my father see me with it.  We moved away from the city where she was buried when I was five, and she disappeared from the center of the  fabric of our lives, only to hover like a ghost around the edges.

My older siblings were more affected than I was.  They were old enough not only to remember her, but to feel more keenly how her loss affected my parents.  My parents did the best that they could (a fact that I appreciated only after I had children of my own), but they struggled under the weight of the loss of a child, and after a long and debilitating illness at that.

When my brother was born two years after her death, my parents gave him the masculine form of her name.  A memorial, no doubt, yet at the same time an erasure, a replacement, even if they did not mean it as such. She was gone, as though she had never existed.  Part of me, deep down in the recesses of a brain formed during pain and turmoil, wonders if this is what happens when you die:  is it as though you have never lived?

After my father’s death, my mother has talked about my sister more.  It as though she is free now, that she need not protect him from his own pain at my sister’s death.  I have talked with my mother about her; Mom seems to have reached peace about her life and death. My sister is now far more real for me than she ever was when I was a child.

She still hovers around me:  I react badly to people disappearing from my life with no explanation or without saying goodbye, for example.  For my own peace of mind I need to know why they left. (That my older brother sometimes  disappeared unexpectedly when I was in my late pre-teens did nothing to dispel that fear of people leaving me with no warning.) Although it has gotten easier as I grew older, I have had difficulty making friends: caring about people means that you get badly hurt when they go away, and I am afraid of being abandoned.

I enjoy taking photographs of nature and beautiful urban landscapes. But I do not take pictures of people, hate having my photo taken, and feel a vague panic when anyone photographs my children.  When I was very young, before my sister died, my father loved to take photographs.  I have seen some of them: he was actually pretty good.  He took a series of photos of my sister during her final, horrible illness that were not developed until after she died.  The difference between the bright, happy child she had been and what she became under the burden of her tumor and the drugs she was given to control it broke his heart.  He rarely took photographs after that, leaving my mother the job of photographing  special family events.

As a result, I formed a deeply held, rarely articulated superstition that to photograph someone is to invite their death. It was a very long time before I recognized that was what I felt; fortunately, my mother-in-law is a shutterbug who grew impatient at the photographs of my sons that I never sent her, and documented their life and growth whenever she got a chance.  There are still gaps, mainly from when they got older and we did not go back East very often.  The Resident Shrink is an obsessive photographer, however, and so I have many pictures of my children from the past few years.

I find myself resenting my sister: how dare she die, leaving my family to struggle under the weight of her loss? How dare she deprive me of a normal childhood, the childhood all my peers seem to have, of the happy family I saw so often on television?  Even now, as I know from friends I have made as an adult that many times the happiness is a facade that masks deep pain, I wonder what life would have been like had she lived.

I never knew my sister, but I have walked through my life with her at my side, unseen but dimly felt, like a faint cold breeze that catches my heart.

I wish she would go away.

Posted in My life and times, Who I am, Writing | 1 Comment

Writing.

I did not blog about Christmas (which was good, more or less) or New Year’s. I made no new resolutions: I have made little headway on those I made for 2011, so I until that happens, I am not going to bother with new ones. The resolutions I would today make are pretty much the same.

I am going to concentrate on blogging everyday this year. Yes, I know at this point I am five days late, although I did have a couple of small non-consequential posts earlier. I want to hone my writing skills; although I doubt I will ever be published, there is joy in being the best that you can be. I have a small band of followers (I once compared this blog not to a small fish in a big pond but krill in the Pacific), and while I do not necessarily expect to get more (barring an important media event happening to me, which is unlikely), you deserve my best efforts. (I also need a very good proofreader. And an editor.)

Competence has its virtues. I am a competent writer, albeit not a great one. I am working on it.

I am realizing that my voice is most often narrative. I can write formally, but I am most comfortable making my points through storytelling. And, interestingly enough, I have discovered that the Red-Headed Menace shares this trait.

I have never taught him to write. I left that to the professionals (which I regret — they seem uninterested in teaching niceties like grammar in middle school anymore, and leaving it to high school makes it difficult to pick it up) and somehow, in the middle of that, he found a voice. He is a narrative writer, like I am.

He has been writing college application essays. It is tricky, because, as I said, he is a storyteller, like myself. Fortunately, several of the writing prompts allow for him to write in the style he is most comfortable, including one he wrote for the University of Chicago. The University of Chicago has both the best and the most challenging prompts, in part because many of them are culled from previous applicants’ essays. (One of the options is for applicants to write their own: RHM came up with one that I think is wonderful. Not that I’m biased, or anything, being his mother.)

The application process is fraught with insanity for everyone involved, and thank God, is nearly over. A couple of schools with January 15 deadlines are left, but the bulk of them were due January first. (Had the UC and CSU school not had a November 30 deadline, I’m not sure how we would have coped.) Most of them were for “reach schools,” which he would love to get into and where he would shine, but which for one reason or another are even more unlikely than they would be normally. (Still, as one school’s application blog said, if you don’t apply you have zero chance of getting in.)  Most of them used the Common Application, and all of them had online submissions. Watching the Common App servers crash at quarter to nine (fifteen minutes to midnight Eastern time) was slightly amusing, mainly because he had gotten the last of his East Coast schools submitted ten minutes earlier. (A whole lot of seniors submitted their applications at the last possible minute. I can only imagine the hysteria in households across America when the Common App servers failed under the onslaught. Poor kids. Poor parents. Fortunately a lot of schools extended their deadlines by a day because of the Common App problems.) While the Common App and online submissions (one school did not have the Common App, but did have online applications) reduce the amount of FedEx fees one has to pay, they ruin the holidays. At least when you have to send in physical applications you have to get them sent off by December 30th, leaving New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day to celebrate.

I am both dreading and looking forward to his college years. Dreading because I will then be an “empty-nester,” which will be stressful.  Not to mention that I will really, really miss him.  I think of all of my kids, he is the most like me, and although I love all three of them equally, and appreciate them all,  his view of the world resonates most closely with mine.

I think he will do well in college.  He will find his tribe.  Once, when he was bemoaning the fact that he was unsuccessful in finding a young woman to date in high school with the same interests as himself, I reassured him that in college somewhere he would find someone who “likes red-headed athletic guys and who are willing to spend hours talking about the ontological arguments for the existence of God.”

Back on topic: I am not looking forward to 2014, necessarily, but it will bring me more stories to tell. I may use some of the college writing prompts as jumping off points for my own essays.  One of the difficulties with being an easily distractible blogger is that all the wonderful things to blog about in the world tends to be paralyzing.  Ooh, shiny! So many stories!  The prompts help to keep one focused, or as focused as I am likely to be at any given time, which is often not very.

We will see.  Thank you for going along with me on my journey thus far, and I hope you enjoy the upcoming ride.

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Given that in previous years the media has used up the words “Snowmaggedon” and “Snowpocalypse” to describe epic winter storms, they need to come up with new ones for the most recent slamming the East Coast.  The Red-Headed Menace suggested “Snapture.” Even better, Railfan offered “Snoverkill.”

Anything but whatever stupid name the Weather Channel has given it.  Seriously, there are good reasons the National Weather Service does not name blizzards.  Winter storms are disorganized, and can stretch all the way across the country.  They’re not like hurricanes, which are discrete events with more or less defined paths and specific circulation patterns.  You can have a summer storm which causes massive flooding and damage, but unless it has circular, sustained winds of at least seventy miles an hour, the NWS is not going to call it a hurricane. Just having cold weather and a crapload (that’s a technical term) of snow does not a winter equivalent of a hurricane.

I really do like “Snoverkill.”

In any case, to my friends along the East Coast and Midwest, I hope you stay warm. Currently, the temperatures in parts of Canada are roughly the same as … on Mars.

Posted on by Pat Greene | 2 Comments

Blog stats.

I have written 182 posts thus far this year, not including this one.  In 2012, I wrote 361 — nearly an average of one a day — and in 2011, 313.  The last year I posted less than 200 blog posts was 2010, when I wrote 152.

I do not want this to be a trend.  I am hoping to write more in 2014.

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I love “The Sing-Off,” I really do. But there are certain songs that should never be adapted for a Capella groups. “My Generation” is one of them.

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Wednesday morning musings.

I am fighting off a cold.  One indicator that I am unwell is that I am sitting in my hotel room in Manhattan in a NyQuil haze, drinking coffee, watching The Voice on my computer, rather than making a mad dash to spend my last three hours in the city visiting my favorite paintings at the Met.

The whole purpose of this trip isn’t in NYC, anyway.  I am going to see a couple of close friends in DC, and I absolutely need to be in good shape. (Getting other people sick is never a good idea.)  People matter more than art.  Some people, anyway. These people, unquestionably.

One of the nice things about NyQuil is that the construction next door which has been going on since 7 a.m. isn’t even bothering me.

I am enough of a nerd that recontextualizing classic rock/soul/pop whatever songs out of their original meaning bugs me no end.  This mini-rant courtesy of The Voice‘s Will Champlain, who dedicated Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come,” to his wife and daughter, talking about a change in their personal lives.  Nice, as far as it goes, but the song was originally about racism in America.  I feels wrong somehow hear it sung about personal rather than societal issues.  I’d be a lot more unhappy if Champlain had not done a very good job with the song.

Of course, the Georgia on Hoagy Carmichael’s (or more accurately, Stuart Gorrell’s, who wrote the lyrics) mind was a woman, not the state north of Florida.

Champlain has become my favorite, if for no other reason that this week he played piano on one song and banjo on another.  Sings good, too.  I’d go see him in concert.

A few weeks ago, my most passive-aggressive (we have a pleasantly genial, completely inauthentic working relationship) coworker walked towards me in the parking lot, gave me a huge bag of clothes, announced airily “I got these at a clothing swap; no need to thank me.”   I was annoyed: it didn’t say “friendship,” it smacked of charity.  Indeed, most of the clothes were ugly, or not my size.  There were a couple of things I decided to keep, though, and in the middle was a nice little black purse.

Last night, at dinner, The Rocket Scientist mentioned that I now had a designer purse.  Really? He pointed to the small “Kate Spade” label sewn on the side.  (It may be, in fact probably is, a knock-off.) Oh.  Later, we discovered a knife clipped to the inside lining.  Now I feel like a real city dweller: designer bag, switchblade knife.  All I’m missing is the small canister of pepper spray.

I’ll add to this later.  Right now, decaf (hot liquids FTW) and sleep.

ETA: I am now in Newark Airport. Oh, joy. I am waiting to board my flight to D C. Am feeling somewhat better. Have I mentioned how much I hate the iPhone WordPress app? Actually, that is not true. I hate typing anything on my iPhone.

Because it looked like it was going to be cold (NYC, December), I brought my school bus yellow parks (which is a story for another time when I have a keyboard). Soooo…. It is 52 here, 55 in
DC, and…… 48 at home. Well, I can use it when I get off the plane in California.

Posted in Travel (real or imaginary) | 1 Comment

End of the month tally.

I did not make the fifty thousand words. It’s a shame really — but I resisted the temptation to go back and edit former posts to make them longer.  I suppose that if I had chosen to do so last night and tonight, I could have gotten a lot closer to my goal, but the past few days have been spent mostly with family.

I was busy yesterday (not shopping!). I could have blogged last night, but instead chose to sit around playing poker with everyone.  Today, all of us went to see the Red-Headed Menace in the State Cross-Country Championships, and afterwards I took a well needed nap.  I could stay in the rest of the evening and write, but we’re going out to have fun and then go to dinner.  I do have priorities.

In the end, I blogged 22 of 30 days in November. on 11 days, I wrote more than 1500 words, on seven days, more than 2,000 and once more than 3,000.  My grand total for the month, including this post is  31,734 .

Some of those posts have been trivial, one was vital.  I ended up posting almost all that I wrote, so that you won’t be stuck seeing old posts in December.

I think, having done both, that it is easier to write 50K words of a really bad novel than 50K in blog posts.  You have to keep thinking up new topics.

Still, I am glad I made some sort of attempt.

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