tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90753884236191280402024-03-05T01:05:57.417-05:00Where's My Plan?As the name suggests, I have no real idea what I'm doing with this blog. It's about lots of things, or it's about nothing. Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.comBlogger380125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-38574735593593032142023-12-16T21:27:00.003-05:002023-12-16T21:27:48.652-05:00The Repair Queen<p> On the first day of her winter break, my wife declared loudly to the neighborhood "I am the queen of car repair!" She's not sure if the neighbors walking by heard or not, but we're hopeful that they will forever think of our house as "the home of the queen of car repair."</p><p>Some days earlier, she had stopped by Auto Zone and asked for a headlight for a Prius. The guy looked kind of hesitant and asked if she wanted them to install it. No, she said, I can do it. He looked a bit dubious, and she explained that she's done it a couple times now over the years. His hesitancy turned into amazement and they commiserated a bit about how hard it is to change Prius bulbs. But, he indicated, the Prius isn't as bad a s aJeep. Still. He would have been happy to have her demonstrate her prowess right there in the parking lot, but she declined. She felt sure she could do it, but how quickly was another matter. </p><p>So this morning, she went out and changed the bulb in record time. Not sure if they redesigned the Prius since the last time (this is the first time she's done it on our new-to-us Prius), or if she's just that good--the queen, in fact.</p><p>And for her next amazing trick? We had seen a dent in the front bumper. She boiled water and we poured it over the dent and--just before we ran out of water--the dent popped right out. Physics for the win! Long live the queen!</p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-48992198251780633302023-12-14T16:51:00.001-05:002023-12-14T16:51:28.292-05:00Done With the SicknessI came down with a bit of a sore throat yesterday and frankly, I'm not a fan. And yet, despite my feelings about being sick, I feel like I've spent the better part of the last few months under the weather.<div><br /></div><div>Earlier this fall, I came down with something that seemed pretty minor. No real congestion to speak of, not even really a sore throat, just a bit of a tickle in the back of my throat. It was a minor annoyance, albeit an annoyance that seriously compromised my ability to do one of my hobbies--singing in a community choir. And here's the thing: minor as it was, <i>it just kept going</i>. Day after day, week after week. </div><div><br /></div><div>Finally, after 4 or 5 weeks I went to see the doctor, where I ended up paying like $700 out of pocket for them to tell me it wasn't COVID, either strain of the flu, or... pneumonia, I think? Basically, just a cold that won't go away. </div><div><br /></div><div>Around that time, it got slightly worse, and a complication arose. I coughed hard enough to either pull a muscle between my ribs or knock a rib out of alignment. And let me tell you, <i>that</i> was painful. Every time I sat up, laid down, rolled over, whatever--and, of course, any time I coughed--it hurt a lot. So even once the cough went away <i>a month and a half after it started</i> I still felt fairly bad because of this rib thing that also wouldn't go away. </div><div><br /></div><div>This is a sign of getting old, isn't it? </div><div><br /></div><div>I sure hope this sore throat doesn't stick around. We shall see. I am more than ready to be done with any and all forms of illness for the foreseeable future.</div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-47329918016069188852023-12-13T20:45:00.003-05:002023-12-13T20:45:27.885-05:00Mixed day in the kitchen<p>It’s not every day you get hot oil splashed on your face, but here we are. </p><p>The closest we got to drama at lunch was my sick-at-home teen having her request for Panera denied. I had zero interest in paying for DoorDash or driving there, but I was able to surprise her with an alternative: chicken soup from a can and homemade biscuits. </p><p>Although I love a good yeast bread, it’s good to have quicker alternatives in your recipe box. The biscuits were a big hit, not to mention cheap and easy. </p><p>As dinner came around, I was short on ideas but cane up with: Breakfast For Dinner: Fancy Edition. The fancy part being crepes. </p><p>I cooked bacon in the oven. Baked bacon has been a go-to for me any time I need to make bacon for a crowd. It’s hands off and relatively hard to mess up (just don’t let it go too long!). </p><p>As I was finishing up the crepes, I caught a whiff of burning bacon. It wasn’t burnt, but it was done. I grabbed an oven mitt, but as I pulled it out the grease popped and splattered. “My eyes!” I thought as pain exploded on my face, shutting them tightly and jerking back. </p><p>In the end I was okay, but have a pretty good dime-sized burn on my forehead right above and between my eyes, plus some smaller burns on my face and one hand. And there was a mess of bacon grease on our floor too. I’ve never had anything like that happen in all the years I’ve cooked bacon in the oven or on the stove. </p><p>But the crepes were great, so there’s that. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-23602832062748373602023-12-12T14:20:00.002-05:002023-12-12T14:22:53.783-05:00Life-changing food<p>I'm on my college class reunion committee, and the alumni office had a virtual luncheon today for class agents. The icebreaker was your favorite food from the dining hall while you were a student.</p><p>Now, I'm not sure if it's my favorite exactly, but there was some dining hall food that changed my life.</p><p>I came to college as a provincial, leaving my small town for, well, another small town, but one that hosted an elite academic institution and the cosmopolitan community that implies. And I swear that, to the best of my knowledge, the only bread available in my hometown was Wonder Bread and the equivalent "whole wheat" bread. We did not have a bakery (except for donuts). </p><p>Our college, however, did (or, it was rumored, they got their bread from the local Amish). In any case, every day in our dining hall featured an array of freshly baked breads for the taking. If I gained 10 pounds my freshman year--and I did--it was surely all bread weight. </p><p>Because this bread was a revelation. That other stuff was fine for sandwiches, but this was bread fit for the holiest of communions. Yes please, I will always have seconds.</p><p>But alas, all good things must come to an end, and when I returned home from college that first summer, I returned to a desolate wasteland (in terms of bakeries--it wasn't <i>that bad</i> otherwise). </p><p>And so I taught myself how to bake bread, first from the Betty Crocker Cookbook (my mother's kitchen Bible), and then from other cookbooks and individual recipes. </p><p>What's more, this kicked off an interest in the culinary arts more broadly. Talking about baking with actual adults earned me recommendations for cookbooks like The Moosewood series, <i>The Joy of Cooking</i>, and Mark Bittman's <i>How to Cook Everything</i>. And I tried my hand at a little of everything. </p><p>Cooking, in turn, broadened my tastes, and I went from an extremely picky kid to an adventurous adult. All of which, it could be said, I owe to the fresh bread in my college dining hall. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-20526039887497595332023-12-10T15:59:00.001-05:002023-12-10T15:59:11.724-05:00Walking and Talking<p> Two weeks in a row makes a tradition, right? </p><p>Two Sundays now, my oldest and I have taken a morning walk to our local Starbucks, justified in no small part by the "Win Starbucks for a Year" promotion and in part by a couple opportunities for bonus stars. As much as anything, though, the motivation is to get in some morning steps and spend time with my teen.</p><p>Mission accomplished on both fronts. </p><p>Starbucks is 1.4 miles from our house, so that was almost 3 miles right there. And she's always talkative when we're heading to Starbucks. It's like anticipation is almost as strong as caffeine. </p><p>We talked about the concert she sang in last night, which was just amazingly good. She sings with the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Chorus, and I'm just continually blown away by what an experience she's getting. Their performance last night was closer in its repertoire and sound to a college choir than to a high school ensemble. </p><p>And we talked about things going on with one of her siblings, and about her recent class trip to Columbus, where she loved COSI (Center of Science and Industry) and the chance to see the Ohio State main campus up close. We talked about next year, when she may be going off to boarding school. </p><p>At home, it can be tough to get time on my teen's busy schedule, so if the cost of admission is over-priced coffee and sugary drinks, so be it. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-8096847858732909892023-12-09T16:26:00.000-05:002023-12-09T16:26:05.985-05:00Long Goodbye<p>I haven’t talked about it much here or on social media, but my mother has been suffering from dementia for at least four years now—four noticeable years, anyway, but in retrospect you start to wonder about the state of her mind even earlier, and certain things appear in a different light. This fall, we brought her closer as we moved her into memory care—a 20-minute drive rather than an hour and a half. Which makes it possible to see her much more often. </p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq0aj6JzHfNZYnNKFvamDiwjXok_rMBbgO4zjmjRl_9L_b8yGr5G6yaZTzRyLp5zfP-qF8dUlFBiWYUqhjWSRlXEyMVpKdTGnkVWqFCGCUKSWHXfFuWhqc_JuFMDMF9-EuhRG074JasvVJb6_2qgohwIcPgQLEermMJgNJc4yppKBSKWynePwceR9fk5Q/s4032/IMG_7993.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="4032" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq0aj6JzHfNZYnNKFvamDiwjXok_rMBbgO4zjmjRl_9L_b8yGr5G6yaZTzRyLp5zfP-qF8dUlFBiWYUqhjWSRlXEyMVpKdTGnkVWqFCGCUKSWHXfFuWhqc_JuFMDMF9-EuhRG074JasvVJb6_2qgohwIcPgQLEermMJgNJc4yppKBSKWynePwceR9fk5Q/s320/IMG_7993.jpeg" width="240" /></a></div><br /><p>The place where she lives had a holiday dinner earlier this week and it was nice to share a meal with her. </p><p>Having her close is a double-edged sword: we can visit more often, but with work and school and all the related commitments, I still can’t get there as often as I feel like I should. It’s almost worse, because when it’s prohibitively difficult to visit, well, you just can’t visit that often. But now? Now that she’s not living in the town where she spent the past half century, I know that no one will come to visit her except me, and I can’t seem to get there often enough. </p><p>We traveled to be with my wife’s family over Thanksgiving, which made it a week and a half between visits, and I felt terrible about it. Part of me expected, and dreaded, what Mom would say when I did visit her, what kind of guilt trip it might be. That is, after all, kind of her MO. </p><p>But she didn’t seem particularly aware of how long had passed. Which was a relief, but also a painful reminder of how much she has lost already. The Mom I grew up with would have been acutely aware down to the hour of how long it had been and never would have let that slide. </p><p>I’ve heard this called “the long goodbye.” And I try to recognize it for the blessing it can be. I know people who have lost parents or spouses suddenly, and that is so devastating. Mom’s death, when it comes, will not be that. I have had years already to come to terms with the loss, because the loss has been happening little by little, day by day. My dad’s death was similar in its own way: not dementia precisely, because his loss of mind and self came from a tumor and damage from surgery, but it was also the kind of long goodbye that meant we were ready, relieved, when his suffering and ours finally ended. The grief we felt—of course there was still grief—was simply the crest of the final wave of many that was crashing against our shore. </p><p>And yet. Earlier this fall, Mom went to the hospital with a fall. It turned out she had COVID and pneumonia. Realistically, any of the three things could have killed her. And driving to the hospital, sitting with her, I realized that while I could make peace with it, while she was going, she wasn’t entirely gone, and I’m not ready for goodbye either. </p><p>And so, each visit, each event like this week's, are at once difficult reminders of loss and precious moments before the real goodbye. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-89911356260097141532023-03-04T11:14:00.004-05:002023-03-04T11:31:31.145-05:00Google and recipes and friends<p>My oldest is in the middle school musical (a big role, and she’s killing it, if I do say so myself). I signed up to bring desserts to tonight’s cast party and I was trying to knock that out this morning before things got busy. One idea I had involved a butter yellow cake mix, so I looked up a recipe for THAT thinking I could finesse that based on what would be added to a box mix. </p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhh9VkvktsYkZVfgdqvRabTb8h7kCTA7BMkN7BZdXhaprHMMSx2j0sJZh1L-cSBYkk_rK2PK5Ok1NMglbeRHhuE5bJ4QbAJmk7UF1xE_PL6tsGeJQ_XyaAM_3vysq-LLSenoCfphHn83y2xSf7sT-N8H2j1QD6yrMKjJhPT6OR0Z6GFC2kzrCAOUbdK/s828/94679961-C17C-440D-AE16-09CF14C65F04.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="402" data-original-width="828" height="155" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhh9VkvktsYkZVfgdqvRabTb8h7kCTA7BMkN7BZdXhaprHMMSx2j0sJZh1L-cSBYkk_rK2PK5Ok1NMglbeRHhuE5bJ4QbAJmk7UF1xE_PL6tsGeJQ_XyaAM_3vysq-LLSenoCfphHn83y2xSf7sT-N8H2j1QD6yrMKjJhPT6OR0Z6GFC2kzrCAOUbdK/s320/94679961-C17C-440D-AE16-09CF14C65F04.jpeg" width="320" /></a></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div>Within a minute I had an answer… gleaned from a Google image search. <i>Of course </i>I could have done that myself, and I felt a bit sheepish. <br /><p>But then something pretty cool happened. </p><p>My high school theater director chimed in: “are you making gooey bars?”</p><p>Yes, I was! Wait, chimes in the person who originally answered me. What are those, they sound delicious! </p><p>So I shared that they are a bar version of the St Louis classic Gooey Butter Cake. My mom always called them chewy bars, because somewhere in the passing on of this recipe its origins were lost and its name misheard as “chewy bars.” Only after marrying into a St Louis family did I realize what I really had. </p><p>And I dropped in a photo of the recipe:</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBl1AXmR_HJKjw6k2WkkVcPIbpVFP4CnCwGntQ62KCZgO-kKpZicV3WueqfnxdzHsAygYcOOtCsd8YcNYXHEmgLtOfr2xK7g5YYZSANtH0kZzezVx-mSa1oL5L_78de8Le6KV28R2PKSvzwPGAvzo5jYj9aNaHlO9rtJuhLZgcrPUW68gfv-aSDvEc/s3840/859FBF8E-DE39-47AF-8E26-56E529C55027.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="3840" data-original-width="2160" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBl1AXmR_HJKjw6k2WkkVcPIbpVFP4CnCwGntQ62KCZgO-kKpZicV3WueqfnxdzHsAygYcOOtCsd8YcNYXHEmgLtOfr2xK7g5YYZSANtH0kZzezVx-mSa1oL5L_78de8Le6KV28R2PKSvzwPGAvzo5jYj9aNaHlO9rtJuhLZgcrPUW68gfv-aSDvEc/s320/859FBF8E-DE39-47AF-8E26-56E529C55027.jpeg" width="180" /></a></div>(I was in the process of making crepes for my kids during this exchange)<div><br /></div><div>And my theater teacher shared a photo she had of the recipe, also in my mom’s handwriting, and my other friend is going to make them to try them out. Side note: it’s funny to think that when this recipe was circulating, there must have only been one size box of powdered sugar!</div><div><br /></div><div>And later a cousin chimed in, was I too young to remember Grandma Mom’s molasses cookies? Yes, but please share the recipe!</div><div><br /></div><div>But anyway, if there’s a point to my story, it’s just to note that, as much as I could have googled this myself (and, btw, another friend googled and shared the answer to the question I really wanted to know: a substitution for the cake mix), if I had I would have missed out on these wonderful interactions with friends and I wouldn’t have shared the recipe with them or with you. It’s convenient to be able to Google and find your own answers, but it’s easy to forget that there’s an invisible trade-off in that choice. Like every choice, really. </div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-27398488532722523002023-01-03T17:25:00.004-05:002023-01-03T17:25:36.717-05:00Ivymas and the Ivy Fairy<p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhU1C2YNceREoEBs0s220eQtcw-JsvwNiTq0eHc_NWa8JlK_HQfDlwyaU0DlJamYA0RW0XMfdVRWp5OK2Hqime_r_VYiJfQGkgjYGsJVMXn0jOZ0DUw8TveIhARxY8OVnW41UCVyQ-Hwrwc1MkweymfsLWiWxfgfccfIQEYXoxWmAten5gRuqHob7XC/s3134/1DC17127-814F-4817-B327-67D5C37ABF3C.jpeg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="3134" data-original-width="2717" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhU1C2YNceREoEBs0s220eQtcw-JsvwNiTq0eHc_NWa8JlK_HQfDlwyaU0DlJamYA0RW0XMfdVRWp5OK2Hqime_r_VYiJfQGkgjYGsJVMXn0jOZ0DUw8TveIhARxY8OVnW41UCVyQ-Hwrwc1MkweymfsLWiWxfgfccfIQEYXoxWmAten5gRuqHob7XC/s320/1DC17127-814F-4817-B327-67D5C37ABF3C.jpeg" width="277" /></a></div><br />The night before our youngest, Ivy, turned 7, she and her mom were drawing a fairy that was somehow involved in a heretofore-unknown holiday called Ivymas. They had to stop for bath time, but Ivy told me in no uncertain terms that I had to write a story about the Ivy Fairy and Ivymas. I think it came together pretty well:<div>***<br /><p></p><span></span><p>There is a beautiful and tenacious plant called ivy that grows on the side of buildings, covering them in a thick blanket of leaves. You may not know this, but these thick curtains of ivy are a favorite place for certain kinds of fairies to make their homes. They have a name they call themselves, but most people call them Ivy Fairies.</p><p>These fairies love to have fun. They play through the air with reckless abandon, turning cartwheels with cardinals, doing roundoffs with robins, and somesaults with sparrows. Because of their colorful wings, humans often think they are seeing butterflies, when really they are seeing Ivy Fairies.</p><p>Ivy Fairies are carefree, fun-loving, sweet, and just a little mischievous. But they have <i>one</i> thing they take very seriously, a sort of duty that they have taken upon themselves: they love the ivy that provides them homes and identifies to human beings, and they honor this connection by keeping a special eye out for little girls--or boys--named Ivy, and when they find such a special child in their neighborhood, they undertake to celebrate this child on her or his birthday, which the fairies call "Ivymas."</p><p>While an Ivy is sleeping before their birthday, in the middle of the night, the Ivy Fairy creeps up the side of the house--just like an ivy vine--and slips quietly into Ivy's room to deliver a special note with birthday good wishes and perhaps a small gift as a token of affection between an Ivy Fairy and the Ivy that it loves so well.</p><p>So: if you ever see a fairy that looks like a butterfly, you might want to yell "thank you!" to her. The fairy will appreciate it, and if it's just a butterfly after all, well, butterflies like to feel appreciated too.</p></div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-70286356251431301362022-12-28T16:05:00.003-05:002022-12-28T16:05:51.658-05:00Goodbye my friend<div class="x11i5rnm xat24cr x1mh8g0r x1vvkbs xdj266r x126k92a" style="background-color: white; color: #050505; font-family: "Segoe UI Historic", "Segoe UI", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin: 0px; overflow-wrap: break-word; white-space: pre-wrap;"><div dir="auto" style="font-family: inherit;">Just over 20 years ago, I got a new neighbor, both in the dorm and over in the Fine Arts building where I taught music and he taught theater. "Kapoo" became one of my best friends and colleagues, a collaborator on fine arts programs, teaching English, D&D adventures, blogging, and assorted pranks and tomfoolery. Brian was the officiant at our wedding (and we couldn't have asked for a better guy to play director, stage manager, and best supporting actor for our big day), and then he and his wife were our neighbors in a freshman dorm our first year of marriage. With our connected apartments it was like one big family or some kind of commune. </div></div><div class="x11i5rnm xat24cr x1mh8g0r x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a" style="background-color: white; color: #050505; font-family: "Segoe UI Historic", "Segoe UI", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin: 0.5em 0px 0px; overflow-wrap: break-word; white-space: pre-wrap;"><div dir="auto" style="font-family: inherit;">My heart breaks as I try to find the words to honor and say goodbye to my wonderful, larger-than-life friend, but looking through old pictures to put together this post, I'm reminded of the joy and fun that he brought to, well, basically every situation. I'm one of so many who will miss him, and whose lives were made better by knowing him.</div><div dir="auto" style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_cMEXde8gRuC0SZ6sy0xYfwREI5F45_FTkGgqIv5sGEyP46thj1juB5NkIc423t1ygzRBt5J_D7WjuMrY1KbmkkvPsxG3cqw-wVra9HfPntFyTHKDeaxHae6x-GpF4YdM63HbgmqApvw1gqwXwiAsbIESuuV85gZGbFseOllvXf_S4r_wXCDcWBx5/s595/Kapoo%20collage.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="595" data-original-width="593" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_cMEXde8gRuC0SZ6sy0xYfwREI5F45_FTkGgqIv5sGEyP46thj1juB5NkIc423t1ygzRBt5J_D7WjuMrY1KbmkkvPsxG3cqw-wVra9HfPntFyTHKDeaxHae6x-GpF4YdM63HbgmqApvw1gqwXwiAsbIESuuV85gZGbFseOllvXf_S4r_wXCDcWBx5/w638-h640/Kapoo%20collage.png" width="638" /></a></div><div dir="auto" style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></div></div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-67129251814262341922022-12-19T21:10:00.002-05:002022-12-19T21:10:34.274-05:00Stunned<p>I got word today that a friend of mine is in the hospital and is transitioning into palliative care. They don’t really know if he has days, weeks, or months, but it doesn’t look good. </p><p>I’m in shock. We worked together in a boarding school for five years. We were literally neighbors, living for several years in the same dorm overseeing kids, and since I was the music teacher and he was the theater teacher, we also worded closely in the classroom, with the theater where he taught and the music room where I taught being adjacent. Not to mention collaborating on programs. The first year my wife and I were married, we lived in a freshmen dorm an an apartment that connected directly with the apartment he and his wife lived in. It wasn’t quite one big apartment, but it was pretty close. </p><p>I was in the car with my 6-year-old when I got the call and I started crying and then I had to explain to her why I was sad. And it’s amazing how putting things into words makes them more real. Like, thinking “my friend is dying” is very different from saying it out loud. </p><p>I’m going to head out to see him and his wife and some of our mutual friends tomorrow for a couple days, so if I don’t manage to blog, that’s why. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-92083540720732920872022-12-18T20:38:00.003-05:002022-12-18T20:38:13.428-05:00Adult giftsIn my wife’s family, we decided years ago to have the adults draw names and just get one person a gift (everybody buys for all the kids). To facilitate this, we all send out a list of things we’d like, and this is the worst part of Christmas. <div><br /></div><div>I just have no idea each year what to ask for. I spent a solid hour h free other day Googling “gifts for Dad” to figure out what I might like to receive on Christmas morning. Because I definitely want to receive a thing or two on Christmas. </div><div><br /></div><div>The problem with gifts for adults, I think, is that as an adult, if you want/need something, you either buy it for yourself or there’s a reason you don’t, such as it being ridiculously expensive. Like, a <a href="https://sleep.me/home-new" target="_blank">cooling mattress topper</a> sounds super cool, but at like $800+ for something I’ve never even tried out? Yeah, no. I’d LOVE to have an in-home sauna but, again, very expensive. A new laptop? Yes please. Oooh, or recording equipment to put together a home studio. Or home gym equipment… the list goes on, of things I’ll neither buy myself nor request as a gift. </div><div><br /></div><div>I finally came up with three things: new sweatpants to support my work from home lifestyle, wool socks, and an Audible subscription. </div><div><br /></div><div>I’d love to get something totally unexpected yet absolutely perfect, but I’m not expecting it any more than I’m expecting to share cookies with Santa. It’ll still be a great Christmas, I’m sure. </div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-61672433001066158632022-12-17T07:18:00.001-05:002022-12-17T07:18:18.307-05:00The Waker and the Sleeper<p> I suspect that evolution has programmed us to seek out a mate with the opposite sleep tendencies of our own, so that one half of the partnership can wake up at the smallest twig cracking and protect the family from sabretooth tigers, etc, particularly during the child-rearing years, and the other partner can sleep like the dead and get a good night’s sleep to be happy, healthy, and live into old age. </p><p>Certainly, I’ve always been the former while my wife has been the latter. When we were young and parenting only a small dog, she knew exactly who you come to in the middle of the night to go out to potty, because it was only possible to awaken one of us. </p><p>And that’s why I’ve been awake since 6:30 on a Saturday, because our hungry-hungry six-year-old also knows who to wake up. </p><p>There was a brief period in our relationship when this dynamic flipped: when any of our children were still breastfeeding. Then and only then my wife was on high alert to the needs of another living thing (a living thing that alternated between sharing our bed and sleeping right next to it). For that all-too-brief period, I was allowed to sleep pretty well through the night (unless the dog needed me or the baby REALLY started to cry). </p><p>But those times are long gone, and none of the routine needs of our children is powerful enough to lift the weighted blanket of sleep from the other side of the bed. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-66462305895765561562022-12-16T19:33:00.001-05:002022-12-16T19:33:48.699-05:002022: The Year in Books part 3 (Non-Fiction)<p>I don't tend to read nearly as much non-fiction as fiction. I generally like history, but there was only one book that fell into that category this whole year. So it goes. Here are the highlights. </p><p>It's been on my list for a while, but I finally read <i>Open</i> by Andre Agassi, and absolutely loved it. I started playing tennis in high school in the 90s, more or less at the height of the Sampras-Agassi rivalry, so it was both a bit nostalgic to revisit that time through Agassi's eyes and also revealing to get to know him and his journey through tennis. It's so well written, so authentic and rich--I would imagine that even people who aren't tennis fans would get a lot out of it. </p><p>I read <i>From Strength to Strength: Finding Success, Happiness, and Deep Purpose in the Second Half of Life</i> after hearing an interview with the author, Arthur C. Brooks. Truthfully, I probably got as much out of the interview as I did out of the book, but both were good. The central insight is that our brains naturally change as we age, such that we may not retain the strengths that helped us in our younger years as we age, but we also tend to grow into other strengths, and the key is embracing those changes as we age to go, as the title suggests, from strength to strength. </p><p>Another book I found after an interview with the author was <i>Trauma: The Invisible Epidemic</i> by Paul Conti. There's a quotation that's stuck with me from the writer Robert Anton Wilson: "Under the present brutal and primitive conditions on this planet, every person you meet should be regarded as one of the walking wounded. We have never seen a man or woman not slightly deranged by either anxiety or grief. We have never seen a totally sane human being." I think Conti would agree: under the influence of repeated traumas, both large and small, we are all suffering to one degree or another, even as we find ways to get by. This was a fascinating and helpful treatment of the subject of trauma, its effects, and how we might better deal with it. </p><p>Far and away the most important and best non-fiction book I read this year was <i>Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood</i> by Lisa Damour. Our oldest officially becomes a teen this January, but she's already started on this transition. It was nice to see some of the signposts more clearly through Damour's analysis and to feel like we've got some help navigating the years ahead not just for our oldest but for the next two as well. I listened to the audiobook, read by the author, and it was particularly nice to hear the humor and warmth in her tone. But I also bought a copy, as I expect to return to it frequently in the next several years. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-30105796931148075622022-12-15T21:51:00.001-05:002022-12-15T21:51:10.282-05:00Daily HabitsObviously, here in December I'm trying to blog daily, and I've been doing pretty well at it, if I do say so myself, even if I got a late start. So, what are other things that I do (or try to do) daily? I'm glad you asked....<div><br /></div><div>Today actually marks a 100-day streak on Duolingo, where I'm working on learning Italian. I studied French in high school and traveled to Montreal, Quebec, and France (mainly Paris, Nice, and Avignon). But I only took the required two years and then let it slide. My best friend in college took German all through college and picked up Italian our senior year, then went to live in Italy, so I had that as motivation to visit Italy, and in the process of several visits over several years I learned the travel basics of the language. Now my wife and I and our three kids are preparing for a trip this spring to France and Italy, so I decided to use that as motivation to try to refresh the little Italian I knew and learn some more. And it's also been a chance to try out a language-learning app. I'll admit that sometimes the vocabulary I'm learning doesn't seem like the most practical, but it does feel like it's all building and that I should be reasonably competent in a few months if I keep practicing. </div><div><br /></div><div>I've also maintained the Wordle habit that was so fashionable, though I don't inflict my results on my Facebook feed. In fact, I've got a sequence of related games I play pretty much every day: Wordle, then Quordle (solving 4 simultaneously), then Octordle (8). The last couple days I've tried out some Octordle variants: one where you have to solve them in sequence and one where they give you the first three starting guesses (which are intentionally terrible) and you have to salvage the game. Anyway, I enjoy the mental challenge. </div><div><br /></div><div>I'd <i>like</i> work out--not necessarily every day, because you do need some rest days in there. But this winter has been brutal. Back in the summer, I got a year-long membership at the local rec center and I went in 4-5 days each week. But that was in the summer when I generally wasn't responsible for anyone or anything in the morning until work started. Once school started, I couldn't go in the morning anymore because the gym doesn't open until 6:00, which is when I start marshaling the troops around here. I can sometimes go either right after my wife and kids leave for school or over the lunch hour. But sometimes I'm too busy with work, and it seems like in November and December there's just a constant stream of obstacles--one of the kids gets sick and stays home with me, or I get a frantic text that someone has forgotten something vital (usually the viola) and need me to bring it. Or I myself am sick or fighting off the lingering effects of being sick. </div><div><br /></div><div>I'd also like to establish a daily meditation practice. The closest I've come is that for the last couple weeks I've been doing some guided breathing sessions with <a href="https://youtu.be/tybOi4hjZFQ" target="_blank">a YouTube video</a> and that's kind of like meditation, not to mention probably also valuable in its own right. I don't know.</div><div><br /></div><div>On top of all that, I'd like to establish a creative practice of some kind. Writing and/or composing music. They are both things I've done in the past, but I'm very much out of the habit. </div><div><br /></div><div>What about you? What habits do you have or aspire to?</div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-41710141064682392622022-12-14T14:40:00.004-05:002022-12-14T14:40:51.221-05:002022: The Year in Books Part 2 (Fantasy and SF)Something like 2/3 of all the books I read this year were in this bucket, which isn't really surprising. Since I discovered Middle Earth and Narnia and the Forgotten Realms in 4th grade, it's probably been my most-read genre in most given years except while I was in college and right afterward. <div><br /></div><div>About a quarter of these books were re-reads. I went into a Discord dedicated to R. Scott Bakker's works and engineered a re-read of his Prince of Nothing trilogy and the follow-up The Aspect Emperor quartet. We're reading (theoretically 15-20 pages per day, and it's a bit of a slog at times, but it's overall been a good experience so far. It's a dense work with a lot of deep world-building. The writing is very good and doesn't spoon-feed the reader anything, so it definitely rewards a re-read, especially one accompanied by discussion to sort out the details. </div><div><br /></div><div>I also re-read Robin Hobb's Soldier Son trilogy. I should say I'm a HUGE fan of her Realm of the Elderlings series. Last year I did some re-reading in those 13 books and really appreciated it. Soldier Son I remembered as being overall inferior to Hobb's other work, but I was very pleasantly surprised by how good it actually is. It hit differently this time around and I really enjoyed it in a way I don't think I did the first time I read it. </div><div><br /></div><div>And then there were wholly new things I read! I think my favorite was Fonda Lee's Green Bone Saga books, starting with Jade City. It's kind of like <i>The Godfather</i> meets <i>Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon</i>. The characters are well-drawn and the plot can surprise you. </div><div><br /></div><div>I read the last several books of <i>The Expanse</i> series by James S.A. Corey. I read the first few some years ago, then I watched the six seasons of the tv series, and then I picked up the books where the series left off. Although there were some changes from book to tv, it was easy enough to slide right back in and see how it all turns out. By the way, this Corey fellow is actually two writers under a penname, and one of those writers is Daniel Abraham; here at the end of the year I read the first 3 books of his <i>The Dagger and the Coin</i> series. Very solid fantasy, well above average. It's not my new favorite or anything, but it's quite good. </div><div><br /></div><div>Right up there among the best fantasy I read this year was the last two-thirds of R.J. Barker's <i>Tide Child</i> trilogy. It's a dark world of vanishing sea dragons and ships made out of their bones. War and death and a fight for something better. </div><div><br /></div><div>No surprise, but Neil Gaiman's <i>The Ocean at the end of the Lane</i> was just great. It was also wonderful to hear him read his own work live at Playhouse Square this year. </div><div><br /></div><div>I enjoyed the <i>John Cleaver</i> series by Dan Wells (starting with <i>I Am Not a Serial Killer). </i>The premise is basically a young sociopath who is obsessed with serial killers (and obsessed with <i>not</i> becoming one, despite his sociopathic tendencies) finds himself fighting supernatural serial killers. It was a really good series from top to bottom, and one thing I appreciated was the fact that Wells wrapped it up in 6 books rather than trying to milk the premise indefinitely (and, at the same time, I was disappointed to run out of books in the series!). </div><div><br /></div><div>I enjoyed Katherine Arden's <i>The Winternight Trilogy</i> with its Russian folklore. I enjoyed Laini Taylor's <i>Daughter of Smoke and Bone</i> series, though I didn't love it as much as her other series whose name escapes me. Tasha Suri's <i>Books of Ambha</i> was also notable. </div><div><br /></div><div>I didn't enjoy <i>Nona the Ninth</i> (3rd book in Tamsyn Muir's <i>The Locked Tomb</i>) as much as I hoped I would, but I'm still excited to read the next book whenever it comes out, because I enjoyed the first two books so well. And perhaps I'll appreciate <i>Nona</i> on a re-read. </div><div><br /></div><div>I also recently read book 3 of Naomi Novik's <i>Schoolomance</i> trilogy (<i>The Golden Enclaves</i>). Very good. It walks the line of being allegorical, in that the magical premise that threatens its world maps so well onto the problem of global capitalism, and I appreciated just how difficult the problem is in the books, mirroring real-world complexity. In that sense, it was a little disappointing that the solution is ultimately magical and not readily applied to our own real-world dilemmas, but there's something to be said just for people trying to avoid the horns of a dilemma and find a third way that's neither complicity nor resignation. </div><div><br /></div><div>One final thing to mention. I read several comic book collections this year. I got started because Robin Hobb recommended <i>Dark Knights of Steel</i>, which is basically a reimagining of the DC universe in the medieval period. I read the book that collected the first three or four issues and very much enjoyed it, but have not continued following it (maybe at some point I will). I was hardcore into comics from late elementary through high school and only stopped a year or so after I went away to college. In fact, I had subscriptions that were being delivered while I was away, and my local-ish comic shop was holding things for me, many of which I bought but never got around to reading. I felt moved to take several days organizing my much-neglected collection just to see what I had, and then I picked up collections to try to revisit some of the old X-Men storylines in hopes of re-reading the comics in my collection. I never did quite make it, but I did read some. It was interesting to see how mediocre the storytelling was back in the '80s in comics, even when there were some good bits. Still, it was a nice sort of nostalgia. </div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-12630861422557283562022-12-13T18:22:00.002-05:002022-12-13T18:22:17.256-05:002022: The Year in Books (Part 1)As we inch closer to the end of the year, it's a nice time to look back, and Goodreads makes it a little easier to look back on what I've read this year. As I type this, I've read 88 books this year, but I fully expect that number to be 90 or more before the calendar turns over. <div><br /></div><div>The largest portion of those have been audiobooks (67, I think). The rest have been a combination of printed-on-paper and ebooks. I don't love ebooks, because I'm generally reading them on my phone... but the fact that they're on my phone means that there are opportunities to read those books that wouldn't be available to me otherwise. And a couple of those books I only had available in ebook format. </div><div><br /></div><div>Twenty of these were re-reads, either to prepare myself for a just-released later novel in a series or to revisit something I thought was very good. As a culture, we probably don't re-read enough, and it's easy to see why. There's so much <i>new</i> stuff out there. But </div><div><br /></div><div>Two-thirds (60) have been fantasy or science fiction. Some handful I would put in the "literary fiction" category, and the rest is broadly non-fiction. I'm thinking I'll do separate blog posts on the "best' fantasy and non-fiction books I read, but since it's a small number, I'll mention the "literary fiction" here. </div><div><br /></div><div>A couple books I read this year were "classics"--the sort of thing you might be expected to read for a college course. The loftiest of those was <i>Anna Karenina</i>. From my review:</div><div><br /></div><blockquote style="border: none; margin: 0 0 0 40px; padding: 0px;"><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="background-color: white; color: #181818; font-family: Merriweather, Georgia, serif; font-size: 14px;">IS it the greatest ever? I don't know. It's very good. For a book written 100 years before I was born, it's remarkably modern in many ways. I was impressed by its subtlety and nuance, by its detail and deftness of description. The characters are so human from their charms and admirable qualities to their failings and foibles.</span></div></blockquote><div><br /></div><div>5 stars. I also re-read <i>To Kill a Mockingbird, </i>which I did because I read Casey Cep's excellent <i>Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee</i>. It was, in part, the story of a series of murders that happened near Harper Lee's hometown (and which Harper Lee at one point intended to turn into an <i>In Cold Blood</i> -like true crime story) and about Harper Lee's life and career. So I had to re-read TKaM, and as a bonus had the pleasure of seeing a stage version adapted by Aaron Sorkin. And I also read <i>In Cold Blood</i> for the first time, which I very much enjoyed. True crime was never really my thing, but maybe it should be, because it was compelling. </div><div><br /></div><div>Two other re-reads that I would consider literary were Umberto Eco's <i>The Name of the Rose</i> and Mark Helprin's <i>A Soldier of the Great War</i>. Both are worth not only a read but a re-read! </div><div><br /></div><div>And the final novel I'll mention is Jonathan Franzen's <i>Crossroads</i>. I hadn't read any Franzen before this, but his story of a 1970s youth minister and his family was captivating, with fantastically telling details and fascinating characters deftly revealed to us over the course of several hundred pages. </div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-53755056319508894362022-12-12T18:46:00.006-05:002022-12-12T19:02:37.463-05:00Cookies and Christmas treats<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCxXLrOM2_FMgko88KLNLGLtYg-GCy4byUwy_TRz5FEC0ZZWVWZFv1SUQM07pcsBpqGAkM3gOQ67wz5D9r9pIwI8gMERh2fCgqcOkYjl7i5f3APX0VnRoywczwM6re93ZNgW_8tZgtPBvJg0gDNQTHgqMJD8oEwperjtlINes0lxbi6NfZh61PT4Mu/s4032/A2DF8253-BF2F-4896-AE95-C1B81B64C94F.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="3024" data-original-width="4032" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCxXLrOM2_FMgko88KLNLGLtYg-GCy4byUwy_TRz5FEC0ZZWVWZFv1SUQM07pcsBpqGAkM3gOQ67wz5D9r9pIwI8gMERh2fCgqcOkYjl7i5f3APX0VnRoywczwM6re93ZNgW_8tZgtPBvJg0gDNQTHgqMJD8oEwperjtlINes0lxbi6NfZh61PT4Mu/s320/A2DF8253-BF2F-4896-AE95-C1B81B64C94F.jpeg" width="320" /></a></div><br /><div><br /></div>My parents baked cookies all through the year, though I suppose Christmas was an extra special time. That said, I don't remember there being any particular cookies that were reserved for the holiday season. Mom had a Kitchen Aid stand mixer that she could make huge batches of cookies in--and she would. For chocolate chip cookies, she would <i>triple</i> the recipe in the Betty Crocker Cookbook. They had these sheets that they would lay out over the counter (our kitchen had more than its fair share of counter space) for the cookies to cool and shed some of their grease into. <div><br /></div><div>The other cookies I remember most were peanut butter cookies and cornflake cookies (distinguished by cornflakes and coconut). When I was quite a bit older, after dad had died, Mom got really into potato chip cookies, which came from a recipe on a bag of <a href="https://www.ballreich.com/">our local potato chips</a>. </div><div><br /></div><div>It seems like if anything Christmas was the time for non-cookie treats. Mom was never quite satisfied that her Divinity matched what her mother used to make, and it was never quite the same from year to year, so to this day I can't say I know what Divinity is supposed to taste like. All the iterations she tried seemed wonderful to me though. We would frequently make Buckeyes, though those were also a year-round treat, but chocolate and peanut butter fudge were (I think) reserved for the holidays. <div><br /></div><div>Christmas time involved a lot of parties, either at church or at the social organization my parents were part of, the Grange. And that's where I remember other festive cookies and treats that we didn't make at home. I don't think my mom ever in her life made Hershey kiss cookies, which made them a particular treat when I got them. And white chocolate peppermint bark always seemed like something that had to have been cooked up between Santa Claus and Jesus, it was so good. There was some kind of green cookies shaped like Christmas trees (were there cornflakes or some other cereal in them?) that were a holiday treat but probably would have worn out their welcome quickly if they were always available. </div><div><br /></div><div>Oh, and popcorn balls! I can't say I loved them, but I recall them fondly. And, of course, we kids got a lot of candy canes, which were good to suck on, but they were even better to gather up and toss in the blender to turn into an ice cream topping. Anyway, I'm getting pretty far afield from cookies--what were your favorite Christmas treats growing up?</div><div><br /></div><div>And finally, I want to direct attention to <a href="https://bozoette.typepad.com/red_nose/2010/09/have-a-cookie.html">Bozoette's Mom's chocolate chip cookies</a>. I gave them a try this afternoon and they are a revelation. The use of a copious quantity of dark brown sugar instead of light brown sugar gives these cookies a distinctive character that is above and beyond the flavor profile of the cookies I grew up with (sorry Betty). Highly recommended. </div></div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-43895645515759256952022-12-11T12:15:00.001-05:002022-12-11T12:15:39.567-05:00Sign of the Season<p>It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas... in the sense that the lines at Target are even worse than usual. </p><p>The cash registers were a mess. Just super long lines everywhere you look. And the way Target sets things up doesn't help, with one set of registers behind another, and in this case they had registers open that were stacked on top of each other. So it was an ambiguous line situation--is it one line feeding into two registers? Is it two lines? Those of us making up the tail of the line tacitly agreed among ourselves that it was one line.</p><p>And then a woman walked up and tried to make it two and all of us 1) knew full well that it was an ambiguous situation, so the woman wasn't <i>wrong, </i>per se, and 2) were too polite to confront her anyway, but 3) were not happy that our implicit assumption was being challenged. But maybe 30 seconds later I took decisive, passive-aggressive (emphasis on passive, honestly) action. "Wow," I said aloud. "These lines are a real mess. It's not really even clear if there's one line or two." </p><p>The woman who had turned it into two lines turns to me and says "Oh, was it one line?" I said we weren't really sure... but we were all assuming (gesturing to the growing line both in front of and behind me) that it was one line. </p><p>She apologetically joined our line and all was well with the world again.</p><p>As we got up to the registered, I continued in my leadership role, suggesting the couple in front of me might go up to the second register and then, comparing the cart of the next person at the near register and the people I'd just promoted, I decided to follow them.</p><p>And <i>then</i>, someone from way back in the line sees me going to the far line and is like "Hey! We all were treating this like one line!" </p><p>I was suddenly being mistaken for a line-jumper! I cleared up my status though, and muttered to the people ahead of me "I've been the one <i>enforcing</i> one line." They laughed with me. </p><p>Anyway, all of this could have been avoided if Target got their act together and made their lines make sense. Good systems trump (hoping for) good behavior most of the time. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-75703433173190825692022-12-10T18:29:00.000-05:002022-12-10T18:29:03.013-05:00Love and Marriage<p>When people talk about marriage, there's a lot of talk about love. Maybe some "soul mates" stuff, or at least "she brings out the best in me." Someone to raise a family with, perhaps (though I think the joys of two incomes and no children should probably not be understated). What rarely gets discussed are things like, when you need to go to the airport at oh-dark-thirty, having one person in the world who pretty much has to take you.</p><p>My wife got to cash in on that this morning as we awoke before 3:00 am to get her there by 3:30. Considering that she's chaperoning a dozen or so high school students as well as a wet-behind-the-ears teacher for a week, I'd still say I got the better end of this deal. I could at least go home and go back to bed until our youngest woke me up way too early demanding food. </p><p>But there really is something wonderful about that part of the relationship. One person who, when you're asking them a big favor, it doesn't feel to either of you like you're asking them a big favor. You're just doing whatever they need done, and you know that they would do the same for you. </p><p>I'm talking about something that, in a way, by its very nature, you can take for granted. But, of course, you can't <i>really</i> take it for granted, can you? I'm in my mid-40s, and for the last decade or so I've watched a certain number of people I know, including very close friends, divorce. Some of them married early, while others married late. None of them involved infidelity, they just had relationships that used to work and didn't anymore. </p><p>And the flip side is that it's really damned hard to date in your 40s. I can't even imagine. It was hard enough in my 20s, a minor miracle that we found each other and neither one of us screwed it up before it reached critical mass. </p><p>It's a reminder of what a precious thing it is to find someone that you can imagine yourself growing old with, someone for whom you could take many 3:00 am trips to the airport if that's what they need. It's not something you think of when you're dating or proposing or making your vows, but it's as much love as any <i>feeling</i> you have along the way. It's love as a verb--a humble, workaday verb. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-46691014697686744442022-12-09T20:00:00.000-05:002022-12-09T20:00:19.060-05:00Oh, Christmas tree<p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div>O Christmas tree, O Christmas tree,<br />How lightless are your branches...<div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi32zSUH-SbWy_vuNHIIAcELQ970XOyUoU0QyltC2TaMrPmvWwiJAdZLI2RS41lnIKR1xsTXrYwwLmS2F5-8utf7aGbcSJ0WdBEw9jmRjIWYJgtxkA2yv2vfN9uo85GC5lQDXPPR5DHeuK4jCHhHk9PYRSOE46xqKjnELXtUv7UDUKaTvrGOZYnM4K7/s4032/89E75129-748D-49AD-9329-850A7462626C.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="4032" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi32zSUH-SbWy_vuNHIIAcELQ970XOyUoU0QyltC2TaMrPmvWwiJAdZLI2RS41lnIKR1xsTXrYwwLmS2F5-8utf7aGbcSJ0WdBEw9jmRjIWYJgtxkA2yv2vfN9uo85GC5lQDXPPR5DHeuK4jCHhHk9PYRSOE46xqKjnELXtUv7UDUKaTvrGOZYnM4K7/s320/89E75129-748D-49AD-9329-850A7462626C.jpeg" width="240" /></a></div><br /><p>It’s a pre-lit tree and the lights have been gradually going out the past couple years. Probably we should make some effort to replace bulbs or add on some new strands, but honestly this is more emblematic of how we roll through life. </p><p>If you look closely, you may see the cat, Zen, who thankfully is not inclined toward Christmas tree destruction. He <i>does</i> think the tree skirt is his bed though. The one dog bed pictured is the one of the three Brutus has available that he doesn’t sleep on. It was really Beaker’s bed, and more her size. </p><p>Weirdly, as soon as I typed this, Brutus got up, went to Beaker’s bed, did a turn, then went back to the bed he was on and acted like he wanted to dig in it (it is very much not a diggable bed). After a few circuits and a few attempts, he lay back down. </p></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWfNGPVv9M9eFH0y8htc73vpAMC2DVYBtuIg4PdWPCy8z53oAgCXlnQrpHeXRku30WFxiskmjCzccLjGn1dyAApO6GU5ggx-YHLLMYyQ8DFLrjLann-BuQboVa0k9GEooIpPGczzDcX5PQpPvb08I51dj4FiHP7cVaSXj6xNMb9X0Y4BwUUczJoHLz/s4032/08E266DC-9856-460A-AC22-563D31D28CE0.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="4032" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWfNGPVv9M9eFH0y8htc73vpAMC2DVYBtuIg4PdWPCy8z53oAgCXlnQrpHeXRku30WFxiskmjCzccLjGn1dyAApO6GU5ggx-YHLLMYyQ8DFLrjLann-BuQboVa0k9GEooIpPGczzDcX5PQpPvb08I51dj4FiHP7cVaSXj6xNMb9X0Y4BwUUczJoHLz/s320/08E266DC-9856-460A-AC22-563D31D28CE0.jpeg" width="240" /></a></div><div><br /></div>That's me watching the pets on a Friday night. Lauren is packing for a week away at Space Camp and the kids are writing a story (Beans), playing on the Nintendo Switch (A), and self-isolating in her room like the teen she almost is (T). <br /><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><br /></div>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-58668488689635921092022-12-08T21:45:00.000-05:002022-12-08T21:45:03.496-05:00Not a Thanksgiving I'm thankful for<p>I knew in advance that this would be a strange Thanksgiving. My wife's family made plans to go down to Florida to celebrate Thanksgiving plus her aunt's birthday, but with Mom in assisted living, I didn't want her to spend the holiday alone, so L and the kids went to Florida and I stayed home. It also meant two fewer days to take vacation, and I rather like the occasional time to myself.</p><p>But on Monday, I talked to Mom and she was sick. Like, destroy the bathroom sick. She also has dementia, and her brain rejected merely being sick. Instead, she told me, someone was poisoning her. Oh boy.</p><p>By Tuesday, she had an elaborate fantasy concocted and she knew exactly who was poisoning her. And not only poisoning her but also sneaking into her apartment and moving things around. That's part of her dementia as well--if she can't remember where something is or how it got where it is, the answer is that "someone" moved it. She's told me in the past that there's "a man" living in her apartment with her, and also that there are college students (no colleges in her town) who are living in her apartment. But anyway, she was convinced that she is being poisoned and her apartment broken into.</p><p>The thing about these delusions is that there's no arguing someone out of them. No facts will make so much as a dent in her explanations for why she doesn't feel good or can't find something. I try to focus on mitigation instead. "Drink plenty of water, it will help flush out whatever you've got." "Take some Tylenol." "Try not to worry too much, I really don't think they can get in, the doors are always locked and the people at the front desk would never sign in someone so disreputable looking." </p><p>By Wednesday she's saying that she wants me to take her away from there. She believes that she won't be poisoned while she's with me. And a pit of dread opens up in my stomach. </p><p>Don't get me wrong--I'm glad she has faith in me. But is it going to make it worse when I go visit and she's demanding I take her away and I don't? Because that would not be helpful. The anxiety has been growing steadily in the background all week, and now on Wednesday it's getting a bit overwhelming. I talk with my wife though and decide that I'll check on her Thursday morning and if she's still nursing this delusion, I'll make an excuse and not go visit for Thanksgiving. </p><p>I go out that night with a friend to hear some live music, and it's really nice.</p><p>In the morning, I actually don't feel particularly good. A little bit of a hangover? Or just anxiety doing its thing? Either way, I call Mom and she still feels sick and is still in this delusion, so I tell her that I'm not feeling well, that I'm feeling sick. I'm not even fibbing.</p><p>In fact, I spend the next several days feeling progressively worse. Mild nausea, stomach ache, headache, achy muscles, chills. A little extra gastrointestinal discomfort. It didn't leave me feeling very thankful, let me tell you. Finally by Sunday, as my family returned, I started to feel better. Felt perfectly fine Monday and Tuesday, then I got a sore throat that progressed over the next few days to congestion and all that. </p><p>So yeah, it was a fairly strange and unhappy Thanksgiving, and it kicked off a solid week and a half of illness. </p><p>But by Saturday Mom was saying that she thought her poisoner had left the area and "I don't think we'll be seeing him again," so that was something. And while I was ill, she was back to her baseline levels of dementia. Which is sad but not overwhelming. There's that to be thankful for, I suppose. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-25528282141072939562022-12-08T09:20:00.001-05:002022-12-08T09:20:18.309-05:00Workstation<p> Here’s the standing desk where I spend a significant portion of my day:</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQ546FRH-2G0itY2bioWXxEb4774k2BtrIUDxZHad0u33x3uxCSR61yFocAp303GOcpX9AVG4KYTV9gr5_HhguSNX2-UXzO877sDJzslsfg3c41Z8Gp0TI0wXW6Ao2foOftt4xNGD41V_GbPHN9n__Y8xjVITVfD4WUu0gPZFCNZsxXs-nrz2wAeDN/s4032/DD5994F9-E5D5-4B5D-9973-1BB214EADB52.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="4032" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQ546FRH-2G0itY2bioWXxEb4774k2BtrIUDxZHad0u33x3uxCSR61yFocAp303GOcpX9AVG4KYTV9gr5_HhguSNX2-UXzO877sDJzslsfg3c41Z8Gp0TI0wXW6Ao2foOftt4xNGD41V_GbPHN9n__Y8xjVITVfD4WUu0gPZFCNZsxXs-nrz2wAeDN/s320/DD5994F9-E5D5-4B5D-9973-1BB214EADB52.jpeg" width="240" /></a></div><p>A few notes:</p><p>Before I started working in tech a few years ago, I was totally good with the single screen of a laptop; now it’s so hard to too anything with fewer than two!</p><p>The music keyboard was added just yesterday. It’s totally irrelevant for my work, but I had the space there and I thought it would be a nice prompt to bring a little musical creativity into my day. Btw, that keyboard is probably 35-ish years old—it was a delightful birthday present one year (now it’s a barely adequate instrument for, really, any purpose; but there it is!).</p><p>The Freddie Mercury funko pop figure on the right was a Christmas present in 2019, when I’d just started a cubicle job. Poor guy was stuck in an office I never went to for two years until he was finally recovered this summer. Do you recognize his band mate?</p><p>The picture above is all three of my kids around age 2, each with a dandelion. Our nanny took all of the pictures over the years and gave us the set when we moved away (she was such a treasure). </p><p>The picture taped to the monitor is from a Zoom meeting with some of my god college friends. One of them took the screen shot and printed it out and mailed it to each of us because he thinks it’s good to have physical mementos of things. We started having weekly Zoom meetings in March 2020 because it was a COVID thing people were doing. We’ve had this meeting almost every week ever since. Two and a half years and counting of connection with old friends. </p><p>The notebooks to the right are Rocket Notebooks: erasable pens and integrated with an app to photograph, save, and organize your pages. It’s pretty neat. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-49127208011428532652022-12-07T21:20:00.002-05:002022-12-07T21:20:41.149-05:00Blogging and commenting<p> Okay, so here's how I like to approach Holidailies. Step one: write <i>something</i> every day. Straightforward enough, if not necessarily easy.</p><p>Step two: post that entry on Holidailies.</p><p>Step three: go read other people's stuff on Holidailies (be the change you want to see in the world).</p><p>Step four: comment if I feel moved (and honestly, I make at least a minimal effort to be moved--see again being what you want to see).</p><p>But here's the thing, step four seems like it's gotten unnecessarily hard this year. </p><p>The first blog I wanted to comment on, it had three options for commenting, all of which appeared to require me signing up for <i>something</i> that I didn't already have. Ugh. I made a cursory effort to figure out one of them, but the documentation was more daunting than I had time for.</p><p>Then another blog <i>that's on the same platform I am on</i> required Google sign-in... but then wouldn't take my Google sign in. I was eventually able to finesse it by switching from mobile mode to the web version, but why did that have to be so complicated? And another website that wanted me to sign into Google, it turns out I couldn't do th same workaround, because I couldn't find a link to switch from the mobile version to the web version. </p><p>It just sucks because I would <i>like</i> to feel like part of a community of bloggers at least this one month of the year, but I feel like a part of that is <i>interacting</i> with my fellow bloggers, and I want that process to be friction-free (at least technically speaking). It's hard enough to invest the time it takes to write and read and comment, but when you have to jump through hoops to do it, and it seems like every blog has some kind of hoops to jump through... well, it's disspiriting. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-51636770783536317552022-12-07T07:52:00.001-05:002022-12-07T07:52:16.693-05:00All He Surveys<p> I’m a little late for the Holidailies party, but better late than never, especially when it comes to writing. There was a span of years where I wrote in a pen-and-paper journal daily. A year or more where I blogged every day and many years where I came pretty close. A fee Novembers where I cranked out 50000 words. </p><p>But all of that is years in the past. And I can’t help but think that my life is poorer for it. </p><p>Maybe this will fizzle out after December, or even sooner, but I suppose a day with a bit of writing is better than the alternative. </p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg8TN5jdTXURulBRYRVRcopnM9KuKdYssewyaGTEY79wBzQO2NS1Xqarup6KkQ5EcfkcHynipPHzM6A8T5cuQskHOlTQzO5nBfI7b-5MuN9sK3onWpx-65c7zAzET6AajKNxpeccMCWToMl2wbZNQfkiakW4MGAoiaehJvxnyFKdMz9L7E5LzQmkL3-/s4032/7A39524A-50D1-4FED-B452-56F0868E0611.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="4032" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg8TN5jdTXURulBRYRVRcopnM9KuKdYssewyaGTEY79wBzQO2NS1Xqarup6KkQ5EcfkcHynipPHzM6A8T5cuQskHOlTQzO5nBfI7b-5MuN9sK3onWpx-65c7zAzET6AajKNxpeccMCWToMl2wbZNQfkiakW4MGAoiaehJvxnyFKdMz9L7E5LzQmkL3-/s320/7A39524A-50D1-4FED-B452-56F0868E0611.jpeg" width="240" /></a></div><br /><p>Zen here has been with us eight months now, and he’s well beyond the skittish new kitty phase. While he is absolutely A’s cat, he lets me feel like the favorite when the rest of the family is away at school (not every day, but some days—I’m sure he doesn’t want his attention to go to my head).</p><p>Perched on a stool in my third-floor office, he is the majestic lion, king of all he surveys, tail lashing with murderous intent, the squirrels and birds he spies living only on his sufferance (and that of a pane of glass). </p><p>That’s basically writing in a nutshell, isn’t it? A lofty vantage point from which to observe, a bit of distance, and natural constraints against action.</p><p><br /></p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9075388423619128040.post-73691011705827926602022-05-11T20:46:00.004-04:002022-05-11T20:46:57.088-04:00Mid-life (if I'm lucky) crisis<p> I'm reluctant to put this admission out in the world, but then again, there probably aren't a half dozen people who read this blog, especially outside of December. </p><p>It's been a hard spring, centered around my birthday back in early April.</p><p>In the first place, it's just busy: I work, my wife works, and we've got three kids in school. Our oldest is a seventh grader who's busy with a million things. And I <i>love</i> that. I was the same way, at least by high school. But often she would have a track meet (and track meets are the <i>worst</i>--they just go on and on and you barely see your kid) and then need to be ferried immediately to choir rehearsal. Besides her school choir she's singing in the Cleveland Orchestra Children's Chorus--and I'm <i>so </i>proud of her and grateful that she has this amazing opportunity. But it's a lot. And then there are two other children who need to be picked up at various times. I don't want to belabor it, because it's definitely not the big stressor here.</p><p>Our 16-year-old dog Beaker was though. It's been a tough six months or so, going back to just after Thanksgiving when my wife broke her ankle and had to sleep downstairs. We knew before then that Beaker was often having "accidents" overnight, but with her sleeping down there it became clear that she was having them multiple times a night, and instead of ignoring them because we sleep on the third floor, I would have to come and clean them up 2 and 3 times a night. Things got better with the help of a mobile pet vet for a while--some medication to lower inflammation and mildly sedate her, but still she was going downhill rapidly: falling frequently and being unable to get up, sometimes combined--quite literally--with one of her potty accidents. She didn't seem to have any joy or even much comfort left in life, just cycling between really anxious and only a little anxious. </p><p>Finally in early April we made the difficult decision to have her euthanized. This was our first time having to make this choice and it was terrible. Even though we knew it was the right thing to do, it felt like killing my dog. My dog who's been with me for over a third of my life, who predated our children. It was hardcore adulting and it sucked. I will say, that it probably went as well as it could have, thanks to our vet who does house calls. She was able to leave this life in the familiar surroundings of home, held and petted and soothed by the people she loved the most. I'm tearing up just writing about it. </p><p>At the same time, Beaker isn't the only one who's aging and declining. My mom has also taken a sharp downturn that became particularly salient in early April. I handle her finances, and that includes getting her taxes done. In the past, Mom was always very anxious about her taxes, and would usually get them done shortly after all the documents arrived, like in February. Even last year, when I was handling her taxes, she was still pretty involved, asking questions and worried about everything getting done correctly and on time. This year, in early April, I called and asked her if any of the tax documents had come to her, since I was missing a few. She said "I think I might have gotten something last week..." which of course was unlikely, given that it was April. But she was also supremely unconcerned. It would turn up. </p><p>Which, all in all, I guess that's better than remaining her old anxious self and <i>also</i> having huge lapses in memory and cognition, but it just really hit me how much she's lost. </p><p>And then on my birthday I called her, and I know she wouldn't have even known it was my birthday if I hadn't answered her question of "what are you up to?" with "Going out to eat for my birthday." Even so, she didn't actually wish me a happy birthday. I'm not upset with her, of course, I'm just deeply saddened to see my mom slipping away like this. And deeply anxious because she spent the last several years steadfastly denying her mortality and being uncooperative about getting things in place. Now I don't know if it's too late or what I'm going to have to do. </p><p>Two of her sisters visited her recently, and they discovered that she hadn't paid her rent at the assisted living facility in 3 or 4 months. I was pretty surprised that the place never contacted me. Mom said she tried to take her check down to them several times but they were always busy and told her to come back later. I'm sure there's some truth to that, but with her cognitive decline I guess that's getting to be a hard problem for her to solve on her own. </p><p>I turned 45 last month, so it shouldn't be surprising that I have all these adult problems, raising children and taking care of an elderly parent. But I thought I would actually <i>feel</i> like an adult by the time all these things hit me. If anything I feel less sure of myself than I did half my life ago.</p><p>But that's life I guess--you're never ready and you have to do it anyway and there's a lot of sadness built into it. A lot of beauty and joy, too, don't get me wrong. I can still see and enjoy all that too, but some days are hard. </p>Sherckhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15365366144078711301noreply@blogger.com1