Saturday, November 19, 2011

Giving Thanks and Giving Back


An electricity stirs as the Holiday season approaches. Thoughts of turkey, football games, and shopping fill our minds. We plan gatherings and prepare favorite food dishes. What feeds us most, though, are memories shared. We think of loved ones no longer there to join us at the dinner table. We give thanks for the blessings and people currently in our lives. It’s the one time of year we take the time to feel “blessed.”

There are so many ways we can give thanks. This year I started going to my Grandma Gracie’s apartment to clean for her on a regular basis. The arrangement started after a frantic phone call from a distance relative. Gracie had fallen and sported bruises on one side. There was talk of getting her help and lots of what-if’s.

My mind wandered back to the early 1990’s when her husband, Jim, was diagnosed with cancer. After chemo and radiation failed to control the disease, grandpa decided to stop treatment. They sold their home and moved into the apartment grandma now occupies. He died in the living room in a hospital bed brought in by Hospice.

As talk about grandma’s health continues, the only thing I know is that my sweet, loving, devoted grandmother deserves to die how and where she chooses, just like grandpa. He was a retired farmer, no health insurance save Medicare. He didn’t want to waste his life-savings, money grandma would need to live, on medical bills. He didn’t want to die, but he loved her and needed to know that she had what she needed.

Each time I make the 2-hour drive from Central City to Blakesburg, I imagine grandpa sitting in the passenger seat beside me. He’s the age I always remember him with old jeans, a plaid shirt, cowboy boots, and that faded tan cowboy hat. In my head, I hear him talk, sporting a toothpick in his mouth like always. He never says it, but I know there’s a Thank You in there somewhere.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Thorns & Healing

Have you ever got a thorn stuck in your finger? The deep invisible ones are the most aggravating. My first instinct is to dig it out. Even then, there can be a tiny speck left unseen. Eventually, a sore spot forms and reddens, a painful reminder that the thorn is still there. You keep rubbing your fingers over the spot knowing what’s inside. All you can do is to wait for your body to push it up and out. Soon a puss pocket forms. Then one day, the infection will erupt, expelling the foreign body.

Maybe our bodies heal all wounds the same, even emotional trauma. It lies beneath the surface, hurting and unseen. Some of us try digging it out with therapy or working through it with vigorous exercise. Other times we do our best to numb it with substances and medication. But even medical professionals can’t reach the specks of trauma left deep inside. They leave sore spots on our tender souls. All we can do is wait for the eruption, if it ever happens.

Recently, I read a story about the lifelong physical, biological, and behavioral problems that sexual abuse victims suffer. The study confirms what many victims have known all their lives: it’s never really over. At least it’s confirmation, validation, proof. But the human body is an amazing thing. It automatically regenerates itself. We can try to speed up the process by changing where we live, what we do for a living, what we look like or even our names. But, ultimately, we just have to wait for our bodies to form a ‘puss pocket’ around the hurt. One day, the infection will erupt, expelling the trauma.

Some never get an eruption. Some of us systematically avoid it in a futile attempt to erase it from our existence. I’ve heard counselors repeat how things can only hurt you if you let them. But, that’s not true. Pain hurts. Trauma hurts. It’s part of being human. We can’t change that no matter how strong our sense of self is.

Time is the only remedy for easing those hurts. I so wish there was a faster method or a magic formula. A recipe to follow with careful measurements and instructions that would reset my body back to WHOLE and HAPPY.  Yet those difficulties make us who we are. They shape us. They give us other gifts. Writing is my gift. Would I have developed this need to express thoughts on the page without the trauma? Perhaps not.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Top 5 Worst & Best Software Features

We all get used to software programs, finally mastering them and knowing where to find stuff, only to discover a recent “update” ruined everything.  It may be a new version loaded on our work PCs or some new software we bought that has more than its share of quirks or oddities.  Suddenly, things are different.  You can’t press the same keystrokes or buttons to do a critical task.  The new “feature” has ruined your day.  You’ll have to waste valuable time re-learning things the new way.
I’m sure you recall these frustrating moments.  You likely also have seen stuff you thought was dumb.  Me too.  So, for the sake of poking fun at the weird, wrong, and witless features I’ve encountered, I’m sharing my personal list of pet peeves.  And just so I don’t seem like too much of a grouch, I’m also listing the best/most helpful new features.
Worst Software Features Ever:
1.      The Ribbon Bar in Microsoft Office 2007-2010
Did you know you can make the buttons smaller (or larger) by adjusting your Windows Menu font size?  Try it.
2.      Facebook’s Poke feature
I just don’t get the point.  You poke someone, someone poke’s you, you poke them back.  I’m either too old to understand or the concept is lost on me.
3.      AOL’s “You’ve Got Mail” sound
This e-mail notification was fun for about 5 minutes.  Then, it was just too annoying.  I had to turn it off.
4.      Paperclip/Puppy Icon in Microsoft Office Help
This feature has a love/hate following (I’m the latter).  When I ask for assistance, I don’t need a warm fuzzy.  I just need to know how to do something.
5.      Online Survey, Need Help?  Dialogs
When I’m browsing through a list of products, I can’t fill out a survey telling you what I think of it yet.  Ditto for the Need Help?  dialog that pops up the minute you search for something.  Just let me see if you have what I need first.  If I need help, I’ll ask.  What I would like is a “Don’t Ask Me This Again” button.
 Best Software Ideas Ever:
1.      Facebook’s Like button
I’m addicted to this.  I want to see it everywhere on the web.
2.      Facebook/Twitter
Love that I can see what my friends are up to and connect with family across the world without sending each one an individual message or e-mail.  OK, that sounds lazy, but I consider it being more efficient! 
3.      Toolbars in general
OK, these can be overdone (as the Microsoft Ribbon proves), but the addition of toolbars with icons to access program features was a welcome invention.
4.      Google Maps/Driving Directions/Vehicle Navigation
For chronically lost drivers (like me) these are a lifesaver.  Now that cell phones like the Android and iPhone are including these features, you can get current information & directions anywhere, anytime.
5.      Bluetooth
This invention is nothing short of amazing.  I have Microsoft Sync in my car and I can connect an iPod or my cell phone to my vehicle’s speaker system to hear music or make phone calls.  This should be standard equipment on all new vehicles (for obvious the safety reasons).

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Smartphones: A Defense of Multi-tasking

No one needs a Smartphone.  Not really.  That said I am unable to live without mine.  The world as I now know it would cease to exist without my portable lifeline.  I’m not talking about being able to surf the internet from the bathroom (not that I’ve done that).  My Smartphone is more than just a cool gadget.  It’s my long-awaited ‘cure’ for attention deficit.  It's a gutsy claim, but hear me out.

My husband went in to get his phone upgraded at Verizon.  The salesman mentioned something about buy one get one free.  My eyes lit up.  "I can get one too?"  I wasn’t sure I needed one, but it was free (sort of). 
We settled on a pair of HTC Incredible android phones.  Soon we were surfing the web, checking our e-mail, and finding cool applications to download.  Within days, I was using my Smartphone to:

·    Be on time for medication/appointments/deadlines
·    Find things on Google maps
·        Track my spending
·        Sync with my laptop calendar
·        Track  To Do lists
·        Check Facebook
·        Send Twitter messages.

I struggle most with staying on task and remembering to do important stuff. 
Before, I used notepads, sticky notes, and a bulky day planner.  A co-worker called me a Post-It addict.  He was tired of going home to find my sticky notes stuck to the bottoms of his shoes.  It was a messy system.  But, if I don’t write things down, I won’t remember.  The other downfall is a planner can’t interrupt you to look at the reminder.  So, I’d end up writing notes on my hand in pen.  But even that wasn’t full proof because ink wears off after a few hand washings.

I take ADHD medication, but it offers only moderate relief compared to my Smartphone. 

A prime example is my Mercury Mariner’s Microsoft Sync feature.  It connects my phone as a hands-free device when I get inside the vehicle.  When I get a call, the car answers it.  When I want to make one, I press a button on the steering wheel.  I listen through the car’s speakers and talk through a hidden microphone.  For us distraction-prone drivers, it’s a lifesaver.

Halfway through my morning 30-minute commute one day, I realized I forgot my phone.  I drove home to get it.  I know I can’t live go back to life before my Droid phone.  Have I simply traded my sticky note addiction for a Smartphone?  Yes.  Am I safer because of it?  Again, yes.  Plus, the roads are a little safer for the rest of you.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Surprise Ending

Pages from my Novel (in progress)
Fussing over the final chapter of my novel, I find myself unable to walk away from these characters.  Technically, they’re just ideas and words on a page.  But, somewhere along the line, the story evolved.  It separated from me and became its own being.  It was no longer mine.  Yet, the umbilical, still intact, links me to each person, place, and scene.  Their world is now mine. 

I worry about severing this miraculous connection between author and novel.  Writing this book has served a vital purpose in my life.  It’s the reason that, in spite of being a self-professed night owl, I get up at 5:30 a.m. each day.  I do it seven days a week, eager to hit the laptop and bang out a few more pages.

All bookworms love the escape of being somebody else for a while.  Imagination fills in the visual details of the people and places.  You can stop anytime and pick up where you left off later.  I love reading on long car rides and plane trips.   But, my favorite reading spot is tucked in bed lying on my stomach.  I don’t know why, it just feels good.  

There are books I’ve read that I so thoroughly enjoyed I was left wanting more.  Dean Koontz’ book “Watchers” is one.  The relationship between the lead character and his super-intelligent dog was brilliant.  His more recent title “Breathless” was similar, but didn’t feel the same.  Both are great reads.  Still, I wish he’d write a sequel to Watchers.  I miss the dog. 

Soon, I’ll be homesick for the newfound friends of my first novel.  For now, I’m savoring every word. 

There's always a sequel, right?

Sunday, January 9, 2011

DAY ONE: My 'Extreme Decluttering' Experiment


This armoire used to contain an
unused TV.  Now's its a pretty
new home for my shirts!
The weakened economy has Americans doing more than just learning to live with less income and gasoline. We are learning to live with less stuff. Being fanatical about cleaning and organizing, I enjoy scouring the internet for ideas and tips. On CNN’s website recently, I stumbled across an article about the latest trend of Extreme Decluttering. The article suggests pretending that you are planning to move overseas. What would you take with you? Of course, no one would lug everything in their home onto an airplane (or even pack and ship the stuff in crates). Naturally, planning such a move requires pairing down to the essentials.

I decided it would be like going on an extended vacation. What would I take? I started with hair and makeup products since that usually what I pack first. Like most women, my bathroom is full of products I don’t regularly use. Some are things I bought that didn’t work for me. Same thing happens with clothing and shoes. Although with those items, it’s usually that it goes out of style, doesn’t fit, or wears out. Then I thought about kitchen supplies. I’d probably just sell my stuff and buy new as it would likely be cheaper than shipping the old stuff. But still, I had all these extra items lying around my house that required storage that I didn’t use (and likely never would again). I had to wade through the extra items in my drawers, closets, and cupboards at times to get to the stuff I really need and use. It was silly, really, when I thought about it.

So how does one go about the seemingly enormous task of weeding out unused stuff? Even if I dedicated an entire weekend to the task, that would only cover the house. It wouldn’t touch the garden shed or the machine shed. There was just too much to do at once. Then I found a website touting a not-so-new concept called the Get Rid of a Thing a Day Challenge. Now, this was definitely a more realistic goal!

But what to pick for my first item? I considered our bedroom TV. Because of its smaller, poor quality screen, we rarely watched it. My husband and I agreed weeks ago that it and the cable TV receiver it uses could definitely go. Yet, they were still taking up valuable space in the armoire. So, while writing this blog entry, I got out of my chair and went to the bedroom. I unhooked the TV and the receiver and collected their remote controls. With help from our son, the stuff was hauled to my vehicle. I knew that would ensure I dropped the items off at Goodwill on my way to work Monday.

So, this is how my Extreme Decluttering experiment began. Where will yours begin? If you need help sticking to your goals, consider getting an Accountability Partner. I’m hoping that my husband or my sister will be mine. Already, I’m wondering what to pick tomorrow.