Monday, December 31, 2007

Happy birthday/new year

So Sunday was my 39th birthday. I'm on my way now to the Big 4-0. And you know, I'm actually feeling pretty good about it. Sunday was a really good day. I slept in, with Buster kind of snuggled up with me, and later in the afternoon we went out to play and took a nice walk. I tossed his new floppy flying disc he got for Christmas for him, and he made a couple of awesome mid-air catches. There's still plenty of snow on the ground, but it was a warm day, so we were out for more than an hour. Later in the evening, Dad and I went into town and met Mom after she got off work for dinner at a new Mexican restaraunt that was excellent. We were all too stuffed to have cake when we got home, so I opened my presents.

It was an all-Peanuts birthday. I got a Peppermint Patty bobblehead and a Peanuts birthday set by the Danbury Mint from Mom, a Peanuts clock from Danbury Mint from Dad, and from my brother, the next in the series of books of the Peanuts strip collections and some cute Snoopy ice cube trays.






Today, I also had the day off from both jobs. I had a visit with my oncologist for my 2 and half year checkup, and most everything is well. My blood test showed I might have a kidney stone forming, so she ordered another blood test to make sure it's not a mistake, and then we'll see. I sure don't want to go through that whole thing again. But everything else was OK, and we discussed having my port-a-cath removed, which I'll talk more about with my surgeon when I see her next month.

So 2007 ends on a good year. I have a good feeling about 2008. Hope your new year goes well, everyone!

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Back to posting

I haven't been anywhere, just haven't had much to say.

Still waiting for the furnace to be fixed. The heat exchange part has been replaced, but the furnace is still making that big WHUMP sound. The repair guy said it's probably something in the board ... I guess it controls when the furnace lights ... and it's maybe trying to light twice. He's supposed to be in tomorrow and thinks he'll be able to talk to some tech person from the manufacturer and get it figured out. I sure hope so. We have 3 space heaters, but it's awful chilly in the bedrooms and bathroom, especially in the morning.

We had a big snow last weekend, about 10 to 11 inches. Digging out from that was fun. Not. Buster doesn't seem to like deep snow. We went and romped around in the back yard for awhile, but mostly he liked to stay either where we had shoveled or where he had already worn a path. Made doing his "business" interesting, poor guy. More snow is expected this weekend, too.

Not much else is going on. Work, work and more work. A few nights off. Wrestling with Buster. Laughing at him as he picks up some dog kibble, runs into the living room to eat it, then runs back for more kibble and runs back to the living room to eat it .... He's got some quirks, that dog.

Here's the picture I used on Christmas cards to friends and family:

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Christmas dog

Why do we torture our pets this time of year? Who cares. They're cute:
Trying to get Buster in the holiday spirit:


He thinks I look better in it:


Time for a retreat:

Saturday, November 24, 2007

First snow


Big Creek in winter
Originally uploaded by junogle.

A photomerged image of the creek that runs by my property. First snow of the winter, about 2-3 inches. Wanted to get a shot of pristine snow before Buster and I went for a romp in it! Maybe more pix to come tomorrow.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Welcome to the 21st century

I bought a cell phone. My very first one. I've resisted until now because I'm just not a phone person. Never was. I just can't sit with some thing on my ear for hours, yakking away. I'd rather be face to face talking. E-mail is great for long distances, even though it's not the same as speaking to someone.

But, having a cell phone would make some things easier, especially where I live in a different town from where I work. And also where my parents live in the town I live in. They can always use e-mail to get ahold of me at work and they're at home, but once in awhile, one of us wasn't near e-mail and we couldn't necessarily get hold of each other right away when needed. So at least now that will be easier.

And it will be easier to deal with problems when I need to arrange some service person to get out to the house or make some other kind of appointment that I really don't want to use a work phone for.

And it would have come in handy on a day like today, where we had a guy come look at the furnace. I could have talked to him myself instead of having to relay messages through Mom or Dad via e-mail and her cell phone. Then I could have gotten the bad news myself. Turns out the heat exchange needs to be replaced. The repair guy said not to use it because it was puting out some carbone monoxide. And the WHUMPing sound it's been making was GAS EXPLODING! Kind of makes me mad at the guy we had check that late last winter and said he couldn't find anything wrong. I think we were pretty damn lucky, really.

Hopefully, the furnace is still under warranty. Then I'll just have to pay parts & labor. Otherwise, time to shell out some big bucks.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Last tase of summer?

I think it might be so. Right now, we've got sunny blue skies and about 70 degrees. Tomorrow, it dips back down into the 50s for the rest of the week, and I would imagine this is probably the last of summer's weather we'll see. So I've gotten my laundry done, including all my sheets, bedspread and duvet to get a last bit of sun-dried freshness in. I planted some daylily bulbs, too. It might be too late for them, but it hasn't really been cold enough for the ground to get too cold yet anyway.

Buster's been having fun hanging out in the backyard most of the day, although he seems to like laying in the shade of my sheets on the line! With all the trees pretty bare now, there's not much other shade. We went to the creek for awhile, and I threw a frisbee for him, at least until it landed halfway across the creek. Buster isn't one for swimming, it would seem, so we'll have to see if the frisbee floats in close enough to the bank to get back this week.

Tonight, I'll do some cooking. Mom's at work til about 6:30, so I thnk I'll make some of my chicken nuggets for dinner, and prepare some extra to freeze and store for busy days. Along with that, I'm going to make some sweet and sour chicken for tomorrow night (I'm working the hotline, and Mom's working til about 7), and then I'm going to bread some chicken breasts to freeze for Friday's dinner, when Mom's working until around 6 or 7 again. It'll be nice to have something easy to make for dinner after a busy day that's not some over-preserved frozen stuff in a bag. Yeah, those are convenient, but they just taste ... preserved. I'd rather have homemade (even if it's just semi-homemade). Or restaurant food. That's always good.

I do have some good news to pass along. I took an online certification course in grant writing from the nearby university, and passed the test with a 94 percent! I haven't studied or taken tests for a long time, so I was a bit nervous about how I'd do. My certificate should be in the mail soon. And I found out through my insurance agent that a mutual friend we had in college (and didn't know was a mutual friend) has a grant-writing biz on the side, so he gave me his contact info to get some tips and advice. Haven't done that yet, but I should. I hope eventually it might help boost my income level a bit, but that's probalby a ways off yet.

Well, I probably better start bringing the laundry in, and Buster needs a walk, so I guess I'll sign off for now.

Monday, November 05, 2007

Still here

Haven't gone anywhere, haven't done much. But I thought it was time to post.

Buster is doing well in his new home, and his personality is really taking shape. His favorite place is the backyard. He likes to stay out there laying in the sun or chasing a ball. We also found he likes chasing a disc, so I've got several cheap ones of those, since he likes to chew on them too! He's not as fond of going on walks as Nipper was, but we go about every day.

Also found out he's scared to death of cows. A farmer keeps some across the creek and up the road from us sometimes, and when we walked by there the other day, Buster did everything he could to not walk past them! He even almost slipped out of his collar. The next day, just smelling them was enough to make him scared. Big trucks still scare himk, too.

He's sleeping on my bed again, now though, so that's good. He curls up at the end of the bed instead of snuggling up next to me, though. But that's OK. It's enough to have him nearby. Except when he lies on top of my feet.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Back to work

Well, I'm back at work after being on vacation and Buster seems to be adjusting OK. We had about six days of my vacation time together, so he kind of got used to me sleeping in. Mom usually gets up earlier than I do when I'm on my days off, and after she'd get up, he'd try to get me up, too, and then get all excited when I did.

Thursday, though, when I got up early after my alarm went off, he was just escatic that I was up early! He ran into the kitchen when I went to fix breakfast, and ran back to my room with me and ran little circles as I went about getting ready for work. And then he stood at the door and looked confused when I went out to the car to leave. I was amazed at the difference in his behavior from one morning to the next. Friday, when my alarm went off and I got up, he actually seemed like he was moping! Like he had figured out that when the alarm goes off, it means I'm going to be leaving him. Now it's the weekend, of course, and I could sleep in, so it'll be interesting to see what happens when I get up Monday morning.

Today, when I was getting ready to take him for a walk, he seemed a little excited about it. That's the first time, so maybe he's starting to associated the word "walk" with going outside. And he does like to spend a lot of time outside, so I'm thinking maybe a doghouse would be a good idea. I'll probably still get a dog door, but if he likes spending so much time outside, it'd be a good idea to have something for him out there.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Bandana dog

He just looks like he needs one.


And if that's not enough for you, here's Buster in his first video:

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Buster

Buster is adjusting pretty well to his new home. And we're adjusting to having a dog in the house again. It's a good adjustment, though.

He's so much the opposite of Nipper, though. Nipper was definatley an alpha dog. Nipper would listen to you if he wanted. He took up most of the bed, or couch or whatever he wanted to lay on. He decided when it was time to play, and when he wanted his walk, you'd better be ready! Part of that is my own fault. I didn't understand the particulars of canine communication, and so probably encouraged a lot of his alpha behavior. We eventually came to an understanding, and I think in some way he saw me as an equal. Which is better than being thought of as below him in the pecking order.

Buster, though, is not an alpha. He comes almost every time I call him, and he'll even come to a sit when he gets to me. I can roll him on his back with no problem. When I say no, he stops what he's doing. Usually. He does tend to bump my hand to be petted or use his teeth when giving me kisses or playing. He's a young guy, still, really, so a lot of that is puppy behavior, but he still needs to learn to stop doing it.

We're getting the sleeping arrangements worked out. After he rolled off the side of the bed last night, he curled up near my feet and seemed a lot more restful there, rather than on "his side" of the bed, like Nipper preferred. Buster doesn't use a pillow, either.

Buster is also a lot more attentive to sounds. He reacts to noise from the TV, especially kids and other high-pitched sounds but also dogs and loud noises. He notices just about every vehicle that passes by, but he doesn't startle at vehicles going over the nearby wooden bridge like he did the first day or so.

While I was at work today, Mom discovered he likes chasing a ball. I tried tossing one ball for him that first day, a hard rubber one that has a little jingle bell inside, but he never showed interest. Mom tried another ball that didn't make sound, and said he had fun chasing that one. So tonight, when he obviously needed to burn off some energy, I took him out for a bit and we had fun with the ball. Although I realized after a bit what it might sound like to the neighbors when I'm shouting "Get the ball Buster!" Oh well.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

I was thinking about a cat ...

... but look what I brought home:


Say hello to Buster, a 13-month old blue heeler. He was a stray, just showed up at someone's house, and then was taken to the refuge run by my vet. She'd had him about three weeks. About all they know about him is that he's not good at herding, and so they suspect maybe he was bought for that purpose, and when he didn't prove to be good, was just let loose.

He's very sweet and mellow, not at all excitable like you'd think a working breed would be. They said he doesn't have separation issues, so that's very good with the concerns I have about being away from the house more with the second job. I'll just need to get a dog door before too long, but he does seem housebroken. When I first let him into the house, he sniffed around a bit and started to lift his leg on a door frame. All I did was make a scolding noise, and he scampered away pretty quick. Same thing when he started to poop in a part of the yard I didn't want him to. He's also pretty timid around new people and loud noises, and when I took him for a walk, he got scared a couple times by some big trucks. It makes me wonder what's happened to this guy to make him that way.

But he seems to be relaxing now and maybe getting used to the idea that this is home. I'm on vacation until next Wednesday, so we'll have some time to get to know each other. Really, I'm pretty happy to have come home with a dog. I like cats, but they're just not the same. I'm sure a cat person would feel the same thing about dogs. But I'm not a real outgoing person, and having a dog makes me more outgoing. I get out around the neighborhood, see what's going on, chat with the neighbors. I'd been a bit worried that with a cat, I might have gotten a bit too reclusive.

I can tell tonight, though, it has been far too long since I've been walking!

Sunday, October 07, 2007

Time to recharge

Whew, it's been a busy week. Or at least it seems like it. Things are rough at work and look to be getting rougher. I worked at the second job three weeknights (which means I'm gone from the house from about 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.), and that seemed to wear me down a bit. I got behind on some housecleaning and other things I wanted/needed to do, but now it's time to catch up. I'm now officially on vacation time until Oct. 17!

I still have to work the second job, but that won't be so bad. I've got Wednesday through Friday completely free this week, and Mom will be back from her trip about that time, so maybe I'll go find some things to do and let her get back into a groove of being in one place. Then I've got the following Tuesday and Wednesday totally free, too, before I go back. I should try to get my car in to the shop one of those two days before I need it. I'm coming up on about 30,000 miles since I bought it, so it's about time for some routine maintenence. At least I won't need a new battery. Had to deal with that last week after I got stuck at Home Depot with a dead one.

Last Wednesday was my support group meeting, so that was one high point of the week. We had a memorial for the sisters who have passed on -- five in a little over a year. We had a candlelighting ceremony, sang and shared memories. There were tears, of course, but also laughter. It's something the group will do each October, as part of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Then Saturday was the local university's homecoming, so we had our float in the parade. We had more who were able to ride this year, and everyone had fun, even though it was hot and the parade people seemed to think the parade needed to move along at about 20 mph. All the poor walkers handing out candy were either far behind us or looked like they were running a candy-handing marathon!

I don't have a lot planned for the vacation. I need to clean out Mom's side of the garage (hey, there's plenty of space for the lawn mower and stuff now!), plant the irises and some other things I got, do some weeding and set out some mulch before it gets too chilly. Other than that, it's mainly just relaxing and getting refreshed.

Friday, September 28, 2007

A winner

Not too many books make me go "wow" after I flip the last page, but The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney did just that.

The book was a suprise winner of the 2006 Book of the Year at the Costa Awards, Britain's most prestigious book awards.

The story revolves around the murder of a French trapper in Canada's Northern Territory in the 1870s. He is discovered by a neighbor, Mrs. Ross, who soon realizes that she has not seen her teenage son, Francis, since just before the time the trapper was killed. Because the town is a Company town (as in the Hudson Bay Company), two representatives are sent to investigate. Mrs. Ross is nervous about the disappearance of her son, but her husband won't go look for him. With the help of a mysterious stranger, she sets out to find him. Trouble is, the stranger is also a suspect. She doesn't know if she can trust him, but he's her only way to find her son. And one of the company men is following their trail. And then there's the mysterious bone carving that brings a once-famous journalist and tracker back to the area, a man with a connection to the local magistrate's family.

There are a lot of subplots involved in this book, and the narrative jumps from different points of view -- Mrs. Ross' narration is the only one in first-person -- so this isn't a light read. But Penney weaves these points of view and stories with skill and beauty. And her descriptions of the Canadian wilderness remind me of Tony Hillerman, author of the the Navajo cop series, and how he makes the landscape of the Southwest a part of the story and his characters. Penney does the same with the frozen forests and plains of the north. The amazing thing is, the British author has never been there. In fact, she was until just a few years ago, agoraphobic. She had to train herself to be able to take the short bus ride to the library to research the book.

Part msytery, part adventure, part romance, this was just an amazing book. Penney is reportedly at work on another book. I'll be looking for that one.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Back to work (not)

I had hoped to get a good day's worth of yardwork done today, but I guess my body had other ideas. No sooner had I got started trimming some grass and pulling some weeds on the hill when I felt a sharp twinge in my back. Crap.

I did get quite a bit done so far today, but not as much as I wanted. I've had to do a lot of resting in between. I got some trimming done, planted the two little mums and the pansies I bought last night, and got the backyard partly mowed. Partly because some of it is so thick I had to raise it up so the mower wouldn't choke and quit. I'll go out in a bit and lower the mower again and finish it off, now that it's cooling down and there's more shade in the back. Maybe I'll get the front yard too, since it's pretty small, and the grass isn't as thick. But the west side is getting awful overgrown, especially on the hill, and I won't be able to get to that until Wednesday. Man, I hope the grass stops growing so darn fast soon.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Messages from Nature

A group of bluejays has been trying to tell me something this week. I think it's something along the lines of "HEY, WHERE'S THE BIRDSEED?!?" Nature is so subtle.

The squirrels are showing up in the yard more frequntly and in greater numbers, the bluejays are hanging out in the empty tray feeder, and I hear a chorus of chickadees and nuthatches. The autmnul equinox is tomorrow, but fall has already arrived here. So, in a bit, I'll be going out to give my birdfeeders a good cleaning, and maybe tonight before heading home from work at the hotline, I'll pick up a big sack of black oil sunflower seed. I might also get some flowers -- there's pansies out now and mums, of course. The mums up front are fine, but the ones I planted on the hill last year have almost been decimated by the grasshoppers. The aster is amazing, though -- I noticed last night it seems to have exploded in blooms this week!

Otherwise today, I'm catching up on some cleaning around the house. I'll go in to work from 5 to 10, and then I'm off tomorrow. That will probably be yardwork day, especially if I get the flowers. But I need to do some weeding, too.

I'm thinking more about another pet. Yesterday, during my lunch break, I went out to my vet's office. She also runs a non-profit animal refuge. They specialize in wildlife rehabilitation, but also have dogs and cats for adoption. There were a bunch of cute kittens, most of whom were going to be picked up later in the day for transport to shelters in the Denver area, where they're more likely to be adopted. There was one, though, who was real sweet. Poor thing had been hit by a car and has lost the use of its left front paw, which will soon be amputated, I was told. He kept coming up to the kennel bars, though, sticking his good paw out to catch my fingers, and he liked having his ears scratched. There were also a couple of adult cats they showed me. They're brother and sister, but, oops, also mother and father to a kitten. Their previous owner had been told they were both female. The one kitten they had was adopted several weeks ago, but is not yet old enough to leave its mother. They're part Siamese and both really beautiful cats, but also long-hair. Mom says she doesn't do so well with long-hair cats with her allergies, but they did say at the vets' it's not the length of the hair, but how clean the cats are. The vet's head nurse told me she has cat allergies and has had no problem around them.

So that's something to think about. I'd still prefer a dog, but with both of us out of the house more often than when Nipper was here, I'm not sure that'd be fair. Some people can get a dog, put it in a kennel out in the backyard and other than giving it the basics are fine with that. Not me. If you don't get a pet as a companion, what's the point in having one?

Monday, September 17, 2007

Soaring away

Today was Lanita's funeral. Even though I hadn't known her all that well, I'm glad I went. There were about 18 of us from the support group, all in our pink shirts sitting together. The women of the Soroptimist Club, which she also belonged to, wore their shirts and sat together as well.

The church was packed. I heard that close to 500 people were ther. And the family -- all eight pews full -- all wore something pink, a blouse, a shirt, a tie. It was actually quite striking. Most everyone wore pink ribbons. And whenever I now hear Lee Ann Womack's "I Hope You Dance," I'll probably always have a tear for Lanita and a small prayer that her daughters take its message to heart.

At the gravesite, our group handed out the balloons the others had prepared the night before (I had to work, but it sounds like they had enough hands to make quick work of it). Her daughters released theirs first -- butterfly balloons on which they'd written "I love you, Mom" -- and then everyone else released theirs. Three hundred pink balloons and 41 white ones -- one for each year of her life -- were quickly picked up by the blustery prairie winds of the day to the north. I'm sure it was quite a site from the nearby highway. A few people cheered as the balloons cleared the treetops, and then we all watched silently until they were just specks in the blue clear sky.

There was a luncheon afterwards, and most of us from the group went. We sat together, of course, but that was also appearatnly Lanita's wish. And we felt pretty honored when we were told the family wanted us to get in the food line after them. It was nice they understood the group was like an extended family for her.

Otherwise, it was a quiet day, and time for it to end. Every day is a new beginning, she liked to say, so live life to its fullest.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Birdbrain

Today started out oddly ... and ended oddly.

Today was my first 8-hour weekend shift at the new part-time job, so I got about 7:30 and got some breakfast and puttered around a bit. Then as I was getting ready for a shower, I looked out the bedroom window and saw something moving by the fence. I figured it was just the neighbor's little dog, but I put on my glasses for a better look and saw ... a chicken! It walked along the fence in the neighbor's yard, then around behind my back fence. I had to get a better look to make sure I saw what I thought I saw, so threw on some sweats and went in the backyard. And sure enough, it was a chicken. When it saw me, it went into the trees, but I hear it clucking softly. I told it if it's going to hide from something scary, it should maybe also be quiet, but it didn't heed my warning.

I went to work, which was very quiet and very boring, and when I got home, put all my things away. It was a bit stuffy, so I opened the windows in the dining area and, lo and behold, there was the chicken, in the neighbor's yard again. I just kind of shook my head. He wasn't home, so I couldn't ask him about it. It disappeared pretty quick. For a while.

I was eating dinner (not chicken) and catching up on some stuff on the computer, when I heard some loud clucking and squawking. Looking out the window, I saw the chicken had somehow managed to get on top of a plank of wood my neighbor had leaning up against the fence of his neighbor's dog pen. The three dogs were trotting around anxiously, occasionally stopping and giving the chicken a quizzical look or barking. It looked for awhile like the chicken was just going to hop down into the dog pen, then she'd look like she would hop down to safety. It went back and forth like that for a few minutes, then finally she tried to hop into the tree right in front of her, only the branches weren't big enough to hold her. I saw the chicken hit the ground running, then there were a couple squawks, a couple growling barks, and then silence.

I figure there probably wasn't much chance of a good ending to that. If I'd gone out there to do something, the same thing would have happened -- she would have gone for the cover of the tree. I had left the back gate open after I saw it this evening. Chickens eat grasshoppers after all, and there's still plenty of them around. I'm not sure what I'd do with a chicken though. They probably can't be housetrained, and I'm not sure it's legal to keep them in the city limits anyway.

I'm not sure if the dogs' owners are home. Guess they're in for a surprise.

Grow

There's a new Grow game! I've been trying to figure it out for about an hour now, and think I'm getting close. Of course, I've thought that for about half an hour now.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

A dance ends

Not much more than 10 minutes after I posted last night, a 5-year-old girl crawled into the bed her mother was in and kissed her goodnight. And her mother took her last breath.

Lanita always called her e-mails "The Journey of the Dancing Queen," and signed off with a quote like "Work like you don't need money, Love like you've never been hurt, And dance like no one's watching" or"Dance like there is no tomorrow! Each new dawn is a reminder that every day is a new beginning. Live it to the fullest." She was a bit hesitant at first to write about her fight, I remember an early note saying, because she didn't think she was a good writer. And she didn't have perfect grammar and punctuation, but that's not what matters when what you say comes from your heart and soul. Her e-mails were always funny and insightful, and, more recently, heart-wrenching.

Her husband sent out an e-mail briefly describing her last couple of days -- that she'd told them she was being fitted for a halo and had wings and what she was seeing -- and despite his saying that Lanita's writing skills didn't "rub off on him," it was beautiful. I'm sure there will be some very hard days ahead for him and the two girls.

Hopefully, I can go to the funeral. I believe it's going to be Monday, but I'm not sure what time. If it's the morning, I might not be able to, since we're pretty shorthanded at work anymore. But I'll do what I can. The support group will be there, of course, and we've been asked to help at the graveside service, with a balloon launch. There will be 300 pink balloons launched, for breast cancer, of course, and 41 white ones, one for each year of her life.

It sounds like it will be nice, but I hope this is our last funeral for some time.

Keep dancing.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

A night off

First two nights on the new job down ... It went well, reallly. There weren't a lot of calls either night, and it didn't take me too long to get the hang of how to fill out the "paperwork" on the computer. Really the important thing is to get the request from the house supervisors or clients to the right people quickly, and that's easy enough. I got a lot of reading done actually, so I'm probably going to have to be making lots of trips to the library. No problem there, and maybe I won't have any overdue books as fast as I'll probalby be reading them!

I haven't been tired out from the extra hours, either. Fell asleep pretty quick and slept good each night. Tonight I even got some of the mowing done. Hopefully, there won't be too much more of that, as it has cooled off quite a bit this week.

It's not all great news, though. One of my support group members, who entered hospice care recently, went into the hospital this week. Only family is allowed to visit, and I understand they have her on a lot of pain meds. It probably won't be much longer. This one will be hard to take because we were diagnosed and joined the group around the same time. She's only a couple years older than me, too. And she was certainly a fighter. It just proved too much for her, though.

Last summer, she went to the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston for six weeks of treatment. She kept us updated with frequent e-mails that were full of hope and humor. In one of them she mentioned how at home, before she left, someone she knew commented that she was a "strong woman" facing what she was going through. But she preferred to be thought of as a woman of strength, as in this poem:
A strong woman works out everyday to keep her body in shape…
But a woman of strength builds relationships to keep her soul in shape

A strong woman isn't afraid of anything…
But a woman of strength shows courage in the midst of fear.

A strong woman won't let anyone get the better of her…
But a woman of strength gives the best of herself to everyone.

A strong woman makes mistakes and avoids the same in the future…
A woman of strength realises life's mistakes can also be unexpected blessings, and capitalises on them

A strong woman wears a look of confidence on her face…
But a woman of strength wears grace.

A strong woman has faith that she is strong enough for the journey…
But a woman of strength has faith that it is in the journey that she will become strong.

I think that says it all.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Keeping busy

Today is a day off from the main job, and then I go to my first day of work at the new job.

I had planned to do some yardwork -- mow and trim some grass, maybe transplant some irises or at least identify which ones to thin out for transplanting later in the week -- but woke up to a cool, cloudy and rainy day. It's only in the 60s as I write this, and will only be in the 70s the rest of the week, so it'll be a good time to do some fall planting. Hope I have some time, because I supsect summer hasn't given us its last yet.

So instead I did some meal planning and cooking ahead for the next week or so, since I'll have some days where I won't be home unitl after 10 p.m. So I've got some sweet & sour chicken made up to take with me for work nights, breaded up some round steak to freeze and use later on for steak fingers and a chicken fried steak, and am trying out a salsa chicken recipe in the crock pot, part of which will be tomorrow night's dinner at work and then the leftovers can be wrapped up in a toritilla for lunch. I bought a roast to throw in the crock pot some morning for dinner, and will use the rest for sandwiches or something else.

See, Mom, I won't starve.

Well, think I'll go take a little nap before I start thinking about getting ready for work.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Getting more done!

I got in a changing mood yesterday, and made some plans to rearrange the dining nook area. I had to work Saturday, so planning was about all I did. But after taking 10 minutes to read the Sunday paper (hey, I had to put the thing together, you think I'm going to actually read it?) I set out on the plan. And no, Mom, this is not the surprise project I'm working on. I think you might like the new arrangement, though. No more having to dodge around cords and legs and feet when we're both seated in there. It seems roomier now. I even hung up a few things on the wall. Not to mentioned vacuumed and swept -- which was needed in all the nooks and crannies.

I went in this afternoon and evening for a bit more training on the second job and met the third hotline assistant. It's a bit overwhelming, all the stuff you have to remember. I guess as long as I get the right people called so the clients can get their help, that's what matters. But then all the calls have to be logged into the computer, and it got a bit confusing knowing whose name to put where ... once I get a night or two under my belt, I'm sure I'll do OK. It's the beginning and not knowing much that has me concerned. They seem like pretty nice people, though, so even if I screw something up, it probably won't be too bad.

I keep dreaming about what to with the extra money, once I pay off a couple debts, do some Christmas shopping and put some in the bank for a rainy day, of course. I'd like to work some more on the kitchen. That all started with the broken faucet. It's one of those pull-out sprayer faucets. It developed a leak and water would drip down the sprayer hose into the cabinet below, and then it developed a crack right on top that shoots out water that gets all over the counter if you hold the faucet wrong. So I originally just wanted to replace that. But then the sink doesn't look all that great. And the countertops and backsplash? Cheap and UGLY. So I went to Home Depot a couple weeks ago and just out of curiosity, did some pricing. And of course, I kept finding more and more I could do -- there was a cabinet unit that would make a nice pantry right where there's room, and it'd be nice to dump the computer table for a built-in workstation ... I should stay out of Home Depot. Good thing I'm pretty happy with the bathroom. Except that faucet needs replacing ...

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Two books

Two recent reading choices. I've been meaning to do this, and now the books are overdue, dang it. I keep the library going single-handedly, I think. But I'm avoiding mowing the lawn, so this is convenient.

One Night at the Call Center, by Chetan Bhagat was a good, light read. Not a great book, but a nice, funny, simple read. It takes place at a call center for an American company in India where the twenty-something employees worry about their low pay, possible layoffs, their relationships, bosses who take credit for their work ... not much different from their American counterparts. But it does give some interesting insight into the cultural difficulties they face, in trying to live in a modern world but also honor their parents' more traditional lifestyles, and how they view Americans.

While the call center is down with some technical problems, they skip out of the office for a while to have some fun at a club, then on the drive back get into a bit of a predicament. While wondering if they're going to die, they get a call ... from God. God is very cheerful, maybe a little too cheerful, really. And he leads them to consider their lives and how to change them for the better. It's amusing, but full of stuff you'd read in dozens of self-help manuals (the author even includes a short self-help style quiz at the beginning), and then the book just gets unbelievable. Well, I mean, God calling on your cell phone is pretty spectacular, but I can suspend my disbelief over something like that. It's the anti-American sentiment that gets a bit hard to take, and makes the climax hard to believe. Add to that a prologue and epilogue to make you gag, and this is only a so-so book.

Scoop by Rene Gutteridge was much better. In fact, I was well into the book before I began to suspect that maybe I'd picked up something in a genre I would otherwise not have thought about -- Christian fiction. Scoop takes place in a last-place TV news station. There's quite a cast of characters here, from Hugo, the stressed-out news producer who's also dealing with a boss who's younger and ethically challenged, and a troubled family life; an aging news anchor who has an unfortunate Botox incident; Ray, the intrepid reporter who gets attacked on live TV; and a whole bunch more.

What attracted me to this book, obviously, was the setting in a newsroom. Yes, I work in print, but a newsroom is a newsroom, and there was a lot here that's true to life: the clashing personalities, the argument of doing "sexy" stories to sell papers/attract viewers vs. more boring but informative stories, and the absurdity that oddly enough comes with the adrenaline of breaking news. Gutteridge captured that really well.

The main character here is Hayden Hazard, Hugo's new assistant. The story starts 5 years before the main action, at the funeral of Hayden's parents, founders of the family clown business. Yes, I said clowns. The Hazards learn that with their parents' deaths, the family business has been sold, and the close-knit, homeschooled, religious clan must now go make their own ways in the world. Rather than seeing the story through her point of view, however, we see it through just about everyone BUT Hayden's eyes. We get to see her, and how she lives and talks about her faith. And you see how it affects the other characters. It's kind of sneaky way of putting religion in a novel, but it works. It's not preachy, it's not in your face. And Gutteridge acknowledges that organized religion isn't perfect in a scene with Ray at his church.

Everything gets wrapped up rather neatly, no one turns out to be truly bad (even the bad guy makes some very valid points about the state of journalism today) and the mystery is kind of predictable. But Gutteridge has a great writing style that is humorous and contains dead-on satire of the news industry. I read this over my lunch breaks, and I was always sorry when I had to put the book down at the end of the hour.

This is actually the first in "The Occupational Hazards" series, each focusing on one of the Hazard clan. The second one, "Snitch," is centered around Hayden's sister Mack, a Las Vegas undercover cop. I'll look for this one, too, and hope the writing (and non-preachyness) stay consistent.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Getting used to solitude

So I'm alone again, this time for a little over a month, as Mom is on her second big adventure and having fun, it sounds like.

My Labor Day weekend was fairly quiet. I did get quite a bit done, though. I cleaned out my car, which I've been needing to do for a long time, got some mowing done and hacked down a lot of the long-gone sunflower stalks out back with a new garden toy -- er tool: a machete. I'd been looking for one all summer, and the store I'd seen them at in previous years didn't have any until last Saturday. So I got a 22-inch blade, and must admit it was kind of fun once I got the hang of it (swing in an arc, not just one way seemed to work best). For a few minutes there I imagined I was in an Indiana Jones movie or Romancing the Stone ... OK, a bunch of dried-up sunflowers aren't the same as a South American jungle, but it was still a lot of work.

I did some cooking and food prep, too, to make things easier when I get home from work, and especially since I'll be starting this part-time job soon. Got some chicken breasts prepped so that I can take them out of the freezer before I go to work and pop them in the oven or on the grill when I get home, meatballs I can toss in spaghetti or sweet & sour sauce, things like that.

And I started on a small project for the kitchen, but you'll have to wait until I'm done to hear about that.

Tomorrow I have my training for the second job. Mainly, this will be watching some videos, filling out paperwork, etc. I should find out what kind of schedule I'll have, too. Then in the evening, it's time again for my support group meeting. We're putting together some sort of thing to give out during Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October, but I don't know what it will be yet.

I also need to take a look at the material for the grantwriting course I'm taking through the local university. The class doesn't officially start until next week, and the first week or so is scheduled to just get familiar with the information, so it's no rush. But it's never too early to start I guess.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Soaring

Just fooling around with video again tonight. I was grilling some chicken for dinner, hoping it wouldn't storm on before it was done, when I looked up and saw about two to three dozen turkey vultures soaring overhead. They roost in the cottonwoods just upstream from my place, and it's always fascinating to watch them. This video doesn't do it justice and naturally once I got the camera ready, they were heading back to their roosts, but maybe will give you an idea:

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Cooldown

It's nice to sleep in on a day off, knowing I'm not wasting the only decently cool hours of the day. Today is supposed to be only about 85, instead of the 90 to 100+ degrees we've been having the last month. So I slept in, and lay in bed for a bit enjoying the sounds of all the birds along the creek -- the cardinal setting his territory, the blue jays calling back and forth to each other. Now I'm just trying to become completely awake so I can get dressed and do something.

It wasn't too bad out last night either, so I went down by the creek and did some work I've been putting off in the summer heat. I trimmed some dead branches from one of the willow trees -- a couple had been hanging down far enough that it was hard to mow around them. No problem there anymore! Of course, the main branch they come off of isn't all that alive either, and as much as it was bouncing as I sawed at the smaller branches, I was a little worried the whole thing might break off and fall on me! It didn't, though. I'll have to take care of that big one, too some time. I spen a bit more time cutting down some poorly placed saplings and sucker branches, too. Today, I'll probably go get them cleaned up and do some trimming on the grass that grew in around them. The creek overflowed it's banks several times this summer, so in addition to all the sludge and stuff it left behind, it just made it hard to get down in there and do the work too. So if feels good to be able to get that done.

One of Mom's friends from out of town is coming up for a few hours to visit and have lunch. They don't get to see each other much, so I might just let them have their time and do my own thing. Or maybe they want me around, I guess we'll see. Mom is getting ready to go off on another adventure with her little trailer, Eggcarto, so she's getting pretty eager to get off her work days and get fully prepared for that. I'll be glad to have some time in the house to myself, although I guess it could get lonely too. Last time she took off, Nipper was still here.

I do miss having a warm, furry body around the house, and it might be about time to get a new pet. I'm not totally sure yet, though. I'll be starting a second, part-time job in a couple weeks that might require me to work a couple weeknights, after my "real" job. Since I live in a different town from where I work, that means I would be out of the house from about 7:30 a.m. to almost 10:30 at night. Doesn't seem fair to do that to a dog. Especially when I don't even have a dog door for it to let itself out. And dogs just don't like being alone for long either -- they need their pack. So I'm considering a cat. But I've never had a cat before, so I'm not sure about that, either. The job is only a substitute position, though, so it might be OK for a dog if I'm gone that long say maybe once a month. Anyway, I have been looking at local shelters' animal lists, and while there are lots of cute dogs and cats out there, I haven't seen what might be quite right. I don't want a puppy or a kitten -- I'm not sure I'd have the time to properly housebreak one, and I'm not sure I have that much energy anymore! Besides, older animals aren't as quickly adopted as the babies, so I'd feel good giving an adult pet a good home. Ideally, I'd like another beagle mix, but I won't limit myself to that, either. I'll just keep watching.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

A bad week

It's not been a good time lately for my breast cancer support group. There is one funeral this week (unexpected) and another on the way.

Yesterday we received word that one member, Elsie, died. She had taken ill last week and was in the hospital, started to feel better over the weekend, but then took a turn for the worse. They did exploratory surgery, but she didn't survive the operation. That's about all the details I know of what happened. She was 78. Her sister is a member of our group as well. They were diagnosed within two weeks of each other a couple years ago, if I remember correctly. They both always made the meetings fun. She'll be missed. Her funeral is tomorrow, and I know some of the group will be going. I might try to go, but we might be busy at work, too. There's visitation during my lunch hour, so I might at least go to that.

Last week, we received bad news as well. Another of our members has decided to enter Hospice care. She's been fighting for about two years, originally diagnosed about the same time I was. At first, after her chemo and surgery, things seemed to be going well, but then tumors started appearing in her skin. She went to the MD Anderson cancer center in Texas for about six weeks last summer, tried some experimental drug, new drugs, etc. She's been in a lot of pain, I know, but remained pretty upbeat through a lot of it -- at least in her e-mails and when she was able to come to our meetings. But a few months ago, she wrote an e-mail that wasn't as upbeat, and talked about how her two girls (12 and 5) were starting to come to the realization she might not be around to see them grow up. It wasn't a good sign. And then came last week's news. Her tumors had spread to other organs and were just progressing faster than treatment could handle. She just turned 40. She's fought this pretty hard, and I thought if anyone could beat some long odds, she would be one who could. It just doesn't seem fair.

I work with her sister-in-law. They're pretty close, and I kind of put off talking to her after the news. But Monday morning, I had to ask her about something work-related, so of course it came up. It was difficult for both of us, and we only made it a few minutes before we had to quit -- after all, the day was just beginning. I'm sure we'll talk about it again. Maybe later in the day, though.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Ewwwww!

If I'd been walking on my front walk just a bit earlier, I might have gotten hit by this:


It was a lot wetter/fresher when we first spotted it -- the "splat" area was about as big as both my hands put together.

So anyone got an ID? Turkey buzzard? Mississippi Kite? Hawk? Had to be bigger than a robin.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Snoozer

So last night/early this morning was supposed to be best viewing of the Perseid meteor shower. The viewing was supposed to be best after midnight, so, since I don't have to work today, I stayed up for it. I went out about 1:30, and sat on the front porch bench, where I would have the best view of the northeast sky. I stayed out until I started to get too sleepy, until a bit after 2 a.m.

I saw one meteor. Possibly two others, I can't say for sure. Kind of a disappointment. Although there may have been some clouds near the horizon, and there is a street light near my house, so maybe I should have hopped in the car or walked up the road a bit, where I'd be out in the country.

I guess it wasn't a total bust, though. It was a warm night, and I enjoyed listening to the cricket concert -- what sounded like thousands of them, all chirping in unison. And then there's the occasional sound of a night bird or other critter that makes you think "what in hell was that?" And I did see quite a few stars and other things, too. Up to the north-northeast, I saw some red, twinkley object that at first I thought might be Mars, but then a bit later I looked farther east and there was a red, non-twinkley object. So I'm not sure what was what. Then I saw somethng moving in a northerly direction that at first was fairly bright, but quickly dimmed. I could still follow it for about 20 or 30 seconds, though, so I wonder if that wasn't the space shuttle or maybe the space station.

I was too tired to go look up any info online then, and, well, since I was up so late, I'm still kind of sleepy now. So today's big goal is getting laundry done. My first load is almost done and ready to hang out. Shouldn't take too long to dry today -- it's 10 a.m. and the air conditioner just kicked on. Gonna be a hot one again.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Lost and Found

Finished reading another book -- Alison Winn Scotch's "The Department of Lost and Found." It's a novel about breast cancer. Well, it's a novel about a woman dealing with the affects of breast cancer. I was a little apprehensive about reading this, but it was a good read.

It's the story of Natalie Miller, a 30-year-old senior aide for an up-and-coming New York woman senator (sound familiar? Nah!) when she learns she has breast cancer ... the same day her boyfriend tells her he's seeing someone else and dumps her. While going through chemo and surgery she's got political drama to deal with, being her best friend's maid of honor, and a lot more.

What I liked about the book is that it doesn't really dwell on her cancer. And the parts that do aren't melodramatic or unrealistic. The narrative actuallly takes place between her chemo treatments, so it focuses more on the after effects -- like trying to live your life around the side effects, and how all the downtime and staring at your mortality starts to change your outlook on life and your relationships. And that's what she does. She examines her motives in her work, her relationships with family and especially the men in her life. And she gets a dog (my favorite part of the story).

There were some moments that got me choked up, remembering some of my own feelings in similar circumstances, but really the book is quite hopeful. And there's actually lots to laugh at too. That's surpising, considering Scotch's inspiration for the book was the loss of a good friend to breast cancer. So if you're a survivor -- or know one -- don't be afraid to pick this one up.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

A good weekend

Today has been pretty quiet, but I got some laundry done and even got on the exercise bike and did some yoga -- something I haven't gotten my butt around to doing for a few weeks. Time once again to get back into that routine. It rained off and on this morning and afternoon, so I just hung around the house, surfing the Web, watching some TV and finishing the sheep mystery (it was pretty, goo, too. Maybe more on that later).

Yesterday, it was much hotter, but I spent part of the day at the Habitat for Humanity house under construction here. I hadn't been there since the first time -- I had to work one week and had some lousy headaches the other weeks. Since I'd been there, they'd finished up framing the exterior walls and two of the upstairs bedrooms, put on the trusses, had plywood sheeting and that plastic-type stuff (moisture barrier?) on the exterior walls, and then Saturday were starting on the roof. There were more people there this time, too, even a couple of guys who do construction for a living, so I'm sure that helped. A few guys were on the roof, putting on plywood sheets and I joined a couple who were working on the soffit. Again, I'm not sure I was all that much help since I can't seem to pound a nail straight, so I ended up holding a lot things, helping measure, etc. The impressive thing is I spent most of the time on scaffolding, and I have a fear of heights (although it's not so much the height I'm afraid of -- it's the landing!). I was there about four hours before it just started getting too hot for me. I don't know if I'll go next week. If they're going to be doing roofing stuff, I'd rather avoid that, but maybe if there's some work going on inside the house I could help out. We'll see.

That's about all the excitement from here. Try not to be envious of me.

Monday, July 23, 2007

What I'm reading

Wow, didn't realize how long it had been since my last post. I have some things going on, but not really something I care to put out on the Web right now. Maybe later.

I have been doing a lot reading, so maybe I'll discuss that. One of the recent books I read was Flesh and Bone. Not a good book to read on your lunch hour. It's actually written by two guys, one of whom is the founder of the (real) Body Farm, a research facility in Tennesse where they study the decomposition of bodies. The forensics in this was VERY desecriptive (hence the warning about lunch) and that stuff was interesting. The rest of the book was just kind of *eh*. I really didn't care for the relationship stuff and, really, did we need a detailed descripton and/or the history of EVERY street the main character drove on?

I've also read the two books in Jasper Fforde's "Nursery Crimes" series, The Big Over Easy and The Fourth Bear. These were great, if you like a mystery with some humor in it. Or if you just like something a bit absurd, a bit along the lines of Douglas Adams' Hitchikers' Guide to the Galaxy series (hmmm ... Jasper Fforde ... Ford Prefect?). If you don't remember much about nursery rhymes, though, a lot of the books will be over your head.

Right now, I'm reading a mystery that is also a bit unusual. Three Bags Full is about the murder of an Irish shepherd, told from the point of view of the detectives ... his sheep. Very smart sheep. So far it's very entetaining, and the sheep are already putting the clues together. Even if they don't necessarily know what a "clue" is.

That's about it for now. Later.

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

A new look

So you can see what I've been busy with today.

It was a rainy afternoon, so I started messing around on the computer, and finally got around to finishing a redesign I started awhile back. The maze symbol is a Hopi symbol representing the rebirth from one world to another. I first came across it about 15 years ago, reading Blue Highways by William Least-Heat Moon, his account of a cross-country trip where he avoided major highways, following those roads that appeared on the maps as blue lines. In Utah, he met a Hopi college student, and explains the maze like this:

It's lines represent the course a person follows on his "road of life" as he passes through birth, death, rebirth. Human existence is essentially a series of journeys, and the emergence symbol is a kind of map of the wandering soul, an image in process; but is also, like most Hopi symbols and ceremonies, a reminder of cosmic patterns that all human beings move in.

I guess it just struck me at the time because I was trying to figure out who I was and realizing what a twisted journey life can be. So when the book jacket slipped off and I saw the embossed maze on the cover underneath, I grabbed a piece of paper and made a pencil rubbing. I've kept that all these years, pinned to a bulletin board, and thought it would make a great symbol to go along with the blog title. A little bit of Photoshop work, and it's a nice graphic element.

Anyway, that's the new look.

Today is Independence Day in the U.S., and I've just been relishing my independence from work today, doing not much of anything. Well, I did throw in a load of laundry, and worked a bit in the garden before it started raining. Dad was going to come over for grilled hot dogs and then a trip into town to see the big fireworks show, but he wasn't feeling well this afternoon. So I made myself a hotdog dinner, worked on the blog some more and listened to all the fireworks going off around the neighborhood. I'm not sure I'll go into town for the show. There's a heck of a lot of traffic to deal with, and I do have to work tomorrow. Sounds like there will be quite a show here anyway, so I'll probably just sit out in the yard and watch.

Happy Fourth, everyone!

Butterfly weed


butterflywd.JPG
Originally uploaded by junogle.

After about five years of trying, I finally got some butterfly weed to grow. It's a native prairie plant, so you wouldn't think it would be that hard to do. Ironically, it's growing under a tree instead of under the hot prairie sun. I'll take it.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Hi there

I know it's been awhile since I posted, and I even have some things to talk about.

This past week I had my last three-month checkup with my oncologist, with bloodwork and a chest X-ray a few days beforehand. All were OK! I will see her next in December. The six-month checkups will continue for three years, I think -- until I am five years out -- and then it will just be once a year until I reach 10 years out. I still have a mammogram coming up Tuesday and then a visit with my surgeon the week after that. My oncologist did recommend I get an MRI in conjunction with mammograms from now on, as new research recommends for women with a high risk of breast cancer. I plan to ask my surgeon about this, but I can probably guess what she will say, since she and my oncologist work pretty closely. I'll have to go to Wichita to get it done, because there are some requirements for that they can't meet here.

Anyway, not much more than that has really been going on. Today I kind of wasted much of the day playing a new game I found, Bowmaster, kind of a defend your castle/capture the flag type game. I got to level 20, and it's not real fast-paced game, so you can guess how much time I wasted. But I redeemed myself somewhat, when during a break from the game, I saw on a local Web site that the local Habitat for Humanity was having regular build days for the house they're building here for a family on Fridays and Saturdays. It's the group's first house, and they've had some trouble getting the volunteer work going. There was just a small crew there -- the husband/father of the family getting the house, a married couple and then an older guy. They were all pretty nice, and I got to pound a few nails, help put together a corner piece for the framing, and help put up a couple pieces of framing for the garage. It was kind of fun, and a good way to spend the afternoon. My wrist can really feel the effects of the pounding, though.

Tomorrow will probably be some mowing, and more reading. Yesterday, I finished up The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon. I liked it OK enough, but it took awhile to get into. I didn't know before reading it that it takes place in an alternate reality, so I spent the first couple of chapters wondering what the heck was going on. Then it took a few chapters to get my mind wrapped around that concept. But once I settled in, it was OK, if not maybe a bit too long.

Now I'm reading something a bit lighter, a mystery ba David Rosenfelt called Play Dead. I passed it over once or twice already at the library, because I wasn't sure how I'd handle a story involving dogs, but I'm enjoying it, really.

It's getting late, and I've already spent more than enough time on the computer today, so time to say goodnight.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Almost summer

It's the evening before the first day of summer, and although it was a hot one today, it's right nice out now. The sky is darkening, the fireflies are rising, cicadas buzzing and robins and mourning doves singing their final songs of the day as a breeze rustles the tree leaves.

We are, however, without water, as a water main down the street that is being worked on was broken or burst.

This last week, we have been tracking our radio-listening habits for Arbitron. Since I worked in radio about a decade or so ago, I am kind of aware of how much I do or don't listen to the radio. Mostly I listen to just one or two, and once in awhile I'll tune in to the station I worked for, when I can get it in the car or on the Net. Actually, working in the biz ruined me for listening to music, period, for about three years. So much so that my "21st century" playlist on my iPod is the shortest. I don't know who half the artists are now. Makes me feel old.

Not much else is going on, really. It's been pretty quiet. I still miss Nipper, but Mom and I can laugh about our memories now. I miss having a dog around, but I'm not sure the time is right just yet.

Well, the bugs are starting to gather round the glow of the laptop, so I guess I'll finish up and go sit in the backyard for awhile and watch the fireflies and the bats. It's too nice out not to enjoy it.

Monday, June 11, 2007

The reunion

The reunion was lots of fun. We had about half the class members there, along with all the spouses and rugrats. Well, some of them were too old to be called "rugrats." Quite a few classmates of mine have kids in high school, and even college. Man, we ARE old.

There were only a few people I didn't recognize right off the bat. Mostly, we look the same, just older. And a lot of the kids look just like their parents. I know, duh, but when you see them side by side for the first time, it's kind of suprising.

We started the day with lunch in the park, mingling and getting caught up. Most of them had a head start on me, as they'd all met at the Horseshoe on Friday night. From what they were saying, it was pretty wild. And the class packed the place. So lunch was probably a bit quieter, heh.

Later on, we had dinner at a swanky new restaurant in town that was more swank than anything else. But one of the classmates had prepared a Power Point presentation of pictures from yearbooks back to middle school and then and now pics of our senior portraits and family pics we sent him. It was funny, and touching, and great to see. He's going to put the presentation, along with photos from the weekend and from our 10th reunion, as well as some other info onto a DVD for everyone. It's a lot of work, I'm sure, but greatly appreciated.

We also got to tour the high school, which has changed a lot since we were there. They started building a whole new section in our senior year, but didn't finish it until after we were gone. So for a lot of people it was the first time they'd seen the changes. And we were told we were the first class to get a tour. It helps that the current principal was in our class!

Overall, it was a great weekend, and Sunday I was just exhausted. I needed to do laundry, but ended up doing nothing more than watching the "KyleXY" marathon on Family Channel.

And then some sad news came yesterday. One of the members of my breast cancer support group died Saturday evening. She had entered hospice care about a couple months ago, realizing that she was just prolonging the inevitable. She was still getting out for awhle, but I guess the last couple weeks took a turn for the worse. I didn't know her all that well, but I admired how she faced knowing that her end was near. She had great faith in God, and said even though she was sad her time here would be ending, she approached it with joy as well because it meant she would be in God's glory. At Friday's Relay for Life, she had so many luminaries in her honor -- all the way around the track, you saw her name again and again. I'm sure many were from fellow members of her church, which was just across the street from the school. I don't know if any of her family made it there to see them all. I hope they did, and that they were able to tell her about it.

Rest in peace, Carol.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Relay

This year, I made it to the local Relay for Life. I stayed a lot longer than I had planned to, but I'm glad I did. It does the soul some good to see how many people are willing to give their time to help others -- or maybe themselves.

I signed in at the survivor's tent and got my T-shirt and sat down with a few sisters from my support group. They had sandwiches and cheese and fruit and veggie trays, which was great since I didn't go home or get something to eat. At 7 p.m. it was time for the opening ceremonies and the survivor lap. Our support group gathered behind our banner, and somehow we ended up leading off the procession. The photo intern from the newspaper where I work was there, but I'm not sure he recognized me and I probably ended up in a lot of his shots. He just started this week, so I guess it didn't register who I was in my non-work clothes.

That first lap was much like riding in the college's homecoming parade last fall. As we rounded the first turn of the school track, where the teams had pitched their campsites, they stood and applauded all the survivors. It wasn't just the bright sun making our eyes sting. As one of my sisters said, who would have thought you would get applause just for being alive? But we got our chance to honor those teams who have worked so hard through the year with their fundraisers and are still walking now, until sunrise tomorrow. Each joined the parade as we passed by their camps and then took their own lap, so we clapped and cheered as they passed by.

I took a few laps myself over the next hour or so to look at the luminaries. There were quite a few for several of the group's members -- some in memory of the two who have died. I didn't find one with my name on it, but I think the support group's board purchased one for everyone. There were also several for I believe the father of someone I went to junior high school with. There was also one for Tammy Faye and one for Farah Fawcett.

One of our members was the first speaker during the luminary ceremony, which took place about 10 p.m., after all had been "lit" (they used those battery-operated tea lights) and it became dark. She did a great job. After all the speakers and songs, I decided I was pretty tired and decided to take off, and got home about 11 p.m.

I took a hot shower, as I could feel those few laps in my legs, and I've thrown a few clothes in the washing machine so I have something clean to wear tomorrow. I'll be going to my hometown for my 20th class reunion. I got the car washed today but sill need to clean out the inside -- don't want them to think I'm still a slob -- so I'll do that and dry my clothes in the morning. For now, though I'd better turn in.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

A couple photos

I finished off one roll of film last week of shots around the yard and garden, and found an old roll that I wasn't sure what was on it. Got them back today. The old roll was from January, after the end-of-the-year ice storm. Not any shots that remarkable on it, but the last one was of Nipper:

I guess I was going for a shot like The Dog. Sure shows off his pretty eyes.

The other, from a few weeks ago, was this oriole I managed to keep in the frame somehow:

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Here we go again!

The sirens went off once again here -- there never was an actual tornado warning, but about a half hour ago, the sheriff's office ordered the sirens after a weather spotter reported rotation in the clouds about 2 miles west of here. And not too long later, they said on the radio spotters reported a funnel right over town! This time we acted like real Kansans and looked out the window. We saw it, too -- a small, ropelike funnel not too far south of the house!

It started coming down more from the clouds, but as it moved east, it quickly broke up and there weren't any others. That's really the first time I've seen a funnel cloud up close. There was once in college when my roommates and I were driving back home from Wal-Mart when a warning was issued. My roommate who was driving said "let's go look," and we took we a detour to the west end of town. We saw three tornadoes, all in a row, on the horizon. I was excited, but my roommates got nervous and we headed back home. That day, though, one of those tornadoes did hit a house out in the country. No one was hurt, but a family lost their home.

Anyway, things are calming down now, and there's actually some blue sky out west. There's more storms out west on the radar, but they don't look as bad. So excitement's over for the night, it looks like.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Memorial Day


red poppy 2.JPG
Originally uploaded by junogle.

I scattered a mix of wildflower seeds last fall near the creek on my property, and now have a whole bunch of poppies. Poppies have long been associated with veterans and war dead, so I thought it somewhat appropriate to post for Monday. Escuse the focus, though. There's more poppy pictures and garden pictures in general in a new set at my flickr page.

Memorial Day Weekend

It's been a quiet one. We don't publish a paper on Memorial Day -- that and Labor Day are the only two days -- so I have Monday off. I haven't had a lot to do. I finished up the foundation garden I started about a week ago in the front yard. Planted a hydrangea and three lupies I got through a mail-order catalog (they had a coupon). The hydrangea is only just about 4 inches tall, and the lupines were bare roots, so there won't be much this year. But maybe next. I also planted some purple salvia that mom had bought but decided they might get too bushy for where she was going to plant them.

Other than that, and some mowing on the hill, which I will finish tomorrow, I haven't done a lot. I still am trying to figure out what to do with myself without a dog to look after. Nipper was always my reason for taking a walk, but so far I haven't been able to get out and do that on my own. He was always a good excuse to go sit in the sun or the shade outside. You just don't realize how much something is a part of you until it's gone, I guess. But both of us are learning to get along.

I'm not sure when I'll get another dog. I'm still missing Nipper too much. Plus, I'm having to look seriously at getting a second job to help pay off some bills. I'll probably do some looking next month. I have my class reunion to go to on the 9th, and I was thinking of taking some of my vacation time to help mom do some of the stuff she wants to do at her house, where my dad lives (yeah, I know, it sounds weird).

I'm trying to read "Devil in White City," about a serial killer at the Chicago World's Fair, but it puts me sleep after a few pages. So now it's by my bed. So now I started on a mystery novel, "Stalking Ivory." The protagonist is Jade del Cameron, a writer/photographer in the 1920s in Africa. The setting is different than most mysteries I read, and so fair it's pretty good. The author is from Kansas, too.

So other than reading and maybe laundry tomorrow, I don't have a lot planned. We'll probably have Dad over and barbecue some chicken or something tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Nervous night

Always nice to end the night on a nerve-wracking note. Not.

We'd been watching the Jesse Stone movie on the local CBS station to keep tabs on the severe weather. Mostly it was out west of us, but progressing our way. And around 9:30 or so, off go the sirens. Now of course the big joke is that when the sirens go off, good Kansans head out to go watch. Well, memories of Greensburg are still a bit too fresh, so we headed to my closet -- with no basement it's probably the closest thing we have to a shelter.

We grabbed some important things and went to the closet with the portable radio and hung out there for awhile listening to the heavy rain and then came the BONK ... BONK ... THUD of very large hail -- up to tennis ball sized, according to the news reports. I believe it, because when we did take a look outside several minutes later, there were still some large hail stones in the yard. Things seemed like they were quieting down when the rain picked up and more hail starting coming down ... and then the sirens went off again. I wouldn't be surprised if they did that in an attempt to keep people at home instead of driving around gawking.

Doesn't seem to be much damage, but I'll go take a peek at the roof when it's light in the morning and see if I can tell if there's any damage. Not that I'm a expert or anything, but the roof has been through one big hail storm since I bought the place, so maybe another will mean a new roof is in order.

Anyway, it's quiet now, and I'm pooped, so it's off to bed.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Puppy picture


First snow
Originally uploaded by junogle.

This is one of my first photos of Nipper. Sorry for the resolution, but I had to get this off my Web site. I hope to find the original print. He's about six months old here, and it was his first snow. Note the bit of snow on the end of his nose -- even up to last year, he would wind up looking like that from sticking his nose in the ground and snorting around for whatever he could underneath!

One week

It was a week ago as I write this that Mom, Dad and I were taking Nipper to the vet for the last time. It's been an up and down type of day for Mom and I. Little things have sent us into tears, but we've also shared some good and funny memories of him today. I found some more pictures and am uploading them to flickr now. Mom has some on her computer that I want copies of, and I'm sure I've got some she doesn't have either. I'd just like to get them all together for now and save backup copies on disk.

I have gotten four sympathy cards this last week. Who would have thought that? One was an e-card from a friend; one from a co-worker and her daughter, who recently lost a dog as well; one was from the vet's office, signed by the staff and included a little pin of an angel dog; and one was from some friends who lost their dog last year (she called me at work, too, after getting my e-mail about Nipper. That was sweet). The last two came in the mail yesterday, so when I got home from work, I ended up having a good cry (again).

Haven't done anything yet with Nipper's ashes. I haven't put away any of his things, either. Mom's last week at work before going into (semi) retirement is this week, so maybe after that's over and she doesn't have to sleep during the day, we'll have a little "memorial service" and do something. Maybe we can grill some hamburgers, and toss out the bites of burger and chips we would have given him along with his ashes. Something for the road. I'm kidding, or course. Sort of.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

He's home

I brought Nipper home one last time today. Or rather, his ashes. The vet's office provided a nice litter silver urn for him. There's not as much as I thought there would be, but I guess I didn't really know what to expect. And yes, I looked inside. It's morbid, I know, but I also wanted to know how concerned I had to be about what would happen if I had to stop the car suddenly (the cremains were in a bag inside if you must know).

I'm not exactly sure what I want to do with him yet. Right now, the urn is sitting on top of the TV cabinet. Probably most of the ashes will be spread here at home, along the creek, where he liked to spend so much time. Maybe I'll spread a little bit in some of the other places he liked to go -- in the park a few blocks from a home, and maybe at the small campground/lake here in town. Maybe I'll keep some. I'm not sure. I could always have a diamond made from him. That seems kind of weird, though.

I do know I will get another dog, maybe two, I just don't know when. I have to be able to separate missing having a dog from missing Nipper, if that makes any sense. It just wouldn't be fair to get another dog right now, because that dog (or dogs or cat or whatever) will never be NIpper, and that's what I wish I had. But the day will come when I'll want another animal around. Ever since buying this house, which is in a town about 15 miles from where I work, I thought it would have been nice to have another dog so Nipper wouldn't be so lonely during the day, espcecially when Mom wasn't around. But Nipper didn't like too many other dogs, and never would have liked another dog on his "turf." But maybe next time, I will think about a couple of dogs. It's just too soon right now to really think about it.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

It's getting better

I did OK at work today, at least until a co-worker, just before I left for lunch, handed me an envelope addressed to both me and mom. I told her I'd open it in the car, and good thing I did, because it opened some waterworks. Her daughter picked it out, she said. They lost a dog themselves not too long ago, one not very old even, so they know how I feel.

The hardest is being at home. Nipper was so much a part of what we did around here. Get up in the morning, let him out, let him in, share part of breakfast. When I got home from work, I took him for a walk. Now, I don't really know what to do with myself in the evenings. I picked up a couple of books at the library, but I don't feel like reading. I did make myself get on the exercise bike for about 10 minutes. I need some exercise, after all. I suppose I should go for a walk on our usual routes at some point -- there are several people we saw on a fairly regular basis who would want to know Nipper is no longer with us. Like the "cheese lady" who, when she saw us walking by would go inside her house and come back out with a slice of cheese for Nipper. If she wasn't outside, he would slow down as we walked by and stop to sniff whatever he could, occasionally glancing at her door. Then there's the boy who, at first, seemed kind of lonely, and liked to pet Nipper, and we would talk occasionally. He has more friends now, but would always stop to pet Nipper.

And of course, there's the pizza guy. Probably won't feel like ordering pizza for awhile, though. He would wave at us if he saw us out walking.

Reflecting on this makes me realize Nipper wasn't just "my" dog. He shared at least a little bit of himself with people who loved me or just knew me, even remotely. That's quite a dog.

New photoset


Christmas 05
Originally uploaded by junogle.

I posted a set of photos of Nipper at my flickr site. They're some of my favorites. I'm sure I'll add more as I find them.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Difficult day

Today was hard to get through. I didn't sleep well, and woke up about half an hour before my alarm went off. Normally if I did that, as soon as I stirred, a tail would be thumping on the bed nearby, and when the alarm would go off, he would usually get up and come lick my face until I'd get up. Or sometimes, Nipper would wag his tail a couple times, then take a long stretch and snuggle closer to me -- or maybe he was trying to get more room on the bed!

I had a hard time telling people at work -- there were a couple I told, and others noticed something wrong. At first, I could barely choke out the words, but talking about him helped. So did the two pictures of him I have taped to my computer. At first I would tear up when I looked at them, but it got easier because those pictures helped me remember better times.



But then it was hard when I was on the way home and knew he wouldn't be there to greet me. And I broke down when I told mom it was hard not seeing him lying on the porch, watching for me. She said she swore she felt him lying on the bed next to her at one point today.

And now here I am on the computer instead of trying to put a collar and leash on a dancing, barking dog. Looks like I'll have to look to myself for some motivaiton to get moving. One thing about a dog, you can't NOT get some exercise with one around.

The days will get better, one by one, I guess. One day down.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Nipper, July 1994-May 13, 2007



My best friend is gone. He died this afternoon, while Mom and I were out running errends. He had seemd ... normal yesterday almost, chasing the rabbit that comes in the yard and doing his little happy dance and barking when it was time for our walk. This morning he was OK, but he seemed to be taking things a little slow.

We took him to the vet's and she did an autopsy. We hadn't been home very long when she called with the report. He'd had a large tumor on his liver, and there were smaller tumors inside the liver. The large one had ruptured, filling his stomach area with blood. She said it happened very quickly and would have been painless. I had noticed lately, I can't say exactly when, then when he lay on his side, his side seemed to have a bit of a bulge. But I know I shouldn't blame myself. He seemed healthy ever since about a year and a half ago, when he first showed signs of liver problems. He had been in for two yearly checkups since then, and the vet never suspected anything either. I can't blame her. He seemed healthy, and she would really have no reason to suspect. She said that even if she had opened him up on Friday when I took him, there woldn't have been anything she could have done.

Nipper will be cremated, and I'll pick up his ashes later in the week. I'm not sure what I'll do with them. Probably, eventually, I'll spread them here, along the creek he loved to explore. When I first got him, and we lived in small apartments, I always told him one day I'd have a house with a big yard that he could enjoy. I'm glad I was able to do that.

You'll probably have to excuse me over the next several days, as my posting will probably be all about him -- stories I've probably told before and photos you've seen, but he was my best friend for almost 13 years, and it will take some time to adjust to life without him.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Good news!

A few weeks ago, I had some blood drawn to have some tests done to see if I have a genetic mutation that contributes to breast cancer. I just got the results in the mail, and there were no mutations detected!

Having the mutated genes could more likely mean I'd have a reoccurance, so it's a relief to know that likelihood is greatly decreased. Plus, when my doctor discussed with me about having the test, she said if it were positive for mutations, it would affect any future treatment, including preventive measures like having a hysterctomy. So good news on several levels!

Friday, May 11, 2007

Nipper

I had to take Nipper to the vet this morning. Last night he threw up several times, even though he hadn't eaten for almost a day. It took him awhile to act like he was feeling better, too. So I talked to my vet last night and she said to bring him in for some tests.

I dropped him off before I went to work, and then worried all morning, especially when she didn't call. I was hoping that no news was good news, but I was also concerned that she had something she didn't want to tell me over the phone and was waiting until I came by to pick him up.

It was good and bad news. She had gotten him to eat a can of dogfood and keep it down, so that's good. The blood test, however showed his liver enzymes were way up. She did a sonogram of his belly (poor guy has a shaved tummy now) and said there is a small abscess on his liver. She couldn't feel it, though, so it's very small and she said it doesn't move around much. But this is similar to the problem he had a year and a half ago, so she said it's something that is obviously progressing.

So next week she wants to take a closer look. Lilke actually opening him up and looking at it herself. I trust her, though, and I'm sure that even with his age (13), he'll do OK. She'll likely do a biopsy then, but since it's small, I'm hoping for the best. She told me of a cocker spaniel patient of hers who has had a liver abscess for three years, and does quite well except for an occasional episode.

So it's good in that it's not likely something that's life-threatening. But on the other hand, he may not be the same spunky pal I've had for years. I've kind of been trying to prepare myself for this the last couple years as he's gotten older and dealt with arthritis that slowed down a bit, but I imagine the weekend might find me shdding a few tears ... and getting them licked away by my long-time pal.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Shoulda got some film

I had planned to over the weekend, but forgot, and so of course there was a reason to get a picture just a bit ago. I had just sat down to eat my dinner at the computer and looked out the window to see a male wood duck perched on my pole-mounted birdfeeder. I've had ducks come around, but they've never actually gotten up on the feeder like that, just checked out what was on the ground. He had a mate, but she stayed on the ground. She did get under the fence and waddled around the yard a bit before she flew off and he followed her.

Nipper is doing much better. He got sick again late Saturday night and threw up some dogfood (which I found with my foot in the dark), and still wasn't feeling well Sunday morning. I let him sleep Sunday, and fed him some cream of wheat, then some chicken and rice for dinner. He loved that, of course. Tonight, I made spaghetti for my dinner and gave him a bit of hamburger. We took a short walk after I got home from work, and he got tired, but was doing OK.

Tonight, not much is on the agenda. A former high school classmate who is putting together a presentation for our class reunion wants some pictures and info, so I'll see if I've got something to send. Then I'll probablly do a bit more prep for my interview. I have a packet of forms to fill out, and I'm trying to brush up on what's going on with the company and what they do. Plus, try and get some exercise in somewhere, since it's nicer in the mornings to give Nipper some extra love and attention before I go to work. Yeah, I'm like putty in his paws.

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Greensburg

While I was having a quiet night last night, the people of Greensburg, Kan., were living through hell. About 9:45 p.m. a tornado, reported to be a mile wide, literally destroyed the town.

I've been watching the coverage on Wichita stations (well, two of them. Where are you, KSN?) and it's just amazing. From the aerial shots, it looks like only the grain elevator is left standing. The downtown is gone and most of the homes are flattened or damaged beyond repair. It's a prety scary reminder of just what can happen.

Right now, there's another storm heading for Greensburg. Hope everyone there will be OK. We've got a storm warning where I live now, too, but I think I'll just get the western edge of it where I am, and they're saying there doesn't appear to be tornadic. But later on could be another question. I've already got my portable radio, Nipper's leash and some other things by the door in case it turns bad and I need to make a run for Dad's house, where he at least has the cellar and a small hallway that's in the middle of the house. That's one bad thing about my house -- pretty much all the rooms have at least one exterior wall, so there's not an obvious place to go in case of tornado.

Friday, May 04, 2007

It's quiet

It is nice to have the house to myself, although once in a while it just feels too quiet. It is kind of nice to have someone to talk to once in a while. At least someone who will talk back. I talk to Nipper all the time but the conversation is kind of one-sided.

I should be mowing the back yard right now, but I got hungry and decided a hot dog cooked over a fire would be good. I'd have dad over (since he gave me the fire pit for Christmas), but he said his allergies are making him feel not so good. Maybe next week. So I'm sitting here as the wood in the fire pit is slowly trying to burn and about a dozen turkey vultures watch me from the big old cottonwood on my property. They don't perch there often, but it's neat when they do. Once in a while, they ust feel crowded because one will seem to push another off a branch, and it will soar around for a few minutes, then return.

Nipper seems to be doing much better. He had a bad little episode last night, bad enough I actuallly called my vet's emergency number to talk to her. She recommended an aspirin to help the pain and help him relax enough to rest, which it did. He seemed fine this morning, so I took him in this afternoon for his scheduled annual checkup. She said everything seemed fine -- she didn't feel anything strange and all his vital signs are OK. So maybe he just ate something bad. Imagine that -- Nipper eating something he shouldn't.

(Oops. Had to restart the fire in the fire pit, and also now all the turkey vultures have flown the coop.)

Took Nip for his evening walk, and maybe we should hae gone earlier while it was still cool. It warmed up pretty good late this afternoon after the clouds went away. We're supposed to be in line for some severe weather, but it looks like all the thunderheads are building up north and west of us, which means we'll miss out.

I guess mowing is on the list of things to do tomorrow. Even if I get ambitious and do the back yard tonight, I still have the hill to do. I did one part of it last Sunday and already you can't even tell. Also tomorrow I'd like to at least start on getting a new flower bed prepared. I bought some things through a catalog that had a $25 coupon in it, so I'd like to start something out front between the porch and the garage.

Well, the fire is burning pretty good, so it's time to get cook dinner I think, followed by a s'more for desser. The mowing can wait until tomorrow!