Wow Shir that guy is ballsy and impressive. I like it. And yay leaving before arrests. Live to protest again another day and all.
Natter 77: I miss my friends. I miss my enemies. I miss the people I talked to every day.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Aaaack, property taxes! Thanks for the reminder, David! Off to find the tax bill (temporarily moved because of doing taxes, but that unfortunately means it is not in the place in my immediate eyeline I initially put it so I'd remember to pay. Aaaack, again!)
You can look it up online with your address. Or at least I could in SF.
I have picked up the Yardley Soap!
Also got two fancy deli sandwiches for myself, and my friend Jes for when she comes over to do more decorative painting on my back stairs.
And this guy is a genius. [link]
Ha! That's what happens when everybody has military service, I guess.
I'm going to pass along a PSA from my friend Rio (who some of you know on FB). She recently had a hormonal implant to address some perimenopause issues and reports:
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The hormones make a huge difference - if you have any female friends in their 40s and up who aren’t using them - let them know to read up because doctors aren’t telling their patients - especially male doctors - but also female ones - it’s shitty - and probably every woman should be using them to some degree - there are all different forms from creams to pills - to the pellets - I feel so much better - and my friend Kathy just went on them and also feels so much better -
It is like Norplant - I have testosterone and estrogen in the pellets under the skin and taking oral progesterone
It helped me feel less dead - I was just feeling kinda blah all the time - just in a vague way - like on a low frequency - it makes me feel more motivated and social - and upbeat - positive - hopeful
I wasn’t having a ton of menopause issues - I had mild hot flashes so it totally eradicates those - But for people who have having big mood swings, crying - sleep disturbances - low libido - addresses all those things -
For those keeping score at home: 9 tasks to-do have been to-done!
I have made three appointments for my calendar (two social, one medical).
That is good to hear about Rio. I didn't have any real issue with menopause so lucked out there.
I finished and filed my personal tax return! Now I just have to do my son and the business. It was a chore.
I have picked up the Yardley Soap!
A not-body wash with which to wash the body!
A not-body wash with which to wash the body!
Exactly! And I picked up one of every flavor so we wouldn't run out again.
Thank you for protesting, Shir.
I don't know why they make dealing with death so hard. I mean, everyone does it. I just remember after my grandfather died, my grandmother could NOT get something cancelled, nor could my uncle who lived near her. Finally when we were out visiting, my father called and said, "I'm [his name] and I want to cancel my service." No problem! My father was a junior, and my uncle isn't a liar.
Shir, I am endlessly impressed by your courage and conviction and am thinking about everyone caught up in this horror. Thank you for protesting.
In other news, goodness, everyone has been so productive today! Well done, friends. I need to switch into productive mode to get ready to leave for the spring high school journalism convention in the morning (part two of the spring break that is the opposite of a break), but, instead, I have gotten home from getting a sassier, shorter, blonder haircut — definitely a treat — and am flopped with a cat. Even though I don't take students to the spring convention, it's a very packed schedule for me every day with all my board responsibilities, so I'm trying to store up a little respite before the marathon starts. It's in Kansas City, MO, so I have a long day of flying with a connection, and then I'm scheduled within an inch of my life Thursday through Saturday night, when I fly home. Then one day to try to get ready to be back in class. Ugh.
The death bureaucracy parade marches on, for sure. So sorry you're dealing with it, David. I'm still in it, too. I got a lot done on my trip to Florida last week, including finally getting the title of Dad's car into my name so I could sell it, and we put the finishing touches on the condo so it could go on the market (ND and friends replaced all the crappy old outlets and switches with new ones, and it looks so much better). It's been on the market about 24 hours. Please send easy-contract-and-closing-at-asking-price thoughts that way.
I was already on Dad's bank account as a joint owner, but I'm running into the same issue with the bank saying they have to close the old account and open a new one now that it's just me. It doesn't feel worth it since there's only about a thousand dollars left there, but I don't want to close his account until I know for sure I've caught all the autopays. I also ran into the name/account issue with the condo utilities — they won't let me transfer the existing accounts into my name, and the alternative was me opening new accounts and having to pay hundreds of dollars of deposits for a condo I hope to have sold in a month; not the best option. Finally, they let me just update the banking info without closing his accounts, so I'm letting them sit until the condo sells and I can officially turn off the utilities.
Then there was all the emotional stuff. Having to deal with Dad's ashes, physically, was harder and weirder than I expected it to be. I had to divide them in two, which involved a zip lock bag, nail clippers, and a screwdriver, and it was...I don't know. Funny, in a way, but also heartbreaking. It was too choppy to go out on a boat as planned, so I scattered the first half of them at sunrise off a beautiful pier by a lighthouse with ND, our friend T, our own Laura, and her DH. It was lovely and sad. I then had to package up and mail the container to CT to my mom's house (which is legal, btw, so long as you follow procedure) so I can scatter the other half when we are there in June. I'm planning to bring the wooden container with his ashes to his celebration of life and then go out with some friends with a boat the next good-weather day to scatter the rest. It seems right to have him in both the Florida and Connecticut Atlantic Ocean. But that was also weird ("So, Mom, how do you feel about me mailing half of Dad to you?"). Mom is a trooper and said yes, but what a weird ask.
Anyway, I'm nattering on. I'm doing okay overall. Just feeling tired and wishing I'd had at least a little time during this break to actually relax. But that will come. ND and I scheduled a trip to Ireland in June after the celebration and family stuff in New England, which will be wonderful. We have spent a lot of time in NI, but we've never explored the majority of the Republic. We will be road-tripping around the west coast a bit (Limerick, Killarney, Galway) before driving back to NI to spend time with our beloved family there. The other thing I'm very excited about is our plan for Christmas. We've been going to Florida to spend time with my dad every year for more than a decade, so ND urged me to pick something different and fun to do to take my mind off the inevitable sadness. After some research and an informal FB poll, we decided on Edinburgh from Dec. 27-Jan. 3. I've never been, and ND hasn't been there since he was a teenager. We will be exploring Edinburgh's festive Christmas market and winter festivals and then celebrating Hogmanay in their incredible street festival. How did I never know about Hogmanay?? Google it to learn more and see the details of the Edinburgh celebration. What a hoot!
So some lovely things to look forward to amid the sad and stressful. And I'm always grateful for friends and community.