Saturday, April 30, 2011

sipping with the enemy

Sigh. An act of simple self-indulgence can be such a complicated thing.

Unlike Dr. Horrible, I never set out to join the Evil League of Evil, it just sort of happened.

Part 1 went like this:

Last week we (me, Jeff, Mom,) spent four nights at the Good Medicine Lodge in Whitefish, Montana. It was charming, comfortable, friendly, and had cookies available at all times. But not just cookies. There, on the sideboard where one could indulge in a variety of teas and raw veggies, was a nifty little thing called a Nespresso, which—using capsules resembling mini versions of Keurig cups, or maybe chocolate covered cherries—would make a quick and delicious cup of espresso or lungo right on demand. And in any of several varieties.

Now I have never coveted a K-cup machine more than a little bit. I’ve enjoyed them at Helen’s house in New York, and appreciate the convenience in a household where morning coffee is not a regularly-brewed feature, but I remained happy to grind my beans and achieve coffee happiness the old-fashioned (or at least older-fashioned) way.

But these Nespresso shots...they were kind of special. Furthermore, it seemed a fun and lovely way to offer Jeff an evening cup of decaf without a major production.

So, Part 2 went like this: After duly researching such units, reading consumer reviews, and exploring alternatives, I concluded that the particular brand—Nespresso—would be the thing. I ordered one. From Williams-Sonoma, along with a frothinator (or whatever those things are called,) then signed up for my first batch of capsules from the Nespresso web-order site, placing special emphasis on fair-trade friendly varieties.

Part 3: Having placed the order yesterday, today I found myself steering Jeff around the Annapolis Towne Center as an after lunch walking opportunity. We detoured into Sur la Table, a too-cute kitchen boutique. Surprise—today they had a Nespresso operative...I mean representative...right on hand in the store, demonstrating the thing’s use, and answering my question about making americano with a Nespresso Pixie model. (This part has nothing to do with me joining the ELE, and would be cut if I were a good editor. But I’m not cutting it, because the encounter had about it that serendipitous sense of synchronicity which I so like.)

Part 4: I started thinking about how the Nestlé corporation was, as long back as the 70s, the subject of much controversy and censure due to the means by which they distributed their baby formulas in third-world country such that a dependence resulted where a dependence on formula couldn’t be afforded. (I don’t think a dependence on formula is ever a wise idea, even when it can be afforded, as I’m a strong advocate of “breast is best,” except in cases where there is no choice. But this is an aside.)

I have never since been a fan of Nestlé, and this old prejudice gave me pause when it came time to consider a Nespresso, but I really assumed—I really did—that the joint pressures of the WHO, public derision, and the money choice of better P.R. would have worked to steer Nestlé away from such deplorable behavior...especially given that the behavior went back, as I said, to the 70s.

But I didn’t Google it all up until after ordering my own Pixie, in electric blue. And here’s what I found out: As recently as ’07, The Guardian was still highlighting Nestlé's aggressive marketing in Bangladesh, re baby formula. There’s a boycott in Brazil pertaining to Nestlé extracting water from a sensitive aquifer. There are suspected labor rights violations by Nestlé in the Philippines. So, despite its dutiful march toward adding fair-trade varieties to its coffee line-up the Nestlé Corporation—though headquartered in neutral Switzerland—would, if it were a character in Dungeons and Dragons, possibly be classified not as neutral, but maybe as lawful evil. They certainly seem to dance mighty close to the line.

Which leads me back to me. I was always a determinedly neutral character when I played D&D, as I didn’t wish to be bound by any particular rules or loyalties unless they meant something to me. Which is also how I tend to play life. But I still suppose that each time I pull a tasty coffee from my soon to arrive gizmo, I am going to relive, in my head, the line from Jellicle Cats which asks “Have you been an alumnus of Heaven and Hell?”

So, yes. I’m getting one, and I hope I’ll enjoy it. But I won’t push the beasties or do any advertising on behalf of Nestlé. (Apart from this one post in which I confess to my conflicted nature.) I am merely presenting the truth about my real, unvarnished, imperfect self. I will also offer a link to this blog, called PhD in Parenting, for anyone who wishes to know more about Nestlé.

PhD in Parenting

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Winding down...

Next time I come to Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, I will stay at the Flamingo Motel.

Frankly, I do not have any immediate plans though. I could easily love the Northwest, I think...(I don’t know...I’d have to try a whole winter before saying for sure...)but I cannot think of any logical reason I’ll be back soon. Still, the Flamingo Motel it would be. I almost booked it for tonight’s pre-flight-home stay. Excellently reviewed, refurbished 50s motor lodge in the heart of downtown, with great walk-to-dinner potential. But I was thinking we’d barely have time to do more than eat and sleep, so I stuck with the known quantity, and we’re here at the Holiday Inn Express. And a very nice HIE it is--the “guest services manager” is a Weimeraner named Dodger, and Jeff and I actually got 20 minutes in on exercise equipment for the only time this trip. But still...you can’t beat local color, unless it’s horrible, and the Flamingo looks good.

Deploying all my electronic oracles (iPhone Yelp App, Googlemaps,) I found us a cute bistro where we could get a light dinner, as I am still trying to digest the past week of food with limited success. (Nothing wrong with the food, mind, it’s me and travel.) Then, with the drizzle abating somewhat, we took a drive along the Coeur d’Alene lakefront, and that was a good move.

There’s almost nothing as useless as seeing nothing of a new town but the Holiday Inn Express just off highway exit 11, and I had no clue, really, what C d’A was like at all. It’s quite interesting, but barely urban. There’s lake, then an intriguing architectural assortment of rich-people houses, then a couple streets of classic Northwest mining town, then batches of smaller bungalows, and then the usual sprawl of shopping, services, and hotels for people who are not brave enough to book the Flamingo the first time.

As for a second time...hmm. I have been thinking of this trip as evaluative as well as diversionary. How would Jeff do? Will I ever choose anything but car travel again? Tentative answer: Not without lots of careful thought. Even the duration--a week--seems to contribute to his level of tiredness and functional downshifts, but we’ve managed well enough.

I’d say the trickiest part was lurching through five Empire Builder cars for each of the four times we took meals in the dining car. It got so that every time the train stopped at a station--if we were even close to a mealtime, we’d try to cover at least half the ground with the train not moving. Jeff is slow and not well balanced.

Still, he remains generally remarkably cooperative and ready to go with the program even when he has no idea what the program is. At about the border between Montana and Idaho, as we headed west from Whitefish, Jeff leaned forward a bit from the backseat of the rented Chevy Traverse and said “Are we on Amtrak?” It’s moments like that that make me realize just how gracefully he manages utter cluelessness.

In theory we will be home tomorrow night. Delta has changed the departure time of our connecting flight in Minneapolis twice since I booked it in January, each time narrowing our layover. According to our current itinerary, there are 34 minutes between our first and second flights, and the first has a 50% on-time rating. But Expedia says Delta says that is acceptable. I will appraise them of our medical situation--inability to hustle--when we check in to our first flight, to put Delta on notice that if they don’t hold the second gate open for us long enough they’re going to be sending us home on Thursday.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Things I can't help but enjoy:

The bathroom faucet in our room at the Good Medicine Lodge, Whitefish. It’s a spillover design. Essentially, it’s designed such that the top front quarter of the spout is cut away, making you think you’ve activated an aqueduct every time you run water.

The espresso machine. It operates very much like a Keurig coffee dispenser, except that the pods are smaller (as, of course, are the cups.) We made decaffeinated “Intenso” after dinner tonight, and it had that frothy stuff on top, like Americanos from Caffe Nero in London. I will not buy such a machine. I would use it too much.

Using (successfully) the Jedi Mind Trick on speed cops in Columbia Falls, MT. You don’t want to give us a ticket. You just pulled us over to wish us a beautiful day.

Queen size beds. We fit. I don’t have elbows in my face. Thank goodness I’m getting one soon.

The word “kla-how-yah.” It was chiseled into the concrete at the back entrance to the (closed for the season) Lake MacDonald Lodge in Glacier National Park. It’s a greeting comparable to “hello” in the pidgin language of Chinook Jargon.

Walking.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Food and Being Food.

6 am. I just got up to the gentle tinkling of my iPhone alarm. I am not interested in any 2-hour time shift wake-up headaches and, these days, I invariably am too tired to write at night. “These days” meaning in general, not this trip. I had a thought about this last night--while I may not feel as though caregiving is an exhausting treadmill (so far,) I am sure that being in constant charge of someone else who can neither put his own coat on nor find the bathroom himself is having the same effect as being the mother of toddlers. At night, your brain just says “no.”

On the Empire Builder, Mom (who has taken cruises of many stripes,) likened the cabin and dining arrangements to shipboard. While Amtrak does not feed you as bodaciously as a Viking cruiseliner, you never feel--when the next meal time arrives--that you’ve done much to burn off the last fueling. As a result we got to Whitefish well primed for a bed & breakfast experience of the bountiful food sort.

Woody and Betsy, who run the Good Medicine Lodge, believe in breakfast. Yesterday’s offering included individual asparagus quiches, slices of scone, a commodious dish of mixed berries, a sideboard loaded with cereals, juices, milks (including soy,) and an assortment of toastable breads with jams. Plus coffee. There is always espresso, tea and cookies on offer all day. They invite you to sample wine and cheese at 4 if you’re around, and yesterday afternoon set out a platter of raw veggies with dressing.

As it is the lowest of low-season in Montana’s Flathead Valley (skiing is over, summer fun at least a month away,) we are the only guests for now, and we’re feeling a little bad that our food intake capacity is so relatively minimal.

Today we will be exploring Glacier National Park, and--today being Easter, when many stores close--we’ve packed our plentiful dinner leftovers from McGarry’s Roadhouse (across the street,) and will be having cold noodles, wokked veggies, and fish for lunch. Which I hope will not be in the car. Mom is worried about mountain lions.

Yesterday, in the Whitefish train depot’s “Stumptown Museum,” Walter, the venerable museum volunteer who tottered around illuminating various highlights for us, mentioned (after pointing out the taxidermied large cat,) that such felines were more dangerous to hikers than bears. (I know that, being much familiar with goings on in the Boulder area where Jeff’s brother lived for years,) but I am not concerned that we will be jumped by a lion if we stick to the more populous easy circuits, especially in a group of three. I hope that since it is “National Park Day,” or something, and entry is free, that there will be enough other visitors for her not to feel like a strolling kebab.

At the museum, it slipped that yesterday was Walter’s birthday (something, he said, like 21 x 4.) Mom made us sing happy birthday to him. This is so typically Gale, but I’ve learned that resistance is futile and went along.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

The longest Empire I've ever chugged across...

I am in the “jump-seat” in our cabin on the Empire Builder. Jeff is in bed, which means he is 12 inches away. This afternoon we negotiated on how many times he may cause me to wake up tonight. I suggested 2. He thought 3. “Done,” I said. Any number of “wake Emily ups” that exceed the number 3, is the number at which I may refuse and say “No. Back to bed. As per agreement.” Let’s see how that goes.

Mom and I have a thing we say, and this started at least in the declining years of my dad, who died of Parkinson’s in ’09. At a certain point of night, his “carriage turned back into a pumpkin.” This is the point at which function and mental clarity become dicey at best. With our 20 or so “wake Emily ups” last night on the Cardinal, Jeff’s pretty much been a pumpkin all day. This means that we cannot move, without firm hands-on guidance, about the train at all. If we are not holding hands as I lead the lurching way through the 75 or so cars between our caboose sleeping car and the dining car, he will become confused by every human head he sees, no matter the gender or hair color, and freeze in perplexity. (It’s 2 coach cars, then the observation car, then two more coach cars, then the dining car. Ok, so I hyperbolized by 70. These are long cars.)

I am pleased to say, though, that The Empire Builder has reclaimed and possibly exceeded the level of service we experienced on Amtrak in October, and which I found lacking on the Cardinal. Stands to reason, I guess, for a line that is named after men who routinely self-congratulated as they wiped out entire civilizations on their way to conquer the American West. We were even served dinner on “china” aka Corelle. And the food was several cuts above. Still leaving me to wonder just how Amtrak determines which routes get short shrift and which are worthy.

Nonetheless, Mom and I have, we believe, managed to get on the blacklist of dining car powers-that-be on both legs of our trip. On the Cardinal, we surmised that the laggardly speed at which we were served breakfast was due to our not tipping the dining car lady to her liking. We did not realize she took orders, microwaved, AND served, is the thing, and we made up for it by tipping well at breakfast, even after she punished us. Here, on the Empire Builder, we’ve run all sorts of wrong ways with Fran from the dining car. First, after showering Jeff in the more commodious downstairs shower room, we emerged as I was giving Jeff the sort of clearly articulated directions he needs (“Jeff, we are going this way,”) only to notice that Fran was making an early dinner announcement on a microphone right outside in the corridor. She stopped, mid-sentence, and stared at me while I hastily hushed myself. Mom, who was upstairs, says she didn’t hear me over the P.A. system, but Fran is not to be trifled with. Our dinner reservation was for 6:30. Having to traverse half the length of Wisconsin to get to the dining car, we left early to wait halfway in the observation car. (Here’s the Amtrak rule: Don’t come to the dining car until they invite your reservation time via P.A.) Here’s the problem: Announcements were apparently not getting to the observation car so when Mom finally, at almost 7, went to check to see whether we’d missed our call, Fran told her in no uncertain terms that 6:30 had been called “3 times.” Shortly thereafter, Fran called the 7:00 people, admonishing a colleague to repeat the announcement in the observation car because “people are claiming they’re not hearing the announcements.” Fran must not have gotten to our waiter, because he was nice to us. We hope we have paid our dues now, and will be served breakfast. (below: Gale and Jeff befriend a frisbee player in Chicago.)


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Cardinal does not rule.

Leg #1 (Washington Union Station to Chicago,) began with me taking pains to get us on the road early enough in the morning that we’d have at least 2 options for commuter trains from Baltimore to D.C. That worry in the bag, it was easy to relax at Union Station. Now we’re aboard the Amtrak Cardinal, which cuts a clockwise arc as it swings us south a bit en route to Chicago.

The Cardinal employs an older car model--a Viewliner--where I feel a bit more squished for space than on the Superliners with which I’m familiar. I am wondering how Amtrak divvies up the relative service levels of their cross-country routes...who gets the newer digs, an observation car, and helpful route maps in every cabin, and why are others a bit on the cut-rate side?

Nevermind. There are some lovely backyards in mid-Virginia, and plenty of debris piles as well. We’re glad to see it all. Now, my intention is to be doing my Japanese workbook. Luckily I brought a pencil so Mom can do her crossword puzzle. Between our cabins (A&B) is a pocket door which the cabin attendant, Shawna, had now unlocked 3 times for us, as it likes to slide shut from the rocking of the train. Presently, it is blocked with Mom’s suitcase. (photo: Mom, through the opened door between cabins.)

I wondered aloud to Mom whether this was a bit of a silly trip to be taking her on. She says of course not. She’s a trooper. Jeff, meanwhile, is wondering if it’s time for a Chardonnay yet. Evidently, not-reading Warren Buffett and the Interpretation of Financial Statements is not sufficiently riveting. Yes, I’m sure wine will be available with dinner unless wine doesn’t make the Cardinal’s somewhat stripped-down amenity cut.

Thursday observations: On the Cardinal Viewliner, dining car table service can be a bit sluggish. Breakfast, to be served to any comer from the room or roomette section of the train, appears to be managed by one young lady doing the order taking, cooking, and serving. We had nowhere to go, fortunately, and watched Indiana farms roll by while our tummies rumbled and breakfast, in spare form, finally came. Take home point: Had the Amtrak Cardinal been my first cross-country train venture, I would not have been quite as enthusiastic to try again. Next up: The Empire Builder. I’m banking on the 2/3 chance that it will remind me more of October’s experience.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Is Emily crazy? Stay tuned...

This could be it, Ladies and Gentlemen. The trip to determine whether we are henceforth constrained to car travel. Since the starboard wheel of my old roll-aboard cracked like a ripe walnut on the outbound leg of our southwest trip in October, I researched a bit, and purchased an Eagle Creek replacement. I am sorry to report that it devotes a wee too much real estate to a slide-in spot for a laptop, sacrificing (it seems) a bit of clothing square footage. If I try again, I will surely want to examine the suitcase options in person (as much as I love Amazon,) but for now Eagle Creek will have to do, stuffed to the zippers though it is. (I even used


pack-it system thingies, dang-it--those zipped mesh pouches meant to magically make all your stuff fit. I’m deeply disappointed.)

In addition to two zaftig roll-aboards, we will be toting a hefty backpack full of travel docs, books, my little Mac, and overflow. This brings us to the logistical dilemma which will be either resolved or muddled through tomorrow, in the trenches. Can Jeff still pull a roll-aboard without giving every passer-by a flat tire? Or should I pull both, and saddle Jeff with the backpack? Which hand will I use to guide Jeff lest there are other women with similar hair about? A foot? A leash? And can we get up the train’s little narrow stairway?

Weird trip it will be. Why are we going to Whitefish, Montana anyway? What is in Whitefish in April? (answer: possibly nothing.) So, I am bearing a bit of an onus. It is the onus called--”I picked this trip because we couldn’t find anything else, but Mom’s accustomed to real trips, so all the weirdness of this quirky adventure will rest squarely on my unremarkable shoulders.” That is a long name for an onus. But, I hope, we will not have long distances over which we must tote our collection of baggage.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

More notes from the world of research protocols...

Yesterday was about the closest I’ve come to giving myself a sharp talking-to about “dragging” Jeff into clinical research. I know, I put stupid quote marks on the word dragging. Because I can’t decide if it applies. I do not force, neither do I coerce, arm-twist, or hornswaggle him into participating. BUT, I do profoundly understand at this time that between the two of us, I do the thinking. If I think something is a good idea, I say so and he agrees. Likewise, for bad ideas. So, when it comes to anything that may have uncomfortable aspects, I have to do two things: Explain, such that he understands and can assent. And measure my grasp of his nature (altruistic) and current ability to tolerate bothersome procedures against what is likely to occur.

Because, truthfully, I don’t believe there are too many people with AD-like processes going on in their brains who are completely capable of making these decisions for themselves. Which leaves me to bear the responsibility if a day feels a bit too arduous. Yesterday at NIH skated pretty close to the too-arduous line.

I like NIH, as a site for research participation. As I’ve mentioned, the people are nice. They’re also very casual. About half of everyone has jeans under his or her lab-coat. The others wear scrubs. Our main doc-in-charge was off for the day (as were 3/4 of the other folks you’d normally see milling about. Friday may just not be a big day for government work. Even the Au Bon Pain had let their stock dwindle in anticipation.) Instead, we had a Nurse-Practitioner who introduced herself as Dr. Hyphenated-LastName (which I forget in its entirety.) “Were we expecting an NP?” I asked. “Oh,” replied Dr. N-P, “I have about ten degrees, including a doctorate.”

She also was sporting NIH denim-professional, and possibly had not combed her hair in two and a half days. Prior to the prep process, she asked Jeff if he had any questions. True to form, he replied, “What is the meaning of life?” “42,” I said, “You already know that.” But Dr. N-P had another lengthy response which led me to fear a full-gospel evangelization was about to occur. I don’t think she understood that Jeff was being silly. She, fortunately, stopped short of the religion-specific details of the meaning of life, but I sensed it was difficult for her.

But, Dr. N-P knew her way around a PET scanner, and that’s what really mattered. Actually, so did the other 5 or 6 people who were in attendance with varying degrees of attentiveness. This was the most well-attended PET scan I’ve ever seen. Actually, it’s the only PET scan I’ve ever seen, as Jeff’s diagnostic one, in ’07, had me in the waiting room. Not so at NIH. I was free to expose myself to radiation, so long as I knew what I was doing.

The things which added up to me second-guessing myself were basically these two: For this inflammation-measuring PET scan, an arterial line was required. An arterial line is inserted in (typically) the non-dominant wrist, and requires a local anaesthetic, plus a bit of immobilization, courtesy of a splint-like board. This was not sufficient to keep him from risking dislocation of the stop-cocks by waving his arm about, which meant that--at pre-scan bathroom time--I needed to keep BOTH arms (the other had the regular IV) out of trouble while dealing with all the jeans-zipper and undies concerns myself.

I would say, though, that the worst of it was 90 minutes of having to keep still in the scanner. That’s a long time for someone who forgets from one minute to the next that he’s not supposed to move his head. To help with this, a plasterish sort of mask is employed, as a reminder not to jerk about if you wake up from a doze, mid-scan. I still had to remind him. Many times. At 30 minutes left, I started an encouraging countdown, and (thankfully) we made it.

We will be returning in May for an MRI. I’m pretty sure the MRI is easier. At that appointment, we will also consider the option of another PET study which does not involve an arterial line. Let’s see how it goes.

Here’s the thing that always happens though--Jeff does not complain. He does not mind needles. He does not freak out. And--once they bring up the hockey-puck cheese pizza with green salad and two orange juices in tiny cups--he’s as happy as can be, and completely free of the sense that he’s been put through the wringer. So I will ponder. Research is valuable, and we’re doing what we can.

Friday, April 08, 2011

cogging the wheel...

Tuesday: Were we in Nevada? No desert to be seen. Must not have been Area 54. Perhaps it was Area 45. Aka NIH, or the National Institutes of Health.

Yes, we have once again plunged brain first into the sea of Clinical Research, where parking is validated and all the anglers wear white coats. As per the emailed instructions, I ferried us to the West (I think, or was it North...I think they like to disorient you) entrance on Cedar Lane, and we proceeded through the 12 steps of decontamination.

Well, we were thoroughly inspected, at least. You drive up to and almost over 3 orange cones, as gestured. You forget how to pop your trunk, thinking he meant “hood,” and instead get out and open the back hatch manually. While the guy with the funny wand gives your car the once over, you enter the gatehouse, wait for the lady to get off the phone, then present i.d.s for her scrutiny. Then they give you a yellow dashboard seal of approval paper, remove the orange cones, and dispatch you to the Parking Garage of  Never-Bring-a-Hummer-Here. Where there are no available spaces, despite the fact that you even threaded your car along the entire golf-cart width circuit without a scratch. You still have to turn your keys over to the guy with the impossible accent so he can double park you. You think. He might have said “I get good price. We give you pretty bicycle after.” But you couldn’t understand him, so you take your claim ticket and head through the double doors. At which point you switch back, narratively speaking, to the first person.

The thing is, everyone at NIH is nice. I don’t know why this is. I’m used to encountering folks who barely tolerate their jobs, no matter where I go, but at NIH they apparently take their hospitality training directly from Minnie Mouse. We arrived with 30 minutes to spare before we were due at admissions, and knowing our first day of rigmarole would be lengthy and arduous, sought a snack. So I stared at the “You Are Here” chart by the elevator, scanning for a coffeeshop. Not on there. At this point, very nice person #1 asked if we need help, and pointed us in the direction of the atrium wherein one may find an Au Bon Pain outpost. Hooray! Coffee! Tea! Cinnamon rolls! And an architecturally intriguing space in which to consume them.

At the appointed time, we presented ourselves at admissions where we were given a friendly greeting, a “welcome packet,” and a 45 minute wait time. The packet contained phone numbers and a booklet detailing the whats and wheres of being an in or outpatient at NIH. The waiting room contained people, whom I tried not to examine too obviously while secretly wondering what studies they were all into. Meanwhile, very nice person #2, who was something along the lines of “patient hospitality coordinator” checked that all was peachy with us, and it more or less was, give or take 45 minutes.

When our name came up, very nice person #3 checked us in, and we were escorted upstairs by the young lady who, evidently, administratively assists the physician in charge of our study. From here on in, things were pretty familiar. The doc explained the study, gave Jeff a check-over including the usual things like “draw these 2 interlocking pentagons” (no way,) “spell WORLD forward and backward” (half-way,) and “remember the words ‘apple,’ ‘penny,’ and ‘racecar.’” (2/3 of the way...not bad.)

This was only interrupted by very nice people #4 and #5, in the guise of patient advocates, whose job was to make sure we hadn’t felt coerced by our referring physician, and also to ascertain whether I was using Jeff as my entry in the Science Fair, but they apparently bought that since I’m only studying Japanese right now he was with me at NIH as a willing and semi-lucid participant. So we passed. And signed some papers that allowed me to sign all the rest of the papers.

Several bouts of poking, prodding, and EKGing later, Jeff was clearly pretty exhausted and our day at NIH was nearly concluded. Our little admin assistant showed us to the atrium alcove where we would obtain our “Extended Visitor badges” with photos (lordy, mine is bad,) and bade us farewell.

We are scheduled to return next week for the PET scan which will measure brain inflammation. Our new badges will let us bypass car inspection, but not--I suspect--the parking conundrum. This depends, of course, on whether the government’s playground standoff means everyone scoops up his marbles and takes them home for the week, or whether services including NIH will carry on as normal.

It will be shorter, and less tiring for Jeff. This time, I rewarded us with a pizza at Matchbox Bistro in Rockville, complete with beer in goblets. That helped a lot. Here’s how I can tell. After our early dinner, we got into the car. “Pleasant day,” Jeff remarked, as we settle in. I chuckled. “What did we do?” “Had food, took a nice ride,” he said.

Was it all gone? The atrium, the nice people, the mental calisthenics, the needles,  the paper signing? Well, for that moment a good feeling in the tummy was all that counted.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Sand, ethernet and wormhole socks

When Apple designed the 11" MacBook Air, they had to leave some stuff out to make it so slim and light. One thing they left out was an ethernet port. When I packed our bags for a short trip to North Carolina I had, likewise, to leave some stuff out in the interest of space conservation.

But I didn't have to leave out the dinky little pigtail of an adapter that converts a USB port into an ethernet port. I just forgot to bring it.

Here in Gillespie Cottage things are not so high-tech, and there is no wifi. Net access by wire only, thanks. So I'm about kicking myself. Mom's li'l Toshiba is here, and available mostly, but you know how I like my own stuff. Well, if you didn't, you do now. I'm blogging by iPhone. It's a pill.

Among the tasks: We've got some lattice to reattach to the deck railing to keep inquisitive small-fry contained. A bedspread to replace. (K-Mart doesn't sell bedspreads. What's up with that?) And about 6" of sand on the parking pad under the house that we'll have to call the Bobcat man to clean up. Except for the not-inconsequential portion our shoes will track into the car.

Meanwhile, we seem to have brought along a sneaky sock. It's Jeff's sock. This morning, when he went to put his shoes on before breakfast at the Holiday Inn Select, one sock had up and disappeared. So I got him out another pair. We ate. Mom and the waitress became fast friends as usual. Then, 20 feet into the lobby, the waitress charged after us with a left-behind object. It was Jeff's dirty sock. I cannot imagine from which part of his anatomy it must have tumbled, and I was a bit abashed to have left behind a crumpled sock, of all things. Well, maybe false teeth would be worse.

Anyway, we pressed on and got to Nags Head late morning by which time I'd noticed that Jeff had pretty well smudged his jacket and pants with pasty unidentified substances, so I got him a fresh outfit and threw the dirties in the wash. Including the errant dirty sock and its more well-behaved partner.

When I fished everything out of the dryer, the bad sock had once again vamoosed. Until afternoon errand time when I threaded Jeff into his clean jacket only to discover a sock dangling saucily from the cuff. I'm not sure where it had been planning to jump out--probably while we were eating dinner at the Outer Banks stalwart, Owens' Restaurant.

But I caught it. Who knows what that sock will try tomorrow? Next trip, I bring my ethernet port adapter for sure, but screen socks for precociousness.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

and tomorrow...room coffee from a filter pack!

Not a bad drive from Severna Park to Norfolk this afternoon. People don’t seem to do much on a Sunday, apart from breakfasting at Garry’s Grill. (Which thwarted my morning spontaneous plan. With several folks hanging out the vestibule door at Garry’s around 10am, Jeff and I went home and settled for frozen flatbread vegan pizza. Good choice.)

But traffic was light down the eastern shores of Maryland and Virginia, and we made good time. Though initially aiming for The Great Machipongo Clam Shack in Nassawadox, Mom and I decided that 4pm was too early for dinner, so we pushed on to Cape Charles for salmon-topped salads at Kelly’s Gingernut Pub, where the waiter--for some reason--showed us the propane torch they use to melt the sugar on the top of the crême brulée.

Now we’re nestled into the Holiday Inn Select, Norfolk, where I’m wondering a few things. 1) Did they really wash the glasses before they put those little paper caps on top of them? 2) Not sure about one of the towels either. 3) Can other people stand compact fluorescent bulbs, or am I an oddity in finding the light they cast best suited for a morgue? 4) Am I going to be absurdly tired at 7pm for the rest of my life, or is it just a caregiver rhythm? And 5) Why did I bring a Sundance Catalog? Oh, I know. Because I knew I’d be too tired to do anything more intellectually challenging than admire jewelry I will not buy on the principle that I could probably get something more unique, that is not sold by Robert Redford, from Etsy.

But here we are. Mom is across the hall. The minute we walked into our room Jeff said, somewhat conspiratorially, “I know--why don’t we go home and use the bathroom.” “Because we’re in Norfolk,” I replied. “Home’s a little too far.” “How did I miss that?” he said.

So here we are. Tomorrow, the cottage in Nags Head for some inventory and repairs.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

ouch parking.

In America, we can’t really fit our cars into our cities. I mean, for a country that opted for extensive interstates over a truly useful public transportation system, we should at least be able to park. But sometimes we can’t.

I’m certain that this is at least half of why people here like suburbs. Because you can park. You can park at your house. You can (except during the 4-5 weeks surrounding Christmas) park at shopping venues, or at the doctor’s office.

Actually, I’m going to take back that part about the doctor’s office. Gradually, over the past decade and a half, most of our docs (whatever their specialty) have moved to the medical complex surrounding the local hospital, and you do have to allow an extra 15 minutes for one of those vertigo-inducing spiral climbs through a parking garage in order to reach one of the 2.5 remaining spots in the open air at the very top.

But the real fun comes when we either must drive or wish to drive ourselves into Baltimore, Annapolis, or Washington D.C. Each of which exemplifies the practical dissonance created when children of Eisenhower’s interstate system attempt to utilize colonial era towns. It’s like trying to link Newtonian mechanics to quantum theory. It doesn’t compute, and the String theory of transportation is decades from perfection.

Did I mention the time, years ago, that Jeff and I stopped in Frederick, MD in the rain and--anxious to avoid an excessive wetting--we scrounged the crevices of our minivan for any coins our children might have tossed about? We needed to feed the meter you see, but there was nothing to be found but a Chuck E Cheese token. Don’t tell anyone, but we discovered that (at least in about 1995) Frederick, Maryland parking meters accepted Chuck E Cheese tokens. Yes, apparently I have mentioned this before.

The thing is, having gobs of coins on hand for meters just rarely happens in 2011, and at least municipalities are trying to adapt. I kind of like the system where you go to one of those “Pay Here” automatons, feed it a credit card, and take the receipt it spits out to place on your dashboard. At least I like it if the boxes aren’t all broken.

Yesterday we encountered something new. Well, at least new to me. We were headed into D.C. for Jeff’s neurology appointment, about to exhaust every one of the 105 minutes I’d allotted to get there. I decided not to even try the parking garage at Georgetown University Hospital. It fills by 10 am, but you don’t know until you’ve reached the 7th level below the river Styx. So I went for neighborhood parallel parking and--amazingly--nabbed one right away. But I had only 2 quarters. Then I noticed the ad, right on the meter: Call a certain number from your mobile phone and pay by credit card! The trouble was, I had 4 minutes until appointment time, and about 37 numbers to input in order to give the dial-a-robot the license plate number, my phone number, my credit card number, and probably a couple other vitals which have slipped my mind in the angst. And then, in attempting to light my iPhone screen back up as it helpfully tried to spare its battery power, I hit enough erroneous keys that the whole process defaulted me to a human operator who had to talk me through the entire process again. So that was fun.

But we got inside where Dr. Turner confirmed that Jeff’s version of Alzheimer’s is in fact Posterior Cortical Atrophy. And, after discerning that Jeff could not put his right thumb on his left ear, or do anything else that involved crossing his midline, the doc exacted reassurance from me that Jeff no longer drives. No, I said. That was an easy call I made several years ago. Now all the parking fun is mine and mine alone.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

They had other skills.


Over the years, among the things I’ve noticed about my Gillespie ancestors of the last century or so is that they were crappy carpenters.

The evidence is in a goodly number of pieces of furniture which have been handed down through four or five generations. Today, it was a flourish of trim from the antique bed that used to be my grandmother’s, and before that belonged to my father’s uncle and so on. I don’t know which of my forebears attempted to fasten this chunk of wood, which is roughly the size of a cutting board (if a cutting board had two auxiliary pieces of trim fastened to it) back to the bed frame when it cracked clean off, but I can’t believe that even in 1890, or whenever, they didn’t have something better than a couple of half-penny nails and a messy squirt of Elmer’s glue.

To be fair, the fact that I am only compelled to re-fix it now--in 2011--suggests a repair that at least hung in there a bit, but visually the effort was pretty slipshod. Sometime this week or so, I will employ some wood glue and a long clamp, and see if we can’t do it right this time. Fortunately, I have a couple of genes from the Branches--my mother’s side of the family--where carpentry was heard of and skillfully practiced.

Now that I think of it, I’m pretty sure my grandmother and great-grandmother (Gillespie side) made a regular habit of knocking figurines and such off their perches, then cobbling the heads back on with too much glue. Come to think of it further, despite my slightly better grasp of joinery, I didn’t escape that legacy.

One of the wedding presents Jeff and I received in 1984 was a lamp with a capiz shell shade--one of those top heavy things, where the translucent shell panels are held together in a grid of flexible metal. Well, we each did our share and--all in all--we probably tripped over that thing’s electrical cord 5 times before finally declaring the lampshade an irretrievable loss. Also, I clearly remember the time in my teens that I walked by my Mom’s dining room table, snagged the veneer with the hammer loop on my overalls, and ripped off a 1” x 3” strip. I don’t remember who glued it back on, but I’m pretty sure it was not my grandmother Gillespie.

Friday, March 11, 2011

smushed things, large and small

It is day 12 of waiting for the body shop to complete reconstructive surgery on my car. 3 weeks ago, during a day of high winds, the resident tulip poplars hurled a few of their unwanted branches at the Earth, a sizable one of which smashed my hood, windshield and roof rack, in addition to creating several extra minor dings. (Its final flourish was to punch a hole in the garage door.) Luckily, as a no-fault event (unless you find accountability in anyone parking a car in a neighborhood where the trees are older than the oldest humans,) the repairs are covered by insurance, and I will suffer little out of pocket. Furthermore I have, for the time being, use of the SUV which used to belong to my dad, and which my mom has retained for purposes of traction during episodes of Maryland “wintry mix.”

So I don’t, frankly, have much to complain about, and today’s news photos of cars and houses swept into Godzilla-sized eddies in northeastern Japan do tend to put my bashed Subaru into perspective.

Still, I will be happy to have my car back. For one thing, I will get a break from buckling and unbuckling Jeff every time he takes the passenger seat, and reaching across to open the door for him when we stop. (The handle being trickily located under the armrest, and less intuitive than average. Not that intuition helps in our case.)

In the interest of gumming things up a little more, the wiper motor on Becca’s car decided now would be a good time to go wonky, so that we must now hope that the rain which seeped into the basement this week, and turned our yard into the swamp thing is done deluging for at least a few more days.

For now, I am sitting. I’ve got Japanese homework on my left, and The Power of Passive Investing by Richard Ferri on my right. A hefty cat who would prefer to be on my torso is settling for occupying my feet, and I’ve finished my latest Alzheimer blog for The Fisher Center. Plus, I had tea.

Oh, and as an extra bonus, Becca and I got in a trip to Whole Foods Market while Jeff accompanied his sister on a visit. Which means I got to skip this scenario I wrote up a couple days ago, which describes a typical visit to buy groceries:

We don’t move through crowds well.

For some reason, which I can’t quite piece together now, we ended up in Whole Foods on Saturday last week. Luckily only for an item or two, but--even for a couple targeted strikes--it’s not the best plan.

Lately I find myself, more often than not, with one hand grasping Jeff’s arm as we shop. It’s a bit like shopping while pushing an upright vacuum and a shopping cart. What happens if I let go is he stops. Well, some of the time. The other thing he’ll do is fixate on someone...almost anyone, really...and the minute that person veers off, Jeff is right behind him or her. So that’s why I hang on.

It poses a problem when aisles get tight. I don’t think other people understand why we have to be a double-wide trailer. Sometimes it’s not until you can no longer behave “normally” that you start to observe what normal behavior is. In crowds, it is (for one thing) this: A herd of humans with normal processing skills move, when necessary, like a school of fish. When they approach a constriction through which passing in a wider-than-single-file format would violate cultural space bubbles, they instinctively break formation and goosh through before re-grouping. Jeff can’t, so when a passage will only allow for one I find that I must thread him through first, while holding an elbow, then follow. It’s more awkward than it sounds.


Indeed. I’m going to study some vocab now, so I can beam encouragement toward the people of Japan, and think a couple thoughts that--if they’re tuned in telepathically--they might understand.

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

season of play


Back when I began spawning small humans, we purchased a playpen. (That's Jeff and Rachel, circa 1987.) Ahem...a playyard. Because that’s what manufacturers had begun calling them by the enlightened 1980s. (Well, maybe other people had trouble penning their small-fry, but I didn’t, so I didn’t ever keep with the times and break the habit of calling it a playpen.)

Not that my babies were ever content to while away more than a few minutes at a time in an enclosure full of the most tempting diversions you could scrounge up to buy yourself a moment, but I did employ the thing. And the whole notion popped back to mind when, recently, I suddenly visualized myself as, once again, the guardian of a playpen.

In the visual analogy that sprang uninvited into my cranium, my house is the playpen. My Soobie Outback is our stroller, and Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, or The Fresh Market (plus a half dozen recurring lunch venues) are our outings in the park.

I used to imagine that if I were imprisoned for some reason, I would find a way to take advantage of it. (this is, of course, assuming a low-intensity form of incarceration, in which I had access to books and other learning materials.) Essentially now this is what I am doing. I am determined to stay active, body and mind, but I think the playpen metaphor does a better job at capturing the nature of our day to day existence, apart from the fact that the toddler is winding down, not up.

Sometimes I think I should be feeling pretty mellow because--in many respects--this is a fairly easy job. We have not reached the levels of stress that dog many of my cohorts in caregiving whose AD spouses are incontinent and/or belligerent. (hoping we can skip the latter, the former will be inevitable, eventually.) We are comfortable and well-fed. I deal with deteriorating building infrastructure as it arises, and rarely go berserk from excessive demands.

I must confess though, that the obscure nature of the end-game, and the relative isolation of being “home with the kid” play a bit of havoc with my mood and motivation. People need to interact--it’s a sort of “self-winding” feature of humans. A certain level of requirement keeps us stepping, and when the demands sink to too quiet...too alone, even all the Rosetta Stone and elliptical trainers in the world lose a little of their sparkle.

In fairness, there is room for malcontentedness all around. Demanding careers can feel like indentured servitude, undoubtedly. My position is not hugely more undesirable than many of the other options, and I am a strong proponent of positivity.

I believe that I am, at present, somewhat fogged as a result of finding myself--caregiver-wise--in the narrow channel between relative mobility and the need for sitters.

Classically, we caregivers deploy whatever help resources we have access to reluctantly and late. Sooner more than later I will need to work out what kind of helper(s) I need and how to engage them. What I am afraid of is that I will have no idea what to do with myself outside of the playpen.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

this time meta, next time betta...

As of this morning I had resolved, easily, that I was overdue for blog posts both here and on my “official” gig at the Fisher Center. Epic Mickey is...well...epic, but I finally achieved the grand finale and felt the release of Mickey’s white-gloved grip.

So I made another resolution: I’d base both pieces on whatever stuff happened today.

As such, I owe Jeff one for providing the perfect springboard for a Fisher vignette. And I owe Becca one for cleaning him up when--while I was at Japanese class--he helped himself to a big batch of Rocky Road, sans dish. Becca discovered him chuckling at the kitchen sink eating ice cream out of his hand, while liberally spreading the excess about his face, sweatshirt, floor, countertop, dishwasher handle, and probably the dog.

But I pretty much kept Jeff out of mischief for the remainder of the day, and our most exciting side adventure was a brief foray into Trader Joe’s. Now, we did replenish our decimated ice cream stock, as you might expect, and the free sample coffee on offer was a very worthwhile cocoa-laced special, but you can hardly expect a whole blog post out of a grocery shopping expedition. Actually, maybe you can. In fact, I’m almost certain I’ve done it at least once.

But today I’m resorting to meta-posting on the nature of blog-thought. Yesterday, you see, I defeated the evil Blot. Today, I merely carried on as usual in the brick and mortar (well, maybe beam and drywall) world of ordinariness, where cups of coffee are new and special, but I have to make sure I don’t eat too much chocolate.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Epically bad, but working on it.

I’ve always had a little bit of a computer game problem. Never life-impacting in any serious way, and certainly--compared to legions of Gen Xers who grew up just behind me--it’s nothing more than an occasional distraction, but they do attract me, and sometimes I feel a little indolent when I jump in for too long.

I think it’s fair to say that I bought my toddlers the early HyperCard based Cyan game “Manhole” in roughly 1989 because I wanted to play with it. Undoubtedly I lost at least a couple of parenting karma points for insisting to my three year old that the hipster dragon who offers you a biscuit was not scary, and we should play on. Because I wanted to play on.

Sometimes when the littles napped, in our early plug-in external modem days, I went as much online as you could in 1988 and played a text-only multi-player quiz game on Compuserve called...what was it called?...oh yeah--”You Guessed It!” When Jeff came home and asked how my day had been, I did not like to tell him that I had played “You Guessed It!” I’m not sure that an itemized list including 3 coloring book pages, 1 trip to Giant, and 2 loads of poopy diapers would have been more impressive, but for reasons that are not quite clear to me, computer games have always been a slightly guilty pleasure.

And yet, despite the fact that Pong emerged in hotels everywhere when I was 11 years old (I played an embarrassing game once, against a random man in a hotel lobby who just wanted to try it, and needed a partner...I missed every return,)...yes, despite that, my fascination with computer games never extended to console-based games.

What was our first console guys...the PS2? I think so. I never played with it, except for a little Karaoke Revolution and DDR. Ok, ok...I also did a good bit of drumming on Rock Band when we upgraded to the PS3. Beyond these large-muscle things though, I never diddled with joysticks and button-based controllers. Too confusing. Too visually chaotic. On the rare occasions that a kid would insist, I’d clutch my controller like a pilot in a death-spiral, trying desperately to discern whether I was the green thing with a mustache bouncing around on the screen, or the red thing with sparks flying out of it. I really didn’t know. The television speakers would yell “ee oo ah...wheeeeoooooo....eeeeeeehhhhhh.” The kid would say “want a rematch?” I’d say, “did you win?” Because I really couldn’t tell, except in that there would be electronic confetti and applause exploding onscreen.

So, I was a little surprised to find myself kind of wanting to buy Epic Mickey, from the moment I first got wind of it this winter. I don’t know what the hook was. But then, my friend Betsy began detailing her progress through the Epic Mickey's “Wasteland” Environment, as a running Facebook status commentary (thing #1,) and Amazon emailed me a 24 hour opportunity to buy the game for $29.99 (thing #2.) So I did.

My first thought was that it was for Gabe. It is true, of course, that Gabe’s usual taste in games runs to post-apocalyptic wastelands where rusted, lag-bolted metal structures are smeared with guts, and zomboid ghouls are apt to be trying to rip your lungs out. But he’d still like Mickey. It wasn’t for me. Until I started, and it turned out to be for me.

So, apart from this confession that I do waste a certain amount of time on video games of both the computer and console varieties, there is this second confession: When I control Mickey Mouse, he has the hand-eye coordination of a 3-legged moose who has just been hit with a tranquilizer dart. He tends to fall off cliffs and stuff like that. Most of the time I’m waving my wiimote around shouting “Where’s my aiming thingy?” while streams of spladooshes, bashers, and blotlings pound Mickey into the pavement. Nevertheless, with the help of those who have gone before (online walk-throughs and videos, as needed,) I have made my way 2/3 of the way through the game.

I wonder where that Pong guy is now? I could offer him a rematch. This time on my quarter. I might return 2 or 3 volleys.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

It's a lot of different things, actually.

Not that I’ve been a terrible slacker where exercise is concerned, but my mom’s recent report of less-than-optimal bone density has galvanized my determination to hit the elliptical as close to daily as possible. It helps tremendously when I’m reading something equally galvanizing on my Kindle, and What is America? by Ronald Wright is doing a pretty good job of motivating me to step and read.

Rachel recently brought home a couple of elementary school textbooks from the 60s (My era. The books look awfully familiar, even if they weren’t the specific ones we used in Mrs. Randall’s 3rd grade classroom.) They brightly remind me of what a blond and Eurocentric world of childhood memes I grew up surrounded by.

Ronald Wright’s relatively analytical retelling of the cultural behaviors and histories which led to the launch of the U.S. is not going to be a staunch latter day patriot’s cup of tea, but as much as I enjoy visiting the courage, follies, and struggles of early Americans through such venues as HBO’s John Adams series, it would be disingenuous of any fair-minded person not to look, with honest eyes open, at the perspectives of all the peoples involved in the settling and expansion of the U.S.

That’s what Wright does in this book, tracing cultural tendencies and clashes back a good ways, into the religious and political (usually the same thing,) maelstrom of Britain and Europe into how it all spilled over onto the turf of the New World.

Thus far, there are only 11 reviews of What is America? on Amazon, with the only 1-star reviewer bashing Wright’s book as an anti-American rant. Which doesn’t surprise me. Because it removes, utterly, the whitewash which was splattered thickly over history as it was presented to young minds, mid-20th century, (which is the only educational era I can vouch for with first-person accuracy.)

I’m not going to rant anti-Americanly either...because I’m not anti-American. But I am willing to face what seems obvious--that humans, as cultural groups, are and have always been driven by ambitions and methods that seem to defy the good-heartedness of people I know individually. There were always eye-witness voices willing to state--with refreshing candor--the facts of what occurred to clear the path for America as it exists today. But I don’t think they read us those voices and accounts in 1967.

And as for now--and as for ever--all any individual spawned into a point in history can do is say “Here’s where we are. Here’s how we got here. What did we do well? What did we do poorly? And what can we do better?” Then you vote.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

my...um...person I take care of.

I took Jeff to the Hair Cuttery today for a trim. I’m never quite sure how they perceive us at such places...can they tell he’s impaired? Is my behavior--as “director” of the expedition--coming across as unnecessarily managerial, or is it clear that someone needs to be at the helm, and it’s not Jeff?

Sometimes, even when an appointment or similar starts out nebulous, by the end I’m sure they know. I sat with Jeff’s coat and played “Spider: Bryce Manor” on my iPhone while the overly bleached hair lady took care of Jeff, but when he was done and clearly perplexed about which direction to walk in, there was no sign of misunderstanding on the hair cutter’s part when I stepped up to pay.

Meanwhile, as I focused mainly on the transaction, I noticed a fellow customer--a women about 60--helping Jeff to put on his coat. This surprised me. Not that an observant person wouldn’t spot the problem with his fumbling, but that someone would be so quick to act. I finished paying, and thanked the coat-lady for helping Jeff. “Your father?” she said. We’re getting this occasionally now. A few weeks ago, when the vet led us into the back of the animal hospital to view Otis’ belly x-rays, she briefly referred to Jeff as “Pop.” “Come on Pop.” Someone could construe that as rude, but it was clearly meant to be a friendly gesture. I took no offense, and Jeff didn’t even notice.

Meanwhile, “no,” I said to the coat-helping lady. “My husband. But whatever it is you’re thinking, you’re correct.” (She could, of course, have been thinking that we’re Brangelina...but I doubt it.) “Yes,” she replied. “My friend’s father is like that.”

Jeff did not take a speck of that exchange in, fortunately. As much as it is important to give what autonomy and acknowledgment you can to an Alzheimer’s person, it is also true that you can often talk about him to another person, completely circumventing his ability to realize that he’s the subject.

But my father, eh? Mom told me she thought that would start to happen. Jeff has always been very youthful looking for his age, so--despite our 14 year age gap--he has almost never been taken for my father. Confusion ages people. And there’s a thing about eyes, which you may not pay so much attention to until you’ve been intimately involved with Alzheimer’s. But intelligence and focus beam right through our optical orbs like a laser and, when it is gone in a loved one, you become a keen observer of it in others--particularly others who may be older than your faded loved one.

Then there’s me, too. I guess I look about exactly the right age to be classic sandwich generation. If you had to peg me vis-a-vis Alzheimer’s, you’d presume it’s a parent I’m caring for, not a spouse. Ok.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

beeeep

What happens in the last chapter of The Wolf in the Parlour by Jon Franklin, is that his dog (whose personal tale is woven into the narrative alongside the story of Franklin’s search for insight into the nature of the human-canine symbiosis,) alerts him and his wife to a house fire, thus getting all three of them out in time.

I am very glad to have a dog (except for when I’m not...she can be awfully barky,) but since I already do, the main action Franklin’s book spurred me to was checking the smoke detectors. Thus was this afternoon’s agenda set.

We have three smoke detectors, all (theoretically) wired, such that if one smells smoke, all will blare. The one upstairs is so high into the peaks of the beamed ceiling that I can only reach it by dint of my Little Giant ladder. Which I’ve done to replace the back-up battery. The unit on the main floor lives on the normal-height ceiling, just outside the bathroom and around the corner from the kitchen. It has had a problem for some time.

The problem with it was that--at some point--Jeff replaced the detector, but not the ceiling bracket. This resulted in its not locking into place at all, and--for years--it has functioned, but dangled on its wires, six inches from the ceiling. There have been many household maintenance details that I’ve ignored over the years, and this is one which today I resolved to fix.

As for the detector in the basement, well, today it failed inspection. Not only could I not push the button to test it--I couldn’t even reach the button which seemed to be unnaturally sunken into the unit. It too was hanging, even though it had a bracket. But the bracket was only half-installed as it turned out, anyway.

My best guess is that an electrician connected the upstairs unit, but that the other two were some of Jeff’s last work--when he still understood the basics but was missing details all over the place. While both semi-functioned, neither was properly installed or wired, so I’m happy to report that replacing wired smoke detectors is pretty easy, even for someone who’s only working on her junior handyperson merit badge.

Green lights on? Check. Red lights flashing once/minute? Check. And all on the ceilings, where they belong. No dangling. Just before Christmas, the house across the street from my Mom’s burned to a crisp. The homeowner got out, but the whole thing’s a goner. This is not something we expect in today’s world of homes which are no longer heated or lit by open flames. But it happens. So I’m a little better prepared now. But I also hope the dog will wake me up.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Ruts are places too.

Did you ever wiggle your fingers just before beginning to type? I never did until yesterday, when I sat down to work on my first official blog post for the Fisher Center for Alzheimer’s Research Foundation.

It was more reflexive than anything, and I felt very silly as soon as I did it. I also assumed that such a stereotypical gesture would guarantee me a case of writer’s block. Well, maybe not block. But at least a 3-day stint in the Inescapable Rut of Trite Phraseology.

And it did. I’m stuck there at least through tomorrow. Still, I think I managed to scrape enough mud off the sides of the IRTP (you know...the rut,) to smudge it up just enough that it wasn’t an entirely hopeless freshman entry.

Meanwhile, I’ll toss thoughts for the next contribution into the slow-cooker and refrain from adding any seasoning until the IRTP is a sad but distant memory.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

coming...to a blog near you...

I am planning another cross-country trip by train. Working name: West by Northwest.

While it feels a bit right on the heels of the last one (known as: West by Southwest,) and I feel a trifle extravagant and/or frivolous, there are creditable reasons to go sooner, rather than later. Primary among them: Making hay while the sun shines. Beyond any impending sense of decline I may be experiencing as Jeff’s caregiver-in-chief, there is also the realistic acceptance that if probabilities hold, stage 6 of his illness (the last in which we can expect any kind of travelability...and only in the early phase at that,) will be over within 2 years.

There is also my mom, and our decision to do something together. I hope my lovely healthy mother will find many more opportunities to explore the world, but since her primary travel partner’s (my dad’s) death from Parkinson’s in ’09, I would love to fill any available niches to the extent that I can. (Though she should note: Olivia, aka daughter #3, has offered to accompany Grandma to almost any exotic location of Gma’s choosing. Is that a deal or what?)

Hence, last week we found ourselves poring over an expansive pile of brochures and magazines offering trips to every corner of the globe. We wanted to take the one down the Peruvian Amazon by riverboat. Sold out. We almost booked a small-ship cruise to the Galapagos Islands. The rivers of Europe looked awfully pretty. But the more we thought and weighed Jeff’s limitations against the imperative to maintain a pleasurable, non-stressful traveling atmosphere, the narrower our parameters became.

Substantial changes of time-zone will knock a healthy person’s IQ temporarily down by several multiples of 10. We don’t want to turn Jeff into a zombie. Airport security is hassle enough with someone who can’t manage his own items. Adding customs to that seemed excessive. Many boat trips required numerous transfers into rocking zodiacs where the nimbleness and visual requirements might trip us up. Tours by land would have us changing accommodations nightly, increasing disorientation.

Finally, I told Mom that ever since our Amtrak Southwest Chief trip, I’ve been eyeing the Empire Builder covetously. Would she be interested? Mom is a sport, and an adaptable one at that. So yes. This has, therefore, become much more of an Emily trip than a Gale (mom) trip.

So--barring unforeseen downturns in function or other eventualities--we will, in late April, chug from Washington D.C. to Whitefish, Montana (with a change of train in Chicago.) I don’t think much happens in Montana in the Spring, but that might be ok for us. Glacier National Park will be there, and we’ll drive in and have a look around. We’ll see what museums are open year-round, and relax at the inn. I’ll post, with an eye toward making it look exciting and enviable.

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

not so old blue eyes

There’s not much sillier than Jeff relaxing with earphones, emitting sounds that are clearly meant to correspond with the phrases in New York, New York by Frank Sinatra. This is not a guy from a particularly musical family, let us say.

Today’s purchase was an iPod shuffle. It’s the most affordable form of iPod by far, and if--like Jeff--you hardly care in what order your favorite tunes are broadcast, then it might just be the device for you. I spent a good part of the afternoon loading various albums--jazz, saxophone, Sinatra, Johnny Cash--into iTunes, then feeding them into his tiny iPod shuffle. It is, in fact, so tiny (smaller than a matchbook even,) that I’d fear for its disappearance were it not snugly plugged into a set of sizable earphones. Fiddly earbuds, in this case, need not apply.

(Now he’s singing Blue Skies, with Willie Nelson. I’m surprised I can tell.) I’ve discovered a website--The Fisher Center for Alzheimer’s Research Foundation--which breaks down the classic seven stages of Alzheimer’s, giving clearer cut guidelines and milestones. “Stage of illness” had been a tricky thing to gauge. Jeff’s process has been, all along, more forceful in its consumption of his visual capabilities than his memory per se. Hence, a cursory review of the seven stages sometimes misses the points with which I can identify, in his case.

But Fisher has helped me out. Assuming you consider it helpful that I can now place him at stage 6a in a process where stage 7 represents the end-game. Stage 6 is subdivided into a through e. And it appears we’ve crossed the border from 5 to 6 on the following donkeys: We can no longer be counted on to put clothes on in the right order, let alone right-side up, and speech is, not infrequently, having trouble coming out in an articulate sequence. (Eventually it does, but it’s often a bit stumbly.) Apparently, by the time we’ve traversed b through e of stage 6, we can expect him to “manifest overt breakdown in the ability to articulate speech.” We will also see an end to continence. There’s one I’m looking forward to.

I was a little surprised to discover, in reviewing the mean durations of the stages, according to Fisher, that we are not far off the averages. Which means (if we stick with the program,) that we’ll complete all the requirements for Stage 6 in approximately 2.5 years. At which point--in Stage 7--relative mobility becomes one of the leading predictors of timetable.

I hope I’m not too morbid. It’s difficult, if one has a mind for research, NOT to probe into this kind of thing.

Ultimately, of course, one cannot call these things anymore than one can predict the stock market, and I’m very happy that listening to Sinatra, and singing along, with a complete lack of regard for key, is a source of happiness.

Friday, December 31, 2010

we'll tak a cup o' kindness...

I am concocting the perfect auld lang syne hot buttered rum. It’s a guid-willie waught, or a festive draught, that is. For reasons understood only (I presume) by my mammalian brain-layer, I’m having a rather nice New Year’s Eve at 8:50 pm, in the kitchen, in the company of quadrupeds. Tonight, all of them got bits of my salmon (leftover from lunch at Garry’s Grill,) but none got buttered rum. They’re relatively certain that’s ok.

The reason this is significant is that New Year’s Eve has, since the time Jeff’s brain devolved to little more than reptilian, seen me in a funk, and I’m just as glad to have broken with an apparent tradition.

I’m not saying it means anything for 2011 (though I won’t protest if it does,) but a light spirit is a thing of beauty and you might as well take one if they’re handing them out.

Jeff dozed through Easy A on Comcast-on-Demand, (a valid response, though I didn’t mind the low-demand entertainment...it was better than Eat, Pray, Pointlessly Self-Indulge,) and has now been pilled and tucked into bed. Hazel is keeping me company in the box-top from a carton of Harry & David pears, and Otis is harassing Chessie around the kitchen. Not nice. (No guid-willie waught for Otis.)

Now there is Peruvian music by Agua Clara playing, and dancing--not sitting--is called for.

Kampai, Slan, and bottoms up! Ok 2011...let’s see what happens...

Monday, December 27, 2010

Storm's a'comin'...

I am enjoying a book by Jon Franklin, called The Wolf in the Parlor. At the 20% mark, I don’t yet have a good idea of what he’s going to conclude, but he is--at the point I’ve reached--struggling to come to grips with the nature of the ancient relationship between man and canine.

Most interesting has been a tangential trip into the tri-partite condition of the human brain. It seems, evolutionarily speaking, that the reptilian reflex-based version of a brain emerged first, followed by the more flexible and emotionally complex mammalian edition, while the primate addendum--with its ability to create cognitive models and formulate detached rational conclusions--is the Johnny-Come-Lately in brain styling. And apparently, we inherited all three types, one on top of the next.*

It is possible, following the logic of brain hierarchy, to conclude that most human angst stems from the knotty problem that all data--even if it’s the kind you’d clearly delegate to the primate brain--must first traverse the reptilian and mammal brains before it can even be considered. Hence, it (the data) is, by the time the primate brain even gets ahold of it, saddled with all the baggage of need and emotion that the reptilian and mammalian ascribe to it in passing.

I have a point. My point is going to be that this insight into the internal struggles of the human brain has shed some light, retrospectively, into some chapters of my life which, at the time, were hard to narrate in an articulate way. One such chapter in particular is the one about my foray into nursing school during the academic year ’02/’03.

I completed the first year of a two year program at Johns Hopkins with an almost 4.0 (felled by the fact that the A- I clawed my way to in Pharmacology conveyed only 3.8 points.) And I liked it a lot. When I withdrew, one day into my second year, it was a little hard to explain to my friends and advisor, not to mention family. But I tried, using terms like “writer,” and “time,” and “family.” Still it was vague. All I knew for certain was that I’d been hit by an unanticipated emotional tidal wave that no rational explanation could adequately analyze.

But I understood it in a primitive way. I knew that emotion had delivered a knock-out punch to reason. Now I can articulate that my mammalian brain knew something which my primate brain could not, and it forcibly took the reins.

You know how dogs can sense storms coming, or know--when she’s still two miles away--that a favorite person is returning? Or know that the word “walk” has flickered through my brain long before I’ve batted an eye? My inner dog sensed the storm system called Alzheimer’s, but all it could tell the primate brain was this: “You have to spend time with your husband.” My primate part understood that message, but didn’t see how dropping out of school was the logical response. So the mammal walloped the primate and did it anyway.

At the time--Fall of ’03--Jeff had the faintest hint of symptoms. But it was mostly irritability. Except for his failure to install the bathroom tile properly (a job which I took over,) there was nothing discernibly wrong with him. But the thing I’ve learned about dogs is, if they’re really going berserk--I mean surpassing any sort of baseline berserk--then you’d better pay attention, regardless of what seems logical. My mammal brain sensed the storm system and went way more than baseline berserk. It’s just that it wasn’t until a year or two later that I had an inkling of the type of storm.

This is, so far, my favorite quote from The Wolf in the Parlor, on the “triune brain”:

We weren’t individuals, we were committees--and, like all committees, we were given to inner uncertainty, dispute, and even feuding. We were the only creature in nature capable of ganging up on itself.
Which is exactly what it felt like at the time--my brain ganged up on itself. Nowadays, when I get particularly crazy or out of sorts I try to say something akin to “What is it Lassie? What is it girl?” Unfortunately, my mammalian brain’s language skills are still not much better than Freddi the dog’s. So, as the I Ching is always telling me, with the most admirable of patience, I just have to chill and trust the Sage. And possibly batten down the hatches.

*On the notion that the "triune brain" model is outdated or simplistic: well, probably so. But I still love this quote from Wikipedia:
In this sense, the triune brain (more properly, perhaps, the "triune mind") is seen as a highly simplified but powerful organizing theme. The statistician George E.P. Box once quipped: "Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are useful."

Monday, December 20, 2010

Be 92. Or 3½. Or at least just act like it.

I will admit: I am not really all that old. I realize, it depends mostly on from which direction on a chronological timeline you’re looking, but my point is that I don’t usually have a self-image of oldness.

Nevertheless, there seem to be some fairly universal lateral changes in the quality of interface with the world that become apparent to most adults as they rack up a handful of decades, give or take.

Our good friend Bill stops by once a month or so to take Jeff out to lunch. Lately, he looks out the back kitchen windows at the five birdfeeders I’ve got stocked with seed, and says something akin to: “I can’t believe how much I’m into birds now. And plants. I find this very disturbing.” Bill recalls being aware, in decades past, of how this partiality to birds connoted aged person and how he, at the time, forswore such a future, but now reckons it was inevitable.

This was fresh in my mind last week when I sat down to knit the finishing rows into a hat. (Hats are what I’ve been working on lately. I invariably start off having committed some kind of planning error, such that the finished product would be unviable, could it even progress that far. I either misgauge the size, or don’t factor the right multiple of stitches for the pattern I intend to use, or--in a spectacular mistake that I didn’t notice until 2 inches in--I let the row spiral around the circular needles, creating an unstraightenable helix instead of the leading edge of a stocking cap. Just now I spontaneously switched to a rib pattern based on 5’s, forgetting that I’d cast on 72. Not a match.) But, back to the aforementioned hat which I did, in fact, complete. I sat down to complete it in a rocking chair. And I chuckled at myself, because it felt so good. Almost sensual, in fact, to be relaxed, sitting in a rocker, and knitting.

Without a doubt, I have the foibles of aging more in the forefront of my everyday thoughts than the average not-quite-50 year old. All I need to do is look at the adaptations I am continually making in dressing Jeff. Today he has on his new pull-on Sperrys, a t-shirt, and a half-zip pullover. The pullover is new. I grabbed a couple at Kohl’s thinking this might be a good step away from button-down shirts which can be buttoned in any number of interesting and askew configurations if lining things up properly is not in one’s skill set. The problem with the pullover is that it hangs a little long. This means that Jeff keeps noticing the bottom edge and being inspired to curtsy. So far, he has demonstrated curtsies to Olivia about 5 times and Becca maybe twice. This, therefore, may not turn out to be the perfect solution to dressing ease, but I’m always on the lookout for new ideas.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Some cats can dance.


Yesterday, Jeff had a conversation with Chessie the cat. Chessie is a good cat--stout of stature, good of heart (mostly,) and only inclined to whine when you disrupt her poundage from atop your chest. So, as cats go, you might as well talk to her as to any. But, when asked by Jeff whether she knows how to tap dance, Chessie did not respond in any meaningful way. Becca, meanwhile, seated at the kitchen counter (unlike Chessie, who was seated in the chair at which Jeff was addressing his question,) did respond. “Are you talking to me?” asked Becca. “If you’re talking to me, I’m over here.” Jeff indicated that yes, he was talking to her, but he still said all this to Chessie, who did not assist in correcting him. As far as she was concerned, I’m sure, his behavior was completely appropriate.

Conversations with cats pose no problem. I wonder, though, about the ifs and whens of implementing other measures to which I’ve given pre-need consideration. When will I employ sitters? Should I investigate day care? I’m already concerned about leaving for more than the shortest of outings. Not that Jeff does much. I think the most pressing trouble he might get into would be locking himself out of the house while on a front yard stick-breaking expedition. Troublesome thought, when it’s below freezing. Should I move him downstairs? Yet? Don’t know that it would suit him. Don’t know how he’ll respond. But I do know that, if not before, the first time his visuo-spatial system fails to navigate the staircase, to hazardous effect, will be the impetus.

It is common wisdom, among the AD caregiver community, that most caregivers initiate any kind of change--day care, in-home help, placement, hospice--later than they should have. I completely understand why.

möbius-ity

42 might as well be the meaning of life. It’s as good as anything anyone else has come up with, as far as I’ve noticed.

Today, after the usual pets and breakfast routine, I met a friend for tea and “breakfast cookies” at The Big Bean. We had a wonderful (but too short as usual) chat, then I bundled up against the wind chill and quick-stepped the 1/2 mile home. By then, Jeff had managed a shower without a shower-director. I noted the extra undies scattered around the bed, a rejected t-shirt, his washed-with-conditioner (instead of shampoo) hair, and the same old dirty jeans. Good enough.

We headed back out into the chill to tick the next item off my list--replacing the ceramic birdbath, whose basin had cracked from freezing water. Just before my immersible de-icer arrived a little too late.

The new birdbath top--positioned with hodge-podge imperfection atop the existing pedestal--is (with de-icer at work,) doing its job.

Furthermore, Otis the kitten will (I hope) soon pass the colon-load of paper, or whatever inedible he consumed, that prompted 2 trips to the vet and an x-ray in the past 3 days. The water heater, meanwhile, is back in operating condition after a day’s work by Yank the plumber yesterday, and our upstairs is once again, therefore, heated.

The thing that likes to drive me crazy on a regular and ongoing basis is this question: Is any of this of consequence? I think if I could send a letter back to 1973...have a little word with myself...deliver some advice, the letter would contain the following: First, I would list the areas in which the grown up me has a modicum of both skill and interest. This part is important, because that 11 year old had no clue what she liked and even less motivation. So I would tell her that she’d be a decent writer and had skill at language acquisition and usage. She should relax and not let math frustrate her so much...approach it with less fear and loathing and she’d be capable. She should stick, arduously, to her study of viola, and add in fiddle while she’s at it. Finally, she should steer herself in the direction of a helping profession--most likely in the area of scientific research. I’m going to have to anticipate that--being a tolerably bright child--she’ll ask what she’s doing heading into research if she’s good at languages and writing. So I will answer that question for her: She will not find a way to be useful to the world as a writer or linguist, so--while she should hone these skills as personally edifying--she will need to be a provider of value to the human race in order not to fret later, as an almost-50 year old, about adequacy of being the caretaker of an impaired spouse and the saver-of-kitties, who writes works that the world does not require.

But back to 42. Apparently I do what I do, because it is what the world requires of me. Or at least a sufficient part of it is. What I really think is that--if I sent that letter to the 11 year old, and even if she took it to heart (the lazy little underachiever,)--I would merely trip the existential feedback loop of Möbius, and end up exactly where I am. So, I don’t know exactly what 42 means, but I think it’s that.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

but she got published, at least!

Ok, I watched it. I watched Eat, Pray, Love.

I didn’t even wait for it to be released on Netfix--I actually told Comcast-on-Demand “Yes. Yes, you may charge me $4.99 for this movie. Go ahead. Do it.” I wanted to pick a fight, and I wanted to pick it with that movie. I’m not sure what I expected, but I obviously (not having even read the book,) needed to view the film before I could launch a cathartic quibble.

Later, I read some of the reviews of the book on Amazon. I wanted to see what people thought of the source material. There were, basically, two strains of comment: There were the 4 and 5 stars reviewers who admired Elizabeth Gilbert’s turn of phrase, and lyrical manner of describing nebulous philosophical concepts. (I can’t argue with such reviews. One need not admire a main character to rate writing highly.) Then there were the 1 star reviews, in which readers largely took exception to the narrative. It was the author’s behavior and autobiography earning their thumbs down, and--way with words or not--they were annoyed at having bothered with it.

I mention this about the book reviews for the following reason: What you get in the film is the narrative, without the benefit of the author’s stylistic ramblings. Hence, it’s hard not to render judgment simply on the basis of that: the narrative.

And here’s what I got from the narrative. EPL appears to be nothing more than a segment out of the life of a woman who--for no reason apart from existential angst, apparently--tanked a marriage to a fine, caring man, jilted a decent lover, and proceeded to spend a year (at her publisher’s expense, I believe,) navel-gazing and eating a lot in attractive and exotic locales. In the end she takes up with a third seemingly decent fellow, and publishes a book which--by dint of Oprah--is a financial success.

It is possible that, in the book, Liz Gilbert describes some sort of philosophical resolution. It is, in fact, likely that she does so. This was not conveyed by the film, and I’ll wager that that’s fair. Itchy people do not become un-itchy people by running away from themselves. (And here I speak from very personal experience.) Maybe Gilbert did rhapsodize eloquent in some form of denouement. But I wouldn’t believe in any real change. Surely she could spin a pretty philosophical picture with equal skill before she launched her odyssey.

Still, people must carry out their lives, and I have no personal reason to object to hers. But I do have personal knowledge and experience: That skittering about does not change, in any fundamental way, your manner of interface with existence. So, regardless of the book’s conclusion, I will draw my own on this review: I watched the film to null effect. Something ventured, nothing gained. But the landscapes were pretty.

Monday, December 06, 2010

A shoe holds more ounces than a jigger.

The Nordstrom shoe salesman betrayed the usual amount of quizzical uncertainty as Jeff and I approached to look over the deck shoes in the men’s section. I may not be the most socially adept human east of the Mississippi, but I can read body language. Hmmm...why is this woman taking charge? If the shoes are for the dude, what’s with this dynamic?

But he too, evidently, had the capacity to catch on, and as I briefly explained that we were leaning toward laceless models, and he attempted a couple different prompts before Jeff put the proper foot on the size gauge, he understood.

Jeff’s Clark’s “UnStructureds” is a fine pair of shoes, and they served us well on our southwest sojourn, for train-riding and light hiking. But that’s why I brought that pair...for their sturdiness. Once home, he’s reverted to wearing the world’s oldest Sebago docksiders, with layers of leather peeling off, and laces that look like sun-dried and run-over jerky. The laces don’t much matter, is the thing. The shoes are old, relaxed, and go on and off without any need to tie or untie.

We ended up with a pair of pricey Sperrys. They’re somewhere between a classic deck shoe and a loafer, are soft of leather, and stout of sole, and should work for everything once I stash the diversionary beat-up or laces-required pairs in the closet, under Jeff’s lower rack of shirts.

For now I will help with the belt. For now I will help get the shirt buttons on even kilter. And occasionally run the razor over his neck, which is a hair-sprouting zone he usually seems to forget about.

It was not a bad day to be at the mall. Christmas shopping is, of course, in full spate, and the California Pizza Kitchen filled up with lunchtime diners, shortly after we started on salad and pasta. Still, it was Monday, early, and not bad...especially when you are free to look around and think Ah...Christmassy-ness, without having any pressing agenda of your own. At such a pace, I could happily snag a couple of stocking stuffers at Crate & Barrel, in addition to a jigger--something which I have heretofore lacked. A jigger is the amount of rum you add to a hot buttered one (rum, that is.) Though I had ascertained that a jigger is approximately 3 tablespoons, depending on the relative generosity of your bartender, it will enhance the experience to make it using the proper measuring vessel. As it will enhance our shoe-wearing experience to not have to re-tie laces every 15 minutes.

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Eye be home for Christmas.

As I mentioned in the last post, my right eye had a run-in with a vine and took one for the team on Thursday, in the process of helping me get Otis out of the tree. As of today, Sunday, except for some watering, light sensitivity, and a minor burning sensation, I’m functioning as normal. Mostly.

I cannot recommend corneal scratches. Like many body parts that you don’t give that much thought to as you go about your daily business (feet, knees, fingertips, teeth...,) do one an injury and you find that its incapacity renders you near-useless for days. But, after an intermittent pirate eye-patch, indoor sunglasses, antibiotic drops leftover from someone’s pinkeye, and lots of doing not much, it is with great gratitude that I welcome my right eye back to the world of useable body parts.

This weekend--the first in December--seems to be the one for getting the Christmas game on. As of last night, numerous houses in town had sprouted an assortment of carefully or carelessly (mostly somewhere in between,) lights. Hence, I did mine today, taking care that the job did not involve any peripheral objects ready to take potshots at my face. I don’t do much--just some strings of white lights more or less following the contour of the front porch and its railing. Additionally, we bought a tree and stuck it in a washtub of water on the back patio. Voila...I am maxed out! Until such time as I bring the tree in the house.

Susan Reimer, a columnist for the Baltimore Sun, opined this week that she would never--no matter how weak her motivation--slack off on the holiday fussiness, due to the fact that she perceived such a slow-down in her mother to have represented a slow fade of vitality. And maybe it is. But I don’t plan to worry about it when the time comes. I’ll fade if I good and want to. Meanwhile, it is most fortunate that I set the holiday bother bar very very very low for myself from the get-go, and have never upped the ante.

It is with equal measures of wistfulness and wry chuckling that I think about certain images that so tantalized me as a kid and hopeful romantic. Holiday special magazines, in which the snug log house in the distant snow-frosted vale, glowed golden-warm at dusk. Inside, a festive garland hugged the banister, while mom (that would have been the future me,) greeted dad (that was the unsubstantiated future mate with a twinkling eye or two) in a kitchen with a couple not-too-aggravating children and a pleasant pet or so. The funny thing is...as I stand in my kitchen looking across the eating table toward the stairs descending, mid-house...it looks almost just the way it was supposed to look. Except there’s no garland. That would be just too many pine needles to sweep up later. The pets are there though, and sometimes so are the children--they’re just a little overgrown. As for the dad...sometimes his eyes do twinkle. It’s a rather unfocused, uncomprehending twinkle, but then, we’re not in a snow-frosted vale either.

Thursday, December 02, 2010

I think I'll take the finger in the eye.


My worst residual problem is eye pain. But with a salt water rinse, and some leftover pink-eye drops, I hope I’ll be fully binocular by morning.

See, here’s the thing about the anatomy of the 12’ no-man’s-land (aka county right-of-way) behind our back fence: It is full of huge bamboo (flute-makers may apply,) a couple decades’ worth of fallen limbs, and vines to make Tarzan proud. I could have picked a more agreeable site to spend 6 hours of the day getting a kitten out of a tree.

But Otis didn’t ask my advice before scampering 4 feet up an old silver maple, then thinking hey cool, and going higher. Twice, actually, before getting to the first crook and realizing he was completely out of his league. So he pretty much spent the next 6 hours crying piteously, while I attempted to get him down.

Becca was home for the first couple hours of effort and, after much coaxing failed, we implemented plans A and B. A was my Little Giant ladder. The only extension ladder I can manipulate without dropping it on my head with unfortunate consequences, or breaking a window. Sadly, it did not extend enough, and put us (standing on the highest safe rung) just over half-way there. So on to Plan B. After much detangling of line from itself and the aforementioned flora features of the back lot, we succeeded in heaving a bear bag (used for suspending your food, safely away from bears, on camping trips) over a branch near Otis. Then, we pulleyed up an open-topped picnic basket, enticingly loaded with a cup of tuna. He did not care to get in that basket. Barely even gave it a passing thought. Then Becca had to go to work. I had to take a break. Still, I didn’t want to remove the option, so I tied an orange juice jug, partially filled with water so that it would just be outweighed by Otis, to the other end of the line, and went to do some necessary errands.

When Jeff and I got back, Otis hadn’t budged. I brought 100 feet of poly rope back with me though, and I doubled and knotted it in such a way that a daring and agile person might use it to climb enough higher than the ladder permitted to snag a cat. Once at the top of the ladder though, I found myself less daring than required, and returned to the drawing board.

So did my Mom, who--learning of my plight, and knowing me to be, essentially, an army of one--came to help. We tied a sheet to the tree, and she held the other corners while I ascended the ladder and attempted to push Otis from the other side with an extension broom. Alas, due to the angle of the tree, and the thickness of the underbrush, there was no means to connect sufficiently brush-to-cat, and Mom had nothing to catch in her makeshift fireman’s net.

Mom left because she had to. I wondered, via text, when Rachel the tree-climbing wonder-daughter might be able to perform a rescue. But, being a real-life employed teacher of children, there was no way for her to get here by dark, and I was left to ponder. And fret. In installing the rope-which-I-couldn’t-climb, I’d removed the escape basket. That seemed wrong. I couldn't give up for the night with no such option in play so, taking a tip from the internet (go net!) I re-threw the bear-bag. (This took about 20 tosses, and as many detanglings.) I got it. This time I hoisted a laundry basket--the floppy kind with two handles. With the tuna, of course.

The nice thing about the floppy laundry basket was that it showed a greater willingness to snug up close to the branch, in a way that the stiff picnic basket had not. Before I’d even gotten my orange juice jug counter-weight tied to the other end of the line, I saw--in addition to the shadow of the tuna container in the bottom of the basket--four paw shadows. I did not waste time. I lowered the basket-kitty contraption and snagged a kitty who was never so glad to be apprehended.

Oh, my eye. It was on one of the about 60 or so trips up the Little Giant that one of those ubiquitous vine or stick things poked me in the right eye. It still hurts, quite a bit. Otis is sacked out on the dog bed, having been properly cuddled and fed. I do not wish for him to go outside ever again. I’m afraid he will.

Jeff used to propose that cat brains looked as follows: One neuron, dangling by a thread in the middle of the skull. I surely hope Otis’ neuron absorbed some aversion therapy about trees today.