Wednesday, July 22, 2009

I love Texas Sunsets

I love Texas sunsets. That's not surprising. I love almost everything Texas. One of the exceptions would be the heat. Have I told you it's hot down here?

I love this reflection of the sunset I caught on the window to the well house a few days ago. The well house is a simple little shed that contains the pressure tank and electricity for the well pump. The water in our part of Texas is hard and "minerally" but not as "irony" as Iron Acres.

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(looks like someone needs to paint their well house!)

Principessa and I drove to a nearby lake last week just before sunset. I love big bodies of water and how the sun reflects on them.

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Last night, my Dear Professor and I sat outside and watched the sun go down together. I have mixed feelings about that time of day. The quiet and coolness is wonderful, but it also carries questions about the hours past. Were they lived well?

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I love Texas sunsets. And I love sharing them with my Dear Professor even more.

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And with you.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Texas Survivor

During our second week in Texas, while staying with Principessa in San Antonio, there was a weather advisory that anyone over fifty stay inside because of the extreme heat. Several days later we left Bexar County and travelled to a little place in the country near Washington County. It is hotter here than it was for the San Antonio weather advisory.

Being 60something and a decade over the weather advisory age, my Dear Professor and I have applied ourselves toward writing a Texas heat survival manual for the, ahem, over fifty crowd. This is a list of the bare essentials.

First, one should have a hat with a brim large enough to shade the eyes. A Texas flag bandana to accessorize is an optional addition.

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Next, and extremely important, is water. I learned this summer from Principessa that a slight headache can be a symptom of dehydration. Needless to say, a water bottle has been my constant companion since that conversation. (A personal fan is a good option for those days you want to dash from the airconditioned house to the airconditioned car without needing another shower.)

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You will find, to your surprise, that your new best friends are shade,

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ceiling fans,

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and a bandana.

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Finally, in addition to being able to identify the four poisonous snakes (copperheads,cotttonmouths, corals, and rattlesnakes)native to Texas, be on the lookout for these little gems. They may be small, but grass burrs are very painful to bare feet.

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Just as long as you stay cool, stay hydrated, and stay away from snakes and grass burrs, you will find your stay in Texas to be delightful.

Monday, July 20, 2009

How I Spent My Summer Vacation

Remember those lame essays we did at the start of elementary school every fall?  The ones entitled "What I Did Last Summer" or something along those lines?  And remember that old saying "a month of Sundays" that meant a lo-o-o-ong time?

Well, hunker down and fasten your seat belts.  We're almost at the end of our 2009 summer vacation in Texas, and I'm gonna tell you ALL about it whether you want to hear it or not.  Let's just call it a month of Texas.

Did I tell you it's hot down here?

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Ahem. This is how I spent my summer vacation. I read books, and watched movies in cool, dark movie theatres (I'd really recommend UP!), and ate things I don't get to eat in Pennsylvania like really fresh mexican food and barbeque and Blue Bell Ice Cream, and didn't have internet access because we were in the country, and took pictures of clouds and storms and other stuff, and met with friends I hadn't seen in 30 years, and spent time with family, and sweated a lot.

That's how I spent my summer vacation. The short version. There's more on the way.

How about you?

Friday, July 10, 2009

The Stage is Yours!

"Just paint my door red and call me Elizabeth Arden"

That line from Steel Magnolias brings to mind two important women in my life--my Mom and my baby sister, iPodite.

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(iPodite and me at the rodeo. I don't have many photos of us together as children, probably because we figured sharing a room was traumatic enough not to warrant significant hang time.)

iPodite and I just realized while watching a commercial the other day that she was the first to graduate from college, even though I'm four years older.  (I was a college dropout.  My Dear Professor sent me back to finish my degree after we married.)

I am so proud of her! (Even though giving up the solo limelight I had enjoyed as an only child for several years before she came along was very difficult.)

iPodite is a techno goddess.  She was also the first in the family to get an iPod.  Hence her nickname.  Her favorite color is opposite on the color wheel from mine.  Does that tell you something about our relationship?  Take a close look at the pictures and see if you can guess what her color is.

I just spent 3 days with her here in Texas, and it was so hot (how hot is it?), it was so hot one of her clocks melted right off the wall.  Yesiree bobtail!  I have the picture to prove it.  See?

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OK, so it didn't exactly melt off the wall, but it was sure hot enough! iPodite is a curious blend of things soft, fuzzy and whimsical like Winnie the Pooh, Paddington Bear, the Velveteen Rabbit,

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things geeky (this was probably for someone at work as iPodite is so not a tech dummy),

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things remembered (doesn't every boomer have a pair of bronzed baby shoes from the 50s?),

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things beautiful, (iPodite loves some Tiffany like lamps)

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and things furry (like Spike, her main squeeze.)

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iPodite does love Spike. And Spike loves iPodite. I caught him gazing longingly at the back door, anxiously awaiting her arrival...

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and his joy when she opened the door and then sat down to ask about his day with me.  He was kind.

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Over the years, iPodite and I have had only a few things in common--our genetics and our love for old movies, and more recently our mutual admiration for a little brown Cheekywawa named Spike.

But there is something about the "dark" side of 40 50 60something that puts things into perspective.

Or maybe I just finally grew up. All I know is we have both marveled at the improved quality of our relationship. Of course, I suppose it also helps that I no longer slam doors on her toes or tie her to the tree while the rest of us go off and play cowboys and indians without her. 

Now it's fun to be together and recall childhood experiences. We made different observations growing up, so together we gain a new, more complete picture of our childhood.

iPodite, thank you for putting up with your older sister all those years. I know it was a chore, but someone had to to do it. And you did it well enough to make both Mom and Dad proud.  And Emily Post, too!

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Oh, and Happy Birthday! Big Sister hugs to my Baby Sister!

The stage is yours!

(and if you haven't guessed, iPodite shares a favorite color with Elizabeth Arden!)

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Did I mention it was hot down here?

When I was a little girl, I loved visiting my maternal grandmother.  My grandfather died when I was four, so my memories of him are very vague.  But I had many wonderful years with grandmother, who lived to see her 94th birthday.

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My grandmother was a woman of leisure.  But she spent that leisure in some very creative pursuits: knitting, crocheting, and painting by number.  I still remember a trip we took downtown to Woolworth's one Saturday.  We did some window shopping, ate lunch, and then picked out some new paint by number kits.  Her favorite subjects were dogs and scenery, mine, horses.

I can smell the oil paint and linseed oil even now.  There were always leftovers once the picture was finished, and grandmother would let me take the tiny bottles home to paint contrasting manes and tails on my plastic "little cowboys," figurines of Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Bullet the dog, and many poses of Trigger.

Or, I would use the paints to "soup up" my collection of plastic cars that came as prizes in cereal boxes. At one time I could name the model and year of every vehicle on the road.

I suppose my interest in painting comes from that initial introduction to colors and drawing.  If anyone in our immediate family has a real talent in this area, it's Principessa, who majored in art.  I just play with it,  and since we have all this vacation time down in Texas, I've been playing a lot! Only now the medium is watercolor.

Here is an Amish scene back in PA.

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My fondness for horses lives on.  But I think what I like most about this picture is the dog.

I like the conversation between these two Amish women. I suppose when the horse is doing the driving, it's safer to take your eyes off the road.

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I love this farm house. I want to walk right up to the front porch and sit down and have a conversation with the people who live there.

Where hearts are sure of each other

But my favorite is this peony.

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Hmmm. If I'm down here in Texas, why are all these watercolors Pennsylvania themed?

I confess, they're not watercolors at all. They're Photoshopped digital pictures I had uploaded to my Flickr page awhile back.  So, what's going on in Texas?  Heat, heat, and more heat. 

Did I mention it was hot down here?
-------
License plate update. It's not too late to get in on the fun. So far, these are the plates identified. AL, PA,MD,NY,FL,SC,ME, GA,ID,NC,NJ,DC,DE,IA,CA,WV,IN,OH,VA. Do you have any to add?

Friday, July 3, 2009

Summer Games

No, I'm not talking about the summer olympics. I think it's the wrong year for that, anyway. I am referring to that sacred and most venerated of "'seeing the USA in your Chevrolet' with a few of your closest relatives and more luggage than Paris Hilton" travel games, collect the state license plates! (I can tell you're excited already!)

How many state plates can we claim together in the next week? Leave a comment or link to your flickr page or email me. Let's see if we can get them all!

These are the ones I've claimed, and I will admit, I sort of cheated. They were all spotted at this apartment complex in lovely San Antonio.

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It doesn't hurt that San Antonio is the home of several military bases. But hey, part of the fun of the game is being in the right seat at the right time. I have taken the liberty of blanking out numbers to preserve the privacy of the plates' owners.

Here goes, in no particular order--

Alabama,

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Pennsylvania (they're not speeding, they're qualifying!)

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Maryland (traffic must be rough in Maryland!)

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New York (The Empire State)

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Florida, the state that arguably has just as much sunshine as Texas,

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North South Carolina (The Sprittles in the North make me forget there's a South)

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and Maine.

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That gives me 7 so far. And I didn't even include Texas, because those plates are everywhere!

Your turn.

PS Foreign plates are included, too.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Larger than life

Texans still claim bragging rights to the biggest state in the US. We've convinced ourselves that Alaska would be the size of Rhode Island if it melted. That means, if Al Gore is right and this global warming thing is a real threat, Rhode Island may shortly be defending its title as the smallest state. (You'll hafta let us know when that happens. It's perennially too hot in Texas to be able to feel any temperature change upward on the thermometer.)

That means that everything we do is larger than life. We fly humongous Texas flags everywhere. You can spot them miles down the road. I think Texans invented the concept of living large.

Principessa and I attended a movie the other day at the local cineplex. Can you guess what kind of theme the builders went for?

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Yup. If this is Texas, there must be cowboy in it somewhere. The lobby included larger than life pictures of some of my childhood heroes--Gene Autry and of course, Roy Rogers and Trigger. I wonder if Dale was ever jealous of Roy's horse.

They carried the Lone Star State theme inside to the screening area. One lone star of significant proportion aesthetically placed on either side of each theatre.

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Now, being the good Texas passport carrying Texans that we are, we couldn't just go see any old movie. It had to one of a scale befitting Texas. I won't tell you which movie it was out of fear of giving away the plot, but I will let you in on some of the action in the movie.

There was a hero,

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a heroine,

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some flashy vehicles,

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some explosions and nasty villains,

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and a magic something or other.

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Oh, and a couple of important characters died. But I won't tell you who. Let's just say they are larger than life.

And, some would say, Texas.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Besetting Sins

You would think I had learned my lesson with computers from my experience sabotaging a Sears store. I did hold off for a long time. In human years. Maybe not so long in computer years.

It was 1982, and my Dear Professor was going through his midlife crisis. (I had one too, but it was caused by his!) He decided one day he didn't want to be a lawyer anymore. He wanted to be a professor instead. This would involve changing jobs (the local university just happened to have an opening in their law school for someone with his particular expertise) as well as eventually going back to school. Oh, and getting a new technological marvel called a home computer so I could type all his papers for him. Wasn't he sweet?


It was billed as the first portable computer with the option of running on a battery.  Supposedly, part of the screenplay for the film 2001 was written on one of these slick gizmos in Ceylon (that's Sri Lanka now) and sent to Hollywood via dial up modem.

Ozzy weighed 25 pounds, had a whopping five inch diagonal screen, 52 characters wide display, and ran the included software (Wordstar, Supercalc, and Basic) from a 92k floppy disc.  It was about the size of a portable sewing machine.

In those days, the operating system was CP-M, and CP-M begat MS-DOS, and MS-DOS begat Windows, and Windows eventually begat Vista.  The Mac was only a spark in the motherboard of an Apple III, and the lawsuit between Xerox and Apple over the rights to the computer mouse was only a few years away.  I remember them discussing that at one of the IBM user group meetings.

The Osborne came with an outrageous 64k of ram.   Not gigs, not megs, but kilobytes.  But oh, what that 64k could do.  Once I figured out how to use the Epson printer that was Ozzy's sidekick, I was  addicted.  It didn't matter that the company went belly up as soon as we moved to New York, this was the day of computer user groups.  I found being the token female in a crowd of male engineer computer freaks was an advantage.

The larger user groups had their own printed magazines.  You could learn how to tinker under the hood, so to speak, with programming language even if you weren't bilingual just by following the instructions in the helpful articles.  The first Osborne group was nicknamed FOG, and helped many a newbie find their way out of it.  If  you think current computer manuals are difficult to understand, you should pick up an early one written by a 20 year old programmer at MIT!

Fast forward to today.

This trip down computer memory lane was prompted by a visit to an Apple store the other day with Principessa.  Computers have come a long way, baby!  (fortunately, Virginia Slims, the first cigarettes specifically marketed to women with that slogan, have come and gone.)  And because of that visit, I am now the grandmod(?) of an 8 gig iPhone.

Apples of the computer variety are aptly named--Eve wouldn't be able to resist their gleaming 'pods,

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'phones,

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or 'puters

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any more than she did that first apple of the fruit variety.  And neither could Principessa.

I guess this besetting sin runs in the family.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Accidental Corporate Terrorist

Visiting the promised land is triggering a flood of memories from my past...

It all began innocently enough. Post college, in the 70s, I worked in the credit department at Sears, Roebuck and Company. But this wasn't just any credit department. It was situated in the downtown store in Houston, Texas. But this wasn't just any downtown store. It also housed the offices of the district managers and supervisors of Sears.

My boss, the local credit manager, was a former IRS investigator, and an incredible judge of character. He would sit in his office surrounded by a cloud of smoke from his Camel cigarettes and watch the customers as they arrived at the counter. During slow times in the day, he would invite one of us into the cloud and share stories from his past. During one of these sessions with me, he suggested that I consider climbing the corporate ladder at Sears, that there were scads of opportunities in management positions for women.

Then I would walk out into the shared space of phones, filing cabinets, and typewriters, right past the desk of his secretary, a kindly woman who had started working there in the 40s for the grand sum of ten cents an hour. Thirty years of loyal service, through raises, had brought that up to $1.75 an hour, still
less than the rate I was hired at just a few weeks previously. I would shake my head and return to the counter to assist someone with a "credit problem".

But my boss persisted in offering me opportunities. I was sent to the Better Business Bureau to learn how to investigate credit records via a fancy teletype like machine. Thereafter, part of my day was spent typing names into the recently installed metal monster and producing credit reports right there on the spot.

Up on the third floor was a large, climate controlled room containing banks of primitive mainframe computers. These computers were attached, via telephone line, to bigger computers in Dallas, where regional credit information was stored. It became my job to periodically visit the third floor room and enter the numbers of lost and stolen credit cards.

All went well until that fatal Saturday. I was sent upstairs to the third floor, climate controlled room which housed the mainframe. In the last 30 years, computers have become second nature, available, tiny. But back in the day, they were awe inspiringly huge. And noisy. And mysterious. (I'm reminded of Terminator, the Sarah Conner Chronicles.)

It was 11:30am on a Saturday when I started typing in the numbers I was given to alert the system of lost/stolen cards. There were about fifteen of them. Halfway through my input, the phone rang. Instantly life kicked into slow motion and black and white--the computers started vomiting reams of paper, a buzzer was sounding, all the district managers and supervisors from the fourth floor were piling into the room in a panic, asking me what happened.

Keep in mind, it was high noon, on a Saturday, downtown Houston, store full of shoppers, and every cash register frozen.

It was later determined that one important fact was left out of my training--if the phone rings, immediately stop input. That call was from the bigger bank of computers in Dallas, updating. Any input after the ring would throw our computer into a loop spitting out all the numbers that were not in the system.

Folks, that's a lot of numbers!

Curiously, I didn't lose my job. My credit manager thought it was funny. I think he enjoyed the sight of so many of his bosses running around in sheer panic and confusion.

I lived to tell the tale of how I singlehandedly brought a major department store to its knees one sunny Saturday. But I still get nervous every time I go through airport security. What if they ask me if I've ever been involved in a terrorist act?

Friday, June 26, 2009

Here's looking at you, kid

I love old movies. I think it's the combination of craft, class, and a bit of hokiness that sucks me in everytime. One of my favorites is the classic Casablanca. iPodite's main squeeze, Spike the Cheekywawa has agreed to stand in for Bogey.

Spike has that Miami Vice 5 o'clock shadow and a blend of strength and softness while still being all masculine. (Well, mostly masculine. We won't talk about the "snip snip" in deference to this being a family friendly site.) He's also a very accomplished Humphrey Bogart impersonator.

Oh, I would be remiss if I failed to mention that Principessa's cat Chester will be the off screen voice of Captain Renault.

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"Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine."

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"Tell me, who was it you left me for? Was it Laszlo, or were there others in between? Or ... aren't you the kind that tells?"

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Captain Renault: "What in heaven's name brought you to Casablanca?"
Rick: "My health. I came to Casablanca for the waters."
Captain Renault "The waters? What waters? We're in the desert!"
Rick: "I was misinformed."

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"Play it again, Sam."

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"Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."

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"Here's looking at you, kid."