Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Keeping Busy...

Well, it's a beautiful day in Juneau...but pretty chilly and supposed to be even more chilly tonight...down into the single digits. And a full moon tomorrow night. May have to go on a photo expedition.

Otherwise the same-old stuff. A bit of a fright the other evening. I had just finished supper when Linda called in a panic. I couldn't even understand what she was saying; but finally deciphered dad had fallen, hit his head and was bleeding. "Ok, I'll be right over."

I figured I was set for a night at the ER but by the time I got there ten minutes or so later things had quieted down. Mom and Linda were still edgy; but dad was seated at the table placidly munching away on a supper of spicy chicken wings, hash brown potatoes and carrots. He had a big bandage taped to his forehead. I asked him how he felt. "Fine," he said.

Apparently he had got tangled up in the legs of his walker when he tried to get up from the table and took a header onto the walker. Linda had to run next door to the neighbor to get help picking him up. And he had a gash across his forehead which mom immediately bandaged. The cut bled a tad but was not deep enough to require stitches.

"Does it hurt?"I inquired.

"Nope," he replied between a chew on a chicken wing and a fork full of spuds.

"OK, I'll be back at eight to help you get tucked-in." I headed back to my place for a couple of episodes of the Ace of Cakes...

Falling is, of course, one of the biggest fears of older folks. And for good reason. On the other hand, life is full of hazards and if the choice is between living in your own home or being placed in an institution - it's really no choice at all in my mind. And I'm pretty confident - in fact I know for a fact - dad feels the same way. On the other - other hand, Linda and mom both worry about dad falling since even between the two of them they cannot pick him up.

Such it is...as Grandma Newman used to say...


Elmer the Elder a couple of days ago. He's now sporting a big bandage on his forehead.

On a more humorous note, I spent a good portion of yesterday with Aunt Emilie. She called about 9 AM to ask me for a ride to the dentist. There had been some mix-up with her appointment; but they had just called and said they could see her immediately.

Okey dokey.

Auntie has had a grand total of two teeth extracted - both of which were located at the back of her jaw and discreetly out-of-sight. Nonetheless she is determined to have at least one of them replaced with an implant and amazingly enough the State's retiree health plan will apparently cover this procedure. When I picked her up she was convinced that she could have the preliminary exam that morning and the procedure the following day or the day after that...before the end of the dental benefit year. I thought this a most unlikely scenario but kept my own counsel.

Upon arrival at the dentist's office we checked-in and took a seat in the waiting room. The only other person present was a kid I'd guess to be fourteen or fifteen who was busy playing with a yo yo. Auntie immediately struck-up a conversation with the lad. After the initial pleasantries they got down to the serious business of laying-out their respective medical conditions. As it turned out, they both suffer from depression. This engendered a lengthy discussion of the pros and cons of various psychotropic medications by two obviously knowledgeable consumers. Surreal.

Finally, we were summoned. A couple of x-rays and then a consultation. The dentist struck me as a capable and decent sort - notwithstanding his willingness to put an implant into the back of the jaw of an 84 year old. Things threatened to turn ugly, however, when it soon became clear that the chance of performing the required oral surgery in the next two days was nil. Auntie was distraught. Her proposed solution was that she would be happy to buy-off someone else on the doc's appointment calendar. I think she was half-kidding - but only half...

The doc gently suggested this was not a viable solution and furthermore he wanted her to see her regular dentist again before surgery since the x-rays showed several other problems that should be addressed forthwith. This prompted a comprehensive recitation by Auntie of her entire 84 year dental history including some near libelous allegations regarding several practitioners she has seen. Fortunately, the doc took it all in good humor.

Finally, in a rare moment of silence I weighed-in with a suggestion on how we might rationally proceed. Auntie reluctantly agreed. The doc looked relieved. We tottered-out to the reception desk and made an appointment for February. After the first of the year I need to make her an appointment with her regular dentist.

An amusing episode from start to finish...

Well gonna go have a workout. And then I have to take mom to see the orthopedic surgeon... This will be much more sedate than yesterday's sortie however.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Alrighty then...On to 2010

Well, another Christmas done. And although it did not even come close to making the top ten Christmas list, I enjoyed it nonetheless. Indeed I am staring at my premier gift as a I type - a new 24-inch flat screen computer monitor. Very nice. And easy on 54 year old eyes.

Christmas Eve featured the traditional Alison Elgee boef extravaganza. And a WONDERFUL gingered carrot soup. I scored a way cool bird feeder, neat stackable cookie cooling racks, and a flock of bottles of good red as gifts. And my kitchen counter is stacked high with a wide assortment of other edible gifts.

As is the norm with the (dwindling) Lindstrom tribe, Christmas dinner was the crown jewel of the family Christmas season. Mom is not yet physically able to stand on her feet for extended periods; but my sister, Linda, knows the turkey drill from many years of observation and experience. Yummy. And mom did rally to make the lime jello/shrimp salad that my good friend, Martha, found so wonderful and my daughters, Leah and Amanda, regard as so bizarre. So, there you have it. Another Christmas done.

On to 2010!

But first a note on the past year which started out with considerable promise but seemed to lose steam on all fronts as the months passed. Mr. Dave Barry catches the essence of 2009 in his year-end piece, a representative sample of which follows:

Michael Jackson dies, setting off an orgy of frowny-face, TV-newsperson fake somberness the likes of which has not been seen since the Princess Diana Grief-a-Palooza. At one point, experts estimate that the major networks are using the word "icon" a combined total of 850 times an hour. Larry King devotes several weeks to in-depth coverage of this story, during which he conducts what is believed to be the first-ever in-casket interview; this triumph is marred only slightly by the fact that the venerable TV personality apparently believes he is talking to Bette Midler.


The entire piece can be found at:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/18/AR2009121802219.html?hpid=topnews

And in other news, this morning's Washington Post also includes a fascinating story about an American evangelical who has taken missionary work to a new level. A Mr. Robert Park crossed the China-North Korea border yesterday - proclaiming as he entered the Hermit Kingdom "I am an American citizen. I brought God's love. God loves you and God bless you..."

Some conservative/evangelical outfit called Pax Koreana may have sponsored Mr. Park's sojourn. The organization's blog says that Mr. Park carried a letter to North Korea's President Kim Jong Il that states, in part:

"Please open your borders so that we may bring food, provisions, medicine, necessities, and assistance to those who are struggling to survive," said the letter, according to a copy posted on the conservative group's Web site. "Please close down all concentration camps and release all political prisoners today."


Who can argue with this? Certainly not me. I am tempted to send Pax Koreana a donation with the hope and expectation that they will send additional emissaries on this mission. One can only hope that this catches on with the wider evangelical community.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

It's Christmas Eve Kids...

So...as is customary here is H.L. Menckens " A Christmas Story" as abridged and now as stolen from the Wall Street Journal.


A Bum's Christmas

By H.L. MENCKEN


Printed in The Wall Street Journal Editorial page - December 24, 1998

H.L. Mencken (1880-1956), the legendary Baltimore newspaperman, wrote the following story, originally entitled "Stare Decisis," for the New Yorker. It was published as a book in 1948. To mark the book's 50th anniversary, we present Journal readers with a slightly abbreviated version of Mencken's classic tale.

© Copyright, Alfred A. Knopf Inc.


Despite all the snorting against them in works of divinity, it has always been my experience that infidels--or freethinkers, as they usually prefer to call themselves--are a generally estimable class of men, with strong overtones of the benevolent and even of the sentimental. This was certainly true, for example, of Leopold Bortsch, Totsaufer [customers' man] for the Scharnhorst Brewery, in Baltimore, forty-five years ago. . . .

He was a sincere friend to the orphans, the aged, all blind and one-legged men, ruined girls, opium fiends, Chinamen, oyster dredgers, ex-convicts, the more respectable sort of colored people, and all the other oppressed and unfortunate classes of the time, and he slipped them, first and last, many a substantial piece of money.

Nor was he the only Baltimore infidel of those days who thus shamed the churchly. Indeed, the name of one of his buddies, Fred Ammermeyer, jumps into my memory at once. Fred and Leopold, I gathered, had serious dogmatic differences, for there are as many variations in doctrine between infidels as between Christians, but the essential benignity of both men kept them on amicable terms, and they often cooperated in good works. The only noticeable difference between them was that Fred usually tried to sneak a little propaganda into his operations--a dodge that the more scrupulous Leopold was careful to avoid. . . . [H]e sent each and every one of the clergy of the town a copy of Paine's "Age of Reason" three or four times a year--always disguised as a special delivery or registered letter marked "Urgent". . . .

But in the masterpiece of Fred Ammermeyer's benevolent career there was no such attempt at direct missionarying; indeed, his main idea when he conceived it was to hold up to scorn and contumely, by the force of mere contrast, the crude missionarying of his theological opponents. This idea seized him one evening when he dropped into the Central Police Station to pass the time of day with an old friend, a police lieutenant who was then the only known freethinker on the Baltimore force. Christmas was approaching and the lieutenant was in an unhappy and rebellious frame of mind--not because he objected to its orgies as such, or because he sought to deny Christians its beautiful consolations, but simply and solely because he always had the job of keeping order at the annual free dinner by the massed missions of the town to the derelicts of the waterfront, and that duty compelled him to listen politely to a long string of pious exhortations, many of them from persons he knew to be whited sepulchres.

"Why in hell," he observed impatiently, "do all them goddam hypocrites keep the poor bums waiting for two, three hours while they get off their goddam whimwham? Here is a hall full of men who ain't had nothing to speak of to eat for maybe three, four days, and yet they have to set there smelling the turkey and the coffee while ten, fifteen Sunday-school superintendents and W.C.T.U. [Women's Christian Temperance Union] sisters sing hymns to them and holler against booze. I tell you, Mr. Ammermeyer, it ain't human. More than once I have saw a whole row of them poor bums pass out in faints, and had to send them away in the wagon. And then, when the chow is circulated at last, and they begin fighting for the turkey bones, they ain't hardly got the stuff down before the superintendents and the sisters begin calling on them to stand up and confess whatever skullduggery they have done in the past, whether they really done it or not, with us cops standing all around. And every man Jack of them knows that if they don't lay it on plenty thick there won't be no encore of the giblets and stuffing, and two times out of three there ain't no encore anyhow, for them psalm singers are the stingiest outfit outside hell and never give a starving bum enough solid feed to last him until Christmas Monday. And not a damned drop to drink! Nothing but coffee--and without no milk! I tell you, Mr. Ammermeyer, it makes a man's blood boil."

Fred's duly boiled, and to immediate effect. By noon the next day he had rented the largest hall on the waterfront and sent word to the newspapers that arrangements for a Christmas party for bums to end all Christmas parties for bums were under way. His plan for it was extremely simple. The first obligation of hospitality, he announced somewhat prissily, was to find out precisely what one's guests wanted, and the second was to give it to them with a free and even reckless hand. As for what his proposed guests wanted, he had no shade of doubt, for he was a man of worldly experience and he had also, of course, the advice of his friend the lieutenant, a recognized expert in the psychology of the abandoned.

First and foremost, they wanted as much malt liquor as they would buy themselves if they had the means to buy it. Second, they wanted a dinner that went on in rhythmic waves, all day and all night, until the hungriest and hollowest bum was reduced to breathing with not more than one cylinder of one lung. Third, they wanted not a mere sufficiency but a riotous superfluity of the best five-cent cigars on sale on the Baltimore wharves. Fourth, they wanted continuous entertainment, both theatrical and musical, of a sort in consonance with their natural tastes and their station in life. Fifth and last, they wanted complete freedom from evangelical harassment of whatever sort, before, during, and after the secular ceremonies.

On this last point, Fred laid special stress, and every city editor in Baltimore had to hear him expound it in person. I was one of those city editors, and I well recall his great earnestness, amounting almost to moral indignation. It was an unendurable outrage, he argued, to invite a poor man to a free meal and then make him wait for it while he was battered with criticism of his ways, however well intended. And it was an even greater outrage to call upon him to stand up in public and confess to all the false steps of what may have been a long and much troubled life. Fred was determined, he said, to give a party that would be devoid of all the blemishes of the similar parties staged by the Salvation Army, the mission helpers, and other such nefarious outfits. If it cost him his last cent, he would give the bums of Baltimore massive and unforgettable proof that philanthropy was by no means a monopoly of gospel sharks--that its highest development, in truth, was to be found among freethinkers.

It might have cost him his last cent if he had gone it alone, for he was by no means a man of wealth, but his announcement had hardly got out before he was swamped with offers of help. Leopold Bortsch pledged twenty-five barrels of Scharnhorst beer and every other Totsaufer in Baltimore rushed up to match him. The Baltimore agents of the Pennsylvania two-fer factories fought for the privilege of contributing the cigars. The poultry dealers of Lexington, Fells Point, and Cross Street markets threw in barrel after barrel of dressed turkeys, some of them in very fair condition. The members of the boss bakers' association, not a few of them freethinkers themselves, promised all the bread, none more than two days old, that all the bums of the Chesapeake littoral could eat, and the public-relations counsel of the Celery Trust, the Cranberry Trust, the Sauerkraut Trust, and a dozen other such cartels and combinations leaped at the chance to serve.

If Fred had to fork up cash for any part of the chow, it must have been for the pepper and salt alone. . . . But the rent of the hall had to be paid, and not only paid but paid in advance, for the owner thereof was a Methodist deacon, and there were many other expenses of considerable size--for example, for the entertainment, the music, the waiters and bartenders, and the mistletoe and immortelles which decorated the ball. Fred, if he had desired, might have got the free services of whole herds of amateur musicians and elocutionists, but he swept them aside disdainfully, for he was determined to give his guests a strictly professional show. . . . He got, of course, some contributions in cash from rich freethinkers, but when the smoke cleared away at last and he totted up his books, he found that the party had set him back more than a hundred and seventy-five dollars.

Admission to it was by invitation only, and the guests were selected with a critical and bilious eye by the police lieutenant. No bum who had ever been known to do any honest work--even such light work as sweeping out a saloon--was on the list. By Fred's express and oft-repeated command it was made up wholly of men completely lost to human decency, in whose favor nothing whatsoever could be said. The doors opened at 11 a.m. of Christmas Day, and the first canto of the dinner began instantly. There were none of the usual preliminaries--no opening prayer, no singing of a hymn, no remarks by Fred himself, not even a fanfare by the band. The bums simply shuffled and shoved their way to the tables and simultaneously the waiters and sommeliers poured in with the chow and the malt. For half an hour no sound was heard save the rattle of crockery, the chomp-chomp of mastication, and the grateful grunts and "Oh, boy!"s of the assembled underprivileged.

Then the cigars were passed round (not one but half a dozen to every man), the band cut loose with the tonic chord of G major, and the burlesque company plunged into Act I, Sc. 1 of "Krausmeyer's Alley." There were in those days, as old-timers will recall, no less than five standard versions of this classic, ranging in refinement all the way from one so tony that it might have been put on at the Union Theological Seminary down to one so rowdy that it was fit only for audiences of policemen, bums, newspaper reporters, and medical students. This last was called the Cincinnati version, because Cincinnati was then the only great American city whose mores tolerated it. Fred gave instructions that it was to be played à outrance and con fuoco, with no salvo of slapsticks, however brutal, omitted, and no double-entendre, however daring. Let the boys have it, he instructed the chief comedian, Larry Snodgrass, straight in the eye and direct from the wood. They were poor men and full of sorrow, and he wanted to give them, on at least one red-letter day, a horse-doctor's dose of the kind of humor they really liked.

In that remote era the girls of the company could add but little to the exhilarating grossness of the performance, for the strip tease was not yet invented and even the shimmy was still only nascent, but they did the best they could with the muscle dancing launched by Little Egypt at the Chicago World's Fair, and that best was not to be sneezed at, for they were all in hearty sympathy with Fred's agenda, and furthermore, they cherished the usual hope of stage folk that Charles Frohman or Abe Erlanger might be in the audience. Fred had demanded that they all appear in red tights, but there were not enough red tights in hand to outfit more than half of them, so Larry Snodgrass conceived the bold idea of sending on the rest with bare legs. It was a revolutionary indelicacy, and for a startled moment or two the police lieutenant wondered whether he was not bound by his Hippocratic oath to raid the show, but when be saw the whole audience leap up and break into cheers, his dubieties vanished, and five minutes later he was roaring himself when Larry and the other comedians began paddling the girls' cabooses with slapsticks.

I have seen many a magnificent performance of "Krausmeyer's Alley" in my time, including a Byzantine version called "Krausmeyer's Dispensary," staged by the students at the Johns Hopkins Medical School, but never have I seen a better one. Larry and his colleagues simply gave their all. Wherever, on ordinary occasions, there would have been a laugh, they evoked a roar, and where there would have been roars they produced something akin to asphyxia and apoplexy. Even the members of the musicians' union were forced more than once to lay down their fiddles and cornets and bust into laughter. In fact, they enjoyed the show so vastly that when the comedians retired for breath and the girls came out to sing "Sweet Rosie O'Grady" or "I've Been Workin' on the Railroad," the accompaniment was full of all the outlaw glissandi and sforzandi that we now associate with jazz.

The show continued at high tempo until 2 p.m., when Fred shut it down to give his guests a chance to eat the second canto of their dinner. It was a duplicate of the first in every detail, with second and third helpings of turkey, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, and celery for everyone who called for them, and a pitcher of beer in front of each guest. The boys ground away at it for an hour, and then lit fresh cigars and leaned back comfortably for the second part of the show. It was still basically "Krausmeyer's Alley," but it was a "Krausmeyer's Alley" adorned and bedizened with reminiscences of every other burlesque-show curtain raiser and afterpiece in the repertory. It went on and on for four solid hours, with Larry and his pals bending themselves to their utmost exertions, and the girls shaking their legs in almost frantic abandon. At the end of an hour the members of the musicians' union demanded a cut-in on the beer and got it, and immediately afterward the sommeliers began passing pitchers to the performers on the stage. Meanwhile, the pitchers on the tables of the guests were kept replenished, cigars were passed round at short intervals, and the waiters came in with pretzels, potato chips, celery, radishes, and chipped beef to stay the stomachs of those accustomed to the free-lunch way of life.

At 7 p.m. precisely, Fred gave the signal for a hiatus in the entertainment, and the waiters rushed in with the third canto of the dinner. The supply of roast turkey, though it had been enormous, was beginning to show signs of wear by this time, but Fred had in reserve twenty hams and forty pork shoulders, the contribution of George Wienefeldter, president of the Weinefeldter Bros. & Schmidt Sanitary Packing Co., Inc. Also, he had a mine of reserve sauerkraut hidden down under the stage, and soon it was in free and copious circulation and the guests were taking heroic hacks at it. This time they finished in three-quarters of an hour, but Fred filled the time until 8 p.m. by ordering a seventh inning stretch and by having the police lieutenant go to the stage and assure all hands that any bona-fide participant found on the streets, at the conclusion of the exercises, with his transmission jammed would not be clubbed and jugged, as was the Baltimore custom at the time, but returned to the hall to sleep it off on the floor. This announcement made a favorable impression, and the brethren settled down for the resumption of the show in a very pleasant mood. Larry and his associates were pretty well fagged out by now, for the sort of acting demanded by the burlesque profession is very fatiguing, but you'd never have guessed it by watching them work.

At ten the show stopped again, and there began what Fred described as a Bierabend, that is, a beer evening. Extra pitchers were put on every table, more cigars were banded about, and the waiters spread a substantial lunch of rye bread, rat-trap cheese, ham, bologna, potato salad, liver pudding, and Blutwurst. Fred announced from the stage that the performers needed a rest and would not be called upon again until twelve o'clock, when a midnight show would begin, but that in the interval any guest or guests with a tendency to song might step up and show his or their stuff. No less than a dozen volunteers at once went forward but Fred had the happy thought of beginning with a quartet, and so all save the first four were asked to wait. The four laid their heads together, the band played the vamp of "Sweet Adeline," and they were off. It was not such singing as one hears from the Harvard Glee Club or the Bach Choir at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, but it was at least as good as the barbershop stuff that hillbillies now emit over the radio. The other guests applauded politely, and the quartet, operating briskly under malt and hop power, proceeded to "Don't You Hear Dem Bells?" and "Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party." Then the four singers had a nose-to-nose palaver and the first tenor proceeded somewhat shakily to a conference with Otto Strauss, the leader of the orchestra.

From where I sat, at the back of the hall, beside Fred, I could see Otto shake his head, but the tenor persisted in whatever he was saying, and after a moment Otto shrugged resignedly and the members of the quartet again took their stances. Fred leaned forward eagerly, curious to hear what their next selection would be. He found out at once. It was "Are You Ready for the Judgment Day?," the prime favorite of the period in all the sailors' bethels, helping-up missions, Salvation Army bum traps, and other such joints along the waterfront. Fred's horror and amazement and sense of insult were so vast that he was completely speechless, and all I heard out of him while the singing went on was a series of sepulchral groans. The man was plainly suffering cruelly, but what could I do? What, indeed, could anyone do? For the quartet had barely got half way through the first stanza of the composition before the whole audience joined in. And it joined in with even heartier enthusiasm when the boys on the stage proceeded to "Showers of Blessings," the No. 2, favorite of all seasoned mission stiffs, and then to "Throw Out the Lifeline," and then to "Where Shall We Spend Eternity?," and then to "Wash Me, and I Shall Be Whiter Than Snow."

Half way along in this orgy of hymnody, the police lieutenant took Fred by the arm and led him out into the cold, stinging, corpse-reviving air of a Baltimore winter night. The bums, at this stage, were beating time on the tables with their beer glasses and tears were trickling down their noses. Otto and his band knew none of the hymns, so their accompaniment became sketchier and sketchier, and presently they shut down altogether. By this time the members of the quartet began to be winded, and soon there was a halt. In the ensuing silence there arose a quavering, boozy, sclerotic voice from the floor. "Friends," it began, "I just want to tell you what these good people have done for me--how their prayers have saved a sinner who seemed past all redemption. Friends, I had a good mother, and I was brought up under the influence of the Word. But in my young manhood my sainted mother was called to heaven, my poor father took to rum and opium, and I was led by the devil into the hands of wicked men--yes, and wicked women, too. Oh, what a shameful story I have to tell! It would shock you to hear it, even if I told you only half of it. I let myself be. . ."

I waited for no more, but slunk into the night. Fred and the police lieutenant had both vanished, and I didn't see Fred again for a week. But the next day I encountered the lieutenant on the street, and he hailed me sadly. "Well," be said, "what could you expect from them bums? It was the force of habit, that's what it was. They have been eating mission handouts so long they can't help it. Whenever they smell coffee, they begin to confess. Think of all that good food wasted! And all that beer! And all them cigars!"

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Bloated

Ugh...feeling a tad bilious this morning. Holiday food binge. I was hungry after my workout yesterday mid-afternoon so went to El Sombrero for tres enchiladas con arroz y refritos. Would have been fine if I'd stopped there...but then went to play cards at Dougie's and Alison's where I snacked on various tidbits for three hours or so - washed-down with a few glasses of sturdy red - then went home and had a half-dozen big chocolate chip cookies and a couple of glasses of milk. And a Zantac for a nightcap. Gonna have to do an extra hour on the treadmill today.

The good news is that I was the big winner at cards. Heh. Heh.

It's been a festive weekend. Friday morning started with a loud CRACK at 6:55 AM when I thought I was about to be smushed by a falling tree. Held my breath for about 10 seconds waiting for the CRASH - but fortunately it did not come. A tree fell about 50 feet from the house. Small tree - big CRACK. You probably never hear the one that gets you...

Friday evening I had cocktails at the Breakwater with Doug, Shelly, and Laura. Great holiday fun. Troxels, the new restaurant/bar at the Breakwater is quite pleasant and was very busy. I had a good steak there a few weeks back; although all the side dishes were mediocre. Juneau still doesn't have a really good restaurant... The Island Pub makes great pizza; but it's certainly not fine dining. And Zephyrs is inconsistent. I pine for the lights and eats of the city. JESUS, I CAN'T BELIEVE I'M THINKING ABOUT FOOD!!!

It's clear as a bell this morning and a mite chilly. Supposed to be nice most of the week and cooler. Mid-teens at night and upper twenties during the day. A little wind downtown but nothing extreme. Pretty nice for this time of year.

Today I'm going to wrap presents. This is a many hour long exercise. I enjoy wrapping presents but am not very good at it and am really slow.

Finally, birthday greetings to Eric Swanson. A little something from the archives - and in keeping with today's theme of binge eating....


Happy Birthday to you...

Well, time to get dressed and head to the elders for morning chores...

Thursday, December 17, 2009

How Much Beef do you Want?

Went to the folks as usual this morning, did the requisite chores, and got a grocery list. OK. Off and running. Went to the post office, my bank, and then found, after a couple of stops, the required 13 to 15 pound Butterball turkey requested by my sister for Christmas supper. I then went to Fred Meyers to fulfill the rest of the elder's shopping needs.

Mom wanted to make meat balls tonight and 7% fat ground beef was on the list. OK. I got to the beef counter, located said ground beef, but didn't know how much she wanted. No problem. Whip out the ol' cell phone and give her a call... An elderly voice answered. The voice said "hello." I said "hello, how much beef do you want?"

The response was "Hello? Who is this?"

At that point I recognized that the elderly voice I was hearing was not the one I expected. I put on my reading glasses. Seems I had dialed "J.P. Holbrook" the next name in my cell directory after "Evelyn Lindstrom."

Oh. "Is this J.P.'s mom?"

"Yes it is."

"Well, this is Elmer Lindstrom, J.P.'s old friend calling from the meat counter at Fred Meyer's in Juneau. I called your number by mistake. But happy holidays."

"Oh.....OK...Merry Christmas to you too."

"Uhhh...OK...Merry Christmas. Bye. Bye."

"Bye."

I chuckled about this all day. But as the day wore on I also wondered what J.P.'s mom really thought about the conversation - did she have any idea who I was or was she now fretting about some weird conversation with a potential home invader? J.P. lives in Hornell, New York.

So...called J.P. late this afternoon. We had a WONDERFUL conversation (and mom DID know who I was). So... good holiday telecom karma.

Hah!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Let it Snow

A winter storm advisory for tonight. Nothing too dramatic - but maybe 5 inches or so of the white stuff. The skiers will be giddy.

Same old, same old in this neck of the woods. The folks are hanging in there...

Yesterday I observed a truly amazing thing. Dad, mom and I were all sitting in the dining room - CNN was on. Mom baited dad with a comment about how Obama was being blamed for all of the follies that originated in the Bush years. Dad then launched on the pointlessness of the Iraq war.

Mom, who is ALMOST as deaf as dad, replied with a comment on unemployment.

Dad responded with more along the lines that if the Iraqi's wanted to kill themselves, then they should be left alone to do so.

Mom retorted that the CCC was a great response to the unemployment of the Great Depression.

This heated and schizophrenic debate went on for about five minutes. I managed to keep a straight face. Don't think either one of them heard a single word the other said.

Ain't life somethin'?

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Think I'll Get Me a Bird Feeder

Another cool and pretty day. No wind. A bunch of winter wrens have taken up residence in the neighborhood. They're tiny brown birds with an upturned tail...very vocal and quite energetic. They make a chattering noise that could easily be mistaken for a tree rat. There are also a bunch of chestnut backed chickadees around. Think maybe I'll acquire a bird feeder - a little tweety-bird action would be amusing with morning coffee.

Just got back from the elders where I rearranged some firewood. We got a cord after I returned from my fall vacation. It was wet when we got it and has not dried out a whit. The woodshed is pretty full but I managed to get about half of it stacked inside. It should dry a little better. I hate to have wood under a tarp outside once it snows. Makes it harder to keep the path to the back of the house clear and is generally a pain in the ass to keep the tarp squared away in winter weather.

Last night's dinner went well...all things considered. Mom's appetite is not good; but dad and auntie tucked-into the groceries with some enthusiasm. The pot roast recipe is a keeper.

Auntie has not checked-in today. She's kinda bear-like (or maybe it's lion-like) - she'll gorge herself and then sleep for a day or two... She was well provisioned with left-overs when she left last night...

Tonight I'm going to Doug's and Alison's for supper. Gonna make an Apple Brown Betty for dessert...got the fixin's yesterday; but didn't have time to make it for last night's supper.

Well, off to the kitchen...

Thursday, December 10, 2009

A Good Day

It started out early...a call from my sister at about 7:15 AM - was just contemplating a first cup of tea. Dad's urostomy pouch was leaking..."OK, be over in a few minutes." Shaved, washed, etc... Zip over to the elders. Put a new bag on dad. Mom's leg hurts. My sister has a belly ache (literally).

Got the folks' Christmas tree assembled which put me in a better mood. Then a half-assed workout. Then shopping. And then I got cooking! I will cut-and-paste from an email I sent to a pal this afternoon in this regard:

I'm making "pot roast" for the elders. Cook it today...let it soak overnight in the sauce. Then slice it, put it into a baking dish and spread the juicy goodness over it for reheating tomorrow night.

Ingredients present that I may not disclose: Anchovy paste, capers, lemon juice, lemon zest.

Ingredients present that cannot be denied: Figs, apricots, prunes, black olives, green olives, zinfandel.

And, of course, Uncle Elmo's famous homemade beefstock which is DAMN good, if I do say so myself.

As usual, I'm sure the reviews will be mixed (at best). Oddly enough, my dad is becoming quite adventurous. I've now got him gobbling stuff that he NEVER would have even tried before. The secrets to this success are twofold: 1) His eyes and sniffer are no longer operating at anything approaching peak efficiency; and 2) I just don't tell him about a lot of stuff...until after he says something is really tasty. Then I tell him what's in it.

This evokes (in rapid succession) looks of betrayal, anger, resignation and amusement.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Sorry...

Sorry I haven't posted in a week or so. I've had a cold and a touch of sinus trouble. I've had a sinus headache every day - feels like my head is in a trash compactor. Just haven't felt good and have not been sleeping well. I feel better today and got my first good nights sleep in quite awhile.

It's hard to believe it's already the 8th of December. On the one hand, it's been a LONG month since my mom had her knee replacement on October 30th. On the other hand, time just flies...

I've got my tree trimmed. And day before yesterday the landlord strung lights on my deck and the eaves of the house. Quite festive. I still need to finish my cards and haven't done any shopping to speak of yet; but I reckon I've got time.

The elders are doing OK. Mom's frustrated with the pace of her recovery; but she's beginning to putter around the house a bit and cooking her own breakfast. She is eager to reclaim her kitchen. I'm still spending lots of time at the folks helping out. It's not difficult work - but pretty much chews-up the whole day. Yesterday afternoon I made a BIG pot of stew which I will distribute to various locations today. Damn tasty if I do say so myself.

Dougie and Alison will be home tomorrow after a couple of weeks of fun and sun in Cabo San Lucas. Their transition to winter should be behind them by the time they get home...I see the weather in Seattle has been clear and cold too - just as cold as Juneau, in fact. Although the weather could be a lot worse than it is...can't really complain for December.

I spoke to both Leah and Amanda in the last few days and they're enjoying each others company in Portland over the holidays. Amanda has a month long break from camp and Leah is only getting a day or two of work each week. Leah is going to start back at the Washington County Health Department right after the first of the year - another 3 month temp job; but at least it will be 40 hours a week. The job market is still pretty grim in PDX.

From the archives and the Ghosts of Christmas Past department. A Lindstrom family Christmas card from around 1960. I got spurs that jingle jangle jingle...

Monday, November 30, 2009

Just Checking-In

Was sick as a dog all weekend. I think I slept for about 16 hours a day for three days. Feel much better but still a little congested. Hopefully I am no longer contagious as I have resumed elder care duties.

In fact I'm off to the store and then back to the elders...

Friday, November 27, 2009

Exile

Woke-up on Thanksgiving morning with a sore throat and a fever. By the end of the day it had morphed into a good ol' fashioned cold. Don't think I've had a cold in over a year - another good thing about retirement and the avoidance of those virus-laden workplaces...

In any event, my bug has put me into self-imposed exile - can't expose the elders to these things. Thus, I missed the family turkey extravaganza although I did send a carrot and sweet potato puree and a chocolate peanut butter pie over via cousin Sandra. Just as I was cooking-up my holiday bacon and eggs a big plate of turkey and all the trimmings was delivered to my door by Andrew and Samantha - my landlord's kids. Delicious.

I still feel crappy this morning - seriously into sniffling and snuffling. But I'm sure I'll be fit as a fiddle in a day or two.

In other news, Sarah Palin did not disavow the possibility of a run for President in 2012 in an interview on Fox. In fact, she coyly mentioned a dream ticket of herself and Glenn Beck. Where can I send a check to support the undertaking of this most excellent adventure?

In a similar vein and further circumstantial evidence that some of our Thanksgiving turkeys may have been spiked with some sort of powerful hallucinogen, Lou Dobbs continued to promote himself as a candidate for President in 2012. Indeed according to Politico, his interview on the Hispanic Network Telemundo was truly surreal.

“I want to engage in a meaningful and constructive dialogue and work with those who will work toward real solutions,” said Dobbs, who once falsely accused illegal immigrants of carrying leprosy into the United States.

Later in the interview, Dobbs made an impassioned plea to the Hispanic community, urging them to reconsider their previous views on him.

“Whatever you have thought of me in the past,” he said, “I can tell you right now that I am one of your greatest friends, and I mean for us to work together.”


One hardly knows where to begin giving thanks for our blessings in the year 2009. Ain't America great?!!!

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Baja Update

DATELINE CABO SAN LUCAS....THIS JUST IN....

First report from Dougie and Alison at the Cape:

Pretty good crowd here. A couple of cute college-age girls in front of us in the check-in line couldn't wait for the party to begin and ordered beer delivered from the lobby bar while they were waiting. And who says these kids today have no initiative?


Dougie was a victim of some good ol' fashioned flim-flammery:

On our walk we had the bite put on us in a new way. An American (of course) comes racing across the street at us, and in an out-of-breath voice insists that he needs 200 pesos to get his car out of impound, but he only has 180. He shows us a set of keys and a handful of small bills and change. He was sunburned, of indeterminate age (probably because he clearly wasn't wearing his dentures -which gave him that Walter Brennan look), somewhere bewteen 55 and 75. Anyway, it was a good act and 20 pesos is about $1.60, so I passed him a couple of Washingtons and off he went -- in the opposite direction from where he had earlier indicated his car was jailed. He was, however, headed in the direction of a sports book that I am acqainted with, and I had the feeling he was less intereted in his car than he was in the spread on the Monday night football game. In any event, it was a story and an act worth paying for and, as Augustus McRea once said, but in a slightly different context, 'If a man won't cheat for a poke, he doesn't want one bad enough'."


Sounds like tough duty in Cabo...

In other news, tomorrow is Turkey Day. I will be making side dishes - the classic green bean casserole, sweet potato and carrot puree, an auxiliary ham (auxiliary to sister's turkey), and chocolate peanut butter pie. Cousin Sandra is making a spinach salad and punkin' pie. Linda has got Turkey, mashed taters, gravy, stuffin', and cranberries. Good and good for you. Yum.

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

My Mother the Wobbly

Perhaps it's the Percoset talking, but nonetheless, I believe my mother is ambling towards the left-end of the political spectrum at a rate that frankly astounds me.

She's getting into a serious "tax the rich" frame of mind. I heartily applaud the sentiment, of course, but her vehemence is something to behold. On the other hand, I never had to go to bed hungry - and she did - which is a great equalizer in any debate one cares to have on this subject.

My mom was raised in rural Arizona. She did not get enough to eat on more days than she cares to recall. She lived in a shack. For most of her childhood there was no electricity. No running water. I think she had finished the 8th grade when she moved to Juneau in September, 1941. She was fifteen years old. She went to work at the Baranof Hotel - first as a dishwasher and ultimately working in the pantry. She made the sandwiches that one would eat when one flew out of Juneau on a Pan Am flight to Seattle.

My mom has the heart of a lion and is as tough as nails.

Neither one of us understands the health care debate. How can our elected representatives be so stupid? So oblivious to the obvious?

Mom says "tax the rich" - I think she's on to something...

Friday, November 20, 2009

Most Fun in Weeks

A pretty fair day. Did physical therapy on/for mom twice today and I could see a measurable increase in her knee mobility. Think we're up to around 80 degrees...from no more than 70 two days ago. And she's more cooperative...

I was finished with my last PT gig by 4 PM and headed to town for cocktails with Laura Beason, Dougie, and Shelly and John Manguso. Most fun I've had in weeks. Doug was at his debonair best, Shelly and Laura as cute and vivacious as they were 30 years ago, and John witty and amusing.

OK...perhaps I exaggerate just a tad...but it was sure nice to enjoy the company of my contemporaries for an hour or two at least.... Friends are good!

The most amusing story of the evening was last week's winter trek by John and Shelly on North Douglas where they stumbled across a deer begging to be shot. John was carrying a rifle - more for bear protection than for deer hunting - but when they spotted the deer Shelly gave permission to fire. In fact, she was apparently filled with something approaching blood lust - hungering for fresh deer heart and liver. Who would have ever thought?

Unfortunately for them - and fortunately for the ungulate - John's rifle was not equipped with a scope and the sites were ice-encrusted - the deer just stared at them quizzically as John squeezed off four or five rounds.

But it's snowing tonight so perhaps better luck this weekend if they are so inclined...

In other news, I will be ferrying Dougie and Alison to the airport tomorrow as they depart on a two week vacation to Cabo San Lucas. Perhaps Dougie will furnish us with amusing tales from Baja...

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

One Step Forward...

...and one step back. A tough day yesterday. Mom had both a physical therapist's and doctor's appointments at the Juneau Bone and Joint Center. Cancelled. She just didn't feel well enough to make it. The fundamental problem is that she has been practicing medicine without a license - as she has been doing ever since I have made her acquaintance - decided she didn't need the stool softener as directed. Big problem. So we spent yesterday getting that squared away - the breakthrough came early this morning... She seems much improved today although she still feels queasy.

I am worried about falling behind in the PT department. I put the odds at 50/50 that she will ultimately have to go back to the hospital and under anesthesia to have her scar tissue broken up. She will not like that. Neither will anyone else in the vicinity. But that may well be the course we are on... The physical therapist from home health will finally be able to see her on Thursday. We can only hope that she will be able to make-up for lost time.

Dad is doing fairly well. And he's being more-or-less cooperative. Can change at any moment, of course.

My cousin, Sandra, is in town for ten days so she gets to argue with Auntie. Good luck with that, cuz.

Oh yeah, and today is mom's birthday - 83 years young.

Well, chores are done at the elder's. Gonna check my email and then head to the store. Gonna make a shrimp saute.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

The Wind Blew and the Shit Flew

YIKES! A serious shit storm in Juneau last night. Southeast wind and heavy rain caused tree falls, mudslides, and the traditional power outage. Power was out at my place for almost three hours from around 6 AM until shortly after 9 AM. I coped in the most sensible manner I could think of - I stayed in bed.

Two elderly ladies who live down the street from my folks and who are participants in my informal meals on wheels program had a tree fall on their trailer about 4 AM. Fortunately they were not injured and the tree removal guy was there early this morning and a general contractor was working on the crumpled roof before noon. They did not have to move out. This evening I am taking them a dozen oatmeal scotchies for consolation...

Downtown was apparently a mess today with several slides on Gastineau Avenue which also closed South Franklin. One house damaged. A number evacuated. Nobody hurt.

Dad recalls a very serious slide in the same area back in the 30's. He was working for the AJ Mine and had gone to a movie. They paged AJ employees during the movie to get to their equipment to help dig out houses - the slide came all the way down to the beach where the Juneau Cold Storage used to be. That whole hillside in unstable. You can tell where the old slides were by looking at the vegetation.

As for the immediate climatological future...it's snowing at the moment and the prediction is for rain, snow and mixed rain and snow for the foreseeable future. And did I mention dark?

Later kids.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Lou, Lou, My Old Buddy Lou

Adios to Lou Dobbs who has fouled the airwaves on CNN the past few years with his xenophobic Latino bashing and loud-mouthed populist demagoguery - putting me in a black mood on more afternoons than I care to recall as I marched on the treadmill at the Club in mid-afternoon. I generally like to watch the news when I'm marching; but have forsaken CNN in favor of the Food Network as the TV monitor of choice whenever Lou's mug is on screen.

Lou has apparently been playing footsie with Fox News (gee, what a surprise) and has some sort of radio gig planned. Perhaps he can co-anchor a program with a certain former Alaskan Governor we all know and love...

It is one butt-ugly day in Juneau. Rain and serious wind. Gusts to 85 mph at Eaglecrest and a gust of 113 mph on Sheep Mountain. Lovely. The extended forecast calls for mixed rain and snow tonight, then more rain, and possibly some snow early next week. And it's pretty dark by 3:30 PM.

In other news, elder care continues pretty much as previously described. We had a little 911 drill on Tuesday when mom had an allergic reaction to one of her medications. Her eyes got puffy and swollen and her throat began to constrict so it was off to the ER via ambulance. This was the first time she had been in an ambulance and I think she was a little disappointed they didn't use the siren... The medics and ER doc pumped her full on anti-histamines and steroids and she improved rapidly.

Yesterday I took her to her first physical therapy appointment. It went well. The therapist seemed to think that she was NOT all that far behind where she should be at this stage of the proceedings. This morning I get to be the therapist which will be interesting, I'm sure.

Last night I was paroled long enough to enjoy pizza with Joan Kasson at the Island pub. Adult company between the ages of 18 and 65 was a refreshing change.

Well, off to the salt mine...

Monday, November 9, 2009

Woke Up, Fell out of Bed, Dragged a Comb Across My Head...

A day in the life...

Got up around 7 AM. Did my morning routine and headed over to the elders around 8 AM. Mom had an appointment at the doctors at 9 AM - her 10 day post operative check-up. While she and Linda were getting her organized I got dad situated - weigh him, poke him to check his blood sugar, and get him into the living room.

The appointment was fine. Doctor Schwarting is a little concerned with all the bruising; but no bleeding or sign of infection. We jettisoned the leg immobilizer - good riddance to about three pounds of gear.

Back to the house and time to give dad a sponge bath and change his urostomy pouch. Went fine...a minimal amount of grousing. He doesn't think he can get dirty because he "doesn't do anything."

Clean-up the bathroom and pass all the laundry on to Linda for processing. Put ice in mom's "arctic pack" to keep the swelling down on her knee.

Off to the club with a stop to check the folks' mail. A good workout. A message from mom when I'm finished, "Please pick up the scrip at the doctors and take it to the Walmary Pharmacy." Done. A nice chat with Ross Soboloef in the Walmart parking lot - hadn't seem him in a year or so.

Off to Fred Meyers for grocery shopping. Shitty produce. They must not have anything from this week's barge yet. The asparagus was as woody as a raspberry cane.

Drop a few groceries off at my place and pick-up a few things I need for cooking supper at the elders. Back to the elders.

Cook dinner - Asparagus with mustard vinaigrette, peas, red potatoes, Chicken Kiev, and fresh deer heart sauteed in butter with garlic and shallot. Deer heart courtesy of Mr. Dave Gray - and dad and I really enjoyed it.

Wash dishes.

Just got home at 7 PM and in an hour I'll head back to poke dad again and then put him to bed around 9 PM. I think mom will be able to sleep in her bed tonight now that she's rid of the major appliance.

Priority for tomorrow: Arrange for physical therapy. The Hospice and Homecare folks can't get here until the 19th and that's way too long a delay. She needs to see someone this week. I'm guessing that will mean more trips to the clinic.

Kinda tiring. But I feel that I'm actually being useful - which makes it A-OK!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

All the Planets are Back in their Orbits

Well, sprung mom from the hospital yesterday afternoon. She was ready to go home! Her left leg is sheathed, wrapped, bandaged, immobilized and water cooled. We have a contraption that outwardly very closely resembles a half-rack sized beer cooler; but is in actuality a "polar pack" designed to circulate ice water around her knee. You fill the cooler with ice and water, fit a pump into the chest, put the lid on with a plastic hose coming out of the pump that connects to a series of plastic tubes wrapped around her knee. Plug the puppy in and it continuously circulates ice water. This is a considerable advancement over the technology we used five years ago when she had her right knee replaced. The old system consisted of two bags of frozen peas which would alternate between her knee and the freezer.

Mom is enthroned in a recliner we moved from the living area to the dining area. She has considerable pain but the meds are controlling it reasonably well. So far...so good... I have no doubt she will successfully captain the family ship from her throne.

I am now sleeping in my own bed but am spending lots of time at the elders. I need to put dad to bed at 9 PM and help him get up and organized in the morning - around 8:30 AM. I'm also in-charge of other intimate dad duties that my sister Linda prefers not to even contemplate.

Dad is very weak and is utterly dependent on his walker for stability and support. He sleeps in a chair in his bedroom. Just getting him into "bed" is a thrash - and somewhat humorous when you think about it. We put a little pillow on the floor in front of the chair for height. I carefully center his "doughnut," an inflatable round pillow with a hole in the center, in the middle of the chair. He then climbs on the pillow on the floor using the walker and my arm for support. I then push the back of the chair forward as far as I can to lower the front of the chair. He then carefully takes aim and plops his ass (hopefully) on the center of the doughnut. Sometimes we have to do this two or three times before we hit the bulls-eye. It's kinda like a game of chance and skill that one might find at Coney Island. Hmmm. Wonder if I could market this?...

Otherwise Linda and I are splitting household duties - cooking, cleaning and so forth. Although we approach virtually everything from very different perspectives, I certainly have come to appreciate her 24/7 trials and tribulations. She's tired and needs a vacation. Mom and dad live a very regimented life - everything gets done in the same order and in the same way every day. Monday through Sunday. Three hundred and sixty-five days a year.

As a semi-outsider I am able to challenge some of the more bizarre and pointless ways of doing things - sometimes with success and sometimes not. Comfort zones are pretty tiny...

In any event everything is chugging along satisfactorily.

In other news, I spoke to daughter Amanda a couple of days ago and she is doing well. Busy, busy, busy. She has decided to stay-on at the camp through next spring although she will have a month off between Thanksgiving and the New Year. Would sure like to see her but I don't know how that's possible given the state of things otherwise...

Leah is not getting as many hours with the Clackamas County Health Department as she had hoped. The swine flu program is operating in fits and starts due to the unavailability of sufficient vaccine. She's had a cold the past couple of days.

Finally, last weekend when I was at the hospital I encountered Kurt West who was in the waiting area with his son poised to become a grandpa and an uncle respectively. I understand all went well and he is indeed now officially gramps. Congratulations to all concerned!

Well, time for a workout. Then the store. I'm cooking steak for the elders this evening.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Very Busy

I've been very busy...just a quick post from my sister's computer while the chicken marinates.

Mom's still in the hospital. She was bleeding from her incision yesterday which concerned the doc. They stopped the blood thinner and today it's much better. She may be able to come home tomorrow.

The other elder is doing fine - or perhaps more accurately he's doing as well as he's going to do. No pain. Good appetite. Looking forward to Game 6 of the World Series tomorrow night. We're both rooting for the Phillies.

Looks like the Democrats are going to be in serious spin-control mode tomorrow. It appears that the off-term elections are not breaking their way. No surprise...and meaningless, of course, but I'm sure the talking head's tongues will be wagging tomorrow.

While I was at the club today I saw some Republican Congresswoman who appeared to be suggesting that the health care reform legislation pending before the House was more dangerous than terrorism to this country. I'm sure that will have tongues wagging as well.

Actually, in one sense I suspect the honourable gentlelady is correct. Certainly for those pols who have been contentedly suckling on the Big Pharma and health insurance company campaign contribution teats; health care reform may well be regarded as a serious threat.

Well, gotta go peel spuds and slice broccoli.

Hope to catch-up with everyone soon...

Sunday, November 1, 2009

A Quart Low

Well, life goes on...albeit at a very S L O W pace. Not much going on at the elders. Everything is very routinized...you can pretty much set your watch by the various activities. Dad is doing OK...his weight was down a pound this morning...which is a good thing although he's still retaining lots of fluid.

Mom is doing well at the hospital. They gave her a transfusion yesterday...she was a tad anemic...but that was no surprise since she was a bit on the low side when she went into the hospital. The physical therapist had her walking yesterday and that caused a considerable amount of what the nurse calls "discomfort" and what you and I would call pain. But that's what painkillers are for... Mom wants to come home - and that's a good sign. Perhaps tomorrow or Tuesday.

I'm headed to the store. Gotta get ice cream. Dad clipped a coupon this morning for me and was positively giddy that we would save a couple of bucks. Think I'll buy stuff to make cookies and applesauce - something to keep busy. I can't stand just to sit on the couch...

A real snoozer of a Halloween. Three kids came to the door. The folks' place isn't much for trick-or-treating. No streetlights and no sidewalks. And it was raining. We had a little snow yesterday morning (didn't stick); but this morning it looks like the snow level is around 1500 feet.

TallyHo!

Friday, October 30, 2009

So Far...So Good

Just got back from the hospital and mom is doing fine. Came through the surgery with flying colors - although she may not feel that way at the moment. It took about 2 1/2 hours to install a new knee. Pretty amazing.

Now I'm waiting for the hospice and home care folks to visit dad. The nurse should be here in a half-hour or so. And I'm still hoping for a workout.

So far...so good...

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Gettin' a Little Chilly

Brrrrrr. Took the jeep in for service at the crack o' dawn this morning. It was 33 degrees. The rain was mixed with snow. It was dark. I turned the heat up when I got home. Took my sweater off then put it back on. On November 1st we go off daylight savings time which means it will be getting dark shortly after 4 PM. Shit...

On the other hand, I will be moving to the folks tomorrow for some period of time...and it is unlikely I will be cold there. The wood stove will be going full tilt. I'll be taking mom to the hospital tomorrow morning at 6 AM. She's scheduled for a knee replacement at 8 AM.

I hope to be able to spend part of the day here at my digs and get my customary workout every day...but it's not yet clear how this will all play out. Fortunately, dad seems to be reasonably chipper at the moment. My sister, Linda, and I will be dividing chores although there are some dad duties that she doesn't feel comfortable performing. Can't say that I blame her...

Spent about three hours yesterday at the folks' raking leaves, clearing the gutters and sweeping the driveway. Second time in about two weeks; and more leaves accumulated last night. The folks think leaf sweeping is important and I certainly don't mind the exercise. But it's kinda humorous when you look around their neighborhood; a lot of folks won't even pick up the garbage that the ravens/bears get into - much less rake leaves. But then again most of the folks in the neighborhood don't have yards...

On the other hand, the immediate neighbors are very nice and are always very solicitous of the elders.

I may be a little spotty on posting for awhile...

Later gang.

Monday, October 26, 2009

It Has Come to My Attention...

...that a certain picture has been circulating on the internet that purports to portray yours truly as an abuser of deer. I have located the offending image (below) and as anyone can see, I am clearly aiming at the green...not the deer. Look at my tootsies...they are lined-up well to the left of the supposed target ungulate. Trickery. Trickery. Trickery.

Although, come to think of it, hunting these semi-domesticated deer with a golf club and ball is certainly more sportsmanlike than with a thirty-ought-six (assuming such a weapon still exists). Not to mention with an assault rifle...

And while we're on the subject of wildlife...I must mention that I have added a new bird to my life list. A Downy Woodpecker. Black and white guy...never seen him before...but I spotted him from the back of my folk's trailer while mom and I were watching the ravens devour the hearty breakfast she had provided to them. The Downy Woodpecker is rare in Southeast Alaska. Wish I had my camera at the time...



Elmo carefully aims at the green...taking every precaution to avoid disturbing his four-legged pal

In other news - got a call from mom just as I was headed into the grocery store this afternoon. Dr. Smith had called and unfortunately spoke to dad. Dad's translation was somewhat garbled by virtue of his congenital habit of saying "yeah" to anyone talking to him regardless of whether or not he has heard a word spoken. And over the phone he hears very few words. Apparently instructions were given...but they remain a mystery...

I am awaiting a call-back from Kim's nurse to find out what was really said...

Life is grand!

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Milton Supman 1926 - 2009

R.I.P. Milton Supman, a.k.a. Soupy Sales, children's television show host from the late 1950's through the mid-1960's. Although I was never a huge fan, I certainly recall watching his show from time-to-time. I pegged him as a dope, but his memorial in the Washington Post this morning notes that Soupy was occasionally in trouble with the authorities for his on camera hi jinx including this gem:
With one minute of airtime to fill at the end of his show, he told his young viewers to sneak into their parents' bedrooms, find their wallets and "take some of those green pieces of paper with pictures of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Lincoln and Jefferson on them." "Send them to me," he said, "and I'll send you a postcard from Puerto Rico."
In other news, I had a busy day yesterday getting mom cleared for surgery next Friday. We paid a visit to her regular doc and then to the hospital for some lab work and a pre-op briefing. No show stoppers so far.

I spoke briefly to Leah on Thursday to wish her a happy birthday. She was getting ready to go to dinner with Chris. Sounds like her job is kinda dicey - this past week she's been working a public health swine flu hotline - not a lot of fun when your message is "We're out of vaccine."

Sounds like the immunization effort is a bit of a cock-up nationwide and the public health folks have their work cut-out for them. First the shortage of vaccine. And now the whack-jobs and flim-flammers are getting into the act big time. The internet is full of scary nonsense about the lack of effectiveness and danger of the vaccine and the patent medicine quacks are further muddying the waters hocking a plethora of homeopathic remedies and prophylactics.

If this winter turns into the 'perfect storm' of influenza and our health care system (particularly our hospital system) is overwhelmed by seasonal and H1N1 flu - something that is very possible - one can, of course, then expect the mullah's to weigh-in with the customary "I told you so's" of the "This is God's retribution for [INSERT YOUR PET PEEVE HERE]" variety.

At times I wonder if this country is governable...

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Happy Birthday Leah and Amanda

Amanda and Leah turn 26 years young today. Happy Birthday gals! I only wish I could share the day with them in person. They are wonderful.


Leah and Amanda have always been sweeties!

In other news, I've
been busy, busy, busy. Yesterday was devoted to serious cooking. I made a LARGE batch of beef stock in anticipation of doing lots of cooking while residing at the elders this next month. And I prepared supper for the whole tribe last evening.

It's always a question mark whenever I try anything new with the family - but the saute of scallops with mustard, rice with parsley, and glazed carrots with apricots and almonds seemed to go down pretty well. And the Apple Brown Betty dessert was mighty tasty if I do say so myself.

Earlier this week I made a large batch of chicken noodle soup which is dad's favorite breakfast food...

Tomorrow I'll accompany mom to her primary care doc for her pre-surgery check-up. And then we have a pre-op gig at the hospital tomorrow afternoon. She's scheduled for her knee replacement on October 30th - none to soon - her pain is extreme. She's ready to get this show on the road.

Last week's beautiful fall weather is now just a fading memory. Back to the normal October diet of rain and wind. The trees are now mostly bare. The very brief fall color is gone and the leaves are now a soggy brown mash underfoot. Yesterday mom noted that our first snow last year was on October 24th. Don't think we'll get any snow this next week but it won't be long...

I see that Microsoft is releasing its new operating system. This is a good thing. I desperately need a new desktop computer. Thought this one was going to have a stroke processing my vacation pics. Or maybe it's computer Alzheimer's...it just kinda stops every few minutes and grinds away like it's forgotten what it's supposed to be doing... It's over six years old which is about 100 in computing years.

Later gang!

Monday, October 19, 2009

Vacation Pics Posted

Whew! Finally finished photoshopping and posting my vacation pics. What an ordeal. Bet I've got at least 100 hours invested. Was working on it until midnight last night and then dove-in again at the crack-o'-dawn this morning.

And damn! Just went back and viewed the slide show again...and sure enough, spotted some spelling and grammatical errors as well as a few pics that I wish I had cropped or fiddled with in some other fashion. But I am bound by the oath I took as a retiree - when a project that's supposed to be fun begins to feel like work - then it's time to put a fork in it...

At any rate, check 'em out at: http://classic.kodakgallery.com/elmerlindstrom - if this link isn't "hot" then go find it under Alaska Related Links on the right...

The Kodak Website is under renovation. Looks the same externally - at least for the moment - but the guts have been seriously redone. And I'm not sure I like it. I had a hell of time uploading stuff and the editing process was REALLY slow. But on the other hand, it may be my decrepit computer.

In any event, enjoy the pics. I'm headed to the elders and then for a workout. And I need to make some chicken soup for dad...

TallyHo!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Fall Chores

A busy couple of days of outdoor chores. I spent much of Wednesday putting auntie's yard to bed for the season - even mowed one last time - pretty amazing for October. Yesterday was spent at my folks doing the same drill - plus chimney stack change-out and fall gutter cleaning. Whew! I'm feeling a mite sore today. It's not hard work but there's lots of bending over which I always feel in the back of my thighs and my lower back. No harm done however...

I also finished photoshopping all the Redmond golf pics and got them on a disc and delivered to Laura. They look VERY similar to last year's pics except, of course, we're all a year older.

Laura just got back from Palm Desert where she closed on the sale of her old condo on Tuesday followed by closing on the new and bigger condo on Wednesday. She's now got a contractor beavering away on some improvements. And she bought a golf cart! Not bad for five days work including two travel days... She appeared tired but content.

Yesterday I spoke to Leah and she sounded great. She had her first day of work at Clackamas County and it went well - aside from the fact they are horribly disorganized about this H1N1 immunization thing. Just like the rest of the country. Leah's moving into a new apartment in Portland. It sounds really nice. And most amazingly it is owned by Steve and Maria Marks. Steve practiced law in Juneau and Maria (Keithahn) Marks graduated from JDHS the same year I graduated. A small world, ain't it?

It's Leah's and Amanda's birthday next week. Twenty-six. YIKES!

Have a great weekend everyone!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Adieu to Jasper the Wonderdog

Dawn patrol. I was camped outside of Alaska Airlines Cargo at 6:00 AM this morning to hand-over Jasper the Wonderdog to their care for his flight to Seattle and Boise. Jasper has a new home with Joan's dad in Nampa, Idaho - said home coming equipped with a big yard and resident squirrels. Sounds like a doggy retirement resort... Joan is visiting her dad and will collect the hound at the Boise airport this afternoon.

After the hound drill I legged-it over to the folks. Dad was bleeding into his urostomy pouch again yesterday and I fully anticipated a grueling day at the hospital. But...amazingly enough...the bleeding stopped last night and he is resting comfortably. So...here it is not yet 8 AM and I feel like I've already put in a days work.

It's hard slogging on the vacation pics. I've got a ton of golf pictures that consist of folks being given various awards. The lighting was not very good so they require lots of work and the subjects all sport wild sun burns that make them look lobster-like. It's tedious work; but I will persevere.

And after some photo work think I'll go have a workout and a steam. Maybe a nap this afternoon...my four-legged bed partner last night was kinda restless and I didn't sleep too well.

It's clear as a bell again today but supposed to blow Taku downtown - gusts to 70 mph. Not fun...but much easier to tolerate when the temperature is 45 degrees as opposed to zero.

Oh...just heard Jasper's flight depart and it sounds like it was a little bumpy on climb-out. I'm listening to the aircraft radio and the pilot just reported continuous light chop from take-off through niner thousand. Sorry Jasper! Just think of those squirrels waiting for you buddy!

Later gang.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Leif Erickson Day

A very amusing article in today's New York Times titled "Every Dog (and Norseman) Has His Day" - a brief history of Presidential Proclamations for various and sundry persons and events. From the proclamation for National Fire Prevention Week: “As powerful as any force in the natural world, fire deserves our utmost attention.” You betcha!

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/11/us/politics/11proclaim.html?hpw


"Even before there was Leif Erikson Day, there was a Leif Erikson, who rode this boat. Or one like it, anyway."

Well, it's been a busy week - and fairly productive, at that. Mom is now scheduled for knee replacement surgery on November 12th - barring any disqualifying condition her primary care doc might discover beforehand. She's ready to rumble. Once one of my elders makes up his or her mind about a matter- that's the ball game - there's no looking back... Let's get on with it!

I'm about half-way done photoshopping vacation pics. Hope to have some stuff posted in the next couple of days. I've been doing a little cooking. Been doing various errands. Hauled and stacked the last cord of wood yesterday morning. Got flu and pneumonia shots. I still need to do the fall clean-up at mom's and auntie's yards - it's supposed to be sunny tomorrow and Tuesday so will check-off those tasks shortly.

Had an excellent supper at Alison's and Doug's place last night - grilled leg o' lamb. Very, very tasty. Cousin Dick and Candy were the guests of honor. We played 'Apples to Apples' a very fun parlor game.

Cheerio.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Way to Go Leah!

Leah is now employed as a Health Educator for Clackamas County, Oregon - organizing H1N1 flu immunization clinics. Excellent! I know how being unemployed/underemployed has weighed on her this past year - Portland is REALLY difficult during this recession. I was talking to Jane last evening and she mentioned a recent notice in the Portland media where a company was hiring a handful of positions and hundreds showed-up to apply.

It seems that this downturn is particularly hard on young adults. No jobs and no health care. I spent an hour or so chatting with a guy Leah's age at the Seattle airport the other day. He was from Denver, just out of college and going through the job hunt ordeal. Denver doesn't sound a lot better than Portland on the employment front for young folks...

Meanwhile...back here in the 'burg I have successfully picked-up from where I left-off with the elders...

It's not as grim as I had feared. I assumed I was in for a battle yesterday on how to proceed with mom's knee replacement while assuring dad was cared-for. Turned-out that we're pretty much on the same page. I accompanied mom to the bone doc's office yesterday and we're now on course for surgery - probably in mid-November. She needs a physical from her primary care doc first - to confirm she's got a good chance of successfully tolerating surgery. Should have that appointment set-up today.

Dad is demonstrably weaker than when I left; but he certainly does not require 24-hour skilled nursing care. That's not to say that his care is easy or fun - but I don't see anything with which I cannot cope - particularly with ongoing support from the home health folks. I THINK I am as capable - at least physically - as crippled 82 year old mom!

So...the bottom line is I will be relocating to the elders while mom is in the hospital and for some period during her convalescence. I HOPE I will still be able to sneak-out for a few hours each day (could be 6 AM workouts). My sister cannot lift dad by herself if he falls and she is unwilling to undertake some of the more odious tasks so I will be on a pretty short leash. I am going to reconnoiter the neighborhood to see if there is someone who would consistently be available on very short notice to assist in case of a fall.

Just finished paying the monthly bills and now I'm going to start downloading vacation pics. It will be awhile before they're all processed and posted on the Kodak site - but I'm looking forward to the task. Later today I'm going to see if I can take mom and auntie to DMV and maybe stop at the doc's office so mom and I can get flu shots. And yesterday I bought the fixn's for chicken stock and zucchini bread...

The weather is supposed to improve today and be relatively nice for a couple of days. There's a couple of days of work to put mom's and auntie's gardens to bed for the season. If I'm ambitious, I may even plant some bulbs. And one last cord of wood should be dropped in the folks' driveway in the next couple of days...

Feeling reasonably chipper - all things considered...

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Lock-Down

Got home last evening after a grueling 16-hour day - everything went as planned - but it was a long day.

The sound of my apartment door closing behind me as I entered the joint sounded suspiciously like the clanging of a cell door. I suspect there's no chance of parole for at least six months.

Headed over to the elders shortly. Mom has an appointment with the bone doc this morning to assess her knee and (hopefully) pick a date for surgery.

My sister picked me up at the airport last evening and waited a whole four seconds before launching on how dysfunctional mom and dad are...

Great to be home.

More later...

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Life is Grand.

Another post the same day...strange I know. But this is the proverbial end of the line. Tomorrow is a freeway drive back to Boston. So, for all practical purposes tonight is the end of the vacation. AAAAAARRRRRGGGGHHHH!

I had a great day. The weather was quite nice. It was a bit of a kurfluffle however...a KAL 007 moment as it were...

Over the past two weeks I have had several people recommend the Town of Woodstock for us leaf peeping types.

Yesterday, I drove near Woodstock, New Hampshire. I ASSUMED this was the Woodstock to which everyone was referring. I got a briefing from the landlords this morning. Woodstock was the place to go. I set off...having set my GPS for the center of the town of Woodstock, New Hampshire. Got there. Didn't look a damn bit like what anyone had described.

Got out the map my "landlord" had given me. Tried to enter some locations in my GPS. No joy. I FINALLY noticed that the addresses of the various places on the map for Woodstock had VT - not NH - as the state. Oh....

Recalculating....


The good news...this is what I missed yesterday.

A couple of hours later I arrived in Woodstock, Vermont. The bad news: It's a tourist trap. The good news: My detour took me back over roads I had traveled yesterday when the weather really sucked - and today I got some good pictures.

Whew! So here I am back at my digs. I've had an early supper. I've got a bottle of good wine and I proceed out to the lawn.


Elmo sits here



This is what Elmo sees

Elmo starts to think about the world -particularly the past month.

Elmo thinks about his elders back home.

Elmo thinks about his daughters and the trials and tribulations of youth. God I love those gals...





Elmo thinks about Tim and Mary Lou Milnes - the fortuitous email from another friend that allowed us to get together. And my Portland pals Arthur, Sher, Jim, Tim, and Jane god bless
'em





And the bloody golf tournament - poor cuz'n Dickie has got the golf bug bad! And my best friends in the whole world Alison and Dougie...

And in the Emerald City of course my dear friend T. (RIP Pogo); and my friend Brent Long who I look forward to seeing at Christmas in Juneau...


And then the wine is gone... Life is grand....

Rain with Embedded Downpours

Greetings from Lyme, New Hampshire...about 15 miles north of Hanover and the campus of Dartmouth College. I arrived in Hanover last evening just as the Hanover/Yale football game ended and got caught-up in a traffic jam that seemed to consist mostly of expensive European luxury sedans driven by old white guys. Poor drivers and highly litigious. I prudently pulled over for a late lunch/early supper.

I listened to a bit of the game on the radio - Dartmouth lost. This was NOT a nationally televised game. In fact, I got the impression that the radio guy (I think this was a college-run gig) had never actually seen football played before...which made the broadcast amusing. Ivy league folks...

The drive down from Bretton Woods yesterday was a bit of a disappointment. I'm sure the scenery was beautiful - but I cannot vouch for it insofar as much was hidden by rain, clouds, and fog. The forecast called for "rain with embedded downpours" and the weatherman hit the nail on the head. Even so, the Kacamangus Highway was pretty cool. Lots of colour - although I expect it is still a week or ten days short of peak.



A lull in the downpour on the Kacamangus Highway


A covered bridge

Well, today I'm going to mosey over to Woodstock, New Hamshire - a village that I have been assured by several people positively reeks of New England charm. The weather is much improved today so I hope to take pics to beat the band.

Hasta luego.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Mount Washington

Ah...finally a little sun. It was overcast this morning; but the weather has steadily improved all day. It's now partly cloudy and quite spectacular.


The entryway to the Mount Washington Resort


The Mount Washington Resort


Mount Washington from the resort

Today I took the Cog Railroad to the top of Mount Washington. The summit is about 6800 feet. It was overcast when we started out...climbed into the clouds...and then out of the clouds. The temperature was 27 degrees at the summit which claims to have the worst weather on the planet. Average wind speed - 30 knots. But fortunately today it was pretty much calm.


Steam choo choo chugs up Mount Washington


A diesel locomotive nearing the summit

Steam choo choo at the summit


Headed downhill - a 35% grade!

Last night I had a great supper here at the resort.
The public rooms are absolutely wonderful - jackets required in the formal dining room. I have a reservation tonight and will have my pre-supper glass of medicinal pinot noir in the conservatory gazing at Mount Washington as the sun sets. Not a bad day!

A couple of pics from East Middlebury and the Waybury Inn - it was very comfortable. I can't get enough of these rural hang-outs...


The Waybury Inn in East Middlebury - supposed setting for the Bob Nehart Show


The Waybury Inn

Well, tomorrow it's off to Lyme, New Hampshire. Just a few miles from Hanover. I will travel along the Kancamagus Highway which is supposed to be the crown jewel of fall foliage. Unfortunately, the weather may not be too hotsy-totsy.


Later kids!