Thursday, April 03, 2008
dear ernest,
I love you all the time, but I loved you the most in the winter when you decide that 8:00 pm is the appropriate going to bed time. It gave me two hours (give or take) or me time. Now that the days are longer, you have taken to going to bed later and later. While this works well for you, I seem to have lost my me time.
When can I get it back?
smooches,
nm who jumped forward and is not falling back anytime soon
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Dear Mayor Nickels,
I don't know about the rest of the chumps in the city, but I know that every paper bag
that I get from the grocery store gets used for composting, garbage and recycling.
Thank you also very much for penalizing those of us who already recycle/compost most of our
waste stream.
nm bagging the canvas in the 98105
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Dear editors,
I know that your job as a book editor is not to micromanage me or hold my hand, but how about some encouraging words that should sent out around March 10th asking how I was doing? That would have been helpful or at least guilt tripping. I anticipate a few sleepless nights between now and April 12th, my own deadline for putting the pedal to the metal so to speak.
At least you were kind enough to provide the authors with a nice template that the publisher likes to use. Thank goodness chapter is so much fun to write -- in my now quite copious spare time learning our beloved model, reviewing geospatial policy and working towards my goal of finding my own way in the world of my group, the one I have been part of for nearly three god damned years.
Well, off we go, to think dream of natural hazards.... and mitigation
Sincerely,
nm lead author chapter 5 - real life applications
Monday, March 31, 2008
The end
I will be participating next month only because the theme of "the letter" intrigues me.
I will leave you with these questions to ponder--
Why do our animals insist on following us into the bathroom?
Do the flight attendants make coffee with the packet of coffee they use to freshen the lav?
Why does the spinster daughter get called before the bachelor son in times of emergency?
Nm who was an old lady that lived in a shoe
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Sunday blahs
I woke up in foul mood which made my 796 minute walk with the dog at 6:30 am a bit more irritating than usual. I have not a clue of what is causing these outbursts of foulness but they have got to stop. Yes I have considered the shooting range but I'm not keen on driving to the burbs on Sunday mornings.
This week I am working on figuring out what is causing such angst -- can't blame the internet, the stockmarket, troop surge and Wynona Judd for this.
Nm caffeine free taking deep cleansing breaths
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Friday, March 28, 2008
the syndrome
someone so young. Massage, acupuncture, PT, xrays, brain examination has come back with various and sundry types of explanations, but still, this nagging pain and discomfort. Oddly activity helps, being sedentary makes it worse.
The last few months it has really gotten to be a drag. I finally dragged my arse into the orthopedist who poked and prodded me and declared me to be a healthy person without any sort of spine, hip, lumbar issues and was flummoxed as to what was wrong with me, because it wasn't something she could fix. I guess this is good in that all fingers, toes, symmetry kind of way. I mentioned something my massage therapist had said and she check that out. Voila -- he was right - I had the syndrome -- piriformis syndrome. Basically, I have irritation of my sciatic nerve and it runs near my piriformis muscle group and this causes "deep glutteal pain." I cannot write this without cringing.
My ass hurts and it affects my leg and it makes me cranky.
The last few weeks I have been dealing with a godsend of a PT (thanks J!) who is working to help me get over this and been fitted with orthotics in my running shoes. I can't say that I'm excited, "the syndrome" may be with me for a long time, better I suppose than a ACL tear, definitely not as sexy. I don't get crutches and I still spend time in meetings getting really antsy because its just not fun to sit down and feel your leg throb after about 15 minutes.
I'm still on track for my half in a few, my 3 day (pimping here) and to keep things active.
Just next time you see me, don't ask how my ass has been. K?
nm
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
hump! day!
Today was really no better work wise than yesterday, but I digress.
I spent part of my alloted luncheon time that I would have spent with Ernest with my parents in their new garden. My father pruned back some perennials and my mom planted some onion starts and chives. We decided that they needed some persian leeks and some sprouting broccoli. These are needs that are easily tended to. I like those the best.
My mom pronounced that they have a new policy chez M, the new PQE rules. For my mom that is no pressure, no questioning and no explanations. My mom figures that the less micromanaging and questioning that people do of her actions, the sooner she'll get back to normal and life will too.
I think as we get older and set in our ways and realize that the love/lust of our lives has just as many ways that are set in stone that much energy is expended on pronouncing our irritation at the unbending of wills or second guessing each other's motives. Maybe I need realize that sometimes things need to be done without this level of analysis and that TH, my colleagues and even my parents may have reasons for their decisions.
An aside, TH could be superTH today. We returned from dinner tonight to hear a bleeping of an alarm in the 'hood. Turns out our neighbor M across the way left a pot on the burner and left the house. We managed to secure a key and turned things off. TH and our other neighbor aired out the house with box fans and are hoping she returns home soon. Another disaster averted because TH decided to check it out instead of shrugging her shoulders and saying that someone else can deal with it.
nm bending to only ernest's will
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
falling down on the job
Today I attempted to battle linux, software installation and attempting to find a license file for a software product that apparently bundles the software authorizations with the dvds they send users who are evaluating the products.
Two of us banged our heads on the wall trying to figure out why we could not find out where to request licensing information, the answer was buried three levels down in the documentation.
Kiss my grits.
Tomorrow, stay tuned while I kill our data management system due to my inability to read the documentation.
kill -9 nm
Monday, March 24, 2008
tangled webs and whatnot....
Today I reopened an evite for party my neighbor and friend is having to reconfirm the time. Evites are strange, in a way they are nice because you don't have to spend four hours of time at Kinkos trying to get something printed and they can be done fast, but at the same time, they can be awfully impersonal.
Having said that, I opened it, acted on it (rsvped) and then closed it. Today I reopened it because I am an idiot and did not write down the date.
I also then looked at who was coming and who was not coming, as if that should dictate if you are going to a party. It does for many. Low and behold, a decliner was someone who I hung out with in the freaking 4th grade. Is that not weird? What is weirder is that I was talking to TH yesterday about the first real time I had ham, which was at her house for a rare sleepover event. Adding to the mix was that moments earlier I was confirming with another recently reconnected with childhood friend a plan for dinner. All these people are quite intertwined in my life and they are all coming back into my life.
Ham chunks, broiled pineapples, the Osmond family, staying up all night giggling and canopy beds are all past us now, but such memories to have.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Lost
Butterfinger eggs are missing from my Easter mix.
Secretly, I am relieved because that means I don't have to eat all of them on Monday.
Seriously.
Other than that all but one plant is in the ground and that is progress.
I'll be so glad when NaPoBloMo is over, I can do with out my own pithy blog entries.
nm hopping down the bunny trail
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
the new year
I will be attending to this shortly.
I love Nowruz, I love the idea of a spring celebration, I love a new start, especially the house cleaning and removal of last years problems.
For those of you who know what we've been going through, hearing good news last week was the best new years joy anyone could imagine.
Thank you for your prayers and good vibes.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Paris finally
Life is good even if the dollar is in the toilet and every one seems to on edge.
Sheep, laduree and a view of the eiffel tower can solve a lot of problems.
Nm
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Its saturday still, right?
Nm
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Friday, March 14, 2008
The Var and Haute Provence underrated if you ask me
Xo
Nm
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Really it doesn't matter
As much as I have ragged on american airlines, I will miss their lie flat seats and billions of episodes of ugly betty.
Nm hoping that her gate hasn't changed to. Marseilles
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Monday, March 10, 2008
the lure of technology
I think my next trip will be techno free. Every little gadget looks so adorable by itself, but together they are forces to be reckoned with, weight wise that is. My D50 is not that heavy, but when you bring the battery charger, which weighs less than a battery, it adds up. We're borrowing J's GPS on C's recommendation. The GPS is lightweight, the hook up isn't.
Add a cell phone to the mix and we're taking up more and more precious bucket bag space.
I'm not sure I can do without the camera, I love to take pictures and some love to see them.
I'll be photoblogging on the road in support of NaPoBloMo (sounds dirty doesn't it?), so keep in touch.
ou est la fromagerie? dit nm
Sunday, March 09, 2008
moderate sunday
I love daylight savings time. I don't even mind the dark mornings for the first few weeks. As a gardener and dog walker, the ability to be outside in the light until 7, 8 and even 10 pm is worth it. This week we leave our light until 7:25 evenings to go to France where they have not adopted our fantastic desire to give me more gardening opportunities. However, the cheese is better and they have better haircuts.
Today I dragged TH out of bed at a very early hour of eight to go look for a red plum tree. For your information, the tree just does not exist and we settled for a pie cherry and hopefully one day the magical tree will appear.
We wandered around a nearly empty nursery with our favorite presidential candidate and picked out some herbs for my parents and a few more bare root loganberries for ourselves, it felt like we had really turned the corner.
Yesterday I spent just one hour moving some stuff around the year round p-patch and another hour today and things are ready to go. I am excited for the gardening season, mostly because I think we have finally gotten into spring and I'm happy. I know the last frost for my area is a scant few weeks away, but for some reason, I am throwing all doubt to the wind and have planted lettuce, arugula and radishes in the faint hope that they will be up in the next three weeks.
The two pictures above are of the p-patch, south and north beds, its not much to look at right now, but come June's gooseberries, lilies, roses, raspberries, lettuce, strawberries and the last of the asparagus, we'll be quite happy and full from our own bounty.
nm who pulled out rhubarb with her bare hands
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Shameless self promotion part 2
I hate to do this to you all, but I'm walking the Seattle Komen for the Cure walk in September with my friends, the Bodacious tatas.
I hate asking for money and thank you for all of you who have donated, I send you smooches and
will thank you every step.
So now, for today, I ask if you haven't or didn't know that I was doing this with Missy and Tracy and hopefully some other fine women, that you consider donating. I have always been skeptical about these events and the amount of money that ends up going to the organization and for research after all the overhead is taken out.
Well, they have trimmed that and money does go towards education and research, so I'm in.
So, reasons to donate:
1. you need the tax deduction
2. you want to support me
3. you really want an ernest sticker (limited time offer)
4. you wish you could walk, but really don't want to spend your Sunday's in August walking 18 miles with only three stops for bathroom breaks and coffee, which leads to more bathroom breaks and makes nm's quite cranky
5. the look in my eyes when I see another donation added to my total, I get teary, I really do
6. well, you know, its the right thing.
Here's my link, I really haven't updated anything, I am planning on it.
My link for the 3 day!
This weekend I'm planning on doing about 10 miles, four one day, six the next. My half marathon schedule is off, April for the Whidbey, May somewhere (Tacoma), June in Seattle and July starting those long walks.
Really long walks. It makes me realize that after this, Portland will be easy.
recession proof nm hah
Friday, March 07, 2008
Quickly before the end
Nm cracking forward
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Monday, March 03, 2008
1. I have the cutest optometrist in the world; thus visiting every other year is a joy
2. I killed five snails today on our walk. Happy Spring.
3. Our wireless is currently blowing.
4. I have great doubts about posting on the blackberry while in France
5. It rained and it was cold
6. Antibody treatments against horrible diseases is an amazing technology, but the side affects also blow
7. TH and I believe that you should buy locally, thus you should be a locacompro is comproloca better?
Okay, must dash, there is some squeaking my future
Sunday, March 02, 2008
things I could have been doing while not watching Superbad
2. taking the dog for walk
3. sleeping
4. watching something else
5. writing thank you emails
B dropped the dvd off for me (thanks), but it just wasn't that funny.
nm who is superbad
Saturday, March 01, 2008
Rabbit
Friday, February 29, 2008
leaping backwards
This week I have been faced with my past, mostly my childhood and adolescence. Strange that I celebrated my birthday this week and spent the Sunday before it with my best friend from age six to twelve and my best friend from age twelve to nineteen. Two very lovely women, incredibly successful women who in turn connected with each other as well.
While my life took turns that theirs didn't, we are all happy with our choices. Be it kids, partnerships, IPOs, basset hounds, multiple degrees that render us useless, suburbs versus the city, we all grew up as the children of first generation immigrants to this land far far away.
I spent the last 23 years running away from my childhood friends. It is not to say it was bad internets, it just was something that I just didn't want to be part of for a while. I built my own support system that I cherish and will never let go, there was just something magical about sitting around on Sunday discussing how we'll never be like our parents in some ways. We will never be able to hold a candle to the parties they had and that makes a all a bit sad and relieved.
I never thought that I would be the girl who needed fifteen chafing dishes for my 100 guests, but I know that push comes to shove, I could call the girls and they would do me proud.
I am making connections with them again, mostly through my mom and dad coming back and my dear brother, who was quite anti-social during his Bershon period, but has blossomed into Mr. Suave.
Hey, starting tomorrow, I'll be blogging daily, in support of NaBloPoMo. I even bought a new crackberry to make it easier while lollygagging and throwing vast sums money at the French for things like cheese baguettes and really bitter coffee.
bonjour mlle nm, comment-allez vous?
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Just in time for my trip in eleven days
Recession, there is no freaking recession. Weak dollar good! Allows more of the US to be bought!
Argh.
We have been really good about hedging funds for the last few trips. I may be paying for my now 7 dollar cafe creme using euros I bought at 1.41 this summer. Really.
It was fun while it lasted (sniff).
nm who now has to up her ATM limit just to take 200 euros out
Monday, February 25, 2008
a new year
Tomorrow marks the beginning of my next year. Its prime, though I am beginning to feel less prime by the day.
I have had lots of on my mind, none of it very inspiring and some of it not very pleasant. It may be middle aged doldrums, it may be more than that. I'm hoping it soon will pass.
I'm trying to figure out what to do next.
nm
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
no brainers/non starters
You know those things that make it easy to say yay or nay to something -- people you date, places you go, people you hang with. Intravenous drug use, excessive gambling, three simultaneous relationships and bad family vibes would be non starters/no brainers in the relationship arena in case you are wondering.
Consider this internets -- no brainers when you were to go looking for a house and the garden you will spend the next 20 years cultivating.
any sign of bamboo in the garden -- run screaming, you will never rid yourself of it
clay soil --I weep when I garden in Berkeley
neighbors with outdoor speakers and/or a conversation fire pit
Luckily, I am really only dealing with the first issue. We are lucky enough to have a neighbor who never uses his back yard and his "firepit" and when he moves, we'll be pickaxing it out.
I hate bamboo.
I'm not avoiding you all, just really have nothing to say these days. V. busy with work, gardening and planning the number of one star restaurants one can eat in five days in Provence.
So far, we're up to two, I believe three is the limit.
nm sorting the bamboo from the bamboozled
Friday, February 08, 2008
I cannot say more than it has been a week.
I'm glad it is over.
I'm now sick, probably due to those around me and end of the week
stressors. Everything will be okay, thank goodness.
TH is in the 510 until tomorrow, leaving me with a 23 month old basset hound who does not feel that icy rain is an impediment to his social life.
If you live in Washington State, for gosh sakes, go to your caucus tomorrow. I will admit to never have gone to one, but the 98 emails from my left wing friends have convinced me that I can pull myself away from something to devote a few hours to this. My district caucuses in the school where I went to the 1st grade. All those days of pledging allegiance in my classroom must have paid off huh?
Many guides have done a great job of explaining the system and how it works. Megan did a great job of recapping it all.
Who am I supporting? I'm still unsure, the dark basset, is my first choice, but not many others.
nm rocking out the vote
Monday, February 04, 2008
Um, for those of you who don't follow my every move on twitter or flickr, I had a great time in
Kauai. Even the extra seven hours it took us to get there weren't so bad. Alaska kept us fed (burger king), watered (mai tais anyone?), entertained (how many times can you see Mr. & Mrs. Smith?) and updated as to if the rental car places would be open when we got to Lihue.
Other than that, it rained on Saturday, which is not uncommon, it just made it impossible to do a low water crossing we wanted to do. We revisited Hanalei, tried to find Makai Orchards (swept away in the bad dam breech), had some damn fine pineapple and then some really mediocre japanese food.
Sunday we bagged anything touristy and went right to the beach. Great day for it. Don't expect to see us all tan or anything. It was a good day for a book read, getting your feet wet and being amazed at how relaxed you can be for four hours.
Back to the grind again. The lull of the Internet, data standards, Haut-Provence or Rhone Alpes, tea or coffee, kibble or pasta, all are decisions that make us crazy.
I'm looking forward to some more structure before I have to vacation again.
nm creating brownie points as we speak
Friday, February 01, 2008
Rethinking the seasons and time with Waverly Fitzgerald.
Wondering if I really need new shoes.
nm off to kauai for the next 48 or so hours
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Things could be looking up, street sign, Montepulciano, January 2008.
I have nothing of note to say, sorry internets.
It is too damn cold here and it is now officially warm.
I am leaving for Hawaii on Friday (shut up) and hope to g-d its at least 75 degrees
and sunny. Yes, I have spf 50.
We have eaten two meals in a row at home and tomorrow means chicken enchiladas (ole).
Mony is back and better than ever.
Check her out.
Carry on.
Sunday, January 27, 2008
bliss
Coming home to a clean house
Knowing that tomorrow we'll get the dog
Tulips from the market
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Just so you know its not all fun and games
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Bullet points for the revolution
Hi there internets!
Bullet points for Saturday night at the airport lounge.
Go see Juno.
I mean it.
Then buy the soundtrack and wish you were young enough or maybe old enough to appreciate Beat Happening in the day.
Some more things:
I made it through twelve odd days of travel without really using my credit card. Internets - can you believe it? I used it twice, once for my hotel near Orvieto and once in Rome. I paid cash for everything, including socks, toothpaste, food and pasta for the dog. That is the sum total of my heavily laden bags. Oh torrone as well, can you believe torrone can weigh that much?
I think my credit card company (I pay it off every month), is going to send out a search party. They miss me.
Other than that, TH and I are on our way to New Orleans. Eight long days in the Big Easy. Email me your restaurant suggestions internets (ehem, Jen). I need help.
We're there for work, not for pleasure, but it always helps to think that I may finally find a gumbo that I like. Forget the muffaleta sandwiches and the hurricanes, I'm not even going there.
Well, I'm off to hit the dunkin donuts and burrito beach before my next flight.
nm easing into the big easy one segment at a time
Monday, January 14, 2008
Happy January.
It is snowing here, glorious and sunny yesterday and today, grey, rainy and now sleety and snowy.
Good for hot cocoa drinking, nuff said.
Getting back into the groove. I can stomach more that mexican food which has led to some major gastric reflux and corn flakes. Oh, toss some starburst and fruit flavored mentos into the mix and you will now have my food diary for the last week.
Tonight we tried artichokes and mashed potato. Tomorrow, who knows, knife and forks will be wielded and we'll carve into a roasted chicken.
Okay, that is all I have to say, tell me what is going on with you. You all seem so, well, silent.
nm working her way back to the four food groups - coffee, cornetti, carciofi and contorni
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Resolving to resolve less in 2008
Run a half marathon this year
Reduce my carbon footprint some more
Plant my bulbs earlier
Weed more frequently
Water less
Forgive more
Take more naps
Listen before talking or jumping to conclusions
Practice patience
Patiently practice what ever I am trying to learn
Smooch more
Happy New Year from nm, TH, ernest the puppy
Monday, December 31, 2007
the end of the year
Beautiful day here in Rome, all of them have been spectacular so far. Sunny, not warm, but very comfortable for walking and taking in the sights.
Tonight we'll be watching Rome celebrate the new year with military grade fireworks, lots of singing and screaming and hugging and kissing.
We'll be eating lentils and cotechino, braised greens, fennel salad and toast in the new year with a nice barbera and prosecco. Chocolates from Paris, typical Roman cookies and Sicilian clementines will finish off our celebrations. It is a good life, we have, we are lucky.
All day long the streets and monuments have been filled with Romans enjoying the day. We stood in the museum of the Capitoline taking in the sights and amazed at the number of people walking in the Forum amongst the ruins. Later we enjoyed a lovely lunch in the Ghetto where TH enjoyed her trippa alla romana and I tested my new gold standard in pasta - cacio e pepe.
The air is filled with people wishing each other a good new year, blessings and good fortune. Every five to ten minutes it sounds like the cannon that sits at the top of the Janiculum hill is going off, but that is just Roma saying goodbye to 2007 and hello to 2008.
I wish the same for you, happy new year and may 2008 be filled with joy, good health and love.
nm
Saturday, December 29, 2007
the great leap forwards
I'm not going to go in depth here, because I vowed to spend only fifteen minutes a day on the computer, but the Rome that I have loved for the last ten years and have been to at least ten times in the last ten years seems to be changing.
Wine bars, remodeled coffee shops, chain stores and supermercatis everywhere are changing the face of Rome, a city I love for the fact it seems resilient to change.
Change is hard, especially for me.
Is a tarted up coffee shop going to make me spend more time there? A new supermercati does not make provisioning (the one hour spent daily to acquire milk, clementines, fughi and carciofi as well as scrumming for bread) any easier really. It just makes it more modern and in some ways more impersonal. The vendors in the food market change yearly it seems, with fewer and fewer food people and more and more scarves, handbag vendors and touristy tat.
The lack of goods, such as today's foray to find napkins (cloth) took hours because the good kitchen supply shop near where we stay is gone. We managed to secure very lovely placemats, but heaven forbid that one can find a cloth napkin that matches. TH and scoured the streets (not such a bad task) and finally found napkins, first white and then a cheery festive red that matched.
Tomorrow, our friends R&K arrive. TH will do the traditional meeting them at the local train station and then the fun really begins. We hope to be able to show them our Rome, some touristy, some not so.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Decompression chamber
I want to go go go, yet, my body is saying, relax.
This is nearly impossible for someone like me.
I am completely and utterly conflicted.
Off to attempt to nap, after an espresso.
more later
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
It is snowing here, not too hard, but making one wonder if driving to someone's house is such a great idea when you could snuggle up at home and eat leftover sugar cookies and plum pudding for dinner. However, family obligations are such that going out on a freezing night with a mother who has a mother of a cold is just what you do.
Tomorrow, we fly to Rome for seven days and then another three in Lazio and Florence and then one more night in Rome before we fly home.
I am excited to show TH some gardens that I saw ten years ago and wished that she could visit. Her plan is to not have one, but to drink cappucino decaffeinato, eat gelato and practice her Italian scrumming for piazza bianca as she wants. Honestly, I'll just be happy to see her happy and relaxed for the first time in two or three years (the post-classwork/orals/pre-research years).
We'll be blogging while gone, flickring and twittering as we can, so stay in touch.
Ci vediamo ragazzi.
nm
Saturday, December 22, 2007
winter light
Today was the first day of winter, one of my favorite days of the year. It brings me hope that I'll be able to walk Ernest in the light, wake again to natural light and give me an inkling that all will be okay in the world as spring comes soon after.
While we woke to lashings of rain and a dull gray sheet of clouds, the day brightened as it went on. It improved to the point that the and errands that required doing and things that couldn't wait, waited, while we stood in the dining room and smiled at the sun coming in and warming our house.
Hello Winter, thank you for bringing us light and warmth, if just for those brief minutes.
nm
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Monday, December 17, 2007
coming home
Tonight my brother and I are picking my parents up from the airport. It is unusual for even one of us to drive to the airport to pick them up. We're not bad people, its that my parents are pretty independent souls and they are used to either picking up a car that we have left them or getting a taxi.
However, tonight my parents are coming back to Seattle forever.
Growing up we were not particularly peripatetic people. The first few years after leaving Iran, we traveled where my father could get a better position as he moved up the ladder from intern to resident to fellow to faculty. My mother continued to do whatever was needed, making friends and connections as she could, keeping us amused and out of our father's way while he studied or slept between shifts. When he realized that at the ripe age of 41 that he had to move from the University to private practice to give his family everything that he never had, he made that shift.
Even when he made that jump, he went from the University to a hospital in West Seattle that desperately needed someone with his leadership, good nature and organizational skills to bring the hospital around. My father accomplished this and then moved on with his team he had amassed to a larger hospital. He flourished in a practice at a time when medicine was not about HMOs and PPOs and they just went to work and helped people. My father left his practice at the right time, he worked hard and had a good group of doctors around him to carry on.
He wanted to garden in the sun, enjoy his days off without rain gear, he wanted to see blue skies that stayed blue and to garden in short sleeves all year around. They moved to California where they built a house that few could dream of and enjoyed it with their friends. They later decided to downsize and remodeled a house that many would still consider to be palatial. During this time, my mother and father remained upbeat, even as they had to visit their things in storage while the contractors ripped out walls and installed granite counter tops.
Last year, when my brother was offered his dream position back in Seattle, my parents decided it was time to come home. They had different requirements than they did in 70s and 90's and 00's when they did major moves, but over time we managed to find something that would work for them. It still requires time and effort to get my mother's seal of approval, but for me its perfect. It brings them within five minutes of myself and my work, near a good grocery store, a pharmacy, hair salon and close to some of their long time friends.
The last few weeks have been very emotional for my mother and father. In the twelve years they have been associated San Diego and La Jolla they have made an amazing group of friends. My mom has been involved in several large charitable organizations and my father has kept himself busy educating himself at the Salk Institute. They are losing bond to my mother's nursing school friends who are known to fly down for a the weekend to have a bbq. These people gave them a sense of adventure and spontaneity that seems to lack here. I don't know why that is, but it just feels that way. In Seattle, they have twenty seven years of memories and an extended family that cannot wait to see them, yet, it all feels so bittersweet.
I cannot explain it, but the move that is permanent means that they are now rooted here, something that cannot be moved. I hope they do not lose their sense of adventure when they come home.
Friday, December 14, 2007
lesser of two evils
TH and I have this routine after dinner. One of us walks the dog while the other does the dishes and puts away dinner makings and leftovers.
90% of the time I opt for dog walking.
Tonight, I got to do both as dinner clean up took too long and it was only fair to TH.
Next time we're going the long way home.
nm
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
I wonder if Lawrence Welk is on the comeback?
Busy here, well, not really too busy. TH is at work (its 10 pm people), Ernest helped sample lemon poppy seed shortbread and I'm too tired to even consider the ten holiday cards that Ernest needs to send out tomorrow.
Tomorrow, that is it, I'll do them tomorrow before work.
nm who wishes she could be misty mountain hopping with the rest of them
Friday, December 07, 2007
Field of dreams
Note I wrote this 11/30, last Friday, thank you for your patience.
It is cold here in Corvallis. It was very strange driving into campus today with TH and have her explain to me the passing landscape, she has a knack for describing things that makes it easy for me to imagine what it looked like in different seasons. TH did this drive for three years, transiting back and forth from Seattle to Corvallis by plane, train and automobile. She was lucky enough to have a home with our friends L&E kept her in divine food, clean clothes and coffee for those long quarters of classes, papers and commuting.
They gave her respite and a place to escape in a beautiful house in the middle of Christmas tree farms.
Over time, she found her perfect drive to and from campus. She would drive windy back roads through small family farm plots full of spinach, hazelnuts, blueberries and leeks. While, this morning it was sleeting and gray, I could picture what it must have been like for her in the early spring when the blueberries were starting to flower and the hazels were unfurling their first light green fuzzy leaves. In the early fall, when the hazels all turned yellow and the corn was ready to be cut, she could see yellow for a few acres. The drive was a good way to prepare before she was to present her work on Bayesian modeling in her informatics class or discuss how ideas in science diffused. We talked a lot on the drive down yesterday about learning, school and when you are ready to be done with school. Neither of us believe that you ever finish learning, there is so much out there. School, that may be another story.
Today, I can say that she knows more about the cutting edge of mapping, information sciences and visualization and how they can be applied to a slew of environmental issues. She has approached these ideas as a geographer, scientist and historian and made sense of them.
Good job TH, Dr. TH to the rest of you.
Thursday, December 06, 2007
Attempting to not drive TH crazy by planning a trip to Drome and Haut Provence before she's done with the rest of her obligations including ten days of decompression after Christmas and really bugging her by suggesting she travel separately.
Motivating myself to haul ass to the Village to buy a new pair of jeans now. Mine are baggy in the butt and hopefully a size smaller will help, vanity sizing that is.
Wondering if I can leave the dog at home after this morning's consumption of yet another ornament.
Asking myself if I really am excited about 2008.
nm trying to forget that tomorrow is another work day
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Some travel related stuff
You can now use your Alaska Airlines miles for redemption on Air France. Those awards are dear, but to get to the airport at noon, board at one pm and be in Paris at 8 am just in time for the next transit strike, supreme!
We're booked for a week in March, Seattle-Marseille, pottering around Drome and Haut Provence and then to Paris to pick up some chocolate.
Mileage runners (you know who you are), post or read here and get some ideas. Trust me, when you are nearly there, you might as well make it, right Bueller?
Me, I'm done for the year, well, sort of. I have to go to Chicago this weekend, but that's just to make sure J gets her December race under her belt.
nm wishing and hoping that her upgrade to F clears
Monday, December 03, 2007
lost and found
I felt like I lost yesterday in all the prep and running around of our Christmas cookie party. I was toast at 7:30 and fell asleep reading a book while TH battled data and the forces of evil in prep for today's business trip.
Today, I found an hour when my trainer called and told me that she wasn't coming in. I used that time wisely chasing frosting bowls into the dishwasher and dragees with a broom. I managed to get to work early, bang out revisions to a proposal, do the other tasks I needed and get my errands done at lunch. I left early for the airport for my short trip to SD. I gave myself plenty of time that I didn't need. My typical airport ride was 20 minutes shorter since everyone seemed to abandon work early to deal with their basement flooding. The airport itself was mellow and my flight was delayed enough to make me rethink flying and waiting and making my parents drive after 10 pm.
They called me and told me to go home. I did.
My trip back from the airport took even less time.
I have all night by myself.
I am not good at relaxing, TH, the Js and everyone who knows me knows that I cannot chill for the sake of chilling. However, tonight I have a date with a great book, my lovely Christmas tree, the heater and a goat cheese pizza. If that does not wow me, I know where a guy who loves tater tots and has some cool moon boots lives, and I may just have to visit him.
Sweet!
nm
Saturday, December 01, 2007
Taking a page from Kimberly McK's book, let us rejoice in the first day of December.
Snow fell today, not too much, but big fat flakes that frosted everything. It made for easy driving and a magical day if you weren't expecting to do any yard work. Kids dragged their friends out for a quick snowball fight and it made for some impromptu, if not micro snow people in our neighbor's front yards.
TH and I went Christmas tree shopping in the snow, not something that happens too often in the Emerald City. In our running of errands, we found parking downtown on the first go and everyone we had contact with was in a great mood. Why? because this snow will lead to rain and we'll be back to the Seattle damp, chill gray of December.
Right now, our house smells great --a fresh wreath is on the door and the tree is now covered in lights. Soon garland will festoon our porch and holly on our plate rail. Tomorrow afternoon, we'll see a covey of kids trying their hand at decorating sugar and gingerbread cookies. I'm sure the adults will also jump in do much the same. TH is relaxed and reading a book, something that has not happened in a while, she's also enjoying the first day of December with peace.
The holiday season has really started to kick in here chez f&f. Its not so much the shopping, the card writing, but the need to catch up with our friends who we see in spurts, some more than others, but miss dearly because life has been hectic. Sometimes, just the simple act of getting out of the house to visit sometimes seems monumental especially when you have deadlines looming and gardens to tend.
More importantly, for us, this year, its a time to be thankful that things are coming to a close in a positive way.
I hope the same for you.
nm
Friday, November 30, 2007
Thursday, November 29, 2007
deck the halls
Things that can't be recycled, being made into ornaments, seen in my brief stay at the LIH airport last night. Nothing like smelling pine mixed in with some gentle tropical breezes. There were at least thirty Holiday trees decorated by different schools in the county. TH and I spent a time between flights (Shut up) admiring them all.
Wish I could have stayed, but I'm off today again.
nm
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
recovery
I am down to two advil a day.
I am doing a normal workout.
I do not cringe when thinking about getting out of my chair.
I cannot believe that people who are not athletes feel like this every day.
I will try my hardest never to be in that situation.
Love your body, its the only one you have.
nm
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Monday, November 26, 2007
To do
- Freaking because I haven't sent out Ernest's holiday greeting and shameless plug for Presidency
- Turn in my FSA paperwork, realizing that I'm not quite sure what my taxable income really is
- Made my Holiday shopping list and actually stick to it
- Finish planting the bulbs (shut up)
- Wondering with my friend B, what are appropriate gifts for our service/trades people
- Figuring out if I really care about renewing my Admiral's Club membership for the following year, especially since there isn't one in Seattle and I am not flying that much
- Deciding when to stop making cookies for Sunday, are twelve batches of sugar cookie dough and six batches of gingerbread cookies enough?
- Trying to decide if my Italian SIM card still works and is it worth using it versus Tmobile roaming
- Figuring out if I can write some donation checks this year
- Gathering my taxable donations and getting them ready and out the door for this tax year
- Wishing she could make Ernest a deduction
Sunday, November 25, 2007
blister in the sun
What can I say, today's Seattle Half Marathon could not have had better conditions.
Sunny, calm, foggy in the right places and it is done.
I PRed it, but I can't tell you what my time is since the server is down. Next year, I'll be doing some serious hill work.
I missed J, but she was with me in spirit.
Shout out to TH and Ernest who met me in the Arboretum and provided moral support and an eggnog latte for the last six miles and for toughing it out and meeting me at mile 12.9. Ernest provided everyone a little joy at the end.
Shout out for the Team in Training angels who were at Madison and the Arboretum providing gummy bears, pretzels, peanut butter and jam sandwichlettes and oranges and bananas. You rock.
Ditto for Mr. kiss by the freeway.
On my way into Memorial Stadium, the Violent Femmes' 'Blister in the sun' was playing on the loudspeakers. I started singing along with them. I love that song, it brings me back to my college days and I cannot tell you how much it made me happy to run into the stadium and to my chocolate milk.
At mile two I realized that I every step I take is a blessing. My body hurts a bit, but I did it, I walked/ran 13.1 miles today and enjoyed most of it. It made me realize my body is something that I have taken for granted in my 20s and 30s and with the aches and pains of my early 40s I have learned to respect and listen to and realize that I can no longer abuse with poor nutrition.
I spent time today loving my body, all its lumps, bumps and small crows feet for the fact that it got me where I wanted to be -- the finish line.
nm
Saturday, November 24, 2007
if I hadn't bought the finishers tshirt already
Friday, November 23, 2007
Friday wrap up
The Dow stayed in the green, so did NASDAQ. A little miracle.
Three dinners down, one to go.
All shopping I did today was on etsy.com. No malls were pillaged by yours truly. Tomorrow we'll hit the University bookstore to look for some baby shower present books and then off to hit etsy.com and mighty goods again for some inspiration.
I'm a Secret Santa twice this year. One is easy because my recipient is female and I have a clue. The other is male and I haven't a clue, but I'm not going to succumb to a gift card to Starbucks Coffee quite yet.
Secret Santa gifts are really more fun to get than anything, you get a set price, some clues about the recipient and then you are off to create something interesting and fun that they'll remember all year.
Tomorrow, we're going to pop downtown to pick up my race packet. I'm so not ready for this race but I'll go and I'll finish and know that I met my goal this year of seven half marathons walked. I just got this month's Northwest runner and now plotting my race strategy for 2008. I'm looking for a few boutique races and maybe one new state! I know the J. has some long term plans for some long ass days, but I'm going to also start looking at running a half sometime in May!
off to bed
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Thankful
I am thankful that I live in a place with clean water, clean air and relatively high standards of safety.
I am thankful for amazing and lovely shelter that we have.
I am thankful I live in a country that allows me the freedom to express my opinion and with citizenship allows me to chose who I vote for. I am also very grateful for the ability of free movement between countries thanks to citizenship.
I am thankful for my family and especially now that we are all together in the same zip code. I am especially thankful that my parents are healthy, active, irritating and still together and are resilient to change. I wish I were.
I am thankful for TH, and her patience and love for the last sixteen odd years. It hasn't always been sunshine and lollipops.
I am thankful for my friends, both local and worldwide who keep me sane and keep me laughing.
I am thankful for Ernest the puppy who keeps us all busy and reminds us daily that life is too short not to check out the neighborhood and stop and smell each hydrant. He is thankful that he lives in a country where a basset hound can dream of running for president and in some places, probably win.
I am thankful every time I walk a race that every step means I am alive, healthy and grateful that I can push myself to do this.
I am thankful that I have a career, which sometimes I bemoan, that is still an amazing one that exposes me to amazing technology and people.
I am thankful for the abundance of fresh, local and organic food that graces our table and the farmers that produce it.
I am sometimes embarrassed that the things that I worry about include petty trivial things such as will my upgrade clear to Chicago and why didn't my hotel stay post, when others work sixty hours a week to make sure they can pay their car insurance and keep their kids warm.
I am thankful for you all.
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
For those of you utterly tired of recipes for swiss chard gratin, chipotle braised rutabagas seasoned with epazote and pumpkin sweet potato gratin served with a froth of nutmeg air, I bring you eating something else the night before Thanksgiving.
Originally, our thought was to go to the local really better than you would think Chinese place next to MM, but then life got the better of me. I looked in our nearly bare fridge and came up with a dinner that will be a keeper for a while.
I'm not a big fan of ready made food, nor am I a big fan of making foods that others make better than me that are available in the ready made format. One of these foods is gravy, but you can deal with that tomorrow. The other is alfredo sauce. I can't imagine having such ingredients on hand and honestly, we don't use tons of it. However, one local company, Cucina Fresca does a great job and we have been seen with the very lovely reusuable jars in our shopping basket. One leftover lug of saffron pasta from Wedgwood's La Pasta, some smoked halibut kindly gifted to us by MZ, fish smoker extraordinare and the some fresh parsely snipped from the garden and we had a dinner that made us both happy and used some awesome local ingredients.
For some the combination of the smoked fish and saffron may seem odd, but honestly, it worked, the woody, sweet flavor of the halibut played nicely off the sweetness of the saffron and the alfredo just held it together. If you can believe it, we're out of parmesan reggiano as well, but this dish didn't need it. The flavors stood on their own.
I can't really give you a recipe for this, I already did. It was a total throw together a meal meal and it worked. I can't wait to make it to the market on Saturday to buy more pasta and recreate it.
For those of you still looking for holiday recipes, remember, stick to the classics and it will all be okay.
Happy Thanksgiving eve.
nm
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Monday, November 19, 2007
Seriously, maybe having a stash of miles and the knowledge of how to use them isn't such a bad thing.
Here's to hoping that R doesn't have to use that ticket.
nm
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Wowed by ACT's The Women.
Pleasantly surprised by Cafe Presse.
Wolfing down leftovers of C's rendition of Shauna's cauliflower with smoked paprika and cocoa.
Lusting after my brother's iphone. Not that I need a gadget, I just love the google map application and the great camera.
Very thankful for the fact that I'm done with stuffing for the year.
Wondering if going to Tunisia for three days is worth a flight, a trip to the airport and hiring a guide or should I stay local and see parts of Lazio I have never been.
nm, wondering if video killed the radio star
Friday, November 16, 2007
Friday means
I cleaned mine out a few weeks ago while TH was in Hawaii. Its pretty clean now, we have methodically been eating chard, pork chops and eggs to make room for goose, fennel and hubbard squash.
I can see to the back, this is a good thing.
It really doesn't take too much time and if you are really clever, you can photodocument it.
nm
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
See you later
Monday, November 12, 2007
looking back
2005 -London for the Remembrance Day weekend. I think I was not by myself, I cannot remember. Yes, I was with TH. G-d, is my memory so bad.
2006- London for Remembrance day weekend with 150 flyertalkers. Definitely not with TH, but still had a blast.
2007 - Seattle for Remembrance day weekend, weekend spent keeping Ernest amused and alive, raking leaves and dealing the minutae of life.
2008 - I'm hoping for a middle ground, a bit boring and a bit exciting at the same time.
nm
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Eat local this Thanksgiving
This Saturday I at the market, I noticed a bunch of farmer's sporting these great buttons that said "I took the pledge", which means they took the pledge to eat local this Thanksgiving. I'm always up for some challenge, so we went over to the Eat Local booth at the U. District Farmer's Market.
The campaign highlights the fact that by eating local, we are reducing our ever expanding carbon footprint. I know mine is atrocious for being a locally eating, tree hugging, obessively composting liberal. It sucks due to my love of Parisian haircuts and Belgian bath cubes. I would calculate it for you, but when I did it January, I cringed.
So, back the great campaign at hand, by eating one or more products within your ecotone, soil conservation district, radius in which you are comfortable or even back garden you will:
- Help maintain our local farms and open spaces
- Help reduce greenhouse gases caused by transporting food from far away
- Help create a food system that good for people, our environment and our economy
Even my fair mayor (eck) has pledged to eat one thing that is local this Thanksgiving.
This made shopping a challenge today. Were trying to get ready for the thanksgiving before thanksgiving, thanksgiving proper and the day after thanksgiving thanksgiving. (really!)TH and I walked around the market trying to figure out what to substitute for celery, it not really very local this time of year. We're trying fennel. Everything else is easily sourced from the market, our regular grocery store and our garden. It should be fun. Sweet potatoes, that should be a challenge.
Think local, eat local and gobble local.
nm thinking about taking a nap about now
Friday, November 09, 2007
Raise your hand if you are not logging into your brokerage account this week...I know you should if you manage your own money, but if you are trusting in someone else, make sure they are doing their jobs.
Remember, we're in it for the long run.
Just to depress you some more, on my way back from increasing my consumer debt and carbon footprint by driving in a single occupancy vehicle today to get my brows waxed (like I could do such a good job myself!), I listened to the Marketplace's Consumed series. I'm now going to move to a yurt and live off the grid.
I'm totally completely shattered from the week. Today we listened to Microsoft tell us that they are collecting petabytes of orthophotogrammetry to build these 3D visual cities for commercial applications, while the US government agencies that are mandated to collect and store and standardize our maps are years behind in updating the basemaps because we can't get funding to do this task. All it takes is big business to fill a need and boom, let it be.
We need that data dammit.
words for today : yeta and zetta, we'll soon be there folks.
nm trying not to depress you before the weekend truly starts
Thursday, November 08, 2007
I am totally in awe of every thing I saw today, the world if full of possibilities when it comes to
putting data onto maps - text, images, social networks, moving targets.
I'm totally stoked.