Sunday, March 15, 2009

More Spring signs

Disclaimer: While I understand that it could snow in Boston on any day in March or April, I'm celebrating moments of spring-like weather and attitudes as they occur. This may irritate bores, literalists or fuddy-duddies. For instance when Z wore shorts the other day and smiled at a passerbye, she offered (in a grouchy voice) "Don't put away your boots yet!"

Today it reached 50 degrees and I spent a couple of hours walking around in it. I underdressed (Seattle tradition) to get as much sunlight on my skin as possible. It was fantastic to smile at my neighbors as they did errands, strolled around the pond, and generally blossomed. Here are some signs of spring to add to my list....

Pictured:
The hat shop is totally ready to move forward.


Honey Bees! (You may have to look really closely... the Iphone has no zoom.) These bees were buzzing around so merrily in and out of this tree that it made me think of Winnie the Pooh. In that hole, I could see the honeycomb and the entrance to the hive.)

Not pictured: frisky ducks and Canada geese, children drunk with sunshine. My three new springy t-shirts from Boomerang's.


Thursday, March 12, 2009

Signs of spring














It's still winter here in Massachusetts, I know. Please don't think I'm fooled by a little sun and weather warm enough for me to leave my gloves and mittens at home, because I'm not.
On the other hand, it's really gorgeous, and my body does not understand that there are still weeks of wintry weather and more snow ahead. My body wants to eat ice cream and fire up the grill and go to the beach and climb trees and things like that... even though I know better.

So here is a list (with some illustrative photos) of signs of spring:
1. The outdoor busking has begun again at Harvard Square (note bagpiper setting down a cup of coffee)
2. Crocuses are blooming, along with snow drops AND there are chirpy little robins bopping around as though they would also like to eat ice cream, and cook out.
3. My cat is lying around in puddles of sunshine on the floor.
4. (Not pictured) I was almost hit by a baseball that was thrown by a child in a Red Sox jersey and just missed the mitt of a young man in a Red Sox jersey.

I'll keep an eye out and post more signs as they show themselves. What are the signs of spring where you live?
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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Zak calls it the Accident Room.

I call it the Emergency room, and at Group Health, where I went for Medical care in Seattle, they called it Urgent Care.

Tonight I called my new doctor here in Boston. Her office closed at 5pm, so I get the choices of Urgent care or Medical advice. At Group Health, the Medical advice nurses could do triage and then make an appointment for you the next day because they keep their appointments in a database. At my new doctor, the woman on the phone couldn't make me an appointment, or tell me if any will be available because "They closed the book at 5." She said that tomorrow I could go to Urgent care. I told her my concern. Turns out, at this new hospital, "Urgent Care" means which ever doctor doesn't have an appointment will come and see you instead of your doctor OR the emergency room, or accident room, or whatever. It also turns out that they write appointments in a book instead of entering them into a spreadsheet which is really wierd. That only took a couple of minutes, but it sure was confusing.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Good Housekeeping




Today I finally continued the unpacking project known as the early part of November. I abandoned this project to celebrate some holidays and spend time with people and work at a newish job, and generally live in a day to day way. The entire time, though, Z and I were aware that certain parts of our lives were missing. Z had done a tremendous job designing systems to make our lives work beautifully, but many of the beautiful objects from our old home (photos, paintings, prints and rocks, mostly) hadn't made it onto the walls.

I've been knitting out of a box of needles and yarn... a huge cardboard box of yarn and needles all tangled up. That's still a mess, I'm afraid. But the plants were repotted. Important, fragile bits of decoration (like the well-wrapped Woodsie, here) were unpacked, and certain elements of our kitchen finalized. (Not that final Z, you still have a veto, here.) Here's a couple of snapshots of progress. I DO wish that I'd taken some before shots.

The pretty cabinet full of gorgeous dishes was similar before, only that bottom shelf had a been a "very important paper/object and coin depository since day one", so it was strewn with a laptop, and papers and an old burbon bottle full of change.

The pantry had housed a bunch of dishes and some food, but the food had lived over in the (very sunny) kitchen, so, that had to change.

There's two things in the bottom photo. One, I brought home this oak ivy as a house warming gift to Z, but it's been floating, homeless around the apartment ever since our first week here. We each wanted to suspend it in this (windowless) transom over the kitchen door, but couldn't find a way to get it there. You can see she's happy in her new home AND that the coffee/tea station has finally come to fruition. We thought it would be awesome to have all coffee/tea and associated aparatus in one part of the kitchen altogether, uncomplicated by other clutter, to preserve the sanctity of the first moments of morning. It's finally all together, there in the lower corner of the photo.

The last weeks have been filled with a terrible cold for both Z and me (he NEVER gets sick) and hurried, belated birthday knitting (sorry Pop). With any luck, the next photos on this blog will be my dad in his enormous scarf. (The weather has been cooperating with this project, and I have no doubt that it will still be cold enough when he gets it.)


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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Yelling "Fire" in a crowded T stop doesn't have the same effect.

I took inauguration day off so that I could watch the proceedings as they happened.  Since we don't have cable at our house, I headed off to a bar nearbye.  (Yes, they WERE showing it at all the libraries, but I was unsure what kind of scene that might be and I was pretty certain what it would look like at Doyle's, so I headed over there.)

As I walked down the stairs, I smelled smoke, and thought "Crazy JP!  Did somebody burn sage down here to cleanse the T on this new day of hope?!"  I saw some haze in the air, rolled my eyes, figured it MIGHT be some friction between train and rail, and continued trying to get CNN on my phone.  Eventually, I heard a man, almost shouting into the emergency call box beneath the escalators.

"... a small fire at Stonybrook station."
"Ok, sir, but you'll have to call a dispatcher."
"No, no.  I'm a passenger... on the T... and I'm reporting a FIRE here at Stonybrook station."
"Yes, sir.  I heard you, but you'll have to call the dispatcher."

At this point most of us on the platform had subtly scooted ourselves closer so that we could hear everything.  I'd looked around and realized that there was an actual fire on the line where the train to Forest Hills runs. The man had been bent over to get his mouth close to the call box, and at this, he straightened up and gave the most comically blank look I think I've ever seen.  We chuckled, and he tried again.

"Listen, I'm a PASSENGER, and I'm telling YOU that there's a FIRE at the T stop at Stonybrook station.  You WORK fo the T, I need YOU to call somebody!"
The woman started to protest but at this point the train to Oak Grove showed up and the man left the call box and boarded the train.  I also boarded the train (I ride this train everyday, and so even though I needed to go towards Forest Hills, I climbed on my usual train and rode a stop in the wrong direction.)  The passenger next to me asked "Do you smell smoke?"  "Yes." I said. "There's a fire at the Stonybrook station."  I said this calmly and looked at the man who'd been trying to do the right thing back there at the call box.  No reaction.  "Oh." Said the woman.  "Thank you for telling me."  Later, on the correct train, I had an identical conversation.  It was strange because I found the words "There's a fire at the Stonybrook T stop." terribly funny even though I really couldn't explain it.

and then, of course, I watched our nation's history change in front of us and drank a beer to celebrate.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Climbing

I was sitting on a big cozy cushion on a barn floor a few blocks from my house tonight when the man on stage asked us to turn off our cell phones.  I had not yet committed to taking off my jacket or hat, but was encouraged by the space heaters gathered around.  I didn't have my phone with me.  I ALWAY have it but today I dropped it and shattered the screen and so my new one was at home attached to my computer, remembering all the things my old phone knew, in no danger of disturbing the show.

The people around me were wearing lots of wool, and big boots and I wasn't the only one who'd kept my hat on.  The girl in front of me had a sign pinned to her back with numbers of Palestinan and Isreali casualties, that had white out beneath the numbers where she'd white them out again tomorrow to change them.  I hated looking at it, but my eyes kept going there, and I checked them,  18 and 718, as though she might white them out and change them during the singing.  The stage was lit by some strings of lights and a central red bulb, and a humidifier sat on the stage occasionally appearing to be a pathetic smoke machine.  I'm generally very good about remembering to turn off my phone at concerts, and since I hadn't done it I started a few times during the first song or two, remembering and then remembering that I had none.  The music was gorgeous, two groups of singers; one men, one women, one Georgian, one Appalachian, one from JP, one (mostly) from California (now).  We sang together, and by the end I was hatless and breathless. 

Earlier today I made my first trip to an Apple store...
I was cranky because I'd shattered my phone.  The people who worked there were all wearing t-shirts, except for the person whose job it was to open the door for people and cheerfully greet us; that person was dressed wierdly with a t-shirt and a hat and scarf.  I was late for my "appointment" with the "genius bar" and couldn't FIND the "genius bar" and resented having to ask someone how to find it.  I thumped up this huge, central, curving, invisible,  glass staircase awkwardly in my snowboots (we all thumped up and down it awkwardly and treacherously because we were all wearing snowboots) sweating in my long underwear.  I submitted to saying "genius bar" to someone too busy to look at me, followed their pointing finger up the REST of the staircase, stripped off all my over-layers and dumped them on a bench nearbye.  I took stock.  I was cranky, nervous, and shy and I had to shop AND admit that I'd droipped and broken a little, expensive computer that I keep in my pocket mostly so I can end disputes with wikis, don't have to ask directions, and so that I can read my friends witty responses to my witticisms on Facebook.  Yuck.  
I finally had to walk down those damn steps, having paid for and obtained my new phone and hot pink case (don't ask), and then donned my sweater, down vest, wool cape, hat, scarf and gloves. I was sure I'd fall down them and crash into some comfortable, cheerfully entitled-looking people. I teetered in the middle, and then kept going.  At the bottom was a man with a bottle of windex and a swiffer, gazing up at me and the steps under me.  He had a long day ahead of him, because we all were wearing snowboots covered in skunky ice.  I sighed then and smiled and apologized to the universe.

So, really, it was great when I didn't have my phone in the barn.  
It was great, and warm, and beautiful.