May 10, 2013

  • Coffee pods

    When I first saw a pod coffeemaker, I thought, "Ridiculous!" Expensive machine, expensive coffee, wasteful (I can make 12 cups in a regular coffeemaker with two pods' worth of coffee). Besides, Salim made a pot or two of coffee every morning for the office.

    But now I'm at a different office. There's a regular coffeemaker, but no one who uses it regularly, and I don't want to deal with buying coffee, setting it up, and cleaning it afterwards. There's a pod machine. For a while, there was a box of pods beside it, along with a jar for collecting money. I used it a number of times, but felt guilty whether I paid or not: "Is coffee really worth that much money? But someone is paying for it!"

    Then the box of pods ran out. It hasn't been replaced for weeks. I see used pods around the machine, so I figure people must keep their own stashes.

    At Ross the other day, I ran into a package of these babies and thought, "Aha! Problem solved!" I immediately bought them.

    Now I can make just what I'm going to drink. I don't have to make it as strong as the other pods; half a basket is fine. It's not the best way to brew coffee, but it's drinkable and simple to manage.

    The package came with four baskets. If you need one and can come by for it, you're welcome to it.

    Hope you have an awesome weekend. Tonight we'll be at Cali Viejo to sing with Alicia's sister. Tomorrow we're going to Pembroke Pines for cousin Raul Rosero's daughter's graduation. I'm sure there will be plenty more music down there.

May 9, 2013

  • Raccoon in a cage

    Got a trap yesterday from the Humane Society to catch a rather beat-up feral cat so we can get it some medical attention. However, when I checked the trap this morning...

    Photo1549

  • You have the key to my heart

    This song just makes me happy. Translated lyrics are below.

     

    Like the moon that lights up the paths at night
    Like leaves await the wind
    Like the earth awaits the rain
    Like the sea awaits the river
    That's how I await your return
    To the land of forgetting
     

    How my fears founder if I sail your gaze
    How you alert my senses
    With your lovesick voice
    With your little girl smile
    How you move my soul
    How you steal my calm

    You have the key to my heart
    I love you
    More than my life because without your love
    I would die

     

    It sounds like a love song, but the line about "the land of forgetting" (or oblivion) confused me. Alicia says the song is about bringing back Colombian music styles that had been dropping into oblivion.

April 29, 2013

April 26, 2013

  • You know you're a Missionary Kid when:

    You know you're a Missionary Kid when:

    • You've driven into the middle of an intersection because that's where the traffic light is
    • You know what real coffee tastes like
    • Some of your favorite foods make your friends gag
    • You laugh at the plants at the garden sale because you've seen them growing out of sidewalk cracks
    • American oranges taste insipid
    • You run into your sister while you're watching a campus demonstration and she says, "Just here getting homesick!"
    • Your pet in high school was a boa constrictor named Sylvester
    • You'd rather have an arepa con queso or a chuzo than a hamburger
    • You have an informed opinion on celery tea
    • You know the dosages and purposes for metronidazol and mebendazol
    • The sound of an accordion makes you nostalgic
    • You've lived in a house with "DDT" stenciled on the front
    • You can't count the number of times you've flown
    • You can recall the smell of a hot patch on an inner tube
    • You've had to chase cows off an airstrip
    • You know what a phone patch is
    • Jell-O has been a luxury
    • You know how to light a kerosene Coleman lantern
    • You've treated skin fungus with dandruff shampoo
    • Things you commonly say in one language are politically incorrect in your other language
    • You have felt less at home in the US than in another country
    • Your childhood books have candle wax stains
    • You've eaten Christmas pound cake at Easter because that's when it arrived
    • You've been thronged by little kids shouting sábana biche ('unripe sheet', but that doesn't matter)
    • An outhouse is not a novelty
    • You carry toilet paper or a stack of Kleenex everywhere you go
    • You debate whether you're expected to flush used toilet paper or put it in the wastebasket
    • The "right on red" traffic law seems like a great idea
    • Your saltshaker has rice in it
    • You recognize people in National Geographic articles
    • Your mom has more experience treating tropical diseases than your doctor
    • You know how to deal with a used chamberpot
    • Any day without diarrhea is a good one
    • Your sister's mosquito net caught on fire because she read in bed
    • You first saw Star Trek in Spanish

     

    (Most of these are my own, but a few are borrowed from other lists)

     

April 22, 2013

  • The poem that inspired The Devil Went Down To Georgia

    When I was a kid, I was entranced by a poem in my older sister's English book about a hillbilly fiddling contest. Some years later, a Charlie Daniels Band song told about a fiddling contest with the devil, and I remembered the poem. Just now (inspired by a photo of mountain laurel in a post by @MelFamy), I did some research and found that Charlie Daniels credited that poem with inspiring his song.

    Here is the poem. (Benet also wrote a story called The Devil and Daniel Webster, which no doubt also influenced Charlie's song.)
     
    The Mountain Whippoorwill (Or, How Hill-Billy Jim Won the Great Fiddlers' Prize)
    By Stephen Vincent Benet
    Up in the mountains, it's lonesome all the time,
    (Sof' win' slewin' thu' the sweet-potato vine.)
    Up in the mountains, it's lonesome for a child,
    (Whippoorwills a-callin' when the sap runs wild.)
    Up in the mountains, mountains in the fog,
    Everythin's as lazy as an old houn' dog.
    Born in the mountains, never raised a pet,
    Don't want nuthin' an' never got it yet.
    Born in the mountains, lonesome-born,
    Raised runnin' ragged thu' the cockleburrs and corn.
    Never knew my pappy, mebbe never should.
    Think he was a fiddle made of mountain laurel-wood.
    Never had a mammy to teach me pretty-please.
    Think she was a whippoorwill, a-skittin' thu' the trees.
    Never had a brother ner a whole pair of pants,
    But when I start to fiddle, why, yuh got to start to dance!
    Listen to my fiddle -- Kingdom Come -- Kingdom Come!
    Hear the frogs a-chunkin' "Jug o' rum, Jug o' rum!"
    Hear that mountain whippoorwill be lonesome in the air,
    An' I'll tell yuh how I travelled to the Essex County Fair.
    Essex County has a mighty pretty fair,
    All the smarty fiddlers from the South come there.
    Elbows flyin' as they rosin up the bow
    For the First Prize Contest in the Georgia Fiddlers' Show.
    Old Dan Wheeling, with his whiskers in his ears,
    King-pin fiddler for nearly twenty years.
    Big Tom Sergeant, with his blue wall-eye,
    An' Little Jimmy Weezer that can make a fiddle cry.
    All sittin' roun', spittin' high an' struttin' proud,
    (Listen, little whippoorwill, yuh better bug yore eyes!)
    Tun-a-tun-a-tunin' while the jedges told the crowd
    Them that got the mostest claps'd win the bestest prize.
    Everybody waitin' for the first tweedle-dee,
    When in comes a-stumblin' -- hill-billy me!
    Bowed right pretty to the jedges an' the rest,
    Took a silver dollar from a hole inside my vest,
    Plunked it on the table an' said, "There's my callin' card!
    An' anyone that licks me -- well, he's got to fiddle hard!"
    Old Dan Wheeling, he was laughin' fit to holler,
    Little Jimmy Weezer said, "There's one dead dollar!"
    Big Tom Sergeant had a yaller-toothy grin,
    But I tucked my little whippoorwill spang underneath my chin,
    An' petted it an' tuned it till the jedges said, "Begin!"
    Big Tom Sargent was the first in line;
    He could fiddle all the bugs off a sweet-potato vine.
    He could fiddle down a possum from a mile-high tree,
    He could fiddle up a whale from the bottom of the sea.
    Yuh could hear hands spankin' till they spanked each other raw,
    When he finished variations on "Turkey in the Straw."
    Little Jimmy Weezer was the next to play;
    He could fiddle all night, he could fiddle all day.
    He could fiddle chills, he could fiddle fever,
    He could make a fiddle rustle like a lowland river.
    He could make a fiddle croon like a lovin' woman.
    An' they clapped like thunder when he'd finished strummin'.
    Then came the ruck of the bob-tailed fiddlers,
    The let's-go-easies, the fair-to-middlers.
    They got their claps an' they lost their bicker,
    An' they all settled back for some more corn-licker.
    An' the crowd was tired of their no-count squealing,
    When out in the center steps Old Dan Wheeling.
    He fiddled high and he fiddled low,
    (Listen, little whippoorwill, yuh got to spread yore wings!)
    He fiddled and fiddled with a cherrywood bow,
    (Old Dan Wheeling's got bee-honey in his strings).
    He fiddled a wind by the lonesome moon,
    He fiddled a most almighty tune.
    He started fiddling like a ghost.
    He ended fiddling like a host.
    He fiddled north an' he fiddled south,
    He fiddled the heart right out of yore mouth.
    He fiddled here an' he fiddled there.
    He fiddled salvation everywhere.
    When he was finished, the crowd cut loose,
    (Whippoorwill, they's rain on yore breast.)
    An' I sat there wonderin' "What's the use?"
    (Whippoorwill, fly home to yore nest.)
    But I stood up pert an' I took my bow,
    An' my fiddle went to my shoulder, so.
    An' -- they wasn't no crowd to get me fazed --
    But I was alone where I was raised.
    Up in the mountains, so still it makes yuh skeered.
    Where God lies sleepin' in his big white beard.
    An' I heard the sound of the squirrel in the pine,
    An' I heard the earth a-breathin' thu' the long night-time.
    They've fiddled the rose, and they've fiddled the thorn,
    But they haven't fiddled the mountain-corn.
    They've fiddled sinful an' fiddled moral,
    But they haven't fiddled the breshwood-laurel.
    They've fiddled loud, and they've fiddled still,
    But they haven't fiddled the whippoorwill.
    I started off with a dump-diddle-dump,
    (Oh, hell's broke loose in Georgia!)
    Skunk-cabbage growin' by the bee-gum stump.
    (Whippoorwill, yo're singin' now!)
    My mother was a whippoorwill pert,
    My father, he was lazy,
    But I'm hell broke loose in a new store shirt
    To fiddle all Georgia crazy.
    Swing yore partners -- up an' down the middle!
    Sashay now -- oh, listen to that fiddle!
    Flapjacks flippin' on a red-hot griddle,
    An' hell's broke loose,
    Hell's broke loose,
    Fire on the mountains -- snakes in the grass.
    Satan's here a-bilin' -- oh, Lordy, let him pass!
    Go down Moses, set my people free;
    Pop goes the weasel thu' the old Red Sea!
    Jonah sittin' on a hickory-bough,
    Up jumps a whale -- an' where's yore prophet now?
    Rabbit in the pea-patch, possum in the pot,
    Try an' stop my fiddle, now my fiddle's gettin' hot!
    Whippoorwill, singin' thu' the mountain hush,
    Whippoorwill, shoutin' from the burnin' bush,
    Whippoorwill, cryin' in the stable-door,
    Sing tonight as yuh never sang before!
    Hell's broke loose like a stompin' mountain-shoat,
    Sing till yuh bust the gold in yore throat!
    Hell's broke loose for forty miles aroun'
    Bound to stop yore music if yuh don't sing it down.
    Sing on the mountains, little whippoorwill,
    Sing to the valleys, an' slap 'em with a hill,
    For I'm struttin' high as an eagle's quill,
    An' hell's broke loose,
    Hell's broke loose,
    Hell's broke loose in Georgia!

    They wasn't a sound when I stopped bowin',
    (Whippoorwill, yuh can sing no more.)
    But, somewhere or other, the dawn was growin',
    (Oh, mountain whippoorwill!)
    An' I thought, "I've fiddled all night an' lost,
    Yo're a good hill-billy, but yuh've been bossed."
    So I went to congratulate old man Dan,
    -- But he put his fiddle into my han' --
    An' then the noise of the crowd began!
     
     

April 19, 2013

  • Cat rescue

    Ruta (the cat that fell from Alicia's 5th floor balcony a couple of years ago) got stuck high up in a tree last night. Again.

    We discovered it when Alicia called her in for the night. There was plaintive meowing from somewhere across the street. We followed the sound to a back yard on the next block. There she was, about 25 feet up, far beyond the reach of my paltry 16-foot ladder.
     
    After fruitless efforts to coax her down, a call to 911 (they don't do cat rescues), and no success finding our tree-cutting guy's number, we gave up and went to bed. It rained most of the night. I slept well. Alicia hardly slept at all.
     
    This morning Alicia talked to our next-door neighbor Billy, who had helped her during a previous tree incident. It turned out he has a long aluminum ladder. I drove home from work and we got the ladder (it hung out about 12 feet behind the van) and drove around the block, where Billy helped us set it up against Ruta's tree. I let Alicia do the climbing, since Ruta was more likely to come to her than to me.
     
    The ladder was still a few feet short (Ruta is marked by the red circle), and the stupid cat refused to come close enough to reach. There were some thin branches that she could easily crawl through but she considered them overwhelming obstacles.
     
    The homeowner and her son turned up then. The lady lives alone, and last night didn't answer our rings because she wasn't about to open the door at 9:30 at night to strangers. This morning she had a doctor's appointment and came home to find my van in her driveway.
     
    Awkward.
     
    Alicia and I went home to lunch. When we went back, I managed to raise the ladder a couple more rungs. I also brought limb-loppers, and Alicia cut away the branch. With the limb gone, Ruta scrambled down within reach and Alicia snagged her.
     
    Now I'm back at work. I'll have to work this evening to make up for the missed hours. Ruta will need to stay indoors until we figure out a way to avoid this problem.
     

April 18, 2013

  • Myers-Briggs and me

    I'm in the process of translating a presentation on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, and it makes me reflect on my own nature. My profile is INTP, although I've moved a bit toward INFP in recent years. The following paragraphs (from this site) will sound familiar to people who know me:

    INTPs are pensive, analytical folks.... Precise about their descriptions, INTPs will often correct others (or be sorely tempted to) if the shade of meaning is a bit off. While annoying to the less concise, this fine discrimination ability gives INTPs so inclined a natural advantage as, for example, grammarians and linguists.

    INTPs are relatively easy-going and amenable to almost anything until their principles are violated, about which they may become outspoken and inflexible. They prefer to return, however, to a reserved albeit benign ambiance, not wishing to make spectacles of themselves....

    The open-endedness (from Perceiving) conjoined with the need for competence (NT) is expressed in a sense that one's conclusion may well be met by an equally plausible alternative solution, and that, after all, one may very well have overlooked some critical bit of data.

    I seem to be surrounded by people who are not like me, even in my family. Facebook is torture; so many of my friends are so adamant (on either side) about issues that are far from clear to me: gun control, genetically engineered food, energy sources, natural remedies, President Obama, George Bush, Alvaro Uribe. Some of the views espoused are extremely stupid (especially regarding immunizations or government conspiracies). Occasionally I will respond with links that quell rumors (Snopes is a favorite) or with comments that point out obvious flaws in an argument (e.g., incidence of an illness before and after immunization was developed), but mostly I sigh and skim over reposts, links, and rants, and look for personal news.

    I would rather know what someone had for breakfast than read their linked article. Unless it's really good. On Facebook, good linked articles are extremely rare.

    Cable/satellite news baffles me. Every rumor gets thrown onto the screen, feeding public hysteria. An innocent person questioned in an investigation has his or her information made public, life turned upside down, character smeared, home besieged, and family threatened. Nancy Grace can rant for weeks about a topic with no new information. Some of the talking heads are plain rude; I have no idea why anyone agrees to be interviewed by Chris Matthews and his ilk, for instance. 

    I don't want any part of it.

    My nature is to be skeptical, even when following my beliefs and principles. I've been involved with church-related service organizations in the past, but there was so much ambiguity: Is this going to do any permanent good? Do they really need what we're offering? Are they where they are because of irresponsibility or ignorance? Discrepancies between reported results (what donors hear about) and actual results (change in the beneficiaries' lives) bothered me.

    In 2002 I started my handyman business to keep up with child support and my lake house mortgage. I was surprised how much more fulfilling it was than my day job. It turned out to be a way to help people with a minimum of ambiguity: Everyone should have a decent place to live. Beauty makes life better. My price per hour is very reasonable. I enjoy working with my hands. They win, I win.

    My dad was a counselor. My mom studied counseling. One sister is an internationally respected counselor. I'm not a counselor. I'm a good listener, but hesitant to give advice. In various men's groups I've been a part of, my main contribution has been to listen while others talk, and then lay bare what I see as the underlying issues or patterns. I'm a lot better at recognizing problems than formulating solutions. But it turns out that most people benefit from having the layers peeled away so they can see clearly.

    I've become comfortable with my personality. I pay close attention to my hunches and emotions, since they tell me what I believe deep inside. I don't hurry to make important decisions or to take stands unless the issues are clear to me. I refuse to let people pressure me.

    And I have no idea how to end this. So I'll stop.

     

April 16, 2013

  • Look, a post

    Happy Tuesday to you.

    Marriage seriously cuts into my Xanga posting. At work, I'm not supposed to upload photos. At home, I have other things to do and don't think about it.

    Stuff going on:

    • Doctor appointments. Finally getting some answers. (Nothing serious, fortunately.)
    • Alicia's work permit came in the mail, but not yet her green card. She urgently needs to travel to Colombia in May. Turns out I should have filed a travel permit request when I filed her other papers in January. So we have an appointment Thursday at Immigration to see what we can do.
    • Got my taxes filed Saturday. 
    • My Dallas house sold April 2. That's a huge blessing. Now I can catch up on a few bills.
    • Applied for Alicia's Social Security card.
    • Bought a lawn mower. Still in the box a week and a half later...
    • Alicia's sister Angela has been singing every Friday night at the local Colombian restaurant. We show up to give her support. Alicia usually sings a song or two with her. Last Friday I sang the song I sang at our wedding. No one was paying attention so it wasn't too stressful. 
    • Alicia and I discovered that, despite our gym work, we haven't been losing weight. We've signed up with a trainer.
    • Got the lake house on the market, but it needs some work. I wish I was there to help.
    • Our water pressure has dropped ridiculously low. I need to run new pipe from the well to the house. Fun.

    I hope you are well.

     

     

April 1, 2013

  • Larry hair

    Our first day of sightseeing in Miami, we went out to Key Biscayne. We stopped on the causeway for a few photos.

    As the session went on, my hair became...

    more and more...

    Larrylike.

    But as long as Alicia doesn't care...

    I don't.