Monday, March 30, 2026

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

 Wednesday, May 24, 2023

  I weighed 145.5 lbs today. Yesterday, I ate a huge fruit salad—absolutely delicious. Homegrown mango, store-bought bananas, frozen mixed berries, coconut yogurt, and granola on top—is what got my weight up there in the first place.  

    Paulette was free for a visit today. I picked up the blue bottles for the Kangen water refill. Elsa went wild. She knows what that means. That dog was out the door and by the car faster than me. She was hiccupping; she was so excited. I let her out close to the bottom of the driveway but not right near the road. I didn't have to worry. Her focus is on getting up to Auntie P's house. Watching her tear up that driveway at full speed gives me a kick.

  It started pouring shortly after I arrived. Carol came down and walked to the lanai while Paulette filled my bottles and loaded them in my car. By the time I headed to the outdoor lanai, it was coming down in buckets. I put a cardboard box over my head and made a run for it. They have a solid-roof pergola that protects us from the rain.       

     The three of us worked on a 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle of a landscape scene. I got four pieces. Paulette said Carol and she sometimes don't find a single matching piece. I left because I was hungry. Paulette and I shared a hug as I got in the car. We're both affection junkies. It's terrific to have someone as huggie as I am in my life.  

   It was a good thing I left when I did. I made it home just in time to make myself a cream cheese and celery snack before I had to sign on for a session with Adolescent D.  

   Our last session was fantastic. So much progress! This session was a step back. It's frustrating because he doesn't or can't apply what I teach. He can't remember when a vowel is long or short. He doesn't remember or just doesn't follow the directions I give him over and over again. I don't know how many times I've told him to decode each syllable separately to make sure he has a pronunciation for each syllable before he tries to blend any of them. He doesn't remember, and/or he hates doing it. Anything that requires effort is an ego assault. He shouldn't have to try. Oh, boy! What do you do with someone like that?

 

 

 

 

Thursday, May 25, 2023

  

I got up early today. My first alarm is always at five-thirty. On Thursday, I set a second for six am to make sure I get my walk in before we have driveway yoga. I was out of the house before six. Walking down the mountain as I returned home, I caught the most amazing rainbow I had ever seen. I captured it in a photo before the rising sun erased it from the sky. The colors were brilliant. The shape was one I had never seen before. It was almost entirely vertical. It came out of a dark cloud and pierced the water below.   

   I saw David, a neighbor from a parallel street, coming up the hill. I yelled for him to turn around. He did, casually looking over his shoulder. I yelled to him to turn further. He finally caught the rainbow. It would have been too late if I had waited until we were abreast. The sun was rising rapidly, fading the rainbow.  

    In anticipation of my July 13 THR surgery, I picked up a raised toilet seat today. You can no longer rent medical equipment that makes contact with water-forget someone’s body. I called the church last year to ask if anyone knew someone who provided this service. They gave me the name of a woman who offered medical equipment for free. Even though I called close to the surgery date, she still had what I needed available. I got the message; I was lucky. I should have contacted her much sooner. That’s why I called her now, to get my name on her calendar for July. She told me she was selling her house and had already gotten rid of all her equipment but had a raised toilet seat without handles. Was that good enough for me? Yep. After the last surgery, I had no trouble getting on and off the seat. She said she wouldn’t be home and would leave it in her carport.  

     I stopped at the bank before I went home. I had a check from first-grade M’s parents for April. There was no line to speak of, and I was in and out quickly. I stopped at the transfer station to drop off a container of glass bottles. I love the transfer station. Mike made it a must-see site for our visitors to Kona.

  Judy found an article in the newspaper about a tutoring agency specifically for Hawaiian students, Hawaiikidscan, Air Tutors. I found it online and started the application process. I’m not sure if they do it for free or charge. I’m not interested in working for an agency that charges for several reasons. It’s not that I don’t like to make money; I do. I don’t care to work for an agency that charges poor people, rips off the tutors who work through the online service, and then calls themselves a non-profit.  

    The tutoring agency advertises highly qualified tutors. For their preliminary scan, they ask if you have a high school diploma. How highly qualified can someone be if all they have is that? We’ll see.  

      It took me a while to figure out how to apply. The article and the Hawaiikidscan site didn’t make it clear. As far as I can figure out, I must apply through Air Tutors. I started the preliminary application. They wanted a resume. I had to find an old one on the computer. I found one I wrote in 2014 when I first moved here. No one was impressed enough to allow me to volunteer.  

  It was my last night with the Firefly Lane girls. Their relationship had a quality I loved; it felt real to me. I missed them. 

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

 Tuesday, May 23, 2023

I weighed 145 lbs. today despite eating thirteen nuggets and lemonade with honey last night. Oh, well. I like the scale going down, but I remain concerned about my health.  

On my morning walk, I went to the top of Kukuna. I turned around and walked down the mountain just before the sun came over the ridge. According to the weather app, the sun rises half an hour before I see it crest the rim. I could see the sun shining brightly several miles away, close to the shoreline, while I was still in the shade of the mountain.

    The other day, one of my walking buddies, Carol, said she had to get up at five if she wanted to walk her dogs on a beach before the sun came up and heated up the world. It was the first time I realized the sun's rays hit the shoreline before they did higher up the mountain. The mountain blocks the sun. Weird!

    I ran into Yvette on my walk. She told me she heard I had a playmate for Masha. Masha was a three-month-old puppy but not available for play. She broke her leg and was sporting a cast. She had to be watched 24/7 to ensure she didn't walk too much so the leg could heal. Once the cast came off, Beverly could bring her 15-week-old lab to play with Masha, who is too energetic for Little, Yvette, and Josh's older dog. 

     I planned to go to town to the computer tech, Bailey, at Jack Be Click. He transferred my files from my old Apple to my new one. Yesterday, I tried to use it. I didn't have access to my OneDrive. When I tried to open a file, I couldn't. If I did get it open, I couldn't modify it. I would type, and nothing happened. I couldn't print from my computers, the Apple, or the Surface Pro tablet. Bailey told me to bring my printer in so he could figure out the problem.

     On the way to town, I stopped at the Civic Center to visit the DMV. B asked me to drive Elijah to the DMV to take his driver's test for his instructional permit. It occurred to me he might need an appointment. I checked the DMV scheduling site. It did seem so. But the one for Kona said, "No appointments available."' Did that mean there were no appointments or appointments weren't necessary? The Hilo site had appointments in July; this was the earliest.   

    The line at the DMV was short. There were only two people before me, and they were quick. The DMV greeter showed me that there were three windows used servicing those coming in for the written driver's test. Two of them had appointments scheduled so far out, but the scheduling app was closed. A third window was open; the first appointment was on July 10.  I texted the information to Brian and Elijah. I thought I would make an appointment at every DMV site. Elijah texted us, saying he had made an appointment in Hilo for July. Great! 

    I drove to the computer tech store. When I came in the other day, Bailey downloaded the Microsoft 365 package, and I had access to my current files on the Apple. I discovered I still couldn't modify my files when I got home. I tapped a key, and nothing happened. I called Bailey. He had never heard of such a thing. He said to come back. He solved both my problems with the Apple and the Surface Pro. He had to reload Microsoft. A part of the program hadn't been downloaded the first time. The printer problem was because we hadn't selected it.

     I asked Scott to load my printer into my car, and I headed back to town. I carried the two computers in and asked Bailey if he could take the printer out of the car. I stood at the door while he did so.

      My first question was, do I have a lifetime subscription to Microsoft 365? No. I guess that was part of the scam Alex ran on me. He sold me several lifetime programs. No way to go back and undo that. Onward and upward. Bailey said I had an annual subscription for $99 a year. What about switching to Google Docs. He told me it would be easy enough to do; just click and drag. OMG! It all seemed too much for me.   

      I looked around the shop while Bailey was working. I saw a fantastic painting leaning against a wall. He said his wife had picked it up. What did she do here in Hawaii? She was a teacher at Hawaii Tech Academy. I missed the grade but thought it was at the elementary school level. I asked for her contact information. I have been generally more assertive about getting my work out there. Time is running out, and the need is great. Through my work with the Step Up Tutoring tutors, I learned others can be successful with the teaching methods I developed as I have been. The tutors I worked with received less than one hour of instruction from me, and they saw improvement in their students. The program is easy, cheap, and successful. You would think people would be banging down my door.

    When I got home, I composed a letter to Bailey's wife. He had given me her school address, but it didn't work. I finally got her personal one and sent it. Hopefully, she will be interested.

    When I asked him how much I owed, he waved me off as he had yesterday. I put $10 in the tip jar sitting on the counter.

I had a few additional chores to do in town while I was there. I dropped off an Amazon return at the UPS store and returned two bottles of tea tree oil to Island Naturals.  I stocked up when a doctor friend told me tea tree oil would be better for Elsa's lesions than the steroid cream the vet gave me. Fortunately, I shared that information with the vet. Tea tree oil is toxic for dogs; it leaches right through their skin.

I had an appointment with first-grade Iz at 4 p.m. She was reading on a 3rd-grade level with me, so she must be at least on a second-grade independent reading level. I won't see her for a month over the summer when she travels to the mainland to visit her grandmothers.

 


Monday, May 22, 2023

 Monday, May 22, 2023

              The scale was 146.5 this morning. Ah, thank God. If it goes up and down, my weight probably isn’t driven by diabetes. Of course, I had thirteen nuggets yesterday. Betty, where is your restraint?

        I had a wonderful night’s sleep; I don’t think I got up even once to pee. But who knows? I fall asleep so quickly when I return to bed. I got up to take care of a piece of business.  

      I bought bras from Amazon that promised to be the most comfortable things on the planet. A miracle. Okay, I thought I’d try. I tried one on. Wow! Had I gained that much weight? 

I measured the underband. Twenty-three inches on a 36 DD bra. I measured my other bras. The underband was 33 inches. A ten-inch difference! Obviously, something was wrong. I had to check an email from Amazon called the “Try Before You Buy” policy. How was this different from what it usually was. Maybe they were enforcing a seven-day return policy. I went through the steps to get a refund. I packed the bras and put them in my car for delivery to UPS tomorrow. 

     I was going to town anyway to see my computer guy, Bailey, at Jack Be Click. I had problems with both my computers. 

I can’t print from the tablet. When I press control P, the print option comes up, but it says I must save the document. I do, and it still doesn’t print. 

  Also, I can’t get Microsoft Word working on my new Apple. It asks me to put in my password. I do. It accepts it but doesn’t allow me to use it. It accessed files from 2021 from the computer but not from the files on my current One Drive. And it won’t let me type in a single letter. I do have access to the Internet, at least. I called Bailey today. He says he can help me figure out what’s going on.  

     I thought I bought lifetime access to Microsoft 365. It’s on my tablet without a problem. Why isn’t it on my Apple? I got this program from some Microsoft customer service outfit out of India. At one point, the man I had the most contact with called to tell me there was a problem and they had to refund my money. I had worked with this guy for several years. I knew him well- I thought. When he said I was family, and he was concerned for me, I should have known then and there. 

     The whole transaction was funny. Alex handed me over to some guy who would ‘help’ me. I drove him nuts. Open your bank account. How do I do that? Put in your pin number. I don’t have one. What do you mean you don’t have a pin number? I never use it. How do you get money from your bank? I go there. When were you there last? Yesterday? Oh, boy. I could feel the frustration coming through the line. One guy had me on the line, insisting I never close my computer. He blew up at me. “You’re so spoiled. I could live on $700 a year.” That’s how I remember how much I paid for my lifetime access to Microsoft. They put a new guy the next day. It was the oddest state of mind I’ve ever been in. One part of me knew what was happening and laughed at how ridiculous it was. The other part was taking the whole thing seriously. It ended when I received my final instructions in the Target parking lot with one leg out the door. Go to the service counter and order $6000 in gift cards. “Don’t be ridiculous. If I do that, they will call the cops.” “Tell them it’s for your grandchildren.” I don’t have any grandchildren.” ‘Stay on the phone at all times, but don’t let them know you are on the phone.” Click! The penny dropped on both sides of my brain. I hung up and drove home. The phone kept ringing, and the texts kept coming. I picked up the phone once to tell them I was heading to my bank to change my account. I never heard from them again. It was a fascinating experience. 

     On some level, I loved it. I asked two hunters in my life if there was an intimacy between the hunter and the prey. They said yes. That’s what I felt. An intimacy I hadn’t experienced since Mike died. I could see why people fall for romance scams and then defend the predator in court against charges. I still get a charge thinking about the whole experience, not just my escape but every minute of it.   

     A year or so after this experience, the company called me and asked me why I hadn’t contacted them. I told them they had their nerve after they tried to scam me. Poor guy. As it wound up, Alex, my primary contact, was in jail for his activities. Now, I have to find out what my status is with Microsoft. Do I need them? Can I work with Google Docs that so many others love? Can I transfer all my documents over? I will need access to something like PowerPoint. Does Google Docs include that?

   I did some research. Google Docs is a possibility. It sure is cheaper than Microsoft. I know many people who prefer it. I would have to get all my files shifted over, including my photos.  

   I had a session with Adolescent D today. No, he didn’t finish all his assignments. Did he get more done with me or without me? He said, “On my own.” I doubt that. He is most proficient at avoidance.   

      I told him I had spoken to his mom, and she was impressed with his reading. “I doubt that,” he said with disgust. “You don’t read as well as the best reader at your grade level. You may not read as well as the lowest student above you. However, your improvement is mindblowing. Your mother thinks I’m a miracle worker.” Three years ago, he was on a first-grade reading level. In September two years ago, the public school special education teacher evaluated his reading to be on a second-grade level, heavily dependent on sight words. However, he couldn’t recognize the word they and confused her and here.

      He said he wanted to work on his book Investing for Young Adults. The improvement in his reading was mind-blowing. I have seen improvement since last week. “The rich get richer.” The more we can do, the easier it is for us to learn more. His mother told me he was taking notes. I asked him if he had started working on reading multi-syllable words one at a time before blending them. Yes! My God, the boy is making an effort on his own!   

     He read exceptionally well and more than he had ever read before. Then he started making mistakes. He had worked hard. He has to tame his nervous system, and rewire it, so he can read. That he could read as much as he did was spectacular. He was suffering from brain exhaustion. I told him it was time to rest. Knowing when to take a break is an important study skill. It’s also important to sit down and push yourself through the task. In this case, it was time for a rest.   

      I told him I would read the text. When I came to multisyllabic words, I would produce the individual syllables and allow him to blend them. In English, it is possible to decode the word ‘correctly’ but not pronounce it they way we normally do. I read the syllables with an eye to producing challenging options. In the word interest, I pronounced the syllable as in/ter/est. We don’t say the word that way; we drop the first e and say /in/trest/. He experienced cognitive dissonance as he wrestled with the way the word was written versus the way we usually say it. I presented the word aside as as/ide. Figuring out words using context clues is a necessity in English. Hebrew is worse.  

     I called his mom after the session to tell her about the improvement I had heard. She laughed. She had come into the room as he was reading and heard. She asked if we could work on practicing for the Learner’s Permit Driver’s written this summer. I had done some work on it a while ago, thinking it was material he might be interested in. Not so much. His mom asked him if he would be interested now. He said yes. I would be delighted to work with him on it. Besides reading skills, I can teach study skills.  

    I had a session with second-grade M at four pm. I continued working on reading comprehension. Her oral reading was pretty good. She did excellent work decoding multi-syllable words at a third-grade level. She misread some function words. I’d work on that over the summer. My biggest concern was her comprehension.  

      She and some of my other students confused reading comprehension with background knowledge. They answer what they think is true rather than what the text says. I usually start by telling them, “ I’m a twelve-year-old boy with bright red hair. What did I say?” Is any of that true? No, absolutely not. When asked a comprehension question, the teacher asks what the story says. I saw almost 100% improvement.   

      I called her mom after the session to tell her what I was seeing. I also asked her mom to recommend me by posting an ad on her Facebook page. She gave my number to her officemate, who is an educator. The woman observed me teaching M and thought I was fantastic. Apparently, she recommended me to several people. I could expect parents to contact me. I didn’t count my clients before they hatch. This would be great. Maybe I can get this ‘educator’ interested in my teaching methods. I want them used by others.  

   I continued watching Firefly Lane. I think it’s fantastic. I particularly love the adolescent scenes. Those actresses almost have me convinced they’re not acting. Of course, I am vulnerable to suspending disbelief.

 

 

 

 


Sunday, May 21, 2023

 Sunday, May 21, 2023

  The scale stayed steady from yesterday. Still a mere 145.5.   

    I didn't attend church in the morning because I planned to go to the four pm mass. Actually, I thought it was at four-thirty. Fortunately, I asked Judy if she was planning to attend the four-thirty mass, and she corrected me.  

     I spent the morning working on updates and pouring pots of boiling water on my neighbors' weeds that border and intrude onto my plantings. I made sure the kettles were on full boil before I quickly took them outside and dumped them on the plants. These plants are unbelievably immune to the impact of boiling water.

       I bathed Elsa. Her skin has been completely clear of lesions for two days. As a result, I didn't wash her yesterday. I wondered how long it would take for her skin to break out if I didn't do it. I was about to find out. Is it only a bath a day that keeps her lesions away? Now, I only leave the soap on for five minutes. I don't know about her. But I'm happier with that procedure than waiting ten to fifteen minutes. She shakes the whole time. I hope five minutes on an every-other-day schedule will be as effective. 

    The four p.m. mass was a special event. A young man who grew up in the parish had recently been ordained as a priest and was performing his first mass in his home church. Dinner would be served after the mass. The turnout was good but not spectacular. I was glad I went to add to the number.

       I usually set myself up on the south lanai because it's outdoors with less respiratory contamination and no refrigeration. The pastor keeps the church that cold (brr!) to make himself comfortable under all his vestments.

       Today, I went to sit inside the church to find Judy and Paulette. I saw Judy immediately. She signaled for me to come sit with her. It wasn't too cold; I went and got my things and joined her. I had a large scarf I could use as a shawl. It was lovely sitting inside the church. I may start doing it again after my July THR surgery. In the meantime, I have to be sure I don't get sick and have to postpone the operation. 

  There was a boatload of priests, deacons, and seminary students to share in the celebration. Father Arrion's parents were sitting in the front row. His mom looked stressed. Was she concerned about his performance,  the number of people in attendance, the celebratory meal, or her upcoming hula performance?

     I danced the hula at Mike's funeral. As I was walking to the back of the church to congratulate Fr. Arrion, I ran into two women who would be performing at the dinner. One had been my PT, and the second was a wonderful woman who came to my home daily for a week to help me learn the dance I did on the funeral day.  

    Most people who observed and attended understood that my performance was part of my eulogy. Hula is a sacred dance here, never just for entertainment. Judy proposed that I ask the Hula ministry to dance at his funeral and that I participate. Mike told everyone that he wanted me to dance with the group. I never did; this was my makeup gift. Better late than never. Hopefully, he got to enjoy it.  

    While I had an extensive background in dance- I took dance classes for sixteen years and performed in concerts for about eight- I hadn't danced in a while. Also, I had never studied hula and had an arthritic hip. So there I was the day of his funeral after two weeks of practice doing one of the more complicated dances with many twists and turns. Only two people commented on my performance. I expected no one to do so. It wasn't appropriate, given the circumstances. 

Meali'inani said I did all right. She had given me some pointers when she came to visit. A mainland friend gave me the biggest compliments, but not intentionally. He told me I had made a mistake and wasn't as good as the woman beside me. The woman next to me had studied hula regularly for twenty years. If all I was was not as good as her! I was delighted.   

      I spoke to Judy H, my hula hero, and Terry, my old PT, for ten minutes. Judy H. encouraged me to join the hula ministry. Maybe I will. It doesn't look like I will be busy with my tutoring. Sadly, there is very little response, even though I offer it for free. Wild! Kids need to catch up, and this method is magical.  

   I went to the door at the back of the church to congratulate Fr. Arrion. Then I got in line for the food. It was one long, long line. It was a good thing the turnout wasn't too big, or the food line would have gone on all night. I wasn't with Judy G., my friend, and her sister, Paulette. I saw them way ahead of me. 

     I started talking to the woman standing next to me. She was a tourist from Germany and was here for three weeks. We continued talking about the parish as we slowly moved down the line. When served, I looked around for Judy G. and Paulette inside the parish center but didn't see them.   I asked Monica to join me because she was alone.  

     I chose to sit outside. I saw Judy G. sitting alone at one of the tables. She had told me she would sit with the Youth Ministry Group, but no one had joined her yet.    

   My tourist guest, Monica, blew her nose and coughed, covering her mouth with her hand. I was freaking out. She stood close to me while we talked in line. She was so close I thought she might have a hearing problem. I was concerned I might catch something from her.  

     After I finished my main course, I went inside to get a second helping I could take home and dessert. When I returned, Monica shifted closer to Judy, and they embraced. Okay. Given my concerns, my feelings toward the woman weren't quite that cozy.

    The hula ministry got up to perform. First, there was a whole group dance. Next, Fr. Arrion's mother did a solo dance to a non-Hawaiian song about a mother's endless love for her child. She is a good hula dancer. At the last chorus, Arrion's father walked up behind his wife and joined her in the dance, duplicating her arm motions. He didn't quite get the hip action that distinguishes the hula. The last move is a symbolic embrace of a mother with a baby in her arms. The father put his arms on the mother's, and they 'embraced' that baby together. I cried. Judy sidled up to me, saying how she also cried. She is struck by the sacrifice of Arrion's parents. He is their only child. He will never have children of his own. Then, two young girls got up to dance. They are the twin girls of the head of the music ministry, Walter, and his wife, Thelma, who sings with him. Walter has the most incredible voice. It reminds Judy and me of Josh Groban's. I love hearing him sing. Thelma's voice is not the same quality, but the two sound good together. Their girls are now sixteen. They have become remarkably posed, beautiful young women. They also danced beautifully. It was one of the best evenings of hula I have seen. While it wasn't part of the mass, it was still significant and spiritual. As hula should be.   

   I headed home with my stash. Scott had fed Elsa at six-thirty, but he hadn't walked her. He had put her out on the back lanai. He said she peed. Well, better than nothing. I still had to clean up the poop stains from the piles she deposited on my indoor carpeted lanai a few days ago. I don't get it. She knows she can get out and back in through the doggie door; why doesn't she? I took her out for a walk. Good thing. I spared my lanai carpet unnecessary additional stress.  

a wonderful night's sleep; I don't think I got up even once to pee. But who knows? I fall asleep so quickly when I return to bed. I got up to take care of a piece of business.  

    I bought bras from Amazon that promised to be the most comfortable things on the planet—a miracle. Okay, I thought I'd try. I tried one on. Wow! Had I gained that much weight? I measured the underband—twenty-three inches on a 36 DD bra. On my other bras, the underband was 33 inches—a ten-inch difference! Something was wrong. I had to check an email from Amazon called the "Try Before You Buy" policy. How was this different from what it usually was? Maybe they were enforcing a seven-day return policy. I went through the steps to get a refund. I packed the bras and put them in my car for delivery to UPS tomorrow. 

   I went to town to see my computer guy, Bailey, at Jack Be Click. I had problems with both my computers. I can't print from the tablet. When I press control P, the print option comes up, but it says I must save the document. I do, and it still doesn't print. 

  Also, I needed help getting Microsoft Word working on my new Apple. It asks me to put in my password. I do. It accepts it but doesn't allow me to use it. It accessed files from 2021 from the computer but not from the files on my current One Drive. And it won't let me type in a single letter. I did have access to the Internet, at least. I called Bailey today. He says he can help me figure out what's going on.  

   I thought I bought lifetime access to Microsoft 365. It's on my tablet without a problem. Why isn't it on my Apple? I got this program from some Microsoft customer service outfit out of India. At one point, the man I had the most contact with called to tell me there was a problem and they had to refund my money. I had worked with this guy for several years. I knew him well- I thought. When he said I was family and he was concerned for me, I should have known then and there. 

   The whole transaction was funny. Alex handed me over to some guy who would 'help' me. I drove him nuts. He told me to "Open your bank account." How do I do that? "Put in your PIN." I don't have one. "What do you mean you don't have a PIN?" I never use it. "How do you get money from your bank?" I go there. "When were you there last?" Yesterday! Oh, boy. I could feel the frustration coming through the line. One guy had me on the line, insisting I never close my computer. He blew up at me.

"You're so spoiled. I could live on $700 a year." That's how I remember how much I paid for my lifetime access to Microsoft. They put a new guy the next day. It was the oddest state of mind I've ever been in. One part of me knew what was happening and laughed at how ridiculous it was. The other part was taking the whole thing seriously. It ended when I received my final instructions while sitting in the Target parking lot with one leg out the door. "Go to the service counter and order $6000 in gift cards. "Don't be ridiculous. If I do that, they will call the cops. "Tell them it's for your grandchildren." I don't have any grandchildren. "Stay on the phone at all times, but don't let them know you are on the phone." Click! The penny dropped on both sides of my brain. I hung up and drove home. The phone kept ringing, and the texts kept coming. I answered the phone once to tell them I was heading to my bank to change my account. I never heard from them again. It was a fascinating experience. 

   On some level, I loved it. I asked two hunters in my life if there was an intimacy between the hunter and the prey. They said yes. That's what I felt. An intimacy I hadn't experienced since Mike died. I could see why people fall for romance scams and then defend the predator in court against charges. I still get a charge thinking about the whole experience, not just my escape but every minute of it.  

   A year or so after this experience, the company called me and asked me why I had yet to contact them. I told them they had their nerve after they tried to scam me. Poor guy. As it wound up, Alex, my primary contact, was in jail for his activities. Now, I have to find out what my status is with Microsoft. Do I need them? Can I work with Google Docs that so many others love? Can I transfer all my documents over? I will need access to something like PowerPoint. Does Google Docs include that?

  I did some research. Google Docs is a possibility. It sure is cheaper than Microsoft, and I know many people who prefer it. However, I would have to get all my files shifted over, including my photos.  

  I had a session with Adolescent D today. No, he hadn't finished all his assignments. Did he get more done with me or without me? He said, "On my own." I doubt that. He is most proficient at avoidance.  

    I told him I had spoken to his mom, and she was impressed with his reading. "I doubt that," he said with disgust. "You don't read as well as the best reader at your grade level. You may not read as well as the lowest student above you. However, your improvement is mind-blowing. Your mother thinks I'm a miracle worker." Three years ago, he was on a first-grade reading level. In September two years ago, the public school special education teacher evaluated his reading to be on a second-grade level, heavily dependent on sight words. However, he couldn't recognize the word they and confused her and here. How could he be on a second-grade level if he couldn't remember those words?

    He said he wanted to work on his book Investing for Young Adults. The improvement in his reading was mind-blowing. I have seen improvement since last week. "The rich get richer." The more we can do, the easier it is for us to learn more. His mother told me he was taking notes. I asked him if he had started working on reading multi-syllable words one at a time before blending them. Yes! My God, the boy is making an effort on his own!  

   He read exceptionally well and more than he had ever read before. Then he started making mistakes. He had worked hard. He had to tame his nervous system and rewire it so he could read. That he could read as much as he did was spectacular. He was suffering from brain exhaustion. I told him it was time to rest. Knowing when to take a break is an important study skill. It's also important to sit down and push yourself through the task. In this case, it was time for a rest.  

    I told him I would read the text. When I came to multisyllabic words, I would produce the individual syllables and allow him to blend them. In English, it is possible to decode the word 'correctly' but not pronounce it as it usually is. I read the syllables with an eye to producing challenging options. In the word interest, I pronounced the syllable as in/ter/est. We don't say the word that way; we drop the first e and say /in/trest/. He experienced cognitive dissonance as he wrestled with the way the word was written versus the way we usually say it. I presented the word aside as as/ide. Figuring out words using context clues is a necessity in English. Hebrew is worse.  

   I called his mom after the session to tell her about the improvement I had heard. She laughed. She had come into the room as he was reading and heard. She asked if we could work on practicing for the Learner's Permit Driver's written this summer. I had done some work on it a while ago, thinking it was material he might be interested in. Not so much. His mom asked him if he would be interested now. He said yes. I would be delighted to work with him on it. Besides reading skills, I can teach study skills.  

   I had a session with second-grade M at four pm. I continued working on reading comprehension. Her oral reading was pretty good. She did excellent work decoding multi-syllable words at a third-grade level. She misread some function words. I'd work on that over the summer. My biggest concern was her comprehension.  

    She and some of my other students confused reading comprehension with background knowledge. They answer what they think is true rather than what the text says. I usually start by telling them, "I'm a twelve-year-old boy with bright red hair. What did I say?" Is any of that true? No, absolutely not. When asked a comprehension question, the teacher asks what the story says. I see almost 100% improvement.  

    I called her mom after the session to tell her what I was seeing. I also asked her mom to recommend me by posting an ad on her Facebook page. She gave my number to her officemate, who is an educator. The woman observed me teaching M and thought I was fantastic. She recommended me to several people. I could expect parents to contact me. I don't count my clients before they hatch, but it would be great if I got some clients through recommendations. Maybe I could get this 'educator' interested in my teaching methods. I want them used by others.  

  I continued watching Firefly Lane. It's fantastic. I particularly love the adolescent scenes. Those actresses almost have me convinced they're not acting. Of course, I am vulnerable to suspending disbelief.

 

Saturday, May 20, 2023

 Saturday, May 20, 2023

Yay! The scale said 145.5 this morning. I got concerned when there was a several-pound weight loss over several days. I remember when Jean told me she had diabetes. She went to the doctor because she had lost something like thirty pounds in a short time. She had called me and asked about being thirsty all the time. I'm the family 'doctor.' Thank God John drove her to an AMA doctor. When the doctor was through examining her, he asked if someone had driven her there. If not, he had to call an ambulance to take her to the ER immediately. 

     I had not been suffering from an unusual thirst or need to pee. I know those symptoms. How could I have missed them with Jean? Thank God they caught it in time. She could have died. I would have missed her terribly.  

     I signed in for my nine am Zoom meeting with Mama K's crew. No response. I called several times. No response. I assumed they were out paddling again, but Mama K hadn't informed me. She tends not to do that. It doesn't make me happy. She should just let me know. She finally contacted me later in the day, apologizing. She proposed dropping the Saturday sessions for the rest of the summer because of the conflict with the paddling sessions.  

      I had a nice long talk with Scott tonight. He has been staying in my home for close to a year now. He is always nice to me when we encounter each other, but I only see him when he leaves, enters the house, or does his laundry. Otherwise, he stays in his room. I was sure that some of his concerns were because he wanted to stay out of my way and not impose on me.

      The problem is I'm not comfortable with that type of seclusion. Mostly, I need people who share space with me. In fact, it is what I miss most about Mike. We often did our own things in the shared space. I like living on one floor rather. I preferred that over Mike being on a different floor than I was. Isn't that one of the wonderful things about living with people – if you're comfortable with them? If they don't resent your presence or consider you an intrusion on their private world. Scott said he had been in other situations where he had to walk on eggshells. I can appreciate that. Shared space means negotiation. If you're living with someone you can't share preferences with, that's a huge problem. There are always bumps along the way. I'm not expecting anything spectacular. He's studying for a pilot's test so he can operate a large drone. Could he do that in the shared space occasionally?  

         I continued watching Firefly Lane. I love the series. I love the actors. I love the script. Its format reminds me of the one Shivani used in her book; it moves back and forth chronologically. In the series, there is a scene with the girls as teenagers, then one when they are young women before their professional and personal paths have taken shape, then one in 'current time,' and then a scene at some random moment that reveals more about their relationship, and occasionally a moment in the 'future' to make you wonder what happened to cause that moment. I loved the jumping around in Shivani's book, and I love it here. The moments are organized around a theme in their relationship rather than strict chronology.  

 


Friday, May 19, 2023

 Friday, May 19, 2023

     I weighed 144.5 this morning after eating twenty-two nuggets. That’s not good. It was a nothing day except for overwhelming grief. I was having a tough time. I worked on updates and some gardening. 

     I was supposed to have a session with Adolescent D. His mother canceled because he had to finish a boatload of assignments before the end of the school year. I spoke to her the other day and asked if he told her what we were working on. No, he hadn’t. I couldn’t tell her because he hadn’t permitted me to say we were working on completing some of those assignments. Moreover, I was working on his resistance to doing the work. He had a video assignment to interview someone on the Big Island. He refused. He said it was weird. Weird? Why? It just was, and he wouldn’t do it. We are talking about a fifteen-year-old boy. Good luck in getting all his work done. I am proud to say that he is academically capable of getting it done now, if not getting good grades on the completed work. Step one. If you spend your life avoiding doing something, you can’t get better at it. It’s a truism. Why is anyone surprised by the outcome of avoidance?  

     I asked his mother if she saw any differences in him. I was hoping for more personality changes. I want him to take the wheel of his life and take responsibility for where he’s going and what he will become. I told him once I feared he would wind up a twenty-five-year-old man holed up in his bedroom in his parents’ home playing video games. He had seen this as a possibility himself. His mom didn’t report any changes in this regard. She knew he had all these outstanding assignments and was doing nothing to get them done. However, she did say she was blown away by the improvement in his reading. She also said he was filling notes books with notes he was taking. She hadn’t looked at them. She didn’t know if they were his own words or if he was copying text. Either way is good with me. I know one person who wrote their way out of a learning disability. What good news! Whatever he was doing was on his initiative, and it had something to do with print.  

    B texted me photos of Elijah at his graduation. I had been invited. I cared about Elijah, but I didn’t want to go. Sitting through tedious graduations is not my thing unless it is a must for a family member.

 

    

Thursday, May 18, 2023

 Thursday, May 18, 2023

I weighed 146.5 this morning. Given all the Hersey’s milk chocolate, this was a relief. I thought I’d be right back up to 148. A friend who follows my updates asked if it was good for me to be so forensic about my weight. The loss of my great shape is an issue, but not the main one. The rapid weight gain and thickness through the middle rather than all over my body is a sign of diabetes. I was monitoring to see what I could get away with. I asked my doctor to prescribe a glucose monitor and diabetes medication so I could make sure it didn’t cross the line.

     I had a dental appointment at 11:30. I had a cavity that needed filling and a slight adjustment to the cap he installed on my last visit. It was tapping against one of my front teeth, a capped tooth but not a post. He had told me that I had cavities in my bottom teeth that needed filling. He looked at them and said I had plaque buildup. What!! I use the bristle toothpick, floss, brush with an electric brush, water pik, and rinse with Crest mouthwash. How in God’s name do I have any plaque? He scrapped some off to show me. Sure enough, I had plaque buildup at the gum line. I have to push my lip out of the way to reach into that space with the toothbrush. Maintaining a clean mouth is a piece of work. He told me to buy disclosing tablets. Where could I buy them? I was heading to Safeway. Could I get them there? Possibly, but I had a better chance at Long’s.  

    I used disclosing tablets many years ago. I popped one in my mouth one day as candy. Mike saw my mouth turn blue or red; I don’t know the color. He freaked out.  He thought I was bleeding.

    I made Target my first stop. They have a Long’s there. I wanted to pick up a few items there. They’re always cheaper than Safeway. They couldn’t find disclosing tablets in the dental aisle. I couldn’t find an employee to help. I looked for the other items on my list. They had celery. I have fallen in love with celery with cream cheese and salt snacks. I bought two packages. They last for a long time. Cream cheese was next on my list. They didn’t have any. It’s Hawaii. Items are often missing from the shelves, off to Long’s.   

   Long’s didn’t have disclosing tablets, either. I didn’t bother looking for cream cheese, either. They only carry very small sizes of items. They did have Hersey’s milk chocolate nuggets with almonds on sale, though. I grabbed four of those. Safeway was my next stop. 

    My shoulder X-ray showed no particular problems with my shoulder, but it did have aortic atherosclerosis. He said mushrooms were the best for that. I have no idea. There’s some chemical in them that’s good for what ails you. Leave them out in the direct sun, and the chemical gets stronger. I bought the first package of mushrooms I found, white button mushrooms packaged for a quick snack with a side of roasted garlic butter. Further down the aisle, I saw a section devoted to mushrooms. Wow! The big ones are expensive. I was going to start with the ones I bought. Then, go to the dairy aisle for cream and cottage cheese. They had one small container of original cream cheese and little else of any variety. Is this a country-wide shortage of cream cheese? I did find a small container of cottage cheese with chives and grabbed it. It might be cheaper to buy Costco-sized portions of both. Even if they go bad before I finish them, they’ll be cheaper than these small containers.

  My last stop was at the computer repair shop, Jack Be Click, to pick up my computer, my new Apple, and the ancient one that I hung on to, thank God. He could download all the data from the old one that wasn’t on iCloud or OneDrive and move it to the new one.  

   Then, I raced home for my 1:30 appointment with the acupuncturist. I asked her to continue working on my left arm. It hurt enough at night that it woke me up. Besides working on the muscles in my arm, she worked on the ones in my upper chest and back. The pressure on my chest muscles made me cry out in pain. The ones in my back weren’t as bad. In both cases, my muscle tension was so tight they could be used in a well-tuned string instrument.  

     I signed in for my 4 p.m. Zoom session with third-grade KPS. There was no response. I called her grandmother repeatedly; there was no response. We have missed many more sessions than we have had. Out of the nine scheduled sessions, we’ve only met four times. 

 


Wednesday, May 17, 2023

 Wednesday, May 17, 2023

           I weighed 146 lbs. this morning and lost half an inch off my waist. 

I only had an inch and a half to go before I was back to where I was three months ago. Of course, I had sixteen Hersey’s milk chocolate nuggets with almonds yesterday. The day before, I had only three. That means my scale and girth will be greater tomorrow, probably right back up to 148.  

     I spent most of the day working on updates and advertising my tutoring and the reading method I developed. I felt like Cassandra. No one will listen to me, either. 

    I met with Adolescent D at 2 pm. No, he had done no additional work. No, he had not handed in the work we had completed. Why hadn’t he handed it in? Because he wasn’t at school today. Did he go to school yesterday? Why didn’t he hand it in then? He forgot. I’m not so much disturbed by his excuse as the possibility he believes them. It would make him dysfunctional in profound ways.  

     Then, I asked him where the completed booklet was. In his bag. That’s good. Was there some way he could make sure to take it out of his bag in school tomorrow? Yes. Clip the booklet to the thing you know you will take out of your bag. That way you can’t forget. He did it. I was teaching him study skills and how to deal with a faulty memory. Lord knows I have to figure out tricks for myself these days.

        There were twelve uncompleted assignments left to go. D said I couldn’t help him with any of them. Again, I don’t know if he was trying to get out of work or if he believed what he was saying. The latter is much scarier than the former. It would make him out of touch with reality. I told him to pick one assignment, eenie, meanie, minie, mo. He picked one. Of course, I could help him. He had to read an article on the Haitian slave rebellion of 1791 and take notes on it. Why would he think I couldn’t help him with that? I told him to read the words he could, and I would read the rest. He read at least 75-80% on his own. This is from a kid reading at a first-grade level two years ago. His biggest problem is keeping the letters and sounds straight when decoding multisyllabic words. When decoding the word consistent, he did alright on the first syllable. He first said sin for the sound on the second, pulling the n from the first syllable. 

     We also came across a word with ar in it. I always tell the kids it makes the same sound as the word are. He couldn’t remember are for love nor money. This poor kid does have problems. On the other hand, he had done nothing to improve his skills until I started working with him.    

     I told him to tell his mind to keep the syllables separate. He said it’s not that easy. No, but it helps. The minds of all young children scramble images. Our minds have to learn to disregard misinformation that is inappropriate for the context. I told him the story of my eyesight change. 

     After my cataract surgery, the double vision I had been living with all my life became a problem. Rather than be able to ditch my glasses, I now needed glasses with prisms to correct the problem. I had to make sure I wore the glasses at all times. It took time for me to learn to adjust to bifocal vision since I had never had it before. 

     My glasses were giving me problems. I found myself taking them off to read better. This was ridiculous. My vision with the glasses wasn’t better than it was without them. It was less tiring to see without them than with them. My left lens is set to near-point vision and my right to far-point. I was going to have to do without bifocal vision anyway. If my brain had gotten used to mono-focal vision in the first place, it could do it again. I would say, “Okay, right eye, you’re on. Left eye, stand back.” Did it make a difference? Probably not. Did it help? Well, it didn’t hurt. I was comfortable that it would take time for my brain to adjust. D could do it, too. I don’t know how much of his problem is due to congenital neurological problems, injuries to his brain after birth, or simple refusal to change in any way. The latter is possible with this boy. The good news was that he stayed overtime to work on the second paragraph. 

     I had Mama K’s crew immediately after Adolescent D. I started with Twin E. In our last session, I discovered that her idea of reading is figuring out the word from just the first letter. I had her practice saying all the letters in words before saying the word. She told me she practiced this skill on her own. I had mentioned it to her mother, asking her to have the girl sit at the kitchen table while she cooked and practice saying the letters before saying the word. Her reading today was much better. I could move her from the primer passages to a low first-grade one. Wow! I may solve her problem by the end of the summer. 

     I had Twin A reread a high-first-grade passage and answer comprehension questions. She did well. She also did the first reading on a second-grade passage, which she did remarkably well on. As we were almost finished with the passage, she started making mistakes. I had her stop. She had worked hard enough. Now, I’ll have to figure out if her visual perception goes haywire after she’s read a while or if she was just tired. 

    Twin A called fourth-grade K to come to the session. No response. I heard his mom yelling at him. He finally arrived. He was in tears. What was the problem? His mom took his game console away from him. Why did she do that? Because I wouldn’t come when called. Why didn’t you come? Because my friend was playing a game on a timer. We couldn’t’ t stop. What would happen if you stopped? Nothing. What happened because you didn’t stop? My mom took my console away from me. I tried to help him think through the relationship between his actions and the consequences. He had a choice.    

     When we started working, he stopped whimpering. We read the passage on Pinzon, a Spanish explorer who commanded one of Christopher Columbus’s boats and went on to explore on his own in South America. K told me he looked up Christopher Columbus; he was Italian, he told me. K remembered that Hawaii was a state in the USA. We went back to geography to learn where Spain was. He was more involved today. His understanding of the passage on Pinzon was clearer. 

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

      The scale said 147 lbs this morning, and my waist remained the same.   

     I wrote three blurbs for some of my students' mothers to post on Kona Moms and their Facebook page. I got an email from one of my moms, who added it to my text. It was a little too much information, mainly information unrelated to my work, but I appreciated her effort 

I heard nothing from the other two, which doesn't mean they didn't post them.

        The mom of third-grade J and first-grade Iz called to say that J had met with a licensed child therapist and loved her. She's into surfing as he is. I hope she can help him deal with the circumstances of his life. I asked Mom to ask him if he didn't want to meet. I would be OK with it, but I believe in consulting the people involved and not just assuming. His mom got back to me and said she had, and said he didn't want to. I'm suspicious of people who assume they know what others think, particularly their nearest and dearest. Statists show we are particularly blind to those closest to us. We have our stories, and they are part of it. I like what TS Elliott said, "Always greet your loved ones as strangers every day." Always be prepared to be surprised.  

      Mom said J didn't want three therapists. That's possible. Whether Mom made a unilateral decision or asked him is irrelevant. She had the power to make that decision. She has the legal right to make all the mistakes she wants. I agree with that.  

     I did meet with first-grade Iz to work on her reading. The school called Iz's mom to tell her Iz needed extra help. They told her she should come in before school for extra tutoring, but that didn't work with Mom's schedule, so she asked me to help. 

     With two hours of work, Iz was moved up to the second highest group. In our last session, she described whole words jumping from one line to another. I showed her the spin release. She said it was better, and she read much better today. She read a third-grade passage reasonably well. She needed help reading the two-syllable words. That was my teaching objective for this passage. When I told her she read at a third-grade level, she responded, "I thought it was on a kindergarten level. What I'm reading in class is harder,"  She was reading something about snakes; the passage gave the names of the snakes. Those names would be harder to read. 

   Josh and I reconciled the expenses for the year. In the past, he's owed me money. This year, it was the other way around. Judy told me how the cost of electricity went up this year. I checked. As of January 1, 2023, there was a 24% increase in the rate. Everyone was suffering with the rise. We had an additional problem. Seven of our thirty-five solar panels were down, and it took forever to replace them. This is scary.   

      I finally received Damon's Mother's Day card. He told me it was coming and was obviously excited about it. I thought it would be pictures of something I hadn't seen before. In the past, Damon's presents always consisted of pictures of his family or of Mike and me. Damon is a good photographer; there is always a need for more pictures. He was excited about the poem below written by "ChatGPT with prompts by Damon." As I read it, I thought, 'Hallmark Card.' 

        At the bottom of the first paragraph, I recognized personal references to me. It is not great art. There are moments when it doesn't make sense, but I love it. How sweet. The second to last passage is my favorite. It was about my effort to create a united family. I insisted that his mother be included in family activities. I love an extended family. My relationship with Damon's mom, Jean, took years to take full form. She is now one of my best friends, a real sister.

 Damon's Mother's Day card.

 Dear step-mom/Oma, so loving and kind

With a heart that's gentle and a spirit divine

You bring joy to our lives in so many ways

With your love for Elsa and your 10,000 steps a day

Your walks along the shore in Hawaii's warm embrace

Watching the sunsets so beautiful and feeling so great.

Floating in Kua Bay, when the waves are gentle and mild

Brings such happiness you can't help but smile.

You love Zabar bagels and chocolate chip cookies, too

With every bite,  we know how much we mean to you.

And helping kids learn to read with patience and care

Your kindness and wisdom are a gift so rare.

On this special day, we celebrate you

For being the loving step-mom that you are, so true

With gratitude and love, we honor your soul

For making our family beautiful and whole

May your life be filled with joy, love, and light

With Elsa by your side and Hawaii so bright

May you continue to inspire us every day

And shower our lives with blessings in every way.

 


Monday, May 15, 2023

 Monday, May 15, 2023  

      I weighed 147.5 this morning, and there was no change in my waist measurement. It is ten inches greater than it was until I gained weight in my mid-fifties.  

     I took my new computer into Jack Be Click to be loaded with Word. I couldn't figure out the password. Scott had asked me for one. I thought he was asking for a new password for something else. Fortunately, I had recorded the password on my tablet file and had the tablet with me. I felt so nervous because I feel helpless when it comes to technology. I can't imagine someone being able to help me.   

      I completed writing several blurbs for the parents of my children to post on Kona Moms and their Facebook pages. I got an almost immediate response from one of them, including more information and in their own voice. I didn't have an acknowledgment of receipt from the other two. One has posted for me before. I'm sure she will again. The other is so passive; I have no idea what she will do.

    Adolescent D was my only student today. We worked on the personal checklist he had to fill out. He argued that he couldn't do it because he couldn't remember what they were doing that day in class. The first quality was 'determination.' I told him he was a 5 out of 5; he was determined to do no work. He insisted we end our last session on time. He wouldn't give me five more minutes to complete this assignment. Today, he insisted he couldn't do the work; doing anything would be better than nothing. We finished the task together. Besides evaluating himself on personal characteristics, he had to answer a few questions. He dictated the sentences; I typed them and emailed them to him. It was hard getting words out of him, too. He had to have the sentences perfectly formed. He had no idea how to brainstorm. I'm sure teachers have instructed students to use it in his nine years of school. D would refuse to do it.   After the session, he texted me, "Thank you." 

     That leaves a dozen more assignments to be completed by the end of May when school lets out. It took us two hours to complete two short assignments. Most of the time is spent getting him to do something, anything. he says he doesn't like the quality in himself, but he clings to it like saran wrap. If he makes no effort on his own to complete the remaining assignments and spends time in our sessions fighting against doing them, there is no chance he will get even half of them completed before the end of the school year.

   After getting my evening dose of Firefly Lane, I took one of my short walks before bed. Judy came by driving home from teaching her RCI class. We had an absolutely lovely exchange. I was filled with love. Thank you, Judy.

 


Sunday, May 14, 2023

Sunday, May 14, 2023

I observe women at church, young and old, who are 'thick in the middle,' as I have become. I watch them strut their stuff, looking gorgeous. The problem is  I used to have a flat belly. Mike complained when it expanded a bit after menopause. I pointed out to him that he had a belly. "Yes, but I've always had one. You didn't when I met you," at thirty-two. In all fairness, I maintained that figure until my mid-fifties, several years after menopause.   

     After church, I headed home, not stopping at Long's to pick up more Hersey's milk chocolate nuggets with almonds. 

     I called Kea to find out how Elijah's scholarship applications were going. They had completed and submitted the Federal Student Aid application. This had to be filed to qualify for any scholarships or loans in the country. I don't know why this would be relevant for student scholarships awarded by a particular school versus the federal government. Whatever it was in. Of course, it was much too late to apply for a scholarship for September. Elijah's friend had only proposed going to college about a month ago. Applications for the following year have to be in before Christmas.     

      Based on Judy's advice, I called Elijah and recommended that he apply anyway. It couldn't hurt. His grades were good. Anything is possible. I also told him to get in scholarship applications for next semester and the following fall.  

   I didn't see third-grade KPS because she was with her mom for Mother's Day. I did have 2nd grade M. We continued working on reading comprehension. She has the same problem several of my other students have. She answers questions based on her background knowledge instead of information from the text. 

Saturday, May 13, 2023

 Saturday, May 13, 2023

      This morning, my scale was at 148 bs. It comes off quickly and on just as quickly if I'm not careful.   

        I had Mama K's crew at nine am. I started with fourth-grade K. I continued working on comprehension. Like some of my other students, he confuses answering questions from their store of knowledge versus reporting what the author said. Today's passage led us to work on geography. Is Hawaii a state or a country? A country. This is a common confusion in Hawaii. Many native Hawaiians speak of Hawaii as a nation the USA forced to become a state. However, students also needed clarification about it in Ohio; was Ohio a state or a country? I pulled up maps of the USA. When I was a child, there were only 48 states. I remember when the USA became 49 states and then 50. Ah, maybe not. Alaska became a state in January 1959, and Hawaii in August 1959. I was a freshman in college. It couldn't have been a big deal for me.   

       Twin A continued reading a 2nd-grade passage. Her comprehension is always good.

     In our last session, I learned Twin E had trouble processing letters. They changed; one word became another. I have seen this in many students. Inspired by Ron del Davis, I designed a system for controlling that movement. I wrote the word wear; she said it became what. Huh?! Kids with unstable visual images see shifting individual letters or whole words, not entirely different words. What was going on? I asked. 

      Do you look at the first letter and guess the word? Yes. According to the Sold a Story podcast, this is how the Whole Language method teaches students to read words, guess the word from the first letter in the word, and how it fits into the sentence to create meaning. I had her say every letter before she gave me the word. Her word recognition accuracy improved by almost 100%. She even read the word saw accurately for the first time instead of reading it as was. Of course, that had nothing to do with the first letter. When she said s-a-w before she said the word, she paused before saying the word, forcing herself to override her automatic response. The only word she missed was our. She couldn't infer the word from context either. Twin A does a dynamite job inferring the word using context.  

     I came home from one of my short walks to find a pee stain on the lanai carpet. What?? This is new. Elsa would poop on the carpet but never pee. Also, she has easy access to the outside through the doggie door. Why did she do this? The best I can figure out, she was pissed because I didn't take her with me on the walk when she needed to piss. Oh, dear.

   B had invited me to an award ceremony for Elijah. I texted him yesterday, asking him to remind me exactly when it was. I thought it was Saturday at 5:30. I heard nothing. I texted him again. Still nothing. I was concerned; B usually tries to get back to me. I called. Yes, it was today. He texted me last night. We wondered why I hadn't received it. He was ready to leave at 12:30. I wasn't up for leaving that early. B wanted to go so he could spend more time with his grandson. Understandable. He said he would leave later if I wanted to go. Absolutely not. He should leave and enjoy his time with Elijah.  

     I texted B around 7:30 pm, asking what the award was for. The school had called his mother to tell him he was getting an award and to make sure he had a fresh haircut and was wearing his Sunday best. B texted, "3.5 3.8 still going." I had no idea what the numbers meant. I got the explanation later. Elijah had a 3.5 to 3.8 for all four years. The award ceremony went on for over three hours. I was so glad I didn't go. I can't think of anything worse than an award ceremony that lasts forever. 

   B called while he was driving Elijah home. Did I want to go to his graduation? He had extra tickets. The only graduations I was willing to suffer through were Damon's, Yvette's, and my niece and nephews, Karin and David's. Ah, I remember attending Mike's niece's graduation from Cornell. I told Elijah to ask his siblings. It would have a lot of meaning for them.    

      I didn't want to go to my graduation from Rutgers when I got my master's. Mike insisted. I was in my assigned seat well before the start of the ceremony. I glanced up to find Mike and my mother sitting in the bleachers. Their pride was blinding. It was worth suffering through the rest of the event for that moment.  

    The gardeners came today. They come once a month to maintain the property. They trimmed the row of Ficus trees that created a border between our property and B's shed. They block my view of the Pacific Ocean if they get too big. They could use a hedge trimmer if they did it often enough before the new growth branches got too thick. Instead, he sent two of his men with manual clippers. I watched them stand in the tree as if they were on a ladder. I asked Rodney how they did it. Yes, they had climbed and were standing on the branches. He said, "We say our people were born in the trees." They're from the Marshall Islands, refugees from nuclear contamination created by the USA.   

     I worked with Kindergarten Steven later in the afternoon. It had been a while since I worked with him. His mom followed up on what I had started. She reported he was finding the bounces in words on his own. It was something he had fun doing. However, she couldn't get him to identify the words' individual sounds (phonemes). When she asked him the sounds in the word Steven, he said Ste and ven, identifying the sounds in each bounce (syllable) but not the individual sounds within the syllable.  

      Steven was obsessed with astronomy right now. He refuses to learn anything not related to it. This is good because he is motivated to learn and bad because he doesn't want to learn about anything else. While he is good in math and has enjoyed it, he has now declared he doesn't want anything to do with that. He has wanted nothing to do with reading. His mom told him he could learn more about astronomy if he learned to read. No, he could learn everything from YouTube. He has learned a lot. He can lecture on the subject for five minutes straight. His mom videoed it. He is remarkably bright. Both his parents are exceptionally bright.  

     I found a reading selection for children on Mars. I read some of it to him. When I hit two or three phoneme words, I sounded them and asked him to figure out the word. He had trouble with it. I was relieved. He doesn't want to do the work because he can't do it, not because he doesn't want to. We worked like that for twenty minutes. I read some of the text, discussed it, and asked him to figure out words from the individual sounds. He never protested the phonemic exercise. He acted as if he thought it was fun.  

   At one point, his mom intervened. I jumped down her throat, telling her to stay out of it. I had assumed she was responding out of anxiety. When I spoke to her later, it wasn't that. She said the sound system wasn't that good. I know the sibilants are hard to hear over Zoom, the /s/, /f/,/sh/, etc; she should do it. That would be better anyway. She can do it at her convenience, here and there, during the day. With any luck, he will reciprocate and challenge her.  

      I opened my new Apple computer. I plugged it in to charge the battery. Scott came out to help me set it up. He didn't get much beyond setting up a password to get into the computer. He didn't know how to do much else. I was delighted with his company. I don't have that often enough from anyone, just hanging around doing something together. Scott mostly stays in his room or goes out. I had that wonderful sense of companionship with Mike. Boy, do I miss it! Most of my contact with people is for a purpose, such as visiting or tutoring.  

     I started watching Firefly Lane on Netflix. I love it. Heigl is good; at least, she is fun to watch.

 


Wednesday, May 24, 2023

  Wednesday, May 24, 2023    I weighed 145.5 lbs today. Yesterday, I ate a huge fruit salad—absolutely delicious. Homegrown mango, store-bou...