Tuesday, June 6, 2023
I did the daily NY Times Wordle and mini crossword puzzles. It's becoming the first thing I do in the morning. If I'm frustrated, I'll check out Tom's hints. There's only so much of a challenge I'm willing to deal with.
I left shortly after 8:30 to make it for my 9:15 haircut appointment. I had time and stopped at Atlas Recycling to drop off Coke bottles. The workers were unloading a truck filled with large glass and aluminum containers—it must have been from a restaurant. Another woman was waiting her turn with a smaller truckload. I decided I'd come back after my haircut appointment.
I arrived just at 9:15. The door was locked. It had been the last time I had an early appointment. I knocked; no answer. I walked across the parking lot to get out of the hot sun and wait. No Randee. I heard my phone bing and checked for messages. Josh sent one about the controversy about how to teach reading. I listened to the Sold a Story podcast. I knew all about it. Here, I had a method of teaching phonics that would satisfy both camps, and no one would listen to me. Of course, some people in either camp will only listen to something consistent with their adopted point of view.
When I responded to the Bing, I saw Josh's text and one from Randee. Could I please come at 9:30 instead of 9:15? It was too late. I went to the car, turned on the air conditioning, and rested. I was already exhausted. I didn't know if I was more distraught by unsatisfying interpersonal relationships, my frustration with getting the reading techniques I developed widely used, or getting more clients. Everyone and his brother have gone into tutoring.
Randee looked great. She wore her hair short with bangs and completely natural. It's her color and her curls. I always enjoy seeing her. She told me wonderful stories about her three sons. The best was how her eighteen-year-old came up behind her, hugged her, told her he loved her, and wanted to help her pay her mortgage. What a gift for a parent to receive. Randee says she doesn't want to depend on her children when she's old. Those old folks are the best ones to take care of. She also thinks she will be taking care of her parents at the end of their lives. It's not an immediate concern for anyone.
I stopped at Safeway to pick up cream cheese. I asked Judy if she could pick some up for me yesterday. We had a long talk about getting it at Costco or Target. Salivating from our talk, I went home and defrosted a bagel and some Lox for dinner, forgetting I didn't have cream cheese. I called Judy to ask if she had some. She had a package and a half. She gave me half. I thoroughly enjoyed my bagel with cream cheese sprinkled with Costco's Everything bagel spice mix, some delicious tomatoes, and a good slathering of Lox. Yum! It never fails to please.
Besides the cream cheese, I picked up one 10 oz bag of Hershey's Milk chocolate nuggets with almonds. Safeway's was a good dollar cheaper than Long's, so I have to keep that in mind.
I went to the produce section, picked up some bananas, and looked for mushrooms. Lutz is pushing the medicinal value of mushrooms. I picked up some oyster mushroom fragments. The white button mushrooms didn't go well with me. I found a display I thought was mangoes. I asked the guy stacking another display if they were. Earlier, I had confused papaya with mangoes. He said, "No, they're oranges!" Huh! I thought he was serious, and he seriously confused me. I had never seen oranges that looked like that before. He was commenting on my ignorance. Not recognizing mangoes would have been bad enough if I were a tourist, but I was a ten-year resident with three mango trees on my property. Those two small mangoes cost over six dollars. I suspect they weren't from the island. I'm going to try the farmers market by the church on Sundays. That makes more sense.
I didn't stop at Atlas on the way home. I couldn't find where to bring the Coke bottles to redeem them for five or ten cents. Atlas deals with them like any other glass bottles—no special treatment. In that case, I would load the car with all the remaining bottles before stopping there. I wasn't sure if I would keep the money I got for myself or donate it to the homeless—the guys who work at Atlas.
My next stop was at Kaiser. Melissa told me a new vaccine was out to protect from viruses milling about. It wasn't available before she left for her stint in the Australian outback as a volunteer OB-GYN/surgeon, but it was when she returned. I didn't have the energy to wait for the shot, but I thought I could make an appointment. No appointment was needed, but the clinic was only open on Wednesdays. I would come back tomorrow.
When Melissa visited the other day, she spoke about an FDA-designer drug that had just been withdrawn from the market because it proved ineffective. So often, the tried-and-true, inexpensive drugs are the best. I asked her why she was so enthusiastic about the vaccines. She said she read the research and saw it was effective with only a few short-term side effects. I was glad I asked. People get worked up about the possible side effects. As one doctor said, unrelated to the vaccines, there are no drugs without potential side effects. It's always a possibility. I planned to go down to Kaiser tomorrow to get my updated vaccine.
I was going to stop at Costco to check out iPads. Brian and Scott say I would be better off with only Apple products than switching back and forth. Also, my Surface Pro is giving me some problems. These tech toys wear out quickly. They don't make anything like they used to.
When I got home, I worked on the updates and napped. I thought I'd only sleep one hour, but my alarm went off for my 2 p.m. appointment with Adolescent D. I had slept two hours.
A while ago, I told Adolescent D that they would discover a solution to his learning problems at some point in his life. It's unclear exactly what his problem is, whether one or multiple. He has an auditory processing problem; is it exclusively neurological, combined neurological and phycological, or just phycological? He has a memory problem; is it a poor working memory, where he can't store information in his short-term memory? If he can't do that, there is no way he can get it into long-term memory. Or is the problem coordinating short-term and long-term memory? Is it a result of a sleep disorder? Memories are consolidated and downloaded into long-term memory as we sleep. Does he have a seizure disorder? Seizures reset the brain, erasing whatever may have been in short-term memory or perhaps even erasing memories recently sent to long-term memory.
Today, I heard a talk about treating memory problems. The experimenters were targeting folks with Alzheimer's, not youngsters with memory problems. Suppose they find an effective solution to memory problems in older people. In that case, everyone else will also find a way to use it.
They've discovered that items go into long-term memory when short-term and long-term memory are in sync, vibrating at the same frequency. I will use this information to help D and Twin E with their memory problems.
Given that D's problem may be with auditory processing, I encouraged him to listen to the 5 Stories YouTube video at night. He said he listens to other things, such as podcasts on neurology. Interesting! I told him that might give him some information about his problem, but the information alone won't fix it. The 5 Stories audio file might.
I also learned that he can have the Hawaii Driver's Test read to him. No, he didn't know. I told his mother I would check into it; she already knew. Why didn't she tell us? I don't get it. I encouraged him to use Google Reader to review all the items to study for the test. My guess is he won't know how to study. So far, when we review the test questions, he does pretty well.
However, we would use the test material to continue working on his reading. Hopefully, we can get him to another grade level over the summer. I mostly acted as a coach, reminding him to use the strategies I had taught him. I could press a button with the announcement, "Decode every syllable separately, one at a time, before you blend them." If it's a three-syllable word, he tries to figure it out after he's decoded the first two. It's too much information for him to carry. He sometimes misses the last syllable and mashes up the whole word, switching sounds from place to place.
I proposed making an answer sheet for the Hawaii Driver's Manual. Then I have to teach him how to study. Don't look at the answer sheet before you figure out the answer yourself. I'm reading Make It Stick, which is about how memory works. They write about how people confused recognition with recall. They read and reread the same material but don't test themselves. You will know if you have learned the material if you test yourself. It won't stick.
I hadn't bathed Elsa in three days. I felt a few lesions this morning, and her belly was pink today instead of white. Here it was, the end of the day, and I hadn't done it yet. I bit the bullet and put her in the sink. Really! It doesn't take that much time. When I bathe her every other day, five minutes with the soap on is all she needs. I can do that.