Sunday, April 19, 2026

Sunday, December 31, 2023

  Sunday, December 31, 2023

 

   It was a beach day for Mama K's crew. Twin E still has to be pushed to use the memorization procedure I've been teaching. She prefers just looking over the words and assuming that will work. She doesn't study with her mom or one of her siblings. She does it all on her own. Since she can't remember the words, she has nothing to practice.

   I teach students to make the individual sounds in the word and then blend the sounds into the whole word. They are to repeat that activity three to five times. Then, they 'see' the word in their mind and 'hear' it in their head. They should repeat that exercise three to five times, too. This exercise forces recall. Their mind has to produce the information.

   Many students confuse recognition with recall. They think just looking at the words will have a magical effect. This is not all their fault. Teachers tell students to study and accuse students of not studying but never teach them what it means to study. All teachers have had a college education. Each has figured out how to study if they weren't taught how to do it by their parents. Poor students didn't have parents who taught them how to study, and they didn't figure it out for themselves.

    I spent New Year's Eve alone. It was okay. Mike and I weren't New Year's Eve revelers. We went to bed as we usually did. It was just Elsa and me. While she jumps into my arms when she hears a nail gun or a firecracker in the distance,  she is calm when they go off nonstop. Been there, done that.

   In past years, I woke up at midnight when people were shooting illegal fireworks. I would watch the show from my bed. Folks up the block figured a great show every year. Not this year. People were amazed that I slept through it. It was particularly raucous.

   But I didn't miss the show altogether. Shannon called while out on a walk around 7:30. Did I want to join her and get in more steps? We were on the street when the aforementioned neighbor shot off one of those package deals usually reserved for the finale of a firecracker show. I got to see a good one and get a good night's sleep.

 

Saturday, December 30, 2023

 Saturday, December 30, 2023

   Twin A read the words on the 101-150 Fry Sight Word list without hesitation. Incredible! She is one of the twins I started working with at the end of first grade who couldn’t name all the letters in the alphabet. Memory problems showed up in nonacademic areas as well. Their parents were not optimistic that they would ever develop memory skills.

  Steve returned my chainsaw. He tried to use it when he came to cut up the tree the wind blew over.   He took it home to see if he could fix it and replaced the rusted chain. As he left, he  repeated his offer, “If I can do anything for you, let me know.”   I told him he could allow me to show him my method for teaching reading. I assured him he didn’t have to agree or like it. Although I was hoping he would. He will be going to India in February to help establish a school designed for the female children of prostitutes. The founders want to embrace these babies as their own children. It will be an orphanage and school with a lot of love. At least, that’s the plan. This would be a great place to use this method. Of course, it will depend on the teachers. If they’re rigid thinkers who need to feel they are the sole source of knowledge, they won’t be comfortable with it. Using this method requires accepting you will make mistakes in front of your students. Allowing students to observe this is a gift teachers must give their students. They need to model how to deal with not knowing or making an error.

 


Friday, December 29, 2023

 Friday, December 29, 2023

       I slept very well. I woke close to five am when my alarm went off. The tapping app helps me sleep soundly. It blocks troubling thoughts, which can leave me exhausted in the morning.

  Ninth grade L was my first student at Ulu Wini today. She said she wanted to work on writing and verbal expression. I did a co-writing exercise about a Christmas celebration at her church. She described the Marshallese social dance. People of all ages participate. Sounded great!

   Josephine, the head social worker at the community center, sat down and asked me to tell her what I was doing with 

the students. She had a list of all of them I worked with. Wow! I had no idea they were paying that much attention. They’ve been keeping track of how many I do a day. Wild. I proposed we meet during the day after the kids return to school after the winter break. It would be too tiring to confer with her after two hours of tutoring.

  Today was the first day of sunshine after 13 days of a dense grey cloud hanging over us, blocking the sun. Where the solar system usually provides 70-75%, during this period, it provided a high of 68%, a low of 28% with an average of 48% daily. When I looked at the mountain when driving on Queen K parallel to the ocean, I saw the cloud cover hover over Hualalai and nowhere else.

 Third-grade S from Ulu Wini is way behind. He has trouble speaking Marshallese as well as English. I sounded out all the phonemes of words. He watched my face intently. He was lip reading. Does he have a hearing problem? I would have to talk to Josephine about this. He should get a hearing test. In the meantime, I worked with him, repeating and blending sounds. We did some work on memorizing the alphabet. He didn’t even know the alphabet song.

  I worked with third-grade L, the son of one of the employees. He’s bright as a whip but insists that everything has to be done his way. He reminds me of my great nephew, Sid.

    The children are responding well to the method I developed for memorizing. I see improvement as they work on the sight word lists. Some show a little bit of improvement, some a stunning amount. None are up to grade level.

  Some students can’t remember the word of and try to decode it. These kids have very weak memory systems. Any improvement is huge. It’s somewhat like getting a car moving from a dead standstill.

  I worked with eight kids today. Reno read just fine. No way I could have made all that difference. Why did he waste my time yesterday? He said he didn’t need to work, but he kept passing near me today. he obviously wanted to meet with me again. I’m not quite sure why.

  I was Maestro last night. I thought it was magnificent. I assume it will sweep the Oscars.

 

 


Thursday, December 28, 2023

 Thursday, December 28, 2023

This was the first day in a while with some sunshine. We’ve been plagued with heavy cloud cover. It’s not over the whole island, just in our area. It’s not personal. It’s coming over Hualalai, our mountain, and not over Mauna Loa. Its worst impact is on the solar panels. It vastly reduces the amount of electricity we get.

 On being personal, the way people use the term drives me nuts. Someone does something hurtful; if you’re hurt, it’s your fault because you take it personally. Did I mention Buddha’s answer to this issue, the theory of the two arrows? The first arrow is the one that strikes you; the second is how you respond. Let’s face it, folks! There is no way that the first arrow won’t do some damage. It’s going to hurt. The second arrow is the one we bring to the pain. There will be some pain, but do we need to enlarge it. Somehow, taking that first arrow personally is supposed to be the cause of all the pain. No, we are injured. Knowing it wasn’t personal does not resolve the pain.

  I recently heard a podcast on Hidden Brain on the impact of rudeness. Not only are we negatively impacted by someone’s rudeness to us, but we’re also negatively impacted by someone’s rudeness to someone else. How personal can it possibly be if someone else is being attacked? Our nervous systems are designed to respond when treated negatively by another human being, whether it’s ‘personal’ or not.

  Vicki called from the dentist’s office to give me an appointment. A tooth cracked or chipped near the gum line. She got me in around noon. My acupuncturist was scheduled for eleven am. I wouldn’t make it to the dentist on time. Vicki said we could do twelve twenty. That would work.

  The acupuncturist placed pads under my shoulders as I lay on my belly to stretch out the muscles in front of my shoulders and reduce the curve of my upper back. I  complained about my mid back on the right side. She was surprised the problem was on the right rather than the left. For the first time since we started working together, she used cupping. It felt great. It relieved the sore point on the right side of my back.

 The dentist felt for the hole in my tooth. KC took three X-rays, which confirmed there was no infection. An old filling at the gum line on top of a cap hadn’t adhered. I needed a new cap. Should I get another implant? No, this tooth would last me till the end. Yes, I’m calculating when my end may come. Given my mother’s longevity, I expected to be around for a while.

   I met with Mama K’s crew. Both of the twins are showing improvement in their ability to rapidly recognize words. 

I use Fry’s sight word list. It could be any list of words. I am teaching them how to memorize rather than specific words. The Fry list is good. Fry was one of my professors when I got my master’s in reading at Rutgers. It is a computer-generated list of words in order of their frequency of appearance in text. I hope I can get Twin A to a high third-grade level by the end of the summer before she starts fifth grade. Twin E needs a breakthrough before I can be optimistic about her progress.

 


Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

 

  I was wide awake at 1:30. When I woke, I was fully refreshed and convinced it must be close to five am. The clock dissuaded me from that notion. The experts say if you can't sleep, get up and do something else. I did. I got on Charity Navigator and made all my yearly donations. It took me several hours and was off my mind. Ah!

  I went back to bed shortly before four am, thinking I could get an hour's sleep. I was freezing. My hands and feet were like ice. Yes, it gets cold in Hawaii. I had been sitting on my screened-in lanai for three hours in 65-degree temperature. I hadn't felt cold the whole time I worked on making those contributions, but three blankets weren't enough to combat the cold when I got back in bed. I could have gotten up and closed the sliding doors to my bedroom. Body heat and breath are surprisingly reliable sources of heat. Elsa and I can do a bang-up job warming up a space, rapidly taking the sting out of the cold.

 Driveway yoga was on the schedule this morning. I moved my car out to the street to leave at 7:45 for the kupuna mahjong get-together at church. It was drizzling when I got to the driveway at seven. I figured I'd be uncomfortably wet if I stayed. I went inside, leaving Yvette and Carolyn in the driveway to complete the asanas. I did the gentle seated yoga I do every other morning.

  No one was in the parish center when I arrived at the church. I saw T.J., who is the organizing backbone of the church. She didn't know what was going on any more than I did. I called Paulette, who attended last week when I didn't. She said, "I thought I told you we wouldn't meet again after the holidays." I said, "You didn't expect me to remember?"

  I went to Long's to pick up some dental supplies. Before moving on, I sat in the parking lot and called Kraftsman Autobody to ask if I could come by for a rough estimate. I explained I had found a dent in the loaner Kia had provided. While there was no way it could have happened on my shift, I couldn't prove otherwise. I can imagine that no one noticed the dent. I hadn't carefully looked for dents before I took the car. It's been a while since I rented a car, and I remembered to do that examination. I wanted to know what a body shop would say it would cost to repair it so I wasn't blindsided by some outrageous bill. While estimates were usually given by appointment, they had someone immediately available. I drove over there. Jamie came out after ten minutes, apologized for making me wait, and checked out the door. Estimate $5,000 to $6,000. Holy cow! I stayed calm throughout. I kept repeating Mike's mantra, "It's just a problem to be solved." I keep my eye on doing my best to solve a problem. What a gift he gave me.

 Next, I headed to the vacuum repair shop. I have been besieged by breakdowns. Yesterday, my precious Rainbow vacuum cleaner just stopped working. I need it to do deep cleanings of the carpet when Elsa decides my lanai carpet is the best spot to do her business despite having easy access to the outside.

   While the sign on the shop said 'open a nine,' there was no one there. There was a number to call. It was answered immediately. The woman who received the vacuums was on a delivery and would be there in a while. I went to Island Naturals to see if they had some in-house tuna salad available. They did. It is so good. Then, I returned to the vacuum store. The woman arrived within ten minutes.

  She looked at my machine and asked, "How long have you had it?" The machine must be at least 15 years old. She said, "I hope it's not the motor. It costs $300 and will take several months to get one."  It's Hawaii. The motor would have to come by boat, a six-week trip.

 It was an Ulu Wini day. I worked with four kids today. I got tired quickly. I worked with a sixth-grade girl. She asked for help in math with fractions. I asked her which fraction was the largest, ½ or 1/8. She didn't have a clue. From there, we proceed to the addition of fractions. It's hard for kids to understand why you can only add numbers with the same denominator and why you can't add those numbers together. I explain it by showing how you can only add like objects together. You can't count the apples if you only figure out how many oranges you have. She didn't even get that concept. She seemed to understand everything I taught. Is that because I went back to the basics and explained them in a way she could understand, or would she lose everything I taught as she had with the tutor the school provided? I looked forward to seeing her the next day to find out.

 I'm reading a book on math. It describes what I experience with these kids. They do not see the concrete represented in the abstract. Math is something floating in space that has no relationship to the physical world. On the other hand, I read something I had never thought of before, although I had known it. 1+ 1  can sometimes equal one. Of course, it does. It's evident once someone shows you how that is possible. If two clouds merge, you have one cloud. Ergo 1-1 = 1. I felt wonderfully energized after teaching math. It is so much fun figuring out how to make the math real for kids.

  I left when I felt tired. I got home and did a  session with adolescent D. We started each class with a cross-body blending exercise. I say, "Give me a word, any word." So far, he has only been giving me one-syllable words. It reflects his poor skills and appropriate insecurity. He really can't remember anything from one minute to the next.

 

 


Monday, December 25, 2023

 Monday, December 25, 2023

    A quiet day, peaceful, actually. I wasn’t haunted by loneliness. I saw no one except those I ran into on my walks until I joined Judy and her family for dessert. It was a lovely visit. It was two grandparents, a great aunt, Judy and Howard’s friend, two parents, and their three young children. This is a true extended family; everyone lives on the family compound, two houses between which the children move back and forth freely.

   At least two of the children move back and forth freely. A third is severely disabled, a functional quadriplegic who has zero communication skills. He suffers from a mutation known as FoxG1. This child is one of the worst cases. Those who spend a lot of time with him see patterns in his responses. No one knows what goes on in his mind. Since he is in constant motion, his arms, legs, and head moving much like a newborn’s, it is hard to know what movements a response to a stimulus are. There’s only one thing for sure: he’s loved.

  

Sunday, December 24, 2023

Sunday, December 24, 2023

 

   I went to church with Judy and Paulette, as I usually do. Meali’inani was sitting on the south lanai where I sat. It was lovely seeing her again. She usually goes to the seven am mass. Sandor, her husband and a deacon Mike helped train, frequently serves at the nine am mass. I get to see him more. I got up to hold the door to the church for a frail elderly man. When I got back to my seat, Meali’inani was chortling. “I watch you hold the door for people younger than you.”

   When I got home, I noticed a dent in the rear driver-side door of the loaner Kia gave me while my car waited to be repaired. I hadn’t seen it before. There is no way I could be responsible for it. I drove it home directly. The dent looks like a parking lot incident. No one parks next to me in the driveway, and I hadn’t driven it since I brought it home.

   I met with Mama K’s crew, three children: fourth-grade twin girls A & E and their fifth-grade brother K. K has been avoiding his sessions with me. When his mother discovered what he was doing, she put her foot down. When I did get him in a session, he dragged his feet. It was grueling. I confronted him. “your mom insists you work with me. if you drag your feet, it will take longer.” Then I realized that I could pick a book he might enjoy more. I had been using Stuart Little. I thought Hatchet might suit him better. I purchased it in the Kindle form from Amazon.

   Twin A is rocking it. Suddenly, she knows words I’ve never shown her. She can retrieve words she has repeatedly seen in school over the past four years. Syllable patterns also become part of our ‘sight vocabulary,” like aninane, and ine, etc. Having those securely embedded in our memory and easily retrievable allows us to figure out words at lightning speed. Twin E still lags behind.

    Introverts choose not to do or say anything when in doubt. Extroverts take risks. Neither is good in an extreme form. I had to learn to tone down. But I find introverts toxic. From what I can see, they assume they never do anything wrong because they do nothing. The standard confession in the church says.

  I confess to Almighty God

  And to you, my brothers and sisters,

   That I have greatly sinned,

    In my thoughts and in my words,

     In what I have done

      And what I have failed to do.

  Doing nothing does not mean a person does no harm to others.

 


Friday, December 22, 2023

 Friday, December 22, 2023 

     Shortly after midnight, I was wide awake. Following the advice of the sleep experts, I got up, dressed, and moved into the living room. 

I was overwhelmed with loneliness. While I am welcomed by many, I belong nowhere.

    Whatever the problems were in my family of origin, I belonged. My place at the table was fixed, guaranteed. That continued after my father died. My mother, sister, and I sat down for dinner at the table every night. My grandmother sat in my father's place. I wasn't disturbed by that. My sister, four and a half years younger than me, blamed her for the dramatic change in the family. She described standing in the school playground, being overwhelmed by loneliness. 

I didn't suffer from that. While my place in my relationship with my mother and sister was secure, the fear I felt in relation to my mother was also secure. I had that strong emotion to keep me warm.

    I am awake now with an overwhelming sense of loneliness. If others knew I felt that way, they would open their homes to me. But none of that compensates for having a fixed place at the table. Mike and I gave that to each other. We would have liked to have expanded that to include others, but our offer was rejected. And now I have no one. It's devastating.

    I remember having this ache once when I was an adolescent. My parents bought a home in Great Neck, N.Y. Rather than wait for the end of the school year in June, they moved in April or May. I stayed with my grandmother to finish the school year in the Bronx and joined my family on the weekends. I was devastated. The pain was almost unbearable. My parents, aware of my feelings, arranged for me to spend a night at my best friend's home. I remember lying on a cot, sharing a room with Mary and her sister Jane. It didn't do a lot to relieve my pain. It was a distraction.

   I had never felt that way before. My parents sent me to sleep away camp when I was ten. They were concerned about my reaction. I went off with my assigned group joyfully. I loved camp from day one. Four years later, Dorothy, my sister, started coming to camp. She loved it, too. She once said, "We had all their love and affection at the safe distance of two hundred miles." 

Our sense of belonging was secure. Whatever problems our parents caused us, we were always valued. They wanted us; they were happy to have us. We felt loved. We belonged.

   This is despite two weeks when my mother thought it would be amusing to threaten to give me up for adoption daily. Intellectually, I knew full well there was a better chance she would kill me with her bare hands than give me up for adoption. Nonetheless, her words had an impact. The episode ended when I said, "Either do it or don't do it, but stop torturing me." It was the only time I successfully stopped her pain-inducing behavior.

   I once had the mother of one of my tutoring clients talk that way to her son. I told her to stop. She pooh-poohed me until I told her my story. I hope it helped the boy. However, I did also say she would throw him out if he became drug addicted. She had an obligation to protect her other two children from his influence.  

    Writing about this and sharing it with whoever chooses to read it gives me some immediate relief.

     Lately, I've been thinking about what I enjoyed doing with Mike. I hear some people say going to concerts, hikes, etc. I can't think of a single activity that stands out. I just enjoyed sharing every minute of my life with him. I don't mean being in his company every minute. I mean having him as part of my sense of self. It was always safe, almost always comfortable, and frequently joyful.

  I sat in the living room as I typed. Elsa sat in the other chair. 

I looked at her and told her I loved her and that having her in my life was good, but she was not enough. Our places at the table are even fixed. I sit either in 'my chair' or the one that used to be Mike's, and she curls up under the table. She is still not enough. I need to belong to another human being or group of human beings. 

It doesn't have to be an intimate relationship, just safe and guaranteed.

   There is much talk these days about the universal problem of loneliness. It is considered a health crisis. I think loneliness is a form of fear. Our brains are designed for group living. Being alone meant certain death in our hunter-gatherer days. Our small roaming bands were as bonded as a military squad. They faced physical danger together and were as devoted to the lives of their fellow group members as they were to their own. I have heard soldiers home on leave from grueling combat anxious to return. That order to group bonding is worth risking life and limb for. We are designed to live that way.

    Modern humans live like zoo animals. We have created physical safety and material wealth at the cost of social bonding. Our group identities have shrunk. We were once members of groups and tribes. Then, we were members of extended families. Then, the identity shrunk to the nuclear family. Now, it's each man for himself. Group unity is reserved for rock concerts and political rallies. Only there can we experience shared neurological firing patterns where we are in harmony. Frightening.

   I worked with Mama K's crew. I checked Twin A, who is the better reader, on the Fry Sight

Word lists. She did well on words 1-75. She was halting on words 76-100. I worked with her on concepts in our comprehension work the last two days. What is the opposite of hot? She didn't have a clue. I drew a line, placing hot at one end, made three additional marks on the line, and gave her the words warm, cool, and cold. She had to put the three words in the proper places. She didn't have a clue. I tried a line with zero at one end, two additional marks, and five and ten. She had trouble figuring out where to place them.

   Today, I worked on contractions is not versus isn't, and then worked on several other contractions. Twin A knew it is versus it's, but that was it.

    Twin E is doing much better on words 1-100. She is doing better on the last list than Twin A. We worked on the words she missed.

    I started Twin E on comprehension today. She read a passage from the Barnell Loft third-grade book. She did a good job reading the text. Wow! I saw a huge difference in her reading level. She has told me her teachers are impressed by the difference. They may be impressed, but they are not interested in my methods. It's very sad. I started her on the In The Book section, showing her how to use the words in the sentence. She followed carefully but couldn't do the work on her own.

  In each session with Adolescent D, I ask him to give me a word, any word. I have him analyze the word, identifying the vowels, the number of syllables, the syllable structure, and the phonemes. Then, he must blend the phonemes together, adding one at a time using cross-body blending. He chose the word future. He'd only seen the final stable syllable ture a few times before. He still has trouble remembering er almost always makes the same sound. He still has problems reversing letters but is willing to work on it. There are long, Latinate words in the articles we're reading for his social studies class. Out of curiosity, I tried him on a low third-grade passage. He read most of the words with improved fluency. I was thrilled. So was he.

     Today, Kia was supposed to devote four hours to installing a new part in my car. I dropped the car off on Wednesday. I called today, so I was sure they knew it was there. When I checked in, the attendant was new to the job. I was concerned he didn't do something correctly. Alex assured me he knew the car was there; he was looking right at it. However, the only mechanic qualified to work on electric cars would be away for the next two weeks. He said it came up suddenly. He was attending a Kia professional development session. I can't believe this only came up at the last minute. But I can believe they only told him at the last minute. Could I have a loaner car? He called me back half an hour later and said his shop supervisor refused it.

  It meant I would be without a car for the two-week vacation period. I planned to tutor the Ulu Wini students daily. It wasn't just for their sake; it was for mine. I need the social stimulation at least as much as they need the help.\I was hit hard but stayed calm. I only made a few snide comments. Then, I got to work finding alternatives.

  I started with rental cars. The cheapest I could find was a car for $585 for a week. I formulated a different plan. A Lyft there and back would cost $60 daily, including tips. Darby immediately offered to give me a ride either there or back when she could. I could get rides from Judy and Paulette, Darby, or Steve and Shannon. That would reduce the cost, a flexibility I wouldn't have if I rented a car.

   When I told Judy about my dilemma, she was outraged. She offered to call Kia and give them a piece of her mind. We also talked about calling someone higher up than the service manager. I bought the car from this Kia from George. I called the sales department and asked for him. He was no longer working there. "Can I help you?" I explained I had bought the car there. It was supposed to get it serviced today, only to discover the mechanic would be off-island for two weeks. The service manager had refused to give me a car. She said she would get back to me. She called me back within half an hour and told me I had a loaner. I was to come down to Kia to pick it up.

   I called Darby. On Wednesday, I arranged for her to drive me down there after the work was done. This morning, I called her to tell her I wouldn't need that ride. This afternoon, I called her to ask her if she could drop me off at Kia so I could pick up a loaner. Yes sure.

 


Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

 

    Wednesday is my day for weeding on the other side of the fence in my neighbor's yard. 

   They have weed-suppressing cloth over most of their yard but not along the edge of the fence. The trailing coral runs amok there, encroaching on my yard. They allow me in the yard to do the weeding. They're Chinese immigrants. I suspect no American familiar with our legal system would consent to having an eighty-three-year-old woman weed their yard. The roots of the trailing coral come up easily because of all the midday rain showers we've had since the big windstorm. I love the hard work of pulling the woody roots out. It's good for what ails me.

     I worked with an immigrant family in Princeton. Their son was a forty-year-old autistic schizophrenic. The father, a professor at Princeton, was a world-class mathematician and a professor at Princeton University. They asked me if I could find work for their son. In Russia, he had a job folding cardboard boxes. I asked around. Everyone said no because of possible legal problems. I explained the issue to the mom. She said she would write a note. I told her it wouldn't stand up in court. She said she understood; in Russia, they worried about being arrested; here, we worried about being sued.

   I went to Ulu Wini for my session with the kids. Ipo ordered a boy to work with me. It was her son. Third-grade L's word recognition was choppy with some inaccuracies, but his comprehension was on grade level. He should be an easy fix. I need to work on improving his word recognition. He needs to work on comprehension at the 4th-grade level. I'll use Stuart little with him as I am with fourth grade K and 2nd grade M.

   Then, the man who was monitoring the program ordered a child to work with me. It wound up being his first-grade son. It makes me feel great that the adults who observe my work want me to work with their children. L had severe memory problems. He tried to decode the. I taught him how to use his short-term visual memory. He had a response I rarely see. He could feel his mind processing the information and changing. "Does it feel like water running in your head?" Yes. I told him to focus on the feeling. It lasted for a good while. Then, I worked on his auditory working memory. He did the same thing. Afterward, I had him go through the first twenty-five Fry words. He got everyone. He had seen the words often enough. He had encoded the words; he just needed to know how to retrieve them. When I see quick changes like that, I wonder if I got it wrong in the first place. Maybe his dad can tell me.

    As I left, Ipo asked me to list the kids who needed help to give to the school. If there is anyone who doesn't know the kids she listed aren't in desperate need of help, they are deaf, dumb, and blind. Besides that, there is nothing they can do about it. Besides the general teacher shortage, the special ed teacher shortage is even worse. The sad truth is someone can make more money serving in a restaurant than teaching. Teachers have to moonlight to make a living.  

    Special education teachers are not taught how to teach. Their courses involve learning the parents' legal rights, the school's legal obligations, and how to fill out Individual Educational Plans. Most of what they do is figure out the child's performance level and provide material at the level. The good teachers go about taking courses on teaching on their own. Only some are qualified to help the children other than provide extra time and emotional support. From what the kids tell me, they are put in front of computers that read stories to them.

    I drove down to Kia after I finished tutoring. I had an appointment for Friday at 1:30. I called to ask if I could bring the car in earlier. I had made arrangements with Yvette to pick me up after work. She would be through at four-thirty. I figured she would be there around five. I left after four, not anticipating the late afternoon traffic. I got a message from Yvette asking where to meet me. I had to walk up to Long's Drugs to pick up something. Yvette said she was in the parking lot wafting. Walking the half mile up the hill took me a few minutes. I dropped my bags with Yvette and ran into the store. I found what I was looking for easily, but the check-out line was long. I had a great time riding home with Yvette. We had to stop at Paws University to pick up Masha. The dog loves being at Paws for the day. 

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

 Tuesday, December 19, 2023

       I have a morning routine. First, I do yoga with a YouTube video, Gentle Seated Yoga, and then Elsa and I do our long morning walk. When I get home, I do three New York Times word puzzles: Wordle, New York Times Mini Crossword, and Connections. I'm getting good with Wordle. Of course, I do cheat a little. If nothing comes to mind, I'll check Tom's Hints. I'm getting better with the other two puzzles, too. I edit and post my blog entry from a year ago, keeping up-to-date with the entries from a year ago. They're easy. They're already written and edited once. I reread them, do a little editing, run them through Grammarly once again and post them on Blogger.  

    Judy, Paulette, and Carol okayed me using their car to get to my Rehab appointment because my car was unusable. I would be all right between their car, Yvette's, and Lyfts. Judy said I could just come get the key from Paulette in the morning. Paulette's door was closed when I got to the house to pick up the key. I walked in and called Paulette. She was sleeping in because of her kidney stone and the drugs she was on to deal with the pain. I felt terrible. I should have left the poor woman alone but was concerned about missing my occupational therapy appointment. I called her name; she roused. I asked where the key was. It was hooked onto her bag hanging over the chair. I got it myself and left. I still feel terrible about bothering her when she wasn't feeling well.

   Judy said Carol would need the car at eleven. I had a few minutes and stopped at Target to pick up a few items. I called Judy to tell her I was on my way. She sounded nervous about my getting there in time.

    I've been watching the Scottish TV series Shetland. It's brilliant. Jimmy Perez, one of the characters, quoted this line: "Now that my ladders gone, I must lie down where all ladders start, in the foul rag and bone shop of the heart." It caught my imagination. I remembered the quote well enough to write a reasonably accurate version into the address box. Yeats wrote it. It's from "The Circus Animals' Desertion." Yeats's loss was of youth-driven inspiration now that he was old and recycling themes.

 


Monday, December 18, 2023

 Monday, December 18, 2023

    I went to bed around 9:30 and was wide awake at 11 pm.

I was concerned about a problem created by the gardeners. Mike asked to have plants providing a privacy screen planted at the edge of a supporting rock wall to block B’s view of Yvette’s ohana and block Yvette’s view of B’s area. The man is a hoarder and a slob. How many cars and trucks, along with his boat, are parked down there? There is stuff all over the place. It’s not a pretty sight. Rodney planted Ficus trees.

   Judy had a problem with her Ficus tree. When I saw it, I was shocked. It grew to forty or fifty feet, with a thick trunk and roots. Those roots would take out my rock wall as the trees grew to full height. Rodney said Mike wanted a tree that provided privacy. How can a tree that grows to that height provide long-term privacy? I don’t know what he was thinking. Then, recently, he had his men chop off the low branches, removing whatever privacy the trees did provide. I am going to have to have the trees removed. It will cost a pretty penny. Then, I will plant bushes appropriate for that space.

   I have been doing some gardening every day. I schedule a section for each day of the week. I don’t always stick to it, but it helps to remind me. Today, I  chain-sawed a leggy shrub in a yard off the bedroom. I have one of those cute ones with a four-inch blade. Just the right size for me. It is much easier to use than a pruning tool. I always wear goggles when I use it.  

 

 


Sunday, December 17, 2023

 Sunday, December 17, 2023   

   Elsa's peed on the lanai several times. I figured it was caused by stress. I would reintroduce her to the doggie door. After checking her for lesions and applying the salve when I found one, I carried her over the doggie door. When she looked resistant, I stamped my feet. That usually worked. She was still resistant. Oh, I got it. I had placed the 

doggie door at an angle that blocked her. I moved that. Problem solved!

    Jean and Rosie stopped by to get some relief from life at home. Kelly, Jean's forty-three-year-old daughter, died on Thursday. They needed a break from it all. Rosie stretched out on Mike's recliner. Jean made some phone calls. She called Kelly's clients from her cleaning service, explaining she couldn't do the job she was hired for because she died. I can't imagine that was very relaxing. Fortunately, the people she talked to loved Kelly and were devastated by the news.

   Where my car had worked for two weeks, it reverted to not taking the charge. I didn't dare use it for fear the car would run out of juice on the road.

   The weather app said the temperature was 64 degrees this morning. It was probably colder than that. Judy's friend, Carol, has a thermometer measuring her room's temperature. It was 63 degrees the other day. The app only reported a low of 67 degrees. That reflects the temperature at the airport. We're one thousand feet up the mountain from there. That is a four to five-degree drop. The higher you go, the cooler it gets.

     Carol drove Paulette to the ER this morning. She was passing a kidney stone. The doctor gave her some painkillers, an appointment to put in a stint, and another to shatter the stone.

s who I am. I am a man who earns five million a year. Wow!

    My Hanai sister, Jean, had a CAT scan of her back. It revealed a 

stress fracture. This explains her persistent back pain after her surgery two years ago.

     When I was young, I believed people had to be on the same page. That was my mother's point of view. Any disagreement was an insult to the other person. I had to learn to find and appreciate what I could share with a person. When I accepted that a thirty percent degree of overlay was the basis for an intimate relationship, I could allow a committed relationship with Michael. He was enough. I relished the thirty-eight percent. Each person needs their own percentage. I don't know what Mike's was. From what he told me and others, I know I was enough.

 


Friday, December 15, 2023

 Friday, December 15, 2023

    Yesterday's strong wind not only knocked down a shallow-rooted tree but also knocked over Josh's motorcycle. It had a soft landing cushioned by a large bush. The wind pruned the trees. It took down fifteen large fronds from the two-story palm tree in the driveway. Each frond is five to six feet long and at least three feet wide.

     After learning the car part was in, I borrowed Yvette's car this morning to go to Kia to get a service appointment. Alex said they hadn't gotten my voicemail because of problems with the Internet connection. Their voicemail had been down. I got an appointment for the afternoon of the 22nd. Changing out the part would take up to four hours.

     I stopped at Costco on the way home to fill up Yvette's tank. I was confused upon finding her tank opening on the right side only after I had pulled up to the dispenser. When I tried to put the nozzle into the opening, it didn't work. I struggled until someone called from another aisle, "That's diesel!" Ah! When I picked up the regular gas nozzle, it wouldn't work either. Seeing my confusion, a woman from another car came over and helped me. When I hung up the diesel nozzle, it canceled my information. I had to start from scratch.

     I have seen a difference in my mental processing since the accident. I fell on June 13 and shattered my left shoulder and elbow joints. This resulted in eight hours of surgery and a two-week stay in the hospital until my blood count returned to a safe level. I was on opioids the whole time. I lay there without a concern in the world. The combined impact of the eight hours of anesthesia, the opioids, and inactivity left me somewhat the worse for wear. My body has recovered faster than my mind. As you can see from my writing, I haven't lost everything. Still, I can't respond as quickly as I once could in unfamiliar situations.

  Shannon, Darby, and I planned to watch Barbie together. It came up in one of our walks. None of us had seen it. I proposed that the three of us watch it together at my house; I had a TV to hook up to my computer. Steve, Shannon's husband, came over the day before to plug in the wire we needed to connect the laptop to the TV. Shannon arrived for the screening with a big bowl of popcorn. We hooked up the computer and TV; the transmission was severely unstable. It started and stopped, started and stopped. Shannon called Steve to come rescue us. Steve arrived dressed like Ken. We thought the problem was with my computer connection. Then Ken (Steve) saw the transmission was perfect on the computer. The problem was with the TV; it was too old to work with the computer. When did I get it? Let me see. We had it at least as long as we lived in this house. We moved in June of 2015. I wasn't sure, but I suspect we brought it from Ohio. We may have had it three or four years already. That made the TV over ten years old.

   We set my computer up on the coffee table and watched it together.   Darby and I had trouble. My double vision caused strain, and Darby's nervous system is still recovering from her stroke four years ago. I got enough out of the movie to judge it as remarkable.

   When I told Judy about watching it, she asked if the movie was anti-male. Well, it had to use the Barbie conceit. I don't blame men for their predisposition for power. The society is set up that way. There are some natural tendencies in all of us to want power over others.

We all want the world to be our way to feel safe. Some of us are more flexible than others. Some of us dig in and strive for as much power as possible.

    I'm reminded of an interview on NPR with the man who negotiated the reduced salaries for the financial leaders after the financial crash. He said he expected the men, I think they were all men, to say they couldn't afford a salary reduction because they had four houses, three boats, and twelve cars to maintain. He was surprised by what he heard. Men said I can't make less than five million a year. That' 




Thursday, December 14, 2023

 Thursday, December 14, 2023 

     This was a high-wind day without rain. It felt like the Mistral. It was scary.

     I had a nightmare vision when working with Shelly today. I faced an abyss. That’s the place we absolutely don’t want to go to. People would prefer to die rather than go there. I know people who have made that choice. 

In my healing work, I devised an image for dealing with the dilemma- a controlled descent preceded by observing the opening from a safe distance. The participant must feel in control and curious rather than scared. I have led people through this process successfully. I don’t think anyone can safely face this on their own. The danger is added fear and trauma, which makes dealing with our demons even more difficult.

   My demons had no name; it was just this big hole in the ground, like a big well. I was terrified. I never did make the descent. I sought a safe distance over the top of a nearby hill to the greener side, down through the valley, and up the other side, nestled in a patch of deep, soft grass. I find waking dream images powerful. We don’t know what they mean, but they speak the way literature and art do to our unconscious.

  Rosie called to tell me Kelly died this morning. The mortician had already picked her up. Jean and Rosie went over to Kelly’s ex to tell the kids. I texted several people, including Yvette, to tell them.   Yvette called to ask how I was. She told me a tree had fallen in the yard. When she mentioned it, I could see it lying there. It was one tall, skinny tree. She would call Erika, her sister, to ask what to do about it. Could it be saved? I called Steve to ask for help. He was more than happy to come over.

  The tree had very shallow roots because it was planted on top of a stone. It would have to be planted deeper. We were lucky the thirty-foot tree fell away from the house instead of toward it. Steve was prepared to break up the stone.   I called Yvette to tell her the plan. Erika said it couldn’t be saved. The roots were too shallow, and the tree too tall. Steve cut up the tree, hauled it away, and helped me pick limes from the bottom of the property.  

    As Steve left, he said if I ever needed anything, he would be happy to help. This neighborhood is filled with people who I can rely on. It is a remarkable set of circumstances. I don’t know if it’s Hawaiian Aloha or just this neighborhood. I feel fortunate. While all these generous people don’t make up for the absence of someone I can live with comfortably and trust as I did Mike, it is great to have.

     I had an eleven o’clock date with Shannon and Darby to watch the Barbie movie. 

None of us had seen it. Steve, Shannon’s husband, had come over yesterday to wire the TV set in the library so we could hook it up to the computer. 

There shouldn’t have been a problem, but there was. The movie would start and stop, start and stop.

   Shannon called Steve and asked him to come over and help us. Steve arrived dressed like Ken, coming to rescue the girls. We all thought it was the WIFI connection. Steve tried moving the computer close to the router. When he saw that the transmission on the computer was sound, he realized the problem was with the TV. It was too old. Mike and I brought it with us when we moved to Hawaii in June 2015. I don’t know how long we had it before that.

   Shannon, Darby, and I watched the movie on the computer screen set up on a coffee table. It was hard on my eyes. It was also hard for Darby, who is still recovering from the stroke she had four years ago.  

   We finished watching Barbie at just three, in time for me to Zoom with Mama K’s crew. I worked on a passage about hippos with Twin A. The passage said hippos weigh as much as three automobiles. She didn’t know what an automobile was no less understand the comparison. “Do you weigh as much as your twin?” No, she weighs more. She got on the scale and showed me her weight. 105.0 lbs. She got Twin E to get on the scale, too. 96. lbs. It was worth the time. I asked Twin A if she weighed as much as her mother. She said she didn’t know. I asked if she was as big as her mother. She could say no to that and seemed to understand that if her mother was bigger, she probably weighed more.

      When I told Judy, I thought the Barbie movie was remarkable. She asked if it was hostile toward men. It couldn’t escape the Barbie conceit. Ken is superfluous in Barbie’s world. He’s just arm candy. He has no power; he barely has a function. Gerwig uses Ken’s dilemma to highlight how marginalized people feel. I saw it as a metaphor for all marginalized people. They all want power. Weak people generally want more than their fair share of power. The rich and ‘powerful’ who want more are still weak. Something is missing that they need that much to feel safe.

    I told Judy about the limes Steve and I picked. Judy has been asking me if there were any available. I hadn’t been down to the bottom of the property where the tree was in months. Judy complained Safeway was charging $1.80 per lime.

   I planned to call Kia on the nineteenth to check if the part was in. On a whim, I called today. They told me the part came in three days ago. I have a car I can’t drive. I need service as quickly as possible. They were supposed to call when the part came in so I could schedule an appointment. I called the service department to schedule an appointment. No response. I would have to go down tomorrow to schedule an appointment.

   While on Zoom with Dash, Sears called. The service man was on his way. This is the fourth appointment I had. The other three were canceled because they didn’t have a technician. I was expecting a fourth cancellation.

  

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

 Wednesday, December 13, 2023

  OMG! I’ve encountered some kids at Ulu Wini with poor number sense. Well, that was my first conclusion. I’ve changed my mind from a for sure to an I don’t know. A second or third-grader was given a worksheet with a greater than/ less than assignment. The adult helping the kid had trouble with it, and so did I. The worksheet used a balance scale. On one side were two numbers to be added (9 +5=). On the other side was one number ( 9 + ___=). They had to figure out the higher and lower numbers and fill in the missing numbers. 

   It was hard for me to remember the lower one weighed more. It was hard for me to remember that the lower side of the balance would be the higher number. It was counterintuitive. The higher number in the air should have been on the higher end of the balance scale. I had to battle the inclination to get it wrong. How did anyone think this was an appropriate exercise for third-graders.

   


Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

 

    I cleaned out one of my bathroom drawers today, looking for the two boxes of Breathe Right Strips. I know I had two full boxes; both were nowhere to be found. Did one of my home health care aides take them? Did I use them and not remember? Either way, they were gone. I found an alternative I had already purchased, Sleep Right Intra-Nasal Breathe Aid. They are plastic gadgets that fit inside each nostril instead of a sticky strip for the top of the nose. I rinse them off each morning and can reuse them for twenty days. I think this solution works better for me. My nose got damaged, banging against my mother's hip for several hours the day I was born. It never bounced back. I have one impressive, deviated septum.

    After a week or so of my Kia Niro taking the charge when I plugged it in, it stopped again. The garage diagnosed it as a loose connection and ordered a replacement part. In the meantime, I had to borrow cars. Judy lent me hers on Tuesday so I could make my rehab appointment. I stopped at Target and then at Costco. Judy called, anxious about me not returning in time for Carol's appointment. Yvette lent me her car on Wednesday so I could go to Ulu Wini. 

      I used my own car on Friday. I had enough bars to make it there and back. I lose a bar with each trip, even though I am cautious. I drive slowly down hills, trying to build up bars. On the flat, I drive on the shoulder of the road at twenty-five miles an hour in a forty-five-mile hour zone.

   Today, I quizzed Adolescent D on his use of the cross-body blending technique for blending words. He reverses letters and sounds. 

When I told him I thought he was resisting using the procedure to decode unfamiliar words, he said, "My way is faster." "yes, your way is faster if you know the word, but when you don't, you're stuck." I made it clear it was my goal for him to read all words quickly. I hoped the cross-body blending would help him embody letters' left-to-right sequencing.

    I also asked him if he believed this work would change his brain. He said no. How many times have I told stories about the brain's ability to change over the last three years? I told him the story of Bach-y-Rita's work with his father after he had a stroke. I cited the research on brain modification resulting from phonics training.

  When I plugged in my phone Monday night, it didn't start charging. I tried every iPhone charging cord I had in the house. None worked. I planned to stop at T-Mobile on my way home from my rehab appointment on Tuesday. As I got into bed for the night, I absent-mindedly plugged the phone by the bedside. The following day, the phone was fully charged.

      I checked the causes for a phone not charging on the internet the next morning.   Dirt in the outlet. It is recommended to use a nonmetallic toothpick to clean it. I had a plastic one. I got some dirt out. All the charging cords worked.  

    I stopped off at T-Mobile after rehab anyway. The internet information said it would open at ten. A sign on the door announced that the holiday hours started at eleven. I was the first one there and the first one in. They told me my outlet was filthy. She had a static-free brush and worked at it for a few minutes. She said it was still dirty. I ordered a set of static-free brushes online when I got home.

   When I do my morning gentle seated yoga, there are some moves where I raise my arms. I will never be able to raise my left arm as high as I could before my accident. The reverse shoulder replacement permanently limits my joint range. I can get the right arm to a one hundred eighty-degree angle and the left arm thirty degrees less. However, I still can't raise my left arm to its full potential. When I do my arm raises in my morning gentle seated yoga session, I raise the left arm as high as possible with my strength and then pull it up further with the right hand. The passive range of motion promises the potential. I have a way to go before I reach my dead end.

 

 


Friday, December 8, 2023

 Friday, December 8, 2023

  It’s been an intense three days. On Tuesday, Jean, my friend, made reservations to come to Hawaii with her sister because her daughter was grievously ill in the hospital. She called Wednesday morning to say the doctor’s prognosis wasn’t good. I picked up Jean and her sister, Rosie, from the airport that afternoon and drove them to Kelly’s house. Thursday, I went to the hospital to be a witness when Kelly signed a POA and a DNR. Kelly was jaundiced with liver failure.

  Everyone was keeping knowledge of her grievous condition from Kelly’s ex-husband and the children, seven and nine years old. I was concerned the children could find out in school when some child yelled out, “Hear your mother’s dying.” Kona’s a small town. Everyone knows someone who knows someone. We have the local coconut wireless as well as Facebook.

    Jean, Rosie, and I went to dinner at the Korner Pocket Café after leaving the hospital. It was a sports bar with excellent food. Rosie’s was the best: delicious pork chop, mashed potatoes, and the best green beans I’ve had in a long while. I dropped Jean and Rosie at home and went home myself. I can imagine stopping off at the bar to pick up an order of those green beans.

    Friday, I picked up Kelly’s dad, Bill, from the airport and drove him to Kelly’s house while Jean and  Rosie picked up Kelly from the hospital. They were going to do hospice at home. I was very concerned about how they would get Kelly up the very steep driveway. She was already frail. She could barely hold the pen to sign the documents the day before. Jean proposed carrying Kelly up. Wild idea. She weighs 108 lbs. no way Jean could have lifted her, no less carried her up that steep driveway; I can barely walk up and down it safely. Bill proposed getting a young strapping neighbor to help. Someone came up with the perfect solution. They backed the car up the driveway into the lip of the garage. Kelly walked into the house with a bit of assistance.

    I went to Ulu Wini at two today, forgetting school didn’t get out till three. Two kids were using the playground equipment. Ipo yelled at one of the kids, asking why he wasn’t in school. He had missed the bus. I had worked with third-grade S before. He had memory problems. Today, I discovered he didn’t know the alphabet song, no less the alphabet. However, he recalled three shapes after a quick glance, drawing them accurately. That suggests his problem is hearing speech sounds or processing them. Covered them and asked him to draw them. He unhesitatingly responded. 

    His visual working memory is fine; he has poor auditory processing. I picked a miscellaneous text and broke down each word phonemically, drawing out the sounds. He was enthralled. He started imitating me. I picked up on that and had him repeat the phonemes as I pronounced them. He liked the work.

  The little girl wanted math. I showed her two addition problems (5+5+5=, 5+4+2= ) and asked which could be a multiplication problem. She caught on quickly. Children from collective societies are taught to learn what their parents do, not figure things out for themselves. She wanted to learn her multiplication table. I showed her patterns that would help her eliminate wrong answers if she did not give her the right one. I drew a series of shapes, repeated the pattern, and asked her which came next? This was new for her. Pattern recognition is key to figuring things out on your own. We also worked on identifying the odd and even numbers. It was as if she had never seen it before. I drew a vertical line to model what odd and even looked like. This will allow her to figure it out independently. Finally, I taught her the memory trick to help her memorize her times' tables. 

    I taught her my method, which emphasizes embedding the image in visual working memory, and the Fernald technique, which uses VAKT, writing the equation repeatedly.

 


Wednesday, December 6, 2023

 Wednesday, December 6, 2023

    While on my evening walk with Darby, someone ran to catch up to us, calling my name. It was Melissa, who lived in the ohana across the street from Darby. We knew she was facing eviction. Her landlord wanted her out. We wished her well the other day. But tonight, she shared additional bad news. Her husband, Jerry, had died the week before.  

   She came home from work to find him napping. She knew never to wake him from a nap. Concerned, she went to wake him after dinner. It was then she realized something was terribly wrong. She thought it strange that he chose to sleep on her side of the bed earlier, but when she looked carefully, she saw his arm hanging in a peculiar position. Then she saw his face and knew. She touched him to find he was ice cold. She called a friend to come over. It was she who called the police. Despite the bulge at the side of his neck where the blood pooled from a stroke, an autopsy was required because he wasn’t under a doctor’s care. They estimated the time of death at four pm.

   I left earlier than usual for my early morning walk because I had driveway yoga at seven. I ran into Vince, who told me a different version of the story of Jerry’s death. The friend who came to help Melissa was Vince’s sister-in-law. I figured Melissa’s was the more accurate, but I kept my mouth shut.

    Jean’s daughter was told she had to go to the hospital on something like Friday. She wanted to wait till Sunday night when her kids went to their dad’s for the week. When I spoke to Jean on Tuesday, she told me the doctor said her daughter only had a fifty-fifty chance of living. Jean made flight reservations immediately. She called me Wednesday morning while I was in yoga to tell me her daughter’s death was inevitable. Her liver had failed completely. It was a matter of days or weeks before the end. I stayed inside and wept. Kelly was forty-three with a ten-year-old and a seven-year-old. Yvette knew Kelly. The news hit her hard, too; she canceled the rest of the class.

   Today was the first kupuna mahjong meeting. It’s a new ministry through the church, bonding us old folks so we provide mutual support. I showed up a bit late. Everyone had already had a lesson. There were two groups. I caught on quickly. I saw the game as comparable to Rummikub, with some different rituals.

    In my session today with Adolescent D, we started with a new article on Biden’s open discussion of grief. They listed all the presidents who lost children in the White House: Adams, Lincoln, Coolidge, and Kennedy. Pierce lost a child while traveling to attend his inauguration. What a statistic!

   D struggled with a letter sequence. We continue practicing cross-body blending, but he remains reluctant to use it. It continues to be a struggle when he has to use his conscious mind to decode. The best we can hope for is each practice moment teaches the unconscious mind what to do.

   Today was a Ulu Wini day. I worked with five kids. Two had comprehension problems; the rest had issues with memory. Hakana was absent today. The social workers who run the community center ran the program. One was sitting close to me as I worked. As I was leaving, she suggested setting up a formal schedule. I objected. I showed her my list. I worked with over thirty kids since I started. I prefer it when the kids come to me when they wish or are ordered to do so for the day. I like working with them for short sessions that end when they look distracted. If they have been concentrating up to that point, I figure they’ve had as much as they can absorb for the day.

   While several people wished me a happy birthday yesterday, Judy and Paulette forgot. Today, I told Judy she had forgotten because I knew she would be very upset when she realized what she had. I told her I wasn’t concerned. She gave me so much on a daily basis. That was worth so much more to me.

Tuesday, December 5, 2002

 Tuesday, December 5, 2002 

  Today was my 83rd birthday. Carol Zim called and sang an improvised birthday song in her style. It brought a big smile to my face. Mike and I sang an improvised version of the sound because Mike couldn’t sing. We caterwauled the song. It was fun. While I miss the man, I enjoy singing the song solo.

   Some friends stay on the phone with me longer than is comfortable because they are concerned about my loneliness. If only a long phone call would solve that problem. It doesn’t. A forced call makes it worse, although I appreciate the concern and the effort.  

    I watched videos of the wedding of the daughter of an old colleague. The bride is the oldest of four girls. The mother often posts pictures of the girls on Facebook. They usually look beautiful, but not so at this wedding. The bride had her wedding party all clad in black. Maybe she thought they would have a dress they could wear on other occasions. Most of the women in the wedding party looked pretty good. Her mother looked stunning, but her sisters looked funereal. I hoped their concern was grief over losing one of their sisters. I feared they were concerned about their sister’s taste in men.

 


Monday, December 4, 2003

Monday, December 4, 2003

 

   My friend Jean told me about a tapping app. Tapping is a system of tapping on acupuncture points to resolve emotional issues. I learned it as EFT, Emotional Freedom Technique. It is debunked as pseudoscience by Wiki. I’ve known about and used tapping for the last twenty-five years. I often use it with my students but less frequently with myself. 

   My current therapist/life coach uses tapping a lot. She will often use it on herself for me while I work. I had no idea it had become so popular. I signed on. I found an app for sound sleep on the site. I tuned into it; I had been encountering some difficulty with sleep recently. I fell asleep easily but woke up early, around 3 am. I would try to mediate until five, when my alarm went off. During those two hours, negative thinking overtook me. By five am, I was exhausted. 

  When I turned on the sleeping app, someone talked for about 15 minutes, leading to a tapping session. I fell asleep easily before the man stopped talking. The background music behind the speaker continued all night until I switched it off when I got up. I slept soundly till four-thirty. The legato flute music distracted me from my negative thinking. What a blessing!

  I paid my $2,360 hospital bill today. I would have preferred to pay it next year for tax purposes, but I had to pay by December 21. I have plenty of medical expenses to claim for this year already. I dropped over $15,000 on three weeks of in-home health care.

   I had a facial today. I got the express service, and that was $150. Wow! I only get one once or twice a year. She spared me the tip, probably because I told her it was my birthday the next day. It makes me feel terrible to see estheticians and massage therapists get over one hundred an hour when people think fifty an hour is an outrageous fee for a tutor, even a highly trained one.

   I called Kia for information on my car. When I took it in the other day, they saw that the car didn’t take a charge. They told me they sent the digital information to Kia headquarters and would hear from them in twenty-four hours.


Thursday, November 30, 2023

 Thursday, November 30, 2023

    We had weird weather for a few days: constant wind and rain, a Kona low weather front. Winds come in from the west. It was cold and damp all day- unpleasant.

    I had a lunch date with Mindy and Zola. We were to meet at a restaurant in town. Given the weather, I dreaded the event. All the restaurants in Kona are open-air; none are closed to the outside world and airconditioned. I anticipated being comfortable in the cold, damp air. I called Zola to check her thoughts on the weather's impact on our luncheon date. We decided to go ahead. We would meet at Foster's Kitchen, where Judy and Howard celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary.

    The weather was fine. It was warmer by the shore than it had been one thousand feet higher where I live. I had a great time with my two friends. I ordered a hamburger. I miss Annie's Burgers like mad. They were the best. I keep trying other places. Foster's is a high-end restaurant. The hamburger was lousy-tasteless.

      I had sessions with Mama K's crew and Adolescent D when I got home. I only met with Twin E. The other two had fallen asleep. These kids get up very early and are exhausted when they get home from school. She completed the first two Fry Sight Word Lists. This is a milestone. Her mother heard her read the list and was amazed.

    I continued working with cross-body blending with Adolescent D. We do one word a day of his choice. He generally picks one-syllable words. The exercise is still hard for him. He picked the word city today. He struggles to separate words into individual sounds and blend those sounds back together.

    In Amazon's Professor T, the titular character says extroversion is a sign of sociopathology. One of the people he applied the term to was a socially hostile person with an anger management problem. It made me wonder about his definition of extroversion. 

I didn't see a pattern. I do believe introverts do see extroverts as pathological.  

 

Sunday, December 3, 2023

 

 Today, it is four years and nine months since Mike died. God, I miss him. He was a wonderful life partner and companion. I burned a yahrzeit candle. I read a person’s after life is determined by those who remember them. Mike should be more than fine. I will think of him every day for the rest of my life. he was loved by so many in the community. Some from church recommended a book to me of prayers to help the departed escape purgatory and enter heaven. I had a bad reaction to it. It made Mike’s successful afterlife dependent on others. It also meant that if purgatory and heaven are real and we all have to be prayed for to ascend, I’m screwed- as are so many others I know.

  I finally got the hospital bill from the Kona Community Hospital. The fees for the surgeries were itemized. I mean, every action, every screw, was individually noted. Who recorded all this as they worked for five hours on my elbow and three on my shoulder? Without insurance, the total would have been over $249,150. I was charged $2,360 for two surgeries and two weeks in the hospital.  

 

Monday, December 4, 2003

 

   My friend Jean told me about a tapping app. Tapping is a system of tapping on acupuncture points to resolve emotional issues. I learned it as EFT, Emotional Freedom Technique. It is debunked as pseudoscience by Wiki. I’ve known about and used tapping for the last twenty-five years. I often use it with my students but less frequently with myself. 

   My current therapist/life coach uses tapping a lot. She will often use it on herself for me while I work. I had no idea it had become so popular. I signed on. I found an app for sound sleep on the site. I tuned into it; I had been encountering some difficulty with sleep recently. I fell asleep easily but woke up early, around 3 am. I would try to mediate until five, when my alarm went off. During those two hours, negative thinking overtook me. By five am, I was exhausted. 

  When I turned on the sleeping app, someone talked for about 15 minutes, leading to a tapping session. I fell asleep easily before the man stopped talking. The background music behind the speaker continued all night until I switched it off when I got up. I slept soundly till four-thirty. The legato flute music distracted me from my negative thinking. What a blessing!

  I paid my $2,360 hospital bill today. I would have preferred to pay it next year for tax purposes, but I had to pay by December 21. I have plenty of medical expenses to claim for this year already. I dropped over $15,000 on three weeks of in-home health care.

   I had a facial today. I got the express service, and that was $150. Wow! I only get one once or twice a year. She spared me the tip, probably because I told her it was my birthday the next day. It makes me feel terrible to see estheticians and massage therapists get over one hundred an hour when people think fifty an hour is an outrageous fee for a tutor, even a highly trained one.

   I called Kia for information on my car. When I took it in the other day, they saw that the car didn’t take a charge. They told me they sent the digital information to Kia headquarters and would hear from them in twenty-four hours.

 

Tuesday, December 5, 2002

 

  Today was my 83rd birthday. Carol Zim called and sang an improvised birthday song in her style. It brought a big smile to my face. Mike and I sang an improvised version of the sound because Mike couldn’t sing. We caterwauled the song. It was fun. While I miss the man, I enjoy singing the song solo.

   Some friends stay on the phone with me longer than is comfortable because they are concerned about my loneliness. If only a long phone call would solve that problem. It doesn’t. A forced call makes it worse, although I appreciate the concern and the effort.  

    I watched videos of the wedding of the daughter of an old colleague. The bride is the oldest of four girls. The mother often posts pictures of the girls on Facebook. They usually look beautiful, but not so at this wedding. The bride had her wedding party all clad in black. Maybe she thought they would have a dress they could wear on other occasions. Most of the women in the wedding party looked pretty good. Her mother looked stunning, but her sisters looked funereal. I hoped their concern was grief over losing one of their sisters. I feared they were concerned about their sister’s taste in men.

 

Wednesday, December 6, 2023

 

    While on my evening walk with Darby, someone ran to catch up to us, calling my name. It was Melissa, who lived in the ohana across the street from Darby. We knew she was facing eviction. Her landlord wanted her out. We wished her well the other day. But tonight, she shared additional bad news. Her husband, Jerry, had died the week before.  

   She came home from work to find him napping. She knew never to wake him from a nap. Concerned, she went to wake him after dinner. It was then she realized something was terribly wrong. She thought it strange that he chose to sleep on her side of the bed earlier, but when she looked carefully, she saw his arm hanging in a peculiar position. Then she saw his face and knew. She touched him to find he was ice cold. She called a friend to come over. It was she who called the police. Despite the bulge at the side of his neck where the blood pooled from a stroke, an autopsy was required because he wasn’t under a doctor’s care. They estimated the time of death at four pm.

   I left earlier than usual for my early morning walk because I had driveway yoga at seven. I ran into Vince, who told me a different version of the story of Jerry’s death. The friend who came to help Melissa was Vince’s sister-in-law. I figured Melissa’s was the more accurate, but I kept my mouth shut.

    Jean’s daughter was told she had to go to the hospital on something like Friday. She wanted to wait till Sunday night when her kids went to their dad’s for the week. When I spoke to Jean on Tuesday, she told me the doctor said her daughter only had a fifty-fifty chance of living. Jean made flight reservations immediately. She called me Wednesday morning while I was in yoga to tell me her daughter’s death was inevitable. Her liver had failed completely. It was a matter of days or weeks before the end. I stayed inside and wept. Kelly was forty-three with a ten-year-old and a seven-year-old. Yvette knew Kelly. The news hit her hard, too; she canceled the rest of the class.

   Today was the first kupuna mahjong meeting. It’s a new ministry through the church, bonding us old folks so we provide mutual support. I showed up a bit late. Everyone had already had a lesson. There were two groups. I caught on quickly. I saw the game as comparable to Rummikub, with some different rituals.

    In my session today with Adolescent D, we started with a new article on Biden’s open discussion of grief. They listed all the presidents who lost children in the White House: Adams, Lincoln, Coolidge, and Kennedy. Pierce lost a child while traveling to attend his inauguration. What a statistic!

   D struggled with a letter sequence. We continue practicing cross-body blending, but he remains reluctant to use it. It continues to be a struggle when he has to use his conscious mind to decode. The best we can hope for is each practice moment teaches the unconscious mind what to do.

   Today was a Ulu Wini day. I worked with five kids. Two had comprehension problems; the rest had issues with memory. Hakana was absent today. The social workers who run the community center ran the program. One was sitting close to me as I worked. As I was leaving, she suggested setting up a formal schedule. I objected. I showed her my list. I worked with over thirty kids since I started. I prefer it when the kids come to me when they wish or are ordered to do so for the day. I like working with them for short sessions that end when they look distracted. If they have been concentrating up to that point, I figure they’ve had as much as they can absorb for the day.

   While several people wished me a happy birthday yesterday, Judy and Paulette forgot. Today, I told Judy she had forgotten because I knew she would be very upset when she realized what she had. I told her I wasn’t concerned. She gave me so much on a daily basis. That was worth so much more to me.

Sunday, December 31, 2023

    Sunday, December 31, 2023      It was a beach day for Mama K's crew. Twin E still has to be pushed to use the memorization procedure...