Thursday, July 9, 2026

Friday, August 2, 2024

 Friday, August 2, 2024

    I saw Dean as he turned onto Holoholo. Rather than make a left on Kukuna, I turned around and walked back the way I had come. It was the longer way home, and I would get in more steps. 

   I didn’t get to work with the Twins because their mom was in Honolulu for a paddling competition. She told me to contact the girls over Facetime on my tablet, but there was no answer. I suspected their middle school brother had a firm grip on the table and had no intention of letting it go.

   I called my Long-Term healthcare insurance company. I received notification that they would be raising their rates. They offered a one-time payment of $10,000 and reduced benefits to avoid the rate hike. Mike and I had been talked into additional insurance, which relieved us of premium payments if one of us went into long-term care or died. Mike died on March 3, 2019. The letter said my policy would not be affected. I called to get verbal confirmation.

    I told the customer care agent I wanted confirmation on my policy status. She asked for my policy number. With my policy in front of her, she discussed the $10,000 one-time payment.  I suspected she was instructed to get people like me to accept the one-time payment and reduced benefits if she could. We old people get easily confused.  While I hoped I was wrong, I snapped; I wanted confirmation of the impact on my plan. She quickly changed her tune. She said my policy would be unaffected by the changes.

   Shortly after that call, I had another from an unknown caller. She asked if a ‘gentleman’ and gave a name, lived there. I said no. I expected a polite, “Sorry, Wrong number.” Instead, she said you live on the Big Island. Do you live on the Hilo side?  I hung up immediately. I dealt with three scams in two days. It makes me despair.

   I loaded a 5-gallon bucket of Plumbago green waste before I left for my Hula class at 10 a.m. at the community center. The class went pretty well, but some arm moves required raising them above heart level.

   I finally sent billing statements to all my paying clients, did more yard work, and loaded up more Plumbago waste. I also cut large palm fronds into pieces to fit in the trash barrel.

   I had an appointment with the acupuncturist at 1. She asked if she could be late. She was in town getting school supplies for her kids.  I hadn’t realized how late it was. I was filthy from the garden work.  I hopped into the shower. Jennifer arrived at 1:20. I got myself together in the nick of time.

   The therapist Yvette has been seeing to help her ‘get herself out of the way of her professional success’ called me.  I need that kind of help. I am very conflicted. I don’t like being rejected and ignored, nor do I like it when people pay too much attention. As I say, I’m conflicted.

      The therapist explained that we can’t control people’s reactions to us. We can only control our responses to theirs.  I am entirely on that page and told her so. She repeated the idea that we had no control over the reaction of others. I felt she had ignored my feedback. I don’t remember what I said. I tend to be blunt. I must have said something to the effect that I had heard what she said. She said, “ I can’t work with people who don’t want to hear what I have to say.”  I said, “You said it once. I told you I agreed. I didn’t need to hear it three more times.”  She said she couldn’t work with me. I agreed. At least, I didn’t tell her why I thought so. I spared both of us that retort.  She also said something else about my wanting to earn money. It’s not that I don’t want to earn money, but it’s not a priority. I am happy to work for less or free if people can’t afford it.  She couldn’t hear that either.

    I have lots of experience with therapists who insist I’m something I’m not. We went to the same therapist for a while. Mike went with me. He walked out, saying, “I don’t understand why they don’t get you.” They all laid trips on me. Most of them were bad trips. Sometimes, arguing with the hard facts of my life. It’s been weird. The therapist I spoke to today complained that I didn’t want to hear what she had to say; that was my complaint about her, too.  In the therapist/client relationship, it’s more important that the therapist hears the client than vice versa. I like to think I do that for my clients.  But so many people say nothing.

   After I got off the phone, I thought, “What would Yvette have done?”  If she had felt the therapist was inappropriate, she would have kept her mouth shut and said something polite about calling back, having no intention of doing so.  The skill of keeping my thoughts to myself could use some polishing. However, if I had, I wouldn’t have gotten the benefit of hearing the therapist say she didn’t want to work with someone who didn’t want to listen to what she had to say. When she did, I recognized it as my problem. Hearing it from her mouth allowed me to see my similar problem differently.

   Later that day, I received a long email from that therapist listing six practical and intrapersonal suggestions.  I recognize the impulse to be heard. I’ve done something comparable myself.  It’s a mixed bag.

    Darby hasn’t been walking in the evening. She told me she did something to her arm and wanted to rest it. Today, I learned that whatever she did caused her so much pain that she couldn’t lie down in her bed at night. I had no idea. 

Thursday, August 1, 2024

 Thursday, August 1, 2024

   Shortly after I got home from my walk, Dean and Nina appeared at my door. They said they had been chasing me for a mile. I was walking so fast they couldn’t catch up. They would see me Saturday afternoon around 1:30 for a few rounds of Sorry.

  I had a session with Twin E this morning. I have known for a while that she doesn’t recognize the difference between b and d. today, I asked if she saw the difference between the letter c written right and wrong. No.  She does not discriminate between the orientation of those two shapes. Oh, boy.  She doesn’t see a difference between the lowercase print a written one way versus backward.  I started doing some work on it. She said there was no spinning, which might account for the confusion. I will have to check which side of her brain she uses. I designed an exercise with the letters written by hand in both directions. Her task will be to discriminate between the right and wrong presentation.  

        Damon called. Cylin and he were in town for breakfast and would call when they were home.  It took forever. I finally called him.  They were heading home.  They had stopped to shop for gifts.  I packed up my computer and the infrared pad  I bought but hadn’t used yet and headed up there. The plan was to hang out.

   We sat together in the living room until Damon disappeared. He was gone for so long that I thought he had gone down for a nap. Cylin said he was in the bathroom, answering texts from work. He finally came out. He planned to use the sauna. Did I want to come? Fortunately, I brought my bathing suit.

   We headed down to the sauna. Damon would have preferred a hot tub; he used one at home regularly.  He walked me down a roughhewn path to the pool and sauna, holding onto my hand. I have a fear of falling. All old people’s bones become brittle with age. I’m in greater danger because of the hardware in my hip, elbow, and shoulder. If those areas are impacted, they will break more easily because of the hard objects embedded in my body.

    Damon and I sat in the sauna. His tolerance was lower than mine. When it was just heating up, he opened the door to let in cool, fresh air. I stayed behind. He said to call when I wanted to go back up to the house. When I opened the door and came out, Damon was nowhere in sight. I thought he would be in the pool. I made my way back up to the house on my own.

   They left the house for the airport at 2 p.m. I was right behind them.  Jean, my friend, called. I pulled over to do the water meditation with her, which we do almost daily.  As I sat there, Damon’s rental car came up the road in the opposite direction. He had left his swim trunks in the dryer.  They passed me, going in the other direction as I completed the water meditation.

   While Damon and Cylin were only here for three days rather than the four they originally intended, it was a good visit. I always enjoy seeing them.

   I arrived home with enough leftover food to last for several days. 

 

 


Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

 

   I woke up in the middle of the night upset, worrying about who would take care of Elsa if anything happened to me. Since Elsa bit Masha last night, I'm concerned we can't trust the two of them. I don't think Masha attacked back, but it was frightening.

    The plan has always been for Yvette to care for Elsa if I travel, am hospitalized, or die. While Yvette would feed Elsa and walk her twice a day if I was away or hospitalized, Elsa would be alone otherwise and wouldn't do well with that. If I died before Elsa, Yvette couldn't take her in.

   I got up around 3:30, unable to sleep, and looked up how much it would cost to have a pet sitter. At $25 an hour for 24 hours, that is $600 a day. There must be a way to work it out. That's very steep. Of course, my full-time care costs $45 an hour. I also texted a friend who pet-sits. She would do it for free if available when we needed her.

   I modified my morning yoga routine again today. Instead of releasing a full breath while laughing with each yoga move, I make as many moves as possible while releasing a single breath. I maintain a single stretch until I have released all the air, then do the same thing six more times. It was very time-consuming. Now, I do as many as three stretches before I take a breath.

  Elsa and I managed to get over 4,000 steps today. I wasn't supposed to see Damon and Cylin this morning. They had plans to go to Kua Bay on their own. I first assumed I would go with them. Damon made it clear I wasn't welcome. They wanted some alone time. I had mixed feelings. I was sad not to be included since their visit was so short—only four days. But I was happy they wanted to be alone. 

   They called about ten. They hadn't gotten up and out and dropped their plans for Kua Bay.  Instead, they went to the turtle beach and snorkeled. Cylin reported seeing many fish and turtles.

    They invited me to join them for lunch. They would pick up sandwiches at this place Yvette told them about. I order a turkey BLT. They called when they were home. I drove up to their Airbnb. The sandwich was delicious. I brought a Kombucha with me.  I think I'm addicted. Hopefully, it's not bad for me. 

  When I told Damon and Cylin of my concerns, they told me it was their idea for Yvette to bring Masha up for dinner. Yvette probably thought it would be okay. Elsa and Masha had met in the street, and there was no drama. Of course, this was different. It was in Elsa's territory, and I had been alarmed when I first saw Masha in the house. Yvette brought her up, thinking I was okay when she brought Little up. This is different. Little is little, and she was old and clung to Yvette. Masha is four times the size of Elsa, young and exploratory.  I'm certain Masha meant no harm.  She didn't return Elsa's bite with one of her own.  Masha is a good girl. I'm not sure Elsa is quite so forgiving. This 13-pound dog takes on trucks, particularly white ones.

    Damon and Cylin lazed around and watched some of the Olympics. I napped. Cylin napped. Then Damon talked about the late afternoon plans. He spoke of going to the Mauna Kea and hiking one mile to see the sunset.  I assumed he was talking about the hotel. No.  He was talking about the mountain, driving up to the visitors' center. I have been there several times. I've never been impressed. You get to see the sunset from above the clouds. Whoopee.  It does nothing for me. And- it is freezing cold up there after sunset.   I begged off. Learning where they were going, Yvette grabbed a sweatshirt and decent shoes.  

   I did more work in the yard.  It is overwhelming. I need to put in at least an hour a day to keep up with it.  I don't do that. My latest project is cleaning up the green waste from Casey's trim job on the overgrown Plumbago bush.   I stuffed a large pile of Plumbago green waste into three 5-gallon buckets. I walked two over to Darby's.  I had the large, now empty trash barrel in hand, ready to wheel back home when my phone rang. It was Shelly, my therapist/life coach. I forgot about her with my focus on the Damons. I shared my upset about the scene with Elsa and Masha and the drama at and about the skin care shop at Kona Inn Shopping Village. I floundered as I struggled to free myself from the grip of sadness and anger about the incident with Masha and Elsa.

   I wondered if everyone feels physical pain when upset. Shelly said no, not everyone did. She had been recommending I find where the sensation was in my body. She then switched her instructions. She said to focus on my whole body. My mind went to the surface of my aura. That's where I found focus and access to a healing state.

    I went through bouts of anger, not so much about the current situation as in general.  Rage, really. I once led a student through this rage and laughed at his reaction. We each have to confront that infantile rage that never entirely leaves us. It's more on the surface for some than others. My best guess is it's dependent on how responsive the primary caretakers were to the infant. My mom was unresponsive. She marched to the beat of her own drum. Her ability to be in harmony with another was limited. As I followed the anger, it was clearly that infantile rage. My mother wouldn't tolerate that for two hot seconds, even in an infant. I know because I watched her response to her granddaughter. When Karin was two, she had a temper tantrum in my mother's presence.  My mom said, "If you cry like that, you will never have a boyfriend." Pretty bizarre response. Not to worry. Karin is happily married with two kids.

     I got to work with the Twins in the late afternoon. Twin E had problems recognizing the difference between the capital I (I) and the lowercase L in some fonts. They looked the same. She doesn't realize that a capital L would not be a second letter in a word.

   Then, E couldn't read the word plant and wouldn't try to decode it. Instead of following the procedure I taught her repeatedly, she acted like it was an impossible task.  

1.     What's the vowel? 2. What is the letter after the vowel?  She gave me the letter before the vowel.  3. Then she blended the a and n. 4. What's the letter after the n? She blended the an and the t with relative ease. 5. What's the letter before the a? Blend that with ant. 6. What is the letter before the l; blend that with lant.

  We have gone over this procedure time and time again. It's like E's deliberately taking a step backward because school is right around the corner, starting on Monday. Then, the tablet ran out of juice. I texted the older sister to plug it in and put Twin A on. It took a while. I organized myself for the afternoon hike Damon and Cylin planned. I put my walking stick and sun hat by the door, along with a flask for water.

    I decided not to go on the Mauna Kea trip to see the sunset. I've been up there several times. None of them rang my chimes. The first time, Yvette arranged to have a friend drive us up to the top. The goal was to arrive in time to watch the sunset. We were too late. I got out of the jeep. The wind was a brisk 40 mph. I clung to the side of the building, frightened that I would be blown off the mountaintop. The other times, I visited the visitors' center with  Mike. Mike was thrilled to look through the telescopes at the stars. Eh!

  Damon called after an hour. I had convinced them not to go; Yvette helped with that. It's a long drive, and it would be cold and windy. The three of them went for a walk somewhere else. Damon proposed we have dinner at Jackie Rey's. He made a reservation for 7:15. I arrived shortly before Damon, Cylin, and Yvette did. I wore a dress; they were both still dressed for hiking.

   The menu was high-class but little interested me. I had raw ahi with seasoning, elegantly presented. I learned Damon and Cylin planned to go home tomorrow instead of Friday. Damon wanted to ensure he spent time with his son, August, while on vacation. August was supposed to come with them, but he came down with a bug and stayed home. 

 


Tuesday, July 30, 2024

 Tuesday, July 30, 2024  

    I woke up this morning to find my phone hadn’t charged overnight- again. Sometimes, I haven’t placed it incorrectly on the wireless charger. I tried again; it didn’t connect. I looked for a charging cord and plugged it in; it didn’t connect.  Sorry, I can’t live without my phone. Then I tried that alcohol trick. No, I didn’t take a drink to calm my nerves. I wiped down the back of the phone and the surface of the wireless charging unit with rubbing alcohol and bingo. 

  When I weighed myself this morning, I had lost another half a pound; I was down to 134.5. My steady premenopausal weight was 128, but I’m told I need to weigh a bit more now that I’m older. 

   The significant drop in weight was last year after the fall when I shattered my left shoulder and elbow joints, spent two weeks in the hospital, and another month at home with 24- hr. care. I couldn’t risk getting up and going to the bathroom by myself. I was weak and unsteady. I couldn’t dress myself or prepare my food.  Because other people took care of me, I changed my diet. I made additional changes recently. I read starting the day with protein was my best bet. I now eat two soft-boiled eggs each morning, followed by buttered toast with a heaping portion of red raspberry jam.  Hardly a diet anyone would recommend.  I eat something substantial midday: a bagel with cream cheese, lox, and a kombucha.  I’m usually not hungry at night. Last night, I had looked forward to enjoying dessert after the meal at Huggo’s. I ate the garlic bread, which was fantastic. I also ate a few bites of the salad and lemonade. I couldn’t finish the poke tower. Damon had a few bites of it, and I took the rest home.  I am getting a bit concerned. Even if the weight loss is because of reduced food intake and better exercise, I can’t go below a certain point. I need some fat on me at my age.

  I was tired during my morning walk. The air punching exercise combined with laughter yoga drains me.  The release feels good, but then I’m exhausted. Should I stop it or do it at another time of the day?

   I met with the Twins this morning. They were both frustrating. While Twin A’s oral reading is continuing to improve, her comprehension skills have maxed out at mid-third grade. Twin E had problems with both word recognition and comprehension. Given how depleted I felt, it was hard work.

  Damon called around 8:30. He and Cylin were off to Yvette’s yoga class and heading to Kua Bay around 10.  I canceled Adolescent D for the week. He is ready to pack it in, as is his mom, and I am, too.  I’ll miss him at one level, but it’s time. My concern is he will want to quit high school.  He loves his job at Costco; I envision him saying he’ll work there for the rest of his life and won’t need a high school diploma. I know Costco will hire someone without one, but will that limit his ability to get a higher-paying job within the company?

  Damon called after the yoga class to say they were heading to Kua Bay and should meet them there.  There is only a small actual parking area. Everyone else parks just off the road. That’s what most of the cars have to do. I drove down to the drop-off area in case a spot opened up. None did. I had a quarter-mile walk to the drop-off spot, comparable to the walk I had to do as a kid from the Jones’ Beach parking lot to the waterfront.

   Damon and Cylin weren’t there yet. I sat on the rock wall in the shade of a tree overlooking the shore. Of course, I had my back to the ocean. I turned to catch some of the view. Damon called as he entered the access road leading to the bay.  I told him the parking was pretty bad when I arrived half an hour before, and more people were coming than leaving. Did he have an umbrella? No. It was now 11:30, which is never a good time to be at a beach. The Hawaiian sun toasted-roasted my legs on the walk down. I hated to think of what I would look like if I sat out there for two hours. I would look like a tourist. They have this pink burn you never see on someone who lives here. 

   Damon and Cylin agreed this wasn’t the best time to do Kua Bay. They drove down to the drop-off area, picked me up, dropped me off at my car, and waited until I had pulled off the rocky area onto the road. We changed into our street clothes and went to town. 

   We parked in the church parking lot. Our first stop was the church graveyard. Damon and  Cylin had never seen the headstones, but they thought they looked great. I like their look better each time I see them. I did a great job.

   Then we headed to Lucasie, the skin care shop where I dropped thousands of dollars in a moment of weakness.  The skin care products are good even if they are expensive.  I knew I was being hustled; I didn’t know I was being conned.  I was vulnerable for the bait in the first place because it was a beautiful day, and the shop had a view of the ocean through an open screenless window, a mood-altering scene. Besides that, I am an 83-year-old widow. It was a perfect storm. 

    The facial peel worked like a charm. I’ve been disturbed by my aging skin.  Aside from the acne I suffered as an adolescent and later some other form of outbreak, I inherited incredible skin. Other than my facial skin, the rest of my body was in great shape. No more. I find rough spots.  I use a plastic equivalent of steel wool to scrape dead skin off my face and body.  I was given a product that would remove that dead skin. I was sold. The cost of the three products I got that first day was not unreasonable. I was to return a week later for a free facial as part of the deal. 

   A week later, my friend and I returned for our facials. The man who provided them, placing ‘golden masks’ on our faces, examined my legs and told me I had eczema. That won me over; I had an explanation for the changes in my skin. My uncle had suffered from psoriasis. Maybe this is what I got instead.  That diagnosis won me over. Okay, I didn’t have all my marbles lined up, or is it I had a few screws loose?  I see incidents of that in my thinking more and more often. I can’t focus on two things at once. One topic can consume all the energy my prefrontal lobe has to offer. I drove through a four-way stop without looking because I was thinking of something else. That would never have happened when I was younger.  I’m sure the losses are more significant because of the eight hours of surgery I had a year ago after my catastrophic fall when I shattered my left shoulder and elbow.

   I let the pitchman talk me into paying for two years of product up front. I was still on board when I got home, but I had an appointment with my doctor early next week. I asked her about the eczema. Absolutely not! Eczema itches, and she saw no sign of it. Then, I got a phone call from the pitchman. He had sent a sample of my skin to the Mayo Clinic. He got the report back: I had severe eczema. That tipped the scales. I was dealing with liars.  Then, I knew I had been scammed. I was told to come in for a facial once a month and pick up the product. I no longer wanted to be touched by anyone working there.  I waited a little over a month and went to pick up my $200 worth of product.

   One day, I was greeted by a young woman who told me she had just started working there and didn’t know how to help me. I came back another day. A man greeted me this time. He offered me one jar of night cream and told me that those products were supposed to last three months, etc. I refused the product and told him I wanted my money back. I videoed myself demanding he acknowledge I had accepted no product on that visit. 

   Damon and Cylin knew the story. They were both outraged. Damon’s mom had been hit by several scams, and so had Cylin’s parents. In Cylin’s case, her parents had engaged a local company to install a walk-in tub for a mere $9,000. They gave him the money upfront. The provider called time after time with explanations for delays. They finally demanded their money back. The owner made excuses and begged for time. He finally declared he didn’t have the money and agreed to pay them back piecemeal. They got a check for $500 one month, a thousand next, and nothing.  They finally hired a lawyer.  

   The lawyer recognized the provider. He had a reputation for selling walk-in tubs to elderly people, delaying delivery, betting on their dying, or being too senile to recall.  The lawyer offered to take their case for free.  They got some more money back but are still waiting.

   Damon, Cylin, and I entered the store. A young woman greeted us, saying she had just started there. When we asked to speak to someone in charge, she said no one was there. Two young people said the same thing the first time I came back. I said something about frequent turnover; she denied that. Because I had shown Damon and Cylin the video of my confrontation with the guy, Cylin recognized him sitting in a corner and pointed him out to Damon.  Cylin and I are both excitable. Damon threw me out first, and then Cylin. While we were standing on the pavement, the young woman we first spoke to came out. Cylin said, “You should be ashamed of yourself working for a place like that.” The young woman was also excitable. She said, “I am a mother!” Cylin replied, “I am too.” It was a tie. Afterward, I thought of an excellent response to her declaration that she was a mother. “Thanks for telling me. I will call Child Protective Services immediately.” She was obviously involved in criminal activity.

   Cylin and I moved away from the shop while Damon dealt with the man who was the owner, Lucas. When Damon joined us, he insisted this was a reputable shop. Damon reported that Lucas said we could refuse payment with the credit card company, and he wouldn’t contest it. He had lied about everything else; this was probably a lie. Cylin kept telling Damon in an agitated tone that this was a scam. She looked up a scam site. Sure enough, there were two complaints against the company. One woman’s mother-in-law had spent $21,000 with the company. 

   We left Kona Inn Shopping Village, intending to go to Kua Bay. Damon wanted to stop at Kona Mountain Coffee Shop. We met there. Cylin and I went to the public bathroom to change into our bathing suits. As I drove into the right-hand approach lane, I thought about checking for my phone. I couldn’t find it and panicked. I backed up my car so it faced the intersection and placed my car at an angle, indicating I wanted to go through the intersection the moment the light changed. It’s Hawaii; no one honked. Not until I missed the light change and the first car honked to tell me to move on. Oh, boy.  I went across the intersection, made a legal U-turn, drove around a circle before the entrance of a gated community, drove back across the four-lane highway into the parking lot, and raced to the bathroom where I suspected I had left my phone.  

   My phone actually rang at one point when I was making all those maneuvers. I was sane enough to wonder how it could if it wasn’t in my car, but not rational enough to stop and look again. Well, that’s not entirely true. I looked again while waiting for the light to change while in my angled position. I couldn’t find it.  Needless to say, it wasn’t in the bathroom. As I walked back to my car, it rang again.  I had stuck it in the bra top of my two-piece bathing suit.  Now, all I had to worry about was the police finding out about my very illegal maneuver and all the repercussions from that.  I called Damon and Cylin and told them I had had enough excitement for one day. I was heading home.  

   When they came over for dinner later that night, they told us their tech-savvy son, August, had checked out the company. Lucas set up one scam after another. Their Juniper light gadget had been refused FDA approval. Damon checked the item. It’s made of cheap plastic with a faux metallic finish. Damon declared, “It’s worth $28.”

 Yvette joined us, bringing Masha up with her. This was the first time Masha had been in my home. Her arrival was a complete surprise, and I was somewhat shocked. I chose not to say anything. Elsa had had contact with Masha, and everything had gone well in the middle of the dinner. Elsa attacked Masha.  Yvette sprung up, separated them, and took Masha downstairs. The concern wasn’t for Masha. Elsa is a 10-year-old 13 lbs. dog who recently had 10 teeth extracted; Masha is a 40 lb. 2-year-old dog with a pit-bull mouth. We have no idea what prompted Elsa’s attack.   Masha had been peering under a sofa. Was one of Elsa’s favorite balls there?  Who knows. We sure didn’t.

 

Monday, July 29, 2024

 Monday, July 29, 2024  

   Every Monday morning at 8 a.m., I do Chi Qigong on a bluff overlooking the tide pools at the shoreline at Old A, the site of the original Kona airport. It was probably suitable for prop planes. We now have a full-on international airport a little further to the north.  Where the area must have been hectic when it was an airport, it is now lovely and peaceful.  

   Again, only Clyde and I were there for the session. I arrived with a disturbed mind; I managed to quiet it. I have been getting better at doing this. What a relief! Afterward, I went home to do some housekeeping in anticipation of Damon’s visit.

   Damon, Cylin, and August were scheduled to arrive today at 2 p.m. They were supposed to come last week, but Cylin got Covid. I learned August wasn’t coming this morning because he was sick with something, probably not Covid. 

  I met with a new client, a young boy, and both his parents. I will not discuss this in my updates because there are people who read it who will recognize who I am talking about. It was an interesting encounter. I discovered the father’s mind works much as mine does. He is also analytical. He looks for the core principle underlying something, just as I do. It was exciting to have such an encounter. He also knows about neuroscience. Amazing. I have yet to find out why he’s interested.

   Damon called when he arrived at his AirBnB, and I drove there. Damon doesn’t do well in other people’s space or having people stay in his space. When Mike and I visited LA, we could only stay at Damon’s house for three nights. If we wanted to stay longer, we had to find other accommodations.

   His Airbnb had a pool and a sauna. Damon can’t live without a pool. He has a hot tub at home and spends many hours in it. He often calls me while soaking.  

  When I met up with Damon and Cylin, it was their dinner time by the LA clock. We went to Huggo’s, arriving at four. We stopped at Huggo’s on the Rocks, and Cylin got a drink. Then we wandered over to the restaurant, which had just opened. We could only order pupus (appetizers) until 5 o’clock.  I ordered their poke tower, which I love, and a lemonade. I ordered a salad, too. It was skimpy.  Damon ordered garlic bread, which was sensational.  

  At five, Cylin ordered a pasta dish, which Damon shared, and I had a bite of it.  I hoped to order some dessert but was too stuffed to finish all the poke. At the end of the meal, 

      Damon declared I was not to touch the bill and then walked away. I followed, realized I had forgotten my scarf, and returned to get it. I ran into the waiter, who asked if Damon would be returning to the table. I assured him Damon was not a runner. The waiter brought the bill to the front desk just as Cylin emerged from the bathroom. Damon was a few seconds later. 

   Damon wanted to go to Safeway to pick up food items for the morning. I persuaded them to go to Old A to see the view of my Chi Qigong site, which I so loved. They found it as remarkable as I did.

   We ran into a couple there who were locals. They lived up Kaloko, the same street Damon’s Airbnb was on. Damon’s house was at about 1200 feet; their house was at 4,000. They said their home was the second from the top. That’s the top of the road, not the mountain. The mountain is a total of 8,300 feet.  It’s wet and cold at 4,000 feet, but they love it. Damon’s Air BnB was damp and chilly but not plagued with mildew as the houses at the higher levels.

  Our next stop was Safeway. I waited in the car, meditating and dozing. Their excursion took about half an hour. Damon called me from the checkout to ask if I had a Safeway card. Yes, what’s the telephone number? I was pretty sure it was the landline number we had when we first moved here. I thought I could find it under Mike’s name in my address book, but it wasn’t there. Damon checked it in his address book. Bingo! He said he saved $25.

  We drove back to the Airbnb, where my car was parked. I drove myself home. I opened the chocolate-covered almonds Cylin gave me. I had put them on the front seat of my car when we left for town earlier. The chocolate had melted. I still dug in, getting chocolate all over my hands. I felt like a kid. They were delicious, better than the Costco brand I buy. I never watched TV. I went to bed and slept well.

 


Sunday, July 28, 2024

 Sunday, July 28, 2024

   I couldn’t sleep. I was disturbed by a neighbor’s dilemma with her husband. He sounds capable of destroying her for crossing him. I was afraid she could knock at my door in the middle of the night, seeking shelter.  I didn’t want to get in the middle of that situation. The husband scared me, too. I got up and looked for information on a local women’s shelter. The nearest one was in Hilo. When I spoke to my other friend about it, she said there was no way the woman would walk away without her daughter in hand. Horribly, I am only relieved I won’t have to be involved. I have no idea what else I can do.  

   The skin on  Elsa’s belly looked worse. Nothing was working. Her skin was worse than before I changed her food, and her skin problem completely cleared. When I changed her food, her skin cleared up. I date the return to the bad breakouts after her dental surgery. She was under anesthesia and had ten teeth pulled. It’s been a while now. The chemicals should be out of her system.

   After Mass today, I spoke with Joseph, a young man Judy knows well, who is looking for a room to rent.  Judy was involved with his conversion to Catholicism and thought the world of him.  I liked him too. He’s twenty-eight years old and currently living with his parents. He has to move because they want to move to the mainland. He was born and raised here.  His parents were both cradle Catholics who abandoned the faith.  Joseph put himself through college, earning a bachelor’s in philosophy. That makes us somewhat compatible, but not necessarily. Mike had his PhD in philosophy, but our approach to learning was very different. He found me very frustrating. 

  I was direct with Joseph about my personality. I’m straightforward; I prefer people I can negotiate with rather than overpowering or being overpowered. Judy said that makes me very unusual. Concession is always part of any relationship, but how do you know when it’s necessary if you don’t discuss it. Some people argue ‘you just know.”  Research has been done on that theory. The results show that we don’t know our intimates as well as we think. Since we assume we do know and don’t explore, we may be even more inaccurate in guessing their thoughts than we are in the thoughts of others.

   I had a session with going-into-fourth-grade M today. She was very subdued. She looked downright depressed.  I asked her what was wrong. When she gets in this state, she doesn’t function well. She can’t remember anything that was said. She usually remembers where we are in the book Stuart Little better than I do, but she remembered nothing today. I heard her mother ask, “Is the dress uncomfortable?”  She was readjusting it a lot. I have seen her in this mental state before, but this is the first time I got the impression that this is how she responds whenever things don’t go her way. I called her mother after the session. She left a busy message and never called back.  

  I thought I would be finished with  M. She read fluently and comprehended well. However, with the insight I gathered today, I changed my mind. This mood problem of hers has to be addressed, or she won’t succeed in her new school.

    I stopped at Target after church to pick up a few things. I looked in the cutlery section for a sharpening tool. When I asked the employee at Home Depot how I could sharpen a scythe, he said that’s what he used, and I could get one at Walmart. I realized it was probably the same tool I had in my knife set to sharpen the knives.

     When I spoke to Adolescent D’s mother. She asked if he could improve his reading by practicing the discipline I taught him. I told her yes. My skills continue to improve as I work with the students. Anyone’s reading skills can improve. The problem is he won’t do it on his own.  He will do nothing that requires conscious cognitive skill on his own. It either happens or it doesn’t. 

  However, he does read well enough to manage most life circumstances. He just doesn’t read well enough to go to college. I am concerned that he won’t want to hang on for the next two years in school to secure a high school diploma. That could be important if he wants to advance beyond entry-level positions.

    He has a second problem: he doesn’t have a driver’s license. He needs to be independent. Given his poor study skills and memory, this is a concern. However, I learned that the twenty-six-year-old woman who can’t read well passed the test. It was read to her, and she got enough correct answers to pass. Mike, with his straight As in two Ph.Ds., failed his test. Go figure.

       D got a summer job at Costco and loves it. This would be a possible avenue for him to earn a living. She wants him to do something creative based on one video he made and his sense of humor.  To be in a creative field, you have to be highly self-motivated. D is not that. She wants to discourage him from working at Costco, fearing he won’t explore creative possibilities.  I think if she pushes him in that direction, she is condemning him to a life of pure misery.  If he has a creative urge, he can work at Costco and develop his art during his off hours. If he’s good enough, it will happen. I know about seven people who have their foot in the arts.

      Only two of them earn a good living wage. One survives on grants. It’s hard work.  One wants to be the new great American novelist. He earns his living by working entry-level jobs. He finds it hard to send out what he does write to publishers. You need a cast iron ego to be in the arts. The rest don’t think of themselves as professional artists. It’s a hobby. One has written two books, both I have enjoyed. Both books are self-published on Amazon; one ranks in the 2,000,000 and the other at 6,000,000; another wrote a wonderful book. I don’t know what she’s done to make it available to a broader audience.  D doesn’t do any work on his own. How does she think he will survive in a job involving creativity? The woman drives me nuts.  She’s a blithering romantic.

 


Saturday, July 27, 2024

 Saturday, July 27, 2024

   I got up to go to the bathroom at 1:30.  I calculated I had three and a half hours of sleep, basically a good nap. I thought I would be up for the rest of the night. I remember reaching for Elsa and finding a foot to hold on to, being half awake at some point. When I finally opened my eyes, it was full light.  I skipped my morning yoga and went for my walk immediately before the sun came over the mountain top and made walking in the sun unpleasant.  While I wasn’t tired, walking was a challenge. I was forcing myself. It has felt that way since I started the punching routine in the morning. Doing it feels like a great release, making my body feel different. I assumed I’d have to get used to the new me. The peacefulness I feel with the release is worth it. I can’t believe the difference in my disposition. 

    Of course, there is another element. I was reading a book that was impacting me, Trying Not to Try by Edward Slingerland. He synthesizes neuroscience and different perspectives of Eastern philosophy and meditation practice to achieve a peaceful life.  My mind has to process this information.  I must sort out my thinking to incorporate what I’ve learned. Making all those new connections takes energy. My brain has to reorganize itself. It’s not something I am doing consciously; I’m just aware it’s happening. I can observe the activity.

  I took a nap after breakfast. Afterward, I went out into the front yard, chain-sawed the sheaths off one of the remaining fronds, stuffed them all into the trash barrel along with the branches from the Crepe Myrtle, and wheeled them down to Darby’s.  She was in the yard when I arrived. She ran to the backyard and said something I didn’t understand because I was listening to Trying Not to Try on Audible. I realized she was rushing to the freezer to get me the promised ulu waffles Patrick had made.

  Another one of my walking buddies revealed marital problems. In both cases, the husband is very controlling and punishing. In the first case, the woman is leaving her husband and taking the kids. They’ve been in therapy for 10 years, and nothing has changed. In this case, a fomenting problem has come to a head. 

    In the other case, the woman has given in to her husband on all counts for years. When she hasn’t, he has threatened divorce. She sought out a marriage counselor. He went to see her once that we know of. We believe he went to make it plain his wife was crazy.  Sadly, I think he believes it. We, there’s another friend in the loop, haven’t heard from our friend in several days. We believe he has threatened to take her 8-year-old daughter from her and cut her off without anything. There’s not much we can do about it.

  I did another Costco run.  Still no vinegar. One Costco employee said they only get two product flats with each shipment. They don’t know what is going on. I only had two items and did the self-service checkout. As I headed for the door,  I walked past the full-service checkout counters and looked for Adolescent D.  I think I saw him. I didn’t see his face; I recognized the haircut, a tall young man with chin-length hair repacking a cart and talking happily to the customer.  It had to be him.  I didn’t see his face. I doubt I would have recognized it. I’ve only seen it twice on Zoom in the last three years.

   I wouldn’t have introduced myself. I think D would be surprised by how short I am, as I am surprised by how tall he is. When I started with him, he was on the cusp of fourteen. He is now seventeen. I have only seen his face twice so far. The first time, he was backlit, and the second time, just after he got his haircut.  

 I had no students today; everyone canceled.

Friday, July 26,2024

 Friday, July 26,2024

 While awake before 4, I got up at 6. I must have fallen asleep for some of that time, but I remember being up. In this case, ruminating on someone else's intractable problem. I do like intractable problems.

   Since none of the Ulu Wini kids have been interested in working with me, I have been home more. I've enjoyed being alone and having less to do.  I anticipated losing at least two of the kids I've been working with online. I've taken Adolescent D as far as he has to go. He can read at grade level, haltingly, but he can do it well enough to figure out what it says. His mom asked if he could proceed on his own.  He certainly could if he would continue the practice we do each day. However, he won't. He won't do anything that requires effort. It has to be easy, something that he can do without effort. Maybe the correct description must come from his automatic unconscious mind. He doesn't like to engage his conscious verbal mind. He loves his job at Costco. All he has to do is pack the carts at the checkout counter and occasionally go get the carts from the parking lot. He enjoys working with other employees and interacting with customers.

 Yesterday, I introduced Jean, my friend, to the punching exercise. I've been doing it in conjunction with the laughter exercise, but  I don't know if doing the punching alone will work as well. Jean, who has severe breathing problems, reports her pulse-ox reading at 98 when it's often below 90. The difference is phenomenal. When moving my arms, I discovered that I stimulate the muscles and circulation in my upper body. Walking and running do not have the same impact.

 I packed two 5-gallon buckets of Plumbago green waste yesterday and one more today. Then I wheeled them to Darby's with a large stem from a Bismarck frond.  I emptied the trash barrel of the three buckets and the stem and took the trash bin back home with me, intending to fill it immediately and return it. I didn't have the energy. I still had to chainsaw the sheaths off one of the Bismarck fronds to fit it into the trash barrel. I will have room for the remaining fronds, the crepe myrtle's branches, and the mock orange's dead branches. I hope to get that done first thing Saturday morning.

    Elsa and I went up to Paulette's. I went to get Kangen water and visit with Paulette; Elsa went to chase a stuffed mouse Paulette had for her cat.   Paulette and Carol were in the carport when I arrived, starting on a new 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle. I love sitting with them and working on the puzzle. I enjoy the company and the fantastic breeze that blows through their carport, which is open on three sides.

  This puzzle has letters printed on the back of the pieces to help you locate them in the puzzle. I put together the D-edge pieces. I like the way this puzzle works. The pieces are divided into subsets, so I don't have to deal with each piece individually. Since I visited last, Paulette and Carol have completed several 1,000-piece puzzles. 

   I bathed Elsa when I got home. Her back did look a lot better. However, her belly had a nasty lesion. 

    I started listening to Slingerland's book, Trying Not to Try, on Audible. Boy, this book sums up much of my thinking about how the mind works. He combines his knowledge of Chinese spiritual practices, neuroscience, and evolutionary psychology. The book is about that state of mind that we in the West mostly know as 'flow.'  It is particularly interesting for me because I guide students on which part of their brains to use when learning and which part to use when recalling automatically.

   I needed a lot of sleep during the day. Of course, I hadn't slept very well the night before. Hopefully, I'm in for a good night's sleep tonight.

 


Thursday, July 25, 2024

Thursday, July 25, 2024

 I was in a bad mood this morning. Stinking thinking came in. I got up at 4:30 and meditated. Then, I did my morning yoga. I did the punching exercise again. Again, I got an enormous release. This time, it was more around the level of the diaphragm. When it was released, it made me feel weak and tired. I wasn't sure of the significance. Was the impact good or bad? It could be that I released tension that I used to support myself as a substitute for healthy body strength.  I hoped that was what it was. I could build up midriff body strength that didn't come from gripping. 

 I incorporated a new lower-body exercise today, too. I saw a video on how to strengthen your body so you could get up off the floor without holding on to something.  I only did the first exercise in the series, the windshield wipers.  I sat on the floor with my knees somewhat bent. I put my knees down to the floor to one side and then the other, hence windshield wipers.  I couldn't do the exercise well. My range of motion was limited, but it was a start.

 I called Provision Solar. After introducing myself, I explained I planned to be a squeaky wheel to ensure the project progressed. When I called last week to check if there was anything else I needed to do, there was a piece they needed to do that still needed to be done. Within hours, I got a document to sign. I concluded squeaking might be good. I didn't tell them I could be a shrieking menace, not that that would do me much good.  The project manager told me their engineers were finishing their work and would submit it to the electric company for approval. It should be in by next week.

 I worked with Twin E. Her reading was better on all counts. Her word recognition was quick and accurate, and she imagined something she had never seen. The reading was about sharks' teeth. Sharks lose their teeth quickly but have as many as fifteen rows of teeth as backups. When they lose a set, the next set moves into place. She understood the concept of rows of teeth and that the next one moved up.

 I picked up the empty garbage bin with three empty 5-gallon Home Depot buckets from Darby. I started loading one with the cuttings from the Plumbago.

 Yvette came up for dinner.  We're falling into a once-a-week pattern. We hadn't planned anything for this week because Damon was supposed to arrive last Tuesday. That was canceled because Cylin, his wife, came down with Covid. They rescheduled for Monday. Let's hope nothing goes wrong. I contacted Yvette to see if she was available on Thursday night. She texted she had the same thought. We eat frozen meals. She brings hers up and cooks it in my microwave.

 The Joy Luck Club arrived today. Judy recommended it highly. I looked forward to reading a novel. I usually read nonfiction, mostly about neuroscience.

 


Wednesday, July 24, 2024

 Wednesday, July 24, 2024

   OMG!  Elsa's skin looks worse. I didn't know what I was going to do to fix it. Her skin was flawless after I put her on the Royal Canin Ultamino. Then she had a dental procedure where ten teeth were removed, and I ordered the wrong food; her skin was worse than ever.  Today, I remembered I had also been giving her a pill pocket coated in MakesNoClaims (Intrasound) powder.  I stopped everything I had been doing while she recovered from the dental treatment. I had to grind her food into a powder for two weeks. For two weeks, she didn't get an extra pill pocket treat. I got out of the habit. Could it be the MNCs that fixed her skin problem? I started giving her the MNCs coated treat twice a day today. Hopefully, that will solve all problems. If it does, I don't have to get rid of the other food.

   I bathed Elsa today. I have yet to stick to the every-other-day schedule as I was supposed to, but it is several times a week.  I only have to leave the soap on for ten minutes, but it feels like an eternity. If I watch Call the  Midwife, the time flies by faster.

   I've been incorporating laughter yoga into my morning yoga routine. I hold a contraction until I run out of breath while laughing. The founder of laughter yoga has people move their arms while they laugh. He knows the health benefits of moving our arms at and above our hearts. Many orchestra conductors live long lives. This is attributed to their extensive arm movements when conducting, which stimulate the blood flow around the heart.  

    I incorporated a new movement into my morning yoga. While I have been moving my arms more freely, particularly at the height of my heart, today, I started punching while doing my hand exercises in conjunction with my laughter.  I couldn't believe the release I got in my upper chest and back.  The pressure I had been feeling that I associated with sadness lifted. The difference was spectacular.

  I worked with Twin E this morning. Twin A is often asleep when I get on Zoom. I'm not as concerned about her as I am about Twin E.  E continues to have memory and comprehension problems that A has resolved. Twin E is the one who fell out of a second-story window when she had just learned to crawl.  I heard that if a child under two falls from a great height, they'll bounce- as long as they don't land on their head. I don't think anyone saw her fall.

   Today, I discovered Twin E had problems imagining things she hadn't experienced. Oh, boy. We have to engage our imaginations to be good at comprehension.  Today's passage was about people getting fresh milk from a cow driven through the streets and milked at a person's front door.  She couldn't imagine a cow being milked in her driveway. I led her through a series of exercises.  She could imagine a pig or goat running up her street or into her driveway. We have wild pigs and goats who do precisely that. She didn't have to imagine it. I had her substitute a cow for one of them. Then she could picture it.

   After Casey cut them down, five large Bismarck fronds lay in my front yard. I took after them with the chainsaw, stuffed them into the garbage bin, and rolled them down to Darby's. She considered all green gold. She distributes it around her yard to build up the soil. I'm waiting for the day she says, "Enough!"

   I had an appointment with going into-fourth-grade L.  We encountered a c followed by an i.  He didn't remember the rule.  I recited it again, and I tested him on it. Not a clue. I asked him if he had trouble recalling what people, particularly teachers, said. Yes. I went about figuring out where the breakdown came in.  I had him repeat the rule after me, "C followed by an e, i, or y makes an /s/ sound." He repeated it perfectly.  He could recall the exact words after a bit. He had no auditory processing problem, and his working memory was fine.  Was it long-term memory?  Then, I asked if the rule made sense. No. Ah, this is the same problem he had with the reading. He wants everything to be logically consistent.  Good luck if you're dealing with English. If it were logical, the word city would be spelled sity, and you wouldn't have to remember some silly rule on pronouncing the letter c.

  I told him I had a similar problem when I was in school. I was a slow learner because I had to understand everything at a deep level.  In my freshman year of college, I took a required math course. I learned more about math that semester than I had in my twelve previous years of school. The teacher introduced the concept of infinity. We had a test shortly after that. I called my uncle in hysterics. "I'm going to fail my math test. I can't feel infinity."  I couldn't learn what I couldn't understand at a physical level.

  As I sat around a table with friends in grad school, they discussed something. I said, "I understand it here (pointing to my head), but I don't understand it here (pointing to my solar plexus)."  One friend said, "Finally."  I had no idea I was doing something differently from everyone else.  I thought something was wrong with me. For the longest time, I thought I was a mentally retarded overachiever. 

   I didn't tell L all the details of my learning experience, just enough to assure him his insistence on 'understanding' everything he learned didn't make him 'stupid.'

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

 Tuesday, July 23, 2024

  I trimmed the mock orange shrub, which stands over 10' high at the driveway's edge.  No, I didn't trim the top.  I cut dead branches at my height. Besides stimulating growth at the level, it allows me access to the weeds growing at the base of the shrub, particularly the haole koas. I used my 6-inch chain saw. It did great, and then it started balking. When I plugged in the battery, it was fully charged. I don't know why it was acting that way.

   Casey finally came by today to trim the dead fronds off the palm trees and trim the overgrown hedges.  He brought a chain saw on an extension pole to get the dead growth on the Bismarck palm. The rest can be taken down with a manual saw blade on an extension rod.  These fronds are huge.  Their full length is on the order of 8 feet, and their width is a good 5 feet. I need a chain saw to cut through the stems and cut off the sheathes.  I started with my six-inch chain saw. It worked better than it had earlier. Then, the blade wouldn't run anymore. I saw the teeth had jumped the track. Perhaps that's what happened yesterday. I couldn't get it back on.  I texted B before I went to bed. I asked him if he could fix it for me. I got a yes before the lights were out that night.

   I met with the Twins. E reported that the part of her memory with the correct answer had moved from an outer ring to the second from the center, where the one with the wrong answer had already been. The other day, she explained the difference: one recalled the word correctly and remembered the words incorrectly. Today, she described them differently. The difference was one recalled them automatically and often incorrectly, and the other decoded the words. Back to the drawing board.  I'm not too concerned.

    Each time we discuss how her mind works, E learns something new. She has to analyze it and categorize its functions. Then, we have to discuss solutions to improve its function. I am teaching her how to think. I don't consider a minute of such a discussion a waste, even if we never fix her memory problem.  Assuming our whole world doesn't go to hell in a handbag shortly, someone will solve the problem she's having.    A pill, electrical stimulation, or a teaching technique will be developed to deal with issues like hers.  The other option is we will all be living in a nation-state resembling North Korea, and all her reading problems will be trivial.

    As we decode the words on the page in our session, she has to tell me where to put the slashes, indicating syllable division, and where the dashes, indicating phonemes.  So, in the word where, she has to say, "Put a dash between h and e."   She said, "Put a dash between e and h."  She couldn't understand why saying it the second way wasn't as good as the first since it was also true.  Of course, she was right. To determine the syllable division, either is correct. However, students need to maintain the left to right movement in reading.  They can start in the middle of a word but must always have a left-to-right orientation. For example, in the word grand, you have to start with the an and then the larger unit of and before adding on the gr.  Gr can only be added as a unit if it is clear that g and r represent two sounds, not one, as some teachers teach.  I'm unsure why this process works, but I know every discipline uses it. 'If you want to improve, go back to the basics.' The basics of reading is the relationship of the phoneme to the letter(s) that represent it. Refreshing that concept helps everyone at every level improve. How do I know? When I prepared a tape recording for my students in 1995, it immediately improved my reading skills. I was stunned.

    Twin A was up and available this morning.  I have her working on the same decoding process I use with Adolescent D, but at a lower level.  She tends to ignore the letters in the word. The school said she needs more phonics training. That is not her big problem. She can usually decode a word. Her problem is she would prefer to guess using one or two letters in a word instead of all the letters.

This method of decoding every word in a text is the process I use when I work with total nonreaders, like Adolescent D when he was fourteen and reading at a first-grade level. It is time to introduce it again but at a higher, vastly more complex level. Instead of decoding Gail Carpenter's 'Sassy the Cat', we are decoding sixth-grade material with multi-syllable words. He has to remember the rules.  His improvement sometimes makes my toes curl. He, on the other hand, while he sees the improvement, is unimpressed.

   The rest of the day was devoted to cleaning the house. I  continued watching Call the Midwife. 

 


Monday, July 22, 2024

 Monday, July 22, 2024

   I made it to Chi Qigong this morning.  Two new people joined us, one from the Unity of Kona and a visiting friend. I found both to be uncomfortably affected. Their behavior reflected their discomfort with themselves and made me uncomfortable. 

   I did nothing in the garden today. I focused on cleaning the house in anticipation of Damon’s visit.  No, he’s not coming alone. But he’s the only one who will give the house the white glove treatment.  I must confess, I’m not doing it for him; I’m just using him to motivate me to clean my house.  As Mike used to say, “Where’s a guest when you really need one?”  

   I cleaned corners I hadn’t known existed before.  I used my new toy, a dust buster, to clean the groove created by the upholstery trim. Who knew dust could accumulate there?  I think the answer to that is any decent housekeeper, which I am not, and neither was Mike.

 


 

 

Sunday, July 21, 2024

 Sunday, July 21, 2024

    The family planning to hire me wasn't in church again today.  They said they would be gone for three weeks. I thought they would be back by today. Hope they are all okay.

   Beth, who serves as a greeter and collects the donations, asked me if I knew what was happening with Claire. Claire is an elderly woman who was dropped off at church every Sunday by a driver from the Regency Retirement Home. When Claire does come to church, she is usually late, arriving just before communion. The driver places her wheelchair on the lanai as close to the front of the church as he can. Claire usually falls asleep.  I knew another resident of the Regency came to the 9 am mass.  I told Beth I would ask her about Claire.

   Patsy said she wasn't attending church because the Regency felt she needed constant monitoring.  Her mind was failing her.  I told Patsy I'd try to arrange for someone at the church to monitor her. I asked TJ. She said no way. The church couldn't risk the liability. If the doctors at the Regency thought she couldn't go out, that was it. 

   As I said, Claire always came to church well into the mass. I blamed the driver for not getting her there in time. Then I saw that he dropped off Patsy in plenty of time for the start of the mass. I asked Patsy what was going on. Rather than being negligent of Claire's needs, Robert, the driver, made an extra effort for her. While Patsy was ready to leave in time for the 9 am mass, Claire was not.  Robert returned to get her, making an extra trip.

   A gorgeous Bismarck palm adorns my front yard. The fronds are huge and silver-blue. Dean told me the tree came from Madagascar and was named the Bismarck because of its stately nature.  It produces these golf-sized, inedible nuts. The gardener asked if I wanted the 'chandeliers' cut down. I thought they were decorative. They were as long as they were on the tree. But they're designed to fall to the ground, break down, and germinate new trees. My yard is a mess with these decomposing brown nuts. There must be a thousand, at least. I decided to get rid of them. I pick them up one at a time and collect them in plastic bags. When I have three or four filled to a weight I can still deal with, I take them to the transfer station and dump them in the garbage instead of the green waste. I empty the bags down the shoot. The nuts roll down the ramp into the container. I save the bags for the next load.

   Adolescent D set our time at noon for today. He didn't respond when I signaled that I'd sent the link. It was one o'clock before he was ready to get online. I don't mind the delay; I'm working from home, and he's a seventeen-year-old boy. Sleeping in is what they do. We must work out a better communication system, so I'm not sitting at the computer waiting.

   Today, I learned that M, who is going into fourth grade, will be attending a private school this fall. Moreover, this private school is on Oahu, while her family home is on the Big Island. Dad's job is here, on the Big Island. He won't be moving to Oahu. I called her dad after the session. Her mom got a job with the state on Oahu. She and the girls would be living with the dad's mother. Both the girls, M and her older sister W, who must be going into ninth grade now, will be attending the new school. 

    W was a student of mine. Along with M. W., she went to Hawaii Preparatory Academy. She did spectacularly well.   I wonder how she's feeling about leaving that school where she was a star and starting in a new one. 

   M is doing well. There are still some weird glitches in her thinking. When I spoke to her dad, he said she has been steadily gaining confidence and reasoning better. I teach thinking skills. They were taught to me, so I know they can be taught. Her dad apologized for not telling me sooner. He said she would continue working with me during the transition and then as needed. 

  Several of my students are doing much better, and the parents no longer feel they need my tutoring. I can't argue with that. Besides M, Adolescent D's reading is much improved. The question is, what are his plans for the future. He will need continued assistance if he wants any education after high school. If that's not the case, his reading is good enough to serve him for the rest of his life. His mom asked if he could continue to improve on his own.  I said yes, but he has to do the work. He won't. 

  Working at Costco is a wonderful choice for D.  He is so happy there. I have never heard that contentment in his voice about any other activity or relationship. His mom wants something more creative for him. Life as a creative person, actor, painter, musician, or videographer takes self-motivation. I would give D a 1 in that department at a rate of one to ten. When it comes to going along with the program, I'd give him an eight out of 9. While he never deliberately worked on the skills I gave him, he allowed me to lead him through them whenever we met. Something sunk in through the repetition. But it would have gone so much faster had he done something on his own. This boy will do well in a structured environment where he is told what to do, and it requires minimal initiative.  

Friday, August 2, 2024

  Friday, August 2, 2024      I saw Dean as he turned onto Holoholo. Rather than make a left on Kukuna, I turned around and walked back the ...