Friday, March 6, 2026

Friday, August 26, 2022

 Friday, August 26, 2022  

 

  I tried the stretch the acupuncturist gave me for my pirus formis. I couldn’t make it work. It required getting my leg into an undoable position. Instead of resting my left calf on my right thigh while lying on my back, I wrapped the left leg around the right leg, the eagle pose. I felt like I got a good stretch in my glutes doing this as I lay in bed before getting up. I also pulled my inner thigh muscle. Did I do more damage to myself? Fortunately, that problem cleared up later in the day. As I lay in bed, I applied the acupuncture pen to my calf and ankle. I felt the impact on my glute. They seem to be connected.

  I thought about Mike a lot today and was filled with joyful love, laughter, and affection. I think about him more as his memory becomes thinner with distance.

     I had a session with 2nd grade homeschooled L. I started on the first Carpenter story at the end of the last session. She knew some of the words in the story, cat and the. The first word in the story is there. I could get her to see the was in, the word with two more letters. One look at the word, and she leaped out of her seat and walked away, saying, “It’s such a long word.” Today, I started the session by telling her that if she did what I asked her to do and one other thing if she couldn’t remember what the word was, it was my fault, not hers. It was my job to figure out how to help her. If she couldn’t do it, it was on me. It calmed her down immediately. The second thing she had to do was not easy: control her fear. I couldn’t do that for her.

      I had her identify the letters as part of working with the word there. She didn’t know the name for t and called the letter e. She was so overwhelmed that she tried to get me to drop the activity and work on singing the alphabet song. She said she didn’t think she could remember it because it had been a while since she had sung it. I had been seeing many children with memory problems. I have never seen this before. Was it coincidental that they were showing up at my door, or was there a more significant problem out there?

   I led L through a BrainManagementSkills exercise. When I asked her if she could see the word there in her mind, she said no. I had her remember her blanket. She ‘saw’ the image in the correct spot, in the front of her forehead. I had her write the word there on her blanket in her imagination. She could do that. Then I made a sound and had her tell me where in her brain she held the memory of the sound. She pointed to her forehead again. Not good. That part is suitable for visual recall, not auditory. Then she pointed to her ear. With some effort, I could get her to use a part of her brain in the general vicinity of the auditory parts of the brain. I wasn’t confident it would hold, but it was a start. I showed her how to link the auditory and visual information, the sound of the word name T, with the visual image of the letter, press the save button (her nose), and send it down to long-term memory via the hippocampal formation. I didn’t think it had been effective for her. We’ll see.

  I got my steps in today when I wasn’t sleeping. I needed a lot of sleep because it was a grief day. At least I didn’t spend the day fighting off tears about the less satisfying relationships in my life. My grief was over missing Mike and all I shared with him.

    During my before-dinner walk, I saw a fantastic rainbow, the full arc. Clearly, there was a pot of gold at one end. I sent pictures to everyone.

    Yvette came up and ironed while I watched my evening show, Another Self. I was still enjoying it. I read that it is considered slow-moving. There are moments of silence. Wonderful, as far as I’m concerned. Action, action, action are not for me. I loved having Yvette up here doing her own thing, parallel play with a few cross-over comments. I hope she does all her ironing up here. She has tons to do. She irons the sheets she uses with her massage clients.

Thursday, August 25, 2022

 Thursday, August 25, 2022

 

 There was a downpour around 5:45 a.m. We were supposed to have driveway yoga this morning. I checked the weather app to see the forecast for the day. It announced the downpour would be over in 37 minutes. Thirty-seven minutes, exactly? It took longer than thirty-seven minutes. I texted Yvette to assure her the rain would end in time for the class in the driveway. She texted back the driveway wouldn't be dry enough in time for yoga at 7 a.m. She canceled.

  My right foot hurt severely for the last two days. On the advice of a chiropractor, I taped my wandering second toe on my right foot so it was straight instead of reclining on the first toe. I put the tape on before I went to bed. Then I didn't take it off when I got up. My foot hurt more with the tape. I could feel a neuroma developing. Ow! Been there; done that! That makes walking impossible. I spent most of the day icing the foot and rolling the sole over a golf ball. When I stepped on the outer edge of the foot, it didn't hurt.

   I had nothing scheduled for the day. I thought I would get lots done, but it was a deep grief day. I miss the casual contact living with someone who provides a passing smile and a comment about a plan, a memory, an idea, or a desire. I have contact with people by appointment; they plan to see me or speak to me. With some, that works. While it's not perfect, it's full of enthusiasm and interest. Having someone relate to me as if I'm a somewhat unpleasant obligation sucks. I have that, too. Those less-than-wonderful relationships were tolerable when Mike was alive. Now that I'm alone, they're unbearable.

   I still have a lot of casual contact on my walks. I run into people, and we share information about ourselves, our plans, our thoughts, and sometimes our problems. I can enjoy conversations with just about anyone. The only people I have trouble with are family members, including Mike. Mike needed a purpose for a conversation. The causal exchange of ideas didn't work for him. Somehow we muddled through. When there was a purpose to a conversation, making a decision, solving a difference, he was good, really good. Those were the more important characteristics for me. Some people love the way I relate; others hate it. What can I say? Facing the rejection of others without Mike to smile at me, hug me, and relish my company makes those other situations more painful.

 I was careless when doing Wordle today. I ignored one of the yellow letters in solving the problem. I only got it on the sixth try. My lousy state of mind made it more difficult. Then, I went on to solve an old Saturday puzzle. I got two of the clues without cheating. For the rest, I needed a lot of help.

 I did some weeding. I looked up the recipe for the vinegar weed killer. I learned this works well on annuals, not perennials or deeply rooted plants. I have several plants that look like shrubs but are vines. They spread by extending their roots. For those plants, I need boiling water.

     I ran into a couple with their dog on one of my walks. The woman approached and asked, "Where's Elsa?" I didn't recognize them. They didn't even look vaguely familiar. While my mind is still quite sharp, I have experiences like this that remind me of my aging brain. So far, I haven't freaked out. I accept it and do conscious work to embed information into my memory. Her name is Lisa. I was sure of that. His, I believe, was Richard. I have no idea of the dog's name.

  Scott was helping Yvette make her yoga videos. He was teaching himself how to splice them. Yvette was getting the best equipment. She had a green screen and professional lighting.

  Today, Scott asked me about picking up the cement pillows from the graveyard. He is a delight to have around. He took a few minutes to make casual conversation with me as he came and went. Other than that, he spends a lot of time in his bedroom. That's okay, too.

  The other day, I read about 'grey rocking' people on Quora. I looked it up. It's like stonewalling. Someone asks for a response, and you give them nothing. It is supposed to be a way to deal with toxic people. I have someone who uses this strategy with me. They have described me in terms appropriate for Ted Bundy. I can conclude they find me toxic. I can't argue that I'm not toxic for them. She has to maintain a stance to maintain herself. Whatever she's doing, it works for her. That's her first obligation in life. Her impact on me, however sad it makes me, is secondary.

  The book Chatter describes the process mostly negatively, at least so far. Most people are only aware of chatter when it is negative. Most people barely notice if it's positive, giving good counsel. Chatter does both. The neuroscientist, Jill Bolte Taylor, experienced a stroke. She loved it. All the negative voices in her head were silenced. She was in complete harmony with the world. She was in love with life. There was only one small problem: she couldn't function. This voice tells us how to pour our coffee, add a column of figures, drive our cars, etc. It's the voice of our trained mind churning out thoughts at 4,000 words a minute. We have to be up bright and early to catch up with it. Without it, we're toast.  

  Chatter directs our behavior according to its training, the training it received from our culture and us. We may have chosen to pick up that guitar and instilled that information, not our parents.

   The noise chatter makes depends on how we experience a situation. Chatter puts out a lot of useless negativity if we see a situation as a hopeless threat. If we see the situation as a challenge, chatter does something else; it works to help us solve the problem. In the latter case, all the relevant information already stored in our brains is a channel to help us overcome the challenge. If we feel threatened, our vascular system constricts. If we feel challenged, our vascular system expands. One is fear; the other is excitement and anticipation.

  Netflix offered me Another Self. It took me a while to figure out they were speaking Turkish. It is wonderful. It's a chick flick about the lives of three friends who all face challenges and get help from a mystical system with some basis in a standard family structure therapy that's normal and less mystical. The script is great; the acting is fantastic. The lead actress and the views of Turkey are beautiful and a pleasure to watch.

 

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

 Wednesday, August 24, 2022  

 

   Been thinking about Mike a lot. In him, I had someone who loved being in my company. What a gift! Thoughts of all I've lost came to mind. Those frequent gentle touches. His wonderful kisses and hugs, those little moments of assumed intimacy. It reminded me of something I observed at Costco one day. A couple was looking at men's shorts. The woman stood behind her husband and checked the label on his shorts. It was a small gesture that said worlds about their relationship and much about how they related to the rest of the world. Some people might have thought such a gesture inappropriate for public display. 

   Elsa's leg was in perfect shape this morning, and my legs were doing well. The insides of my thighs felt strained last night. I didn't complete my 9,200-step goal. I only made it to 8,553. On our morning walk, Elsa chose to go up the hill instead of down at the intersection. I followed. Coming down the hill was harder on my legs, but my biggest problem was my left ankle. It limits my movement. The X-ray showed I didn't have severe arthritis there. I should be able to get it in shape one day. This problem stems from a sprained ankle. Horatio, a PWD I disliked, charged me from behind and knocked me over.  

  I had three tutoring sessions scheduled. I contacted everyone for confirmation. My first was with second-grade-homeschooled L. Her mom responded. "Oh, I thought we were meeting on Friday this week." She had asked me to meet at ten on Fridays instead of noon. I often have someone else scheduled at that time. I put her in for Wednesday this week. We had some back and forth before we settled at 11 a.m. on Friday for this week.  

  I made myself some soup and sat down to do word puzzles. I got Wordle on the second try today. My first trial word, ready, produced three green letters,  _ e_ d y. I played around and got three possible words. I played eeny-meany-miny-mo and got the right one on the first shot.

   I had my second session with Adolescent D for the week. We only met twice a week for half an hour at a time. I told him all the good news his mother had given me. He was responsible for getting his work done for his online school. This alone was amazing. He had a history of just floating. I spoke to him about the importance of being at the wheel of his own life instead of being a passive bystander.

  I just recently spoke to him about this and the need for him to work independently if he was going to learn to read. He said he knew that. Wow! When did this happen? He said, "A while ago." "When," I asked. "When you were seven, ten??" He said, "When I was fifteen." He just turned fifteen. His mom said he has some weird distortions around time. Interesting. It's worthwhile looking at some point.

  His mother's understanding of what he was doing was accurate. He read along while Google text-to-speech and reread it for greater understanding. Again, Wow! Wow! Wow! I pointed out that six months ago, he would only have listened to the audio file; he would never look at the text. "Look at all the progress you've made!" He finally got it. He finally got that he was in much better shape than when we started. With the aid of Google Docs, he is in survival mode.

   I experienced him as more alert, more attentive, and more participatory. I asked him if he understood conversations more. He said, "Yes and no." I asked, "Why yes, and why no? The yes was he understood what people said more; the no was he didn't understand what he read more. Making that distinction is a significant difference in this boy. Holy cow!  

    He had been listening to the PDS 5 Stories audiofile most nights. His mom said when she told him to get off his phone and go to bed, he would turn on the file on his own without further input from her. He didn't wait until he was ready to get into bed. I remember telling him to link the act of turning it on with something he regularly did. There is no 'evidence-based' proof that this audio file works, but there is a fantastic amount of anecdotal evidence. Every person who does listen to it reports improvement in their ability to comprehend conversation, and some see improvement in their ability to communicate their thoughts. In at least one case, a seven-year-old boy went from unintelligible speech that even his siblings couldn't understand to clear speech that everyone could understand. I kept telling D to listen to it. While we can't be sure it is that which is producing these amazing results, we can be sure it will do no harm. 

  The recent improvement in D's reading performance relates to my reverting to drill procedures. I used the word list his other tutor compiled of sight words he still didn't know to show him how word families work. For instance, with the word that, I wrote every single syllable word that used that pattern: th-a-t, b-a-t, c-a-tch-a-tf-a-th-a-tm-a-tn-a-tp-a-tr-a-ts-a-t, th-a-t's, and v-a-t. When we did this exercise, D said, "This is easy." Yes, if you look for patterns, reading gets easy. I pointed out how this exercise illustrated the importance of identifying the vowel pattern before adding the initial sounds. With contempt in his voice, he said that he didn't do that when he did that exercise. He started with the beginning sounds. I pointed out that he didn't need to because the vowel sound and pattern were given.

    I wrote thb, cchfhmprst., and v and told him to tell me the word in the -at family. This finally got through to him. This is one stubborn boy.  

  Next, I taught the six syllable patterns: V, VC, VCe, VV, Vr, and the final stable syllables. It took forever before he could consistently remember V stood for the word vowel. He reached the point where he would name the vowel letters rapidly in the correct order but still couldn't remember the word 'vowel.' That is good enough for now. Then, I had him give me examples of the patterns. Then, I had him identify the syllable pattern in every syllable in a text. Some words were regular and conformed to the rules, and some were not. Of may be a VC word, but it's not phonetically regular. When a syllable didn't conform, I sounded it out using the rules for regular words. Then, we saw if he could figure out the actual word from context. It is an essential skill for all readers of English, even the most competent. He was reasonably good at using context clues to figure out words. 

   I didn't use phonics drill strategies with this boy when we started because his ego would have rebelled, and I would have lost him. I started with a philosophy book on Spinoza. Then, I went to 7th-grade material. Then, I went to 2nd-grade material. And only then did I begin phonics drills with him. This boy might have been spared eight years of delayed reading if he had been in a strict Orton Gillingham program at age seven. Whatever, he was a non-reader- didn't even read signs- when I started with him in March of 2021. Not bad for a year and a half. 

   I called D's mom right away to share my excitement. There is a good chance he will eventually be up to grade level. I hope the parents will have me continue working with him after his word recognition skills become functional. He has missed a lot of school. He would need to work on reading comprehension and writing.

  I met with Mama K's crew immediately after finishing with D. I started with Twin A. She was the one who was further behind when we started and was further ahead now. I started with the second Carpenter story. She did well but still needed help with the recall of unfamiliar words. She read was with a short /a/ and an /s/ instead of the /schwa/ and /z/. I asked her how she would normally pronounce that word. She gave the incorrect pronunciation. Her mom yelled at her and told her how she pronounced it. I asked the mom to stay out because this was an opportunity for me to teach her to hear how she pronounced words in preparation for using context clues. Besides being unable to hear how she normally pronounced the word, she couldn't remember the word.

  I asked her if she could 'see' the word was in her working memory. No. I asked her if she could see her blanket in her mind Yes. I told her to write the word on it. She did and could see it. I asked her to tell me the first letter, the second, the third, and the second and the first. That's a good test of the strength of the visual working memory. She was using the correct part of the brain for this function. Then I asked her to hear my voice in her head. Where did she hear it? She pointed to her forehead, which is good for visual recall but not auditory. I showed her where to listen for auditory input. She was able to do it but didn't like it. I asked her why. It made her sleepy. Good point. That's something to be dealt with.

  Then, I worked with Twin E. She couldn't remember words that she couldn't decode easily. The words she could read she read one at a time as if reading a list. There was no natural speech intonation. I would have done work with her on her processing, but someone called on the phone she was on, and she signed off.

  When Mama K reconnected to the Zoom, fourth-grade K was on. We worked on comprehension using the questioning per-sentence method. Factual questions about the topic came up that prompted an Internet search. At some point, he stopped responding. I figured he had fallen asleep. He had.

  I completed all the available Indian Matchmaking episodes. I miss them. I love how marriage is depicted in the series: marriage first, then love. Behind that expression is the assumption that love is something you work for; marriage requires accommodations from both partners. 

    I have difficulty believing this representation of marriage in India is common. Men are dominant, and women must do most, if not all, of the accommodating. I have difficulty believing all, or even most, arranged marriages wind up as joyful as the ones depicted on the show. One husband said, "The key to a happy marriage is to keep falling in love with the same person over and over." This is what I experienced in my marriage. I loved Mike more after years of marriage than when we first committed to this partnership. The other oft-repeated needed skill for a good marriage is tolerance. 

   I watched Stupid, Crazy Love last night. It's a rom-com about marriage plus. The main character announces he has always been in love with his wife, even when he hated her. He made a side comment about how married couples would understand that. Yes, indeed. But those moments don't overwhelm the positives. It's all about statistics, that 1 to 5 ratio. 

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

 Tuesday, August 23, 2022

    Jean, my Hanai sister, called at 5:15. I was up but unwilling to admit it to myself, no less her. Elsa's limp was gone. After walking her for my usual 2,000 to 3,000 steps, I fed her and sat down to meditate. I always fall asleep. I fall asleep so quickly that I sometimes think I'm narcoleptic. I shouldn't make a joke about that. Some people suffer from that problem; some have insomnia, another difficulty I don't have. 

  As I meditated, Scott turned on his van and sat in the driveway. Gas fumes came wafting into the house. When I texted him about the problem, he moved out to the road. He was waiting for Yvette. It usually wouldn't have been a problem, but we opened the windows on that side of the house when he had Covid.

    I got Wordle on the third try. I evolved new strategies. I didn't know if anyone else used my strategy; I didn't check the YouTube videos on the subject. I was having fun figuring things out on my own. I finished off all the Mini NY Times crossword puzzles back to 2014 for August and was doing the regular ones. I love doing it on the tablet, where I can cheat like anything.

  I had an acupuncture appointment this morning. She had been coming to my house since Covid. I wasn't comfortable meeting in her small windowless room. In my house, we met in an area with a bank of windows all open. She proposed we start meeting in her space again since she had Covid now, and the cases were generally mild. I agreed, but then she changed her plans. We did the session on my lanai, where I had moved the table from the guest room where Scott spent his quarantine during his Covid episode.

   I showed her how I could bend my left leg at the hip. The improvement with the surgery was impressive. My PT noticed I got more flexion if I bent both legs. She thought the restriction came from protecting the hip. I thought it was caused by tightness in my glutes and back. The acupuncturist showed me a pirus formis stretch. It was even out of my range getting in a position to do that stretch. Then she had me lay on my stomach and worked on my back. She was impressed with how tight some of the muscles were. It was amazing that I wasn't in more pain.

  Shortly after the acupuncturist left, I went for my haircut appointment with Randee. I told her there was a strong smell of gardenia or jasmine this morning. It didn't last too long. I wondered if I was hallucinating. Randee told me she had the same experience. She thought it must be the flowers just bloomed. I always enjoy seeing her. She loves my hair and enjoys me. What a pleasure!

  I asked her if the person I gave her name to had called. She said, "Oh, Willow!" Well, Willow did call to make an appointment. Randee was booked till forever and gave her an appointment with Meaghan. Then Willow asked where she was located. She said she had no way of getting there. Randee said to take an Uber. Willow canceled at the last minute, leaving Meaghan high and dry. Too bad.

 I stopped by to pick up a potato salad at the next-door deli. It's labeled Scandinavian potato salad, but it tastes just like the German potato salad my mother used to make, using vinegar instead of mayonnaise. Today's serving didn't taste as good as usual. So sad.

  I went home to start reading the second book W (of the M & W sisters) will have to read in her sixth-grade class at this new private school, The Barren Grounds. It begins with a heavy emotional load, a young girl starting out in another foster home. I have faith that it will work out okay in the end; it's a children's book.

Monday, August 22, 2022

 Monday, August 22, 2022

    I got out of bed once the light came over the mountain instead of when my alarm went off. I had no reason to be up earlier. Elsa was still limping. I took her out long enough to do her business, brought her home, and fed her. Then I went out to complete three thousand steps toward the nine thousand two hundred, my goal for the day.

  Scott met me in the cemetery today. We checked on the cement pillows. I wanted to paint the cement so it doesn't get that bleak look. I thought of painting them in the graveyard, but that seemed too complicated. Scott will get a friend to help him carry them to his van. I will do the chemical cleaning in the driveway. Then we can bring them into the house where Judy, Paulette, and I can do the work.

   Elsa accompanied me to the cemetery. She was there last when we interred Mike's remains. I didn't bring a leash with me. I wasn't concerned about her running away or after cars. The parking lot would be empty. She followed me as I entered the cemetery. Then she settled in one spot in the shade. The graveyard is lava rock; the sun was bright. It was too hot for her feet. Scott carried her back to my car.

 On Friday, Dr. Hiranaka's office called to offer me an appointment on Monday, asking if I wanted to come to have my tooth extracted. I turned down the offer because it conflicted with my scheduled office hours. It was something I couldn't easily change; three people signed up. After I turned it down, I wondered if I would regret my decision. This morning, the penny dropped. I couldn't have dental work done till September anyway. I had to wait for three months after my total hip replacement. The hip is vulnerable to infection. The mouth is a source of bacteria that can impact the whole body. I also had forgotten that I would have to take a heavy dose of antibiotics when I did have a dental treatment- any dental treatment, including a cleaning, no less three extractions.

  I called the doctor's office on my way home from the cemetery. How much would three extractions cost? I had to arrange to have the money available. It would be $361 a tooth. I was afraid it would be a lot more. For those from countries where you can live half a year on that amount, know that a homeless person couldn't live on that little in the USA. Why do I think of such a thing? I had a scammer try to get $800 out of me. He went a little off the rails. He screamed at me that he could live on that amount for a year. No, I didn't go through with the scam. But it was an interesting experience.

        Three people signed up for my Reading &Writing Office hour. They might be starting tutors fulfilling the requirement to sign up for something. I have no idea why Step Up requires this of volunteer tutors. It's amazing how many comply. Only two of the three attended the Zoom session. Both had yet to meet with their student. They were starting on Monday. I asked if they had Julia's toolbox for initial sessions. They both said yes. I told them I would give Julia their names.

  I had two questions for Adolescent D today. I started with the usual. Did you do any reading? Yes. How did it go? Good. I heard those answers more frequently. We are making progress. He was in his first year of high school. I have been working with him for over a year. When we started, he was reading at a first-grade level with a huge ego problem. Now, He was doing much better.

 However, a session or two ago, he said that the work we were currently doing was 'easy.' Easy meant he could do it. I was drilling him on syllable structures. There is no way I could have done this a year ago. The impact on his ego would have been devastating. But now, I felt I could push it. He won't do it on his own. I have to drill him. His parents never pushed him to do anything. I was the first tutor they hired, even though their son struggled. They are educated people. It wasn't indifference. Paralysis? I didn't know. I couldn't get the mother to get him to do any exercises I asked him to do. She knew her son was very stubborn. Pushing him could only have negative results for everyone in the family. I couldn't say she was wrong. I often wanted to wring his neck. Frustrating! Oh, boy.

  He would tell me he had made no progress. He always read this way. In the meantime, his father heard him reading the subtitles of a movie and burst into tears. He did very poorly on the work he considered easy. I told him I wouldn't give him a grade higher than C+ or, more likely, a D. He could never have done it without my assistance. If he had tried it on his own, he would have probably gotten an F. Sometimes, I worried he had more serious problems than just reading. His idea of his skill level was disturbing.   I mentioned my concern with Katie, my PT, the other day. She said her clients say the same thing. Most people don't have a very accurate idea of their progress.  

       I talked to D's mom today. She was thrilled he could find a product on a grocery shelf because he read the label. She is still pleased with behavior appropriate for an emergent reader. His high school was online three days a week and in person for two. Online schools put more responsibility on the student to get the work done. According to his mom, D is making every effort to do so. While he told me his reading has been going well, she told me that he downloads the reading assignments into Google text-to-speech. He hadn't told me. I suspect he thought I would object.

On the contrary, I thought it was great. When it comes to his class assignments, his primary objective is getting the work done. The reader is a great solution, given his difficulty with reading. I love it. She thinks he reads along and perhaps even rereads it on his own. The reader reads the words without inflection. It sounds like a list of words, making it difficult to make sense. It is fantastic if he follows along in the text as the words are read. It constitutes practice, probably more than he knows.

  Ethan Kross discussed the value of using our names when we talk to ourselves. His theory is it creates distance from the circumstances and our emotional involvement with the problem. I used it once with adolescent D. I instructed him to say, "D, remember the list of syllable patterns." I planned to use this mental trick with more people. Let's see if it works.

  I spent time brushing Elsa today. Sometimes, she objects. Today, she stretched as I brushed her. Lovely. I could do that every night while I watch some TV.

   I continued watching Indian Matchmaking tonight despite my objections. The show is like a dating tutorial. It is fascinating to see how different people deal with these situations. They know they are checking each other out as potential life partners. Sometimes, they ask each other direct questions. Fascinating.  

Sunday, August 21, 2022

 Sunday, August 21, 2022 

   Elsa was still limping on our morning walk. I didn’t take her too far. I didn’t know what was wrong and didn’t want to make it worse. We only got so far before I picked her up and carried her home. She wrapped herself around my neck and snuggled in as is her want. This little girl is bright enough to figure out that she can get me to carry her if she fakes a limp.

  I continued with my commitment to attend church every Sunday. I thought it made Mike happy. If it made him happy, it made me happy. I sat on the south lanai again and wore a mask around others. A woman pulled up on a kick scooter. She parked it near me and looked me straight in the eye with a big smile. I barely recognized her. Maya had converted to Catholicism under Mike’s tutelage. She was devoted to him. Her face looked completely different except for her expression. She has a great, loving smile. She gave me a big hug. She is one great hugger. Her energy is fantastic, so loving, and so comforting. The last time I saw this woman, she was dealing with some rare form of brain cancer. She must have recovered entirely since she could handle a kick scooter. It was good to see her.

  Then she got up to leave as the priest prepared the eucharist. Why would she leave then? She became a devout Catholic. The eucharist would mean a lot to her. I would have to call her to get answers to my questions.

  Today’s Gospel reading referred to the ‘narrow way.’ The other day, I used a similar expression and couldn’t think of where I heard a comparable reference. But there was in today’s reading. How could I have forgotten it? It is probably where I got the expression. My best guess is that my image of the narrow way differs from the Catholic reading. It is Christ-centered. Mine refers to the limited choices that make it possible for two people or groups to get the best deal for themselves.

   At the end of the mass, the priest, an associate pastor from Poland, announced he would leave our parish and go to St. John’s on Oahu. I texted Judy immediately to ask if she knew about this. No, it was a surprise to her, too. The priest said something about having just been told a few days ago. It must be an emergency. Judy knew that one of our associate priests had taken over that parish. He must have left on a dime. Maybe his family in Columbia was ill. Judy said it was a large parish in an impoverished area with people of diverse ethnic and language backgrounds. In other words, it is a difficult parish to run. 

   I stopped by Kona Bay Books to pick up the books the private-school-W would be attending assigned for the year. It was after ten, and the parking lot was empty. As I approached the store, I saw a sign announcing they had moved to the Kipiko Plaza. It took me a few minutes to figure out where that was from reading the map. Their old location was a warehouse with lots of floor space and high ceilings. I couldn’t imagine they could find anything comparable at the Plaza. All the locations were regular shops. While they had probably the largest space in the Plaza, it couldn’t be as big as the warehouse space. This is the only bookstore in town, and it is a used bookstore. I hope they survive the move. I also wonder why they did it. 

   When I got to the new location, I saw the bookstore was only open Monday through Saturday. I resolved to go home and buy the books on Amazon for my Kindle. I spent most of the day reading one of the books, The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise. I loved it.  

  I don’t usually enjoy fiction. Adult fiction is too complex and often too dark. I wondered if there was some formula for children’s literature on the dark versus the light. The book had several doses of sadness, some downright tragic. Still, it was all presented in the context of a loving, connected group of people and topped by a psychological victory. 

  On the way home from church, Just a Minute was on HPR with Shankar Vedantam about useful delusions. He was a man of pure science and logic. Still, he had concluded that humans couldn’t make it through life unless we indulge in delusions, ergo Useful Delusions, the title of his book. I have always held that point of view. Poor Mike. He would have been appalled at the idea, as Shankar was when he first encountered it. Me, I ordered the book in paperback.

   The father of M & W called in response to my text asking about his plans. W had just started school on the eighteenth. He would send me the books. (So I had understood him correctly. He had intended to send me the books. This poor guy is not too well glued together.) He asked if we could meet on Sunday at two and Monday at four, starting next week. Sure. Neither girl is in desperate need. W could possibly use some personal help dealing with the new school situation. Meanwhile, I get to read some great books.

   I came across some numbers on how fast the mind processes words. In a TED talk on 10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation, the speaker said that most people speak at 250 words per minute. Our minds can process language at 500 words a minute. That’s why we have difficulty paying attention. Someone else’s speech doesn’t provide enough stimulation for our minds. Now, 500 words a minute refers to our ability to understand someone else’s words. According to Ethan Kross in his book Chatter, our working memories, or unconscious mind, produces words at the rate of 4,000 a minute. He said a 6,000-word speech takes about an hour. Wow! This has major significance for me, comparing our ability to deal with new information, someone else’s speech, versus the processing of our thoughts. When people say they don’t decode language when they read, my response is, “How the hell would you know? Your thoughts whiz by at 4,000 words a minute. You have no idea what your mind is doing.” Neuroscientists are trying to figure it out. 

   I continued watching Indian Matchingmaking. It was wearing thin. I wanted to see what happened to that one fellow who had to tell the woman he was matched with that his father was in jail for putting a hit on an ex-wife. That would eliminate him from the ‘good family’ category. I liked this guy and wished the best for him. My best guess was his story was dropped from the show because the outcome was not good when he told his potential bride the circumstances of his life.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Saturday, August 20. 2022

 Saturday, August 20. 2022

   I had to get up early again because I had my Saturday morning office hour for Step Up Tutoring. I had to limit my walk. While I didn't walk around the block, I did take on one of the side hills. After reading Gokhale's article on the benefits of walking down a set of stairs versus up, I walked down the hill as slowly as I could, moving from foot to foot with sustained movement.  

     The Gokhale article described an experiment to determine which creates greater muscle strength, walking upstairs or down. They had two groups: one walked up ten flights of stairs three times a week and took the elevator down, and the other took the elevator up and walked down the stairs. When walking down the stairs, the muscles have to stretch and resist at the same time. We had a clear winner: walking down the stairs promoted greater strength, reduced cholesterol, and more significant gains in bone density and range of motion.  

   The most effective way to kill a roach is to strike it with my hand. If I go to step on it, it gets away. If I go to swat it with an object, it gets away. My best guess is so few people hit them with their hands that the roaches still need to develop the necessary defensive senses. However, tonight, I swatted at one, and it was roach one, Betty minus zero. It got away, and I hurt my hand.

  I walked 9,000 steps today. I was increasing the number of steps by one hundred daily. I planned to stop pushing the envelope at ten thousand.

  I noticed Elsa limping. She was holding her left front paw in the air when she wasn't walking. I massaged the leg and shoulder to see if I could find the source of the pain. She didn't respond. I would wait a day before I called the vet. These problems often clear up on their own.  

Friday, August 19, 2022

 Friday, August 19, 2022

 

  I had a 7:30 a.m. appointment with Katie, my PT. I told her how I applied the heel shift she taught me last year while I walked. She timed my walk. I did three hundred steps in two minutes with the walking stick and the same without it. That was a good pace for my age. My gait was more syncopated when I walked without the stick. That's why I walk with it, to make sure my gait is symmetrical. She timed how long it took me to execute five sit/stands. It took me thirteen seconds. Five sit/stands in fourteen seconds are good for my age. I asked what was good for a forty-year-old. There was no standard for that age. It was eleven seconds for a sixty-year-old. I could reach that goal. 

   I had a dental appointment at 9:10 in the new industrial district. Did I have time to deposit the check from one of my parents? I got there before the bank opened. Fourteen people were already in line. When the bank opened, there were only two bank tellers. I set my alarm for 8:55. If most of the people in line were there for personal transactions, I would make it out in time. If several were people there with business transactions, I would have to leave without completing my business. I made it out with time to spare.

   I had a short wait when I arrived at the dentist's. I suspected my visit would be a waste of time. I wasn't feeling any discomfort. It was probably not my teeth but my sinuses that were bothering me. KC took an X-ray of the area. Dr. Kris confirmed I had a bad cavity under the cap where I was feeling the pressure. He recommended I get that tooth extracted as well as the one that sheared off last week. He said this one was about to break anyway.  

  When I got home, I called the dental office with another question. The doctor answered. That was great. It was him I wanted to talk to. I asked him if he thought I should also have the back tooth with the abscessed root extracted. I was scheduled for a root canal on September 8. Would it be better if I had it removed first? He told me that I wouldn't need a root canal if I had the tooth extracted. If I went the route of the root canal, I would need to have the cavities filled and then a new cap. Given the bad state of my teeth, how long would that last? He said at most five years. He said that given that my teeth are cavity-prone, it would be best to go for the extractions and implants. Implants don't get cavities. I have the money now. Will anyone have money in five years? Best to take care of things now, so they last now. I was going to have three extractions in one day. Wow!

   I was supposed to have a Zoom tutoring appointment with second-grade-homeschooled L at noon. There was no response. I called her mother. "Oh, so sorry we forgot. We're out of the house. Could the session be postponed till two pm?" Sure. A few minutes later, she called back. She hadn't done anything I had asked her to do. Could we just skip this week? Sure. A bit later. She called back. She had done what I asked; could we have a session now? Sure.  

   One of the things I asked the mom to do was compile a list of sight words L could already read. I wanted to use words on that list to develop a list of words with the same ending. I used the word cat again. I had used it in a previous session. As I led her through the exercise, figuring out words that all ended in -at but started with a different letter (batcatfathatmatpatratsat), L kept saying, "I can spell dog." Boy, she wanted to avoid working with sounds. She did reasonably well with the exercise. She can't stand not getting everything perfectly. Perfectionism is a dead end.  

  I started her on the first Carpenter story. She didn't know the word there. She immediately got up and walked away, saying, "It is such a long word." I must think about approaching her slowly so I don't frighten her. I planned to say, "I want you to try what I give you. If you can't do it, it's my fault, not yours." I hope that eases some of her fears. It is valid to say it is my fault. It is my job to figure out how to help the student. They also have the difficult job of not allowing themselves to be terrified of failure. That's a lot trickier.

   Judy had carpel tunnel surgery yesterday. She was doing well. It was also her 49th wedding anniversary. Howard scattered 49 roses throughout the house. He had some in a small vase on the dining room table, surrounded by a ring of roses at the base. Rose heads were laid in a line on the floor with an arrow pointing to that vase. The remaining roses were a huge bunch placed in another vase. Who would have thought Howard was the romantic type? Although it was already evident that he was crazy about Judy. The two met in eight-grade. They have been friends ever since. They became more than that while in college. Theirs was a slow-grow courtship. 

   Buddhists advocate selflessness. As Batchelor describes it, it is not a state where you think of others instead of yourself; it is a state where you surrender any clear definition of yourself and any sense that you have a core being that lasts through all changes. When you let go of a fixed sense of self, you feel more at one with the rest of the universe, particularly other people. Buddhism does advocate sitting with negative feelings about the events in life. Buddhism does not tell us how not to accept what happens to us blindly. S. N. Goenka, the guru who brought Vipassana back to India from Burma, said, "You're not a vegetable; there to be sliced."  

Thursday, August 18, 2022

 Thursday, August 18, 2022

 

 I had to get up early this morning because of the 7 a.m. driveway yoga. Five people were in the class today, including one new person, Yvette's boss at Island Heart Care. And  Deb joined us from Seattle via Facetime. I saw a difference in the bend of my left leg. It is a result of the exercise Katie gave me. I lie flat on my back with my left leg bent as far as I can comfortably with my right leg straight. The position puts a gentle pull on the muscles of my left leg. Dr. Salassa was not optimistic that I would ever be able to touch my left foot again. When muscles remain contracted for long periods, it is hard, if not impossible, to stretch again. We'll see.

  I attended Julia's office hours. There were several other people at the Zoom meeting. Some were only checking in because the program required attendance during office hours for new tutors. I offered to do in-classroom tutoring via Zoom. When I made my offer, Julia said, "Noted!" in what I thought was a surprisingly stern tone of voice. I have no idea what prompted it.  

       I have been concerned that I got myself blackballed because of the BrainManagementSkills I did with one girl. I had never had a problem before. The girl was fine with the process. It involves releasing the mind's excessive spinning, which interferes with ease of perception. Students will describe how letters move around in their minds or on the page. When they move on the page, the problem is generally more serious. This child was comfortable with the release. However, she described the size of the spin as being as large as the city of L.A. I have yet to hear from the parents or the tutor she was working with again, despite repeated efforts on my part. I suspected she had told her parents about the experience. Because of the silence, I imagined the parents were evangelical and interpreted their daughter's experience as having to do with the devil. Oh, boy. However bad the result might be for me, it would be much worse for the girl. She already knew she had problems with spinning. To have her parents associate that with evil would be very dangerous for the girl. The release wouldn't harm her, but the parents' reaction would.

  Jean called. The children in the family were visiting: Jean's son Damon with his son, August, John's children James and Lisa, and her son Connor. They all went for a walk with John while Jean stayed home. Jean and John moved recently. They had three storage units with mostly paper they had to sort. Six or seven boxes were Damon's that had been stored in the old house's attic. After throwing out items like his second-grade spelling books, he mailed the three remaining boxes to his home in L.A. He spent the summer cleaning out his garage, which had become their storage unit. Damon suspected Cylin would not be pleased to see three new boxes come into the house.

  Jean said while it was delightful to have Damon visit, there was a downside. He had to leave. So sweet. So true.

   Damon and August were in NYC for a music event with computer-generated music. Jean told me that August would be performing. I hadn't known that. I was looking forward to hearing about the event.

  Elsa and I went up to get water from Paulette. Elsa loves visiting Paulette; she has a cat. I had to stop a bit lower down because a workman was parked at the top of the driveway, where I usually park. Elsa had no problems finding Paulette's door. I just picked up the water and spent only a few minutes visiting. Paulette had to deliver another Turo car in a few minutes. Usually, when I get in the car and call Elsa, she comes. Today, she ran around the house. Paulette had to chase her. Once Elsa was clear about where I was, she jumped in the car.

    While I continued to be fascinated by Indian Matchmaker, I had some reservations. All the people being served by this matchmaker are extremely wealthy. Their homes are off the wall. No, not quite true. One fellow from a middle-class background worked in the public sector where everyone else on the program was in business- from 'good' families. As I watch, I am painfully aware that arranged marriages are not always a good deal for the couple. Twelve-year-olds forced to marry fifty-year-old men are also arranged marriages. The people 'Sima from Mumbai serves are all wealthy enough to afford her.

  When I was in high school, a classmate from Afghanistan was returning home after graduating. Her parents had selected a husband for her. I was horrified. She assured me she could reject him if she didn't like him.

    The concept of an arranged marriage sounds more appealing now- at least as presented in the Netflix series. Both parties can say what they want in a partner and reject people. One fellow had been on fifty arranged dates before he accepted a woman as a wife.

    Sima said she had no choice in her marriage. It was a marriage of their two families. What the kids wanted was secondary, if not irrelevant. I think she said she first met her husband on her wedding day. Fortunately, she was happy in her marriage thirty-five years later. Several long-married couples were interviewed. They were all happy with their circumstances. 'With the arranged marriage, the concept is "marriage comes first; then comes love."  It's a more realistic approach to marriage. If you marry someone with a good heart who understands that marriage requires commitment and work, that is a good place to start. Many 'love marriages' start with "love" and assume everything will work out without effort. The concept behind arranged marriages is closer to reality. Those in a 'love marriage' have to reach the point where they understand a good marriage requires commitment and work.

  The series only shows the best of marriage. There are glimpses of the other side. The wife has to move in with the husband's family. The mother-in-law remains the queen of the house. The woman has to adapt; adaptation is not mutual.

  I chose Mike from a place of appropriateness more than love. I wasn't passionately in love with him. I didn't find him irresistible. I found him comfortable and 'right.' For those familiar with the old USA public pay phones, you listened for the sound of the coin as it dropped. Sometimes it didn't catch. That produced one kind of sound. When it did catch, there was a feeling of satisfaction and lightness. I felt right about him. He was committed to respecting me, even though he had a terrible hatred of women due to his relationship with his mother. He suffered from an insufferable case of arrogance. That's a wordplay. It was bad, but it wasn't insufferable. That was one quality he changed with pressure from me. Love did come. I was crazy about the man. I thought he was wonderful. He was a decent human being; he adored me and was an affection junky as I was. We took great pleasure in making each other happy. In our last years, I often said, "I love you so much, it's silly." I couldn't have picked better.

 

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

  Wednesday, August 17, 2022

 

         Vince and Julie yelled, "Good morning," as they passed the driveway as I transferred the bush cuttings from the infected shrub myrtle crepe into the trash instead of green waste. I managed to walk around the block again this morning. Sometimes my muscles don't feel up to that challenge. I believe it is because I was waking up muscles that haven't been engaged for years. They go into complaint mode. I give them a day's break.

    I remembered getting a notification that someone else was on my Netflix account, someone from France. Huh! How does someone manage to hack my account? Netflix told me to change my password. I tried, but all the directions were in French. I found a telephone number for Netflix support. They led me through the process after they changed my default language back to English. When I signed on, I got avatar pictures of six people on my account. I couldn't close the screen. I called back. They told me how to delete the other participants. I was not to delete the first one because my history was attached to that participant. The 'primary' member was named Dum-Dum. That sounds about right. I wouldn't have acted this fast if he hadn't changed the language. I had to change this primary member back to my own name. Bye-bye, Dum-Dum.   

   I started a new book by Batchelor, Living with the Devil. I love the way this man thinks and writes. His version of 'the devil' isn't like the Christian version. It is that annoying voice in our head that gets us to think about "sensual desire, discontent, hunger and thirst, craving, lethargy, fear, doubt, restlessness, longing for praise, honor, and fame and extolling oneself while disparaging others." 'The devil' of Buddhism closely resembles the voice Ethan Kross, the neuroscientist and author of Chatter, describes in his book. 

   I resonate with the definitions of 'emptiness' and 'egolessness' as Batchelor defines them from his reading of the original Pali texts. It has to do with letting go of any fixed definition we have of ourselves and accepting that we are in a state of constant flux. When we let go of a precious self-concept, we die -or that version of us dies. We become more open to others because we are not constantly fighting for our own concept of – everything.  

   On the other hand, we do exist; we do have an obligation to preserve ourselves. As S.N. Goenka said, "You are not a vegetable to be sliced." We are not supposed to be passive in the face of life. Buddhism does not address that question. Is it any less moral to allow ourselves to be destroyed than to allow someone else to be destroyed? How do we navigate between the zig and zag of life? The A.A. Serenity prayer comes the closest to addressing that question. It's what I call the narrow path. I'm sure someone else has defined it in the same way. I quickly checked Taoism, which uses the term 'the way.' However abstract my concept is, theirs is even vaguer- go with the universe's flow. What the hell does that mean? Mine has to do with choosing between myself and another person, any other person. That's a little more concrete but no less ambiguous.

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

 Tuesday, August 16, 2022    

 

   Before falling asleep, I massaged my skull with a tennis ball. That relieved my headache. It may be that the plates in my skull shifted because of the change in my alignment. I had pushed the flesh of my left heel over to the inside of my foot, and I did a slight bend to the right as I walked. I slept well for the rest of the night. When I got up, my head felt great, and my dizziness was gone. I made it all around the block with ease. I ran into Carol with her dogs, Luke and Max, as I came to an end of Punawele. I turned around to walk with her. She spotted a loose dog and decided to turn around. She had experience with dogs attacking her dogs.  

     Carol told me about her neighbor from hell, not here in Hawaii but around their home in Oregon. She has to pass her neighbor's house when she walks her dogs. They've taken in a rescue dog who charges her and her dogs whenever they pass. There are ordinances against loose dogs. This woman is undeterred. From the stories Carol told me, this woman is self-destructively narcissistic. She has an enlarged sense of entitlement which gets her in trouble repeatedly.

   Step-Up Tutoring had a town hall meeting today. Julia announced the professional educators on the Step Up Tutoring Instructional team would require tutors to use programs they selected. They will observe tutors to make sure they are using the prescribed lessons. Professional educators are obsessed with 'canned programs. Not only are they bringing in required math and reading programs, but they also require the completion of three forms a week; one for the student's teacher, a second for the student's parents, and a third for Step-Up, tutors have to attend a Town Hall meeting once a semester and attend someone's office hours. The program is making demands on the volunteer tutors that rival the demands on teachers in school systems. Teachers are quitting because of the demands and accompanying pressures. What do they think is going to happen with volunteers? The feedback from parents and teachers has been good so far. If they lose tutors who don't want to dance to their tune, they won't have anything to offer students. I suspect they will have to cancel my service because I teach a different method than they are advocating. It is personally depressing. 

   I counted the participants in today's required town hall meeting. There were about twenty-five. There are something like seven hundred volunteer tutors and two town hall meetings a semester. What are the chances the other six hundred seventy-five would show up for the other Zoom meeting? 

      The one up note was I met up with Howard, who attended one of my office hour sessions in the breakout session. There were supposed to be four people in our group. The other two didn't have their videos on. I suspect they signed in but didn't participate. The last time I spoke to Howard, he said he was dealing with health issues. He told me he was feeling better but had been struggling for a year. He had a very bad reaction to the Covid vaccine. Seeing Howard again was a treat. 

   I watched more of the Indian Matchmaker. It looked like the series had ended. Too bad. I was enjoying it.  I watched another show Une Vie ou L’autre.  I was surprised to find this was an American film, all in English. Why did it have a French title? There was a lot of French writing on my Netflix site. I wasn't sure what was going on. Whatever, I loved the movie. I watched to the end, even though it was way past my bedtime.

 

Monday, August 15, 2022

 Monday, August 15, 2022

 

  Before I went to bed, I became concerned about the pressure I felt on the left side of my face. Was this a sign of a tooth infection? I have severe problems with two teeth now. I needed a root canal with one of my back teeth; with another, I lost a cap. The dentist glued it back on temporarily until I could have work done. Then, the tooth sheared off at the gum line. Now, I needed a second extraction. I had thoughts of all my teeth going. Scary. I had visions of my teeth being the cause of my death; I would develop an infection and not have the money to deal with it, develop sepsis, and die. What a way to go!  

  I was dizzy when I got up in the middle of the night. It is the third time this has happened. The first time, I couldn’t stand up. In the second incident, I felt too dizzy to walk Elsa. I was afraid she would pull me over. I walked her this time, but not as long as usual. I did take it easy for the rest of the day. 

  I had my Reading and Writing office hour for the Step-Up Tutoring program today. No one had signed up by last night. I checked this morning on a whim. Someone had signed up. The tutor hadn’t met with her student yet- hadn’t even had a student assigned to her yet. She was nervous because she had never tutored before. I felt well enough to be fully engaged. I felt somewhat better with the interaction. That was a good sign that I was not ill. If I am sick, the interaction does not make me feel better.

   I had a session with adolescent D today. Boy, this kid is frustrating. I continued by giving examples for the six syllable types and then identifying the types of syllables in a story. He remembered that V stood for Vowel today easily and quickly named the vowel letters. He struggled with the rest of the activities: giving examples for each pattern V- aei, o or u, VC- apetimob, uc, etc. That was a struggle. The last activity was identifying the pattern in each syllable in a reading selection, even if the word wasn’t phonically regular. All this was a struggle. At the end of the session, he said, “How long do we have to do this? This is easy.” What!!! He had trouble doing it; what did he mean it was easy? He desperately needed this exercise. He never did anything to practice reading. It either happened or it didn’t; therefore, I have to drill him. I have no choice with him. I wouldn’t dare have done this when we started. He was so ego-defended.

   While I didn’t get my 8,500 steps in today, I did get several loads of laundry done. I hung them up on the line. I was a little wobbly, but I didn’t keel over.  

   I tried a full-body MELT treatment to deal with my headache, assuming my spine was out because of changes I had made in my movement. I shifted the flesh of my right heel over to the inside of the heel and did a slight side bend to the right as I walked. The MELT treatment didn’t do any immediate good. Before I did the exercise, I asked Yvette to be ready for a call, asking her to help me get up from the floor. I didn’t need her. 

  I took a Covid test this evening on Yvette’s insistence. She was concerned my headache might be a symptom. When Scott didn’t feel well, he insisted he didn’t have Covid. Yvette insisted he take the test. He had Covid. My result was negative.

Sunday, August 14, 2022

Sunday, August 14, 2022 

  

  I ran into Rosemary on my early morning walk. She told me I looked good. I thought she was referring to my stride since the operation, but no. She said my hair and my skin looked good. Okay. I’ll take it. I thought it might have something to do with the shock I got upon realizing how damaging my mother’s behavior is considered to be. While the information was shocking, it was also affirming. It’s amazing what shattering thoughts can do for your looks.

  I finally had a session at 8 a.m. with Mama K’s twin girls. She couldn’t find time for me to work with her kids over the summer. Drove me nuts. K was in fourth grade now. I wasn’t worried about him. His word recognition skills were on grade level. I did two sessions on comprehension using my questioning method on sentences. His response was good enough last spring. I believed he would continue to improve over the summer. Mama K confirmed it. He read a few books, and his ability to understand what others said and express his thoughts was better. That’s what I expected.

   However, the girls were a different matter. I teach metacognitive skills, skills that students use to teach themselves. K had already demonstrated his absorption rate. The girls had not. When I started with them last August, they didn’t know all the letters in the alphabet, no less read words.

In the spring, both of them were doing some basic reading. Twin A could read the first two Carpenter stories. Twin E struggled to read the first story. Mama K already told me they did no reading over the summer. Twin A said she did some reading online, probably when playing games. I asked her if she had thought about how to read words. She said yes to that. Wonderful. The school was thrilled with their progress from a low pre-school level to kindergarten. That’s a huge leap. I was nervous that they had lost everything over the summer. I was prepared to discover they couldn’t even remember the names of the letters in the alphabet. But that’s not what happened.

   I started with Twin A. She sailed through the first two stories we had worked on last spring. She read them faster than she had. Twin E was the real surprise. I hadn’t started her on the second story because she struggled with the first one. She sailed through that story at a fluid rate. Amazing! 

   Statistically, students lose ground over vacations if they don’t read independently. With my methods, this has happened only once. I expected it with the girls because they were so weak, but it didn’t. It breaks my heart that the method is not widely used in schools. It is easy to incorporate. 

    Damon sent me an article about schools reinstituting highly sequenced and structured phonics programs. Schools dropped this method because teachers hated it. It was reinstituted because there was a dramatic drop in reading performance with the decline of the method. I incorporate directed phonics instruction. There is no way we should expect students to reinvent the wheel. But we should expect students to have fun figuring out the words rather than do grueling worksheet exercises. Some students figure out how to apply what they learn from traditional phonics lessons to reading. But some have no idea how to do that. This is what my method teaches. 

   I made it to Mass. I usually sit outside for my sake. Today, I did it for everyone else’s sake as well. I was exposed to Covid by Scott. I didn’t know if I had it. I didn’t want to risk anyone else’s health. After Mass, I gave Carolyn, at the church gift shop, Mike’s remaining religion-related items. I gave her things right after he died. Then parishioners were eager to have items of his. I didn’t know if anyone cared anymore. That didn’t bother me. Mike’s impact is from what he did. That will last forever. 

  I stopped at the refreshment table, grabbed half a donut, and then at the table in front of the church to donate $75 in cash for Fr. Lio’s walk for Catholic Charities. I had forgotten my checkbook again. I paid in cash, handing Karen fives and tens. She asked, “Are these your dancing tips?” Got to love this woman. I told her yes. 

    Next, I stopped at Island Naturals to pick up more raw almonds to compensate for the reduced number in Hersey’s milk Chocolate nuggets. I was not too sleepy when I got home. I am usually exhausted after church.

  I missed the Wordle puzzle today. The word was Khaki. I thought of the kh combination but knew it was from the Indian language, not used in English. I forgot about the possibility of a borrowed word.

  I got a call from the gardener asking if they could come tomorrow. I got to work trimming to bougainvillea and pulling down the fallen palm fronds in the yard off my bedroom. I put them in a pile for the gardener to collect and take to the dump. 

   My sister sent a text saying that her son-in-law, his sister, and his father were at the Salmon Rushdie talk when he was attacked. OMG! Can you imagine seeing that happen? It must be hard to comprehend. 

   I got a nap in before Elsa and I did our before-dinner walk. I walked around the makai (toward the ocean) block. I hadn’t done that in at least a year. I was delightfully surprised by the improvement to one of the properties. I had been a mess with the previous occupants. They did not attempt to maintain it. Now, all the garbage was gone; they painted the outside of the house a rust orange. Two men were out front working on the yard. I thought they looked like an older man and a much younger one. I spoke to the older one, complimenting him on his work. He said the other man was also an owner. I assumed they were a couple. That was confirmed by Lutz later in the day. 

  I finished watching Finding Ola this afternoon. I would have loved to see more. Netflix offered me Indian Matching Making. I accepted. It’s a documentary and fascinating. 

Saturday, August 13, 2022

 Saturday, August 13, 2022

 

   As I awoke this morning, I dreamt I was spreading a blanket or tablecloth with another person. I wasn’t sure how it went, and my body seized up with fear. Good, God! Are we all like this, or is it just me?

   I had to get up early this morning; I had seven am Reading & Writing Office hours for Step-Up Tutoring. Seven am my time is ten am in LA. It was the earliest I could manage. I figured it would leave room for people to get on with their day in LA. Concerned about the time this morning, I limited my walk to the street I lived on with a short detour up part of a hill. 

   I signed on to the meeting shortly before seven. While I waited for someone to show up, I worked on posting the blog update. The one person who signed up never showed. I enjoy these sessions; the tutors who attend have no background in education and are open to my suggestions as no teacher would be. Teachers these days are afraid to use anything if not officially approved by their school district.  

    The person who signed up for the office hour never showed. I got lots done. I posted my blog entry after editing it, I completed the Wordle puzzle and ten mini NY Times Puzzles, one for today and the rest from 2015, and I started work on proofreading my typed copy of the section of my Will. Not bad for an hour’s work.      

     When editing my update from August 13, 2021, for posting on the public blog, I read about something Katie, my PT, did. She taped the flesh of my left heel, pulling it over to the inside edge of my foot. I modified my walk, making that shift happen by stepping on the outer edge of my heel and pushing the flesh to the inner edge. I also used something Katie told me to do in our last meeting;  to do side bends, especially to my right. My body was over-stretched on the right and over-contracted on the left. I incorporated that bend to the right as I stepped onto my left foot. 

      Today was primary day in Hawaii. I filled out my mail-in ballot. I had it ready to mail when I realized I wasn’t sure what signature I used. I had to do in-person voting. I took the completed ballot with me to copy my choices. I researched the candidates. I looked for experience. Enough of people for whom this is their first civic position. They at least had to have a record on community organizing. Politics requires specific skills, just like all other professions. Many people assume politics and teaching require no particular skills. Oh, boy.

    The voting site was at the Civic Center. When I arrived, I saw someone looking around, confused. There was no sign showing where to go. I pointed. It was easy to find once you knew what direction to go in.  

   I explained my situation to a security guard. She spoke to one of the election officials, explaining my situation. The official said it should have the same signature as my driver’s license. She was able to check my ‘official’ signature. She told me I had used the right one. It is not the one on my driver’s license. On my license, I used Betty on my registration form; I used Elizabeth on my voter registration form.

  I finished editing my Will and tried to email it to Howard. I saved the document in One Drive but couldn’t find it when I wanted to send it as an attachment to the email. This aspect of One Drive drives me nuts. 

   I trimmed the second crepe myrtle on the property. It also had mold. Once the sun set, I sprayed it and resprayed the one I had treated the other day. 

   I continued watching Finding Ola. The more I watch this show, the more I like it.

Friday, August 12, 2022

 Friday, August 12, 2022

Last night on Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam talked about our need for affection. There was a period when parents were advised not to show affection to their children because it created dependence. Mothers were to think of themselves as dispensers of food and medical care, not affection or emotional support. It was an outgrowth of Behavioral Theory. My mother denied me affection. I thought it was just her problem because she was touch-averse. But no, this was an actual trend. The show didn't say when doctors were dispensing this information. I do know that Mike's mother got that advice. Mike often retold the story of how he was allowed to cry himself to sleep. As his mother also told the story, she sat in the living room and cried while Mike did. Holy cow!

  Harlow's experiment with his monkeys brought a different perspective to the role of affection in mothering. I lived across the street from his lab in the 60s. I went over to visit once. The only things I saw were the cages with the wire 'moms' and the cages with the terrycloth 'moms.' The lab tech who showed me around told me how the baby chimps preferred the terry cloth 'moms' over the wire ones. They would go without food if it meant letting go of the softer, terry-cloth ones. The experiment made clear a primate's need for physical contact. It was primary, maybe even greater than food.  

  My mother was not an affectionate woman. When writing this, I searched the Internet for when doctors gave this horrible recommendation. I found nothing on American doctors, but I did find information on parenting Guidelines in Nazi Germany. Parents were advised to ignore their children's emotional needs to toughen them up to be good soldiers for the German cause. From what I could make out, this advice fell on fertile ground. German parenting practices were harsh already and open to this draconian advice. My mother immigrated to America from Germany three years before I was born.

   I learned something new about Harlow's experiments. He went way beyond the wire versus terry cloth mom experiments. He became the poster boy for inhumane experimental practices.   He devised a 'mom' that put out barbs if the baby sought affection from 'her.' Holy cow! That resonated with me. That's what my mom did. I remember wanting to kiss her cheek so badly. She pushed me away as if I wanted to do something harmful to her. It was very frightening. Often, if I wanted to 'help' or do something I thought she would like, she would scream at me. In Harlow's experiments, the babies treated that way became obsessed with appeasing the 'mother' rather than abandoning her. I became obsessed with mine.

  In my case, the obsession led to a good result. I didn't pursue appeasing her. I 'gave up' and retreated and fought back. The retreat set the necessary boundary. As a result, I could invite her to spend the last years of her life living with Mike and me. While it wasn't a perfect relationship I would have liked, it was good enough. I wasn't afraid of her anymore. Unfortunately, the damage did affect other aspects of my life; it still does, even though she has been dead since October 16, 2001.

  I believe Mike's experience with his mother was comparable to mine. We bonded over the similarity. Affection and playfulness were hallmarks of our relationship. Besides that, we could resolve differences amicably.   

  The situation with my mother was more complex than the experiment with Harlow's monkeys. My mother wasn't a wire contraption with one response and one motivation. As one friend observed, my mother was a complex human being who was capable of love. Moreover, she did love her children passionately. Other friends told the story of reaching out to their parents. When their parents asked what they wanted, they responded, "Love." The parents, this is two unrelated sets, replied, "What do you think this is, a Hollywood movie?" My mother would never have responded that way.

  While I was shocked to recognize my experience with the barbed 'mother' in Harlow's experiments, I also think many children share this experience. Given the bad chances of recovering from that experience, I think I've done a pretty good job creating a productive, loving life. Much of my life was formed due to my relationship with my mother. Fortunately, I didn't see myself only as a victim. I saw myself as responsible for my recovery. Even the educational systems I have developed are in reaction to her. She got angry when I didn't know what she knew. I work hard to see it from the student's point of view and design the lessons accordingly.

 Today was the first day since my total hip replacement operation I walked all around the block, completing over three thousand steps to start the day. When I got home, I meditated. All spiritual work knocks me for a loop. I needed a nap afterward.

    I had my second post-operation appointment with Dr. Salassa today. I did a pre-check-in online. When I arrived at the site, I had to enter a password to let them know I was there. I sat in the waiting area for a while. Since few people were waiting, it seemed odd that my wait was that long. My phone rang. "This is Kaiser. You have an appointment with Dr. Salassa today."  "I'm sitting in the waiting area." I thought I hadn't pressed the send button. I often do that. When I checked, I saw I had.  

  At our last session, she told me I could do an online visit or in person. I chose in-person because she is such a delightful person to connect with. Today, she didn't seem thrilled to see me. There may have been other things going on in her life. She seemed a bit faded and frazzled. When I announced the PT thought I was way ahead of where most people are at this time, she nodded. I suspect she had me pegged before the surgery. She had had me walk down the hall to observe my gait. She said, "Are you always that conscious of your stride?" I wasn't sure how she interpreted that at the time.

    I had questions about what was possible. Yes, I could use a vibrating platform without concern for the hip. There are no movement limits for the hip with the anterior approach. I will be limited by scar tissue and fascia from before the surgery. I might never be able to cut my own toenails again.

       When I got home, I heard Yvette and Scott talking in his bedroom. She came out wearing a mask and announced he had Covid. He must have gotten it at the memorial celebration for Jared at My Bar. I wasn't concerned about possible contamination. First off, the current strain isn't a killer. I was never closer than at least six feet from Scott, and we only saw each other in the open-air parts of the house. There is a good chance I was never close enough to catch anything. But to be on the safe side, I called Kaiser. I wanted to know what I should do if I did come down with it. There is some medication available to people in my age bracket. She said to call Kaiser; they would contact my primary, who would prescribe the medication. I also told them to tell Dr. Salasa. 

Now, I was sorry I insisted on an in-person consultation.

  When I met up with Lutz during my evening walk, I told him I had been exposed to Covid and needed to keep a distance. Lutz regaled me with stories of Covid boring into the brain and causing dementia. Lutz has a gift for sharing inappropriate information. I told him to shut up. I didn't need to hear that right now. Brian, his son, was walking with him. He said, "He does that all the time." Lutz is a sweet, well-intended man who is missing a few synapses when it comes to understanding another person's perspective.

   On the other hand, he was amazing when he inspected five-year-old Sidney's bumps to see if he could determine the cause. He spoke to him gently and knelt by his side. Lutz is also the guy who flew over to Oahu to pick me up after the surgery. Where he's good, he's very, very good; where he's bad, he's horrid. Nay, Lutz is never horrid in my experience, only somewhat annoying.

  B stopped by to drop off more food from Nedda. He said she would call me to talk about the food. Ah, she was starting a business. I thought she was giving me the food as an act of caring because of the great work I did with her son. I will eat the food she provided, but none was to my taste. One dish looked delicious, with beautiful shrimps. Only I'm allergic to shrimp. I texted B and told him to pick it up and eat it himself.

   I watched Finding Ola on Netflix. Wow! This is good. It takes place in Eygpt, one of the modern Islamic countries. Ola doesn't wear a hijab while her mother does.   The script and the acting are fantastic. My only problem was I had trouble following the captions because I couldn't take my eyes off the performers.

Friday, August 26, 2022

  Friday, August 26, 2022       I tried the stretch the acupuncturist gave me for my pirus formis. I couldn’t make it work. It required gett...