April 27, 2008

End Times

The end is near!

No, not The Rapture, where the good people go to heaven and the rest of us are left behind being chased by zombies who are under the control of our Evil Overlord, Simon Cowell.

I’m talking about the end of high school.

Our youngest youngen is about to graduate. How can my baby girl be this old? *sniffle* What makes this a bit odd is that high school goes on for another month. But the seniors only have a few more days, thanks to a bureaucratic snafu.

Back in February there was a school bond issue on the ballot, which included remodeling the high school football field. The football field where graduation was supposed to be held. The bond issue passed, and work began. Then Mother Nature decided that 2008 would be the wettest year in history and the football field became a giant mudhole.

Can’t have commencement in a giant mudhole, must find other venue.

Unfortunately the school auditorium isn’t large enough because the area has experienced expansive growth and has twice as many students as they thought they’d have at this point in time. The graduation committees of all the surrounding districts booked all the good dates at all the available auditoriums years ago. Frantic phone calls and schedule juggling ensued, and thus, Daughter will graduate miles from home, practically before she was born.

Like these last few months of school haven’t been nerve-wracking enough. We’ve had to contend with the hideous weather, like getting her to the ACT College test on an April day when it snowed. The last time I took a child to the ACT test it snowed and I ended up in the hospital with a broken leg. So that made me a little edgy. (I survived unscathed.)

Then there was prom. Daughter has never attended a prom and I nagged her that she should go. Nope, don’t wanna go and you can’t make me. That was the standoff until three days prior to prom, when she suddenly decided it’d be fun. See what nagging gets you? A headache, that’s what it gets you. Plus trips to 50 places for tickets, a dress, shoes, undergarments, transportation, flowers and accessories.

But they went, it was lovely and yes I have pictures

All of this while doing full-time caregiving for grandma. Trips to every -ist on the planet…neurologist, orthopedist, opthamologist, optometrist, urologist, therapist, radiologist and pharmacist.

Visiting the doctors is easy compared to trying to figure out the billing, though. Medicare, Medicare supplemental, Part A, Part B, tie ins, tie-one-ons. The paper billings are months behind so we decided to sign up for Medicare online. God help you if you are a sick old person and try to use the Medicare website. It was designed by Simon Cowell and the zombies.

To sign up you have to get a special username and password. Ok, I’ve done that hundreds of times at hundreds of websites. Ha! You can’t just sign up! You have to figure out the formula. You have to use the first letter of your last name and the last letter of your first name combined with the town you were born in. That’s step one. Then multiply your social security number by itself and subtract that from the distance to the sun. That’s step two of the 487 steps to get a username. The real irony though, is that once you have completed the entire process, the website is filled with confusing and illogical data that helps not at all.

I need a psychiatrist. One who knows a good pharmacist.

:-)

Categories: Family, Humor

February 14, 2008

Happy Valentine’s Day

Sending loving thoughts to all of you - I miss you so!

Happy Valentine's Day

Categories: Family, Friends, Blogging

January 23, 2008

Helluva Year

2008 has been one hell of a year, and it’s not even a month old.

We started out with the computer on the fritz. This plucky little machine has been chugging along for years now, but it was starting to wheeze under the strain. It has suffered at the hands of an anime-obsessed teenage girl and a Goth-inspired young man. It has listened to many, many song downloads. It has held thousands of photos. It has groaned at my prose.

We tried clearing out the files of the young-man-who-has-flown-the-coop. We uploaded photos to online storage. We lit incense and prayed to the bits/bytes gods.

Nothing worked.

Daughter suggested we upgrade the operating system. I balked (that’s what moms do) but as the days wore on and I was getting the shakes, cradling the useless keyboard in my hands and sobbing, I agreed.

I am a technotard. But I understand the words others tell me, even if I do no fully comprehend the meaning. It seems there are these things called “drivers” that communicate between the programs and the operating system. Without the drivers, the programs are like college students on spring break, getting rowdy and flashing their boobies at strangers. The operating system throws up its hands in disgust and settles into a recliner with a tall glass of scotch. The only remedy is to download updated drivers, which sounds good…in theory.

Unfortunately, one of the programs that goes crazy is the modem. It’s at a party on the beach, so getting it to download the updates is damn near impossible. It stumbles and barfs a lot. It delivers information sporadically, at an appallingly slow speed, before it passes out. We connected at 9 kbs. That is not a misprint. Nine. The website said it would take 872 years to get all of the required updates. Talk about irony! We couldn’t download the upgrades needed because the modem needed upgrades.

Then Eldest Son (belated Happy Birthday sweetie - love you!) rode to our rescue. He told us that Sprint just came out with a new thingy that you plug into the USB port and it works like a wireless high-speed connection. We went to the Sprint store and got it - it looks like half of a cell phone. It was easy to install and is working like a charm (she whispered, lest she jinx the thing).

So the gods smiled on us and we got high-speed Internet access. The programs got upgraded and the computer is running like a political pollster is chasing it. I bet it will be really cool once I get to use it. Because of course, one thing goes right and…well you know….

Grandma got broken. Somehow she tore the rotator cuff in her shoulder. It’s a painful injury and an even more painful surgery and recuperation. I know this because I heard it from ten different doctors and because grandma tells me. It meant she would need assistance, so we started staying at her house to take care of her, and to allow her plenty of opportunities to remind me that it’s a painful injury and an even more painful surgery and recuperation. I understand. I’ve been broken - a lot.

So I’m trying to be patient and polite. My halo is starting to slip though and feels more like a noose - LOL!

But I try to find humor in the situation, and I have to admit, it ain’t easy. Grandma’s pain meds cause her to slur her speech and speak softly. I seem to be the only one who can hear or understand her. So now I am the driver, trying to communicate between the operating system and the programs.

Grandma will mutter something and Husband or Daughter will misunderstood and respond with an inappropriate answer. It goes something like this:

Grandma says - “This light bulb went out”.
Husband responds - “Yes, it’s cold but bright out”.
Daughter responds - “I don’t like trout”.

I could use an upgrade.

Undergoing MyBlogLog Verification

Categories: Family, Humor

November 8, 2007

Martiana Jones

Hi there! Remember me? Former regular blogger, now full time eBay seller and watchdog over grandma’s computer?

I’m home sick today {{cough cough}} It’s the first day off I’ve had in six or seven weeks. I’ve kind of lost track of time, as the days of driving over to grandma’s house and spending all day, every day, teaching a woman in her 80’s how to use a computer, and photographing and describing her vast collection of Depression Glass, have all sort of run together into one big melted blob of cheese.

Cheese?

Yes, grandma likes cheese. I like cheese too, but we have something with cheese every day for lunch. I should have very strong bones and a stopped-up colon in a few months. But my colon will survive, which is more than I can say for other parts of me.

My back may never be right after my escape the other day. Grandma is driving some now, as the medicine she takes for her Parkinson’s has stabilized the shaking, and she needed a prescription refill. She doesn’t have a spare front door key, because they always came and went through the garage. But since grandpa passed away, she had a spare door opener.

So she left to go to the drugstore, and left me the old garage door remote control to use in case she didn’t return in time to be there when I had to go pick daughter up from school. The time came, and I used the wall-mounted opener inside the garage to open the door. When I got outside, I pressed the button on the hand held remote she gave me, to lower the door.

Nothing happened.

I pressed the button again. I pressed it several times with increasing urgency.

Nothing.

I went back inside and pressed the wall-mounted button. The door closed.

I pressed it again and the door went up

I checked my watch and realized I had to get going or Daughter would be left at the altar…errr… parking lot. So I did what any mother would do. I wished I had a stunt double.

But no magic person appeared, so I did the next best thing, I did the stunt myself. I hit the button and made a dash for the door as it started its descent. I did a diving roll, a la Indiana Jones, and made it to the driveway before the door closed all the way. I was quite proud of myself. I was also quite sore, as I am not a world class adventurer. I am a middle-aged mom with a history of broken bones. Nothing was broken but I was breathing hard from the excitement of the mad dash, and my back and hips ached from the drop and roll.

(This is starting to sound pornographic with all this urgency, arising, and heaving breasts - LOL)

I made it to the school in time to pick up the girl. I returned to grandma’s house and found her at the computer. I hoped she was heeding my warnings not to click on any links in any e-mail (I told her that e-mail links could be viruses and if she clicked on one she might get a virus on her computer. She didn’t really understand that, so I told her that if she clicked on a link, Howie Mandel would die and she’d never get to see Deal or No Deal again.)

:)

Don’t know when I’ll get a chance to post again, or visit any of your blogs. I miss you, and wish you well.

TUESDAY NIGHT UPDATE: many Tuesday evenings find me at Open Mike Night at Successful Blog. It is a lovely venue filled with wonderful bloggers who discuss a wide range of topics, eat virtual Klondike bars and frolic in the meadow. OK, so we don’t really frolic, but we do have some fascinating discussions. And this evening, Timothy Johnson, blogger extraordinaire of Carpe Factum, was wondering why his Technorati ranking seems to go up and down like a roller coaster. In the spirit of sharing (which Liz Strauss promotes) I am sharing Timothy’s blog with you. Stop by, read and enjoy. Cheers!

Categories: Family, E-Bay, Humor

September 21, 2007

Today is Our 26th Wedding Anniversary

25th Wed 25 years ago

Today is our 26th Wedding Anniversary

September 21, 1981

Categories: Special Days, Family, Humor

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