Saturday, December 19, 2015

Its Over!

Good Evening, Don,

So sorry it has been almost three weeks since I last wrote. We came up to the end of the quarter, had finals, a major report was due that ended up over 15 pages long, a curriculum re-write that had to be done, changes to the syllabi and getting the first week photocopied and electronically transferred  before the quarter was over took precedence over absolutely everything. Today, the quarter is over, we have graduated well over 120 students this morning – I am now officially on vacation. Okay, as much as I can vacation – I'm sure I'll be doing something along the line to get ready for the next quarter that starts in January.  

I find graduation to be rather bitter sweet – I remember the names, but the people going across the stage to get their diplomas are not the same people I had in class way back in the day. It is good that they are moving on. I enjoyed the speaker – she didn't come off as a know it all. Her advice to the graduates was to take risks, be nice, work hard – just because you have a degree doesn't mean you get the job- you have to earn it. I especially liked the "be nice".  Fitting words for this day and age.

My world has suddenly expanded from concentrated focused effort to WOW! There's a world beyond the end of my desk! OH NO! One week to Christmas! Shopping?! Cards?! Family!? Where will everyone be for Christmas and what do I need to do?! Semi-panic... we did the Christmas shopping yesterday before the weekend before Christmas. In many ways I'm very lucky. My better half knows what he wants and just orders it from Amazon. All I have to do is meet the delivery person at the door, take it and wrap it. Sure does cut down on wondering what to get him that he won't return. The rest of the family is pretty easy – they send a list, I pick 2 off of it and away I go! Now I need to concentrate on wrapping.

Our son and daughter-in-law decided to treat their son (just over 2 years old) to Santa Claus and snow so they flew back from tropical China (where they teach) last week and arrived just in time for the blizzard. I'd found real boots for our grandson along with snow pants and mittens so he was ready for the snow. Getting the boots on became a main event – little kids sure can curl their toes so their feet don't fit in the boots! Once they were on, he had to figure out how to walk again! Big heavy clumpy things hanging off his legs made walking a new experience. But once he got it, he and I walked everywhere, through every drift he could find. And then he discovered he could eat the snow. Instant cold trickling down the throat seemed to delight him to no end! Every time I turned around he had a new bunch of snow that he was licking off his mittens. And the smile on his face was the image of pure satisfaction.  There is a sense of 'living in the present" that little kids have that I sometimes envy.

My latest interests have been hydroponics. Actually acquaponics. I read an article about 9 companies in Iowa raising salt water shrimp. They are supplying up to 250,000 shrimp a month from landlocked Iowa. There is even a company here in Denver that is now raising shrimp! I'm hoping that after the hoopla of the holidays settles down I can go visit. As a vegetarian who eats fish, I'm really excited about acquafarming – and I'm really hopeful that the acqua farmers treat their fish more responsibly than the factory farms treat their cows, chickens and pigs. That is one reason I became a vegetarian.

Much to my surprise, the natural health food store was selling acquaponic units today at half price so I picked one up. Not sure where we'll put it because it has to have sun for the plants but not shining into the fish tank, and the temperature has to be 70 – 80 degrees for the fish. But it is an adventure! I have lots to learn – but hey! That's what vacations are for!

I was fortunate enough to have sometime between everything else to edit a story written by a lady in New York for a contest about addictions. Powerful story! The conflict between treating an addict with tough love and the realization they are on the path that will destroy their lives and there is nothing you can do to stop it is heart wrenching – do you enable so you know when the addict literally dies? Or do you send them out and spend the rest of your life wondering which gutter they died in? This is the subject of a parent's (s') nightmare.

I've seen the movies on your list – can't say that I understand why Animal House and Annie Hall are even in the top 50 – and why Ferris Bueller's Day Off  isn't. It is, like you said, "What are you thinking?"  I had to laugh when you talked about VHS and VCRs - we pulled out an old VHS tape last night and watched Die Hard 2. We were amazed that our VHS machine still worked and that the tape didn't break in the middle!

Your Twainism hit the spot: "Action speaks louder than words but not nearly as often."
I'm not sure about the "not nearly as often" part. In the classroom, I see the actions long before I hear the words.  I have become very aware that I can almost always tell what a student is like based on their actions – rarely do their words and actions have the same meaning.

By the next writing I'll have returned to the land of the real and happening! Hope you all have a great Christmas, a magnificent holiday, a peaceful time ... however you honor this time of year – I wish you all well and joy.


Carolyn 

Images from google images:
Christmas tree retrieved from Hue Christmas - Apps for Hueapps4hue.com

Santa retrieved from Grand theft auto vice city gta #70171577-themes.com


Thursday, December 3, 2015

Bueller.........Bueller?... plus Bill and Ted and Beetlejuice MIA


Hi Carolyn,




For starters, I forgot, last time around, to wish y'all a happy Thanksgiving. A good  friend of mine, and fellow Canadian  found himself  in NYC for the Macy's parade this year and said it was a spectacle quite unlike anything he had seen before. Alas, he also noted that security was beyond molasses thick and he was less than comfy with all of that visible weaponry.




The quirky climate stuff you mentioned certainly seems to be making its presence felt. That little slop of snowfall I referred to last time around is history and we are back to temps around plus five to 8 (Celsius ) during the day and just a tad below freezing at night. I haven't put the bike to bed yet simply because I have a feeling that there is one or two more rides left this year. It's December and I'm in snow country and I'm trash talking like this !! Canst thou dig it ??   Never-the-less, I had a most therapeutic  hour on the bike just a couple of weeks ago, so let it be known that  I'm keeping the two-wheeled  faith here, brothers and sisters!









Your mention of " Bosom Buddies " and it's trading on the " Some Like It Hot " vibe struck me as quite interesting on two levels. Firstly, I had just seen Messrs. Lemon and Curtis in that flick a short while ago on Turner Classic Movies and enjoyed it supremely once again. When that first miraculous VCR player/recorder appeared in gadget land so many decades ago, a VHS tape of this flick was among my first purchases. It was pretty cool to realize, at the time,  that we could watch it any time we wanted to!


On a second and more detailed level it reminded me of a list my daughter had recently  sent me.  It's from The Writers Guild Of America itemizing what they feel is/are the.....











See the complete list at  www.wga.org/content/default.aspx?=5949





I gotta admit, I have a bone or three to pick with this particular list.

 For startsies here's the Writer's Guild top ten:


1- Annie Hall


2- Some Like It Hot


3 - Groundhog Day


4 - Airplane


5 - Tootsie


6 - Young Frankenstein


7 - Dr. Strangelove


8 - Blazing Saddles


9 - Monty Python and the Holy Grail


10 - Animal House







For the record, I have seen all of these. In fact the only ones I have not seen more than once are the ones that I would personally kick out of the top ten. I figure if you see a flick and then want to see it again that's a pretty straightforward gut reaction type  barometer. The two flicks in this list that I didn't see again, by choice, are Annie Hall and Groundhog Day.




I hereby remove them from this top ten list and substitute two of my gut list total faves.  They would be The Princess Bride ,which was # 22 on their list and Ferris Bueller's Day Off, which was # 33.




Now let's look at egregious omissions from this list - stuff that didn't appear at all. The most glaring no-show  has to be Beetlejuice.  Not too far behind is Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure.  These two absolute  oversights made me do the " what were they thinking ?"  dance big time.










Some other placings that I'd like to, as the jewish folks say , " kvetch" about are:

The Marx Brothers Duck Soup at #17 , The Odd Couple ( the movie ) at #41, MASH ( the movie ) at 48, Stripes at # 88 and The Life of Brian at # 26.

Once again " what were they thinking ? ". Okay, 'tis true that a screenplay is a different animal than a script but in each of these cases the " if it ain't on the page it won't play on the stage " dictum was strictly observed from the git-go.




Anyhow, that's all I have to say about that ( to paraphrase Mr. F. Gump )



And while we're passing on other people's words here's this weeks Twainism. It fits the subject matter, if you think about in a certain way.


Action speaks louder than words but not nearly as often.





Glad to hear that your Thanksgiving was a wonderful family fricassee, Carolyn.


Catch  ya later.




Don








All images sourced from Google Images:


Fig. 1 - hostelsclubblog.com
Fig. 2 - filmplicity.com
Fig. 3 - wga.org
Fig. 4 - filmsack.com
Fig. 5 - movieposter.com