Monday, December 27, 2010

Christmas Suprise

On Christmas day, while I was waiting for my dad to pick me up to go to my sister's place, I went to check my mail. Hanging from my mailbox was this Christmas ornament tin.



Taped to the tin was an empty envelope with my name written on it. I took it off the mailbox and shook it. "Sounds like candy in there," I thought. "Probably Hershey's Kisses." I dropped the ornament in my bag of gifts and waited for my ride.

"Well, I could use a little chocolate treat, " I thought and fished the ornament out. I worked the tin open looking forward to the candy I knew must be in there. When I got the tin open, this is what I found.



"There's money in here," I said out loud and closed the tin back up. I looked at the envelope that was taped to the front. I was my name though it was written in a handwriting I didn't recognize. The envelope itself was empty. I open the tin back up, thinking maybe I just imagined it. Nope, the money was still there - 4 twenties and 2 tens. There was no card in the tin.

Someone gave me a Christmas gift but I don't know who it is from. I'd like to say thank you, but I don't know who to thank. I'm not even sure if I should accept a gift like this. (The money, not the candy - I'm keeping the candy.)

So, to the Santa who left it, thank you for the gift.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Christmas 1991

In December 1991 I pulled out the Christmas decorations. That may not seem like such a strange thing to do in December, but it was unusual for that year. I June of 1991 my mother passed away and I wasn't sure how Christmas would go that year. My mother always made a big production of Christmas - baking cookies (that she thought were hidden from us), making my Dad put up the tree and lights, cooking and shopping. But this year, none of that would happen unless someone else did it. I left the cookie baking to my sister, who is better at it than me, and pulled out the tree and decorations.

In one of the boxes I found a small white box with a snowflake design on it. When I opened it I found an envelope with "1990" written on it in my mother's handwriting. (My mother was left-handed, but one would never know from her handwriting.)I took out the envelope and found another marked "1989", then another marked "1988", then another... Inside those envelopes where Christmas cards; the card the Carpenter family sent out each year from 1954 to 1990.

I eventually ended up with that box of cards (along with other special items from the family home) when my Dad sold the house. I always thought it would be nice to preserve these electronically, but I wasn't sure how and didn't have the time.

This year I do have the time so I thought I'd create a video of the cards. This would not be easy. I don't have the most up-to-date software on my computer. I don't have Adobe Flash which would be the first choice for creating an electronic video. I have a seven year old version of Adobe Photoshop (Photoshop CS, no numbers after it), an even older version of Adobe Illustrator (version 7), and a four year old version of Camtasia Studio (version 3).

Its taking a lot of time, good thing I started early, but here is a beginning iteration. This is a low-resolution version as Blogger will not allow the high-resolution version. (Too big.)

Monday, November 15, 2010

Weight...Oh! Gone...

I was cleaning house over the weekend and decided to get rid of some of the junk that has been accumulating. I wanted to start small - something I could do in a day. Something I could accomplish like the SMART goals I use to have to make for work. (SMART goals are specific (S), measurable (M), attainable (A), relevant (R), and timely (T) see SMART goals for more information.)

I decided to start with the medicine cabinet and the cabinet in the bathroom. You know the places - the one where all those travel-size bottles of shower gel and body lotion accumulate. The place where that jumbo, bargain bottle of Advil expires because you don't have enough headaches to use it all.

I found tons of that stuff. Some of it pushed to the back of the cabinet, sitting there since I moved in. In the process I decided to actually weigh the amount of junk I was getting rid of. That totaled nine pounds! That felt great; purging nine pounds of clutter. Now I actually have room in the cabinet to store my blow-dryer, combs, assorted hair accessories, etc.

So I stood there looking at the bathroom scale. Stood there in the shorts that I almost had an "America's Funniest Home Video" moment in while walking to the corner store. Shorts that, last summer were too tight, but now I can take off without unzipping. Should I? Should I step on that scale?

Looking at the picture below you could see why I would not want to step on the scale.


Holy freakin' dog-mess batman! Is that me?

Yes. Yes, it is. This picture was taken a few years ago. My niece, who is now 6, was using the high-chair in the background. But...still...it probably wasn't too different from what I was seeing in the mirror six months ago.

Six months ago. Before I was riding my bike at least 4.4 miles a day, five days a week in order to get to work. Before I decided to cut all refined sugar and flour products from my life. Before I decided to eat mostly veggies, fruit and protein.

So, while holding my shorts up, I stepped on the scale. Thirty pounds. Gone. From me.

And nine pounds of baggage. Stuff I didn't need. Stuff I didn't even want anymore.

Thirty-nine pounds of junk that could never make me happy. Thirty-nine pounds of "fat" that only made me unhappy.

Now I just have to keep it up. Keep up both kinds of weight loss.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Who Writes This Stuff?

Lately I've been seeing a lot of...oh, lets say, strange posts on facebook. Many of them are from the "status of the moment" sites. The ones in which you can select from pre-written posts. A lot of those posts are funny, clever little sayings that are kind of fun. Others, well, they just reflect badly on the poster.

I saw this one today posted by someone and it is completely out of character for her. I know her as a pleasant, fun, sweet woman with a beautiful voice. This post is just not her and, I suspect, she was just having a rough day. I don't think she wrote this and I hope no one else re-posts it.

Alert - the grammar police are helping me write this blog. We all make mistakes and we all abuse the exclamation mark (!) and the ellipsis (...). But when the tone of the post is so self-centered and anti-social, its hard to ignore the punctuational abuse. If you abuse poor helpless punctuation marks like that, how do you treat human beings? (I've been known to abuse both myself.......... So sue me!!!)

A HANDFUL!! Unfortunately most women won't repost this. I'm strong willed, independent, a bit outspoken and I tell it like it is. I make mistakes, I am sometimes out of control & at times hard to handle. But if you can't handle me at my worst... then you sure as heck don't deserve me at my best. If you're a HANDFUL, repost! I......... dare you! I'll be looking for the ladies who repost!

Nothing about this post says anything positive about the poster; it just sounds...well, mean and self-centered. Lets take a closer look.

"A HANDFUL!!" OK, one exclamation mark will do and you don't need to shout at me. I can hear you. Small children are a handful, and a wonderful handful at that, grown women should not be.

"Unfortunately most women won't repost this." Thank the Lord for that; who would want to? Oh, and its "re-post". Did you not see the red underline below the word? It signifies a misspelling; right click and fix it.

"I'm strong willed, independent, a bit outspoken and I tell it like it is." So you're stubborn, too good to ask for help when you need it, and rude. Nice, lets be friends.

"I make mistakes," But do you learn from them? Oh, and that's a comma splice. Look it up: Comma Splice.

"I am sometimes out of control & at times hard to handle." Sounds like a substance abuse issue.

"But if you can't handle me at my worst... then you sure as heck don't deserve me at my best." You have a "best"? I haven't heard anything good yet.

"If you're a HANDFUL, repost! I......... dare you!" Would you stop shouting at me, I just want to review my facebook news feed. I seriously doubt I would do anything you dare me to do - it could involve the police and fire departments. Oh, and the ellipsis has three periods. More doesn't make it better.

"I'll be looking for the ladies who repost!" Keep looking. Good luck with that.

So by now you are thinking, "What.......a bitch!!" Yes, OK, I'll give you that. I could have been a little more gentle. But, think of this. Every time something like that appears it reinforces the negative stereotype of women. A stereotype that, while I didn't create it and don't live according to it, I'm measured against. Men are afraid of me because of things like that. Really? Me?

I grew up in a time in which I was told, "You can do anything. The barriers are coming down. You just need to work hard at it, keep going, stay focused, etc." I know what the poster was trying to say, and its a noble thought, but choose your words more carefully.

So how would I say it? How about this:

I'm a strong, independent woman who isn't afraid to ask for help. I don't always say the right thing and, sometimes, you may not like what I have to say. I make mistakes, but I try to learn from them. I sometimes get angry or sad, but I try not to take it out on those I love. But if you can't accept me when I fail, then you don't need me when I succeed. If you're a strong woman re-post this. I'll be looking for all the women who do!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

When Social Networks Collide


We all have heard of the "Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon" game in which one connects any actor to Kevin bacon. Its a fun game based on a real principal. (See Six Degrees of Separation ) I first heard of the "real", mathematical, social aspects of this while reading Malcolm Gladwell's book "The Tipping Point". An excellent book, by the way, particularly if you are interested in social media as I am.

Every morning I "set-up" my computer. Turn "the beast" on, log into my wireless network, and open my browser. My homepage is my personalized iGoogle page with a widget for my email. Then I open up tabs for facebook, LinkedIn, my Yahoo! mail account, and my Blogger dashboard. Then I might bookmark some interesting articles on my delicious account in order to read them later. Check out the simplyhired.com job website. Make a blog post, watch a video, have a quick chat via GoogleTalk.

I spend a lot of time in social networking. I have friends, contacts, links, videos, documents, and images out there "in the clouds". I shouldn't be surprised when I see friends and contacts collide, i.e. when people from different groups are connected. But I am.

About a year ago I noticed one of my facebook friends had just friended a new person and his name sounded familiar. When I checked him out I found that he was a long-time "real-life" friend of another of my friends - I'll call her Monica. Monica and I traveled a few times to watch this guy perform. (He is a musician.) I thought it interesting but thought the chances of it happening again were small. (Wrong. The chances are probably not that small.)

Then, just today, it happened again. I found a guy I went to school with is friended to one of my little brother's childhood friends. I don't know how they know each other, it can't be the "old neighborhood", high school, college or jobs. I don't even care how, I just think its cool. I love social media and I love the idea that I can keep in touch with people whom I might not be in contact with because of distance. Distance, both chronologically and geographically.

I have friends, family members, and colleagues who refuse to get on any social networks for a variety of reasons. Some of them include:

"If I don't talk to the person now, I don't need to talk to them." Really? You did talk to them at one time, perhaps everyday. You might have even been friends. Why not again?

If I want to talk to someone I'll call one the phone and meet up in person. People spend all their time online chatting and writing they never make any friends. How is a friendship, online, any different from a friendship carried out via mail? In the past entire friendships, romances even, were carried out via letters. To disregard all relationships that happen electronically is to disregard all relationships that don't happen face to face. What about the guy how works from home, a 1000 miles away from the office. Does he not have a relationship with his co-workers and the company? What about a woman serving in the military in another country? Are her electronic chats home to her husband and kids suspect because she isn't in the same room? And, NO, it isn't different.

Its so annoying when I'm with someone and all they are doing is checking facebook. Well, yes, you are right there. But those people are just rude, its not the problem with the media.

I don't want some old boyfriend to find me. Your old boyfriend can still find you whether you have an online presence or not. And what if he does? You DON'T have to friend/connect with him.

Who cares what a bunch of amateurs have to say? That stuff is so bad. Professionals need to be creating content for the world. Two words - "Reality TV" Nuff said.

I love social networking/media. For years we were forced to be simply consumers of media. Now we are consumers AND creators of media. (Shirky) I'd rather be making a youtube video than watching the junk on TV. I'd rather be trying to figure out how my facebook friends know each other. I'd rather be blogging.

References:

Clay Shirkey, Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age, 2010 Tantor Press.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Time to Come Clean

Back in June a friend of mine passed away. Suddenly, unexpectedly. He was only 47 years old. It freaked me out. People my age should not be dying. We are suppose to be inventing cool things like Google. Or building things, or doing anything.

He wasn't my best friend, nor was I his. But he was always fun to hang around with, easy to hang around with.

I've been recording my memories in this blog but in the third person because it was just to sad to write in first person. But I think its time to change that and come clean. These are my memories that I would like to share.

When I first met Donny, he kept telling me that I shouldn't listen to what people said about him. If I heard something I should come to him. It wasn't until after he died that I was able to put the pieces together and figure out what he was talking about. So many people judged him; he assumed I would also. That was never the case.

I remember one night being at his place. It was late; we had had a few drinks. (This was before he quit drinking.) He started to get very sad. I can still picture him sitting on the edge of his bed with his head in his hands. Crying. Tough guy Donny. "I'm a man" Donny. Crying. Over the difficult relationship he had with his own father. Over his own sons. I put my had on his shoulder. He brushed me away saying, "Stop, I don't deserve to feel good." Yes, you did, you deserved that. I rubbed his shoulders and back, kissed the back of his neck. He calmed down.

He saved me once from some creepy guy at Horan's. I called him on my way home from work. I had gone out with some co-workers and didn't want to go home just yet. He said he would meet me there after he finished helping fix someone's car. I got to Horan's first and was sitting by myself. Some guy started to move to the next bar stool, intending to sit down. "Are you here alone," he asked. "No, she's with me," he said as he seemingly appeared out of nowhere. He was like that old Dudley Doright cartoon - always there at the last minute to save the woman in distress.

He talked about his family all the time. He missed them. I heard all the family stories as he loved to tell them. Sometimes I heard them more than once. When I first showed him faccebook he had me looking up all his family. Every search showed 4 or 5 people he knew. "That's my sister, that's my niece, that's my cousin." It seemed like he was related to the whole town. And then he would tell a story about the person we searched.

I fell asleep on his couch quite a few times. He never woke me up and sent me home, he just went to sleep himself. Then he would make breakfast the next morning. We had pancakes one morning. We had a midnight snack once of his special mac and cheese - it was delicious. He was like that. He had so little, but he was always sharing what he had.

He always appreciated a gift. I once gave him a laptop bag and one would think it was plated in gold. He said no one had every given him something that nice. (Not true, but he always said things like that.)

I wish he was here now. I miss him.

I'm Clueless...

Well, not really. I can build you a database, write you a simple computer program, build you a simple web page. I know what Fitt's Law is and I can perform heuristic evaluation on you web site or computer application. I know how to run a usability test, a focus group, and I can build a rockin' survey. I can use a screen reader and determine if it is accessible to persons with disabilities. I can build you a Halloween costume from a few pieces of foam board, a roll of Contact paper, and a couple of dowel rods (twice). I can make you curtains, a table topper, a new dress. But there is one thing I just don't know about.

Boys.

Oh, I can work with them - they make great co-workers. I can be friends with them - some of my best friends are boys. But as a "mate", I just don't get their logic.

And, perhaps, its my deficiency, not theirs. In my entire dating career of about 30 years, I've had three "real" relationships and there have been only three guys I "dated". Not a lot of experience. My last "date" was in 2007. (And I'm calling it a date. Otherwise I'd have to admit the last date I was on was in 2001 or 2002. Its been so long I can't remember the year.)

Two weeks ago I met a very nice gentleman. We had an funny conversation about technology. I like that - a geek like me. At the end of the conversation he said, "I like her, she's OK." So I gave him my card, got his number, and told him to call me if he was going to go again next week.

Fast forward a week - back at the same pub. The boy shows up. By the end of the night we were hanging out, chatting, going to the late-night burrito place for a bite to eat. Having a really fun time. He walked me home, and then headed home himself, telling me, "Think of me tonight, I'll think of you." (Now that's a nice thing to say to a girl; listen up guys.) He even called and left me a message that he got home safe.

Now here is where I'm not sure what I should do. I returned his call but got voice mail, left a message. (Long story short. The card has my business number. I left my personal number.) Was it wrong to think he might call back? Am I just a freak to think that? I don't hear from him so I try again. I get him this time and the conversation was awkward at best. We end the conversation with him saying, "If I call you I'll call on the ... number."

Huh‽

But...you said...your message...I thought...hmmmmmm. This isn't what you said earlier.

I really am stumped. I'm not calling back. Ever. I'd prefer to avoid this pub, but I'm suppose to go to a party there next week. Do I say hello and risk being to forward? Do I say nothing and risk being a bitch? I feel like the guy with the pitch-fork in his back.


















I envy women who breeze through all this kind of stuff. It all seems to come so easy to them. I don't know how to flirt; hell I can't even recognize when someone flirts with me.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Bored...

I've been out of work 14 days (not counting week-ends) and I'm bored. Well, not bored, but tired of job-searching. I can repeat my resume back to anyone who asks. I could probably do it backwards. I still wake up early, take a shower, then I have nowhere to go. I've had so much coffee (at home and Starbucks) that I think I will turn brown as a coffee bean soon.

I'm now doing, everyday, what I use to do on week-ends - wander around the hood with no real deadlines or purpose. That was fine for two days a week in order to relax. But seven days a week? I spend the morning filling out applications, fine-tuning my resume, and writing cover letters. By about 3P I can't sit in the house anymore. Even my cat is sick of me being home all the time.

I need something to do...

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

New Name, Same Content

Had to change the name of the blog because I needed the "eBethInk" moniker for my professional blog.

Searching for a job in the age of social networking is quite a task. I have to checked my linkedIn account, my email, update my portfolio documents, fill out online job apps, etc. I'm spending more time in front of the computer than I was when I was working.

Thanks God for coffee. Really.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Unemployed (Again)

Back in June of 1997, I was let go from a job. I was going to school full-time and working full-time. I thought I could handle it. I couldn't. I was making silly mistakes on the job, my performance was slipping, so I was let go. I probably wasn't doing as well as I could have been in my school work either.

I made a decision that day. I was going to apply for financial aid, go to school full-time, and perhaps get a part-time job. It worked out. I graduated from DePaul University in 1999 with a BS in Computer Science. Specifically, I had a degree in Human Computer Interaction - a field which had been around for a while but was just starting to gain prominence with the emergence of the Web and eCommerce.

In 1998, a year before I was going to graduate, I took an internship at SPSS. I ended up on a project in which SPSS was going to incorporate some mapping capabilities into the flagship SPSS product. I spent my days noodling around with the mapping product; documenting its features, chatting with the software engineers, and even participating in usability testing. (I had only done this in classes with class projects, but this was "the real thing".) When I graduated, they offered me a position - making twice the money I made when I was let go.

That job came with a little culture shock. I was amazed when, in a meeting, someone would turn to me and say, "Elizabeth, what do you think? You've done some . Is this possible?" Or when another designer would come to my desk, paper prototype in hand, and ask, "Would you walk through this task analysis with me. I want to get your opinion." I was happy as a clam when I asked another designer what he thought of my design for "Random Sampling from a Database" and he chuckled and said "You are really talented, and you have a sense of humor for these things - red dice. Kind of funny." (I hadn't really thought of humor. What else could imply random sampling except dice or maybe a coin? Every stats course I took used flipping a coin and throwing dice to demonstrate probability.)

I loved my job. I looked forward to Monday mornings so I could get back there. Then came off-shoring, the dot-com explosion, 9/11, bad economic times. I was laid off. "This has nothing to do with your performance. The company will be moving in a different direction and your skills are not in line with the company's direction." Oh well. They wanted to develop more web-based applications and my skills were in desktop applications. Time to move on.

Fast forward four years. Now I have a Master's Degree but I am underemployed at a company I didn't really love and who didn't really appreciate what I could offer. I got a tip about about a job. Applied for it, spoke with the HR person about setting up an interview, and waited for the call with my interview date. The next day I found out "my position has been eliminated". I was laid off again. "This has nothing to do with your performance... etc." Oh well (again).

Two and a half years later, I'm looking for a job again. I don't know what I can say about this situation. I haven't accepted the severance package so I will error on the side of saying nothing.

Except.. This has nothing do do with my performance.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Getting Things Will Not Make You Happy

This is the title of a post on one of the blogs I follow. I find it to be so true. And its interesting that I saw it today.

I ranted-out on my facebook page today and when I really think about it, I acting in the way I should be. I wasn't acting in the way I profess to act, which is, "Do onto others...".

After I loaded my bike onto the bike rack on the front of the bus, and then got on, the bus driver said to me, "Wouldn't it be easier for you to get on at Forest Park (the "el" station) than here. Look at all the traffic that is backed up now." There were about four or five cars behind the bus. "Well," I thought "actually it wouldn't be easier for me to get on at the station." The place where I get on is closer to my house, it allows me to avoid crossing a busy street that feeds onto the expressway, and I thought I was making it easier for traffic using this bus stop. I thought, "I've been standing, waiting, in the chilly fall morning for about 10 minutes for the bus. They can wait the minute and a half, in their heated cars, for me."

Well, now that I think about it, I was wrong. That is no way to "do unto others". I put myself first. I should be more considerate. But...

I was cranky. (That's no excuse, its just a reason.) It took comments from 2 facebook friends for me to realize I was just being a whiner.

In the last couple years, I've been feeling very pressured to "fit in - be like everyone else". "You need to buy a car." "You need to wear different clothes." (Translation "buy new clothes") "You need to get your hair colored and styled" Translation "buy a new look") "You need to watch TV, nobody wants to hear about the books you read." (Translation "buy a new TV to replace the one that broke, then buy cable") Its buy, purchase, get, acquire.

Been there, done that. Have the debt to prove it. And it never made me happy. I associated the bus driver's comment with another directive to buy. Wrong, I know.

I've learned that what really matters isn't the things you have or give, but the memories you give and have. There is a song I like that goes "I want to leave a legacy, how will they remember me". When I think about the people who are no longer in my life, I don't think about the things they had, but the times we had. When my brother, sister and I get together and talk about my mom or grandmother or grandfather, we talk about the fun and funny things that happened. We don't pull out a box of stuff. The song just wouldn't be the same if went "I want to leave the biggest box of stuff."

Getting things will not make you happy, but making memories will get you happy.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Goodbye Summer

Oh my! It been way to long...

I've been feeling very blue lately. I think I'm sad to be saying goodbye to the summer. I looked forward to the warm days, long evenings for so long that I can't believe they are almost gone. I refuse to let them go.

I will continue to bike into work until there is snow on the ground. (Too dangerous to do it with snow.) I'll have to go shopping for my appropriate cool and cold weather biking clothes. I don't want to give it up because I enjoy it so much, and the daily exercise is starting to show. A few people have told me I look like I've lost weight so, now that I'm on a roll, I can't stop. now. I've thought about an alternative "active transportation" method for snowy days - I thinking about snow-shoes. http://www.rei.com/expertadvice/articles/snowshoeing+first+steps.html

I usually look forward to the fall - I like the season. I like every season except winter. I look forward to every season - a new beginning. Things to look forward to; so many possibilities. But this year the fall is only a warning that winter is comming. Or perhaps I've lost faith that a new season can bring new beginnings, possibilities. I sometimes feel like there is nothing to look forward to anymore; just more of the same routine. Is this what it feels like to get "old".

Before this post turns too sad, I will end with happy things. Won an award at work with a sweet cash prize. (I still have to buy myself a gift with the money - just need to decide what I want.) Got a good performance review with a nice raise. Attended a school assembly with my niece as a "cherished person".

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Once Upon A Time (Again)

A few more parts. Its been too long since the last one.




He always appreciated a gift. The first one she gave him was a six-pack of his beer of choice. Later, after he quit drinking, it was a pack of cigarettes, a pizza, a laptop bag. When she first met him, when she didn't know him very well, he told her about the sweatshirt he got as a gift.
"Nice shirt," she said.
"Its from my sister. She sent it too me for Christmas. Its my favorite team."
In winter he wore it every day. Over the years it started to look worn. Then started to look too big when he lost the beer belly.

When she was at his apartment he always talked about the things people had given him. A sign in the shape of an arrow that said "Fenway Park". Probably filled with memories of going to the park as a kid. She always meant to ask, but never did as he would move on to the next thing. Each thing a new story. A story he loved to tell.

He rarely talked about his life in a direct way. She, probably most people, learned about him from the gifts he was given. Or mayby that was just her impression, perhaps he did talk about himself but she just didn't remember.

He kept all his gifts on the shelves above the bed. He lived in a studio apartment. He took the doors off a closet to create the alcove for the shelves. He would reach over and pick up some object then start talking about it. "You see this..."

He loaned her a CD once. "Be careful with this. Someone gave this to me. Its special." Then he would talk about the person who gave it to him. One of the regulars from the pub. One of the "day crowd". He gave him CDs, and funny t-shirts. He treasured every one.

He gave gifts too. Not material things, those things disappear. She had a leaky facuet and, instead of just calling the landlord to have it fixed, she decided to fix it herself. It made her feel independent. She turned off the water to her apartment, removed the fixture, went to the hardware store, and purchased the correct parts. Only find out she didn't have the strength nor the correct tools to complete the job. She called him.

"Sorry, I just don't know who else to call. You're the only one I know who knows about these things and has the proper tools. Could you come over and help me fix my sink?" She had blabbered on, he stopped her.

"No, you're not bothering me. I'm glad you called me. I'd be honored to help you. You've done so much for me," he had said. He really did say he would "be honored". She almost laughed until she realized he was serious. Such chivilary. He enjoyed the chance to be able to help. She can still picture him, wearing the sweatshirt, sitting on the floor in front of the sink, with the wrentch on the pipe asking, "Do you really want me to try this? If this old pipe breaks, we are screwed." She did, and luck was with him. The old nut turned away cleanly from the pipe. "You are so lucky," he said.

Monday, August 16, 2010

There Are No Stupid Users, Just Stupid Systems

I've been complaining a lot lately. Well, I've been in kind of a pissy mood but that's for another post.

I went to a local coffee shop this evening. Not the one in my neighborhood; one a little farther away for a little bit longer of a ride. I was going to get a cuppa joe, then sit outside and read my book. But first, I needed to use the restroom.

That's the problem. For the second time in four days, both the women's and the men's room were closed for cleaning. I understand that; the restrooms need to be cleaned. However, there was only one person cleaning both restrooms. Like me, she can only multitask in the vitual world. She cannot split herself in two and clean both rooms at the same time. Then why were both restrooms closed? (If the women's room is closed or occupied, I have no trouble using the men's. I just ignore the extra fixture.)

Well, long story short, the babe got a little snippy with me and I decided to send a note to the corporate headquarters of the coffee shop. I went to their website and started filling out the form. Name, no problem. email, no problem. Address, no problem. Then I ran into this:


"date of visit" Two things wrong here. Exactly what format should I be entering the date in? Is it "mm/dd/yyyy" or "mm/dd/yy"? Secondly, why am I "cleaning" your data for you? If I enter 8/16/10 and your database requires 08/16/2010, why can't you just parse the input text and format it for me? It is possible to do that - I've written code that parses text myself, and I'm not even a code monkey. (I'm a User Experience Professional - we don't write code, we just draw pictures of software. Hence the usability rant here.)

"time of visit" I'm not in the military, but I respect those who are. I admire them and not just because they know what time 21:00 is. I always have to do the math, and I don't do math well in my head. I always get it wrong. So why should I enter the time in military time?

I'm already rippin' mad, don't tick me off any more with your poor usability.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Being single is a lot wiser than being in a WRONG relationship!

At the risk of being accused of being a weak, dependant, needy woman, I'm going to have to break bad and disagree with this statement.

I've seen this posted on facebook page by various friends, all of which, except for one, are not single. They have been happily married since their 20s, or are in and have been in long term relationships for a long time. Do y'all even remember what is was like to be single? Do you even remember what is was like to be single for long periods of time? I'm not talking weeks or months, I'm talking years, decades.

Do you remember a time when you took your "coupled" friends' advice and "just treated yourself and when out to dinner by yourself." Do you remember what it feels like to have the owner of the place offer to buy you a drink at the bar because, "I really need this booth." You need this booth for the couples waiting in line. Was my money not green enough? I just spent about $40.00 in your place. (The government thinks my money is greener; as a single I pay more in taxes than marrieds.) Do you ever get tired of hearing "just one" when you walk into a restaurant?

And what exactly is a "WRONG" relationship? If the statement was "Its better to be single than to be with a partner who uses you as a punching bag." or "Its better to be single than to be in a relationship where your partner is stealing from your bank account." then I would be all in.

But simply saying "WRONG"; not so much. Is a "WRONG" relationship one in which your mate worries about you but you define that at jealousy? How about if your mate is giving you good advice like "sure you could handle going back to school" or "they won't know what a good employee you are until you are gone". Do you call that "trying to change me, trying to run my life". Or is a "WRONG" relationship one defined by money, possessions, looks? For people enmeshed in this bling culture a statement like this simply gives them an excuse. "He's just wrong for me, he doesn't have a job, any money, enough time for me.

How many "WRONG" relationships could have turned into "RIGHT" relationships if only the parties had compromised and worked together. "Baby I know finals are coming up, maybe we can do something to celebrate when they are done." "I know you're broke, I have some burgers in the freezer, let's just grill them and chill out tonight." "I don't like musicals, but I'll go with you to see Cats. I know how important it is to you."

I type this on a Saturday night at Starbucks. Single. Alone. Its the same thing I did Friday night and it will probably be the same thing I do Sunday night.

Which is really the lesser of two evils?

Friday, July 30, 2010

Daisy


21 years ago I got a call from my mom asking me if I was coming right home after work. When I asked why she told me that my brother had brought home a kitten. When I got home if found a new friend. The kitten was kind of dirty and sickly, too young to have been separated from her mother. The vet speculated the mother had died. We nursed the kitten back to health.

The vet told us she was probably born sometime in April of 1989. My mother wrote the date in the family phone book for reference. (A phone book my dad still has.)

My Daisy slept with me almost every night. She was a fighter; always ready for an argument. At a recent vet visit, she bit the vet and me.

She was there for me when my mom died, when I lost my job, when I broke up with a boyfriend, when I was nervous about going to grad school. She sat with me when I had a depressive episode a few years back and couldn't work up the energy to get out of my favorite chair. She was there when a friend just recently died. All she ever wanted from me in return is to be near me. Oh, and a can of Friskie's Buffet every day.

My Daisy died today. She was 21 years old. I miss her already.

Good bye my little Boo.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Just Need A Break From Report Writing

So I'll write in the blog.

There is a man I work with who puts an interesting quote on his gtalk every day. Most times they are pretty cool quotes. His current one is:

"Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future." - Paul Boese

Hmm. I'm not sure I agree with that one. I forgive my friends and family - that's easy to do. Usually when they tick me off I know it is because they are just trying to look out for my best interests. I can see how that would enlarge the future - maybe they are giving me good advice that I just can't see because I'm too close.

But forgiving a stranger or someone I don't know very well, that is hard. How do I do that? I I know if I don't it will only piss me off; give me ulcers. The person who wronged me goes on his or her merry way while I stew. I know this, it makes sense, its perfectly logical, but I can't do it. The left side of the brain, buying into the idea; is ready to forgive. The right side keeps coming up with reasons for not doing it.

And, now that I think about it, the hardest person to forgive is myself. I keep working through scenarios - what if I had done this or that, what if I had called, what if, what if, what if, what if?

I will have to think about this quote some more. Really roll it around in the gray matter. Right now, its back to the report.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Once Upon A Time

I promised a friend I would write a story. Its a true story. Actually, its a series of true stories. A difficult set of stories for me to tell. Difficult for me to tell as me, so I will tell it as someone else. In the third person.

It will be a long story, so I will write it in parts; in parts, also because, even now, I'm not sure of the order in which it will go. I'm not even sure of when these stories occurred. Who actually categorizes their memories? Who thinks, I'll have to remember this happened on this date? We always think we will be able to corroborate our memories shared with others.

Are they even really stories? No, they are more like little items in a shadow box carefully arranged. Like mementos arranged on shelves next to the bed. Occasionally taken out and fondled, shared with others.

Its been years since I've written any fiction so please be kind. Here is some of my story.



"The Things He Said To Me"

She met him for the first time sometime in 2004. Fall, she thinks. After August, perhaps September or October. Shortly after what she called "the Victor incident" When she saw him she thought he was Victor sitting at the end of the bar of the neighborhood pub. But no, Victor didn't wear glasses. That's not why she went up to him that first time; to say hello to an old friend. No, not that at all.

He looked solitary, alone. It was difficult for her to describe without resorting to cliches: "alone in a crowd", "like he lost his last friend", "like a beaten dog". He kept his elbows close to his sides, his hands in plain sight. He was sitting with two of the regulars of the pub, a couple. When they walked away he seemed to contract. It was as if he was trying to take up as little space as possible. To be small. To be unseen.

He reminded her of the old television show in which the producers paired an attractive, popular person with a geek. The geeks all got makeovers, they now looked like the beauties on the outside but inside they hadn't changed yet. Still socially awkward. He was like that, externally changed, internally the same.

She did go up to him, she could never understand why. Later he would ask her, "Why me?"
"I don't know," she answered. "I wish I knew. I don't pick my friends, they are selected for me."

She sat near him. They talked about cell phones. He said his was nothing special. "At least you have a color screen, mine is black and white." She asked to see his phone, thinking he probably doesn't have many numbers in it. Why did I think that? She would add her number and perhaps a silly name like "Lance A Boyle" or "Ophelia Payne". He gave her the phone but she failed, terribly, to put any number in it. He wanted the phone back; he was leaving with the couple.
"Sorry, I think I messed something up,"she said handing him back the phone.
"What did you do to my phone, woman?"
It was the last thing he said to her for, how long? Two, three years? Later, she would ask him if he remembered that night. He didn't.
"Sorry I yelled at you," he said after she told him.

It was a phone call late one Saturday night that made them friends, not just people who knew each other from the pub. The phone call was from a number she didn't recognize, a local area code and prefix, but with no name attached. She ignored the call. "Probably just a wrong number." Then she thought better of it, called the number back. No answer. What if it was her sister calling from a pay phone because she lost her house keys? No, she would just come over.

She got a call from the same number the next day as she waited in the Starbucks for her coffee. She answered this time. 'How you doin'," a voice said. The "how" sounding more like "ow".
"Hello?" she repeated.
"Ow you doin?"
"Who is this?"
"Its me."
"Oh, sorry, I didn't recognize your voice," she said.
"Forgot about me so soon?"
"I could never forget about you," she said. "Hey, what are you doing? I'm across the street. Come on over and sit with me, its nice out. I'll buy you a fancy coffee drink."
"I don't like coffee," he said.
"Then I'll buy you an iced tea. Just come over."

She watched him as he walked across the street. He had lost weight. As they talked she found out life had been hard for him since the pub, they one they knew each other from, had closed. He had worked there. He had no electricity, no phone service. He had called from the mystery number by running a wire from the phone box in the building. "But I can only call certain numbers," he said. She pictured him alone in his apartment with his pirated phone line, running through every number in his phone list.

They talked about the break-ups with what she later refereed to as "his nut-job girlfriends". One who he had to get out of his apartment by putting her bottle of vodka outside the door then slamming it shut when she went out to retrieve it. The other simply disappearing in the middle of the night. "They were just pieces of meat," he said.
"Nice attitude, no wonder they left you."
"Only one. The only girlfriend I've never had a fight with."
This would become a pattern with him. He called her whenever there was trouble with one of the nuts. Why is he asking my advice? I haven't had a date since... Well since 2007. But that's another story. But I'm still counting it as a date.


They eventually got to the reason, she thought, for his call. He had some one's old cast-off computer but it didn't work. "Can you fix it?"
"I don't know, I can try," she said.
She did get the computer to start up. It was dusty from sitting in a garage for months. I had a CRT monitor - huge. He had it set up on a dresser. He opened one of the drawers and put a board across it creating a keyboard shelf. He pulled an executive office chair up to it and put his ashtray and drink on the shelf. "Now that's what I'm talkin' 'bout."
"Your man-cave," she said.

She set up shortcuts on the desktop for him. "What's a shortcut," he asked.
"A quick way to access your programs."
"Programs, I can't use any programs. I'm not as smart as you, I'm stupid."
"You're not stupid. You'll pick it up. Remember, there are no stupid users, only stupid systems."
"I like that," he said.
When she left that night she told him to play Solitaire. "It will help you to get use to using the mouse. That's why the program is there, to help people use the mouse." When she returned a few days later, he told her had played Solitaire until he won, three times. He had also changed the desktop picture, and carefully arranged the shortcuts she created around the edges of the screen. "Did you see what I did?"
"Yes, you are a good student."




Enough for now dear reader. I have succeeded in telling myself a bedtime story. Keep checking back for more parts.

Comments, suggestions, and prof-reading welcome. Anything to make the story as good as the truth was.

A Day in the City

Last Wednesday, while I was on vacation, I decided to take a trip into the city. My plan was to pick up an Illinois bike train map from the Active Transportation Alliance and visit some of my old haunts. I miss the city. I miss going down there everyday. My current job is "in the burbs". I miss not having a place to eat, shop, get cash that is within walking distance. I miss the noise, the people, the occasional movie filming. I miss the Streetwise people (Streetwise, onedollar onedollar onedollar). I even miss the Peruvian street band that use to set up outside the windows of the Tribune Tower. I don't see things like that in Wood Dale. (Wood Dale is a very nice city. The people are friendly, and the neighborhood is beautiful. I'm just a city girl.)

I picked up the map and wandered over to Michigan Avenue near the Tower then took the Water Taxi over to the Sears (Willis) Tower. Then I walked up Jackson to the DePaul Loop campus and bought myself a new DePaul t-shirt. Here are some photos from my travels.







The "First National Bank" building (now Chase Tower). It is wider on the top and the bottom than it is in the middle. Its easiest to see if you stand with your back to the building and lean your head back and look up.




The reflection of the First National Bank building in a neighboring building.



One of the Marshall Field's Clocks. Now, officially Macy's, but it will always be Marshall Field's to me.



From the Water Taxi. My two favorite buildings along the Chicago River, the Leo Burnett building and 77 West Wacker Drive.



Kayaking on the Chicago River. Thirty years ago people laughed at then Mayor Richard J Daley when he suggested the river become a playground.



I don't think much of "the Donald", but the new Trump Tower is a nice addition to the riverfront.



Looking up at the Sears Tower from the patio on the south side. This building is designed to sway in high winds. It sounds like an old ship creaking when it happens.




Looking up at the Sears Tower from the Franklin Street Entrance. The building on the left is the parking garage that was my view from my desk. The building in the middle building is "the White Castle building" because it looks like it has a White Castle on top of it.



One last image of the Tower.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Friends

I've just finished reading Donald Miller's book "Blue Like Jazz". Its a great book. If you've ever heard stories about this guy Jesus and thought he sounded like a cool dude, but Christians...well they are sort of hard to get along with sometimes, then this book is for you. If you already think Jesus is a cool dud, but the message has been lost, then this book is for you.

In one chapter of the book, he describes a time in which he was "living with hippies". (pg 207) He says: "I have never experienced a group of people who loved each other more than my hippies in the woods. All of them are tucked so neatly into my memory now...I pull them out when I need to be reminded about goodness, purity and kindness." (pg 208)

He goes on to say: "They asked me what I loved, what I hated, how I felt about this and that...what I daydream about...They loved me like a good novel, like an art film...I did not feel fat or stupid or sloppily dresses...I was never conscious what my hands were doing or whether or not I sounded immature..." (pg 208-9) When he lived with hippies, he forgot about himself and "gained an interest in people outside my own skin. They were greater than movies to me, greater than television." (pg 209, italics mine)

He is describing friends.

I've always believed that I don't select my friends, they are selected for me. I know this because, firstly, these friends may not have been the people I selected myself. I'll admit it. I want to hang with the "cool kids". This never works out for me; I always end up disappointed. Don't get me wrong, my friends are cool, but we are not the ones who always get the prize, the award, the cheerleader/quarterback.

Secondly, each of them is what I call a "low maintenance friends". The kind of friend where I can go two weeks, two months, two years without talking to them and then just pick up like we spoke yesterday. So, I present to you my hippies; my friends. Note: all of them have an alias. If you are one of my friends, see if you can guess who you are. Post a comment with your guess.

Agatha - My speech would not be as colorful toady if it were not for Agatha. She taught me phrases like "man mountain Dean" and "like a big dog". She taught me how to bring 50 empty cardboard boxes home on public transportation while singing the title song from Oklahoma. She was my Ches Goat buddy when she lived in Chicago. She told me where to buy a Bible when I needed one for school. (I still have it, but can't read it - print is too small.) She was heartbroken when I was laid off from the company we worked for. Her alias: Her mother was a victim of breast cancer and when ever I think of her and her mom I think of the following road trip itinerary:

  • To Maryland with her and her cat.
  • To Florida with her mom
  • Back to Maryland by myself
  • Back to Chicago with her and her cat

Peter - Working as an intern is tough. You are not really an employee and sometimes you are forgotten. I kept running into him in the copy/printer room and he said "We have to stop meeting like this." "Yes, people will talk." I said. He always came by and chatted with me; he told me later that he had worked for so many years as a contract employee, he understood what is was like to "not be a regular employee". He gave me good advice during a particularly difficult project. We both have a fondness for a certain version of "Amazing Grace". Thanks for the C/S puppet show. I use it when I have to describe a difficult computing concept. He told me "Its OK, now we are even" after I had a bad night while visiting him and his wife. His alias: He and his wife just went fishing and had a spectacular catch.

Joseph - I worked with Peter and Joseph. Joseph was always calm and collected in meetings. Me, I would go off, but him, never. It was a great lesson. He was the best prof-reader I knew while I was the worst. He calls me when he is in the neighborhood and we go out for a beer or lunch. I just missed him recently, I wasn't home when he called. Too bad, it would have been fun to catch up on old times. His alias: he now works in real estate. Think burying the statue in the front yard.

Monica - She keeps me from becoming an old fart. We get lost everywhere we go together. She always has a change of outfits with her when I see her, just in case she decides she doesn't like the one she has on. We were part of the welcome committee, she provided the comment cards. Her alias: I really did think her name was Monica when I met her. I didn't like Monica, but she is OK.

Luke - I work with him now. During an orientation I had to play a "get to know you" game. One of the questions we had to answer was "If you could talk with anyone in the world, who would it be?" I wrote "the guy on the other side of the wall of my cube". Turns out he was fun to talk to. He knows what 3:33 means. I can always count on him to "loan me 47 cents, I don't have enough change to get on the bus". He is my new lunch leader. We disagree on things, but that is good. Its boring to agree on everything and we would probably end up gossiping like old hens if we didn't has something we disagreed on to talk about. His alias: He is an excellent cartoonist. He once drew a doodle during a meeting which ended up getting tacked up on co-workers walls. It described the system they used perfectly and with humor.

Lawrence - He always thought about others. He once told a mutual friend, Dan, "Hey, thanks for getting my friend a job." (Dan was the one who told me, back in 2007, to "apply at for anything you are qualified for.") He thanked someone else for helping me. One evening I was at his place; I missed dinner and was hungry. He insisted on making us sandwiches, He gave me a sandwich, on a plate, no less - not just on a napkin. I noticed he made his sandwich with the stale old heel of the bread. He gave me the best and took the least for himself. I fell asleep on his couch more times than I could count. He never woke me up and sent me home...in the middle of the night...in the rain. His alias: I got the idea for this post on the feast day for Lawrence; both he and Lawrence had a way with people.

This post is dedicated to the memory of Lawrence, he will always be in our hearts. "For the love of God."

Monday, July 19, 2010

Accessibility Part 1, How does someone with a visual impairment use a computer?

This post got a little long, so use the following links to skip sections:



As you have probably read from my profile, I work for the online division of a large university. (I don't know if I can say publicly, so I'll let you guess.) One of my jobs is to determine how usable our online courses for accessibility for persons with disabilities.

I fell into this job; it isn't something I would have selected as a speciality. When I was a student at DePaul University in the Human Computer Interaction (HCI) program (Note: it appears DePaul no longer offers an undergraduate degree in HCI - interesting), I debated taking the "Designing for Disabilities" course, but it didn't fit into my schedule when it was offered, so I passed. I finished the program and graduated in 1999 and was off to the work force with my newly minted degree.

In my first job as a User Interface Designer at SPSS Inc. (now an IBM company) I heard things in team meetings about "accessibility", "section 508", "government contracts", etc. but it wasn't part of my job. The lead UI designer on my team, Chuck P, was the contact person for any accessibility questions. I have to give Chuck P a shout-out. He was the one who supplied me with the best defense when co-workers (or anyone) asks " Why do we have to do this? Does it really matter? Home many blind students do we have anyway, it can't be that many." (I, myself asked those questions. I hang my head in shame now at the memory of it.) Chuck P's answer was: "Because its the law. And because its the right thing to do!" He was the go-to guy for this. Until he left the company. Then I get a call from the marketing department wanting to know if I could check one of our products for accessibility.

Now, at the time, I didn't know much about accessibility, neither did my department manager. We had to learn. Fast. Very fast. Extremely fast, as the product was already about 60% complete.

Accessibility Tip #1: The time to think about accessibility is at the start of the project, not at the end.

Long story short, learned fast, finished project, became a victim of the tech down-turn and got laid off, went to grad school, took the "Designing for Disabilities" course, graduated, got a crummy job, got a better job (the one I have now).

So now I determine if our online courses are accessible.

So how does a person who has a visual impairment use a computer? He or she uses assistive technology, in this case either a screen reader or a screen magnifier in addition to some of the built-in features of the operating system the person is using.

Accessibility Tip #2: It the person using the computer cannot see the display or cannot see the display very well, he or she is probably not using a mouse.

People with visual impairments ("users" - the official term we UX people use) are more like "power users" as power users tend to use keyboard shortcuts instead of mouse-centered commands like menus and toolbars. This article is from The Onion, but I know it was written by a usability person: http://www.theonion.com/articles/area-man-knows-all-the-shortcutkeys,1566/ .

I created the video below using JAWS, the screen reader I use at work. In it I show how a person could create a Word document, complete with font changes.

Some things to note while watching the video.

My mouse pointer never moved. I'll reiterate tip #2, people with visual impairments rarely use the mouse. I worked on a project in which I had to look at the accessibility of an eBook reader. The developer insisted that the screen reader would read the menu bar of the application. I found it didn't work. The problem: the menus were read when the user hovered, with the mouse, over the menu items. I know this as I was testing the application with only the keyboard. Ask a visually impaired user how to copy something from one document to another and he will say: "Hold down the shift key and use the arrows to select the text you want to copy then hit control and c. Then alt tab to the document you want to paste into and hit control v."

Screen readers users are honorary computer geeks. The screen reader tells the user she is in the "font dialog" on the "font page". A user who doesn't use a screen reader and who hasn't done any computer programming may not know what a dialog box is. (Trust me, I was helping a friend once, a pretty novice computer user, via the phone, and I told him to "Just close that dialog box." There was a silence then he said "Close Internet Explorer?".) A screen reader user knows a dialog box is a window, a check box is a window, a list box is a window. (They even know what a list box is.) Technically, they are windows as they all inherit from the "Windows" class. If you are writing Help files for a screen reader user, go ahead and call it a dialog box, they know what you are talking about. Oh, and include that "Accessibility" help topic. Many software companies do, including my former employer SPSS.

Sloppy interface programming is inexcusable. There are standards. Both Microsoft and Apple publish them online for Windows and MAC developers. I haven't read them, but I'm sure there are JAVA, Unix, Linux and Web standards as well. Use them. The colon at the end of a label means something. The ellipse; it does as well. A tab order is important. Text boxes are not buttons. It is amazing to me to see software that is so sloppily written. Would we buy a book full of typos? Would you buy a CD full of badly recorded out tracks? The eBook reader I tested followed no known programming standard.

This is Verdona in RGB (255, 0, 0). Don't make assumptions about what someone with little or no vision can do. Don't make assumptions about what any person with any disability can do. Heck, don't make assumptions about what any user can and cannot do. I repeatably hear things like:
  • "Well, a blind person can't take a graphic design class." They can. Open up any Adobe Illustrator document in notepad. You can create images by editing the postscript.
  • "Would you go to a doctor who was dyslexic and couldn't read?" Well, actually I would. I know she isn't going to stop and check her old textbooks while I'm on the table in the ER.
  • "How can a deaf person edit a sound file?" Open up a sound file in an audio editing program and get back to me.

In the video I was able to change the font face (I'm sighted and even I don't know what Adobe Castelon Pro looks like.), change the font color thanks to accessibility information programmed into Microsoft Word (RGB values), and change the style to "Small Caps".





Sunday, July 18, 2010

Vacation - Day 1

Can the Saturday before vacation cound as vacation as I'm off anyway? I'm countin' it.

Day one of vacation went well. Things I finally got to:


  • Sent some email I've been meaning to send for days.

  • Bought a new plastic blow-up pool for the days I won't be able to get to the neighborhood pool.

  • Spent some quality time with my fur kids Daisy and Sophie.

  • Purchased a book on Adobe Flash development so I can learn it and say: "Yes, Flash can be made accessible to persons with disabilities. Would you like to see some examples?".

  • Entered some of the back log of codes in mycokerewards.com I think I'm going to get the "Speaker Genie".

  • Called about getting my bike fixed.




Things I want to accomplish this week:

  • Finish that html document I'm working on. Man, I've forgotten a lot.

  • Learn som Flash programming.

  • Do some "big job" house cleaning.

  • Go to the pool.

  • Put my new mini grill together and cook up something good.

  • Catch up on my reading; I have about 20 books in the cue.

  • Stay up late on a "school night" if I want to.




I think that's it for now. Keep your fingers crossed for me.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

"I'll be late for work, I have to help catch a goose."

I ride my bike part of the way to work each day.

Here in the Chicago-land area, all public transportation allows for and accommodates bikes. On trains and the "el", there are time restrictions, but on buses one can always load the bike on the rack in the front. This is my mode of transportation to work each day - at least in the summer.

I catch the 7:35 bus every morning which drops me off close to work about 8:10. The ride from the bus stop to work is only 2.2 miles, but it is a relaxing time before the chaos that is sometimes my job. I stop at the gas station, grab a coffee, maybe a bagel ride a bit, stop at the picnic grove to enjoy my coffee with nature and head into work.

A few weeks ago, I turned off the street onto the sidewalk near the picnic grove and saw a Canadian Goose sitting in the grass. And she wasn't alone, she had her five babies with her. Canadian geese normally run away when you approach them, except when there are babies around. A mother goose will attack if you get too close. This mommy had already warned me - they hiss like cats so I peddled a little faster to get away from her. (She and her kids were very close to the sidewalk.)

When she didn't chase me, I stopped and went back for a better look. She had been injured, most likely by a car as there were feathers in the street. She had somehow got herself and her babies onto the grass. I couldn't just leave her so I went over to the fire station just across the street and asked them to call the animal rescue. I went back and waited with mommy until the officer showed up.


As the I was talking with the officer, explaining the situation, a neighbor walked by and joined our conversation.

"Well, I think if you can get her into the big cage, the babies will follow her in." I said.

"Yes, they will." said the neighbor. "I can stand here by the water and make sure she doesn't go in."

Then, the officer looks at me and asks: "You can stay and help catch them, right?"

Huh? Oh dear, I'm a city girl. The closest I get to wildlife is watching the family of rabbits, that lives under my porch, hop around the yard. I told her I would, but I had to call work and tell them I will be a little late. (Now that's an excuse that would probably be recorded somewhere in HR hall of fame of ridiculous excuses: "Yeah, long story short, I'm going to be late for work. I have to catch a goose.")

We worked out a plan for catching the geese who would then go to the animal wildlife center for treatment. It was a good plan, however, the best laid plans... A worker from the city of Wood Dale, can by and without following the plan tried to catch her. The worst happened, she went into the water and was out of our reach. Defeated I rode on into work.

But, wait, there's more. On my way home I spotted a furry shape in the distance. It was a baby raccoon separated from his (her?) mother. Standing close by and keeping watch were two gentlemen from a nearby business. This little guy was as cute as a button and so young - he had no fear of humans. I resisted the urge to bring him home with me and instead called the police to have the animal rescue come out. Imagine my shock and horror when I was told that "we don't pick up wild animals".

"Well I was just helping the officer this morning rescuing an injured Canadian goose." (Now that I was an expert in animal rescue. If this User Experience thing doesn't work out for me...)

Turns out they will only rescue injured wild animals. I was torn, I couldn't leave him nor could I take him away. I left him sleeping in the crook of a tree. That was the right decision as I did some research. Clearing the area of humans and leaving the baby is the only way the mother will come back. I rode past on the way into work the next day and he was gone. I pray that mom came back and brought him home.

Mothers are amazing beings.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

I Found a Rainbow

idI just recently bought myself a new cell phone, an LG Neon. Its not the latest and hottest phone around now, but it will suit my needs. Like many people I don't have a land line, just a cell phone. I had to slim down the expenses while I was in grad school so cable TV, the land line, and the cell phone contract had to go. I now only have the pay as you go cell phone. (Interesting side note - when I had a contract with the carrier, the customer service was less than stellar. Now that I easily, and with no penalty, find another carrier, customer service is fantastic.)

I bought the phone for $90.00 from a big discount store. To me, it was a spiffy new phone as I was using a $10.00 go phone in which I could hardly see the screen. I couldn't wait to get it home and rip it out of its annoying plastic packaging. (Why do companies do that?) Once freed from its package I found that the phone uses a micro SD card to store data.
I had a card from a previous phone with a camera so I popped it in. When I looked at the data on the card, I found this:


It may be difficult to see, but on the left side of the image is a rainbow. The picture was taken, I think, sometime in summer of 2009. I remember taking the picture. I went to the coffee shop after work to use their wireless to do some work I had brought home. I was engrossed in my work and when I looked up, there it was: a promise. I grabbed my phone and took the picture, then just watched as the rainbow eventually faded. It reminded me to stop working so hard and to enjoy the small pleasures.

I was as happy to see that promise in the summer of 2010 as I was to see it in 2009. Sometimes the smallest things bring the most happiness.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

This is Just a Test

Testing out mobile blogging via my new phone.

Leave That Bike Alone!


I went to my community pool today. It was a perfect day for it. It was sunny but there were those big fluffy ones that block the sun every few minutes. They block it long enough to give a touch of cool as they pass by the sun then the heat once again.

We have a beautiful park where I live and we have a rockin' cool pool. Adult and kid sections, water slides, patio overlooking the pool, the works.


Today it was really crowded so lounge chairs were at a premium. Luckily, my sister and niece got there early and secured a chair. Custom dictates that if you "claim" the chair, you leave something on the chair while you are away. I don't spend a lot of time sitting in the chair; I spend most of my time standing in the water at the edge of the pool, in the adult section, reading my book. But, Sue had gone to the trouble of getting me a chair so it seemed rude to abandon it.

I'm glad I didn't. After returning from the concession stand for a drink I saw an empty wheelchair not far from the pool edge. There was a family there for the day, mom, dad, son Dylan, and grampa. None of which had a chair. Dad approached me and asked "Are you leaving?" I told him I wasn't. Turns out he was trying to find a chair for his father-in-law who had a partial amputation of his leg. I offered him the chair, he declined, I offered again: "No, really, I spend most of my time in the water". Finally he agreed to take the chair in trade for keeping an eye on my beach bag.

I have been feeling kind of blue lately. I have experienced and am experiencing a few sad events lately and I have also watch some REALLY bad behaviour go down. But giving up that lounge chair was the best therapy I could have had. Someone once told me "We are only happy when we are doing something for someone else". So true. Doing something for me is great for about 30 seconds, but doing something for someone else was great for the rest of the day. Kind of a cool buzz you just can get from anything else.

As I left I wished the family a good time for the rest of the day and headed over to my bike. From a distance the bike just didn't look right. I thought maybe someone just bumped into it while locking their own bike. Imagine my shock and horror when I realized someone had deliberately tampered with it. They has twisted the handlebars around 360 degrees causing the read brake cable to pop out of its socket. They also released the front brake, twisted the gear shift, and broke off the new headlight I installed.

WHAT IS WRONG WITH PEOPLE? What kind of a person just screws around with other people's stuff just for S & Gs? I'm not someone who gets all bent out of shape about material things. They are, after all, just "trinkets and a treasure pile that moths and rust and thieves and such would soon enough destroy." But really. Have some respect. Its just a bike, I know, but how about some respect for the person who uses the bike? I just don't know...

I took a deep breath, repaired the damage, and refused to let some mean spirited person ruin my day.

Thanks to T who gave me the idea for this post - it would have just been a rant without the message you sent today.

Do something nice for someone, even a smile can change the world. It can change yours too.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Writing is harder than I thought it be. I can't seem to have a coherent thought. I have so many things I want to say, but cannot seem to organize them into one seemless post.

Perhaps I expect too much.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Hello World

is the first program one writes in any computer science course. I've written my share of "Hello World" programs. Its time to do some writing of a different kind.

I took some writing courses in college and did well. "This is Cadillac prose, missy" read one comment on a story I wrote. But life moved on and most of my writing is now email, facebook posts, and technical documents. I signed for this blog, I think, sometime back in January, after reading the blog of a facebook friend. Now, six months later, I'm making my first post.

Expect to see a strange mix of things to match my varied interests.