Thursday, November 21, 2024

The Thursday Ramble: Reflections on a year well lived


The end of the year, and all of the end of the year holidays are fast approaching.  I have to admit, the year has flown by.  It seems like just yesterday, I was briefing Erica what she needed to know as the next director of the Commission. And already work is fading into distant memory.  I realized the other day, that I really don't care if I stay up to date on many of the issues I worked so hard on for 25 years.  That happened much faster than I thought it would.  I might even think about moving my license to retired status in a few years when I am eligible to do so. 

What has filled my year? 

Travel certainly, 73 nights away from home.  Walking, averaging about an hour a day, about half of that at the gym, about half of it wherever I felt like walking that day. Reading, I have finished reading over 80 books this year, I will end the year at nearly double my goal.  I have done some writing for a couple of journals,  and three consulting projects.  I am fiddling with my creativity with a little painting and lots of photographs - probably 6,000 this year.  I have had fun cooking, gotten bored, and then reignited my interest. I continue to enjoy blogging, daily, plus my daily selfie project. I need to decide if I am going to continue the selfie project. I lead a weird and eclectic life, and I like that.

Doc Spo's post the other day about how we answer "what do you do" caused me to stop and think.  Answering that I was a lawyer was always problematic. Some wanted legal advice that I was seldom able to provide, always worrying about the malpractice angle, others simply hate lawyers and think all are evil.  If I change the answer to what I do now, it should / could provoke a much different conversation.  

I can think of a couple of bloggers that I love reading, commenting on, or talking with, that I really have no idea what they do or did besides blog. But then I live in a town where many people give vague answers,  spies and other operatives don't tell you what they really do. 

Over the next few weeks I will draft my end of the year summary, and set goals for next year.  Then we will see where the next year takes me. 



  

 


Wednesday, November 20, 2024

My World of Wonders, aka the Wednesday Ws November 20 edition


Where have I been this week? The Pentagon City Mall, The Smithsonian Natural History Museum, The National Archives, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to listen to the National Symphony Orchestra, Huntley Meadows, along the River in Alexandria, the grocery store, the Library, and the gym a couple of times. 

What is the Photo above? An internal stairway at the Natural History Museum, I thought it looked best in black and white. 

What am I reading? I will finish Ina Garten's memoir before this posts, then I should finish Essays from the Sunshine State, and I have a novel laying on my desk to read.   

Who have I talked with?  My sweet bear . . . I am getting out but not talking to strangers. I had a surprise call from an old lawyer friend, looking for a referral. That call caused me to reach out to three former colleagues, and none of us knew anyone in Idaho. I have been trading emails with a couple of dear bloggers. I reached out to a Niece, and sent a chatty letter to my oldest brother who had a birthday this week. 

What are my plans for Thanksgiving?  I am down to roasting one or two turkeys a year, Thanksgiving is turkey day for me.  

What made me laugh this week? 


I read this too fast, and had another worn-out hole come to mind. If that makes you laugh, you have my kind of sick mind. 

What was laying on the sidewalk that made me wonder this week? 


Medicinal, how many sick people are there wandering our streets? I bet sales will increase over the next couple of years. 

What is my strategy for the next week? Shop for the special holiday meal, get out and about, and stay distracted. 

Who deserves a slap this week? The moron who is picking cabinet officers who are totally unqualified nutters. Out of 5, at least 500. 

How is my mood? Improving, slowly.  





 



Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Travel Tuesdays: The Hirshhorn Museum of Modern Art




Most people either love or hate the Hirshhorn Museum here in Washington DC.  The building is a striking circle, open in the center, with circular galleries. I fell in love with the building the first time I saw it. Over the past year, the galleries have been gutted and redone. The result is that they are much more open than they had been the past few years, really showing the circular architecture.  The current shows are selections from the permanent collection, and street art, bright colorful, imaginative. 
The Banksy exhibit was very limited in time, and only two small pieces of his work were included in a small subterranean gallery.  The lower level and sculpture garden are undergoing a massive remodel, when finished you will be able to pass under the street and into the sculpture gallery on the lower level (why it was never done this way, I have no idea.) There will also be a much needed elevator to the street. 
























 

Monday, November 18, 2024

Monday Mood: Ranting And Calming


I have been working on this post for a few days.  Current political events are truly challenging my mood and mental health. I know I am not alone in this.  

When I was working, I was always urging others to take care of themselves, or they wouldn't be there to take care of others. If I don't take care of myself, I won't be able to help pick up the pieces, when this farce falls apart.  I won't be strong for the next opportunity to fight. I need to focus on what I can control, and trust in the system to do what it is designed to do. 

We, by that I mean sensible people, have been here before. We are still here.  If we take care of ourselves, we will be here two years from now, and four years from now.  If we let it get to us, the @$$holes win.  

Turn off the news.  I tried Visir the news from Iceland that Google easily translates, and stumbled into upsetting news.  Angus in Scotland said that he had to go to page three of the London newspapers to find news from Great Britain - so even going to world news sources will not escape the laughingstock we are a part of.  

I have to be careful with some of my favorite bloggers, I know we are all hurting and sometimes we need to hurl, as Anne Marie did in her day, but I need to limit my exposure.  Even as I spew a little below.  Please think about your mental health and mood, and click away if that is what is best for you. 

 If you are avoiding politics, click away now. 
 

I decided to write this, hoping that getting it out, might make me feel better inside.  Sometimes it helps to put into words, what is eating away at our souls.  

The idiots that Trump is naming for high government jobs are appalling. Elon Musk bought his way into the inner circle for $118,000,000 and a good share of the 40-some-billion dollars that he wasted on Twitter. He and some moron have been named to a fictitious department to examine ways to streamline government.  I guess you can pay to play in this country, or money is political speech.  

The statement from these two "geniuses" that set me off, was that we need to eliminate the unofficial fourth branch of government, the administrative branch. Ummm, I know I have a bit more education than these two and there wannabe boss, but the administrative branch is a part of the Executive Branch of Government.  You know the branch headed by the President of the United States.  

The primary duty of the Executive Branch is to implement the laws passed by Congress and signed into law by the President. Congress passes laws authorizing the executive branch, through the administrative process, to implement laws and create programs.  The law - the statutory law - does not contain the details needed to implement and regulate.  In theory the law could, but then Congress would need to have many more subject matter experts, and take a much longer, much more involved time in drafting laws, and the length of laws would grow by at least 100 to 1. Todays 50 page law, would suddenly need to be a 5000 page law, that few in Congress have the time or expertise to understand. 

The Administrative process creates regulations.  This is done through a public process of listening to input from all who are interested.  You can submit comments on proposed state or federal administrative regulations. 

When mistakes are made, the administrative process can correct them in as little as 30 days if it is urgent, or about 90 days if the need is not urgent.  The same correction in Congress would likely take years.  Let me offer an example.  There were two different regulations on funeral reserves in the Kentucky Medicaid regulations, that conflicted with one another.  I called someone in the state office and asked which rule is correct.  Her response was, "thank you, we missed that, use the rule that allows the slightly larger amount." The next time the administrative register came out there was a notice of proposed correction on that issue, and without objection it was effective 30 days later.  The same correction, in statute would have taken at least six months. 

If Congress wants to limit the authority of an administrative agency, they can change the law authorizing the agency to act. 

I was pleased to hear that a sleazeball had resigned from congress just ahead of the release of an ethics investigation, only to read the next morning that he has been named as a nominee for a cabinet position.  I read that in the news in Iceland, the reporter commented that the confirmation hearing should be interesting.  

Then Mr Brain worm, who left a dead bear in Central Park, and who fails to understand basic science, is being placed in charge of health and human services.  The inmates are taking over the asylum people. 

A fracking executive for Energy Secretary, wait until he finds out he is responsible for more than half of the world's nuclear fuels. 

Remember the OLDman bragging that he only hires the best . . . the best of what I have yet to figure out.  


Sunday, November 17, 2024

The Sunday Five: Conversations


1: Who was the last person you talked with? 

2: What did you talk about? 

3: When was the conversation? 

4: Where did the conversation take place?

5: Why? 

My Answers:

1: Who was the last person you talked with? J the sweet bear.

2: What did you talk about? How he is feeling?

3: When was the conversation? about two hours ago

4: Where did the conversation take place? in the living room.

5: Why? He was telling me that he has not been well. 

Please share your answers in the comments. 

Saturday, November 16, 2024

The Saturday Morning Post: Adventures in Flying: Sometimes There Is Amazement



Back in 2015 we were planning a trip to Germany.  Jay was attending a conference at Oxford, and I would fly over and meet him in Stuttgart Germany. We are still driving the reason we went to Stuttgart.  When planning the trip, Jay sent me links for two flying adventures.  One was riding in a WWII era German TriMotor airplane.  And I thought about that, I had never flow in anything like that.  The other option was a flightseeing tour with the Zeppelin Company. I checked out the details, and planned the trip around a Zeppelin ride.  

That was the year of my great adventure in medical care.  The nurses were asking about my goals of care, and I was stumped by the question, "I don't know, I would like to survive."  The neurosurgeon interjected with a better question,  "what do you want to be able to do 90 days from now, that you can't do today?" I answered, that "in 90 days I am flying to Germany to ride in a Zeppelin, I need to be able to walk unaided about 100 feet over grass and climb five steps to take the ride." The next time I saw the doctor, he said, "I googled it, you are serious about the Zeppelin aren't you?"  Yes, I was, I had non-refundable reservations. He said, "I kind of wondered if the pain meds were a little to strong."

Zeppelin made the current generation of Goodyear Blimps. 

The ride is amazing, they sort of float up, then the propellers move them in the direction of travel. The cabin is spacious with a single row of seats on each side and wide aisle.  Once at altitude, about 250 meters, you can get up and move about. There was an open window, you could stick your head or your camera out of. When you looked down you could see the shadow of the Zeppelin moving slowly across the landscape.  The ride we took goes out of Lake Constance, on the border between Germany and Switzerland.   

If you are looking for an illustration of Amazement, look at a Zeppelin ride.  And bragging rights, how many people can say they have done that?   If you want to see the video click here. 

 

Friday, November 15, 2024

100 Tips to Slightly Improve Your Travel Experience: #30 Guide Books?

 


Guide books? When I first started traveling internationally, planning for every trip included a trip to the book store for the latest guide books. The books contained useful and practical information on everything from currency, to local customs. When flying internationally it was common to see people waiting for the flight, or on the plane discussing the books. Those extra pounds of paper packed into every carry on. 

But a lot has changed in the last 34 years, and not just the amount of hair on my head (my first trip across the Atlantic was in May of 1990.) 

I still find the books helpful for identifying museums and attractions in places I have never been, then I find myself looking online, visiting museum websites, looking at the streets on Google Maps and street view.  I buy fewer books, and I use them differently than I did 34 years ago.  

The weight of the books has become a factor.  I don't really want to carry an extra 1 or 2 pounds of paper with me. I have copied the pages I really wanted and taken just those pages, I have cut the books apart and taken select pages with me. I hate cutting up a book, but it allowed me to take the ten pages I needed and leave the other 290 pages behind.  I have tried e-book versions, and find the inability to easily flip from page to page, and to bookmark an e-book version, results in the books not being as useful. 

I am more likely today to use the books for background research, idea generation, then do in-depth online research.  Creating a few pages of notes on what I might want to see and the details of how to go about doing so. With my trusty Chromebook and WiFi I can fill in the details as I go.   

Guide books are not dead, but need to evolve.