Friday, October 9, 2020

You're not the same

 I don’t know why, but this song has been running through my mind all week. So I’ll share it with you.




Thursday, October 8, 2020

OBE

Here’s how my Wednesday started yesterday: 

I don’t have a pantry, and my 1970 kitchen doesn’t have sufficient cupboard space for all the things you need for baking: multiple types of flour, multiple types of sugar, multiple types of chocolate, multiple types of dried fruit, multiple types of bran, multiple types of etc. So I have a bunch of paper grocery bags and half-cartons that you take your shopping home from Costco in, loaded with all this stuff. One box for bags of flour, one for bags of sugar, one for chocolate, etc. 

As an aside, a lot of products that come in “resealable” bags really don’t, because after you’ve poured, say, some brown sugar out of the bag, it just won’t reseal. I know this.

However, yesterday morning I needed to get to the bag of raw sugar that I use by the half-demitasse spoon for my coffee. To do that I had to pull aside one of those mega bags of chocolate chips that you get from Costco. In one of those “resealable” bags. And chocolate chips poured out into the sugar box. To be followed shortly afterward by a bunch of light brown sugar that came out of the other bag I had to move to get to the raw sugar.

So I spent an inordinate amount of time picking chocolate chips out of brown sugar and tossing them back into their bag. (Soon to be superseded by an OXO pop-up canister.) The sugar I dumped.

And now I have my project for Friday’s company-wide mental health day: I’m reorganizing my kitchen.

 

 

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

End of the road

 I was on my walk yesterday morning and came across this:

 


It made me so sad—someone tossing a Mini, even a toy one.

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Too soon

I know I shouldn’t be surprised to find Christmas stuff in Costco—after all, it was all of September when I was in there to buy butter for my new freezer.

But egg nog in Wegman’s the first Sunday in October? That’s just beyond the beyond



 

 

Monday, October 5, 2020

Gratitude Monday: ready to exercise my civic duty

Whee dawgies—Friday was quite the…slice, wasn’t it? And so far it’s lasted clean through the weekend, what with dramatic announcements, conflicting medical “updates” and staged photos purporting to show Cadet Bonespurs at the helm despite falling victim (with a slew of co-morbidities he and his medical staff deny) to the hoax virus. And then there was the drive-by. 

But this is Gratitude Monday, so here’s what I’m thankful for: 

Friday I hauled my butt out to Fairfax County Government Center and registered to vote. You’ll recall that my clever plan to get a Virginia driver’s license so I’d be automatically registered (and also, you know, be a legal driver) came to naught because this former capital of the Confederacy refused to accept my utility bills as proof of residency because my first name on them is three letters different from my name on my passport.

(Don’t even get me started on the SSN requirement.)

And now I’m scheduled to be a supplicant again in…December.

So, my only alternative was registering the old-fashioned way. I could have filled out the form and mailed it in; you’re in as long as your application is postmarked by 13 October. But I have no confidence in the USPS getting a first-class letter 13 miles across NoVa in a week’s time. Ergo the trip.

Well, sportsfans, it took me an hour all told: 20 minutes to drive over; 20 minutes to have the woman at the voter registration office enter my details into the computer; 20 minutes to drive home. It takes a week to percolate all the way through the system. But starting next Monday, when the satellite voting station opens here in the People’s Republic, I can take a good book, stand in line and vote to remove Bonespurs and all his ilk from office. And that’s my gratitude for today.

Also—at the FCGC (currently the only place open in the county for early voting), the line to cast ballots snaked out around the parking lot, back and forth a couple of times. I wanted to walk past all of them, applauding.

This is how we take them out; with the vote. God bless America.