?`s and ANNEswers

Ten minutes to write. Less time to read.

On Board

We are finally settled in our stateroom, our home for the next two weeks. The bathrobes are in the closet and the Champagne glasses are waiting to be filled by our room steward for the welcoming toast.

We took our first cruise fifteen years ago this month. Back then, I was a reluctant passenger who thought cruising was an easy way to gain five pounds in fewer days. But Earl, who had cruised once before with his elderly parents, was adamant. He wanted to try it again with someone more his age.

I still remember the first view of the Grand Princess. It was huge and didn’t look anything like a sailing ship, even though the promotional materials said we would “set sail” at 5 PM. Rather it resembled a shoe box with a short pointy end in front. In sailor’s parlance, that’s “fore”. The back of the ship, which was boxy and filled with windows, is “aft.”

The first thing we did on that maiden voyage, after locating our stateroom, was explore the various decks. The next thing we did was find the twenty-four hour buffet. Today, it’s pretty much the same routine, although we’re slower at climbing the stairs and less inclined to eat everything in sight. In fact, we’re proud of the fact that we come home weighing the same as when we left. There have been many changes in the cruising industry since we first joined the ranks, but that remains constant.

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Musings on Being Dangerous

Yesterday’s flight from Chicago to Ft. Lauderdale was uneventful once I got through the extra-diligent security check. But it got me thinking. My experience could be compared to the current questions regarding allowing Syrian refugees, or any other refugees, into the country.

Pretend for a moment that the TSA represents the checkpoints of our borders and that the passengers represent refugees trying to get in. Most will pass through with little fanfare (although, I might add, the process is markedly more protracted than that to board an airplane). Some, like myself, will be temporarily inconvenienced for the sake of security, while others will be detained permanently as truly dangerous. In between these two categories are those who actually are dangerous and get through anyway and those who aren’t but for some reason are turned away.

The thing is no system is one hundred percent foolproof; but each usually has back-ups. In the airline world, additional checks are done randomly at the gate; flight personnel can refuse to board a passenger under certain circumstances; and travelers are regularly encouraged over the loudspeaker to report any unusual behavior. Luggage left unattended is whisked away.

As a nation we’ve become used to these procedures if we want to travel from Point A to Point B. Maybe we complain about it, but most of us are still glad the TSA is in place. And for the most part the system works well. What I don’t understand is why we can’t use this analogy to work toward resolution of the refugee issue.

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Dangerous

I usually try to stay under the radar when going through airport security: nothing metal in my pockets, no belt, no shoes, remove computer from case, remove liquids from luggage. I’ve traveled enough to know the drill, but it didn’t work today.

I even chose the line that didn’t require passing through a full body scanner, but when I got to the front of the line security personnel directed me to the full body machine for some reason. But I wasn’t particularly concerned.

I stepped into the scanner, put my shoeless feet on the decals on the floor and raised my arms over my head, just like you’re supposed to.  I didn’t make a peep. “You can step out now,” one of the TSAs said. I complied, always trying to be pleasant.

But Mr. TSA said, “There’s something in your pocket,” and he showed me the scanner image with a big yellow square over my pocket. I reached in and pulled out the offending item, a lip balm that had never caused problems before.  Mr. TSA took it and sent it to the back of the conveyor line to go through on its own.  It seemed like overkill, but I kept my pleasant demeanor. I’ve learned that works best with TSA types, some of whom are akin to prison guards.

Suddenly a Ms. TSA told me to go back through the full body scanner and try again without the lip balm. In I went. Same drill. Out I came positive I’d be on my way.  However, Ms. TSA pointed to the new image of me and said, “There is something in your head, on your back, and in your groin that didn’t pass the test.”  Sure enough, there were more yellow squares on my virtual body. So Ms. TSA began her script about how I needed to be patted down in my vulnerable areas and did I want a private room?

In the meantime, Earl was waiting for me with a question mark etched on his forehead. To remove it, I called to him, “They’re going to do more scanning; I’m considered dangerous.” Ms. TSA was not amused.  She said in her most un-amused voice, “That was unnecessary.”

I knew enough not to argue, but really isn’t that the connotation when one doesn’t pass the scanner two times in a row? I said, “What about my underwire bra?  There’s no yellow square on my chest.” She wearily said that the scanner takes that into consideration.

I also knew enough not to comment on the scanner’s inability to recognize lip balm as I was led away to a private room by two women, one to do the scanning and one to be a witness. Fifteen minutes later, after I had offeredto help by taking off my clothes, the two females TSAs decided I was not a threat. They returned my lip balm, and hoped I’d have a nice day. I smiled and asked them to do the same.

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Getting Ready

We leave early tomorrow on vacation, so today I’m starting to shut down the house: unplug the computers and printer, stop the hand-wound clock, and empty the refrigerator of items that won’t last until we return.

I have a whole collection of things – half a pumpkin pie, a full container of orange juice, holiday cookies, etc. – to give a friend.  Then there are the onesies that are headed for the garbage disposer.  Good bye leftover pretty-stale croissant! Adios lone raw egg. So long lingering lime! See you next time odious onion!

Our refrigerator is bare except for some bottles of water and various condiments whose shelf life defies vacations.  Our holiday decorations are all boxed and ready to be put away with our luggage when we return. The mail and the newspaper are both on hold.

And finally, it’s time to say “See you next Christmas,” to my poinsettia. We’re outta here

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Big Brother Microsoft

I am fairly happy with Windows 7, but apparently Microsoft doesn’t think I should be. Now that Windows 10 has been on the market for almost six months, I regularly receive notification that I can download the newest version for free. So far, Microsoft has made it sound as if I have a choice.

I’ve checked with a couple tech people I know, and both say, “Don’t do it. Windows 10 has bugs (as most new versions do), and once you upgrade you cannot return to your old version.”  Of course, this was only a sample of two opinions, but they’re from people I trust in the business.

Now Microsoft is becoming bolder. It is changing the status of W10 from an “optional” choice to a “recommended” one. This means that owners who have told their computers to automatically download all recommended options will see Windows 10 appear on their screens, possibly without their full understanding of the situation.

I find this sneaky, aggressive, underhanded, and duplicitous. And that’s for starters. So I’ve set my computer to never download updates without my permission. Sure, I have to check from time to time and manually tell Microsoft what I want and don’t want. But at least I’m in charge of the decision.

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Embracing Social Media

Just as I’m trying to get over my anti-social stance on social media and embrace sharing my life with total strangers in the name of fame, along comes Emily McFarlan Miller. Ms. Miller has been a social media editor whose job was to get more followers on such sites as Twitter and Facebook. That’s exactly what my team and I are planning for 2016.

I’m also studying how to establish my own publishing company – Virginia and Leonard Woolf did it – and bypass agents and the Big Five publishers.  To do this I need to address my deep-seated aversion to social media, because that is where I’ll find people who might buy my work.

Ms. Miller was interviewed in yesterday’s Chicago Tribune Magazine by Bill Daley and made some salient points. Among them are:

  1. Just listen. That is, before you respond to a post, make sure you have studied all the points of view. In this day and age of instant reply, that’s a good idea.
  2. Retreat on occasion. Which means to take a break from social media in a way that works for you.
  3. Control what you share of yourself. I love this; it gives me permission to filter what I put on the Internet.

Miller’s comments made me feel better. I don’t have to behave the same way that I see others behave on the Internet; in fact, all I have to do is be me.  And this was her last point: Be authentic.

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Reviewing Christmas

I had great intentions about writing during the Christmas holiday, but it got away from me what with cooking and baking and wrapping. Entertaining too. Perhaps you felt the same way.

Soon it will be New Year’s Eve, and Christmas 2015 will be just a memory. I’m fine with the entire year being in the past tense, as it was a challenge to say the least.  Still, Christmas 2015 deserves recognition as one that found me scaling back and enjoying more.

We bought a smaller, pre-lit Christmas tree.  It was easier to assemble, yet still festive. I loved sitting beside it during December as we awaited the Christ Child and Santa. We didn’t display all the snow people I’ve collected, and I didn’t miss them.  This is not to say I won’t display my collection again, but this year it felt right to keep them in their storage homes. We hung our stockings by the chimney with care, but it was mostly for decoration. I didn’t fill them this year, and nobody commented.

As for Christmas dinner, it was an experiment.  My oven is on its last leg, so we ate in arbitrary courses as one item got done and the others needed more time. Still, our group didn’t go hungry.

Regardless of the scaling back, we were most blessed. When I think of how much of the world is in turmoil, I am even more thankful that we could put aside our obligations and come together as the year wanes.

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Hate Has No Business Here

On this eve of Christmas Eve, I read a story about a couple of small business owners in Minnesota who are standing up against the current spike in xenophobia. Their names are Elana and Danny Schwartzman, and they own the Common Roots Café.

While our presidential candidates, who claim to be Christians, are railing against Muslims, immigrants, and illegals, the Schwartzmans are taking a different tack.  They put a sign in their café’s window that says, “Hate Has No Business Here.”  In addition, they asked others via the Internet to do the same thing. Now the national organization called Main Street Alliance is promoting this attitude on a broader level.

So as we begin to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, which is really what the Christmas holiday honors whether you’re a believer or not, let us ask why hate has become such a problem.

Jesus didn’t hate, although he had harsh words for the money changers in the Temple. His followers, as far as we know, didn’t hate even when they were martyred for their beliefs. So why would today’s Christians do otherwise? I’m not sure.

Perhaps it’s because of fear of the unknown, although the early Christians certainly didn’t have a crystal ball about the future. Perhaps it’s because few among us actually have Muslim or refugee neighbors. We don’t know them personally, so we rely on the media to inform us.

It’s a bad reliance.  Instead we should seek out such people as the Schwartzmans and join with them to acknowledge that hate has no business here.

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Advice for the Christmas Tree-Challenged

I’m a struggling writer; by that I don’t mean I struggle with the words.  On the contrary, I struggle with becoming more well-known for them. But perhaps there is a new path for me.

It began with a pull-up Christmas tree that I bought online from a company named Solutions. While Earl met this purchase with skepticism and I with low expectations, it seemed like an answer to the tedious task of setting up our old tree.  According to the advertising, it was pre-lit, pre-decorated, and festive. Best of all, it was on sale.

The tree has been with us for about two weeks now, and it is everything as described.  Earl is happy, I’m happy, and the tree is happy.

But evidently there are other potential purchasers who are confused.  They can’t find the directions for assembling the tree, nor can they find the video online showing its features.

So Solutions (which had my email address, of course) emailed me and asked if I had any helpful comments about the tree for these challenged buyers.

This just goes to show where we’re headed. It’s not enough to post opinions of books on Amazon or hotels on Trip Advisor anymore. Now we have to solve problems for companies like Solutions.

Still, I responded to Gloria’s and Linda’s concerns encouraging them to purchase the tree.  I even got a thank you in return, although it’s probably computer-generated.  Just maybe advice to the shopping-challenged is a possible writing career path.

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The Concert in Grant Park

Recently I caught a rerun on PBS of Simon and Garfunkle’s Concert in Central Park, which was originally performed in September, 1981.  It was a free concert that the folk duo gave before five hundred thousand people to help raise donations for the revitalization of the famous park in mid-town Manhattan.

I loved S and G then; and I love them thirty some-odd years later.  But watching the concert this time, I felt sad. Whether the two did their famous songs together or whether one of them sang solo, each of them seemed oblivious of the other on stage.

So I did what everybody else does these days: Googled®. It made me sadder.

The two knew each other from childhood in the 1940s. Fast forwarding to the sixties, they created one of the most popular sounds of that era, but by 1970 their personal differences overrode their fame.  They went their separate ways.

The Concert in Central Park was one of several attempts to reunite, but it didn’t succeed even though it was followed by a tour and an album. Simon and Garfunkle eventually went their own ways again. Looking at the rerun now it was obvious all along.

That is the saddest thing of all.

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