Category Archives: life

Heat

Years ago, when I was a technician at a well-known electronics component manufacturer, we did an experiment to demonstrate the benefits of using our products.

We used a thermal imaging camera to take a snapshot of a working computer circuit board: one with our components, and one with the competitors. We were going to give customers visible proof that our components ran cooler and thus consumed less power.

We discovered something entirely unexpected: the “after” image not only showed that our components ran cooler, but it showed that using our components made the other components (including the microprocessor) run cooler.

This baffled us at first, until a company physicist explained what we were seeing: with the competitor’s products running so hot, the microprocessor had no place to dissipate its heat. But with ours in place and running cool, the microprocessor was able to offload that heat and run cooler.

In other words, it wasn’t just one area that was affected by the relief from excess heat, it was the whole system.

Families work the same way. When even one member is overloaded with stress, that stress is absorbed and magnified by everyone in the family.

Relieving just one person’s stress makes it possible for the entire family to feel the relief.

That’s easier said than done… but it makes sense. And it means it’s a really good thing for mom and/or dad to have a stress relief outlet – whether it’s something physical like running or swimming or biking, or something epicurean like cooking, or even spending just half an hour alone in prayer.

Forcing yourself to take the time to offload that stress will make a huge difference in the stress level of the whole family.

Quoth Daddy

“Thanking the universe for your blessings is like thanking the walls of the restaurant for your meal.” – Me.

Smartness

The Portland area forecast is for rain/snow mix, and lots of it. They’ve been talking about it for days.

I’ve already assured my wife I’ll be bringing my laptop home from work in case we get snowed in. She’s requested that I put her snow tires on in case it’s really bad.

I drove to work today in wintry conditions: foreboding sprinkles and near-freezing temperatures.

So naturally, for my lunchtime errand, despite seeing the heavy, dark ominous clouds looming overhead and moving inland, my thought was:

“Nah, I don’t need to bring my coat.”

And after returning from my errand, looking very much like a drowned rat from having sprinted through the sudden (but nonetheless predictable) deluge of sleet and rain, I ponder my choice. Was it a bad one? Yes.

Will I learn from it? Probably not.

I’m glad my wife puts up with me.

Things Unspoken

There’s stuff you can write about, and there is stuff you can’t.

Sometimes it seems like the “can’t say” stuff is just too much. You have to deal with them pretty much every day in some way or another; you have to shoulder weighty burdens that have no short-term resolution, if any…

“I got it! I got it! I got it!”

“I ain’t got it.”

…and you really want to write about it.

I’m sure you can all relate to this. Blogging can be very cathartic; it provides a venue for expressing frustrations and hopes and for relating funny family stories or regaling others with details of family adventures. But there are some things you just gotta keep to yourself.

Suffice it to say: I am very thankful for Michael’s Mommy who supports me, and for the Lord who renews my strength.

Skunk, continued

After a week of keeping traps out and baited, we have caught no skunk.

But we have trapped opossums six times. I don’t know if there are six possums living under the deck or if there are just two really stupid ones that don’t seem to learn from past mistakes. Either way, I’ve called the trapper guy to come out and whisk off the two I found trapped this morning. They can go be stupid somewhere else.

The real kicker today didn’t concern the possums or the skunk. Sister S had been concerned for her cat. Sister B had her dog spend the night Saturday, and S was worried that her cat might run off.

Most of yesterday cat was no where to be seen. Even after dog went back home, cat remained missing.

This morning, cat was not stationed outside the bathroom door, waiting for sister S to finish her morning ablutions. Cat did not come running for breakfast when the can of Friskies was opened.

“Tom? I’m worried about the cat,” she said finally, before heading off to school.

“Why?”

“She hasn’t shown up this morning. She usually comes in for breakfast. I haven’t seen her all night.”

“Well, I’m sure she’ll turn up. We saw her yesterday when the dog was here,” I said, trying to be reassuring without giving in to the possibility of her freaking out.

“I guess so…”

She gathered her things and headed out, shutting and locking the door behind her.

Not two minutes later, she came back in.

“I found the cat. She’s in one of the traps.”

“Oh, jeez…” I got up and got my shoes on and headed out the front door.

She’d finally gotten herself trapped, like I was worried she’d do three years ago.

I approached the trap in the front. Sure enough, out of the trap droned the most pitiful sound: “YOWL! YOWL! YOWL! YOWL!”

“Hold on, kitty. I got you,” I said, lifting the mechanism and opening the door. She shot out of it like a fuzzy black howitzer shell, still yowling repeatedly, before she disappeared under the back fence.

I came back inside and told my wife. Then yowly cat could be heard again, this time from inside the garage, where she sat in front of her cat door, no doubt terrified that it too could be another trap.

I’m sure it’ll be another year of re-training before she starts using small, hinged-door entrances again.

I hope the skunk is gone.

Call Me Mr. Fixit.

“Honey? The refrigerator is leaking.”

“What? Where?”

“From the water dispenser.”

“Oh.”

(pause)

“It’s really bad.”

“How bad?”

“Like, a big puddle on the floor.”

“Oh.”

(pause)

“It’s going to ruin the floor.”

“That’s true.”

“Well, aren’t you going to do something about it?”

“Yeah. I’ll take care of it.”

“There, I fixed it.”

(pause)

(glare from wife)

(picks up phone) “Hello, Sears home repair? Can you come out Saturday?”

edited to add: Sears came out promptly Saturday morning, and got it fixed in less than half an hour. Wow. I am impressed.

Skunk 2.0

It’s back.

We thought we’d dispensed with it three years ago. Remember? No? Read about it here, here, here and here.

Okay, so maybe this skunk is just a distant relative.

Either way, a few day ago this little bugger must have found cousin Pepe’s former apartment, moved in and got right down to the business of stinking the place up.

It’s really horrible to be awakened by a smell. Scents are the things that reach deepest into your most primal, lizard-esque brain cells and touch your very soul, whether for good or ill. This smell is definitely squarely in the “ill” category, as it propelled us both out of bed and into various activities: me going downstairs to fetch the vinegar jug, my wife to opening windows and doors wide to let in the 30-something degree air from outside, which smelled fresh and sweet.

I filled up a spray bottle with vinegar and began saturating the surfaces and air with the tangy, neutralizing elixir. This helped some, but it required regular booster sprays throughout the day. Whatever that polecat was doing, it certainly knew how to smell up the inside of the house without being detectable from the outside.

I called up the same wildlife guy as last time, and he came out and set traps the very next day.

Nothing caught so far, but it’s only a matter of time.

And this time, I am going to put up the wire mesh around the deck to keep that bugger OUT. Between that and a regular application of cayenne pepper spray in the back yard, we shouldn’t have skunk problems any more.

Michael asked me why God made skunks, if they’re so stinky and cause so much trouble. It was difficult for me to provide a good answer: “God needs skunks here for a good reason. Daddy can’t really figure out what that reason is, but God’s a lot smarter than daddy so that’s why He’s in charge.”

I am going to ask Him when I get the opportunity, though.

Wealth

Things that make me feel wealthy, in no particular order:

  • A drawer full of clean, matched socks.
  • A clean kitchen.
  • Being married to Michael’s Mommy.
  • A house full of happy, helpful, interested children.
  • Dining Al Fresco (out in back, in the summertime).
  • Both cars parked in the garage.
  • A fire in the fireplace.
  • A freshly mown lawn
  • An uncluttered work bench.
  • Having time to write.
  • Knowing that I’m part of God’s grand plan, and He’s already got it all worked out.


  • What makes you feel wealthy?

    Portal Of Doom

    Toilets are evil. At least, the ones in our house are. I’m convinced they’re sentient and angry about something, and have for some reason selected me as the target for expressing their resentment.

    We have three bathrooms in our house, each with a toilet having its own personality. Upstairs in the kid’s bathroom is “Breezy”, the toidy that is forever discarding its seat. I must have re-attached the seat five times last year. Over in the master suite is “Twitchy”, the latrine that never quite stops running; you have to actually get into the tank to adjust the flapper to seat right so it doesn’t keep on repeating the “endlessly tinkle and loudly refill” pattern all day. And downstairs in the powder room we find “Eager”, the commode that tends to be done with flushing before the job is complete. To get him to behave, you must hold the flush handle down in order for the bowl to empty, or to “drink it up” as Michael puts it.

    Guarding Eager’s chambers was an equally evil powder room door. A pocket door. A door that I have dubbed “Surly.”

    From the time we moved in, the thing never worked right.

    First of all, it was impossible to lock. Pocket doors are not known for presenting a high security level, and this one was no exception. In fact, because the house had settled funny in its twenty-some-odd years, the frame was askew, and even when you closed the door as much as possible, it left a gap big enough to drive a Buick through. There was little hope for the door’s latch to ever span the distance to make contact with the strike plate.

    Once my stepdaughter’s dad visited, bringing along Cousin O (stepdaughter’s little half sister, who was no more than two at the time). He stepped into the downstairs restroom for a bit, no doubt believing he had a semblance of privacy. This lasted until Cousin O decided to find out where daddy went, and she opened the door wide, and then scurried off elsewhere to play. From his compromising position he called out frantically to me for help, since I was the only other responsible male in the house. I mercifully shut the door and stood guard.

    Eventually, the door went from merely not locking to full-on sticking. It became an ordeal just to cajole it into sliding shut. It required puzzling skills and acrobatics in order to properly align it while simultaneously sliding it along, and even great skill to open it. While this new behavior did incidentally provide a rudimentary form of privacy, it was far from ideal.

    After a year or two of door wrestling, I’d had all I could stand.

    I decided to take it apart and fix it. How hard could it be?

    After removing approximately three thousand four hundred nineteen pieces of trim, bracing and structural lumber to access the door itself, I became quite aware of exactly how hard it could be.

    I tilted the door outward and pulled it off its track.

    Ah, simple! The rollers were bent! No sweat.

    I employed some carefully chosen pliers and clamps to re-straighten the rollers, and then replaced the door.

    It rolled smooth as silk, open and shut. And as a bonus, it even closed enough to get the latch to work! Amazing!

    Time to put back all the lumber!

    I got it all back in place, though the resultant pock marks on the trim made it look a lot like I employed a burlap sack filled with jagged rocks.

    But at least it was done. Problem solved.

    Then after about two or three days, it started sticking again. Except it was worse.

    We endured worse for most of a year, until I decided I needed to try again with the fixing. Because it takes a whole heap of lessons before I learn.

    Somehow this time it required the removal of six thousand eight hundred thirty eight pieces of lumber; not sure how I got so lucky the first time I did the job.

    But I was eventually able to remove the door, and saw that the rollers were completely shot.

    Off to Home Depot for new rollers!

    Luckily, they had them.

    Replace rollers, adjust and align rollers, replace door, smile, replace lumber, whap thumb with hammer, come this close to issuing extremely foul language. By this point the trim looked like I re-installed it using a shotgun loaded with hatchets and piranhas.

    But the door worked great!

    For two days.

    From there on out, it closed just fine – and then wouldn’t open up. I mean, it really wouldn’t open. Surly’s first new victim was Michael, who upon discovering his surprise jailing, cried frantically until we could let him out. This required the deft application of daddy’s fist against the door in a forceful and relatively angry manner.

    Then the inadvertent incarceration happened to his mother. And his sister. And his grandmother. And then me.

    So for several weeks, we just went without a door. You could use the bathroom, but only if you didn’t cling to social mores such as discreetness. I could have hung up a sign: “Check your modesty here before you enter.” My personal choice was to run upstairs to take my chances with Twitchy instead. On the plus side, that meant lots of trips up and down the stairs. That counts as exercise, right? There’s a silver lining in every cloud.

    In time, the balance of reason and decency outweighed my pride and I called in the handyman.

    He came in to inspect, and immediately confided that he hated pocket doors. We chatted about our options, tossing around ideas such as a bi-fold door, curtains, beads, etc., but eventually settling on replacing Surly with a regular hinged door with a knob and a real lock. For actual privacy.

    That weekend, he got to work removing the old door and frame, and hanging and finishing a new door. In the space of three hours, he was done with the whole job. Why the heck didn’t I have this done years ago?

    This new door I have dubbed “Jeeves,” because he looks proper, and is there solely to do my bidding without giving me any attitude.

    Now that I don’t have to go running up and down the stairs any more, I should probably get a stairmaster.

    Hang In There

    This is a phrase I use a lot, usually at the close of an email to a friend or relative whom I know is going through a struggle: “Hang in there.”

    My wife wrote me an email this morning, telling of struggles going on at work, predicting that her workday would be difficult. I responded with my usual morning report, and closed with “Hang in there.”

    And I mean it: just stay strong, stay tough, push through and the end of the day will come.

    Sometimes I wonder if people who receive this phrase from me understand exactly what I mean by that, and whether it means anything at all. I wonder if I’m coming across as dismissive or uncaring, or otherwise less than genuine in my concern for their problems.

    I wonder if I could construct a phrase that would be more sympathetic, more helpful, more sincere.

    But really, this phrase imparts all that I wish to give: encouragement to stay strong in the midst of struggle, to push through to the end of the ordeal, whatever it may be. It might be a particular crisis, like a busted water heater or a car in the shop and no money to pay the repair bill, or it might be a child who’s sick for a day, or a week, or an entire lifetime. It might be a relationship gone sour, or a sudden termination from a job you’ve had for twenty years.

    Life is tough. Each of us faces struggles both big and little every day. Some of us have more to deal with than others, and some of us face one particular struggle every day knowing there is no end to it. Some of us have faced tragedy after gut-wrenching tragedy, and wonder when the next one will strike.

    But hope lives, and joy remains, and even after the darkest nights the sun comes up in the morning.

    So to all of you, fellow human beings who struggle and wonder if there’s any point to it or any reward or rest at the end, I say with all encouragement: Hang in there.

    And I would even add this as well: Pray. There is no comfort or help greater than what God provides to those who seek Him.