Friday, August 25, 2006

Another vacation

Next week I will be taking my last week of summer vacation (I still have a week in November and one in December coming). I am not going anywhere this time; I'll be working around the old homestead. So, you know what that means. I likely won't be blogging or commenting. I hope you don't miss me too much. :-) I'll be back at it the Tuesday after Labor Day, while the youngest son starts his junior year of college.

Beginning tomorrow, my days will be filled with painting of garage doors and deck trim, staining of said deck, digging out overgrown shubbery and replacing it with wonderful perennial flowers, with a few trips to The Big City thrown in for good measure. I am sure I'll be called in to work at least once, maybe twice, while on vacation. That's just par for the course. Maybe, just maybe, I'll be able to work up a post, but I am not promising anything. Ciao, friends! I'll miss you. Stay out of trouble in my absence (charlie, that means you!) And be nice to Amy.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Blog workshop

Hi everyone...guess where I am? At a library workshop on blogging and the use of blogs in/for libraries. I am one of only two people at this workshop, which about 15 attendees, who has a blog. The instructor is showing everyone how to set up a Blogger blog. Naturally, I am exempt from this part of the workshop. (I think I get an A on this section.) The afternoon session is about RSS. I have tons of RSS feeds (I like to know when you guys post as soon as you do, so I get your blog feeds!) but I don't know how to create a feed on our web site. So, that's what I hope to learn this afternoon. Since he's teaching everyone how to create a blog and post to it, it's okay that I'm blogging right now. In fact, we're supposed to blog right now. Yippee! Paid to blog! :)

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Growing pains

My town is changing - quickly, and not necessarily for the better. Obviously, every town changes with time. Businesses come and go, as do people; some move, some die, all change with age, sometimes becoming unrecognizable. New neighborhoods spring up, new businesses sprout from once vacant lots, new roads go in to service all the newness, and the face of the town changes. For the most part, those changes have been gradual in my town. It's a small town, off the beaten path a bit, and short of its breathtaking geographic beauty, lacking most of the qualities that draw throngs of new residents. There are very few well-paying jobs in town. There isn't much in the way of affordable housing available. With the exception of WalMart, Home Depot, and the usual fast food enterprises, we lack major retail outlets. It's more than an hour drive to the nearest mall or movie theater. There is no institute of higher education within a 70 mile radius. But the area is beautiful - breathtakingly so. As a result, the various magazines that rate such things (Sunset, Outdoor Life, and the like), have deemed this town one of the country's most desirable places in which to live, going so far as to call it "the next Aspen". I want to thank those publications so much for those articles.

Not wanting to miss out on the latest, hottest, hippest thing, people are flocking to this area. They are not flocking to live and work here, though. They are coming to develop the area, build homes, drive up housing prices, sell their spec homes, then move on to the next hot market. The people who can afford these new homes are mostly retired, usually don't plan to live here year 'round, and add nothing to the economy in the way of jobs created. Sometimes they are people who need a tax write-off in the form of a second home, or maybe they want to escape city life for a week or two a year, so they build a home here to meet that need. Unfortunately, they usually bring their big-city attitudes with them when they are in town, driving aggressively, behaving rudely in our local business establishments, treating the employees at said establishments as servants, barely worthy of acknowledgement. Yes, my town is changing.

Houses are going up faster than I can keep track of them. Neighborhoods of dozens of ostentiously enormous homes, paved with wide, interstate-like roads, are being cut into the previously roadless, pristine forests, miles from downtown, changing the very nature of the area. If I take a different route to work, I am apt to be assaulted by the shock of seeing new "premier, upscale townhomes" being built where a block of quaint little homes once stood, as was the case this morning. Laughably, these premier townhomes back up to shoddy little houses (picture chicken coops in the yard, laundry hanging on the line) and front one of the few busy streets in town. Not exactly my idea of a "premier, upscale" location, yet they're asking more for them than the value at which my house, on half an acre, with lake access, was appraised. We are in the midst of a sort of tax revolution as a result of the meteoric rise in property values. My property taxes are set to increase by more than 50% this next year. Thank you, all you "hipsters" who are changing my town.

When I first moved here, if I called my friends at home, and they were not there, I could almost always find them by just driving around the few streets that comprise "downtown", locating their vehicle, and going into the store on that street. They were almost certainly inside, or walking down the street, easily spotted. Going to the grocery store took forever because I invariably knew 75% of the people in the store, and of course, had to stop to chat for a few minutes. Everyone smiled at everyone else. People said "hi" even if they didn't know you. They probably know your folks, kids, siblings, or neighbors. It was a nice feeling. If my kids were at the City Beach, and I had to leave for some reason, there was always a contingent of friends around me who would look after them for me. Now, I barely recognize a tenth of the people I see on the streets, or in the shops. Now that we've become "hip", the folks walking our streets and perusing our shops are usually tourists, or seasonal residents. Most locals don't even go downtown any more. The parking is a nightmare, the shops are tourist oriented, and unless you work downtown, you seldom have a reason to do so. Yep, my town is changing.

I used to joke that we didn't have rush hour here, we have "rush minute". No more. Traffic in town is choked from a two lane road into a one lane road on both ends of town, as it comes into town and as it leaves town. The volume of traffic has increased 5-fold, yet we have roads that haven't had their capacity expanded in over 20 years. We now have rush half-hour. I avoid it by leaving for the gym at 6:30 AM and not leaving work until 6:30 PM. My town is changing, and I am not thrilled with most of them. But I still love my town. I hope we find a way to deal with all the changes without losing our character, our heart, our core.

Monday, August 14, 2006

New blog additions

I have added a couple of widgets to my blog. They are wordy widgets. Considering the fact that I am often accused of being a bit wordy myself, they seemed apropos additions to my word-encrusted blog. I love words. I enjoy using them when I write, when I speak, and even when I think. Words intrigue me. Especially their origins. I should have been an etymologist, or a linguist because I like words of all kinds - English and non-English alike. I am a non-discriminatory word lover. In that vein, I have added a "word of the day" widget and a synonym matching widget to my blog. Go ahead, test your mettle. I know I'll be doing it often.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Tomorrow, tomorrow, I love ya tomorrow...

Last week was a tumultuous week, both personally and professionally. There was major drama at home - none of it good. Fortunately, it's on the road to resolution. Work was fraught with problems that have yet to be resolved, both at my "day job" and at my consulting job. It seems to be the way it goes with computer gigs.... everything goes really well for a period, every problem is easily solved, then nothing works, solutions escape me, problems cascade like a waterfall crashing over me, until I feel as though I'm drowning in them, rescue nowhere in sight. The fun part of my job, the part I slip off to do when I can't think another second about how to solve the technical problems, is being farmed out. I wanted to cry when I was told this would happen, but I had to admit I don't have the "mad skilz" necessary to do what the boss wants done, and I don't have the time to acquire them in time to do what he wants done. It's been a crushing week, but tomorrow a new one starts. It has to be better, right?

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Sunshine, lollipops, and rainbows

Everything that's wonderful is what I feel when we're together,
Brighter than a lucky penny,
When you're near the rain cloud
disappears, dear,
And I feel so fine
just to know that you are mine.


I don't know why that song popped into my head, but it seems apropos. So, I've added a few blogs to my blog list. I've been lax in doing that, considering how often I read said blogs. So, Lorraine and Nicole in France are now included. I know there are others I should add, but I can't think of them just now. I suppose I should organize the list alphabetically or something, but that just seems so structured, something I do try to escape as often as possible.

I'm working on a new look for the web site at work. It's driving me crazy. I have this vision in my head....but I just can't get it out of my mind and onto my computer screen. I know what I want, but I don't have all the skills necessary for creating it. It's very frustrating. I keep coming up with "interim" designs, intending to get the "real thing" completed soon....but it is taking an awfully long time to get to "soon".

Another project on which I've been working for months and months is still causing me fits. It's the implementation of our internet access management software, and it's still not going well. Something is wrong, and no one can figure out what it is - not me, not the developers, not the tech people. It just is not working and we're all about to lose our minds. That is what I'm working on this week, with a few hours of web redesign thrown in when I can't take the frustration any longer. And so, I spend my days in a constant state of frustration and aggravation, with the only real respite coming in the form of reading the posts of my fellow bloggers. Thanks guys. You have no idea just how much I enjoy reading your blogs, and how doing so helps keep me sane. Keep it up!

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

It ain't over 'til the fat lady sings

I thought I'd be back blogging regularly by now. I guess I need to have another think. I'm still so darned busy, and I don't see any signs of it letting up any time soon, sadly. If it's not work, it's home projects, if it's not that, it's college financial aid stuff. It's just BUSY all the time now. I do have time to read posts on other blogs, for the most part, just not much time to write posts for mine. Since nothing is worse than a blog that is never updated, I am committed to writing at least something every few days, just to keep my few readers interested.

A former coworker, fellow Italian, and all around great lady just started a blog. It's called Rosemary's Attic. I put a link to it on my blog link list. Check it out. She's just getting started, but I can tell already it's going to be a good one. Charlie will like this - her last two posts are about her dogs. They will make you cry. Charlie, her dog's name is Charlie. She is an animal lover extraordinaire. Visit her blog, leave her a comment. Welcome her to Blogland. Now...back to work.