Blog Archives

My cousin’s art blog

     Tonight I was so busy working on my book that I couldn’t think of anything to write about for my blog.  Then it occurred to me to send you over to see what my cousin is doing.  She’s quite the talented artist. 

     I haven’t seen her for about thirty five years and we only recently managed to get in touch because her sister directed me to the blog.  You’ll find the link to her blog in my blogroll-Carol’s art blog.

     She has quite a collection of her work there so do take the time to check through her back blogs.

     Have fun!

All I needed was dog food…

     I had to go to the pet store for dog food today.  I knew there was no way I could put it off any longer.  Horror of horrors, Gavin and Patty had the last of their kibble for breakfast this morning.  If I didn’t have dog food in time for their dinner, my life would be a living hell.  Gavin scolds me enough when it hits five o’clock and I haven’t begun to fix their dinners.  Imagine the screaming I’d be in for if I didn’t have dog food.  Bull Terriers can and will scream at you.

     Once there, I drove around the large parking lot at the strip mall for quite a while before I could find a place to park.  I’m always willing to park in the boondocks but even the remote never-used-except-at-this-time-of-year parking spaces had no openings.  At last, a spot opened up, I parked, and dashed from the car to the store.

Once in the door, I grabbed a cart and instead of heading directly back to where their food resides I picked up two bags of their favorite cookies, ear cleaner (won’t Patty be pleased?  NOT!)  And two large Nylabones. 

We haven’t bought the pups new bones in a while and their toy box is looking a bit empty.  Yes, they are spoiled.  There was also a method to my madness.  I hate crowds and I don’t want to go back there until after the holidays. 

     Arriving home, I dragged the huge bag of food inside.  I went back out to the car for the other stuff, and when I returned to the kitchen, the dogs mugged me.  The pups had caught the scent and couldn’t wait for me to open the Nylabone packages.  They danced about and jumped on me, each wanting to be the first one to have a new bone.  We spent the rest of the afternoon and evening watching the two of them alternately steal each other’s new bone and celebrate each theft with couch bounces, headshakes, and wagging tails.

Bottom Line Books scam

     My mother in law is eighty-one years old.  Her vision is poor and she doesn’t read.  She’s never read more than a few books.  This is a great sorrow for me, a writer. 

     However, Bottom Line Books has relentlessly billed her for books that she never ordered, never received, and didn’t want.  They’ve even sent her to collection through the North Shore Agency, Inc. 

     Dear Hubby spent three days on the phone calling North Shore trying to get through their maze.  After bouncing from one number to another and spending hours at a time in the phone, he at last talked to a human.  He told the person that he was a retired Police Officer.  His mother hadn’t ordered the books.  She didn’t receive or want them, and was being fraudulently billed.  He explained that he’d researched both their company and client and that he understood that they provide a service that some people don’t like.  He added that as a Police Officer, he was often disliked and unappreciated.  The person passed his call to her manager.  Dear Hubby suggested to the manager that they check into their clients’ background before they accept a job.  The collection they were doing on his mother was bogus.  The manager told him they’d take care of it and deleted my MIL from their list.

     The manager did a search for any more collections from Bottom Line Books listed at my MIL’s address.  A few seconds later, she said, “here’s another collection for Bottom Line at that residence it has a different first name.” 

     Dear Hubby chuckled and told them, “I’m sure he’d be glad to pay the bill but it will be hard to reach him.  The delivery charge might be a bit steep and his current residence has no zip code, unless it’s the dead letter office.  He’s been deceased for over ten years.”  The collection agency manager weakly replied, “No problem we’ll take care of that one as well.”

*See my post:  Bottom line books scam part 2

**See also: Painvanish another scam and Painvanish problem settled

That white fluffy stuff

     Here on the east coast, it’s been pouring for two days and it’s still raining.  I’m glad all this rain isn’t snow.  If it had been, we’d be under several feet of the white fluffy stuff by now.  It has commonly happened to us here in the past.  I’m happy that so far this winter I haven’t had to go out and shovel snow.

     Over the years, I’ve taken pictures of the pathways we had to dig through the deep snow in our yard so the dogs could go out.  Our dogs aren’t little guys.  There was one year when Dear Hubby’s (four-wheel drive, extended cab) Chevy pick-up truck couldn’t make it out of our driveway because the snow was up to the top of the hood.

     I heard that Louisiana and Mississippi got snow.  Some areas even had a significant amount of snow, eight inches.  Therefore, to those of you in Mississippi and Louisiana I say drive carefully that white stuff is slippery.  In areas that get snow on a regular basis, gong under the speed limit when there’s snow on the ground is normal.  We learn this early. 

     Another snow tip: If you spray your shovel and snow blower chutes with cooking spray the snow slides off easily.

What’s the worst gift you ever received?

     Dear Hubby and I no longer exchange wrapped gifts.  He doesn’t have the energy or strength to go shopping and I hate to shop.  Instead, we think of things we like to buy or do and we go out together and buy or do whatever.

     On our first Christmas, DH surprised me with a pair of diamond earrings, they weren’t large, they weren’t fancy, but to me they were the crown jewels and I loved them.  To this day, I’m seldom seen without them.

     I think it was our second Christmas where he made a mistake.  He listened to his mother about what gift he should buy for me.  Maybe some people would love to receive a new vacuum cleaner, but cleaning items have never ranked a place on my Santa’s list.  Cleaning is work.  DH never made that sort of blunder again.

     Since that second year fiasco, he has managed to buy me brilliant and insightful gifts, gifts that have brought tears of joy to my eyes.  The best of them weren’t expensive they were the gifts that proved he’d been listening to me during the year.

     Now you tell me what was your ‘worst’ gift ever?

Sure, give me a down filled robe

     Dear Hubby was leafing through a catalogue tonight and managed to come across a few items he knew to be completely unsuitable for me right now.  Things like Doctor Dentons made of fleece, down filled robes, or wraps made like electric blankets…the perfect gifts for a woman whose inner child plays with matches.  Yeah, right.  This man had the nerve to giggle as he showed them to me, certainly not a safe thing to do.

     I told him, “Go ahead, and laugh mister.  You have to sleep sometime.  Keep in mind that I write murder mysteries.  I also do all the cooking around here.  Mwahaha!”

     In this house, my hot flashes are legendary.  Dear Hubby swears that if he could hook me to the furnace in some way we’d save a fortune on fuel bills.  (Gee, thanks.) 

     Another thing, he’s always cold and cranks up the thermostat and I turn it down.  “Are you trying to roast me alive?”

     I’m telling you it’s not Global warming that’s screwing up our climate, it’s all us baby boomers hitting menopause.

Another great TV show bites the dust

     As I watched Boston Legal tonight, it was with a heavy heart.  Though I took delight in the show itself, I sorrowed over the loss of it.  Tonight was the last episode of one of the best shows ABC has presented us in years.

     I will miss the passionate Alan Shore, the zany ‘mad cow’ afflicted Denny Crane, the calm Shirley Schmidt, and the rest of the charmingly offbeat characters in the cast.

     The show’s adept writers created a program that handled scores of sensitive subjects.  They dealt with racism, women’s rights, gay rights, disabilities, sexual harassment, and many other issues but they handled it well.  The characters steam rolled through with humor, sensitivity, love, and in Denny’s case political incorrectness and guns.

     What is ABC replacing this marvelous show with you ask?  One of those shows that doesn’t require writers or actors of any intelligence or ability.  They will be presenting us with another brainless reality show.  Not a show that draws you in and brings you to tears of joy or grief for characters you grow to love or hate.

     Instead of talented actors/actresses who deliver clever lines of impeccable dialogue that takes you to their world, you will get to watch another simple-minded show. 

     I can picture the network big wigs discussing expenses and coming up with, “Why spend money?  Why not put great writers and actors out of work and replace them with low budget, no talent idiocy.  The public won’t care.”

Cold remedies

     Gavin here, Mom is sick.  She has a bad case of the creeping cruds, or what you humans call ‘a nasty cold’ so Patty and I are standing in for her tonight.  We’re both curious about what she calls cold remedies.  We know she’s tried a few that some friends recommended. 

     Elena suggested to Mom that she should drink some thyme tea and even told her how to make it.  You should’ve seen Mom’s face when she drank that.  Patty says to tell you that Mom also said a few colorful words when she tasted it.  (None of which I’m allowed to type here.)

     Oh, excuse me a minute Mom is over in her chair coughing I must go jump on her chest and lick her face.

     Now where was I?  Ah, yes.  Cold cures.  A green tea and honey cure came from a neighbor.  There’s another one Mom swears by, hot and sour soup.  Dad got it for her from the Chinese restaurant.  It smelled good, we tried begging for some but she wouldn’t share.

     Do you have a special cold cure for our Mom?  We sure would like her up, around, and ready to play with us again.

Thirty-four billion to bail out the auto industry

     Tonight on the news, we heard the announcement that the auto industry says it now needs a THIRTY-FOUR BILLION DOLLAR bail out.  Are you frigging kidding me? 

     We can’t afford to buy a new car, so why should we give them our tax money?  I hate to say it, but most cars today sell for more than what I paid for my house thirty-five years ago and I refuse to take out a second mortgage to buy a car.

     Last January my ancient van gasped its last in the middle of heavy work traffic never to move on its own again.  Did anyone bail us out?  If you consider AAA coming and hauling the old hulk away a bail out, well, then maybe.  Could I afford a new car?  No.  Hell, I bought another used ten-year-old car.  One might consider ten year olds to be youngsters but not when they are cars.

     Maybe if ‘We The People each got our fair share of this THIRTY-FOUR BILLION, we could all buy a new car which in turn would give the auto industry a good shot in the arm.  Gee, wouldn’t that be a better bail out?  Give everyone a check made out ‘for the purchase of a new car’ heck, just for GP let’s make it stipulate ‘a new American made car.’  We’d all have new cars and the auto industry would get MONEY.  Many of the old clunkers would be off the streets.  We could save money on gas with newer gas efficient cars and cut down on air pollution with cleaner running engines. 

     Does anyone see a problem with this?  Tell me, where’s the downside here?

Ya think?

     I have friends who have lost their jobs during this past year that are barely scraping by, some even fear they will lose their homes by the new year.  I know parents who have had to tell their sons and daughters that having beans and rice for dinner several times a week won’t hurt them.  They’ve told their children that their Christmas gifts will be limited to items of much needed clothing; maybe they can get a new winter coat.

     The big news is that we’ve been in a recession since December of 2007.  Wow!  Ya think?  Gee, how long did it take them to figure that out? 

     Heck, we’ve been tightening our belts for more than a year.  Those of us on small incomes have been quite aware of this fact and yet it took until now for the NEWS to come out?  

     I guess for such a thing to be NEWS it takes having the wealthy suddenly discover that their BIG BUCKS aren’t going nearly as far now as in previous years. 

     Goodness, does this mean that instead of scarfing down a filet mignon or lobster for dinner they may have to cut back and have a NY strip steak, or God forbid, hamburger?  Do their darling sons and daughters have to forego one of their yearly Christmas gifts of new cell phones, Ipods, big screen TVs, Xboxes, WIIs, or another new car this year?  What a shame.

Packrat-itis

     I hate clutter, although to look at my house you wouldn’t know it.  I do try to get ahead of it.  However, when you are married to a packrat who is the son of two packrats, it is a difficult task.

     You know you have a packrat in the family when you throw things away and the next day you find that at least half of the items have magically reappeared.  You know you have a packrat when your attic, basement, and outdoor shed are bursting at the seams. 

     When you find an old, empty card for a tiny light bulb stuffed in a drawer and throw it away only to have your husband retrieve it from the recycling bin to ask you what light came from the pack, you have a packrat.

     If your mother-in-law has paper bags from a store that hasn’t existed in twenty years, all neatly folded in a six-foot tall bundle stashed under her basement steps, you know where your packrat came from.  (We won’t go into ALL the OTHER hoarded stuff.)

     If it took more than five years to put a dent in your deceased father-in-law’s accumulated clutter: yep, your packrat is his son and he brought a ton of it to your house.

     If you could hold a weekly yard sale every week for a year and still have too much clutter, ah huh, there’s a packrat around somewhere.

     I’ve decided that once spring is here, I will start in the attic, work my way to the cellar and throw away, donate, and sell all the clutter.  If it isn’t nailed down, if doesn’t have extreme sentimental value, if we don’t use it regularly, it is gone.

     If I have to, I’ll hog-tie Dear Hubby to keep him from playing junk retriever.

     Are you a packrat?  Do you know a packrat?

MS the drunken puppeteer

     Early this morning we had a dusting of snow.  However, that didn’t last long because it changed to rain.  The ground is now oversaturated, it is still raining, and my yard is rapidly becoming a swamp.  I half expect the Koi to leave the pond and go exploring.  The dogs weren’t interested in too many outings today, poor dears.  Yesterday was a lovely day but they didn’t get to enjoy much of it. 

     Dear Hubby is coming down with something and it has aggravated his MS.  Yesterday when I woke up and came downstairs, his balance was so far off, that he told me he felt like a marionette with a drunken puppeteer on the end of the strings.

     DH was also running a fever and seeing double.  Our doctor has a walk-in emergency clinic so I drove him over there.  It seems that everyone who wasn’t out shopping was in the waiting room.  With that many people ahead of us, I began to wish that I’d grabbed my Alphasmart when we left so I could do some writing while we waited.  Luckily, I always carry a notebook and plenty of writing implements.

     One and a half hours later, a nurse called DH’s name and we followed her back to the exam rooms.  After another thirty minutes, we left with two prescriptions for him and instructions, one of them, that he should drink plenty of fluids.  Since we had to pass near a grocery store on the way to the pharmacy, I ran in there for stuff for him to drink.  I think the same crowds from the doctor’s office were in the store. 

     Our next stop was the pharmacy and if we wanted to wait for two hours, we could get his prescriptions then or wait until today to pick them up.  It seems the throng had beaten us to the drug store too.  By then the sun had set and the dogs had spent a long time alone so we opted for picking up his medications first thing today.