Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: July 2020

    • Video Oh!

      Posted at 5:22 pm by kayewer, on July 25, 2020

      Everybody seems to post videos. Cameras are on every cell phone, and the manufacturers seem to focus (pun intended) on the camera quality more than the actual phone service these days. You can shoot high quality footage from your cell phone at night, but you might miss a call.

      My dumb phone (a smart phone without a data plan) shoots good video, but it takes up battery life, so I splurged and bought one of those new “pro to go” video cameras. I figured I’m anybody, so I can do it.

      The first challenge was getting it out of the package.

      This is an age of extreme packaging, in which the amount of cardboard, plastic and interior filling is so cosmetically precise that even one scratch on the box is visible. This makes it hard to try to repackage anything, so one must commit to a purchase as if it were a tattoo. Or maybe a marriage.

      Once I got the item home, I realized that unpacking this item would be rather like a honeymoon. The part in which one strips one’s partner. Only this was in the living room, not the bedroom, and I was not planning a naughty video shoot.

      The camera itself was housed in a hard plastic display atop a box. There were no pull tabs or other opening instructions, so I dutifully went on everybody’s favorite video resource (rhymes with “Boo Lube”) and keyed in the product name and “unboxing instructions.” Sure enough, a video on how to remove the thing from its box was posted.

      To what depths have we descended that we need video instructions to unbox a product? And to add to the groan factor, the manual is also exclusively online if you don’t have the app (again, dumb phone owners). This is probably to make up for the countless numbers of people who pitch the instructions along with the store bag or wrapping paper, with the confidence of being able to figure it out on the fly, then fruitlessly seek to find a manual elsewhere when nothing works as intended.

      What was in the package was a folded sheet of stickers, even though the product was not seemingly designed for children, who tend to like stickers. Also inside was a booklet of product warnings related to electronics and their related injurious factors, written in about a dozen languages. And there was a “quick start guide” which is in visual language with no further details. The sales associate at the store grumbled about visual language and yearned for the days of actual wordings, too.

      For some reason, I don’t feel like throwing those papers out.

      I found the plastic housing makes great storage for the accessories, which include two surface mounts: one flat and one curved for a helmet. Apparently this product is designed primarily for people who film their adventures on apparatus which require helmets. I’m past that phase of my life, but I could possibly mount the camera on my toaster to film food videos.

      My first footage was of my banana bread, which I hurriedly made early this morning after the second of my two ripe bananas lost its stem and risked browning in the July heat if I didn’t do something with it. Since I had considered the idea of making a video for the aforementioned video channel’s “day in the life” project, I decided it was the perfect start to the day’s filming. The heck with talking about me; let’s bake bread!

      First, I had to mount the gizmo on its tripod, find the power button, then quickly learn how to start filming, keeping in mind that using a higher resolution could shorten my battery life. Meanwhile, the oven was preheating, and my ingredients awaited my skilled application from their positions in three bowls. I managed to do the film, and though I’m no Giada or Martha, I think if the Boo Lube channel wants real life without the frills, they’ll get it.

      My next video should probably be a commentary on packaging.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged GoPro camera, YouTube videos
    • How to Survive Half-Year Hell

      Posted at 5:02 pm by kayewer, on July 18, 2020

      Five and a half months to go. 2020 feels like the year that won’t come to an end soon enough, and we have just reached mid-July. It has been over 110 days since I started working from home, and it feels as if I have not been to the office all year at this point. Maybe I won’t recognize the place when I do get back: the company has gone to great lengths to convert it into a less virus prone environment in which we can work safely, kind of like John Travolta in the movie “Boy in the Plastic Bubble” on an enlarged scale. And without hazmat suits.

      When we do finally get to go back to what is termed the “new normal,” it may just look like an infectious disease lab set up shop in your office. The only problem is that none of us are trained to work in an infectious disease lab and adapt it to what our real jobs are. Technically it’s impossible to take the entire human race and seal them off from harm. When something infectious of this scale appears, it will do what it’s engineered to do, and we do our best to dodge it. But it has been a disruptive event to be sure.

      This is what might be called a century event, even though it took an extra two years to actually show up. If viruses have bosses, this one would definitely have been fired. Instead it’s fired up and ready to go full throttle into our lives and make sure we’re miserable.

      That doesn’t mean we have to go along. We’re adapting pretty well, and changing with whatever life throws at us. Graduation ceremonies were held this month, and people showed up. Sports are going intro controlled practices, and people are letting them do their thing without crowding around to watch and risking getting everybody sick. Sports fans hope for games, even with empty bleachers, to broadcast soon. We can still shop and exercise, and television hasn’t been too bad, even without sports.

      I’ve become a fan of The Incredible Dr. Pol on NatGeo Wild, binged two weeks of shows recently and didn’t feel guilty about it, because I read an article validating “guilty pleasures” as something we all need to do to some extent. Sometimes I wonder if I could deliver a calf after watching Dr. Pol do it about 30-40 times. No, I don’t think reaching into the rear of a distressed cow in labor is my thing.

      One thing online I have gotten hooked on is unusual video channels. It started innocently enough by discovering the Try Channel, where people from Ireland are subjected to international cuisine. Some things are heavenly, like Lindt chocolate, while others are barf-inducing like durian fruit (an acquired taste). From there I discovered “Tribal People,” which introduces new food to seemingly isolated village Pakistanis, and a channel featuring an American with an opinionated wife he brought over from Italy, trying to navigate what is “real” food here that she would be willing to cook or eat (the lady poo-pooed Whole Foods’ pastas, folks).

      And yes, I got hooked on some cat videos from a (I think) South Korean woman who has seven cats in her home to keep her and us entertained.

      Then I found “first time” channels in which folks watch movies or music videos from before their time: this resulted in quite a few newbie Star Wars fans, as well as vintage MTV hits rekindling those fond memories of the eras when nobody worried about a virus (or at least not this one).

      Meanwhile, I’ve learned how to make banana bread, am brushing up on needle felting, crocheted again, re-potted some desperate plants and used Marie Kondo’s methods to tidy up the house. Well, it looks a bit better, but there is still de-cluttering left to do.

      At some point I will–maybe–end up back at the office for the rest of the year, which will mean resuming rising early, timing my day, the commute, the meals and such, and perhaps some normalcy will return.

      After these past few months, though, I wonder if anything we have done is actually normal, or just one more way to live life? When thinking about who has not seen Star Wars or eaten (or liked) durian fruit, the view of the world as we have seen it before has expanded. We’re living in a big world, and an affliction just as big is making this year seem like it will go on forever. It won’t. Still, I’m taking a deep breath and waiting for whatever will come in these next five and a half months.

      Normal is as normal does.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • It’s the Little Things

      Posted at 4:37 pm by kayewer, on July 11, 2020

      I took a walk this morning, and when I came to a corner I noticed that some detritus was blocking up the sewer grate, and the water puddling in the gutter from the previous day’s tropical storm was trickling in much slower than it should as a result. I moved a clump of the gunk with my shoe, and the water started flowing into the grate like a dam being burst open.

      The small things we do every day, or could or should do, make a difference. We don’t always see them, like the water draining from the street so nobody has to step in a puddle, but good affects more good in the same way that bad begets more bad.

      Having started a walking routine in the past month, I have noticed that some things we do haphazardly have a way of reminding us of the sin. For example, I have walked past the same discarded, flattened, dried up former water bottle in the street. Somebody threw it out a car window, no doubt, and at some point a street sweeper will retrieve it without anybody running the risk of catching any germs from it, but just because an object has left your hands doesn’t mean it magically vanishes. That bottle moved very little over a three-day period; only a few inches after a vehicle’s tire kicked it around slightly.

      For reasons I don’t understand, we seem to have a strange unwritten rule in our country that, once we finish with a container, it must leave our hands immediately. This normally means dropping it within the next step or two we take on the street. This happens to bottles, cans, food wrappers, and even the contents of entire former fast food meals, not to mention store purchases in which the buyer has removed the wrappings and placed them in the bag before dropping it.

      I have never checked to see if any receipts are in those puffy pieces of trash, but if you worry about those things, and you’re a doofus, be sure not to leave one in there. Some enterprising con artist (or, if you’re paranoid, the FBI) might trace you via your receipt or your DNA on the inside contents.

      It really shouldn’t be a problem to carry a cup until you reach a trash container, or until you get home. Besides, who invented this need for cash-and-carry beverages anyway? The companies who invent the liquid and don’t seem to care about what people do after consuming the product. The days of glass bottle deposits are long gone, but it saved us from tons of plastic waste in the oceans. On that waste sitting squished in the street.

      What’s wrong with moving a twig off the pavement, closing something that’s obviously flapping open for no reason, or waving another vehicle through to do a left turn? Apparently it’s some sort of pride thing, but I think that it really does little for a person to not do them, while it’s satisfying to feel good about actually doing them.

      Last week one of my plants had a bent stem, and the bloom on the end was bound to die, so I grabbed a twist tie and splinted it, and it has continued blooming through the week. That’s the reward that comes with attention to the little things, and I won’t stop doing them, even if others are cranky or stubborn.

      Let’s just hope that street sweeping is done before the next time I walk by.

      Oh, and yes it does also apply to wearing a mask.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Epic Fails

      Posted at 4:49 pm by kayewer, on July 4, 2020

      I had a week’s worth of failures, but it’s okay.

      Today I planned to do a Fourth of July volcano using soda and candies. I’ve seen the videos in which dudes seeking a thrill go to the woods or a beach and put together a cocktail that results in a huge foam explosion. Mine didn’t turn out that well. In fact, nothing happened at all, except I wasted three bottles of soda, a box of baking soda, half a six-pack of candies, a bottle of vinegar, three aluminum containers and my pride.

      Still, I put up the video to show that failing is okay:

      Maybe it was my choice of soda: I wanted to use a popular colorful soda for the obvious red, white (sort of) and blue patriotic significance. Maybe I didn’t have enough of the ingredients or did the wrong combo in the recipe. Anyway, I wound up with less of a mess if I would had it gone correctly.

      Tried my hand at sealing cracks earlier in the week, with a recommended spray can, which stopped up and didn’t look very appealing when applied. I guess I’m stuck with it until I can wrench it out. Plus I’m out two thirds of the can I bought.

      Last week I bought a beautiful plant, a hydrangea, and I figured that once it rained and the ground was soft, I could pop it into the ground. The threat of severe weather hung like a cloud–a nonproductive one at that–all week, but nothing came. After a few days I tried to get into my dad’s old tool shed for a spade, but the combination lock was frozen and would not budge. Wound up borrowing a friend and a bolt cutter and getting a new lock.

      Once I had the spade, I had to start digging. The insects were out in force and I got bitten a few times, but got the hole dug and put the big root ball into it and was ready to walk away, when I looked back and saw that my angle of viewing was so off that a good two inches of the plant was still protruding from the ground. Plus I had watered it already. Two muddy hands later, and it’s finally at the right depth.

      Fixed a squeak in the storm door, or thought I had. The telling feature was when leaving the house and holding the storm door with my butt while locking up: the squeak had such an interesting timbre that I would occasionally (when nobody was around to look) do a little bump and grind to make some squeaky door music with it.

      Hey, I’ve been working from home in quarantine, too, and whatever brings joy is fine at this point.

      Anyway, a can of that famous two-letter and two number lubricant later, and it’s finally fixed. Squeaky door concerts are over for the season. It may return in time for Halloween.

      Bought a loaf of supposedly tasty but healthy bread, but for all the care spent packaging it, it tasted like flavored cardboard. I went back to my regular bread.

      Out of the three cartons of milk I had ready to go last week (one nearly empty, one ready to replace it and one on reserve, I realized the one I had almost emptied had a later expiration date than the other two. Considering that the store has been known to do this, I should’ve put my glasses on first.

      The great thing is that I survived this week, and today I’m going to have burgers and coleslaw and just forget about soda foam salutes. Next week is a chance to start over and do better.

      After I polish off the rest of the darned soda.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Feedback

      Eden's avatarEden on Getting the Message
      Eden's avatarEden on The Unasked Questions
      Eden's avatarEden on And Her Shoes Were #9
      Eden's avatarEden on The Poison Field
      Eden's avatarEden on Final Tally

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Join 32 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d