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: November 2021

    • One Man’s Trash

      Posted at 4:41 pm by kayewer, on November 27, 2021

      When my office building was shut down in favor of permanently working from home, some of the knickknacks we had accumulated over the years had to go. Just like at home, we had amassed a horde of items in need of new places to hide in; being a customer service environment, we stored paper plates, utensils and cups, along with table cloths for the occasional massive eat-in lunch orders for which we set up tables and serve-yourself items. We also had seasonal things to decorate the departments, and from that group I inherited a large metal lighted snowman.

      He stood guard near the vice president’s office in front of a post for years, and he was frequently decorated with flower leis and suited up for various occasions. Unfortunately he is missing one arm which apparently was never found when we scoured the place to clear it out, and once an item like this is sold out, replacement parts are impossible to come by. The idea is that you throw the old one out and buy new. Since I am one of those people who doesn’t believe in hopeless causes, and since I even managed to retrieve the box for the thing (imagine that: somebody kept the box!), I figure I may be able to fix the snowman by creating a new arm for him.

      This poses its own set of problems, because I really don’t know what size wire this creature is. I searched the question “How do I determine the gauge of a wire” and received a rocket scientist formula in reply. Not happening: I was a lost soul from the New Math generation who got by college math with barely enough sanity to remember what numbers are.

      The next best thing is to go to a hardware or craft store and try to find a similar wire there. Then I can buy the correct length and bend it to shape in my late father’s cellar workshop. Or at least that’s my first plan.

      Since the other arm is just wire, I could always fake it as a last resort, and just mock up a hand and cover them both with something resembling a pair of mittens.

      Then comes the act of setting the thing out on my front lawn. I’ve never put out decorations in front before, because for years they were destroyed or toyed with, and it wasn’t worth the effort. Now that the block has a much different vibe, I think it may be worth trying again. At least I didn’t pay for the snowman. I will pay for a cord and a timer so it will come on at dusk. It will still be a bargain.

      But I’ll say this: if I plug it in and it comes to life saying “Happy Birthday,” I’m out of here.

      Share this:

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

      Posted at 6:38 pm by kayewer, on November 20, 2021

      Autumn leaves are a menace. At least that’s what the general opinion is among society. Actually my neighbors, but to me they are the society that matters. I live close to them, and it’s important to maintain stability with one’s neighbors.

      I was away for a few hours at a show, and while I was gone, the general alarm went out that the leaves on our lawns needed to be raked to the curb for pickup immediately. I didn’t get the memo, but in the four hours I was gone, neat piles of leaves appeared curbside. Mine is untouched, so I am temporarily out of compliance with the general neatness of the block. It’s dark, so I can’t rake now, unless I want to find myself in a padded cell somewhere, being tested for soundness of mind, so it looks like I will spend tomorrow morning raking.

      I don’t know who decided nobody can keep leaves on the lawn in autumn. Left unattended, they degrade into a nice fertilizer for the grass. Forests don’t get raked, and they do just fine, but we spend weeks every season trying to stay ahead of the lemming-like mass leaf suicide.

      Men rake or blow leaves; a popular commercial (for a law firm, no less) features a fellow with a super-sized pair of massive high-powered blowers with which he takes charge of his leaves in full bravado mode while a neighbor watches. It’s a control thing for men to have the most efficient blower.

      I rake, and I have an adjustable rake with a lever that widens or narrows the prongs for optimal coverage. Leaves quake when I approach, and I go into full girl-power mode while the neighbors sleep in. Hey, I’m not a showgirl; I just go to them in the city once in a while for entertainment.

      My lawn care guy has kept ahead of the leaves very well, considering he is still forced to work alone because of support employee issues. Still, I will get my front lawn looking naked so nobody will have an issue with the care of my front. We may have trees, but gosh gee, we don’t let them make a mess.

      Once the warm weather returns in spring, we will have springtime droppings from those same trees, and nobody rakes or complains about them, so I’m guessing the cause of the discord is the fact that autumn leaves are dead, dry and subject to moving around during wind or rain, causing slippery conditions and unsightly detritus all over.

      It seems we don’t even enjoy jumping in leaves anymore. We want them gone, so we rake them up for collection and admire our naked lawns with yellowing autumn grass feeling we have done our part.

      I’d rather leaf them alone.

      Share this:

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

      Posted at 4:51 pm by kayewer, on November 13, 2021

      I’m doing NaNoWriMo this year; short for National Novel Writing Month, I decided to try this year to take on the challenge and write 50,000 words within the month of November. Even though I have fewer obstacles in my way this year, at least in terms of everyday things, life still throws unexpected roadblocks into the mix, and over a two-week period, I’ve had quite a time just trying to put 1,700 words (or more) on a screen every day to keep up.

      My first week went very well. Starting on day six, I had an overnight trip to New York, and the WiFi failed on the bus on the journey in, and didn’t do much better on the trip back. Add to that my return to work, evening meetings, a birthday and a complete Windows update, and I fell short of my daily word count.

      The real challenge is whether I can continue chugging on or not. I took advantage of a write-in on Wednesday night, and cranked out another 1,500 words. And that made me feel like I’m still in the running. Not giving up is the key, first and last on the list of unwritten rules of writing commitment. Another rule is that it’s okay to write crap, as long as you’re writing, darn it.

      Since I’m not an outline writer but a pantser–one who writes by the seat of my pants–and I suffer from first draft perfectionism, it has always been tough for me to just write everything down without regard for spelling, punctuation or grammar. Imagine being your own worst writing partner. I have perfection as the angel on one shoulder and the urge to write it all down and the heck with it as the devil on the other.

      This is why I blog with a time limit, so I can try to unbind myself from those restrictions and learn to edit later. If spell check doesn’t catch it, I try to let it go, or I’ll find it later on and fix it. With a daily expectation of writing 1,700 words, however, when there is no daily time factor (only a deadline of November 30), but there is regular living on the line, I’ve found that my self discipline comes in spurts, and I have to take advantage of them. A few times that has meant the 11 o’clock news has ended and I’m still cranking out crap absentmindedly.

      This morning I did a quick free-flowing write-in and did over 500 words. This evening I will do another 1,000 or more. Tomorrow I’m sitting and writing 3,200 more along with some other torture-minded writers in a virtual group meeting. The life of a writer, especially when you’re working a “real job” and writing on the side is a test of writing character, an inward look at one’s commitment, and an opportunity to actually focus on something of value which may go unfulfilled when everyday life gets in the way. I consider the time writing to be a gift, so this is thirty days of gift-giving.

      When it’s finished, I can add an award to my writing credentials, and I may have a good deal more of a first draft on record than before. What comes afterward is taking time off (yes, they encourage this) and then editing what I’ve written. That’s when I’ll glower at misspellings and mentally flog myself for bad punctuation. Like Leonardo daVinci, I have a bad habit of never declaring something finished, but I may find myself one step closer this time.

      Excuse me, but I have to produce more free-flowing crap.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Welcome Back and Mask Up

      Posted at 2:47 pm by kayewer, on November 7, 2021

      I’m excited to finally have the opportunity to attend shows again, and I’m not wasting any time padding my schedule with whatever I can get. I go to the movies with a friend all the time, and I was even able to attend a screening last year while using the recommended procedures. The crowds aren’t back there yet. Live shows, however, have been reborn. Enthusiasm for theatre, opera and other performing arts is surging, and I am glad to surf that wave.

      When the chance finally came to go back to New York City, I happily accepted. A few places comped tickets for patrons who had been part of the previous season, or held funds on account in the event of cancellations, for when live performances returned, but the catch was that I had to use mine for an evening performance.

      In case you didn’t notice, guys, I’m a matinee person. Home before dark.

      It couldn’t be avoided, so I made arrangements and soon found myself in an orchestra seat surrounded by a variety of patrons either decked out beautifully or understated as if they just came from raking leaves. It didn’t matter: we were together again for something we all love.

      My choice of outfit was in the grey area between Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman and business casual, and it worked just fine.

      Three women seated in front of me were gowned up, but one wore a hard molded plastic face covering which did not fully seal under her chin and left room under the eyes for gaps. I figured that she probably had her own idea of what safety is for her and others in her circle.

      Venues are checking for vaccinations and protection in New York, because if anyplace can be considered a soup of viruses and bacteria, that’s the place, simply because of the humanity from around the world who pass through if they’re not staying. The authorities are broadcasting messages about keeping up immunizations and staying protected, hoping for an eventual normalcy to return. I can’t wait for that, either.

      We’re all looking forward to being free of the burdens of global disease, and being able to sit together in a theater while keeping some rules in mind is a step in that direction.

      Since we’re used to what we have right now, step on out and see something. And don’t wear hard molded plastic.

      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