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: August 2023

    • Food to Go (Crazy)

      Posted at 4:54 pm by kayewer, on August 26, 2023

      I’m at the age at which trying to enjoy foods can be hazardous to my health. The days of reckless candy consumption, cake and ice cream, or even a snack-sized candy bar, seem to be behind me. Not that I’m a big consumer of junk food; the past three years in particular have been nothing compared to what my eating life used to be.

      Before the office closed and we started working from home, food was everywhere I looked. People brought in donuts (or the boss told me to order them), and the cafeteria was bustling with folks devouring eggs and bacon or the oatmeal of the day. Lunch was a choice of dinner entrée or a platter with a sandwich and a side of fries or onion rings. The vending machines stayed busy at all other hours.

      Those are all rarities on my daily menu now. Except for the oatmeal. I have that daily in autumn and winter. I haven’t eaten bacon as a breakfast food in ages, although I have found a flaccid slab or two in the occasional burger.

      I broke down and decided to try a delivery service, so five days a week I prepare a two-minute meal in the microwave which is supposed to be healthier and portion controlled. The meals arrive once a week in an ice-packed box, and I simply move them to the fridge and take one out at dinnertime.

      The meals are tasty, hot and filling, plus I have not found any I don’t like. This either means that I have a tolerant palate for anything, or I don’t know good food when I taste it.

      I’ve never outright refused to eat a meal. Okay, one time the omelet my mother prepared was a bit on the softer side for my taste, and she was rather annoyed that I asked her to give it more of a cook, but it was just that one time. Even the Navy always met my expectations on omelets. I guess this means I used up my one complaint about food allotted me per lifespan.

      I wish those Karens I see on social media videos would realize they earn one complaint about food preparation per lifespan.

      Unfortunately, I had some blood work done at the lab, and the results came back that I still have too much sugar in my system. Gee whiz, I already gave up sugar in my tea, switched out several items for alternates with real and low percentages of sugar, and my summer cereal boxes all come with ten grams or less of sweet stuff.

      My doctor will probably tell me to limit dessert.

      Wait until I tell him what that will do to my daily life as I know it. I may need therapy.

      Another recommendation may be to change the diet plan for my deliveries, to something like the DASH or Mediterranean diets. Both are known to help older people get better numbers out of their blood samples. They’re also rather restrictive and a bit pricey. because anything good for you naturally costs more. My current service is reasonably priced, but I may need to spend more for healthier choices.

      Despite eating two bananas and a Greek yogurt a day, my potassium was still low. That’s not easy to build up, but not impossible. Unfortunately, foods such as spinach don’t come in meal delivery services, and watermelon doesn’t travel well. I added a salmon dinner to the delivery service to help boost my numbers.

      Snacking has been out of the question, so I don’t have chips, pretzels or popcorn at home, though I indulged in a bag of chocolate drizzle popcorn last month (I stretched it out to last all week).

      Here’s the kicker: the sugars you consume stay in your bloodstream and can be read with a simple test to find out what you’ve been doing for the past ninety days. That was vacation time, so yes I did have a few indulgences such as fudge from the boardwalk. And my blood told on me.

      Gives new meaning to the term “bad blood,” doesn’t it.

      So soon my primary doctor will read the test results and probably offer some suggestions. I’m willing to follow them, because nobody wants to find their healthy meter has suddenly expired and it’s the end.

      At least if I “checked out” in the cafeteria, somebody would say, “Must’ve been the oatmeal of the day.”

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    • Get Together

      Posted at 4:40 pm by kayewer, on August 19, 2023

      Has anybody else noticed that it has become harder to get a group of people in one place that does not involve an online meeting?

      This year is my high school class reunion, and it seems as if every five years the number of people involved dwindles. It doesn’t appear to be due to folks passing on as much as it is because of the logistics of distance. Nobody stays in their hometown anymore. Gee, is there such a thing as a hometown for anybody?

      It seems that everybody moves far away from where they went to school. A friend of mine has two children, both of whom moved across the country upon graduation (one half-way, the other to the opposite coast), and she sees them during the holidays when the families congregate in one place at least once a year. So it is with quite a few of the graduates, who in those days may have stayed put for five or ten years or so after picking up their diplomas, but then relocated elsewhere and lost touch. We still haven’t found a handful of people; it’s as if they moved to Mars or went into witness protection.

      I don’t have a problem with them finding me, because I’ve lived in the same home all my life (and the high school is a few minutes’ walk from there), so I’m easy to locate. That explains why nobody contacts me. I’m like that famous place in your home state; since you know where it is, you figure it’s always going to be there, and you’ll get around to it when you’re ready. My contacts have been limited to social media group messages. As long as I get them, I guess they know I’m still living.

      My hobbies over the years have also produced various circles of friends, and we also have trouble getting together. One of our groups had planned a big reunion which was interrupted by a certain worldwide problem. The last time we managed to do something as a group, we had a luncheon at Red Robin for five (out of a good thirty people). After so much time has passed, a few of us have mobility issues or can’t travel. I put the suggestion out there for a Zoom reunion. This would enable the movement challenged to be part of the action. We won’t have much longer to reconnect with some of us, which is depressing. The higher the numbers in your reunion, the lower the number of people you’ll actually get to see there.

      My mother went to one class reunion–her fiftieth–and I drove her there. She remembered every face in the crowd as if no time had passed at all. I felt privileged to experience the happiness she felt when people were genuinely glad to see her. The invitation came by snail mail, so I suppose they figured out who had passed on by which envelopes were sent back by the post office.

      Our world has become so out of touch that even reunions are suffering. It’s sad to think that the end of a long journey, such as twelve years of schooling, ends so abruptly that few care about the nostalgia of our lives while we shared them in those classrooms.

      It’s not as if we live forever. The memories die with us.

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    • Scarier Than Hell

      Posted at 5:00 pm by kayewer, on August 12, 2023

      I went to see a horror movie last night (The Last Voyage of the Demeter), so with theatres basing their pre-movie fare on the theme of the main feature (which was rated R), I fully expected the trailers to be terrifying as well. I wasn’t disappointed. With the exception of the live-action comedy Strays (featuring the voices of Jamie Foxx and Will Ferrell in a canine gang), my friend and I were subjected to an endless pummeling of our sanity with gut-punching promises of gore, killings and shock.

      In watching the movie I chose, I did so preferring the traditional movie monsters and tropes. Without adding spoilers, I can say that I got more good scares out of the movie, and nothing in the trailers convinced me to come out to see a majority of the movies they touted. The inhumanity in the way fear is exploited is becoming more extreme as people become numbed to the old methods. The trailers I saw leaned toward psychological horror, with an underbelly of the visceral, and I wasn’t particularly impressed by any of that.

      The first movie in the lineup was an unusual one called It Lives Inside. The premise is based upon an East Indian cultural demon and looks like it involves a spiritual haunting from which an afflicted person cannot escape. Worse than that, anybody trying to help the person is also targeted for horrible happenings. This one made me jump and cringe a bit.

      The Nun II movie is on the way. I never saw the other related ones, but it promises to offer similar jump scares, lots of blood and anti-religious frights. I knew it wasn’t for me, and the trailer didn’t change my mind.

      The one film I was already familiar with and knew was coming was The Exorcist: Believer, which appears to be a franchise update. Ellen Burstein reprises her role as Chris McNeil, whose daughter Regan (Linda Blair) survived demonic possession. She is called to a home to help a father whose daughter and a friend are seemingly possessed. This seems to be a tribute to the original move which was released 50 years ago. Having seen the original a few times, I may catch this on home release, where I can change the channel if it’s over-the-top disgusting.

      The big trailer was for Five Nights at Freddy’s. Having seen some of the licensed figures, I paid no attention because they didn’t seem at all engaging. Apparently this is a story of Chuck E. Cheese meets possession of some sort, with a security guard and his daughter meeting up with animatronics in an abandoned theme park which come to life, kidnap children and commit mayhem and murder. I sure hope this doesn’t spell the end for the pizza franchise (or worse, Disney).

      A less horrific offering but still with death and fear as a theme was an Hercule Poirot mystery remake, A Haunting in Venice. It delves into the possibility of psychics actually being able to summon the dead. The great Belgian detective is pushed to his limits as he attempts to unravel a séance connected Halloween murder in Italy. The Agatha Christie based story brings back Kenneth Branagh as the sleuth after a successful turn in Death on the Nile. This one is a possibility.

      I suppose my problem is that I don’t find the horror franchises which depict murder entertaining. And when I say murder, I am referring to cold killing of a human being by another. I sat through a couple of Nightmare on Elm Street movies, but they’re not at the top of my favorites list. Monsters and supernatural beings offer the safety of their implausibility, so watching a man/bat terrorize a ship’s crew didn’t faze me, in spite of barrels of blood. At least I was primed for it, having been amped up by the frightening reels of coming attractions rolled out beforehand.

      Maybe I should take up going to comedy shows. At least the pre-show acts would make me laugh, too.

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    • Line Up the Unusual Suspects

      Posted at 5:05 pm by kayewer, on August 5, 2023

      Sometimes the important news of the week is not worth repeating, and with politics and weather dominating the media, I looked elsewhere for inspiration. I found it in an article about a woman challenging the science behind the everyday queue in public places. She was standing with her baggage at the airport to check in and refused to move up when the line in front of her began to thin out. She replied to anybody who asked her why she wouldn’t tighten the line that it wouldn’t matter when she moved up, because everybody would get waited upon in the same order.

      This meant that a growing gap was creating space between the queue near the front of the line and herself with the others waiting behind her. Her intention, then, was to wait until the entire line ahead of her was gone, and then she would parade herself–dragging, carrying or rolling her luggage–up to the head of the stanchions and cordoning ribbons or ropes– across the open space to the counter.

      This is what is sometimes referred to as commanding a room, in which your behavior draws attention to your authoritative presence. But if you have no authority, you sometimes seem the fool.

      Two examples of this concept of commanding a room appear in the Harry Potter movies(1), when Professor Snape entered the classroom, magically shut the windows with a wave of his hand and bringing systematic bangs of finality, then intoned to the class softly, “Turn to page 394.”

      Perhaps the etiquette rules for behavior in the queue also appear on page 394 of Emily Post’s guidebook (yes, it’s still out there).

      Delores Umbridge was another Hogwarts example, but she used her stride (in pink high heels, no less) to make her point. People of every age are familiar with the sounds of footsteps approaching; my mother had an elementary school teacher with a wooden leg, whose comings and goings were particularly frightful because of the distinctive step of one limb and the clunking of the other. Prosthetics were heavy in the 1930s.

      This power play from the woman in the airport is certainly debatable. She apparently set herself up as a living challenge line for those behind her to dare step ahead of her (none did) and took on the role of gatekeeper for the rest of those waiting their turn. Everybody there was “next,” and quietly and politely adopted that role for however long it took for those in front to move up. The woman shunned that role and made the line, to observers, seem awkward.

      The placing of ropes and stanchions is designed to provide an orderly open-ended system for a specific purpose. The other airport users–staff and passengers alike–used the public walkways to move about, and those in line to check in were protected by clear lines of usage and boundaries. One commenter noted that the major problem would have arisen if her standing so far back began to cause spillage past the end of the queue design and into the public areas. Also, the staff at the airport and passers-by would normally have a clear idea of how many persons were waiting in line, and her defiance skewed that perception. It was not the speed at which people were served, since the next person is always the next person until the one ahead of them is finished with their business, but a queue depends upon a spatial order to operate optimally.

      One time I was pulling up to an outdoor ATM, and a large vehicle was there finishing a transaction. I did not move up behind their bumper to wait, but since no other cars were approaching at that moment, I stopped a good car length or two behind while I retrieved my ATM card. A driver moments later was pulling up behind me and swerved to move ahead of me, pulling up to the other vehicle. Obviously they thought I was being an idiot by not moving up. Instead, I knew they were an idiot for being rude.

      It’s all about giving reasonable space. And waiting one’s turn the normal way.

      (1) Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004)

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