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 2024

    • Laborious Day Weekend

      Posted at 3:16 pm by kayewer, on August 31, 2024

      The first weekend in September is dedicated in the US to the workers, with Monday being designated as Labor Day and a federal holiday. It marks the unofficial end of sociological summer, as the beach or (if you’re from New Jersey) shore season transitions into autumn and the nation readies for the start of a new school year.

      How many of us actually relax on a holiday weekend?

      For those who adhere to the Sabbath, either Saturday or Sunday is a day off from working anyway, which pares the weekend down to its usual two days. Any projects you would normally undertake would be interrupted by one day in which you aren’t supposed to work. Monday is the official “last cookout day” of summer, when chicken, ribs, burgers and brats sing on the grill.

      The children and young adults have started or will start school on Tuesday, many for only a half day, making the first week of education a three-and-a-half-day “why bother” chain of events in which everybody finds their classrooms, review the upcoming semester and then go out to pick up all the things which one actually needs for their course load but were not mentioned anyplace in the preliminary notification processes.

      People will return home from vacation and realize that the cars they left in the garage–and delayed getting regular maintenance for–no longer function. The battery on one breathed its last after four years, and the tires on another were worn down until Lincoln on the penny would have the equivalent of two inches clearance in actual size. The auto dealerships and repair shops will have a mountain of work for themselves when they return from holiday.

      Then there is the after-vacation ritual of laundry (if nobody destroyed or outgrew what they took with them for the summer) and food shopping. Don’t forget that little Madysyn is now vegan, and your son whose bedroom was decorated in everything dinosaur now wants to focus on a game console nook.

      So the home is dusty, one car will be in the shop, the pets are out of necessities, and how are we going to pay for it all?

      Overtime. On Tuesday morning.

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    • In Hot Water

      Posted at 3:24 pm by kayewer, on August 24, 2024

      This past week, I found out that using hot water isn’t as easy as it seems. My faucet produces a decent temperature of steamy H2O, but one doesn’t work on all, as I found out. Let me explain.

      In the mornings I eat oatmeal for heart health, and I’ve found the best deal in steel cut oats which take a few minutes to heat in the microwave. For my beverage I have been drinking hot tea, which is loose leaf and prepared with the aid of a Keurig (I recently posted about this in another blog entry).

      My morning oatmeal calls for 3/4 cup of water. As the average person would do, I added plain tap water at room temperature to start, since there were no indications of what temperature water to use. The combination produced soup with minimally moistened flakes. I learned by trial and error that using the hottest tap water resulted in a wonderfully creamy, fragrant bowl of joy. Using boiling water instead causes an oatmeal volcano. When I temporarily used oatmeal in a microwavable cup, the cups actually exploded. Lesson learned.

      On the other hand, loose leaf tea is best prepared with boiling water. My Keurig heats water to 192 degrees, just short of the ideal temperatures. Guidelines call for a maximum boil of either 185 or 212, depending on whether you are preparing green or black tea, making it slightly off both ways.

      So here I am needing two kinds of water every morning like some entitled bedridden dowager who keeps a thermometer by the bedside, ready to fire underperforming butlers and maids who can’t prepare water at the proper temperature for the task at hand.

      Instead of struggling, I broke out my electric tea kettle, and the full value of its worth in the kitchen has saved my sanity. I can prepare my tea water in the kettle while putting the hot tap water in my oatmeal. My utility bill will also reward me (my July bill just arrived, and it was the highest in the whole year).

      Now I’m faced with what to do with the Keurig. Place it in storage, perhaps, until it is needed for something else, or to fill in should my kettle whistle its last. Since it seems possessed, making noises even when unplugged, maybe I should put a cross on the box to prevent its escape. And yes, I keep the boxes for my appliances. Old Depression-era parenting ingrained that into my brain.

      Meanwhile, my countertop will be more open, and my hot water will be in keeping with directions. A hot bowl and a hot cup. Who could ask for more?

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      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged boiling water for tea, oatmeal, quick oatmeal, tea
    • Cup of Plastic

      Posted at 3:23 pm by kayewer, on August 17, 2024

      I have been a tea drinker my entire life, and could never develop a taste for coffee. Becoming a coffee drinker is a rite of passage in the same category as one’s first date, first overnight camping trip without the family, or that first (legal, hopefully) sip of spirits. Kids look forward to sharing a cup of coffee with the adults, and once they are indoctrinated into the fold, it becomes as natural an act as brushing one’s teeth.

      Of course, after a while, the teeth also become needy of some extra dental care to remove those stubborn brown stains from drinking coffee. And yes, teeth do become affected by tea as well, but some inconveniences such as unexpected bathroom visits or a sour stomach are missing from the picture.

      My first tea was from Red Rose, and back in the day they used to include a bonus in every box; a small animal figurine designed by Wade Ceramics. People collected them from when they first appeared in the late 1960s. We eventually moved to Tetley. The boxes come with tea bags neatly arranged in rows kept in line by thin white cardboard dividers. In hard times, the folks at Tetley left out the dividers and, as long as people didn’t jostle the boxes around, they stayed relatively straight like the ranks and files of British soldiers. Most people seem to associate tea with Britain and India. A proper tea break is essential in the culture across the pond.

      Until a few years ago, I had tea at breakfast, lunch and dinner, but lately I’ve kept my indulgence to mornings because of the effects of caffeine on the aging body which can interfere with sleep. Recently I abandoned tea bags because research has shown that what we Americans are consuming from those neatly stacked boxes is actually dust from tea leaves, and in the process of collecting and packaging, we may be ingesting micro plastics along with our morning cup.

      Feeling downhearted at this revelation, I moved to ordering tea online; several marvelous websites show you how the tea leaves are picked and packaged in their natural state for brewing at home. I have become familiar with tea balls, infusers, bags and baskets and proper boiling and steeping times.

      Being an American, I also cheat a bit when making that perfect cup.

      I have a Keurig which is possessed by a mechanical demon; if I don’t measure my water carefully, the mechanism makes a mysterious sound as if a fuse is firing off. Unplugging it doesn’t make it go away. Since it has posed no harm to me, I simply ignore the noises, do my best to dry out the dispenser portion of the device, and continue as usual. Using an adapter, I can prepare hot water and steep real tea in my mug without sending K-pods into the environment. It’s a win-win for me, and I’m getting real tea.

      The tea comes in temperature controlled bags which I can pop open and fill up my tea ball–a spring loaded device requiring concentration to avoid injuring fingers–with fragrant leaves from a measuring spoon, which will yield a tasty cup of joy. This time around, I’m brewing a green tea from a sampler collection I received.

      Earlier this week I noticed that my acuity was slightly off. Hoping it was simply a byproduct of working off schedule one day, I tried to get plenty of sleep and refocus. Still some of my usual spot-on behaviors were not up to par. Had old age started to dull my mind?

      Turns out my new tea was decaf.

      When you’ve had caffeine for most of your life, withdrawal can creep up on you without your even knowing it. That goes for coffee drinkers, too. I recently read a joke about a barista who read back a customer’s order of a decaf with no sugar and diet creamer as a “why bother.” One drinks these beverages for the kick. In fact, entertainment sources such as television and movies depend on how the performers react to that cup of coffee. Clint Eastwood, in his Dirty Harry Callahan persona, famously returned to his favorite diner while a holdup was in progress, telling the invading robbers that he needed to complain that his server put sugar in his coffee. Indeed she did: we as the audience watched her consciously pour about a mug’s worth of sugar into the coffee with the intent of alerting him to what was going down.

      Turned out what went down wasn’t a good cup of coffee.

      My biggest memory of coffee was during a Girl Scout cookie sale in the lobby of what was then our town’s most famous bank. The mayor had his own desk in the front. The entryway had a table with a coffeemaker and all that could possibly go with it, so being a teen with a sense of adventure, I broke out a Styrofoam cup and began creating what I hoped would be a decent cup of coffee.

      I added about a two-thirds helping, then added powdered creamer and sugar. The taste was horrendous. I felt like I was drinking liquid floorboard. Adding more sugar didn’t help, and the hot coffee was melting it as fast as I could add it. I would not have been able to stop a burglary with this cup. I had to surrender and admit to my peers that creating coffee was not my thing. Oh, the horrors!

      It looks like I am in need of caffeinated green tea to get my edge back. Or else I should break out the English Breakfast that’s next in line to try. I’m sure I’ll finish off the decaf, and I won’t run out of varieties to try since tea shops are making a comeback. My Keurig cranks out a decent cup of hot water, even if it is possessed, so I’m not worried.

      And before anybody steps up to defend coffee drinkers or complain that a coffee maker should not be used for tea, remember I have a mug and a hard metal tea ball, and I know how to use them.

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    • The Clack is Back

      Posted at 3:20 pm by kayewer, on August 10, 2024

      We are all familiar with the sound of a computer keyboard. It’s become as commonplace in everyday life as ring tones, car alarms and Mister Softee. We have been raised to enjoy the soft clicks of keys being tapped and spacebars being given the sides of our thumbs in salute, and people under 50 are not as familiar with any other way to record letters and words for reading.

      For those of us over 50, we remember typewriters. The old-fashioned keys were metal arms tipped with a smooth circular resting place for our fingers with each letter proudly displayed on top. They also weighed two tons and were made mostly of metal. Later we began using electric typewriters with tapered block keys. Those were also heavier than a toddler and unwieldy to carry. The most famous was the IBM Selectric, which relied on balls for printing the characters in various fonts.

      The sounds coming from a high school typing class were a cacophony of clacking and dinging. Each line ended with the need for a carriage return, signaled by a bell in the machine. You can look up “The Typewriter Song” on social media for more. We then moved up to data entry on a computer, with no loud clicks or dings and no bell, because word processing does its own returns and can practice “widow and orphan” control to make each line of print a marvel of efficiency, perfectly placed.

      In the olden days, students could center typing line by line on the typewriter and create art: the most common task would be Christmas trees made with one letter centered on line one, three letters on line two, and so forth. The end result was always in black.

      The problem with computers is that they are connected to the entire cyber world. Unlike the task of typing which demands your full attention (you are in charge of actual paper, ink ribbons, and carbon paper sheets for copies, not to mention bottles of correction fluid for mistakes), one is often beckoned away from the task of typing by emails, social media engagement or shopping alerts. It’s hard sometimes to reach a word count goal when pop-ups from your favorite family members or local binge spending mecca demand your attention.

      In order to avoid some of these distractions, I made an investment on a hybrid method of typing which combines a bare bones computer with the missing joys of using a typewriter. The device is for drafting only. Text appears a few lines at a time on a small screen, and you can correct or delete and then send your creation to an email destination for storage. The best part is the return of the clack of keys as you type. Who’d have thought that one could bring nostalgia back to one’s hands after all these years? It’s a lightweight, portable, simple gizmo with just a USB-C port. Nothing fancy.

      So far I have set up the Wi-Fi connection and sent a test draft to my drop box, successfully and quickly. It’s encouraging to see that I can now back away from the many alluring detours of computers without dealing with paper, ink ribbons and carbon sheets. My plan is to spend more time with this device during the week for at least a seven-day trial, and see how much bigger my word count can be.

      The only thing missing is the bell for carriage return. Maybe I can get one on Amazon and use it like the guy in the Typewriter Song. Would that make me a crazy typing lady? Ding ding ding.

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      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged typewriter
    • Top of the Tops

      Posted at 3:07 pm by kayewer, on August 3, 2024

      The issue of what to wear this morning involved more than just swapping out yesterday’s outfit. I was going to an event, so I wanted to present a low-key vibe. A horror convention came to town for the second of their yearly visits, and a friend and I, both fans in our golden years, would be mingling with people of all ages, with a lean toward the younger folks. She decided on a tank that I had gifted for her birthday, depicting one of the latest gross horror movie icons. I could have worn a shirt from a prior convention, or selected a movie themed tee, but instead I opted for a generic souvenir tee.

      Off we went to the local hotel venue, credit cards at the ready. We were QR code scanned, given security wristbands and sent off to await the opening of the vendors’ areas some ninety minutes later (arriving early ensured a safer parking spot and avoided needing to shuttle from a nearby overflow designated school parking lot). While we waited, we chatted about some of our misguided plans from past conventions. My friend delayed in replying to me about a past spring edition which she would have enjoyed attending, and the tickets sold out rapidly. These conventions promise a fine list of celebrity guests who either sign autographs, pose for professional photos with (extra) paying fans, or both. We have witnessed the queues for these fan events snake out the hotel lobby, past the pool and nearly to the street. Excited attendees have brought full-size mounted posters, artistically recreated busts of characters and other items for signing. The lines for the vendors’ rooms are also lengthy, but once the time arrives, they move rapidly and offer merciful relief from times like now, in August, when waiting in oppressive heat is unbearable.

      We stopped at a favorite tee shirt vendor first to grab the newest collectibles, then on to the various pins, action figures, videos, household items and decorations, all with a frightening theme to match. If you wanted a Nightmare on Ordinary Avenue, this is where you would make it happen. I approached at least two authors selling their books. As we began to tire, my friend’s shirt themed character appeared, and she got a few selfies. Proof that one doesn’t need celebrities to have fun at a horror convention.

      As I moved from vendor table to displays and racks of merchandise, something unusual happened. People were paying attention to my tee shirt, which was an impulse item I had bought at an Amish retail mecca in Pennsylvania. “Oh, I miss being in Lancaster,” one gothic-clad woman remarked. “Oh honey, we need to visit this place,” a vendor husband said to his wife after calling up the location on his cell. A third struggled to communicate her excitement through prosthetic vampire fangs. My friend was gobsmacked.

      Once a year I have made it a point to visit the location of the shirt’s origins, a place known as Shady Maple in the quaint East Earl area of PA. There is a humungous smorgasbord, touted as the largest in America, as well as a farm market and gift shop with a variety of local items as well as collectibles. I go for the collectibles, and have blown through my funds there every time, preventing me stopping in for the food. I promised my friend that we would go together and eat whatever we want. They offer everything from comfort food to vegan menu items; certainly we could indulge in a treat or three for one day.

      In all I received four comments from total strangers about my shirt. So much for being low-key.

      My credit card is a bit heavy from the haul, but I made wise choices and will use what I bought. Our next visit may be in the spring, if we plan ahead better. But first, let’s look at that luncheon menu.

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