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: April 2026

    • Hybridized

      Posted at 3:05 pm by kayewer, on April 25, 2026

      Just when I was starting to truly feel comfortable working from home and had figured that, after nearly six years of it, I would not be going back to the office, I was called back to the office. We are working under a hybrid schedule a few days a week, and then we also work from home.

      This meant much more than just readjusting to the workplace environment. There was now the issue of resuming expenses for transportation in terms of bridge tolls, gas and parking. Meal planning is another animal altogether, and a topic for another time.

      I’m using a different bridge to get to work now, and I fill my tank more frequently. The mileage didn’t change much (about 11 miles), but now I know my car won’t last me as far into retirement. The major highways are brutal proving grounds for motorists, where speed limits are posted but are actually based on a mass-approved code of conduct which is considerably higher. In this world, everybody stays in their space. One doesn’t tailgate too close or lag too far behind. Somebody zooming past and crossing three lanes at 90 is speeding, and nobody likes that.

      At least the parking is subsidized, and of my three location choices I may have made the wisest one. First, it’s a covered garage and not an open parking lot (I avoid needing to scrape ice or remove snow, which was a plus during the extreme weather). Second, it’s a short but much-needed walk. Third, it’s well-tended and feels safe.

      Over the years, my memories of work and my life (which, let’s face it, are interchangeable) have been based upon where my workspace was located. Let me explain.

      In the early years, I worked in the windowless basement, where our small contact center was among three dark central call-taking departments. We shared space with IT and the mailroom, which still had a huge shredder the size of an industrial washing machine. My next big leap was when call processing was moved to an upper floor, and we received cubicles with orange burlap walls. The nearest window for me was yards away.

      We then moved to a secondary building, and I could push my chair away from my desk, look around the cubicle wall (which was now a neutral grey) and see a window. After that, I transferred to a different building, and the cubicle walls partially hid the windows, but I was against those walls and saw the outside world readily.

      At last, I was sent to an office in which I had a large cubicle with several windows directly behind me. I saw sunlight and approaching rain with equal joy. Then that building was shut down in 2020, and we began remote work from home.

      Now I have a large cubicle again, but the windows are steps away for those of us in the inner circle. The managers have the window offices, which is fair.

      However, the building isn’t filled with the activity of six years ago. In fact, if there are 30 people on my floor, I think we have a crowd. The last day in the building each week can almost always be mistaken for a Friday, yet there is still work from home to do. It’s an effort to reach what will be the new normal, but it’s good to have other human beings nearby again. When working at home feels like being a caretaker in a graveyard, with the other empty homes on the block silent as tombstones, it helps to know there is a journey which will end with something resembling what we used to know.

      I don’t speed to get there, but I anticipate it every time.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged fiction, life, mental-health, travel, writing
    • Long or Short (Sleeves)

      Posted at 9:19 pm by kayewer, on April 18, 2026

      Meteorological spring began in March, but we all know that we are in the middle of fake spring. This is the period of weather in which winter keeps popping back up from the dead like a horror movie serial killer. The cherry trees are blossoming, yet in a few days we will have a freeze warning posted for overnight temperatures in the 30s.

      You can’t keep a good killer movie franchise icon down.

      Or a good winter.

      We had already served a heavy prison sentence handed down from the weather, with impossible amounts of snow and ice lingering for over two months. The coming of spring was like the arrival of the probation officer: we were sprung from the icy walls, but are still not totally free.

      Prince famously sang that sometimes it snows in April, and I remember a few days in May which could have been mistaken for November. We aren’t out of the woods until Mother Nature says so.

      I think she’s knitting a blanket and needs to complete “just one more row.” That’s what she said six rows ago. If you’re a crafter, you know what I mean.

      I have been trying to put my winter clothes into storage, but I may not need short sleeves until July at the rate this fluctuation in temperatures is going.

      A couple of weeks ago, the local news reported that a huge pile of snow at a local train station had officially been declared fully melted at last. The station parking lot had sacrificed several parking spaces for the pile of removed frozen precipitation, and a lighthearted contest was declared to see who could guess the target date at which the last of the blizzard’s evidence was gone. If we can do it in southern New Jersey, what must Minnesotans do all winter? Perhaps they still wear long sleeves in July.

      My landscaper stopped by to check on the plants, and I know they were not handling the harsh winter well. She recommended waiting until May to work on them, allowing them to settle down into true spring weather conditions before trimming and mulching. I agreed, though my neighbors will probably think I am not keeping up with my home’s external appearance while I wait. My rhododendrons and azaleas are looking a bit like they took a hit this winter. My ferns took the abuse like champs, and new tendrils are appearing already. But I know the real spring weather is coming, fleeting though it may be, and my front yard will look spectacular while theirs, which they all scrambled to mulch earlier this month, will begin to need more maintenance sooner.

      So the cardigans are still in use, I can’t put my jacket away, and I may switch from cooling the house to heating it again once or twice before it’s central air for the rest of the season.

      And sometimes it’s hot in November.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged nature, seasons, snow, weather, winter
    • All You Can Enjoy

      Posted at 9:28 pm by kayewer, on April 11, 2026

      Today was a girls’ day out, and I spent an enjoyable day with two long-time friends at a huge smorgasbord and gift shop. Some of it I spent eating, a lot of it sharing conversation, and a little shrinking my paycheck funds. This is the kind of outing that is becoming rare, but we find time to spend with each other whenever possible, and this was one of the nicest Saturdays this year.

      The three of us arrived in time to have an early pre-dinner packed with everything an empty stomach could wish for. Utensils are one set per person, but plates are dutifully taken away as we went to get fresh ones and fill up with as much food as we could hold. None of us had eaten so much before, being seniors and watching our waistlines as they grow in spite of dieting.

      I started reasonably enough with seafood: salmon served at a cooking station, followed by helpings from hot trays brimming with fried shrimp, cod, crabmeat stuffed fish and plenty of sides. The next plate was piled with vegetables, including broccoli, peas, Brussels sprouts, carrots, mushrooms and mixed beans. The one thing I avoided was salad, since I ate salads all week. Plate three included chicken tenders, baked potato, crab cakes and more sides. Finally, the meal ended with plentiful desserts of key lime and apple pie, chocolate cake and specialty puddings.

      Then we shopped. The gift shop is the size of a department store emporium and populated with collectibles and local crafts. We each have a favorite artist, and we grabbed a cart to take a tour around the building and choose our bounty to take home. I looked at wind chimes and found the pricing a bit steep, so I made a few choices of my favorite collectibles, and my companions narrowed their selections down to some much-desired items. By the time we left, we had hands filled with bags (and one large box for an oversized collectible that had no bag to fit in).

      The best part of the outing was the camaraderie and conversation, which I’ve lacked for most of the past three months. Bad weather and my return to the office have upended my life this winter, but we were able to make time at last to spend together, and the April weather didn’t make it difficult. The drive was calm, the crowds reasonable, and the overall experience was pleasant.

      It’s nice for once to not have a negative thing to say, and we should find ways to bring such joy into our lives as we move from a brutal winter into a (so far) promising spring. Fill your plates with happiness, let your tummies gurgle with delight and your soul sing from the enlightenment of interactions with others.

      And it’s okay to burp.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged family, food, life, travel, writing
    • Easter Weekend

      Posted at 5:29 pm by kayewer, on April 4, 2026

      I probably just offended some people with the title of my post this week. After all, only a select portion of the world’s population is Christian, and even some orthodox religions celebrate Easter on a different day on the calendar. It’s not their Easter. To be fair, Easter is also ecumenical with the required bunny and other spring newborn animals, as well as tulips and hyacinths and candy which have nothing to do with holy miracles or affirmations of divinity.

      A comic mentioned in his stand-up that we Americans tend to be non-confrontational about religion, so when the school-age folks get a week off this time of year, we call it “spring break,” just as the Christmas to New Year’s vacation is “winter break.” Whether you sit around playing video games all week, go to a recreational hotspot or catch up on movies in a theater (which I hear is big on Christmas and known jokingly as “Jewish People Go to the Movies Day”), it’s all good. As long as you don’t mention the “C” word or the “E” word, depending on the season.

      It’s strange how Ramadan just ended, and that is, from what I hear, a much stricter period of faith-based deprivation, yet Lent is given second place among social awareness sources. The fasting rules are different, but the people practicing them seem to have equal faith that what they are doing is good, obedient, and uplifting to one’s soul. Why can’t we exchange “happy holiday” greetings with the names they were given?

      I worked with a Muslim and was able to discover that wishing them a good Ramadan is okay coming from me (what being an infidel or something like that). I don’t take offense if somebody I know doesn’t celebrate Easter wishes me a happy Easter. It’s social connection. It’s good manners. It brings us together with something fleeting yet common to most humans: a special day. It’s special to at least one person in the world if they were merely born on that day. What’s the big deal?

      Since we just learned (or we ignored) the fact that Reese’s candy has been called out by the founder’s family for changing the original formula to a more synthetic combo of fake sub-par chocolate and peanut butter, maybe we’re starting to turn the tide toward what used to be called REALITY. Hershey has promised to repair the damage within the year, so maybe by next Easter, our peanut butter cup spring treats will be better.

      Meanwhile, since I’m being snarky, I would like to misquote a certain South Park character:

      Hey there, all you non-Christians, happy ***bleeping*** Easter.
      Have some potato salad and some fake chocolate bunny ears.
      If you didn’t know it yet, Jesus rose today.
      So, watch some four-hour epic films and ***bleeping*** celebrate!

      Have a nice Sunday, whatever you do.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged christianity, easter, ecumenical-holiday, faith, jesus, resurrection
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