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?
  • Category: Commentary

    • The Knowledge Pool

      Posted at 2:32 am by kayewer, on March 16, 2014

      When contacting a tech support center, you are stuck with the luck of the draw. Sometimes you can be connected to somebody who truly knows something. On the other hand, you can get a person who can’t help you because they don’t know the right thing to do.

      This is what happened to me when I had a problem trying to get mobile broadband. For some time I had two devices; a USB version and a MiFi, or free-standing, version. Some devices don’t take USB. The MiFi provider had changed their policies about automatically billing for monthly access, and for three months in a row I was caught short, with no access, because my efforts to pay for my MiFi and set up billing did not work.

      When all else fails, Americans don’t wait around. They move on. I figures, why not just get a better broadband and just use one. Heck, it will save me money and I can use all my devices on one unit. So I bought a MiFi from my USB provider and tried to set it up, but it wasn’t helping me get started. I called tech support and got a nice-sounding woman who tried to help by suggesting rebooting the system, moving the unit closer to a window and using a paper clip tip to hit the reset button. She suggested that Windows 8 might not be right for the unit. This after I had already been assured that it would work and the box was mangled beyond return status.

      Nothing worked to get the MiFi working, and I was getting upset enough to do what many a computer user has threatened to do: take the entire laptop and all the accessories and unceremoniously drop them from the fifth floor roof.

      Instead, I took her advice and later retrieved an old laptop with Windows Vista (old technology), called tech support back and got a fellow who went over what had been done so far, then suggested I press F5 on my Windows 8 machine. Suddenly a choir singing the “Hallelujah Chorus” sounded throughout the land when the Internet sprang to life. The call took ten minutes, while my previous calls took up nearly an hour. It was all because he knew one thing to do that the others could not. Also that I didn’t know to do in a pinch. He explained that the system was locked up, so F5 reset it.

      I’ll have to remember that when life itself has me all locked up.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged mifi, tech support
    • Put Some Clothes On

      Posted at 2:58 am by kayewer, on March 2, 2014

      I just came from Wal-Mart, and on my way in I spotted a woman in a heavy jacket suitable for the cold weather, but with flannel pajama bottoms and furry metallic tinged slippers from the waist down. I would not be caught at the end of the world wearing my bedroom attire with outerwear thrown on top of it as an afterthought, so I wondered what kind of people think it is okay to not at least put some effort into personal pride before stepping out the door, whether it’s Wal-Mart or the Waldorf Astoria.

      The appearance of Wal-Mart, with its basic layout and discount merchandise, does not immediately imply that one must appear as if the store has a shopper’s dress code. When one dresses slovenly, they tend also to behave slovenly. I have seen racks and shelves with their contents moved about and not put back, with dented boxes and holes in packages. The parents often scream louder than the children. Some days in Wal-Mart it seems like a parade of what famed author Edward Bulwer-Lytton called “the great unwashed.” To be dressed above or below the mass of humanity in the store is uncomfortable.

      In the good old days, no woman with any self-worth would be seen outdoors without gloves on. White gloves. Ask your great-grandmother. Women wore hats, and not just to church. In fact I would like to see an entire church congregation march into Wal-Mart to shop some Sunday after services. It would be like a breath of fresh air. At least they might wear dresses and pant suits, and the men would look a bit dapper.

      Speaking of men, what happened to shirts, jackets and ties on occasions other than weddings and funerals? The stores are patronized by, and cater to, the tee and polo shirt crowd. We have dressed down to a style which used to be only designated for farm hands or farriers.

      The folks–even the lady with the fuzzy slippers–seemed clean enough, so they must be raiding the bottoms of their dresser drawers to find and wear some of the abominations I’ve seen passed off as public clothing.

      For goodness sake, at least wear decent shoes. Don’t make people wonder if you have a pair of underwear between your pudendum and the flannel pajamas, or socks on your feet under the slippers. Make an effort to look good, and even Wal-Mart might thank you for being a better looking patron.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 1 Comment | Tagged casual dress
    • Volatile Valentines

      Posted at 12:36 am by kayewer, on February 10, 2014

      For those of us for whom Valentine’s Day is second only to Christmas in terms of depression, this is a bad time of year. Beginning December 26, merchants start to tear down the holly and break out the hearts. That breaks a lot of people’s hearts when they don’t have somebody with whom to share the holiday. Plus it gives you more than 50 days to suffer the heartache before the actual holiday comes and goes.

      And we all just got through one already.

      When you’ve been single for two months or two decades, all the hype can be amusing if it didn’t all serve to remind one of how little one might be loved in real life. There are stuffed animals of all types, in bizarre colors like purple panthers, and often they are holding roses or hearts or carrying some saying like “You’re HOT!”  The boxes of chocolates and other evil diet death dealers come in boxes saying things like “You’re Cool!” The idea is that a sentiment goes with the gift at any temperature.

      The food is eaten and, in the words of a famous chef (it might have been Bobby Flay), becomes poo the next day. The stuffed animal takes up space on the bed or gets relegated to a shelf and becomes another thing to dust. The manufacturer makes jillions of dollars because the stuff is overpriced at rates second only to Christmas.

      Some enterprising men go to the jewelry store for Valentine’s Day. They may be prepared to propose, and the engagement ring is a must in these cases. While I was at the jeweler getting a few watch batteries replaced, I was seated next to the bridal jewelry case while I waited. Inside the case were diamond rings with more to their pedigree than any dog in the upcoming Westminster Dog Show (which, for some reason, is usually held near Valentine’s Day). I, not one to wear rings for fear that some future date might mistake which finger it’s on, moved myself to the charm bracelets counter.

      Some people put a lot of pressure on this holiday. Their significant other must spend such-and-such an amount and buy just the right thing to prove their love. When I worked in the city, I saw men on public transportation struggling with the extra burden of flowers or the overstuffed purple panther.

      It does feel strange to watch the process from a totally observational point of view. It’s how I laugh at it all.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged valentine's day
    • “Born to Shun” New Jersey?

      Posted at 1:29 am by kayewer, on February 2, 2014

      I’ve written a little ditty about the controversy going on in New Jersey, specifically in terms of what our governor, Chris Christie, actually knew about the recent bridge scandal in which two of his employees shut down lanes of traffic to send a message to a mayor. If the governor know they were striking a blow for the team, he may be in some trouble. We knew he found out that a “traffic study” was done (which was actually a bogus closure of enough traffic lanes to a major bridge to back up traffic for miles and cause some major upheaval. So while we’re waiting for the evidence to be pondered, here is a song, sung to the tune of Monty Python’s “I’m a Lumberjack” for your enjoyment.

      (Chorus 1)
      Oh I’m a Jersey Girl and I’m okay.
      I sleep, I eat, and I work and play.

      I have a home, I have a job.
      I keep my front yard green.
      We’re also called the Garden State
      And I think that’s quite keen.

      (Repeat Chorus 1)

      We have Chris Christie for mayor.
      I think he’s pretty good.
      But now there have been rumors
      Throughout the neighborhood.

      (Chorus 2)
      Oh, he’s a Jersey Guy and he’s okay.
      He sleeps, he eats, and he works and plays.

      He writes laws from behind his desk
      and helpers do his bidding.
      But sometimes they get attitudes
      When they’re mad, they’re not kidding.

      (Repeat Chorus 2)

      Some underlings did dirty work
      and snarled up Jersey traffic.
      When governor Christie found out,
      his displeasure was quite graphic.

      (Repeat Chorus 2)

      Was he aware the traffic jam
      Was part of a great plot?
      Or did they tell him half-lies,
      and not reveal the lot?

      (Repeat Chorus 1)

      Now since I live in Jersey
      I protect the land I live in.
      We’ll find out what did happen
      And face the facts as given.

      So until we know the whole deal
      Don’t pick on Jersey State.
      We’re all in this together
      That packs a lot of weight.

      Oh we’re Americans and we’re okay.
      We live, we learn, then we go our way.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 1 Comment
    • While the Cat is Away

      Posted at 7:00 pm by kayewer, on January 11, 2014

      When your back is turned, people do things you don’t expect. New Jersey had that problem this past week when Governor Chris Christie found out that two of his staff members plotted behind his back to pull an unforgivable prank on the mayor of Fort Lee. They conspired to close most of the major traffic lanes and restrict all vehicles to one lane at a major bridge approach. Police and ambulances were stranded with uncountable numbers of travelers, for days. All because the mayor did not endorse Governor Christie’s bid for his second term in office.

      There is now a criminal investigation going on, with possible federal charges pending. The governor held a news conference and told it to the press straight: he delegated jobs to his fellow employees, as any boss would, and the people entrusted to act like adults turned into elementary schoolyard bullies with adult privileges, with disastrous results.

      People are questioning whether the governor is to blame. I think not. Evidence (so far) says not. When you try to enforce behaviors in others, you cannot possibly prepare for everything that might come up. When you raise a child to understand that “this” is right and “that” is wrong, how can you determine in advance that they will question whether “the other thing” is right or wrong, or whether they will try it out to find out for themselves? The persons involved in this debacle were adults, of course, and should have known better. One does not snarl up traffic at the risk to public safety to prove a point. Why didn’t they do something more adult and constructive, like letting it go?

      Who did they think they were? How much did they value the boss they serve, that they would betray him in such a juvenile way? People in positions of power have it rough when hiring help. The people who organized this horrific traffic jam obviously do not possess enough common sense, and might work better in a different profession.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments
    • I Resolve

      Posted at 1:53 am by kayewer, on December 28, 2013

      2014 will be the year. Lots of people say that every new year, but one time it has to be THE ONE, and 2014 for me will be that ONE.

      I decided to make it easier to keep some of those resolutions that always go wrong within hours or days of January 1st, so I ate some of the most godawful cafeteria food, wore some of the clothes that make me look fat, made a note of how many steps it took to get me winded and comparison shopped for fitness equipment at Five Below (they have resistance bands for five bucks).

      Now I am ready to quit eating, exercise and lose some weight.

      My food portion sizes will fit on a teacup saucer. The contents of that saucer will be primarily veggies, with a smattering of starch and protein to make it look appetizing. My ketchup is already free of high fructose corn syrup, and I rarely touch the salt shaker, so the next step should be easy, right?

      To fill in the time I will gain by eating less, I have a project a day lined up for me to do: writing (always), crochet and felting. As for the latter, I’ve found a wonderful UTube tutorial which will teach me to make wonderful poseable animals from fluffy wool, some wire armature and a lethal-looking barbed needle which one uses to inflict multiple injuries to the fibers to tangle them into solid matter. As I poke away at the wool, I can recall people who have caused me to lose my temper, or I can think about all the terrible stories on CNN, which blares constantly in the cafeteria at work while I’m trying to enjoy my food (which will now come in a saucer sized portion).

      I have a walking program lined up. I will get out and walk a bit every day. This will  make up for the time I sit glued to my chair waiting for the once yearly phone call from the company CEO, when I can explain that my boss is in a meeting at another location and can he return the call. If I do this for my two ten-minute breaks a day, that will be 100 minutes of exercise a week. Not bad for the girl who never could run and, in the old days when school children could run around the school building without fear of interference from the outside world, she usually finished steps ahead of the chronically obese kids in the class. Funny thing is I’m not really out of shape: I just never could run, so walking is the thing for me.

      Last year at this time, I had lost fifteen pounds to stress. Once the stress ended, I gained it back. The key was to eat lots of soup. Unfortunately soup does not fit on a saucer well.

      Maybe I should just resolve to write more. I could exercise more by going back and forth to the mailbox looking for responses to query letters and live off ramen noodles to lose weight. I could be in a size six by Valentine’s Day!

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments | Tagged new year's resolutions
    • Say Goodbye to 2013 By Numbers

      Posted at 3:40 am by kayewer, on December 22, 2013

      I think the major problem with 2013 is that there is a 13 in it. If there is a bad number like 13 in a year, other bad numbers come up, like the clock radio I bought a few years ago (covered in an earlier blog here, too), that still runs seven minutes fast. Or the fact that anytime I play “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” on Facebook, I tank on the $250,000 question. During one regular game, I second-guessed myself and gave the same answer as everybody else: if I had followed my gut, I could have been the only person to get the $10,000 question. That error put my out of the game when I’m used to being in the top three.

      At my job, my parent company spun some of us off into another corporate arm for 20 months, which didn’t work, so now they’ve brought us back in. That doubled our paperwork, but at least it’s not likely to happen again.

      I sat in traffic for two hours or more twice this year, busted one tire on my car (replaced all four), spent eight days with a splinter in my thumb (it only seemed bruised until the offending sliver poked out by itself), and did not have my hair cut once. I saw two 3D movies and five regular movies which I liked, but also saw dozens of movie trailers which did not influence me to see the films at all.

      In 2013 three major landmarks came down (an adult performance venue called the Fantasy Showbar and then Jersey Girls before closing, a Chevy dealer in Moorestown– the former Classic Chevrolet, with its trademark neon sign–and a landmark Sears Store). The porn palace was replaced by a Taco Bell, the dealership will have a Wawa store soon, and the former Sears is just a gaping hole in a city full of them (Camden, NJ).

      With only ten days to go in the year at the time of this posting, I’m glad we can put an end to this one. Maybe 2014, being an even year, will be better. At least my clock radio will be into it seven minutes before everybody else.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments
    • Hollywood Corporate Compliance

      Posted at 1:16 am by kayewer, on December 15, 2013

      When I’m at work, the company requires all employees to complete courses to enlighten us about business issues, a program collectively called corporate compliance. We are reminded how important it is to  maintain a secure office environment, how not to cause emotional disturbances in a diverse workplace and how our elected officials have designed programs with rules to live by when we’re on the clock. We usually take three courses a year; new employees have a few extra courses to help assimilate them into the corporate environment; it doesn’t matter if it is their first or fifth job, it’s a company rule to make sure everybody is exposed to the courses and knows what is expected in the world of cubicles and corner offices.

      I was at the movies last night at the premiere of The Hobbit: the Desolation of Smaug, which I saw in IMAX 3D. I don’t go to a lot of IMAX features, because not all the movies I see get to play there. Those that do are big.  The theatre screen is the width and height of my family home, and the sound quality has the effect of a giant cotton swab. I turned to my theatre companion during the commercials, which were softer due to their not having been filmed for IMAX sound quality, and told her I hoped the sound would get better in time for the feature, and in the next second the first IMAX footage hit the screen, and the speakers, with a sonic boom that punched the sweat from my pores (and cleaned my ears). The folks at IMAX must have planned it that way.

      One can almost forget where they are (a big, boxy and expensively maintained piece of real estate) and believe they are in, say, a huge grand hall filled with pilfered gold and guarded by a fearsome dragon, when watching a big Hollywood production on an IMAX screen. It was totally enjoyable, though I felt afterward as if I had been in a war, feeling emotionally drained from dodging dragons, giant bees and other impressive things coming out from the screen into my face.

      The experience of a movie in 3D on such a grand scale is immersive and assimilating, much like corporate compliance places all employees on the same page when it comes to the world inside an office. As I watched the previews for upcoming features, I noticed a trend that seems to scream corporate compliance requirement. If Hollywood had a corporate compliance course listing, they might require some interesting things of their employees. Herein is my list of compliance courses (which Hollywood seems to follow well):

      Equal Employment in Battle Epics: The upcoming movie 300: Rise of an Empire appears to be compliant with this course, in which women dress minimally but have the testicular fortitude of 300 men. Warrior women are claiming their own spot in the movie versions of history, and any film that has battles in them will need to include at least one hard-as-nails female.

      Taking Risks: Going again to the preview for 300, it seems a lot of movie big men are required to leap from a cliff or building into mid-air without thinking about where they might land. The business world likes risk-taking to a degree, but corporate risks don’t normally include defying death.

      Landing on Your Feet: Some movie superheroes seem to have picked up a trait by which they fall from the sky (see the above course) and land in a kneeling position, causing a seismic wave with the impact (as happens in the Ironman  or Thor movies) Doing so with a weapon like a hammer in your hand is a bonus.

      Diversity Training: Quite a few movies focus on young people who have special gifts, what used to be referred to as quirks. They may get bullied, and teachers and bosses may not like folks who don’t fit into the mold, but they make for good cinema, and a diverse workplace should have people from all walks of life, before or after world destruction and takeover. Thus we have compliant films like Vampire Academy and Divergent.

      Environmental Impacts: Any movie trailer that opens with a vista of fields or destroyed cities counts in this course. Interstellar counts as one; the new Godzilla counts as another. It’s always important to let people know what their world looks like now, and what it might look like if we’re not careful.

      So there I was in the IMAX theatre having my ears cleaned by sound waves, trying to figure out why images distort when the 3D glasses tilt on my nose, and cursing myself that I couldn’t leave my job at the door. Don’t get me wrong; the movie was spectacular, and I was there at a unique moment to interpret everything before it like this. You don’t get that from a newspaper columnist; only from an office worker who is corporate compliant.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary, Theatre/Movies/Entertainment | 0 Comments | Tagged Hobbit, IMAX 3D, movie trailers
    • The Holy Day Question Part One

      Posted at 3:24 am by kayewer, on December 8, 2013

      Let’s take a look at the state of the Christmas holiday in 2013. Warning: this blog may be provocative and negatively influential, so I’ll be as brief as one can on such a subject.

      There is a distinct likelihood that the holiday, as we know it, has been manipulated by the machinations of men, and it is possible that we are not celebrating the birth of Christ on the proper day. There, I’ve said it. In doing so, some folks may feel that, in spite of my life’s efforts, I may well have just purchased an irrevocable one-way ticket aboard the satanic express train to that other place, where a private fate teeming with brimstone and suffering await my damaged soul. It’s hard to talk about things like this and not wonder about what one is saying when saying it. As a human being, I know that we are all making errors all the time, but when it comes to doing the ultimate duty to honor the birth of our Lord in whom we and millions of others believe, do we want to err this way? If nobody can claim December 25 as the actual birthday, let’s examine why we’re moving such important dates around for convenience’s sake (and I won’t even mention Easter).

      All the writings and rumors point to a scheme perpetrated in the past by which our ancestors replaced a pagan holiday with a holy one, probably with the intent to realign people who, in the opinions of others, were in error by worshipping nature or practicing holistics or something of the sort. Sure, folks can argue this point and other aspects of our faith to exhaustion, and I certainly don’t want my spouting off about Christmas herein to become an all-out religious argument (which it often does when somebody brings this matter up in the first place, and I’m certainly not the first). So let’s take a breath and get down to the real question.

      My question is this: Who, if anybody, knows on what day Jesus was actually born, and why has it not been shared, if somebody does know what day it is?

      Maybe it has something to do with the history of the day itself. Christmas was supposedly banned in the United States for a while, then it came back, then it gained the trees and holly and songs and carols. In modern consumer times it has ballooned into a free-for-all in the malls, theft, debt and mayhem. Every time I read about people being trampled over a piece of merchandise, or a town hall arguing over whether a snowman can be displayed on the lawn if a crèche cannot, I shake my head.

      How can one day on a calendar be such a disaster? If we can put an end to all the misinformation and correct our erroneous ways, why not get started on it now, before we have another season of mistakes? How do yule logs, faith and annual cheese log catalogs all fit together when the real idea of the day is to celebrate a life-changing birth?

      (Part Two is coming, if the results of Part One permit.)

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments
    • With Charity for All

      Posted at 3:29 am by kayewer, on December 1, 2013

      This is the time of year when requests for donations increase tenfold. If you have not received a dozen calendars, packs of wrapping paper or greeting cards, a glitzy set of address labels or a hard plastic card displaying next year’s calendar in print that will blind you without a magnifier, you are lucky as you are apparently off the grid when it comes to charities.

      Organizations seem to feel that, in sending you cost-minimal items you may use, you will feel like contributing to their cause out of a sense of guilt, obligation or because you forgot when you last wrote them a check. The common gist of most conversations between people who are inundated with charity guilt swag is that, if the organizations didn’t send all the stuff, they could put the costs into the very cause for which they are trying to get your money.

      Some folks are quite particular about what appears on their address labels, and not everybody likes to see their name incorrectly listed on a twenty page notepad which might be spotted at the supermarket with the grocery list on it.

      One can also only use one or two calendars at a time (except a friend of mine, who buys about five versions of polar bear and panda calendars every year). The ones you don’t use tend to wind up in the “take one, give one” pile at the office. Sometimes this works for people who don’t go out and buy a themed calendar for their cubicle.

      I tend to give to charities every month except December. That is the one month when people tend to remember to be charitable, so I declare December a month of rest. My charity list will hear from me again next year, when everybody else forgets that people starve January through November, too.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Commentary | 0 Comments
    ← Older posts
    Newer posts →
    • Past Posts

      December 2025
      S M T W T F S
       123456
      78910111213
      14151617181920
      21222324252627
      28293031  
      « Nov    
    • 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.

Susan's Scribblings the Blog
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
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d