Thursday, November 5, 2015

PNewL PNewS Volume 23 Issue 4. October 2015

PNewL PNewS
Volume 23 No. 4               “All the pnews that phits.”                          October 2015


What is Hard Work?
     I got an email from a woman I have been working with who wrote, Thank you for your hard work. It stopped me in my tracks. Some things take me years to “get.” Hard work? What is hard work? I am not a brain surgeon or otherwise saving lives. I am not digging ditches or building houses. I am not a first responder. I am not raising or teaching small children. I do not consider anything I have done in my work life as particularly hard. Sometimes it was annoying—working on the west coast and getting phone calls returned to my home at 5am PT from the east coast’s 8am and trying to sound like I was already at my desk was exhausting and challenging but it was not really hard. Spelling medical terms or finding doctors who would talk to me was frustrating but it did not raise a sweat.
     I have been working on a project that has been a lot of fun and is one of those experiences that makes me feel good about collaboration. There have been a number of balls to keep in the air and things to remember but it has been so much fun and wound up being a big success–where’s the hard part? I am connecting with people who I might not have met otherwise. I reached out to people in the community I might have been intimidated by under other circumstances so it was not hard—it was…am I really going to say it? Empowering.
     On a completely unrelated subject but stay with me here, this summer I learned what people have said all these years about mint. Pardon my language but it is a royal pain in the ass and I regret the day I thought, “How bad can it be?” If the root structure carried electricity, it would power Weaverville and that covers some territory. I planted one plant…something like pineapple mint, which I never really figured out how to use…in a 4x8 slightly raised bed. It took over. I spent an hour or so pulling it out this afternoon. I will confess—that felt like hard work, but it was only an hour.
     I guess what one considers hard work is personal. Now that I think of it, getting the doublewide ready for tenants was and still is hard because people don’t do what they say they are going to do, they don’t return phone calls, they really don’t want to work on 40 year old doublewides, but it feels a little more like torture than hard work. The nice man who cleaned up all the overactive growth in my yard in a mere four hours didn’t seem to find it all that hard though it might have killed me, or more likely never would have happened.
     Perhaps I think hard work must be physical and painful and messy. Perhaps the hard work I have done I don’t remember because the relief of it being over is what I remember. Perhaps it’s all one’s perspective.

Things I am Learning
& Miscellaneous Observations

• One of the joys of living where I live is the renewal of a friendship from high school. Patsy and her husband Ernie are great friends and frequent dining companions when they are in town. One of their passions is television so you can imagine their horror when I disconnected my satellite dish—something they call my "TV situation." Recently, Patsy emailed that it was time for me to “consider prioritizing the role of television in a rich, fulfilled life.”
• I came across the names of my San Anselmo neighbors in my address book and wondered about them. We were neighbors for 15 years+ and we were friendly but we didn’t hang out. They were older and…different. She once said she thought my yard looked great despite the fact that it was all weeds. Another time, she offered to take some stuff I had left in my driveway too long to the dump. Her husband didn’t talk much and didn’t have many teeth and he went somewhere in a rumbly truck at dawn most mornings…but he was friendly. Seeing their names, I googled them. They didn’t strike me as folks who would have much of an internet presence. I don’t know why but I was struck hard to find Berne’s obituary dated 6/22/08 (Don seems to be still alive and living in the same house). I was probably in California then, maybe even driving by to check on the old neighborhood. It was also the June I moved to North Carolina. It was a poignant search.


 • The latest foster dog is still here and I can’t seem to figure out how to send him on his way. I signed up for two weeks but then the rains hit South Carolina and the shelter was inundated with SC shelter animals and I just couldn’t imagine forcing them to take one more. Then Frankie the nervous (aren’t they all?) Chihuahua started biting folks in the neighborhood. He was surrendered by his previous family for biting one of the children. At my house, he is precious. I enjoy his company—he’s cuddle-y and he’s darling—he plays tug o’ war all day with Roger. Outside, he is wretched. He barks the whole time. If he gets off leash, he literally disappears. He is so fast he can be three properties away before I finish tying my shoes.  He’s so little and so cute everyone thinks he’s harmless which is when the biting begins. [Since the above was written, I finally said Enough. I had come to love Frankie but I knew the time had come for him to move on. I told the Shelter when I was bringing him in and enjoyed our final days together. I took him in and waited for them to rearrange crates. I set him in one with tears streaming down my face and Frankie shaking like a leaf and looking a little like he was thinking “Traitor!” By the time I got home, there was a message in the Daily Begging letter saying he’d been snapped up by another foster home. Yay!]
• As I am starting to go through paperwork in my effort to eliminate the overwhelm, I have come across files that have not been touched in years. It’s fascinating. From a file marked “Fun Stuff: PNewS”: Reduce discomfort from poison ivy by rubbing the rash with the inside of a banana peel (USA Today, 2009) I recycled the rest as it was all crazily out of date.
• Lately I have been watching people near to me go through life changing experiences and it gives me pause. I keep thinking, these are things that will affect the rest of their lives. David emailed while having chemo. Elspeth, Andy and Henry came home with a 4-day-old baby. Others are experiencing the later days of their parents or the old age wake up calls themselves. It’s one of those times that life feels Big and Real. Meanwhile, I am rolling up socks and shredding old bank statements which is fine with me.
• At the last meeting of the itty bitty knitting group, one member said she thought she might have enough yarn to last her the rest of her life…or something like that. I panicked. Does that mean we have to stop buying yarn? Noooooooooooooo!
• For the last few issues of this PNewSletter, I have been battling with horizontal lines that didn’t seem to want to go away. I was so frustrated. Nothing I did did anything to them—I could not delete, I could not erase. Finally, I googled it and there it was! The internet is amazing. (In case you were wondering, the line was no longer a line--it had morphed into a border. You go to the border section, choose None and kaboom: Gone!)
• It occurred to me as I walked with Roger this morning that I have lived in places for over 30 years where every single morning is gorgeous and often different. I am feeling that thanks-giving season coming on.

The WNC Version of Life-changing Decluttering

     In case some of you missed it, Life-Changing Magic of Tidying up: the Japanese Art of Decluttering by Marie Kondo is a popular new book. I was skeptical, but Jean said she learned some things but hadn’t put any of them to use. Ha. (Jill the librarian confirmed that she had not heard of anyone who had actually followed through on suggestions made in the book.) Still, I was inspired.
     So I folded all my t-shirts and stood them up in the drawer and then I was really inspired. It sounds goofy but it works—I can now see all my t-shirts—and I have a LOT (fewer than I had before but still a lot)—and now I don’t wear the same ones over and over. Socks? OMG—I have great socks and they have been separated and hiding all these years. There is even a yellow section of socks from my sock dyeing period. Who knew?      
     Then I started going through my closet, which I dreaded. When I looked at the pile I was giving away, I was really surprised. The basic concept from the book is to only keep what you love, which I amended to only keep what fits and looks okay. I have some clothes I love but look like hell on me so they are going to some other home where the person—and my clothes—may shine.
     My clothes closet is still not finished. I have left the shoes and blue jeans until later. I wandered in there this morning and found that I actually own silver shoes, which will come in handy for an event next week, and inside the shoes? A necklace I have been looking for…well, for longer than I care to admit.
     And this is just the beginning—yesterday I took a stack of towels (I swear they have been multiply-ing in my linen closet!) and clothes from Ray’s to the homeless shelter, plus boxes and boxes to the recycling center. Today, I have boxes and boxes of books to take to the library—some of them belong to the library but that’s another story…Last night, instead of doing something fun, found me going through files and recycling or sending the contents to the shredder. (My shredder says it takes five pages at a time. Au contraire…I’m shredding two pages at a time. Sigh. But that is not quenching the fire to de-clutter!)
     I have heard people speak (and it was probably also in this book) of how eliminating a lot of miscellaneous stuff feels like relieving a burden. I was not then but am now a believer. I will always have a lot of stuff. It is the lot in life for a crafty type who is also the offspring of two packrats, but I am enjoying the feeling of cleaning out a lot of too much. I own a queen size bed and a full guest bed—how many sets of single sheets do I need? And where did they come from? And why have I saved them?
     I think the key to my success is this: when dealing with any subset---blouses, for instance--bring them ALL out of the closet and lay them on the bed (get rid of the foster Chihuahua first), and then put them back in one at a time. It has made all the difference for me.
     I so hope I can keep this up and see it through. But now the sun is out and that distracts me. Rain returns tomorrow night and that’s not all bad.

Happy Autumn Y’all!


“I want people to remember me for laughter…
and that I was a good guy.” Art Buchwald