Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Another YouTube Fix

The light on our ceiling fan had died and I really need that light. However, Art needed to remove the glass covering and see what kind of halogen bulb we had to buy as a replacement.

Unfortunately, that glass covering would not come off. It was slippery, wouldn't budge and we were afraid to break it.


So what did Art do? Yup. Looked it up on YouTube and discovered it's a pretty common problem.

The fellow said to use T-Rex tape which I happened to buy on sale in Illinois last year. 

We stuck it on the glass and twisted. 

To be honest, I didn't think it would work. Afterall, we'd already been trying to twist that glass casing off together with all our strength.


Dang! It worked like a charm. We got the glass cover off, took out the halogen bulb, bought another one and replaced it.

Yay! I have light in my kitchen again. How does one come up with these nifty solutions anyway? 

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

A Birthday Get-Away

 Art and I have birthdays that are exactly two weeks apart. We've been getting a free birthday drink at Starbucks every year for quite a few years now. We had also built up a bank of star rewards that would equal to another couple of free drinks which were going to expire soon.

Since moving to Hawaii 14 years ago, Art and I have celebrated every birthday and holiday with mom (unless we were traveling) making sure whatever dishes we had would be something we knew she would love.

For Art's birthday we decided to go out and get his free birthday drink and use up some star rewards to get another free drink for me.

It was a guilty pleasure to go out on our own and spend some private time together.


We went to a parking lot and sat under some flowering shower trees.

The breeze was cool. We sipped on our mocha frappuccino and matcha frappuccino with almond milk and gazed at the flowers around us.

It was peaceful and we felt like two delinquent kids.

We couldn't stop smiling and laughing.

That night, we had a special take-out sushi dinner with mom that she loved.

We enjoyed the brief hour so much that two weeks later on my birthday, we did the same thing again.

I was sure that the shower tree season would be over.



But the flowering trees weren't quite finished. As we sat under the trees again with our frappuccinos, the petals started swirling all around us. There's a word for this in Japanese. Hanafubuki. Flower blizzard. 

So there we were sipping on our drinks in the middle of this flower blizzard.

We were so happy.

And mom? Oh yes, another sushi dinner had her smiling too.

Monday, September 28, 2020

Puzzled Off by Shutterfly

Art has enjoyed putting puzzles together during these COVID-19 stay-at-home days. He's never been one for puzzles, but he's really enjoying the challenge of it now. 


It was our daughter who first sent him a couple of Ravensburg puzzles to do and from there it's been COVID history. I've written about this before. I must say Ravensburg does make quality puzzles.


And then, for his birthday, Tiffany and her family sent this 1,014 piece photo puzzle from Shutterfly. It was really pretty and we planned to frame it somehow.

However, after completing everything, he discovered that two of the puzzle pieces just didn't fit. Tiffany contacted Shutterfly and they sent him another puzzle. Art hoped that he could just find those two pieces and replace the non-fitting ones.

Nope! The pieces were different.


This time, he figured he'd do the borders first so he wouldn't be frustrated again.

Would you believe? 


No kidding! That one corner piece on the new puzzle does not fit properly. He tried replacing it with the corner puzzle piece from the old puzzle but the picture is different. 

I wonder if I could just use a Sharpie and color it in.

This is so crazy. It makes no sense. Don't they just use some kind of machine that would just stamp out the pieces automatically so they would all fit?

I guess not.

Sheesh!

Friday, September 25, 2020

Simple Telephone Fix

My 90 year old mother has a difficult time hearing people on the phone. I realized then that using the speakerphone option would be really helpful for her. She doesn't need hearing aids, but probably is a little hard of hearing. The volume control on the phone does not go high enough for her.

Art has hearing aids but doesn't always wear them at home so he's been using the speakerphone option also.

AND... when I'm having to call in prescriptions and need to use the keypad to punch in the prescription numbers, having that speakerphone is really helpful.

It's just one more way technology has made our lives easier.


Thursday, September 24, 2020

Groundhog Thursday

Art and I seemed to always know what day it was because I had Zumba on Mondays and Fridays and we walked with our friends at the mall on Wednesdays. Tai chi on Thursdays was also another reference point. Art walked with a classmate and they met another classmate at McDonalds twice a week. On Sundays my brother would stop by to see mom. It's been so long since we've done these things that I've forgotten what else we did and what day we did it on.


Now that there's nothing to mark our days the only thing we have left is Thursday because Friday is garbage pick up.

So every Thursday we'll  exclaim, "It's Groundhog Thursday AGAIN!" just like the movie where the character repeated the day over and over again.

The scary thing is that with nothing to mark our days the months seem to just slip by faster and faster.

Sigh...

Groundhog Thursday seems to arrive within a couple of days.

How are you keeping track of your days?

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

House Plant in the Storm Drain

When we lived in Illinois we loved keeping plants in the house. We had giant peace lilies, rubber fig trees, areca palms, ficus benjamina, etc. I figured it would help keep the air clean when we were closed up for the Chicago winters.


In fact, our daughter sent us a photo of our very old rubber fig tree that somehow has taken on a very odd shape.

I told her that she should maybe just chop the top off and see if it will grow another shoot at the bottom. She's reluctant to do so since we left that plant with her when we moved back to Hawaii 14 years ago. I'm impressed she's kept it alive this long.

Those rubber fig trees grow absolutely wild here in Hawaii and are HUGE.

We also had a ficus benjamina for a long time which we left with friends when we moved.

Here in Hawaii, we don't keep houseplants. They seem to attract bugs. Besides, we have greenery all year long outside.

After caring for the ficus benjamina for years and always worrying when the leaves started to fall it was a surprise to see this on one of our walks.


Yup. There was a ficus benjamina growing right out of a storm drain. I wonder how deep that drain is and if the roots might be causing some damage. Whatever the case, it sure looked healthy.

POSTSCRIPT:
Just saw this on another morning walk!

It's a very healthy fern!  

I wonder if I'll find a mango tree next time. Just kidding.

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

When Siri Wouldn't Talk to Me

This post would only be of interest to iPhone users, I'm afraid. Sorry about that.

Apple just did another update on our iPhones. It's iOS 14.0 I normally don't pay attention to these updates, but this time there were changes that seemed like fun.


The widget said I could change Siri's voice. 

OK... I know it's silly. A female American voice is perfectly fine, of course.

But what the heck! I thought I'd change it to a British female for fun. I would have chosen Scottish (I'm reading Outlander right now), but I didn't see it. 

Art chose Irish male.

And then the trouble started. First it was his phone and then mine. Siri would not talk.

Seriously? Why? 

We tried turning off our iPhones and turning it back on again. Nope. Nothing. Siri would only give us text messages. 

So Art looked it up on Apple Support.


We had to go to Settings, Accessibility, Siri and then click on Always Speak Responses.

So PHEW!

Siri is talking to me again, but with a fun English accent. 

I wonder what I can try next. Maybe South African since I love Trevor Noah?

What would you pick?

Monday, September 21, 2020

Flu Shot Confusion

 We get a flu shot every year. The CDC states on its website that July and August are too early for senior citizens to get the shot because its potency will probably be diminished later in the season. They recommend September and October.

I was waiting for October, but then a good friend said she was looking for the High Dose flu shot and it wasn't available at one of the Longs (CVS). She finally found another Longs who said they had the High Dose. I called the Longs near us and they said they didn't have it, but had an alternate which was also for seniors. Well, I decided we should get the High Dose since it was obviously in high demand.  I got all the information on this post from the CDC website.

"The high-dose flu vaccine (Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent) contains four times the amount of antigen as the standard-dose inactivated flu vaccine, and has been associated with a stronger immune response following vaccination and better effectiveness than the regular dose flu vaccine in older people in a two-season randomized trial."

 I knew that mom had to have the alternate Fluad Quadrivalent at Kaiser the week before because all their High Dose Fluzone was reserved for their hospitals. 


Art and I went to that Longs (CVS) purported to have the High Dose Fluzone and got our shots.

Then I was hearing from other friends and relatives that they'd gotten the High Dose at other CVS stores. 

Another friend said she was told this alternate Fluad Quadrivalent was better than the High Dose Fluzone which is what she was given.

Sooo... I decided to do some research online to write this blog post and discovered some startling facts.

Here's what I found out about that alternate Fluad Quadrivalent.

"FLUAD and FLUAD Quadrivalent is a standard-dose, inactivated influenza (flu) vaccine, manufactured by Seqirus that contains an adjuvant. During the 2020-2021 influenza season, both trivalent FLUAD and FLUAD Quadrivalent will be available. Both of these vaccines are approved for people 65 years and older. They are manufactured using an egg-based process (like most flu vaccines), and are formulated with an adjuvant called MF59. An adjuvant is an ingredient added to a vaccine that helps create a stronger immune response to vaccination."

"FLUAD was initially approved in Italy in 1997, and at the time of its U.S. approval in November 2015, had been licensed in 38 countries, including Canada and 15 European countries. FLUAD Quadrivalent was approved in the United States in 2020; it will be available for the first time during the 2020-21 season." 
"To date, there have been no randomized studies comparing FLUAD and FLUAD Quadrivalent with High-Dose flu vaccine (brand name, Fluzone High-Dose and Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent) against laboratory-confirmed influenza."

 After doing all this research, I decided to make sure we'd gotten the correct High Dose Fluzone we were promised.


Nope.

We were given the alternative Fluad Quad, not the High Dose. And you know? I'm kind of ticked because both Art and I had asked if it was the High Dose and the people there said yes. She even told Art that it was 2 times more effective. Where are they getting their information?

I guess just as our country has not been prepared with the necessary PPEs for our frontline workers, we also don't have enough of the High Dose flu vaccines for all the seniors who would normally get this. 

I'll be keeping my fingers crossed, but we don't go out much and we're doing our best to stay safe. I know most of you are too.

Friday, September 18, 2020

Trump Science?

There was a clip last night of Trump talking to Governor Newsom of California and the secretary of Natural Resources. As they spoke of the urgency of the climate change disaster already happening on the west coast, Trump remarked, 

"I don't think science knows, actually,"

He also said,

"It'll start getting cooler. You just--you just watch."

Duh... well yes, it will start getting cooler. It's fall, for goodness sakes! It's going to be winter after that. This president does not understand the difference between global warming/climate change and seasonal weather change.

And on Wednesday he actually disputed his own CDC director, Dr. Robert Redfield's assertion that the COVID-19 vaccine cannot be ready before the election.

Dr. Redfield also insisted that masks are...

"the most important, powerful public health tool we have... I might even go so far as to say that this face mask is more guaranteed to protect me against COVID than when I take a COVID vaccine."

However, Trump told voters in Philadelphia the night before that... 

"There are a lot of people (who) think the masks are not good."  

I don't understand. Why is he doing this? Why is he rejecting his own advisors and pretty much promoting COVID spread. He's killing his own supporters who believe him and are following his example.

Trump even held a large indoor rally with thousands attending on Sunday in Nevada flouting the state directive limiting indoor gatherings to fewer than 50 people. Very few people wore masks since most of his supporters believe everything he says.

He told The Las Vegas Review-Journal,

"I'm on a stage, and it's very far away."

 Oh wonderful... So it's OK then since he's safe. But what about his supporters who don't wear masks and were certainly not social distancing? I suppose he doesn't care. Everyone who comes near him is tested everyday, so he's safe. 

I'm just shaking my head over here... and not understanding it at all.

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Organic Wasp?

 OK. I'll admit it. I've gotten lazy. I now buy prewashed salad from Sam's Club or Costco. I TRUST them to make sure everything is washed properly. I just use my salad tongs and throw bunches of the salad into a bowl, add dressing and pass it out.

The other day, the Sam's Club organic salad had gotten to the last USE BY date so I washed my hands carefully and started to pull out the spinach and lettuce that had gotten a little mushy. The salad had been in our fridge for 4 days. Suddenly I noticed something moving. It's a good thing I had my glasses on.


Good grief! The wasp was moving slowly. I think it was sluggish from being in the cold. Art picked it up with a pair of chopsticks and was going to let it loose outside. I'm sorry, but I told him to kill it. You don't know where the wasp came from. It's packed in the U.S. but you can't be sure it's an insect indigenous to Hawaii.

The scary thing is that my 90 year old mother is severely allergic to bee stings. What if I inadvertently put it in her bowl? The thought of it totally freaks me out. 

I wrote to Sam's Club to let them know and they said they would tell the manager so he would be more careful. I wrote back that the Hawaii manager would have no idea there were bees in the salad. They needed to contact their producers. They said it would be the responsibility of the local manager. 

Whatever the case, I now use chopsticks to carefully look through any salad I buy.

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Politically Appropriate Team Names

 I wrote a post in 2010 about our U.S. senator from Illinois, Paul Simon. He was the commencement speaker at our son's graduation from the University of Illinois. I was so moved by his speech that I wrote him a letter telling him so and he actually wrote back to me. This is an excerpt from my post.

...The first thing I remember was him admonishing the Board of Trustees for continuing to use Chief Illiniwek as the mascot for the University of Illinois. I'm proud to say my son was one of those strongly pushing to retire the dancing chief (who was actually dressed as a Sioux instead of an Illiniwek warrior). Mr. Simon told the Board that if one Native American felt it was denigrating to have a person dressed in a Native American costume as a mascot, it needed to stop. He spoke eloquently of prejudice, respect and understanding...


Art was wearing his high school Honokaa Green Dragons t-shirt the other day and it got me thinking about sports team logos and mascots. 

I wondered who came up with the idea of a green dragon. I didn't think there were green dragons in Hawaiian lore so I looked online. Would you believe there is a legend with dragons? Here's the link. https://www.to-hawaii.com/legends/puna.php

I don't think the Hawaiian people would mind Honoka'a High School using the dragon as their mascot.

I've always wondered why we had the Marauders as our mascot/logo for Waipahu High School. 

I mean really? A marauder? Whoever came up with that? Marauders are not good people. And if you look at the logo, you see they didn't look nice and didn't look like they would play fair.

Ah well...

At least it's more or less politically safe, just like Green Dragons. 

What was your high school logo/mascot? Can you think of a better name for the Washington Red Skins? Because... seriously... don't you think that's a terrible name?


Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Nonsensical Nightmare

We'd watched the last episode of the British detective show Endeavor on PBS that night. It was interesting though we talked about how parts of it didn't make sense. 



That night, I had this weird dream. I was a detective with a partner who was late showing up while we were looking for some killers. I saw them in the distance while watching on a garage roof. I had a flashlight that was shaking because I was scared. And I was a man. Sheesh!

Anyway.... I got more and more scared that the killers were closing in on me and I couldn't keep my flashlight steady so my partner would know where I was. (Yes, I know. The killers would see my light too, but when do dreams make sense?)

Suddenly a hand shot out and grabbed my shoulder and I jumped off the roof! Yup. I did. 

I'd actually jumped (rolled) off the bed. The hand that touched me was Art trying to gently wake me because he knew I was having a nightmare. 

Good grief! 

We were both shocked to see me standing next to the bed. It's a good thing I didn't hurt myself because I would never be able to explain this to my doctor.

Sheesh!

Monday, September 14, 2020

Sit or Stand

I have been tied to my computer for the last two months working on a genealogy photobook for our children and grandchildren. I suppose it's something to do with being on a Coronavirus lock-down or maybe just that I'm of that certain age where I want things recorded for the kids so they can know the roots and branches of their family tree. I thought I'd be done in a couple of weeks. That was a wild miscalculation. Whatever the case, I'm done and it's now Art and our daughter's job to edit for errors. 

Before I start with another photobook to record our family photos for the kids with a condensed snapshot of our lives for the past 40+ years, I'm taking a break and blogging again.

It's still having to work on the computer and therein was the problem.


In 2013, I'd read that it was better to stand than to sit at the computer.

So we constructed a shelf to elevate the monitor.


And I did like it. I could stand or sit. It gave me more freedom of movement. Eventually, I got a bigger monitor and still loved standing or sitting.

However.... 

Last month I noticed that the monitor was a little far away and... sigh... my eye sight might be getting worse. My brother had also complained about this when he used my computer.

Poor Art. I commandeered him to help me change everything again. He didn't mind since he does have time on his hands. It was rather a hassle because of all the wiring that we had to change... AGAIN. 


He even gave me his more comfortable office chair. But then, after a few weeks would you believe my butt started to hurt? Seriously. I never expected that to happen. Is it because I'm older now and there's less fat where it would have helped? Even an added cushion didn't help.

And my blood sugar rose. Darn! I haven't been able to go for Zumba classes or tai chi and we're stuck at home most of the time. And there I was sitting for long periods. 

So.....


It wasn't easy to mention my predicament to Art after all the trouble he's gone through.

And here I am, back to mostly standing (and sometimes sitting) with the monitor even closer to me. 

So far so good.

At least Art hopes so.

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Tested for COVID-19

Hello everybody! 

Gosh it's been a while since I last posted. Looks like the whole Blogger format has changed. 😬 I hope I don't goof up doing this post.

I'm still excruciatingly at work on the family history book. However, I took a break and went for the free COVID-19 test here on Oahu and I just had to report on it quickly for my island family and friends.

Hawaii has gone from being one of the safest states with the lowest numbers of COVID-19 to being one of the worst. At one time, there were even mainlanders who were trying to get here because our numbers were so low. 

But alas! We also have people here who are disregarding the rules to wear masks, social distance and not hold large gatherings. They were even at City Hall protesting the Lock Down because they felt their civil rights were being infringed. And yes, they didn't feel they needed to wear masks. Now where do you think they're getting that idea from? 😒

So here we are with one of the worst numbers per capita in the country. We even had the surgeon general assisting our state government. Our Health Director, Bruce Anderson and State Epidemiologist, Sarah Park have been removed for ineffectiveness and replaced.

The latest effort is to have Surge Coronavirus Testing. They're trying to get 90,000 tests administered in two weeks. This was the first week. We weren't going to participate at first but then friends told us that it was quite easy and helpful for the state to get better data. So we went.


We registered first at https://www.doineedacovid19test.com/  It was very helpful to complete the registration online before going and bringing the printed voucher with us.

We signed up to go to Mililani District Park yesterday.

There's a large field there so lots of social distancing.

There was a trickle of people arriving for the test, but no line.



We presented our voucher and the National Guard attendant took our information and wrote it on the test vial.

The online registration website gives you the information on what to expect and there were also banners there telling you what to do.

We were directed by firefighters to head toward the line of tents set up for the procedure.

A nurse then explained how we were to remove the swab and insert it up our nose. That wasn't the best feeling and it did make me sneeze. I then had to place the swab into the test vial, twist it shut and seal it in an envelope. 


They gave us 5 cotton masks to take with us. I'm actually surprised at how comfortable these masks are.

So there you have it. It's our excitement for the week.

I shall have to leave again now and get back to work on our family history photobook.

Until I return, take care and stay safe please.

POSTSCRIPT 1: No, I haven't gotten my results yet. It's probably delayed because of the Labor Day weekend. I just wanted to note that interestingly these masks have copper and silver in it which is supposed to be even more effective. Cool!

POSTSCRIPT 2: 
Yay!