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2021 in review — health and fitness

The PolyBlog
December 18 2021

I’m planning ahead to the new year, and thinking about my goals. But before I get there, I want to do a review of the past year.

For health and fitness, I did a bunch of survival stuff early in the year, trying to basically hold the line against deterioriation. My leg wound in particular pushed me into fairly dark places mentally, and that’s saying something for year 2 of hellish isolation.

I blogged a lot about the wound care experience, and then later my attempts to boost my health in October with the BowFlex, etc. I didn’t make a ton of progress other than trying stuff out, and I’ll need to go further in 2022.

But I did get a bunch of stuff set up, like BowFlex, and a basic area for working out. I did not, however, figure out all my meds, still adjusting some stuff, and I haven’t found a new doctor yet. I also need to get going on using a UV light and setting up a sleep machine. Plus meditation, and even a weekend away by myself sometime, if the world ever approaches something normal.

I also still need to assemble a workbench and the exercise bike, set up a space for yoga, figure out tai chi videos. I had some “event” type things on my list this year but I got to none of them, as most of them would require leaving the house, which I did very little of this past year.

Overall, I would say the only accomplishments I had were the BowFlex and figuring out two workout routines (stretching and working out).

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Leave a reply

Feeling emotional as we near the end of the year

The PolyBlog
December 11 2021

I like to enjoy a lot of “end of year” recaps in the popular press. Sometimes, it is fun and frivolous, like sports bloopers. Sometimes, it is more fascinating, like the top ten moments in astronomy.

Recently, I was reading an end-of-year wrap-up, pre-2022 transition piece by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Separate from the stacks of fiction writing that she has done over the years, she has been a consistent voice in the wilderness blogging about the business of writing. I don’t always agree with her interpretations of the motives and psychology of other players in the business, her lines are often drawn a little straighter or solid than I would draw them in my limited experience in that field, but I always enjoy reading her take on things.

But as I read one of her wrap-ups, my thought was not about the writing business, but a phrase she used. That 2021 was better than 2020. And I had to pause. Was it?

Was 2021 actually better than 2020? I hadn’t given it any thought, not really. On an objective basis, there’s certainly the obvious. 2020 gave us the pandemic, 2021 gave us the vaccine. It must, therefore, be better, right? Yet the phrase stuck with me.

2020 was tough, of course

2020 was a tough year, no doubt. For myself and my family, we hunkered down. We were no longer at work or school, we switched to Work-From-Home (WFH) and virtual school, and watched as the world turned into a giant dumpster fire. Over time, we all started to become well-versed in amateur epidemiology discussions. And I was convinced, utterly convinced early on, that the conversation would soon turn.

We started off playing Six Degrees of Separation from Keven Bacon, learning about friends of friends of friends of relatives in other countries who were affected. We followed open posts on social media of people asking for thoughts and prayers for a loved one who started with a cough, went into the hospital, was eventually on a ventilator, seemed to get better, was being weaned off, had relapses, was talking about coming back home and a long recovery, and then, silence for a day or two while their world collapsed around them to say that no, that person would not be coming home again after all. Ever.

And I was convinced that as the disease progressed, and we saw the type of outcomes that Greece had seen, where a one-page obituary page in a newspaper had grown to a dozen-plus pages in two months just trying to keep up with notices, that the 6 Degrees would become 1 Degree of separation. But it didn’t.

A highly-social, healthy young minstrel of a cousin was presumptive-positive, but recovered. A friend in another region became sick, one of only 5 people in their entire jurisdiction to have COVID, and recovered.

When a friend contacted us to say another friend’s spouse had died, we thought it was some sort of cruel mistake. It couldn’t be our friend Jeremy. He wasn’t even sick. It must be some other Jeremy. Except it wasn’t COVID, just random health things that claimed a friend.

And the year continued. Lockdown became normal. My family and I became hermits, keeping ourselves safe. And we knew almost nobody who died from COVID, or even diagnosed, let alone hospitalized.

Isolation was bad, the world was a dumpster fire, but it was relatively quiet within our bubble. No chaos, outside of toilet paper hoarding. We tried to help out where we could from our health-safe bubbles, even just simple things like trying to order from different restaurants just to spread the love. Extra contributions for charity. More volunteering, albeit virtually.

We inhaled sharply in March, and we slowly exhaled for the next 8 months.

2021 was a different beast

At the start of the year, my life sucked. Not “we’re all dying” sucked, which is a different level of perspective, but I had a stupid irritating leg infection. A wound tied to diabetes, weight, extra fluid, and a host of other basic poor-health things, all started by scraping my leg one night in the dark on the side of a plastic laundry basket.

The damn thing wouldn’t heal. January, February and March, even a bit of April were all about appointments, wound care, and being accidentally flayed when strips of tape were removed during one cleaning.

I did a mental health check-in on myself with medical professionals in April. I was definitely feeling the strain of everything with work, lack of a personal life, isolation, concern for others, etc. I wasn’t feeling like I was going to hurt myself or anything, but it raised an interesting question.

Is it self-harm if you are not actively trying to defend yourself either? At one point, when my leg was driving me crazy, and I’d just had enough of dealing with all this crap and wanted a solution, I was in the ER and thinking about what options they would offer me. And I realized something scary.

If they had told me that the solution was to amputate below the knee, I felt like I would have said, “Can we do it today? Is this an out-patient thing?”

Not, “Are you crazy? Let’s get a few extra opinions before we make a drastic discussion like that!”.

No, instead, it was more like, “Okay, I’m parked in the regular parking area, is my car okay there while we go ahead with a life-altering decision. I’ll tell Andrea and Jacob about it later.”

I was out of energy. I didn’t have anything left in my reserves, never mind the main tank. I just wanted a solution.

I rebounded. But I wouldn’t say May-August were hotbeds of happiness. As I found my way through the months, I was feeling a certain degree of malaise, ennui, a feeling I couldn’t quite put into words. Until the NY Times did it for me with their article about “languishing”.

My reaction was not simply, “Yes, that’s accurate” so much as “F***, yes, that’s EXACTLY what I’m trying to articulate. Get out of my head!”.

For Thanksgiving, Andrea and Jacob were ready to reconnect with extended family. I definitely was not. I feel somewhat adrift, to be honest.

Just after Thanksgiving, Jacob came back with a cold. I had one by the end of the week, either a variant of his or just on my own, doesn’t matter which. It went away, and came back a week later. Jacob’s was strong enough, tied to school attendance, for us to get him a COVID test, which was negative. I got better, didn’t bother being tested. It was just a cold. But every cough, ache and sniffle was “Umm, does THAT mean something?”.

I had started working out in September, and I was feeling better physically, on track for some goals, until I got sick. Since then, I have felt like crap more days than not. I’ve been altering dosage times for some medicine I take, which has improved my sleeping overall, but I’m not back into workouts yet. January 1st, either way, I’ll be back full-throttle, but I’m not there yet. Getting closer. But not yet.

November should have been a huge high for me. National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), or “national novel-writing-in-a-month”, depending on your perspective was on deck, with the official goal to write 50K words. I had hoped to hit 70K for my HR Guide, but I had to “settle” for 50,925 in 30 days. I did NOT write every day, a mixture of energy levels, interest, competing obligations, and well, feeling like crap.

On the volunteering front, back in June, I gave up a huge project that I had dropped the ball on, as I was just not able to finish. Someone else took it over and it died with them too, so not just me. Others have pitched in, no success. Doesn’t matter that they didn’t do it either, for me it only matters that I said I would do something that I didn’t / couldn’t deliver.

I was approached in the fall to take on another assignment, something that would have been a good challenge for me, and something I had thought about doing. I said no. I just don’t feel like I can commit to a regular gig right now in my personal life. Too much “obligation”, not enough “flexibility”, I guess.

I completed half of another project, another half to go. Another project is 90% done, and I had hoped to be finished by now, but we agreed to some small updates that I’ll do by April, and then be done entirely. A separate but related commitment should have lasted two years, but I withdrew after one.

I tell myself that it is so I can focus on other things, but the reality is that in those contexts, I don’t want people relying on me. By the end of March, all of my commitments will be complete.

For work, I don’t have the same concerns. At work, I’m willing to take on MORE responsibility, within a defined timeline of my day i.e., I’m functional during the day. I can’t commit to other things at night when I’m not.

Contrast and compare

If this was an exam, and they said to contrast and compare the two years, I would say 2020 was “bad but uneventful for COVID impacts”. After the first “thud”, we waited for the second shoe to fall and it didn’t.

For 2021, I would say I felt a lot of frustration (January to March), a bit of hope with vaccines (April to June), continued languishing (July to September), and physically like crap (October to now).

I don’t feel like 2021 was better. I am still struggling with re-engaging with the world in person. I went for a simple dinner out the other night at a Swiss Chalet, and I was a bit uncomfortable with the number of people in the restaurant, including a bunch of young unvaccinated kids. I’m double-vaxxed, the kids were nowhere near us, and yet I was getting a heebie-jeebie feeling. Andrea and Jacob were fine.

I’m not ready for a return to normal, even though I’ll be signing up for a 3x / booster soon.

I’m angry with the world. I’m less tolerant. I have no extra energy to waste on the stupid. I enjoyed a skit too much, by ventriloquist Jeff Dunham with his old-man puppet Walter as a pseudo-Walmart greeter…”Hi, Welcome to Walmart. Get your sh** and go home!”.

But I also find that I am much more emotionally vulnerable/available right now. Lines in shows that are a bit sad, or the death of a character, are enough to have me crying a blue streak. I read a few articles today with strong emotional stories from the last year, and they can wipe me out in a few lines. Too many of them and it’s time for a nap.

My back and ribs are giving me more trouble than usual, and I feel immobilized with inaction on a bunch of chores I need to finish before the new year. I feel like our house is starting to look like a scene from Hoarders, I have boxes of stuff that need to be put away, but there are about 22 dominoes between me and success on the first box.

Getting there, but it sure has been slow.

I’m not saying there aren’t bright spots, there surely are. I’m just saying I don’t know that the rollercoaster of 2021 was better than the “waiting to exhale” feeling of 2020, at least not for me.

And if I think about it too long, my eyes water. I need to focus on solutions more in 2022. Getting by right now isn’t working.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Leave a reply

#MoreJoy – Day 30 of 31 – Are you a closet dasher?

The PolyBlog
October 30 2021

Okay, so the heading was a bit cryptic to see if you clicked. 🙂 By “dasher”, I mean somebody who likes, designs and uses dashboards.

Obviously, the simplest dashboard is a to-do list. A simple list by itself doesn’t qualify — it shows info, but not status. But as soon as you add a check-box of some sort to show pending vs. completed? Now you’re in dashboard territory.

Those two elements — simple info plus some sort of metric — are the two essential elements of a dashboard. Some people argue that it requires a graphical representation, or an indicator of completion, but that is getting too close to specific forms of dashboards. Your car dashboard indicates speed graphically, which is true, maybe your tachometer in a graphical representation (both usually dials), but it also indicates if your headlights are on or how much gas you have, maybe what your tire pressure levels are currently registering. Even distance. Not all of those are “status of completion”, they’re just a metric.

For those who aren’t really into “planning”, they often think that anyone who makes a list is some form of planner. That the list i.e., the plan, is the most important part. It isn’t. True planners know that the most important part is not the end, but the means and the process. Just as military commanders know that no battle plan ever survives engagement with the enemy, a true planner knows that the value of a plan is the process that went into the actual creation. Knowing what troops you have, how you can deploy them, what resources they’ll need, etc. The end doesn’t justify the means, the means justifies the end product.

I have a huge to-do list, I confess. And it is divided into multiple categories so I’m comparing apples to apples when setting priorities, and into multiple columns for levels of priority within that category. Part of the benefit of that long list is to get it out of my head on to paper so I can easily see what I have in each category and which priorities I might want to tackle this week. But that “list”, even as a to-do list, is not really a dashboard because there’s no real element of it meant to be visual and it runs multiple pages.

To me, you have to be able to see the entire dashboard at a glance. If you can’t, you can’t tell quickly what’s going well and what isn’t, or where you might want to give more attention or take your foot off the gas in another. As such, when I’ve played with my to-do list, I’ve also often had a one-page summary at the front. While it is a dashboard of sorts, it is overly detailed (lots of priorities, not much info) and extremely simplistic (mostly checkboxes). It doesn’t inspire me in any fashion, I don’t look at it and go “There! THERE’s where my attention should be this week!”.

For my attempts at increasing my workout routine, I created a couple of different types of dashboard. The first two are more like info posters than true dashboards, as I don’t modify them regularly. They are overviews for my stretching and workout routines, including the pictures of the exercise for easy memory, and the # of reps or weights I’m using for each. It serves more as an instructional dashboard to get me through the routines than to tell me how I’m doing. It has info and metrics, but it isn’t a “management” tool so to speak. It just tells me where I’m at currently.

I created an actual dashboard for my health, which DOES include a lot of other measures, and which I can update monthly. I’ve even added a basic street-light-inspired heat map of progress – green is good, yellow is caution, red is cause for attention.

Dashboard 21-09

I’ve only used it for one month so far, and I ran into some other challenges this month unrelated to the content of the dashboard, so it will take some time to know if this is the right set of metrics going forward.

Wanting a writing dashboard

But I felt I wanted and needed a new dashboard. One that would help me with my writing goals. I focus a lot of time and attention on the content of my websites, but I rarely think about it terms of actual “goals” or “metrics”. I liked it when I hit 500K words, and again when I hit 1M. My visitor stats go up and down, and while I’m regularly above double digits, another week comes along, and I barely have single-digit coverage. I’m okay with that, partly as I am not blogging to become famous, build a brand or run a business. I’m posting what I want, even if it isn’t completely “brand-friendly”.

I have a post coming tomorrow that will talk about a series of posts in November, but I wanted to see “where I was”, a snapshot so-to-speak on my writing goals.

Writing dashboard - October 2021

It is NOT very sophisticated, I admit. The top part is really just a current status of how many words I’ve written or the number of posts. When I split my website into two — PolyWogg.ca and ThePolyBlog.ca — I lost the combined totals showing up easily. I knew I was over 1.5M words, and over 1500 posts, but I had not tried to calculate a combined total recently (1.67M words + 1626 posts and pages), plus 528 comments. I suck at engagement, but hey, it’s something. I was also curious to see that my “blog” posts, albeit spread across two sites, is at 1042 by itself. I hadn’t really thought of extracting that number from the data previously. But this post, for example, is exactly that type of post. It’s not a review, it’s not a page, it’s just me blogging about, well, me.

While some of that is purely me being anal to see the numbers, the one that was amazing to see was the Reviews total. I often feel “down” about my review numbers. I started the original site to post book and movie reviews, and when I started, I had some 75 movie reviews in the can (but not copied over) and book reviews ready to GO, with hundreds of books ready to be reviewed. Fast-forward almost 20y, and I’ve only posted 199 book reviews? Really? How is that possible?

And movie reviews, some of that is format, design, time, lack of priority, but less than 10? Wow.

Yet I rarely think about what I am doing instead. A couple of music and podcast reviews, but almost 50 related to “general TV watching” and predictions of where shows will go or get cancelled. Huh. And then the real kicker.

I have 233 reviews of TV premieres and another 23 of full seasons of shows. What? I have MORE full TV reviews than I do book reviews? Really? When did THAT happen? Apparently, almost two years ago, and I never even noticed. I have never really thought of them as full reviews as they are more breezy and less structured. Yet I’ve generated 250 of them without even blinking in the last 8 years. Yet I never give myself credit for it.

At the bottom, I just added references to my current works in progress. I wrote it as if I knew what I was going to write about in November, a novel in particular code-named CC, or two other guides that I count as “works in progress”. I’m still debating which I’m going to use November to blast through. My HR guide isn’t really amenable to the next phase, but I might choose it anyway. I don’t feel like I’m ready for the Astro Guide in full yet, but the novel isn’t quite right either.

For now, I listed two types of metrics — word counts in one area, and table of contents as checkboxes in another.

As I said, the dashboard isn’t quite right, but it doesn’t have to be. The point of doing it was to push my planning a little farther from a simple to-do list and more towards thinking about actual outputs in my writing. Just gathering the data gave me a couple of surprises and a new way of thinking about what I am doing as a writer and where I want to expend my energy.

It’s not the prettiest dashboard, but it does give me #MoreJoy.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged change, goals, joy, lifestyle, mental health, personal | Leave a reply

#MoreJoy – Day 29 of 31 – Music lessons

The PolyBlog
October 30 2021

I have almost no musical ability at all. I can’t sing, I have no rhythm for dancing, I can’t play any instruments. I hope to learn how to play a song or two on our piano just to keep my brain agile as I get older and for fun, but I admire those who can play anything. Even a kazoo if they can do it well.

So I’m not saying that I am taking music lessons and am enjoying them.

No, I mean that I enjoy that Jacob is doing music lessons. I like listening to him practice, I like his recitals when he participates. I like occasionally when I’m listening that he’ll play a couple of the older songs he learned a few years ago that I really enjoyed. Like even This Is It (the Looney Tunes song).

He’s not ready for a concert hall performance, of course, but he could be doing chopsticks, and I’d enjoy it. Well, for the first hour anyway. Just hearing him play anything brings me #MoreJoy.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged change, goals, joy, lifestyle, mental health, personal | Leave a reply

#MoreJoy – Day 28 of 31 – SupperWorks

The PolyBlog
October 30 2021

I mentioned earlier that I do most of my grocery ordering online, and have been since about week 7 or 8 of the pandemic. Over the years (of life, not the pandemic), Andrea and I have experimented with a few “food boxes” to have them delivered to the house. Some were “fresh veggie” orders and others were special meal collections, but while the convenience was good and the contents were quality, we found sometimes the portions were off or we were getting things we wouldn’t normally choose to eat — sometimes we were choosing three dishes out of 7 for example, but only really liked two of them. The other five weren’t terrible, we didn’t hate them, it was edible, but they were often not dishes we would care to repeat. Or, for one box, the prep time was frequently off the chart. It would say “ten minutes”, and then Andrea and I together would spend 30-40 minutes. Not a great solution for a week night.

SupperWorks had a different model. It was designed, generally speaking, for you to book a spot in their calendar, go to their store, and assemble the ingredients into packages yourself. They would have perhaps 8-10 “work stations” set up for different meals, such as a glazed pork chop recipe at one station and a stew at another. You would go in, go to a free station set up for a specific recipe, and follow the directions. Kind of like an IKEA store but you assemble all the ingredients in the box yourself. For example, you would put two tablespoons of soy sauce into a bag, and then add the pork chops, a dozen or so other pre-chopped ingredients, and seal the bag while attaching a label with the cooking instructions. If you wanted a bit more soy or a little less maple sugar, you could adjust your assembly accordingly.

You do this a few more times around the store, essentially pre-assembling all the ingredients for a few meals, and you’re good to check out. When you get home, you freeze everything you can and any time you want to make one, you take out a bag, thaw it in the fridge a day or two before, and then just follow the instructions. Everythings is already pre-assembled with the right quantities and ready to cook.

It’s more expensive than buying all the ingredients yourself, but it is all pre-assembled and ready to cook. No re-measuring, you’ve essentially prepped all the meals in advance, with the store doing most of the sous-chef duties for you. At first glance, as I said, it might seem expensive, but my wife does most of the cooking and is generally frugal, and even she considers it value-for-money for prep and meal-planning options.

Some people used to make social outings of it. Find a friend or three, book a night, and go and assemble while chatting. It’s hard to have more than two people at any one station, and you might not all want the same recipes, but it was easy enough to find open slots. Weekends, weekdays, weekday evenings.

The pandemic messed that business model up entirely, of course. People couldn’t be in the store wandering around and touching all the food stations, even with having to wash your hands between stations so there’s no cross-contamination of foods (to prevent allergic reactions). You could always pay them in the past to pre-assemble the meals for you, but the cost differential was not insignificant. Take into account the fact that you were already paying a premium for their sous-chef duties, and the price of pre-assembled packages could get out of hand quickly. Not to mention the need for a large freezer to keep everything!

SupperWorks pivoted with the pandemic and now everything is pre-assembled for you. It’s the only option. But we like the meals, partly because we get to CHOOSE which foods are in our order. No need to pick something you don’t like to fill a quota; no need to pick something with a huge prep time.

Prices vary as do personal thresholds for cost. They have a cheesy mashed potato-bacon casserole that we like, and yes, we could easily make it ourselves. This is more like a store-bought one, but tastes fresher. It runs $14.00 and is big enough for all three of us for a meal. That’s not bad for price. Meanwhile, we also have Cranberry Chicken with Apples, done up as a split meal (instead of serving 4-6, we split it into two orders to serve 2-3, which is just right for the three of us usually). With the full meal split, we get six servings for $48.00. Some orders come up with sides, some don’t. Lots of DIY sites could offer the same meal so you could get it down to less than $4 per person instead of $8, mostly by buying in bulk, buying stuff on sale or in lower-quality cuts of meat, and substituting sweat equity for cost up-front.

We find that we (aka I) tend to slightly over-order in a month, so if I do two months in a row, we tend not to order the third month as we are too backed up in the freezer department. If you reorder from month 1 to month 2, you get a discount for month 2. Similarly for subsequent months. Discounts range from 10-25%; my discount for October was 15%, and I ordered five different types of meals.

First, there are the full meals split into two meals each. For this category, I ordered Cranberry Chicken with Apples, Maple-Kissed Pork Chops, Creamy Lemony Dilly Chicken & Orzo, and Italian Herb-Crusted Pork Tenderloin. They’re a bit heavier than we normally eat, so we don’t often do more than two in a week, and often only one, hence why with four meals split into eight dinners of three portions, we often end up having to skip a month after two orders in a row.

Andrea and I are often of two minds on these ones. The meals are excellent, no issue there, and it’s nice to have all the prep work done, BUT Andrea also sells Epicure and it wouldn’t be that difficult to Epicurify the recipe to do it ourselves. Except we would have to do all the prep, have all the other ingredients ready, plan in advance to do all of that, etc. These are easier, and particularly so for mid-week meals. The only other catch is that Andrea’s version would likely be better than these ones, after a bit of experimentation. Still, it’s a pretty good set of dishes and makes for easy meal-planning.

The second category is what I considered fully pre-assembled meals, like the Cheesy Mashed Potato-Bacon Casserole. Basically, you open it up, wrap it in tinfoil, throw it in the oven, and you’re done. They’ve already got it fully ready to cook, no additional assembly is required. These are pretty close to just store-bought, and can’t be split.

The third category would be soups and sides. I ordered Asiago-Herb Mashed Potatoes and Andrea chose a Butternut Squash and Coconut Soup + Italian Wedding Soup. But the one I am excited by, and I’m surprised to ever utter these words, is a Maple-Crumble Mashed Sweet Potatoes. Here’s the thing. We don’t really like Sweet Potatoes. Yet I accidentally ended up with it as a side for something small last month, and it was AWESOME. So I ordered a full-sized one for this month.

The fourth category on the list is lunch-time meals. They’re kind of like small TV dinners, I suppose, except it’s higher-end obviously and often smaller versions of the larger dishes for the month. They’re about $9-$10, you throw them in the microwave to cook them from frozen, and they are good lunch-time options for work to have something hot for lunch when we don’t have a lot of time. I picked up an Apple Maple-Glazed Chicken, Dad’s Favorite Meatloaf, and a Quinoa Veggie Stew (yeah, that one’s not for me hehehe). I did a turkey dinner one in October around Thanksgiving which is how I ended up trying the sweet potato side, and they’re pretty good for a change of pace.

And finally they also have some dessert options. Most of the time, these are like the storebought solutions, pop them in the oven to bake, and voila! One Fudgey-Fudge Brownies. Pretty rich, though. SupperWorks also usually throws in some sort of extra bonus, which is often six chocolate chip cookies, ready to bake. Pretty good ones too, no mess or mixing required.

Some people do hard-core ordering each month with 2-3 per week because they love the time advantage of avoiding prep or the convenience of weekday cooking after working all day. Some do it because they love the taste.

We’re not hard-core, but we are regular customers. Because the meals bring us #MoreJoy. And inspire us sometimes to find a personal recipe version of the meal to do on our own.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Tagged change, goals, joy, lifestyle, mental health, personal | Leave a reply

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  • More workplanning on my new Calibre libraryMarch 28, 2026
    I wrote earlier this week (Using Calibre to embrace my inner librarian for ebooks) about the Poly Library 3.0, and when I did, I thought I had most of my “work” done. I had decided on three main areas (the book profile, user engagement, and user tools), although, truth be told, I had four categories … Continue reading →
  • An update on Jacob…March 24, 2026
    For those of you who don’t know, as I didn’t blog about this much before, Jacob decided to have surgery on his legs this year, which he did at the end of February. I’ve held off posting anything as I didn’t want to ask Jacob what he was comfortable with me sharing, but today was … Continue reading →
  • Using Calibre to embrace my inner librarian for ebooksMarch 23, 2026
    I have used Calibre literally for years to manage all my ebooks. It started way back when Kindle was doing a huge business of people pushing freebies of their ebooks. Some good, some slush, all free. But it meant a LOT of ebooks to manage. So I tried a couple of programs, most of which … Continue reading →
  • What would you put in a personal health dashboard / framework?March 8, 2026
    I started this year with a few short plans to work on health factors in my life. Some of it was prescribed; I needed a physical exam for certain pension forms. Others were ones that I was trying to do some proactive work on, like my teeth and my feet. And still others were more … Continue reading →
  • Book clubs 2026-03: Options for MarchMarch 8, 2026
    February wasn’t as productive as I had hoped, at least not for my “bookclub reading”. I had 28 from book clubs below as potential reads, but my Christmas present hangover reads occupied most of my attention, plus some non-reading projects. Oh, and life itself, I guess. I read This Book Made Me Think of You … Continue reading →

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