måndag 31 december 2018

Eventually I do something

It can take me 5 years or longer to start and complete a lot of projects so I should just stop with the new year resolutions and such. This house still has a lot on the list but I am concerned most urgently with my personal needs.

The last time I had actual dental work done was when I lived in Los Angeles. It could have been 25 years ago. I have no idea of the actual date but I moved to Austin in 1997 and that’s 21 years and the last dentist visit was long before that.

There’s no excuse for it, really. I got caught up in a whirlwind of work and life in a new city. And shortly thereafter, the collapse of the company where I worked. Then I started smoking and drinking again which launched a decade of alcoholic excess during which time dental work was not a priority. My singular focus was making certain there was at least half a bottle of tequila in the house.

It has been almost 9 years since I collapsed on the patio and broke a number of bones in my face. This made brushing my teeth rather painful and nearly impossible on the upper left side where my cheek bone was broken. That was when the plaque started to build up.

Five years ago I did attempt to see a dentist. She recommended a deep cleaning of the teeth and along the gum line. However, she would not do the work on account of my high blood pressure. I tried various methods of lowering my BP but nothing worked. I had stopped drinking hard liquor entirely but the wine and beer were still impacting it along with the smoking.

I resolved in 2015 to do something about it, and again in 2016, and yet again in 2017. Being frustrated with myself, this was the year I decided to see a doctor and get this taken care of. I wanted to have the dental work completed before the end of the year. 

The blood pressure pills were helping but not solving the problem. Subsequently my doctor suggested I double the dosage which I started about a month ago. Unfortunately I have been extraordinarily busy at work and never scheduled the dental appointment. By early December it was fairly obvious this was going to get postponed into 2019. I wasn’t happy about it but at least the wheels were turning.

Near the end of the week before Christmas I started having sensitivity in the area where I have the plaque buildup. Nothing severe, just discomfort when rinsing with cold water for instance. Within a day or two, going into the weekend this became extremely painful, almost unbearable at times. Needless to say I had to find a dentist and with the holidays I knew it wasn’t going to be easy.

The pain had begun to subside a little by Christmas Eve and Christmas day - at least enough for me to sleep at night.

On Boxing day I started making calls. One recorded message after another announcing they were closed until January. Finally, I found one who was open, had had a cancellation, and could see me that afternoon.

An x-ray revealed a crack along one of the upper teeth. The doctor had to schedule me for a crown which is due to happen this afternoon. He will have to clean the tooth and surrounding area, and then I can schedule another appointment for the remaining cleaning work and whitening. I have been so disgusted with my teeth and self-conscious for so long I am not sure how I’m going to feel when I see them cleaned up after so many years of neglect.


The good news is that I am getting started with this in 2018 as planned! Just barely! I am claiming that as a victory.

lördag 24 november 2018

Self-created fashion dilemmas

Sometimes I wonder what the fuck I’m doing. For a guy who sometimes leaves the house only on Saturday and Sunday, and hardly ever for more than two hours, I own a ridiculous amount of clothing. There are at least 25 summer shirts and at least that many for milder weather and probably a dozen more for cool weather.

I’m trying to get in the habit of wearing a summer shirt under a mild weather shirt for cooler weather attire but the reality is that it would take me half a year just to wear everything due to the fact that I will often wear the same shirt both weekend days.  And why not? If I’m only wearing it for 2 hours on each weekend day, that’s just 4 hours of wearing time. I feel like 8 hours is required before something needs to be washed.

Perhaps I need to get in the habit of wearing these shirts when I’m not out of the house despite the fact that most of them are made to be seen in.  But if I like them, and I do, then why not wear them to please myself?  The bulk of the resistance is because I eat dinner on the sofa, after some drinks, and stains happen. On the other hand, I have stain removal products that seem to work so I need to let go of that fear.

Maybe I’ll start testing this idea with the shirts that are not at the top of my favourites list just to see how it goes.

I am also exploring the world of jumpers which have never been something I enjoyed wearing until I actually figured out how to wear them. Now that I have 4 or 5 of them another problem has been revealed. I can wear those over a summer t-shirt in lieu of many other cool weather shirts in my collection.

At least my fetish is largely confined to tops. I have about 4 jeans that I normally wear out, and my lineup of shoes is even more limited.  Unfortunately, I rarely wear jeans in the hot summer months and I own at least 15 pairs of shorts for that season. And over the course of two months I might rotate between 5 or 6 of them.  

I am not going to concern myself right now with summer attire in November. I can deal with that issue in about five months. My immediate goal is to see if I can start wearing more of these nice shirts during the winter, determine which ones are absolute faves and which are simply OK. Then maybe I’ll be able to whittle all this down to a manageable size. Or maybe I won't need to if I start wearing them at home on a daily basis. Maybe over the course of three weeks I could actually wear them all! What a concept!

One alternative is to simply not worry about it. Millions of people have all kinds of clothes they have only worn once or twice and will near wear again and yet they continue to hang there. I just don’t know that I can be one of those people. Either it gets worn or it goes out. I’m rather ruthless that way. I would much rather see eight shirts hanging that I adore rather than eight shirts I adore mixed in with 12 others that I simply like but wear once every two years.


We shall see how this goes. It’s something I can obsess about and we all know I need that!

söndag 2 september 2018

Draining the spit valve

I cannot understand people who dislike jazz enough to make it known how much they dislike it. They have a screw loose. And people who love jazz have a bigger screw loose.

Jazz became big for me back in the 1990s when I was living and working in Los Angeles. Long Beach had a public radio station devoted to jazz which I discovered during the lengthy commutes and I became somewhat addicted to it. Prior to that I never gave jazz much thought other than a shrug of indifference at best. That’s rather odd being a child of the 1960s who was exposed to it in my early years — notably by its use in films and a British television series The Avengers which infatuated me for years.

During the 90s I went on to acquire a rather sizeable collection of jazz CDs. Some of them I still count among my faves regardless of genre while others I may have listened to once or twice. Granted, this was a period in my life where true hi-fi was absent thanks to an electrical storm and would get worse in years to come when my listening device was a desktop Bose radio/CD player. Many of them I acquired from one of those CD club memberships that would send you 13 CDs for a dollar or whatever, and then you were on the hook for another half dozen or so at full retail price.

I’ve never done well by loading up on music all at once. It is too much to absorb. CDs get heard once then moved aside for the next, and the next, and the next. So I’m glad those music clubs have faded into obscurity.  Meanwhile I have sat on this large collection of jazz now for well over 20 years.

About three years ago I finally got a true hi-fidelity sound system re-established with a nice turntable which shifted my attention even farther away from CDs for most of my listening.  Awhile back I started pulling CDs off the shelving with the idea of sorting through them, keeping what I do listen to, and trading in anything I don’t hold dear. For months now the CD collection has been a shambles. Once they were all neatly grouped on shelves with rock in one section, jazz in another, and a few oddball classical pieces stuck at the end. Now they are partially on shelves in the den, more on shelves in the foyer, and several dozen in boxes in the dining room.

As I’ve been sorting through them a number of times trying to make a decision about what to keep it occurred to me that perhaps it would be easier if I could determine why I want to get rid of them. That requires actually listening to them, or at least the first track or two, since many of them have not been played for two decades.

This has resulted in yet another revelation of sorts. I’m looking at all this stuff and realising that I have a huge amount of contemporary artists who were still newbies on the scene in the 1990s. Reading the liner notes I noticed many of them are doing their own versions or interpretations of works by true jazz masters from the past, and I don’t actually own very many of those, and frankly there are many I’m not even familiar with except through the works of others.

Ornette Coleman. There’s one. I find myself really wanting to get my hands on some of his stuff. Maybe even get it on vinyl.

Another thing I have noticed from reading the liner notes is there’s a ridiculous amount of collaboration between these people. Thanks to the CD club membership I have all these CDs by Joshua Redman, Cyrus Chestnut, Roy Hargrove, Christian McBride, Wynton Marsalis, and more, and you want to hear something funny? They all play on each other’s albums!

Nicholas Peyton with special guests Roy Hargrove, Wynton Marsalis, Joshua Redman.

Christian McBride’s debut album features Roy Hargrove, Joshua Redman, and Cyrus Chestnut.

The Roy Hargrove Quintet featuring Branford Marsalis, Joshua Redman, and Cyrus Chestnut!

For fuck’s sake! Can you spell incest?

I’m not knocking it. These are all accomplished musicians in what is apparently a very tight-knit community of jazz lovers often paying homage to compositions of jazz legends I do not own!  At the very least I should probably investigate what all the fuss is about if I’m going to call myself a fan of jazz. To be clear, I’m not completely bereft of exposure. I have some Miles Davis, Coltrane, Basie, and others. But there’s so much more.  And actually a few albums in my collection are by newer original composers I throughly enjoy and those have actually seen multiple playings through the years.

One album I played today totally blew my head off. Jimmy Smith’s Damn from 1995. This was probably one of more than a dozen from the CD club that got lost in the shuffle. Jimmy Smith was old school, born in 1925 and he was one with the Hammond B-3 organ.  Ironically (or not), his 1995 release featured the following:  Roy Hargrove, Nicholas Peyton, and Christian McBride doing songs by Horace Silver, Charlie Parker, Herbie Hancock, James Brown, and more.  But it works and this one is a definite keeper.
I guess my point is that this process is a lot more complex than I imagined and I’m going to need to listen to a lot of jazz before I determine what can actually be sent away.


Eventually I plan to get some shelving for this stuff and get everything back in alphabetical order. Maybe. I think I love jazz so much I might want to have jazz vocals grouped separately from jazz instrumental works. This is going to take longer than I thought. And once I have all the jazz sorted out I'll get going on downsizing the rock CD collection.


Maybe that won't take so long. Will I need to listen to every Marilyn Manson CD to decide which, if any, to keep? One never knows.



måndag 30 juli 2018

The Friðvin Samúelsson Museum

Jesus Christ. I have been cleaning the house and finding all sorts of historical crap. There is a plastic bag full of shit. My high school graduation certificate, various reports and unflattering notes from teachers using words like ‘careless’ and ‘retarded.’

‘Baby’s First Book’ is particularly interesting as my mother documented my growth and eating habits for the first year or so of my life. It is somewhat freaky to read in my mother’s handwriting and knowing she was writing about me and using words like ‘pablum.’ Little did she know I was only a few years shy of being a careless retard.

I know she gave me all this stuff some years ago because she probably wanted it out of her house, and now it is in mine, and what do I do with it? When I die the sentimental value will abruptly be reduced to zero and it will be tossed in the rubbish bin so why not now? Should I feel guilt at tossing something that my mother treasured for over 58 years?

I supposed I could take a room in the house and set it up as a museum comprised of an enormous collection of memories with tattered remnants of hope.

Friðvinsafnið

Opnunartími: 
13-17 mán, mið og fimmtudaga  
10-17 þriðjudaga og föstudaga


When I die perhaps I can have it placed in a small box in my grave. I’m not sure what else to do with ‘Baby's First Book’ and part of me resents the fact that it is my responsibility to make the decision.

But why not open a museum? I’m apparently already operating a thrift shop here.

A number of years ago I had a tank top fetish and acquired dozens. Last year I don’t recall wearing one all summer and I had managed to not wear any this year, so I started sorting through them, selecting ones I particularly liked, and some that had never been worn yet and put them in the pile to keep. The remainder went in a bag to be taken to the charity shop at some point.

Lately we started having the typical Texas summer with real heat (40C and over) and I noticed my t-shirts were wet in the arm pits for most of the day despite being inside the house. So I started shopping in my thrift shop bag. I pulled out one I had been reluctant to give away, then I pulled out another, and then another. I think there are now only about 3 or 4 remaining in the bag! But hey, at least they are getting worn, and the wet armpits have gone away.  Plus, I can wear them in the evening and it doesn’t matter if I drop curry on them.

The good news is I have another closet that actually functions now. I tossed out two huge boxes that were used to ship my hi-fi speakers here a few years ago. Awhile back I smashed them flat but it didn’t really create any extra space due to the hard styrofoam packing material.

The weekend was actually productive overall as I managed to get both bathrooms cleaned and also started cleaning in the garage, plus the closet!

I think cleaning and organising is how I avoid confronting the harsher realities of life. And it happens to make me feel good in the process. It is, for me, much like meditation.

I intensely dislike clutter. Compared to the average American home this place probably looks stark and minimalist already but there is so much more to do.

The remodel of both bathrooms was far more disruptive than I anticipated since everything had to come out of both bathrooms. I still have not got things put back exactly the way I want them but at least a lot less went back into them than what came out!

Meticulous organisation is but one of my obsessions.

onsdag 11 juli 2018

The last of the 20th century pussies

When we moved here in 1997 we were soon visited frequently by a polydactyl black cat with beautiful green eyes. I knew she probably belonged to someone in the neighbourhood but I gave her the name ‘Big Thumbs.’ She would sprawl somewhere and extend her arm out with her paw turned upward as if to show off her anomaly. 

Other cats were prone to hanging round here as well. Usually they were males. One was a big grey boy, perhaps Maine Coon, and the other was a large ginger. The ginger didn’t linger much and I only saw him a few times. One of those times I caught him copulating with Big Thumbs.  I never named him because he was not a regular visitor, but the big grey cat I called ‘Tiger’ which I will freely admit is not terribly original.

Sometime later, in 1998 or early 1999 she gave birth to some kittens somewhere in the area. Once the kittens were large enough to be handed off she brought them here to our patio. Big Thumbs was a wise girl because she apparently sensed they would have a safe and loving home with us.

One of the earliest photos (from a film camera, not digital!) I have is of her on the patio with three kittens all nursing while Big Thumbs was in her classic pose with paw extended out. The kittens were as large as she was. One female was a classic tortie and the other two were black.

We took Big Thumbs to the vet to have her spayed as a precaution against this incident repeating itself.  Some time after that Big Thumbs disappeared and it happened to coincide with some neighbours on the next street moving elsewhere.

One evening Sheldon came into the house holding the tortie girl. She was an indoor cat for the rest of her life. The two black cats remained outside as patio cats, along with Tiger who never seemed to wander far. I decided to name her Sissy because she also was a polydactyl. Sissy Hankshaw was the big-thumbed character in ‘Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.’

‘The whole idea of paying for a ride just makes my thumbs hurt.’— Sissy Hankshaw

In addition to being polydactyl she had another weird quirk. One of her extra claws would grow in a circle and form a round disk. Once during a vet visit the doctor, much to my dismay, clipped one off. I was delighted later to see it grow back.

When Sissy was introduced into the house we only had one other cat. Samantha was our mixed Siamese we brought here from California. They bonded well. 

In the feline world I guess the word spread that our house was a sanctuary for cats. Soon, another large female appeared on the front porch. This was probably in 2000. She seemed older. We fed her and provided water for a year while she endured the Texas summers and the handful of cold mornings that pass for winter in these parts.

One day I opened the front door and invited her to come inside. She walked in like she had always belonged here and made herself at home. I named her Jezebel.

The three cats all bonded quite well. One of my favourite photos is of the three of them stretched across my bed sleeping, and Sissy was resting against Samantha.

I believe it was in 2003 when Jezebel was hit with liver failure. It was shocking to me because it happened immediately. She had been sitting in the kitchen window and then jumped down to the floor. I later found her under my bed seeking seclusion. This was odd for her but I assumed she must not be feeling well. This continued for another day or two and I was getting concerned.

Finally I reached under there to drag her out and it was clear she was ill. I placed her in a corner of the room so I could monitor her. It was a Sunday before the Memorial Day holiday.

Monday morning was horrendous. She had begin to secrete a nasty brown fluid from her mouth. I placed her in a box and called the emergency vet service since it was a holiday. I took her in and they recommended she be put to sleep immediately due to her condition.

This was my first experience ever with a cat euthanasia and I did not handle it well. I was not present when they injected her in the next room. But when the doctor came in to announce the deed was done I broke down sobbing on the floor. Uncontrollable sobbing. 

Life continued with Sissy and Samantha until 2005 when another ginger male appeared in the garage. He was young, maybe a year old, but very friendly and immediately declared the patio as his home. He also had a toe injury — a swollen red bulb. I wasn’t sure if it was a birth defect, a growth of some kind, or another injury.  It never seemed to heal.

On New Year’s Eve if I recall correctly, Sheldon brought the ginger boy into the house. (Note: these are my memories and I believe them to be accurate. However, I have mentioned these incidents to Sheldon and he denies involvement in introducing either Sissy or the ginger boy into the house, but I digress.)

The boy spent the night in my bedroom and the next morning there were bloody footprints all over the bed and bathroom floor. It was obvious that toe injury needed medical help.

It was actually a broken toe and infected. The doctor removed the toe and placed a purple sock bandage on the foot. So the first couple of weeks with him were quite amusing with him walking around in his purple sock.

In retrospect he was one of the more unruly kitties we ever had. Maybe it’s just a boy thing. He was prone to shitting behind the television, and sometimes pissing. Soon thereafter I changed his name from Big Red to Tater Tot because that’s what his turds looked like: a small cluster of tots.
Sheldon hated the connection and continued to refer to him as Red rather than Tater Tot.

In 2007 we were in the midst of some home makeovers thanks to a heavy rain that resulted in some flooding in the house. Carpets were being ripped up and replaced, rooms painted, and we were replacing overhead lighting in the kitchen. And Samantha was dying.

Samantha was the only indoor cat I’ve ever had who managed to die on her own, at home, without assistance. And I thank her for that. She crawled behind the washing machine and was draped over the power cord when I found her the next morning. Her face was peering out between the washer and the wall, eyes open, but lifeless.

Sissy took this very badly. I have never witnessed a cat in mourning or grieving. For a few days she would sit in the litter box that Samantha used. She would just sit there with the only remaining connection she had to Samantha.

As I reflect back on this time it is quite hard to believe we only had Tater Tot and Sissy in the house. However, we were still caring for Tiger outside, along with Sweet Pea, one of Sissy’s brothers. The other, Coal Pot, had disappeared at some point and we never saw him again.

Things were OK for awhile. Sissy and Tater Tot coexisted but without much in the way of bonding. I had spotted a beautiful Siamese girl up for adoption in March, 2011 at a pet store. I brought home a flyer with her photo on it and it sat on our kitchen table a few months. I desperately wanted that girl and thought Sissy would enjoy having another Siamese since she was so fond of Samantha. Silly me. That’s not how it works but I didn’t know.

Finally, over the protestations of Sheldon, we adopted her in July 2011. The introduction went fine despite our fears that there would be personality clashes between Tater Tot and Jessie Lee, the new arrival.  On the contrary, those two bonded quite well and Sissy was unfortunately the odd one.

Sissy was always the odd one, a bit reserved, very shy around people, and not at all forceful, aggressive, or defensive. Over time it became more of a problem as Tater Tot assumed the role of King Tot and began tormenting Sissy, and particularly when she would use the litter box. Time after time she would be trying to pee and Tater Tot would be creeping up as if he were going to attack.  Sissy would flee the box in a panic with cat litter flying from her feet.

The last straw for me happened one day when Sissy needed to use the box. Tot gave her a scare and she jumped up into a chair before completing her needs.  The Tot stood there staring at her and suddenly I heard the sound of pee dripping from the chair to the floor.

From that moment on, Sissy resided in my bedroom with the door closed. Based on a review of photos I had taken, I think that was probably in 2012. She was completely relaxed and content there, safe with her daddy at night.

This is how life continued. Occasionally, I would leave the bedroom door open by accident, and if the Tot managed to get back there we would hear a screech coming from Sissy. Even Jessie Lee enjoyed an occasional Sissy chase if she had the opportunity. So I tried to keep the door closed at all times, especially if we were both going to be out of the house.

What’s funny is that Sissy was so skittish of anything that moves and yet I would occasionally allow Sweet Pea to come wander in the house at night for a few minutes. There were no issues with either Tater Tot or Jessie Lee, oddly enough. But I would sometimes take him to my bedroom and place him on the bed with Sissy and she wouldn’t even flinch. I have no idea if she sensed the connection as his brother or what.

Soon the outside cat situation was also going through changes. Sweet Pea also got the liver failure and had to be put down. Tiger was in failing health, had lost most of his hearing, and his fur developed massive clumps of matted hair. And yet that boy kept going, barely able to walk.

One day I was sitting on the patio and he was in the garage looking out from an open door. We were looking at each other, directly in the eyes. He turned and wobbled away and I never saw him again. It was a most perplexing thing because he was so physically weak I do not see how he could have gone very far. I never found his body. The three indoor cats became our only cats.

Those six years with Sissy in my bedroom were an amazing time of bonding for us. I realised at some point that she could detect my brain wave patterns, or maybe it was my breathing patterns. She sensed with incredible accuracy exactly when I was either drifting into sleep or waking from it, and often when she was in her own bed in the corner next to the human bed where she couldn’t even see me. I would open my eyes to see her sitting near the door, ready to greet me, and more importantly to receive the food I would soon bring.

As she was getting older her fur starting to get matted and she had exactly the same problems that Tiger had with his fur, in exactly the same places. At that point it suddenly hit me that she probably had two daddies: Tiger, and that unnamed big orange boy who had had a fling with Big Thumbs.

The start of 2017 was wild. We lost a dear friend who had two cats. They were, shall we say, a rather unique pair and difficult to rehome. Maggie really wanted the cats to be housed with us in the event of her death and that is how it unfolded. Scout, a female ginger, and Mungo, a black male with a neurological disorder resulting in his head being cocked sideways in order to see straight, joined our family.

The assimilation was not successful. Jessie Lee enjoyed a good playful chase and Scout is something of a loud screecher when confronted. It was too much for Sheldon as the hissing, spitting and screeching sent him into spasms of anxiety. They have been sequestered in a spare room since arriving here in late January, 2017. There were not so many issues with the Tot that I recall, but maybe it was all overshadowed by the dynamics between them and the aggressive nature of Jessie Lee.

By the beginning of 2017 Tater Tot was getting feeble and lost a lot of weight rather quickly. He lasted until April. His strength was all but gone. One day his vocals changed and it was clear that he was having periods of pain. I had to make the decision to call the vet and schedule an appointment. I had not been through this since Jezebel’s death thanks to Sheldon dealing with Sweet Pea’s demise in the interim. 

I drove my beloved Tot to the nearby vet office. We spent a few minutes chatting. I told him he would forever be my orange boy, my Tot, thanked him for our time together, and then caressed him as the death drugs did their magic. It was difficult for me but I handled it far better than the Jezebel episode. 

I brought him home for burial and was startled by how limp and lifeless his body was when I removed him from the carrier. It actually startled me for a second. I placed him in the hole, touched his cute pink nose and his peachy pink toe pads one last time, then covered his body with dirt. I really hated that part.

Within the year or so, Sissy became more feeble. She no longer hopped up on the bed but clawed her way onto it. And I noticed something else. She was going deaf just like Tiger did in his advanced years. She often would not hear me enter the room and would be startled if she was eating with her back to the door and I suddenly walked through. I was still able to communicate with her a bit with certain tones when I would say her name but otherwise I believe she was 90% deaf.

With Tater Tot out of the picture, I began leaving the bedroom door open and allowing Jessie Lee to venture in. There was initially some hissing and spitting at each other. After all, it had been several years since they had been allowed any real contact with each other.  And I was concerned that Jessie Lee, being unaware that Sissy was deaf, might inadvertently cause a problem.

After a few weeks it was all going well. I think they somehow understood each other and Jessie Lee was aware of Sissy’s health and hearing issues. Sissy began coming out of the room more frequently, first into the hallway, and then gradually extending her roam into other rooms briefly before retreating back into her sanctuary.

By mid-June she was coming out more and sometimes staying out for lengthy periods of time, and often drinking from Jessie Lee’s water bowl and nibbling at the food bowl. Jessie Lee would simply watch while at the same time showing some kind of concern about this situation.

Things continued to deteriorate further in early July and it was clear that Sissy was nearing death.  She had been drinking huge amounts of water for quite some time, months, or maybe even a year. But suddenly she was eating less and looked like a walking skeleton. She would hover in the kitchen or near Jessie Lee’s bowls as if craving something but never getting it.  She was also sleeping a lot in the den under Sheldon’s desk rather than in her room. Over the past weekend I carried her back to the bedroom once, in my arms, and she was not purring.  That was the clearest sign of all that things were about to change yet again.

Monday morning, 9 July, I had a hunch it was time to take her to the vet. This was confirmed when she started walking back to the bedroom to use her litter box and suddenly lost control of her bladder and urinated on the hallway carpet before reaching the bedroom.

I forced myself to call the vet and schedule an 11:30 appointment. At 11:20 I scooped her up and got her into the carrier for the short trip to the vet.

Sheldon and I decided we would do the cremation this time. It was raining all morning and frankly I’ve dug enough cat holes for a lifetime. If I remember correctly, I think I had to bury Samantha in the wet ground. Why must cats die in the rain?

Sissy and I had a rather interesting conversation on the drive to the vet. A lot has changed with me over the past 20 years as well as Sissy. I’m not the same guy in his late 30s who welcomed her into this house. We are all getting older and we’re all dying. I just wanted Sissy to know this is what’s going on with all of us.

I held her in my arms in the exam room at the vet’s while waiting on the doctor. I put her on the floor once in order to sign some papers. She was so feeble she could barely walk and yet the curiosity regarding all this was still there. She had to sense on some level what was about to happen.

The doctor took her to prepare for the injection. She returned and asked if I wanted to spend some time with her but we had already said everything there was to say. I kissed her head and stroked it gently while the sleep drugs were going in.  Within five seconds she went limp. It is always the strangest sensation to be caressing a cat when that happens.

Her eyes were open, still green with peaceful life.

The final death drugs probably took the same amount seconds to kick in and extinguish all. The disappearance of life is so quick and strange. I bent over to give her a final kiss on the bridge of her nose, barely managed to mumble ‘I love you, baby girl,’ and her eyes were as dark as night.

onsdag 27 juni 2018

Hot wires and such

Sheldon goes to North Dakota for several days every summer to visit his family and I always take advantage of that time to embark on home improvement projects that he would likely forbid. He just returned last evening after six days and since he did not travel there last year I had a two year backlog of projects. It was an ambitious list and I actually accomplished more than I expected.

The first priority was to paint his bedroom. During the bathroom remodel last year there was a serious screw-up in the shower installation adjacent to one of the bedroom walls which required cutting out a huge piece of the wall to correct the error. They did repair the drywall and sprayed matching texture but it was never repainted. 

It has been several years since I painted the room in a blue-grey and so I had to find a close match. I went with one called ‘Lighthouse Shadows’ which is quite nice and a shade lighter than what was on the walls. Of course this necessitated repainting the entire room. I had to move a couple of things out and also pull the heavy bed away from a wall.

I started around 8:00 on Saturday morning and was done by 11:10. Only a few minor touch-ups remain where I dripped or accidentally got some on the white ceiling.

With the bed away from the wall I was ready to start another project — replacing all the electric receptacles as well as the light switches. For a long time I have wanted to do this throughout the house because I am not fond of the standard beige that is used in most homes, and with my Nordic design fetish, I insist on white.

I had doubt whether I would ever actually do this myself rather than have an electrician called in to tackle the project which would no doubt be costly as there are 35 receptacles and 17 light switches that I counted. The biggest priority was to replace the switches for the ceiling light and closet light and then the five receptacles in that bedroom. If I could do that successfully then I would have confidence in doing the remainder of the house at my leisure.

After watching a number of instructional videos online I was ready to begin. I shut off the power to that room and got my tools ready which included a flathead screwdriver, a Phillips screwdriver, needle nose pliers, and most importantly, a tool to check for voltage present in the wires which has proven to be an essential necessity for any project involving electricity.

In shutting off the power to the room I assumed that would cover the entire room. But I went round with my tester checking each wall outlet. When I got to the last one which was behind the bed I got a beep and a red light indicating voltage present. Wow! I didn’t expect that!

There is another room on the other side of that wall and apparently the circuit for that room includes that one outlet on the shared wall. Lesson learned: never assume anything. This was, however, not the biggest surprise I would experience.

I started with the light switch that controls the overhead light. I knew my first attempt was likely to take significantly longer and then I hoped once I got into a rhythm I could get these done in about 5-7 minutes which would make it theoretically possible to complete all 17 in the house over the weekend.

That first light switch was certainly a challenge. The incoming wires were secured with a clamp inside a small hole on the back of the receptacle and were impossible to pull out. I learned that you can release the clamp using a small screwdriver to press into an opening that would release the clamp and the wires could be pulled out. After struggling with that for several minutes I was finally successful.

I also noticed the old receptacle did not have a grounding screw like the new one. Two of the wires were attached using the push-in clamps and a 3rd one was attached to a screw so I assumed that must be the ground wire.

After wiring everything up and getting the receptacle secured to the wall I went out to turn on the power so I could test it.  There was light and I was proud of myself.

I shut off the power again and did the second light switch for the closet, and then decided to try one of the electric outlets on the wall.  That was was a bit more difficult as there were 4 wires plus a ground wire but I got it all done.

After switching the power back on I went to test everything. The overhead light still worked. Hitting the switch on the closet light did nothing. I tested with my voltage meter and got no reading. Then I tested the electric outlet that I had just replaced. Nothing. No power. I then removed the receptacles leaving only exposed bare wire and got no reading whatsoever with my voltage tester. Not only that, but every other outlet in the room was now dead except for the one that was on the adjacent room’s circuit.

I went to the bathroom to wash my hands and now there was no light in the bathroom either! Now I was completely frustrated and baffled and my progress came to an abrupt halt as did my self-esteem. The remainder of my day was spent troubleshooting this and double checking my wiring.

Sunday I had a friend come over to take a look. She is considerably more experienced with this kind of thing than I am, but she was also perplexed.

The master bath already had a pre-existing problem with a GFCI switch located in the garage that periodically shuts off power to the two bathroom outlets and most often happens during a storm. Restoring power is as simple as pressing a reset button on the GFCI but that wasn’t working for several months now. The electric razor and toothbrush have had to be charged in another room.

Knowing that I was already going to need an electrician to determine the cause of my existing problem I decided to go ahead and make an effort to replace the GFCI receptacle. I got that wired up and still no success with hitting the reset button. My friend checked that, tightened my ground screw, and suddenly the thing worked! Any bit of good news and success was welcome.

Meanwhile I was getting into a panic mode because the last thing I wanted was for Sheldon to return home on Tuesday and find a bunch of live wires hanging out of the wall in this bedroom, and especially after I had been instructed NOT to do ANY electrical work since I am not an electrician. That humiliation would be too much.

On Monday morning I was able to get in touch with an electrician who had availability at 11:30 for about an hour. I was apprehensive because I had no idea what the extent of the problem might be, or if it was something he could resolve in an hour.  

He arrived on time and I explained my problem. He took one look at the first light switch I wired up and said, “Well, there is a problem here.”

The only wire that had been connected to a screw terminal on the old switch that I assumed was a ground wire was actually a live wire meant to relay power down the line to other switches and outlets on the circuit, which included the bathroom light next door!

The electrician rewired that one, did the same with my closet light, and then checked the duplex receptacle I had wired up. Actually, that was the only one I had wired correctly!

He finished all of this in about 30 minutes, I turned the power back on and everything worked again! The ceiling light, closet light, and the receptacles all had power again. He was nice enough to explain my error and gave me some tips for continuing this project so that I don’t make these mistakes again.

While I understand the most basic things about electricity I never had a clue that one entry point into a room was the relay for everything else in the room.

Now it was Monday afternoon and I knew I had to finish the other our duplex receptacles within the next 24 hours. I got right on it. I did the second, third and fourth receptacles on this circuit. Sure enough, when I took out the fourth one which was the end of the run, there were only two wires plus a ground wire rather than four because that one had nowhere to relay to. It all made perfect sense now.

Then I shut off the power in the adjacent room for that one outlet behind the bed and rewired that one with a new receptacle, tested for voltage and it was all good. Just to be sure, before I moved the bed back against the wall I plugged in the Alexa assistant and nothing happened.  Fuck! At this point I was about ready to have a screaming fit.

I walked away from this for awhile to really ponder things and then wondered if perhaps Alexa had an ‘on’ button. She did! So everything was fine. I was never so happy to get that bed back into place and start making the room look normal again. 

Sometimes I can be so outrageously stupid and I will admit that I am completely incompetent when it comes to anything mechanical, although generally I do not struggle with off/on buttons on gadgets!  I am pathetic with assembly instructions, I can do next to nothing in terms of engine work or anything of that nature. Basically I can use a hammer, a screwdriver, and a drill. I can hang pictures. I can paint. And being queer I can have design ideas to die for. Anything else gets dicey. For example, I also wired up a new switch for the closet light in the master bedroom. I was a bit stunned when I finished and pressing the top of the paddle switch (normally the ‘on’ position) would actually turn the light off instead of on, and vice versa. Clearly I had mounted the damned thing upside down! So I had to fix that.

Last year when I was replacing all the door hardware with new knobs and hinges there were several instances where I mounted the hinges upside down and had to redo them. It’s embarrassing. 

Although I really wanted to have more light switches in the rest of the house completed before Sheldon’s return, I was thankful that at least his room was done before his return, and I am armed with the knowledge required to continue with the other rooms whenever I am ready.

It was an outrageously busy six days. Aside from painting the room and rewiring the electrics, I stained a wood shelf in the master closet and sprayed two coats of polyurethane finish. I’m not sure the difference was worth the effort. Originally my intent was to paint it white so it would match all the other shelves in the closet. But it was an interesting piece of wood and I wanted to try staining first. Now I am thinking I will paint the underside white and make it into a reversible shelf and then I can decide which looks nicer.

Another project was one that wasn’t on my original project list. It just popped into my head while I was painting the bedroom. I wanted to take down all the air vents from the ceiling, clean them, and repaint them white. I managed to get that done as well in between other projects. It was quite easy and quick to remove them, give them a wipe down or a scrub if needed (one of them in the kitchen was hideously filthy) and then quickly spray them white and let them dry. The drying phase took about 3 hours so I was free to resume work elsewhere while they dried.

What is interesting after all this is that I actually enjoy electrical work more so than most other projects. Plumbing comes to mind. I despise plumbing and have absolutely no desire to attempt it. If Sheldon ever goes away for a few days and returns to find new faucets in the kitchen and baths there will be no doubt whatsoever that I hired a professional.

Meanwhile, during this project, nine more door handles arrived so I can resume that project of replacing the door knobs that I only installed late last summer.


Someday this will all be just the way I want it.

Sargon and Thalassa