Archive for April, 2012

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As the limit approaches infinity

April 21, 2012

I went to a friend’s ballet performance last weekend. It was lovely, interesting, and innovative. At last year’s performance, she was awesome but this year was even better. And this year, she did some of the choreography which was vibrant and spectacular.

Now, my ballet dance friend is not defined by her significant other (she’s also an engineer, she’s hard to define in lots of ways). So it is a little odd to say how much she’s gained in confidence since she broke up with her old boyfriend and found a man who treats her as though she’s amazing. Which she is.

He’s applied his interest in photography to her ballet, taking pictures of rehearsals and shows. He goes to all of her performances. He’s successful enough in his own right to be proud of her success. It shows in how he treats her.

I’m happy for my friend because I have a husband like that. He’s so supportive of what I want to do that it seems I have no limits in his eyes.

Do you know how annoying that is? Do you have any idea? Maybe not. Not everyone gets to have a partner like this. Which is sad.

The annoying problem is that when someone else believes you can do anything you set your mind to, you have to limit yourself. I hate having to admit I can’t do something. Or even that I just don’t want to put in the effort to figure out if I can or cannot. It might be easier to have someone say, “Well, sure you could write a book but, it’d be a lot of work, do you really think you can make such a commitment?” instead of “Heck, yeah, go for it.”

As far as problems go, I admit this is not one I’d trade for anything else.

My friend is considering leaving her dance company. And she keeps being asked if she is going to start her own. With her old boyfriend, she would have had to say she couldn’t afford it since he didn’t contribute much to their finances. Today, she said she didn’t want to pay for it. She had to admit her own desires, to think about what she wants, and choose the means to get there.

It is hard work to choose the path as well as walk it. Not that I’m really complaining; I’m happy for my friend that she finally has this burden as well.

 

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The Red Queen said

April 21, 2012

Off with his head!

Well, that too. More importantly, in the Red Queen’s race in Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass, the Red Queen said,

It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place.

I feel that way. I don’t mind that the pace of technology goes on, I like to learn new things. And since my specialization is generally a growing field, the stuff I know is valuable and stays that way. It is everything else that makes me worry about the speed of my treadmill.

Everything else in this case is probably Twitter. I have a serious love/hate relationship with Twitter. It is mostly hate though. I feel like I don’t get it. Maybe everyone else gets something better out of the so-called Twitterverse than I do. What I seem to find looking at my Twitter feed is that I’m never, ever doing enough.

I want to go to the RobotGrrl’s robot parties but I never make it. I want to go to the IEEE talks on open source robots or Bluetooth or medical technology but when 7:30pm rolls around I’m happy on the couch with a book and can of champagne. I see people giving talks all the time. Developers promoting their spiffy new app or building an awesome gadget in their free time. Folks traveling to China or France or Africa. I see hackathons and meetups. New books for technologies I’ve never heard of, or worse, books on programming languages or techniques that I want to read but can’t make myself get the oomph.

Everyone has something going on all the time. Twitter is like an endless desert of billboards, each promoting some person doing something fantastic. It makes me think that my billboards are not enough, that I can’t ever keep up.

Part of me knows this is ridiculous. I wrote a book, I have a couple patents, I have a small but reasonably successful company, I am very good at what I do and I get things done. I contribute to a women-in-tech blog and I co-host a lunch every other week for entrepreneurs (specifically women but we’ve never limited it, just failed to invite any men). I occasionally volunteer to talk to classrooms and almost always get invited back. I do conference presentations a couple times a year. I’m a good friend to at least five people. I’m a good wife to one and only one person. My pets are happy, my house is complimented often and my neighbors cheerfully say hello. My cooking isn’t excellent but I bake a mean cookie and awesome pizza. I exercise regularly, occasionally enthusiastically. I’m going on an epic road trip soon.

For the most part, I’m quite happy. But I get the idea that I’m falling behind because everyone is doing something more. I know it is an illusion but that doesn’t stop it from stinging sometimes.  Maybe I should just follow @horse_ebooks and @uberfacts instead of all the amazing people going out there and doing things.

Part of succeeding at a race is knowing where the finish line is… where is the destination? In the Twitter race, there isn’t one. And if there was, it wouldn’t be only one but a multitude of destinations. I know better than to compare myself to strangers but there is something about Twitter that brings out my impostor syndrome.

 

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Packing list

April 21, 2012

Food stuffs

  • Cold ice chest: powered by car and augmented by ice packs.
    • Sliced cheese
    • Some drinks
    • Jam
    • Ice pack
    • Odwalla kids smoothies
  • Insulated cooler for things we don’t want to get super hot (i.e. food bars)
    • Food bars for me (breakfast)
    • Emergency food bars for C
    • Peanut butter packets (actually almond butter packets)
    • Apples? Some sort of fruit
    • Sliced bread
    • Frozen waters
  • Other foods
    • Case of water, some orange-mango juices
    • Crackers
    • Animal cookies
    • Ginger snaps
    • Freeze dried fruit packets
    • Oatmeal (and brown sugar)
    • Cereal- brown rice crispies and honey nut Cheerios
    • Canned tuna
    • Mac and cheese
  • Other
    • Knives, forks, paper plates, napkins (paper towels?)
    • Doggie cleanup bags for trash
    • Travel mug for E

Gadetry

  • Camera + charger, lenses, monopod, backpack
  • Cell phones (2)
  • Lytro camera + USB cable
  • Small camera + charger
  • Fitbit charger (Fitbits are implied)
  • Wifi keyboard
  • Enough computing equipment to fill an Apple store + chargers
  • Kindle + charge cable
  • Aux hard drive
  • Small telescope
  • Binoculars
  • Power inverter and octopus power strip
  • Headphones (3 pair)
  • Drum pad and sticks
  • Small watercolor kit
  • Sketchpad + colored pencils

Clothes (traveling)

  • 10 unders each
  • 2 pair jeans each
  • 1 pair shorts each
  • 2 knee length skirts E
  • 3 short sleeve tshirts
  • 4 long sleeve things (2 sweater/sweatshirt, 2 tshirt)
  • E brown coat
  • E black windbreaker
  • C jacket: rain jacket
  • C jacket: leather
  • C fedora
  • E wide brimmed had
  • Baseball caps (2)
  • Swimsuit for each
  • Knit gloves for E

Being-there clothes

  • 2 button shirts for C
  • Slacks for C
  • Extra pants for each
  • Casual dress for E
  • 2 dressy blouses for E
  • (No tie for C, no little black dress for E)
  • Belt for C

Shoes

  • E Hiking sandals
  • E brown sandals
  • E tennis shoes
  • E tab dress shoes
  • C dress blacks
  • C tennis shoes
  • C hiking boots

Car stuff

  • Fuzzy green shawl
  • Emergency kit- silver blankets, flares, jumper cables, first aid, etc.
  • Hiking first aid kit
  • 2 Pillows
  • AAA membership card, TripTik, region books and assorted maps
  • Tire inflator?
  • Seat belt cutter and window smasher
  • Hand lotion
  • Large maglite
  • Picnic blanket
  • Sunscreen
  • Towel (?)

Drugs

  • Advil
  • Tylenol
  • Zantac
  • Prevacid
  • Allergy meds: Claritin, Benadryl, Benadryl gel
  • Cough drops (sugar free and not)
  • Prescriptions
  • Dramamine?

Bathroom bag

  • Fully stocked plus shaving cream and razors
  • Hair brush
  • Ear plugs

Soaps

  • Laundry detergent
  • Dish washing soap
  • Pump hand sanitizer
  • Sanitizer towelettes

 

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Most to coast

April 20, 2012

Is it considered trying too hard if we go to Santa Cruz on Saturday so the trip is really coast to coast?

 

We can say that the trip starts on Saturday, spend the night at home in San Jose and then head off to Flagstaff on Sunday. It adds a whole day to the trip but it means going to the beach. Sure, it is a Saturday but it is April, long before the boardwalk gets crowded. With an expected temperature of 84F, a day at the beach can’t possibly be bad. Unless I get sunburned. Even then, the day at the beach will still be lovely.

 

Also, does combining sand from the west coast with east coast sand create a giant explosion, possibly causing the end of the world? Just asking.

 

 

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Dogs and cats living together

April 19, 2012

Dear Jennifer,

Thank you for house and pet sitting! We hope you enjoy spending time with the dogs and cats. We aren’t insane pet parents so as long as everyone is ok when we get home, it is all fine with us. However, I’ll write up a note on them so you know what you are getting in to.

Thanks!

Elecia & Christopher

Introduction

We have two dogs (Zoe and the Bear):

Zoe is an 8 year-old beagle (right). She doesn’t howl but she’s got all the other beagle traits (“merrily stubborn” means she’s happy but she thinks we are idiots). Bear is a 7 year-old maltese-poodle cross (moodle? maltipoo?). He’d love to be carried in a purse and he’s genetically engineered to crave laps.

We also have two black cats. This one is Anakin.

This one is Dylan.

It is easy to tell them apart, Ani is small and fuzzy and has white whiskers, Dylan is a little Jabba-the-Hut-esque. Oh, and Ani will be running away from you. She does not like people at all. If you sit quietly on the couch, she may deign to let you pet her or, more likely, she’ll groom you. Dylan will do anything for you if you feed him.

Food

Bear and Zoe get separated for feeding because Zoe doesn’t like letting Bear eat. Zoe gets two scoops twice a day in her crate. Bear gets one scoop twice a day but won’t eat all of it. They start dancing around 6:30pm, demanding their dinner. We try not to give in until 7pm but that is mostly because watching Bear dance is highly amusing. They can also have assorted treats and cookies (atop their crate). They don’t get goodies very often but you are welcome to spoil them.

Ani and Dylan get fed at night, usually after the dogs get put in their crate. We feed them on top of their kitty tree so the dogs to munch their food. Fill their bowl to the top (but not overflowing).  Dylan will try to convince you that is not enough. But it is. Really. But if his mind control works, you’ll find wet food in the kitchen cabinet marked Pet Food.

As for water, all of the pets drink out of the bowl in the living room. Zoe is a sloppy drinker, sometimes needing a mop up after. Bear shouldn’t drink 1.5hours before his bedtime (usually between 10-11pm). If the dogs drink a lot of water after playing, they will barf it up so if it seems like someone (usually Zoe) is drinking a lot of water in one sitting, it is usually prudent to ask her to sit down and take a breath. Which she’ll ignore (she’s a beagle) so usually we tie her to a table or something. Bear will often cough or quack like a goose when he drinks. Don’t worry about it.

Activities

The dogs spend a fair amount of time tied to or encaged in the furniture. We often shut the doors to the living room or tuck their leashes in the coffee table drawers so they don’t roam the house. They’d like to eat trash and cat poo. They do the latter in the backyard and we pretend not to notice. If you are home, the backyard is a fine place to let them hang out as long as they don’t start barking a lot. Do feel free to kick them off a lounge chair and hang out yourself. The umbrellas are easy to work. Zoe may bring you a tennis ball, she can have about 4 throws before she starts to get too into it and injures herself. Just throw it into the cypress tree or tuck it inside when she isn’t looking. She’ll keep searching for it but that will make her tired, not hurt, so it is ok.

If you aren’t home and it is daytime, feel free to put them in their kennel. As you can see, it isn’t exactly a hardship. Zoe knows the word kennel (of course, she’s a beagle so knowing what you want and doing it really aren’t the same for her). But she likes it and will usually happily go in. There are bowls for water in there.

The cats are allowed to roam the house (excluding our bedroom and office). Dylan likes to sleep in the bathroom closet. Ani in the hall closet. They recharge their solar cells in the wood paneled room. Ani has no desire to go outside but Dylan occasionally wants to munch on some grass and will sneak out with the dogs. We’ve taught him that out means to get out of this room. Since he thinks the outside is a wonderful playroom, saying, “OUT!” will usually get him back inside. But so will picking him up (lift with your legs!) and taking him back inside.

The dogs also go for walks, we usually take a left from our driveway and walk around the block (not crossing the streets). They both wear halters to walk. Zoe is not the best walker, she would like to sniff everything but if you are moving, so will she. Bear usually only stops if he wants to do something. Baggies are atop their crate. Two or three of these round-the-blocks spaced out through the a day is enough to keep them sleeping for the most part, especially if there is a lounge chair involved.

Finally, Zoe and Bear will play fight but we’ve never seen them really fight. You can tell they are playing by the tails and the fact that Zoe lies on the ground so Bear has better leverage.

Sleeping

Bear and Zoe would like to sleep with you. If you opt to sleep on the couch, that is fine with us (I’ve slept on the couch plenty of times, it is pretty comfy but so is the bed). If you opt to sleep in bed, well, then they get to sleep in their crate. They sleep together in there. Bear sometimes wakes up and barks. On the crate door are the bark collars for both of them. You can put Bear’s on him before you go to bed. He seems to go through spurts where he’ll wake up early and bark so I tend to leave it off, groggily put it on at 4am and then make him sleep in it for a couple days. Extra batteries and spray are atop the crate. Leaving the bark collars on the crate door does provide some level of deterrent though I often forget to turn them on.

Zoe wears her normal collar to bed but Bear sleeps in the buff (his halter will give him mats).

Bathroom

The kitty litter is in the front bathroom. It is scoop litter, nothing special. The black bin is for trash so it goes there. The grey bin is for recyclables.

Both dogs will let you know when they need to potty by wandering around a lot or getting hyper. Bear will scritch at the door. He hasn’t had an accident in a long, long time but since he was the last one to have one, well, he’ll always live with the stigma.

Medical issues

Bear will often shiver. The shivering is not a sign that he’s cold. Or scared. It is all about manipulating his way into your lap.

Bear sometimes skips when he walks (his back leg). If he’s doing it a lot, cut back on the walks. (Or if Zoe is limping.) Zoe tends to get too excited and hurt her shoulder, back, or tail. (She actually had a bad sprain due to wagging too hard, oh to be a dog!) If she’s heavily limping, give her an anti-inflammatory pill (Previcox). There is a green container in the Pet Food kitchen cupboard along with liver snack pouches. But you shouldn’t need these.

The dogs clean bill of health is on the fridge.

Dylan’s nose is occasionally snotty and he’s not great at grooming himself.

Commands and personality

Zoe is very smart and kind of tricksy. She’ll sneak out of a room to go back and get a snack. She understand object permanence and kind of enjoys puzzles (beef jerky in boxes taped closed).

While she’s gotten better at it, especially if you make a show of giving Bear a treat, Zoe does not usually come when called. Don’t let her off leash. If she escapes, take a yummy treat, show it to her and then run into an enclosed area. It is like a game of tag… if you are “it”, she’ll run from you. But if you convince her that she’s “it”, she’ll run toward you.

Bear is not very smart. He’s relied on his cuteness too much.

Command Supposed Action Known by Zoe Known by Bear
Sit (hold fist out, possibly put cookie in fist) Sit Y Y
Stay Stay Y N
Down (point down) Lie down Y Sometimes
Roll over As expected Y, requires visible treat N
Wave Will wave at you N Y
Shake Shake your hand N Y
No Stop what you are doing, look guilty Sometimes Sometimes
Leave it Quit eating that, stop licking yourself (or each other) Sometimes Sometimes
Potty Um, well, go potty. Y Y, but he likes to find just the right spot by circling
Come (crouch, clapping hands to knees) Come back No Y

The house

You’ve got keys to the back door and front (or will soon). We talked about alarms and neighbors.

I showed you the TV remote, mostly push help if it didn’t do what you want. And open the cabinet doors so the remote can talk to the receiver.

The thermostat is on in the dining area.

I put new sheets on top of the bed and there is another set in a box under the bed. There is a plant in the master bedroom which I thought was a miraculous no-water-needing plant but apparently C waters it every few days.

I’ve put post-it notes on the Pet Food, Forks, Cups and Plates cupboards. We usually put trash under the sink and recyclables in the blue bin. Zoe would love to eat people food. You give a dog bacon once in her life and she’s sure that is all you ever eat.

The WiFi password is on the fridge with the dog’s vet info.

If something goes wrong

You have our phone numbers and my mother-in-law’s. Email or text is easy, do feel free to send us pics of the pets.

There is some cash on the dining table in case we forgot to buy enough food or what not.

If things aren’t working out, take them to Paws Crossing at 901 Dell Avenue, Campbell. Get them a shared room and give us a call.

In case of emergency, take them to Kirkwood Animal Hospital, in the same shopping center as Starbucks and Nob Hill. They are under White. The vet’s number is (408) 374-5850.