Oatmeal or Cookies — Cooking in the Land of the ADHD

So the oatmeal was taking forever.  I figured five or ten more minutes might be needed to mush the stuff up right. Too long.  I poured Cocoa Puffs into a bowl. I added extra Reese’s Puffs. The problem of the oatmeal was solved, with the addition of a little almond milk.

Then I went to the Blue Room. The education blog was running over five-hundred visits a day. The password problem remained unsolved. I made a list, trying to get a fix on what I needed to do.

In the meantime, silently in  the background, cooking went on. The oatmeal perked away on low single burner.  And perked. And perked.  And perked.

I think I made a cookie. I’m not sure what it is. If I had known I was making a cookie, I would have thrown in chocolate chips. It’s not burnt. Like the planet Mercury, it’s just a little short of water. I will try to solve this problem tomorrow.

Cooking in the land of the ADHD.

Zombie Phrase for the Day: Use the low burner. Ooooozeduhhh ohhhddurdner.

 

 

Passwords — a Pharmaceutical Industry Plot

O.K. I have five numbers and five symbols. Not good enough. I throw in some letters. Weak, I am told. Hell, nobody could remember this combination for more than 5 minutes. By the time I get to strong, I had better have the damn thing recorded. Because a million monkeys plunking keys for a million years may never hit on that combination.

Then I have to tell the security sites behind the site what I have done. I don’t even know why the last one stopped working. I mean, I wrote the bastard down. Did I create a new one and leave no record of that effort? If so, I did it in the last day or two, a sobering thought. But I don’t think so.

I have decided the Prozac nation wants to make sure I am taking my Prozac like a good girl. Faceless foes inside the pharmaceutical industry are gaslighting me. But their latest clever attempt to drive me insane will fail. If teaching in a school taken over by the incredibly competent State of Illinois did not drive me insane, I am probably sane for life. Or I slipped over the edge and I’ll never know.

But, damn, I hate passwords. I also hate those patronizing programmers who think I need between eight and fourteen digits-symbols-numbers-letters-etc. to get my password right. I promise not to use my dog’s name, but can we please let me take a few chances in life? It’s my life.

Or it ought to be.

Zombie Phrase for the Day:  Where did I put my purse? Aehhrrrrduh uhhhhhhhbuhdddbuhh buhrrzzzz?

 

Cars Should Not Drive Themselves

(Please don’t sue  me Potterverse. I don’t actually know where I got this picture. If I ever get more than a few hundred readers a day, I’ll replace it. But it’s perfect.)

Can we take the humans out of the equation? Yes, we can.  But in the end, cars fail, like toasters and refrigerators fail — and they fail a good deal more often. The damn things are filled with parts, and parts, readers, are trouble. Suddenly, a flashing engine light makes you spend hundreds of dollars to find out you have a broken flashing engine light. Or the gas gauge says empty when you know the tank is full.

I know from experience and my parent’s car that a plucky human can keep barreling down the road without gas and with that pesky engine light warning of impending doom, a doom years in the coming that still has not arrived. Like Penny, I just put the key in the slot and dare fate.  Somebody told dad not to worry unless the engine light turned from yellow to red.

He is planning to fix the car — again! – shortly.

But let’s forget engine-light car.  Let’s remember ancient Sable.  Ancient Sable needed four alternators, if memory serves me, and kept depositing me by the side of the road or in a random parking lot until I finally switched to Japanese cars for life.

We cannot put our cars in their own driver’s seats.  When cars go bad, there’s no turning back.  Bammm!! Suddenly, we have one less tree to make oxygen for us all, one more air bag exploding in our faces, and what have we gained from our latest attempt to work less? Most likely a lesson in human hubris.

Just because you can does not mean you should.

Eventually, all toasters fail. This morning, look at your toaster. Then go look under the hood of your car. Ask yourself how much you want to trust technology.

A Public Service Announcement from the Blue Room.

P.S. If you want to buy that car that warns you when other cars are too close, absolutely go for it. Just be sure to listen and look outside — and not just at the screen.  With enough time and treachery, I could put zombies on that screen. Think about your past auto repair bills, too.

 

Who Are the Victims? Who Are You?

Do we know what this is?  Do we know what lurks inside the vats?

Zombie fiction at its best raises ambiguities to ponder. Is the CDC our friend? In a worst case scenario, will the CDC be our friend? How will America respond to a crisis? Will America respond to a crisis?

In our PC times, how much trouble can we get into for coming down on the wrong side of the equation? I want to take a moment to pose an important zombie question: Are we too damn dumb to sustain a necessary quarantine? When the virus takes hold, will we try to put borders around that virus? Or, as my mom said when I told her I needed to vacuum, will we say, “Oh, no, dear. Just open the door and let the breezes in.”

???

Let’s be clear: The POTUS has created a porous and peculiar attempt at a quarantine with his travel ban. It reminds me of an Israeli official describing U.S. airport security measures after 9/11: “The Americans haven’t made travel safe. They have made it annoying.” The travel ban’s too steeped in politics and prejudice, I’d say.

But a little big-picture thinking might be useful here. What will we do if the POTUS has to impose a quarantine due to a broken vial of smallpox and some random judge in Seattle or Hawaii declares his action to be legally inadequate, shutting down that quarantine? If the best answer we can come up with is “Die with our Civil Rights intact!” we might want to pause a bit.  Someone has to be able to say, “Shut down the roads into Cleveland.” That someone logically should be the POTUS. We could hand the responsibility to the CDC, but I’d guess they are already pretty thoroughly embedded in the loop. Also, military structures of command exist because someone must take charge in an emergency.

I am sure readers are thinking, “But this is not an emergency!” I hear you out here. But what if it were? When judges all across America can stop putative emergency measures, we had better hope the dead don’t rise. Or the vial doesn’t fall. Or some crazy guy in North Korea can’t get his missile across the ocean. Or his emissary with the bottle of who-knows-what-nerve-agent doesn’t reach Chicago’s water supply.

Just because you are paranoid, doesn’t mean they are not out to get you. Just because you not even worried most of the time doesn’t mean they are not out to get you, either. We are a wild and diverse species, and we should not underestimate our ability to screw feral pooches.

Coming to you from Zombieland in the Blue Room, where reality penetrates at the oddest times in the oddest ways. Just food for thought.

This post was going to be about unionism.    Image result for smile icon free   Something went wrong.

Done. What now?

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The best thing about retirement is a sense of “done.” Done has a feel. Done has a texture. The cake is baked, the zombie has been dismembered and burned.

I can read in peace. I can ignore the news. I can write silly haikus about cooking shows. I can write dialogs with Shasta the Invisible Slug. If I don’t tap that button the commits me to sub, I can read through the middle of the night and turn off all the alarms.

More importantly, when technology decides to act like the Russians diabolically hacked it for no reason, I have TIME. I can recreate the stupid password.  I can google solutions for my latest quandary.  I can try to get organized — and then decide that organization, a forever work in progress, can be postponed again.

I have been too busy for too long. My parents had the right idea. Bourbon and Seven-Up in the backyard with friends. Walking around lakes with friends. Reading useless stories where the plucky humans kinda-sorta survive the zombie apocalypse.

Zombie phrase for the day: You have to believe in yourself.

Oooohaahbbbuhweeve uhnn uhhhelllll.

Government by Telepathy

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Mind Control! Landru is real!

“What the President meant to say was …”

How do Fox commentators know? How do Sean or Kellyanne know? Do the Russians know? Will the Russians share? Who knows? Is Julian Assange human? What secrets have the Ecuadorians been  hiding? Does Ecuador exist? Have you been to Ecuador, reader? How many people do you know who claim direct experience with this mysterious place, Ecuador?

Personally, what I think the POTUS meant to say was that we have to go to a single-payer healthcare system because the current plans cannot be sustained economically while offering the benefits of Obamacare. The Obamacare plans could not be sustained economically.  That’s what gave the telepaths an excuse — actually good and necessary reason — to take on the Leviathan named Healthcare.

Zombie phrase for the day:   Ecuador does not exist.

Gahhhdohhhzzz nahhhggssihhhidd.

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