Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Ode to Needles

Small

Thin

Almost invisible 

Yet so 

Powerful.

The driving force

Behind so much

Beauty

From flags of nations

To prom dresses and saris

To curtains and pillows and bedsheets

To baby bonnets

And baseball gloves.

Needles




Friday, January 27, 2023

Letting Go and Autonomous AI

One of the guys in my group at work quit this week, and as a result, my manager is re-assigning and redefining roles on our team, which is good. I am going to hand over a chunk of my current responsibilities to my colleague, to expand her internal resume. I am excited for her and I am happy to hand this work over. 

I don't want to be in Disaster Recovery for the rest of my career. In order to move on, I need to move out first. If I want a new role and new responsibilities, I need to let go of the current ones.

The challenge is I am letting go before my new role and responsibilities are clearly defined. I feel like I am a trapeze artist flying in the air, moments after letting go of one swing and before I catch the other. I am open and available, flying and free.

One of the projects I might be working on is setting up a Chatbot and then AI Operations, AI Ops for short. Both of these sounds really cool and would be great growth opportunities. I started taking an online UW Coursera class on Autonomous AI. I've heard from friends that AI is mostly calculus and probability, both of which I've studied extensively in college a million years ago. A million years ago; however, we did not have the computing and programming power to pull off AI. Now we do. 

I was really excited to take this four week course. I was a week and a half into the class and it was awesome. I was having so much fun taking the class. It was light and fluffy, showing how Frito Lay uses Autonomous AI to make Cheetos. The instructor on the videos is super engaging and fun. I was loving it.

Until yesterday, when I hit the brick wall of hard core engineering. OMG it was like learning a foreign language, with a bunch of acronyms and videos embedded in the video if I didn't know what PID and MCL meant.

While flying through the air between swings can be fun, there is also an element of terror at times. This is one of those times where it is best to push through the chapters even though I don't fully understand, and then loop back to pick up the rest, and have faith that it will all work out.

Monday, January 23, 2023

Hamlet and Harry and Eleanor Owen

I bought Spare. It should arrive tomorrow.

In case you have been living under a rock, Spare is the Prince Harry's memoir.

Initially, I wasn't going to read it because I thought it was going to be stupid and I am a snob and I didn't want to read some schlocky celebrity memoir. Then, I read The New Yorker review, which favorably compared Spare to Hamlet

I was not expecting that.

(I am not expecting Spare to end in a bloody massacre, but maybe it will end with a metaphorical massacre, like people get cancelled, the modern day version of murder. Instead a poison sword, people get the sharp end of a poisoned pen.)

Harry's ghostwriter is J.R. Moehringer, and it sounds like he is a really good writer. Rebecca Mead, the reviewer for the New Yorker, loved most of the book but she said it drags in parts where Harry has to talk about every single insult from the British press. Other than that, she said the rest of the book is well written.

This reminds me of my friend Eleanor Owen who died last year at 101. First, she was a Shakespeare fiend. She knew the complete works inside and out. I'd love to get her take on Spare. It also makes me think about her own memoir, The Gone Room. I read dozens of drafts of chapters of Eleanor's memoir before it was self-published, and I loved the bits and pieces. We would share pages of our writing via email and then a week later, we would meet for lunch at her beautiful old house in Roanoke Park and have homemade lentil soup.

The story takes place during the Depression as Eleanors mother support's her eight children on the farm in Upstate New York after her unstable husband disappears. In my mind, Eleanor's story is about a strong-willed and resilient matriarch's forgiveness of her daughter. Eleanor was responsible for watching her younger brother when he was hit by a train and died. 

What could have been a beautifully written tragic tale of forgiveness got lost in Eleanor telling too many stories about the names of her chickens on the farm.

Okay, that is a bit of an exaggeration and I love Eleanor. Nevertheless, she could have used a ghostwriter who would have taken her beautiful life and her beautiful words and make into a beautiful story. 

Likewise, Harry's "ghost"writer (get it? "ghost" writer like ghost in Hamlet who is Hamlet's dad who tells him to kill Claudius...) had this beautiful story of the second son, and then the second son wants to rant about the press and how he got frostbite on his wanker and all of this random shit. I want to read the Director's Cut version of the book, you know, sans interruption from the subject himself, naming all of the chickens.

One of my friends from India used to read a lot of British literature and history, and she had different perspective on British and American history than I did. 

"America was created by the second and third sons of the British aristocracy. They couldn't inherit land, so they left in England to find their fortune and then they formed the United States," she told me. This version was skipped over in U.S. textbooks in favor of the Pilgrims and religious freedom. 

In that context, it makes sense that Harry, the Spare, moves to the U.S. like the other second sons who crossed the Atlantic centuries ago.

Alright, the real reason I want to read this: I want to see exactly how messed up the Royal Family is. After sending my own kid to treatment and getting a divorce, I want to see how it could be worse.

Honestly, I think the elephant in the room in the late queen. I am not spilling any secrets here--I've seen a few episodes of The Crown--the woman had some control issues, kind of by definition because she was the queen. And it wasn't just her, but the whole idea of "This is how things are done." That is the opposite of peace and freedom and serenity. The only way to survive in that environment is to act in, act out, or to get out.

I also feel for the Royal Family, not because they are royal, but because they are a family and sometimes families are really messed up. Harry went to therapy after his mother died, and probably isn't too different than the kids at Pedro's boarding school. They got there because they were troubled, and then the families had to face with their own dysfunctions. According to Pedro, the kids who got better were the ones whose parents did their own work, who faced their own faults and flaws. Those whose parents blamed the kids for their own problems struggled because their parents never took responsibility for their own actions.

Harry is calling bullshit on his family. I feel for King Charles, having his son call him out and everyone else out. I get it. I've been there, with my kids calling me on my crap. When I didn't listen, they yelled and screamed and acted out and got louder and louder. When I sat quietly and listened, they felt seen and heard. Writing a book about your messed up family is screaming.

I am curious to read about this, and see how it all turns out.

Saturday, January 21, 2023

Divorce Funerals and Saturday Night Freak Out and Art

The world should have divorce funerals, like a wedding, but the opposite. It would be a way to honor the end of a relationship, whether the relationship ended amicably or badly. There is a Netflix series Uncoupled about an Indian couple divorcing. They had a ceremony with friends and family that "celebrated" their amicable separation. For those that have difficult or toxic relationships end, there can be an event without the other spouse present.

I wonder if this would provide a healthy sense of closure, and allow us to wish our ex-spouses well. My friend has been divorced for three years, and she just heard word that her ex is doing remarkably well. He got sober and has a great new job and a stable girlfriend. I was like "Oh my god isn't that just the worst! He finally got his head out of his ass after you divorced him? Why couldn't he do that when you were married?"

Her reply: "I am happy for him." 

And she was, no bullshit. My greatest fear is that my ex would do a 180 after I got divorced and all of the things that used to bug me about him would be resolved, that he would see the light. So why is that my fear? Shouldn't I just wish him well and hope his life goes well? I don't wish him misery or to fall prey to alcoholism and disaster. Even without me in his life, I wish him well.

The hardest part of divorce for me is Saturday nights. Saturday nights are like a weekly Valentine's Day, where people couple up. For a middle aged woman like me, a majority of my friends are either married or dating or have children at home. Every other day or night of the week is open for friends. Not so much Saturdays.

I need to get over my freak out about Saturday nights, and just view it as a regular time. Sometimes I have plans, but not always. The ironic part is so often the rest of my week is jam packed, that Saturday nights are the few times I have to spend by myself. I should enjoy this time to work on projects or cook or read or make a fire or take a bath and just relax. See? Doesn't that sound nice? Why do I need to convince myself of that? I've actually had fun going to dinner alone, sitting at the counter. I've met some interesting folks, many visiting Seattle from out of town. 

On another note, this afternoon I bought some art at the gallery in my neighborhood.

Because I wanted to.

Because my dad said I should treat myself.

One painting reminds me of my mom. It is a really cool picture of flowers scanned and called "Remembering Grandma." When I saw the picture online, I immediately knew I wanted it, both for the picture and the title.

The other painting, "Nesting in Red," resonated with me and my new life after divorce. It is a monolith, where the artists creates a painting on plexiglass, and then puts paper on top and sends it through a press. (Watch the artist in action in the video at the bottom of the page.) This is process super risky -- the result after pressing the plexiglass and the paper together could be beautiful or a mess. So much like life, eh? This painting has a red background with a cheerful yellow and black bird near a flower arrangement. I feel like I am the bird, floating in space. I can't tell if the bird is coming or going, giving or taking. Maybe I am the bird. A friend of mine said after her sister died at too young of an age, that even though she was grieving, the birds were still singing. Divorced or married or single or whatever, I am still me. I am still moving and breathing and living.

Just like the bird.

Blue Space

I was at a little self-care seminar this week. There was the usual stuff (drink water, get enough sleep, eat whole foods) but there was a term I had never heard before: blue space.

Dr. Dae talked about the healthy benefits of connecting with nature. As a city-dweller who used to live near a fifty acre woods, I now live downtown with lots of tall buildings and shops and people, but not a forest. I believe that dense urban living can save rural spaces and farmland and forests, so I am not at all anti-urban. Cities allow other spaces to be preserved instead repurposed for human habitat. Yet, I get anxious at times living in the city when I know it is better for my mental and spiritual health to connect with nature. In the seminar, I asked the question, how can I connect with nature when I live and work in a city?

Dr. Dae said simply getting outside and going to parks is a way for urbanites to connect with nature. Even getting stepping outdoors and looking at the sky is connecting with nature. I am fortunate enough that my condo has a courtyard that is filled with plants, and those plants bring birds and bunnies (and rats and raccoons...) Still, my beautiful courtyard is not the same as Ravenna Park. I miss walking Fox along the creek.

Then she mentioned the benefits of blue space: connecting with water.

Bingo! I was thrilled to hear that water counts as nature. I know that sounds crazy that I am shocked that water counts as "nature," because who doesn't love a water view? Many big cities are centered around water, whether it is an ocean, a lake, a bay, or a river. Downtown Seattle is centered around the Puget Sound. My condo has a view of the water. While I don't have a sweeping view, I can see the Sound from my desk and my dining room. I live close enough that I can walk along the waterfront. I am getting my dose of nature.

Saturday, January 7, 2023

C-bus and Brigadoon

My father and I buried my mother a week ago, and I am still in Ohio, as life returns to normal. We had a big post-funeral road bump when my father became ill with an infection. I've had three people say it is normal to get sick after a stressful event. The immune system is in overdrive when we are under pressure. As soon as we relax, so do our internal defenses and wham--germs have a field day.

I'd been driving my dad back and forth to the hospital, listening to the radio in Columbus, now called "C-bus" by teens, hipsters and newscasters. Either "Columbus" is too hard to pronounce or more likely, Ohioans discovered their namesake Christopher Columbus was exceptionally violent man, inclined to torture and pedophilia, much more so than other European explorers who sailed across oceans hundreds of years ago.

So am driving around C-bus, listening to the radio. My dad has news radio dialed in in his car, and damn it I wanted to listen to music. I found five or six stations, and each was playing songs from when I was in middle school, high school or college, or earlier.

It was like I driving in Brigadoon, where C-bus radio was trapped in the past by a few decades. It is as if when I left, the radio stations stayed the same. Eighty percent of the songs were by groups like Culture Club, Phil Collins, Van Halen, Aerosmith, AC/DC, and a bunch of one hit wonders, like 'Til Tuesday. I heard one song each from Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran. That was it. I wanted to start taking notes, tracking the songs and the every, and then conducting some kind of analysis to see if my intuition it rooted in fact. 

My senior year of high school, the school musical was Brigadoon. Where they trying to tell me something, like you can leave, but we will never change? Is my hometown like a fictional Scottish village that appears once a century?

Friday, January 6, 2023

Death and Life in Slow Motion

Watching someone 

live with Alzheimer's 

is like watching them 

die in slow motion. 

The mind goes 

the body stays. 

We say good-bye

long before 

she leaves the earth.