Saturday, May 02, 2020

Saturday Cats And Flowers

Today I focussed on practicing working to the calendar - an ability I'm going to need as I assume multiple leadership roles in Toastmasters and elsewhere. I'm using Google Calendar as my basic camera, with some real-world extensions for activity lists as I drive around, as this is much moer convenient than the cellphone calendar.
The day was often wet, but I got my walk in anyway, going up to the bank to deposit a check and looking at flowers on the way back.
I was delighted to read that a program I'd worked on last month is now on the Bar website and for sale:
Cultural Heritage Protections in US and International Law
I had gotten an inquiry about refinancing a few days back so I asked about what I could get now - just a short time after I'd refinanced, but interest rates had gone down again. Today I got the reply, which was neatly laid out but basically said that my current rate was the lowest available. I thanked the agent for trying.
Flowers On My Walk:





Arthur Naps Next To But Not On A Pillow

Ginny Naps On A Bookcase

Imp Wants To Run Around

Shadow's Just Watching


Friday, May 01, 2020

Friday Walk And Roleplay

Front Yard Unsuited For Croquet
Today's morning walk went through the Gatewood Neighborhood, which has some pretty astounding houses for our area. At least one is a super b-and-b. The steep hillsides make planting a challenge and the solutions were often creative.

In the evening we started our Zoom D-and-D game. I haven't done this for ages and it was fun. I am trying something very different from my actual life: the halfling rogue, sneaky and bold. Well, maybe that's not so different.
We worked through the variety of technical issues that seem to underlie so many of our social actions today and ended up having a good time.

Thursday Miscellany

Today I did yoga and had the usual walk, hanging around and chatting with Julie afterwards, about gardening and stuff. I shopped FEEST with Leigh and a laid-off barista from Capitol Hill. I lent my weed whacker to a young couple from Buy Nothing.
I sent a suggestion to a couple of Snohomish County family members to recruit them to drive for the Snohomish Mask Brigade, but no response. I probably need to recruit more boldly.

Galen from work called; it had been 30 days since our last contact and he was just confirming I'm still employed and all that. There was talk of letting the seasonals go but since I accepted moving to permanent that doesn't affect me. There had been a lot of work to set people up to start working the phones from home but that got halted, so who knows? I heard a 3pm lecture by the Attorney action Club on IRS COVID-19 Relief Beyond The $1200 Check. It looks like they'll be doing weekly Zoom meetings and this one was pretty good; it was interesting to hear outsiders talk about IRS operations.

Ed Getting His Stuff
Ed called last night for permission to come get his wheelbarrow today. I told him that was fine and I also had a small box of his stuff he'd left behind. He came by with his friend and they loaded up. Ed assured me he'd been tested for COVID19 and was negative but he has 3 masks now that he used all the time - I was wearing it when he got the wheelbarrow. He mentioned our mutual friend Cyril being in the hospital. We wished each other well. I had not intended to kick him out immediately when I learned he was smoking (after cancer recovery) and drinking quietly in his truck, but it worked out ok because even if he is testing negative, I don't need to take a chance on him.

I probably got too excited about the Washington Legal Foundation's proposal to the section-leaders listserve that we use some of our section reserves to create a program to help attorneys struggling due to COVID19. My point was that charitable gifting unrelated to education was not within our bylaws and, even if we could figure out a way, the whole gifting process is too much work for too little impact when the best way to accomplish this worth goal is for the BOG to set up a Work Group to do much the same thing but including the whole bar. The proponent replied to the various criticisms by saying that someone from some sections had thought it was a good idea to repay the people who had contributed to whatever reserve the Section had, in particular by way of CLEs, which annoyed me since the nonmembers who contributed through CLE did it for credit not as a contribution, and it was impractical to make gifts only to those nonmembers who previously expressed a desire to make a charitable contribution, but mostly because this whole thing would be much better done via the BOG using economies of scale. Much of my reaction was due to prior attempts to convert Section balances to WSBA purposes, but also my experiment with cash gifts through DAV is that they frequently go astray; figuring out who has a claim we can help with, making sure the money goes to the purpose, and above all ensure that the recipient has a plan for avoiding this happening again is complicated, but necessary to keep this all from just being a gift to the mortgage bank.
I suppose I should have let a day go by, or not responded the 2nd time. Live and learn.

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Walk, Mask, FEEST and Bill checking

It was a beautiful day for a morning walk. To the west was the Sound and to the east was the Cascades.
I did mask pickups and FEEST shopping In the evening, I reviewed my Discover bill and was surprised at its size. I reviewed the account and did not see something odd;  I see the $600 Mienecke bill for fixing the car, plus $142 for WES to fix the part that failed (and to install the external sensor that had been omitted); the Animal hospital a charge for Arthur's annual checkup and bloodwork plus more for his medications; also some for a pizza I got from Proletariat either in solidarity with small business or to celebrate my prosperity relative to so many others. I would not be able to afford many months like that but fortunately my car is unlikely to need another fix.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Tuesday Speakout

Bluebells fascinate me
Our delightful morning walk featured a lot of bluebells and other flowers.
The first bluebells I remember seeing were around the plum tree at the north end of our property. They seemed so very special, growing on their own without any beds of dirty old dirt, just coming up to greet us. We cut some (I think with permission) to give mom and she put them in water in the window, perhaps.
In retrospect, my parents might have planted them, but who knows? The feeling remains.
Today's mask pickup in my sector was canceled, presumably for lack of materials.
I participated in a noontime program, by PLI, on COVID19 impact on immigrant legal rights. This is excellent and timely information; I recommended it to the WPTL section and I hope they passed it on.
I received new artwork from Stephanie! I will put it up over the weekend; I want to do this neatly not haphazardly. I think it'll really make the living room mine.
Caliber Home Loans did not respond to my message about the error in their billing system, although I did get an email confirming my initial payment. I'm not surprised about their failure to honor the promise to respond, because of their legendarily bad customer service. I'll give them another day before taking this to the next level.
I worked on my Toastmasters responsibilities. I edited Karen's draft of a Mentorship document, which was fun, especially rewriting the introduction to introduce "Mentor" as a person in Homer's Odyssey instead of a definition in the dictionary. I hope the specific bullet items may be helpful; I suppose I should test it out myself!
I put in a little time preparing for the next contest round. Since Starburst linked to a recording of another District's co ntest, I decided to watch the speakers and see what tips I could pick up. What I picked up from Omar Rivas' presentation ( https://vimeo.com/409513379 hour 1 minute 29 second 20 ) is that I didn't need to worry about renewing my passport; I wasn't going to Paris. It's really worth watching (  ) although I'm still trying to figure out how I can learn from it.

My role for the evening SPEAKOUT Toastmasters meeting was to evaluate Karen Lezon's presentation, paying special attention to presentation skills specific to the online (Zoom) meeting format. The presentation itself was excellent, as expected, and her sound was perfectly understandable. I noticed that she not only kept good eye contact with the camera (and therefore with the audience) but varied the eye contact by looking away briefly as part of an expression, such as look to a top corner while thinking, or looking up in exasperation. This gave me the thought of "eye contact variety" which can be as important as vocal variety.

Monday, April 27, 2020

Monday At Home

After my morning walk (3.9 miles or so according to Google Fit) I worked on cleaning the yellow room and took a class from PLI. I realized I can try getting my precision nutrition lecture in while on the morning drive, so I'll try that tomorrow. Zumba tonight, and catching up on mail.
On the walk, an abandoned greenhouse,
overgrown with laurel
I got a second mailing from Caliber, saying that my new mortgage had been sold to them. I'm not terribly happy about this, since my research had them as having terrible customer service, but I can do nothing about that. I tried calling to arrange automatic payment but the message said to use the website. I tried the website, and it insisted I schedule a payment before setting up autopay. Fine, I scheduled the 1st payment and then set up autopay on the 15th. It said, fine, it'll take the 4/28 payment and then start autowithdraw on 5/15. That was not what I intended at all. I called again and the message said they'd try to contact me but meanwhile I should email them. I sent a calm email stating my expectations; let's see what happens.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Sunday Walk

Every morning I make the day off on the calendar, to keep myself oriented in time now that I don't have the structured work week to keep me oriented.
On days that I don't have the long morning walk with Julie and Hannah, I start with the trio of YouTube video exercises. I then start - and typically forget - a light breakfast - usually oatmeal, but today leftover pizza from yesterday's order.
I did some gardening. I put most of Julie's seed onions into the north garden and didn't have to bust any more sod to do it. I put the sprouted nasturtiums into the pots whose previous contents - periwinkle and miner's lettuce - I had transplanted into the north foundation garden.
Ginny Got Her Hair Done
Ginny appeared with grey on her back and tail, and green on her bid. I concluded she had rolled in the chalk art across the street (and when I posted this on facebook, Wendy confirmed they had blutting). Maybe Ginny just wanted a change in appearance!
I got an email saying the macrime pot hanger I ordered from Stephanie's Etsy had shipped. I think it's really dress up the living room.
Barton Street P Patch
Inspired by my weekday walks, I downloaded google fit and resolved to walk an hour. To keep it simple, I just headed west on Henderson (which turns into Barton). I got done around 34th in half an hour, then returned for around 7500 steps and a few photos
Barton Street P Patch Mosaic

On The Way Back