Tuesday, December 31, 2013

2013 Was a Year of Learning. A Lot of Learning...

2013 was a challenging year, personally and professionally. I learned a lot. About me. About other people. About expectations. And about assumptions. At my company, DBE, a few of us have started referring to 2013 as the year of the assumption. Which means, as we are a learning organism, 2014 will be the year of communication and understanding.

On the challenging side of the business, the changes that I started to put into place in 2011 had some positives and some areas where improvements were still needed. 2012 was a year of digging deep into myself to see where the issues that were keeping us from experiencing “real” growth lay. In 2013, I turned the magnifying glass elsewhere, and, with the aid of some new power players, kept uncovering all kinds of issues and areas for improvement.

The team is rocking and we’re about to start a wave of hiring to staff to the levels we need, in the places we need them, for the growth we are experiencing. That feels good especially when I look back on what it took to get from “there” to “here.” I’m encouraged by what I’ve learned about people. If you look hard and closely, you can find the right ones to work with you. I feel very lucky for the ones I have now—and they know who they are because I thank them just about every day.

As the year draws to a close, and not wanting to jinx anything, it looks like 2014 will be at least 50% ahead of 2013 in terms of revenue and profitability.

2013 was very stressful, even when things were going well, and it definitely was a tough year for my body. First it was a series of problems with the nerves in my mouth, requiring repeated root canals and oral surgery. Then in the spring, my digestive system went haywire. In preparing for testing, I learned that a person can develop lactose intolerance (I thought it was something one had a birth—or didn’t). Once that was resolved, I injured my left knee (ripped muscle) and then had problems with both knees (they’re on the mend). Then I had a solid week of not being able to sit, stand, or walk right from extreme lower back pain (I literally jump out of bed every morning since I was a kid…one morning, my legs were ready but the rest of me wasn’t). As the year wraps up this evening, I am thankful that I can enjoy food again, and I am walking normally on flat surfaces (stairs are still a comedy show). It makes me really appreciate the saying, “When you have your health, you have everything.” I’ve taken steps to improve how I balance my energy and have joined the gym right across the street from the development where I live.

Speaking of which, one of 2013’s stresses was the move from New Jersey to Newtown, Pennsylvania. The company is still based in Plainsboro, but the new house is about a 25 minute commute. It’s lovely here in PA and the people are very congenial. Though the move was crazy with all the usual nonsense that I’ve come to expect from moving, once we were in, all has gone relatively smoothly. The views are wonderful, the neighbors are friendly, and I love being able to cook in the new kitchen (the oven in the last house kept setting off the smoke detectors).

Wil graduated from high school and started college this year, and he didn’t like that we moved further from his part-time job, college, and girlfriend, so one of 2013’s challenges was adjusting to seeing him less because he stays at his dad’s house more often to be closer to the rest of his world. He doesn’t like driving on highways (he got his Aunt Barbara’s driving anxiety genes, which I suspect were all directly transferred from my mother who made driving an extreme sport every time she got behind the wheel) so he doesn’t stay here often, and that is a big transition for me at a time when there’s a lot of other transition in my life.

Rachel got an apartment in Brooklyn in August and that was a major stress too. Not just for her, but for me, riding shotgun. OMG. She can make me look like a calm person. I learned a lot from her apartment hunting escapades so when the time comes for an apartment in NYC, I have a better sense of what to expect.

For 2014, I’d like to keep working hard and seeing my company grow. I want to be an even better mother, girlfriend, and friend to those in my life, and I want to feel like I’m making a positive difference in the world, even if it’s only on a small scale.

I’d like to focus more on my personal—not just professional—development. I’ve learned (and am still learning) to set and achieve goals in incremental steps. Success happens best when you have the time and opportunity to reflect on the little wins along the way so that you can leverage them to win more. So in 2014, I’m going to focus on learning to meditate for health, to find time to write a little since I’m not going to find the time to write a lot, and to exercise regularly to reduce the stress that my life generates and to feel better while I’m enjoying this ride.

Good-bye 2013. Hello 2014!


Sunday, May 19, 2013

Random, Really Random, Warning, Really Random Thoughts


In no particular order, this is what’s popped into my mind over the last few hours.  I leave it to you, dear reader, to decide what, if anything, any of it means.

  • I thought my toes would look better if I let the nails grow longer.  They are the longest they’ve ever been and my feet are still ugly.
  • It’s my sister’s birthday today.  I remember being 5 years old and eating an apple, bragging to my friend Michele that I had a baby sister.  I felt like I was putting on airs at the time, as if I were being filmed for posterity. I remember feeling that at the time, and perhaps it was my memory doing the filming because that is 1 of the 2 first memories I have of my amazing sister.  The other is of seeing her in my mother’s arms through the windows between the hospital cafeteria and my mother’s hospital room.  She was just a bundle in blankets, but she was my sister.  And she still is.  She loves me through all kinds of craziness—hers and mine—and our friendship grows stronger by the day.  Who would have thought when I asked God to give me a sister that he’d give me a best friend too?
  • What would happen if a meteor the size of the one that hit the moon the other day hit earth?  Done thinking about that…moving right along…
  • I bought some pens at Staples today because I like the feeling of writing by hand.  Then I got writer’s cramp and started typing again. 
  • Why am I so fascinated by Paris?  I have more postcards, stationery, phone cases, and assorted other images of the Eiffel Tower than anything else.  I really loved Paris when I was there, but it’s as if the idea of Paris is stronger than my actually memory of Paris.  As if my dream of what Paris is was untouched by actually having been there.  Maybe I lived there in a past life?  Or maybe the preponderance of Paris-related postcards, stationery, phone cases and assorted other images of the Eiffel Tower are available in such volume that they prompt thoughts of Paris and dreams of Paris at every turn.  A Paris-22.
  • I really am afraid of zombies.  I feel I could reason with a vampire…and they seem to go for really pure or really evil people.  I’m more towards the good end of the spectrum, but years beyond pure, so I think I could take my chances with a vampire and come out okay.  Werewolves, they seem to go after people for revenge.  I don’t know anyone who hates me that much (not counting my ex,) and even if there are a few haters out there (including my ex), I don’t think they’re werewolves, so again, I’m on safe ground, I think.  But zombies are irrational and they scare me to no end.  I’m terrified of being eaten by a shark or a bear, so I would put zombies in that category—I don’t think I could reason with a shark or a bear either.  Maybe I should be more afraid of sharks or bears since they’re real, but I don’t know, zombies are just way scarier.  Though the shark with the 14” dorsal that swam behind Marc in Florida was really scary.  I still have a little residual PTS from that.  And yet, zombies still win.
  • Watched the Preakness yesterday.  Guessed really badly on the winner, but did guess correctly that Orb wasn’t going to win.  Also, I am now convinced I was a stable boy in one of my past lives.  I have to go to someone who can verify this as it does explain a lot.  A lot.
  • I made salmon pate today following a recipe online.  I am curious to see how well it goes over tonight.  As with 95% of the items I serve my guests, they start with a recipe and end up an improv.
  • Why do all the other women who get gel nails get 2+ weeks out of them and I get less than a week?  Why do I peel the polish off?  Why can’t I stop peeling until all 10 nails are once again naked, only to repeat the whole polishing process again each week? 
  • Wil has agreed to go to his senior prom (victory #1) and for me to throw him a graduation party (victory #2).  I feel so much like Barbra Streisand’s character in “Guilt Trip.”  Sweet movie.  A must-see for every mother of a son.
  • My daughter is having a blast in South Carolina with her friends.  I’m so glad she headed down there after graduation.  She deserves a little R&R after working so hard all semester.  Can’t believe she’s now a senior in college.  Where the heck does the time go?
  • Had a nice chat with my brother today.  Short call, but good to talk with him.  I wish I could see him more.  He has a good soul, good spirit. It just feels good to talk with him, even if we don't talk long or say a lot.
  • I like my new haircut.  It looks very much like my old haircut.  There was a time when that would have been a bad thing.  Now it means I made it through getting my haircut without having anything to stress about.  Looks the same, just shorter.  Cool.
  • I am remarkably calm for someone who is going to be moving in 4 months.  Remarkably calm.  Remarkably calm.  If I keep typing it maybe I will believe it.  Remarkably calm.  Remarkably calm.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Calling Out the Sexists


This weekend’s New York Times brought two opportunities for ire.  There probably were many more., but there were two that really got under my skin.

The first one was a comment in the magazine section. Steve Sailer of Los Angeles wrote a response to the previous week’s article about the woman jockey, Rosie Napravnik.  His comment was titled  “Can a Woman Win the Kentucky Derby?”  Here’s what he said:

“The door has been open to female jockeys for more than 40 years. That women haven’t, on the whole, had more success lately than they had early in the feminist era suggests that racing is one of those sports in which an exceptional woman, like Lynn Hill in rock climbing or Judit Polgar in chess, can make it to very near the top, but the bell curve of talent and drive is shifted more in the men’s direction.”

There was one woman jockey, Rosie Napravnik , in the Kentucky Derby on May 4; there was one African American man, Kevin Krigger. 

If the same thing had been written about African Americans as was written by Sailer about women, I don’t think the Times would have published such racist nonsense.  But claim that women aren’t as talented or driven as men and you can earn yourself a spot in the editorial section of the New York Times magazine.  Does the Times editorial staff even recognize sexism as hateful? 

And then there was the piece in the Sunday Review section of the Times by Frank Bruni.  In this case, I agree 100% with Mr. Bruni.  The reason I got angry is that he is right on every point he makes regarding how the mainstream media makes a woman’s sexual experiences wicked and titillating while a man having had the same number or types of experiences would be treated as pedestrian at best.  He concludes his piece called “Sexism and the Single Murderess “with this:

“When we chart and lament the persistence of sexism in society, we look to the United States Congress, where women are still woefully underrepresented.  We look to corporate boardrooms, where the glass ceiling hasn’t’ really shattered.  But we needn’t look any further than how perversely censorious of women’s sex lives we remain, and how short the path from siren to slut and from angel to she-devil can be.”

I’ve been leaning in for my whole life.  I’ve been patient, I’ve been assertive, I’ve been a mentor and a mentee.  At this point, I’m really angry.  Where is the tipping point?  When does sexism stop rearing it’s ugly head? 

And let me be clear:   the “Them and Us” isn’t women and men.  The “Them and Us” are old thinkers vs. the new. 

Women are well represented as graduates of higher education, and well represented in the workforce.  Very good.  Next Challenge:  Women need to stop trying to go along to get along and to call out sexism of any kind where and when we see it.  We've already proved on multiple fronts that we're capabile--more than capable.  Now let's make sure that sexism in any form, from the most overt to the most subtle, gets called out, shown in the light of day for what it is and erradicated.

Let’s stop giving people exhibiting sexist behaviors the benefit of the doubt.  Let’s be more reactive and more vocal in our reactions to the sexism we see in our world.  Let’s try this:  If you think it’s sexist behavior, regardless of whether it’s undermining women or men, speak up.  Call it out.  Get a discussion going.  It’s pretty clear that many men and women just don’t recognize their behaviors and language as being sexist.

Recognize sexism the way you recognize racism and then do something about it.  Confront it the way we confront racism.  Sexism is real and it will take a commitment to change to abolish old thinking.  Patience and doing the right thing are not working.  “In your face” anti-sexism is my call to action.



Saturday, December 15, 2012

Proactively Alleviating Violence in America

Hello Representative Holt,

The social media channel is being lit up with condolences, outrage, and expressions of deep sadness over the shootings in Connecticut yesterday.  But people are lost as to where to put their anger and misery.  Some people are blaming guns, others are more specific in blaming assault weapons, others are blaming poor mental health services, violence on television and in film and video games, poor parenting, etc., etc., etc.

As a leader, can you suggest what we can be collectively doing to get our heads and hearts around solving the problem of violence in this country?  Can you spark a task force, or committee, or some kind of special project fueled by people who are passionate about changing the way America deals with these issues?  Can we get out ahead of the problems, identify the multiple causes that lead to these horrific acts, and find ways to address them? 

Isn't there some kind of computer modeling we can do to demonstrate that, for example, that not dealing with a disturbed child properly in school can have x# of consequences, but by investing in Option A, B, or C, we reduce the likelihood of a violent act by that child by 90%?  Couldn't this modeling be applied to the other factors, and perhaps we can create a visual representation that will help people see that we need to take the consequences of inaction more seriously?

We just seem to be stuck in reactive mode in our society, but with technology, education, tools and proactivity, perhaps we can get people to invest in changing our approach to the problems that beset us.

I'm like the other people who are so angry, disgusted, and struggling to find a solution.  I'm wondering if as an elected leader there is some initiative that you can start or tag onto that can build a groundswell for change.  And of course if you can, I am there to assist as I know thousands of others would be too.


Veronica Fielding

Monday, November 26, 2012

Black Friday Eve


Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday.  It was the one holiday that had no agenda other than getting together with family and close friends and sharing.  Literally remembering to be thankful for what we have.

So it’s with true and deep sadness that I reflect on my favorite holiday being corrupted by commercialism.  They got to Halloween, the Easter Bunny, and of course Santa, and now they’ve gotten to Thanksgiving too, henceforth known as Black Friday Eve.

My daughter is a student at NYU Tisch and was causally speaking with a student from the Netherlands on her way to the train on Wednesday to come home for Thanksgiving. This is how their conversation went:

Him:  “So you’re going home for Thanksgiving.  Where do you go for Black Friday?”
Her:  “We don’t go out on Black Friday.  You couldn’t pay me to go near a mall on Black Friday.”
Him:  “Really?  I can’t wait!  The pushing, the shoving, the grabbing at bargains.  It looks so exciting! This will be my first one, I can’t wait!”
Her:  “Umm, that’s not what we’re celebrating.  Thanksgiving is about giving thanks for what we have, not planning to get what we don’t have yet.”
Him, with a pitying look:  “You have to get out there on Friday!  Thanksgiving is for the old, Black Friday is for the young.  Happy Black Friday!”

And with a nod to Kurt Vonnegut…and so it goes.

It seems that I’m becoming aware of this phenomenon of Thanksgiving Eve at about the same time as the rest of the masses.  This story from CNN chronicles the rise of Black Friday:  http://www.cnn.com/2012/11/18/opinion/greene-black-friday/index.html?iid=article_sidebar

I saw another short news story that said this Black Friday broke all kinds of records.

My sister, my anecdotal direct connection to mainstream America, was out there in the mix, but she didn’t get up uber early, she just headed to the big boxes around 11 a.m. and reported back that yes, the lines were crazy long, yes there were great deals, yes, the deals weren’t as great as the stores touted, e.g., “They say I saved $300.  I know that’s not right.  The stuff should have cost about $250.  And I spent $180.  So I saved $70.  Which is still great.  And here’s all the stuff I got,” and like a child rattling off to another what Santa left under the tree, she detailed all the buys she got.  She ended with, “It was fun.  I had fun!”  I love my sister’s joie de vivre.

So I will continue to host Thanksgiving at my home each year, no matter how big or how small the gathering.  And I will continue to quietly be thankful for all the good things my life has brought me and I will continue to wish the best for mankind.  I will be hopeful on Black Friday Eve, despite the frenzied preparation all around me for National Shopping Day, the celebration of grabby madness and over the top commercialism gone wild.

I think I will be in the minority, but so what else is new?




Saturday, November 3, 2012

So Close and Yet So Far

Well, as I suspected, things did not go well after my Raspberries and Frankenstorm post on Sunday, October 28.  That was the day before the “biggest storm in 100 years.”

However, keep this in mind as you read this:  on the day there was sun again, there was one, lone, bright, ripe raspberry in the very middle of the raspberry patch.  It was gleaming, just begging to be picked.  In the middle of the patch means you cannot get to it, because raspberry vines are covered in thorns.  Okay, do you have that visual?  Let’s proceed.

So on Sunday after my post we discovered that the hot water heater was leaking.  We have a PSE&G “Worry Free” contract, so they came out within hours, as promised, to check it out.  I had said to Marc beforehand that no matter what they said, don’t let them turn off the hot water heater—I would rather deal with a leak or minor flood in that section of the basement than no hot water for days.  The tech said the hot water heater could break and water could go all over.  He shut off the heater and left.  Then Marc told me it was off. 

And so it began.

Because of the impending storm, none of the plumbers in the Worry Free system would come out to replace the hot water heater, but one promised to call after the emergency to make an appointment to come out right away.  Heavy sigh.  No showers Monday morning. (Thankfully I had done laundry all weekend, so at least we had clean clothes.)

Monday, October 29 we were taking the storm seriously and preparing for the hit that was to come sometime Monday evening.  I had convinced Rachel to stay here and not go back to the city on Sunday, so it was the 4 of us at the house:  Marc, Rachel, Wil, and me. My entire company worked from their homes to stay safe.  All day Monday there was unbelievable wind.  Trees wer bending 45 degrees or more, stuff was flying everywhere; I could not fathom how most of the leaves were still on the trees.  I had a surprisingly productive day and was ready to call it quits at 6:00 when I made dinner for everyone. 

It was right around that time that the real rain came.  And the wind that we thought was bad…it got worse.  A lot worse.  I don’t think I’ve experienced that kind of wind except once when I was a small child and lived closer to the shore and there was a hurricane.  Not sure what year.  I was very small.  I just still have an image in my mind of the world gone black and white and grey, with pine trees bending over unspeakably.  Lightning, thunder, and being told to get away from the windows.  So this was familiar in a prehistoric memory kind of way. 

Then a little before 9:00 the power went out.  It had been flickering most of the evening but kept righting itself.  This time, the ship went down.  I said aloud, “Well, that is real and it’s going to be off for a long time.”  Just didn’t know how long long was going to be.  Well, let me tell you about long.

I insisted the kids sleep on the couches in the family room rather than in their beds upstairs as a precaution against breaking glass.  Marc and I slept in our room on the ground floor as usual.  The cat was happy for the kids’ company and slept between them on the floor.

The worst of the storm was over by the time we woke up on Tuesday morning, and foolishly I thought “it” was over.  Marc went out to reconnoiter as he likes to say, and came back with dismal news.  Trees were down everywhere, he’d never seen anything like it.  So many roads were closed, it was almost impossible to get around.  There were hardly any traffic lights working, even on the major roads.  And there was no power at the office.  In fact, there didn’t seem to be power anywhere.

With no power and no hot water, Wil went to his dad’s house.  Rachel decided to hang out here. She started hearing how badly hit Manhattan was, and after the talk of parties turned to talk of dismay at no power and no water pressure, she seemed glad to be with us and not in the city.

I worked to get Internet connection on my devices, but it was tough.  Everyone at DBE worked remotely using their smart phones to connect to the Internet.  We had no email because our ISP that hosts our website had no power after his generator died.  No website meant no domain level email.  We created temporary Gmail accounts and alerted our clients to use those or texts to reach us—as predicted, texts worked better than phone calls.  Phone calls didn’t go through, texts went through slowly, eventually, or after you resent them several times.

With no hot water, we heated water on the stove (lit the burners with matches) and then cooled it with cold water to wash ourselves.  I became the family shampooer.  I didn’t mind.  It was kind of nice washing their hair over the kitchen sink in the morning light.  It felt spiritual and primitive, a necessary rite. 

Wil’s dad came to pick him up because it was his day with Wil and he had power at his house.  Rachel decided to stay here.  We took a ride around in the afternoon to reconnoiter again.  Things looked bad.  Marc said they were no improvements from earlier.  We saw not 1 PSE&G truck.  Rachel was doing well during the day, but as night approached and the thought of another night with no creature comforts encroached, she was open to being driven to her dad’s house.  She seemed to feel bad about leaving, but of course it was better to be warm, showered, and Internet-connected than not, not, and not. It took us almost an hour to get there with all the downed trees and detours, coming back the way we had gone there included a few additional detours we hadn’t expected.  By the time we got back to the house, we just went to bed and hoped there would be light and heat by morning.  Wrong.

Wednesday was spent trying to get an Internet connection and to stay warm.  The temperature was dropping.  We lit the fireplace and left it on all day.  Our neighbors generously allowed us to keep recharging our devices because they had a generator at their house.  Made a note to research generators, the new “must have” item for climate change survivors. 

Honestly, the day was a blur.  I prioritized my work down to the most essential things to keep the time on the Internet to a minimum because the connection was so slow, unreliable, and aggravating.  Wil showed up unexpectedly—he was taking someone’s shift.  He said he was staying the night and I was trying to imagine what that was going to be like—where would he sleep that he would be warm.  When 5:00 rolled around, I declared the work day done and had a shot of bourbon.  We were going to go to dinner but I didn’t want to put on makeup and I didn’t want to risk Wil coming back to an empty house if we were delayed.  We ate prepared food from McCaffreys on the couch in front of the fireplace and chatted. 

When Wil came home, we talked for a while and then I insisted he sleep in front of the fire on the couch instead of upstairs.  He agreed.

In the middle of the night, the carbon monoxide monitors started going off.  The first one went off at midnight.  Two hours later, the other one went off.  I was now convinced the monitors were trying to tell us something. The fireplace!  Of course, it must be the fireplace.  Try Googling carbon monoxide monitors at 2:30 a.m. and you’ll see that they are set off by gases from an assortment of things, including faulty furnaces.  Fireplace =furnace to my bedraggled mind.  Of course!  That’s why the day was such a blur!  I was being poisoned! 

So we shut off the fireplace and told Wil he’d be fine and that there was low risk of becoming a popsicle.  Then the other monitor went off at 4:00 a.m.  Marc decided to read the manual.  I fell asleep, exhausted beyond imagining.  Maybe I was being gassed to death, but I was too tired to care.  Marc discovered that the monitors are meant to run on electricity,; the batteries won’t last more than 20 hours.  He pulled the batteries on both monitors and went to bed.  That seems logical.  And I was surprised to not wake up dead.

In the morning the temperature was easily less than 50 degrees.  Even if I could see the temperature app on my iPhone, I didn’t want to know.  Marc was going to work at Deepa’s and I was going to work at Bethany’s.  Marc reconnoitered like the dove leaving the ark but came back with no olive branch.  He learned that a client had power and decided to work there since he needed to meet with them anyway.  Bethany wasn’t feeling well, so I went to Deepa’s.  It was very nice there.  Warm people, warm home.  They kept trying to feed me all day—Deepa worries that I don’t take care of myself.  They don’t understand that I don’t like to eat during the day, and kept bringing me fruits and crackers with peanut butter, almond milk, and some salty water beverage that Deepa insisted I drink when I stood up too fast after sitting for 4 hours straight at the computer.  (I had no idea when I’d have broadband Internet again and wanted to make good use of every second before I headed out at 5:30, grateful for their hospitality.)

I got back to the house before Marc but after a series of unexpected detours due to closed intersections.  I saw my first line for gasoline and felt panicked.  Lines anywhere make me nervous, even if they’re for something nice, like cheap theater tickets.  I always sense agitation on the part of the people in the line and am fearful of an eruption of tempers.  I don’t like crowds in general—when they line up, it only makes them a little less scary.

When I did finally get home, the house was cold.  Bone chilling cold.  I wrapped myself in a blanket and wandered through the house.  It felt sad and forlorn and that’s not good karma for a house.  Marc came home and we headed right out for dinner at KC Prime, a local steakhouse that has an identity crisis.  On the way there, we saw 30, maybe more, utility trucks just sitting silently in the mall parking lot.  Just.  Sitting.  There.

KC Prime was warm and our reservation got us a table right away.  The food is consistently good and the drinks are awesome—that’s where I discovered my favorite cocktail, the sidecar.  The servers are always attentive but not unctuous.  You can show up there wearing sweat pants if you want to—I’ve seen people do it—and that’s okay too. 

Joe Queenan has this very funny piece in his book Red Lobster, White Trash, and the Blue Lagoon.  He writes about how the people who regularly eat at Red Lobster think it’s upscale and they dress up in their leisure-suit best for it, and then look down their noses at the people who “just don’t get it.”  I’ve turned into that person at KC Prime.  Not that I’m rude about it, but to me, it’s where we go after work so we’re usually wearing our business-casual best.  We’ve had a hard day and we want a nice cocktail in an upscale but relaxed environment, close to home.   So it’s funny when people show up in shorts or sweats because, well, hey, “they” just don’t get it.  J

Our waiter Thursday night was friendly and smart.  He didn’t need to be told that we were two of the barely washed masses who were there for a meal.  He paced everything beautifully so that a dinner we typically have in 90 minutes-- if that--lasted well over 2 hours.  I blessed him the way one best blesses waiters—with a sincere verbal thank you and a tip that relayed the same message in the coin of the realm. 

Back to the house.  Icy cold now.  My brother and sister both had power and offered for us to stay with them.  We can’t go until Saturday, after Wil takes his SATs that morning.  We make plans to go to Barnegat on Saturday to spend the night.  Marc found us a hotel room for Sunday and Monday night.  Tuesday we’d already made plans to stay with friends after the election.  But how long would this all go on?  My friends Carol and Mark texted—they had a hotel room and had offered us to stay with them.  We thanked them and didn’t want to intrude.  But we would take them up on the offer of a hot shower the next morning at 8:00.

But first we had to get through Thursday night. Marc brought Rachel’s twin mattress down to the family room and we repositioned the couches to be opposite each other, perpendicular to the fireplace.  The mattress went in the middle.  After a few rounds of “Do you want the mattress or the long couch?” I flopped on the mattress and ended the game.  I was exhausted when I managed to get through to my sister on the cell—4 bars!!!—and we talked until the call failed and we texted our good nights.  

The cat slept on the edge of the mattress right next to my head all night and as cats do, he considered me the intruder and was annoyed every time I moved around, which I do a lot when I sleep.  It was so cold!  All I kept thinking through this whole ordeal was, “What are people with little kids doing?”  I really felt bad for them.  I fell asleep thinking about the stilled trucks in the cold outside and the stilled children in the cold inside.

It had to be in the 40s when we woke up and got ourselves dressed to head over to the Westin and our showers.  On the way there, we saw that the traffic lights near the office were working.  After our showers (thank you Carol and Mark!) we swung back to the office instead of to our client’s office in Pennsylvania where we were going to work. 

Delight! Sheer delight.  The office had power and wi-fi!  We worked there all day.  We offered our space to others who needed power.  We planned to sleep there if there was no power at the house, but Wil texted at 4:00 that yes, power was back at the house!

I texted Carol but she said they were still out of power, so I offered for them to have dinner with us but they had plans for that night and would come Saturday instead.  We offered them to stay with us until they got power, and they said they would. 

I cleaned the house up, went shopping, arranged for the cleaning lady who usually comes on Thursday morning to come on Sunday.  Bought thank you gifts for our neighbors of the generator, Dave and Donna, and met Donna for the first time.  Their generator was still running; they didn’t realize power was restored.  They thanked me.  And I thanked them again.  Lots of thanking back and forth.  We’re going to have them over for dinner soon.  I like them a lot.

Back to the house.  Wil was supposed to go out with friends but plans fell through.  He was stuck with us, poor kid.  Friday night is pizza night.  Yeaaa. 

“What’s on TV?”

What?!?  Comcast is out.  No TV, no Internet.  The DVR worked but nothing else.  We assumed we would have lost everything on the DVR as happened with other outages but there must have been a quantum leap with technology when we weren’t looking because all our recordings are still there.  Sweet.  We watch Jon Stewart’s Night of Too Many Stars and laugh our butts off.

Bedtime 11:00.  I didn’t sleep well, have no idea why other than maybe too much coffee during the day.  Gotta work on that.

Up at 4:00 a.m., can’t sleep any longer.  I didn’t try to go back to bed because I had to drive Wil to take the SAT in Princeton.  At 5:30, Wil came downstairs and said the SAT was postponed according to the email he got.  Made Wil French toast and chatted a bit.  I was convinced he would stay with me because there’s no Internet so no video games.  Ha!  How foolish of me!  He said he was cold and invited me to go upstairs with him.  I said, “What are you going to do up there if there are no games?” 

“Well,” he said, “I’m going to sit, or lay down.”

“Really?” I asked.  “You can do that right here where I am.” 

“Well, I’m probably going to get warm and stay in my bed,” he said.

“Oh, so you’re going to, what do they call it, sleep?” I asked.

He smiled and headed up stairs.

And so he’s upstairs, sleeping I think. 

I’m training the cat to be more doglike than he already is, and finishing this blog post.  I’ll upload it via hotspot if I can get one going.

The hot water repair guys are here.  They forget you can hear everything they say, they’re just below me in the basement.  I am enjoying their conversation.  Work banter.

I’m picking Rachel up from her dad’s house at 3:00.  Carol, Mark and their boys are coming over at 6:30.  I think I’m making chicken stew.  Ali and Marc will be here.  It will be nice to all be together.  Am I asking too much to have hot water and Internet by then? 

Honestly, as long as there’s Internet at the office on Monday, and heat here and there, I will be thankful.  Because you know what really sucks?  Five days after the storm, half of my neighbors still don’t have power.   This isn’t a remote location.  It’s New Jersey--the most densely populated state in the country. 

So after all of this, I’m wondering about that raspberry out in the patch outside the kitchen window.  Is it a sign of hope, or is it taunting me?  So close and yet so far….

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Raspberries and Frankenstorm


There were a few raspberries left on the vines outside in the little corner between the kitchen and laundry room windows.  As I was bringing in the plants from the back deck, I realized most of them were dead or dying, which shouldn’t have surprised me because it’s October 28 in New Jersey.  I was bringing them into the garage because “Frankenstorm” is coming.  Every update shows it moving 10-14 mph up the east coast and at this point it’s projected to hit NJ tomorrow night. 

The storm is actually 3 storms:  Hurricane Sandy coming up the coast, a cold front pushing snow and rain from the west, and a blast of cold air from Canada coming down and east.  So, NJ is right in the path of all 3.  To make matters worse, the vast majority of the time there is a low-pressure system over Iceland that tends to draw hurricanes away from the east coast, but as bad luck would have it, this is one of the .2% (point 2 percent!) times that it’s a high pressure system pushing the hurricane towards us.  Not bad enough?  Well, there are still leaves on the trees, so when the snow and rain weigh the branches down, they will pull down the power lines under them. 

I have lived in New Jersey all but the first 2 years of my life, and I’ve never been without power for more than a few hours.  That is, until Hurricane Irene last August when we were out of power for 4+ days.  Some areas had it worse—10-14 days without power.  The only good thing about that was that it wasn’t hot and humid those days so being without air conditioning was bearable, though being without hot water for showers really sucked.

This time, we get cold air too. 

I’m thankful that Rachel decided to stay here rather than going back to the city.  She was stressing over a meeting with an advisor that’s supposed to be on Tuesday, but I tried to help her see that the advisor might not be able to make it into the city either that day.  When they cancelled classes for Monday, I think she started to realize that it could be pretty bad.

Regarding Rachel, I’m not worried about the power being out per se, but more about the potential for rioting and looting that tends to go hand in hand with power outages in the city.  Glad that she’ll be here with us.  I think she’s not too thrilled because I’m getting on her nerves, but frankly, I would get on my nerves if I were her so I’m trying hard not to do the things I do that make us both anxious, like over planning and over anticipating.

So, we’ll have something with fresh raspberries tonight and I’ll keep praying that the hurricane swings out to sea where it will just bother the fish.

But I have a feeling that’s not how this is going to play out.

Stay tuned.