Life continues to be rich and full here in Enoughsville. The week kicked off beautifully, with Nelson sending me a photo that shows he fills out his suit quite nicely. Yes! What a handsome brother-sister team he and Sizzling make!
Sunday, February 27, 2022
Suits and tutus, a bit late
Saturday, February 19, 2022
family update, with Valentines surprises
Life continues to be rich and full here in Enoughsville. We learned some surprising (to us) facts this week, partly by way of celebrating Valentines' Day. The week kicked off, as it often does, with waffles and an intense game of Boggle, in which Inkling trounced me during one of the four rounds we played.
Be My Valentine XOO -- check it out! |
Mom this one is for you- ;)
Kiss-adillas,arrows (arroz) y I'm bananas for you fried bananas for our vday dinner
Mathematicians sometimes like to publish what we call "proof with no words" (a graphical presentation of something cool and true); Sizzling texted us all with her "news with no words".
This was followed by lots of congratulations from all of the Snoughlings, but of course!
Nelson has been invisible, but rumor has it that next week he'll be wearing this fancy suit somewhere. Let's check back in a week to find out whether it's true!
A group of alligator shoes is called a "pair". |
My own life as a dean continues to be a learning experience, although I have to think that most of what I'm learning won't be of long-term use in my life. The regulations involved in Radiation Safety, anyone? How about the difference (and corresponding tax implications) between wages, stipends, and fellowships? I've also spent a lot of time trying hard to be human/humane in the midst of bureaucratic tasks -- like trying to convince already-busy people to take on big committee assignments, or threading the fraught space between administrators sticking to the rules they know and faculty members who want to do research that spills out across the boundaries of those rules. For example, one of the things that is taking up way, way too much of my time right now is trying to find a way for some of our faculty to take paid student researchers into the field over the summer, with our HR department seizing up because our little College isn't set up to pay taxes in other states -- or worse, other countries.
I've taken on a bunch of time-intensive, non-dean tasks as well. Somehow, those haven't added to the overall burden, but rather add sparks of joy. I'm teaching a half-credit research class, and seeing the progress the students are making is fabulous. I am giddy about the nifty thing my own small team in particular is figuring out; it kinda blows my mind. And I'm also organizing a musical for faculty and staff (and trying to reassure other administrators it won't blow up in our faces). Singing and dancing with my colleagues has been an incredible communal joy --- it takes so much time, and yet it gives me so much energy back.
And that's the news from our family, which continues to be wealthy in our trips and tribes. May you and yours be similarly prosperous.
Saturday, February 12, 2022
This week in Enoughsville (and beyond), with a wall-mounted bicycle chandelier
Life here in Enoughsville continues to be rich and full, even though my fam is mostly very far away.
Nelson, after his two Emergency Room adventures of last fall, has gotten kinda serious about taking care of himself, inside and out. The taking-care of himself seems to be having tangible effects; he likes the way he looks, his glucose levels are back in the Not-So-Terrifying range, and he's having all sorts of good things happening inside his head, too. He's been helping to coach a middle school basketball team. We talked for about 10 minutes on the phone today before I got all phoned out, and that was fun. He also texted this update:
Got to go to a Minnesota Timberwolf game today
The construction workers did some mysterious incantations over the new concrete pads that are scattered around what used to be a parking lot . . .
. . . and then they all went away. I have been spending my own week not so much thinking about noise as about dark and light. I'm reading a book a friend gifted me -- Tish Harrison Warren's Prayer in the Night -- for one thing. It is a lovely meditation and reflection and it gives me a chance to grieve the friend I'm missing, when I have time to think about missing him. But also, the sunlight these days comes earlier, sticks around later, and has been so amazingly glorious. Here is a picture of what it looked like when I arrived at work earlier this week.
I've taken down the Christmas lights at last, having left them up for my husband, who has appreciated having their soft glow. Now that he's wandering around Pari-loo-gium and possibly Germaland or wherever, though, I packed up the Christmas lights and put up a cute lamp I'd made out of a bicycle wheel and a deconstructed chandelier. So even the dark has a bit of light in it.
And I guess that's enough for now from our family, which continues to be wealthy in our adventures. May you and yours be similarly prosperous.
Saturday, February 5, 2022
Enoughsville update, with dried fruit
Life continues to be rich and full enough, here in Enoughsville.
The earth shakers across the street seem to be tuckered out; they've been hunched over, sleeping on the street with their scoops tucked in like birds' heads under their wings. The ground that they had been doing their thump-y dances on is now covered over with giant concrete slabs, and posts that look like the start of metal fencing have been erected like sentries around the dance floor. I guess the party's over, and maybe the beasts will go home to sleep it off soon. Shhh! Don't wake them up, anyone.
I don't like to think of myself as a materialistic kind of person, but just in this week alone I've asked my husband to get me all sorts of things I've been yearning for. And without even batting at eye at the resulting expense, he turned right around and bought me
- a personal amplifier (with a mike that goes under my mask, and a speaker I can wear on my belt, to make it easier for my students to understand me while I'm teaching),
- a watch battery that cost more than the watch (which I'm pretty sure I got for free, so that's not saying anything),
- raisins (How is it I keep running out of raisins?), and
- postal stamps.
These last, even though I asked for them, came with a planned surprise: who or what might the stamps feature? To my delight I now have two sheets of Edmonia Lewis stamps, which cause me to go down an internet rabbit hole figuring out more about who she is. Was. (She lived a really interesting life to read about!) And so these were perfect for Black History month, and also for getting me a sculpture fix.
Let's see if I can get a close-up here.
Voila! |
And that's a bit of the news from our family, which continues to have quite enough adventures in the family tree to make us feel wealthy. May you and yours be similarly prosperous.
Update, somewhere in January
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