1.102 novel, virus

Friday, 3/13/2020

In the morning, for exercise, I walked the mile-plus to the P.A. Cafe. I sat outside (distancing) with my computer and continued editing the novel. At 11am I took a Lyft back.

I didn’t mention yesterday, that I had ordered a pizza online from Palo Alto pizza, picked it up from on California avenue, and ate half for supper, with a beer, in my apartment. Today for lunch I had the remaining half. Then I returned to the editing and completed the job. Then I sent the link to the Google Doc to several friends. Here it is. Next jobs with that are to, 1, collect comments from beta readers, to include hopefully some actual middle-graders; 2, prepare a submission package and send a letter and opening chapters to some possible agents.

About 4pm I decided to get outside again. I was out of bread (I keep bread in my cupboard along with peanut butter, salami, cheese and other sandwich makings), so I decided to walk to my local store, the Whole Foods a few blocks away.

The walk was pleasant but the store was not. I didn’t immediately notice the bread shelves just inside the door, and walked the whole store looking for bread. I observed that the pasta shelves were bare. Preppers love pasta, I guess. Everything else was in good supply, except for the bread, when I finally found it. As I walked around I got increasingly nervous. There were lots of people, and which one (or ones) of them was oozing viral particles? I had come into a crowd for no really good reason, exposing myself and not even finding what I came for. I walked out and home again in a bad mood. I felt exposed, and not only washed my hands but took a shower.

 

1.101 novel, Yosemite

Thursday, 3/12/2020

This morning I resumed editing the novel. Amazing number of typos, but also small tweaks that improve the text, all made visible by putting it in a different format.

I could do that because this week, the Yosemite shift is not a full day, but only half a day, from 1pm. They didn’t say, but I bet the morning is being used for staff meetings on the virus issue.

I went to Yosemite where Dave B., Elena, Toni, Tom and Allen also gathered. We traded virus news, as one does. We nearly completed the sweep of all boxes looking for the lost Ferrante plug-board. Another hour or two will do it.

Back home, to a peculiar email from Stanford Sports, thanking me for my ticket purchase with a price of negative $136. Soon after came the email saying the Stanford had canceled all sports for the rest of winter and spring terms, and they would be refunding purchased tickets. So I presume that -136 represents a refund of the remainder of my baseball season ticket?

Not long after, news that the NCAA had canceled all of the basketball post-season, and other sports.

Not long after, via Reddit I find a link to a Guardian article citing what seems like very credible scientific studies from China and Taiwan, showing that the virus is communicable from 2 to 7 days before symptoms appear. This is very disturbing to me, and should be to anyone. You simply don’t know which healthy-looking person you interact with, is infected and might infect you. And they don’t know, either. Suppose that everyone who had the slightest respiratory symptom, dutifully self-quarantined (and they won’t). It wouldn’t make any difference! Or at least, not much.

If it’s upsetting to me, how must it be for someone who has a job meeting the public? A restaurant server, a store clerk, any kind of public-facing clerk? Every single person they deal with is a potential case of virus.

This makes it entirely credible that, as competent epidemiologists are already saying, a year from now, 60%-80% of the US population will have had the virus. That’s the point at which herd immunity kicks in, when the newly-infected encounter mostly immune people and can’t create new infections. Present “social distancing” efforts will have some effect in slowing the rate of infection, but nothing will stop it from becoming endemic.

 

 

1.100 novel, FOPAL, virus

Wednesday, 3/11/2020

Went for a run. Might have finished a minute faster than the previous time, but that could also be due to not having to wait for a traffic light. Anyway I felt strong and healthy, which is good.

Did a bit of paperwork left over from my annual review with the Financial Advisors. They Advised that I should really have $3M of general liability coverage, not the paltry $1M included in my Renter’s insurance policy. So I emailed my agent. Later she replied that I could get such a policy, and then could dial back the liability coverage in my Renter’s and Auto policies to almost make up the difference. So that’s in progress.

Next, I did a copy of the full text (which is 43,000 words) of the novel, and pasted it into a new Google Doc. That took Google at least 30 seconds to digest. I thought it wasn’t coming back, but it did. I started reading through the text, tweaking the format so it looked like a book, not a manuscript, and immediately spotted a typo.

It is well-known to writers that when you reformat something, change the font or the line spacing or whatever, suddenly you will start to see things you didn’t before. So now I have to do a full read and edit in the new format, and of course, have to make the same edits in the “real” document at the same time.

Also interesting that Google Docs has a grammar checker. It has a spell-checker that puts a wiggly red line under words it thinks are misspelled; Open Doc (which I am using for the “real” manuscript) also does that. But Google Docs also puts a blue wiggly line under any phrase that doesn’t look right to it grammatically, and that has already showed me two typos where I missing words. (Like missing “had” in that line.)

At 11am I headed out to FOPAL for my usual Wednesday sorting shift. Did four hours of sorting, as usual moving many, many boxes of books. At 4pm my back was painful; time for the usual “two ibuprofen and a nap” prescription.

But there were new emails from the Channing House Response team. They’ve received guidance from the powers that be: when there is even one confirmed case in the county, all senior facilities in that county should lock down. Santa Clara county has 48 cases (as of yesterday), so at Channing House:

  • No visitors at all, family, vendors, whatever
  • No contact with the contractors who continue to work on the 5th floor upgrade
  • Strongly recommend that residents avoid all unnecessary outside activities that involve groups of any size

Although walks in the neighborhood are fine. I’m thinking hard about my volunteer activities, which are quite limited.

Tomorrow I’m to go to Yosemite for artifact work. That’s a group of maybe 5 people who are smart enough not to show up if they have cold symptoms. Should be OK.

Processing computer books at FOPAL, and sorting books there outside of donation hours, exposes me again to at most four or five other volunteers. I had already been wearing latex gloves while handling books. I may want to quit sorting during donation hours, 2-4pm, when members of the unwashed public come in to donate.

 

1.099 quiet day with novel

Overnight I realized that the new pillow I’d bought really was uncomfortable, just a bit, well, a lot, too thick, and made my neck hurt. At 3am I got up and found the old one and stuffed it into the pillowcase.

Tuesday, 3/10/2020

Absolutely nothing in my Google Calendar for today, a rarity. Whatever shall I do? After breakfast I decided to cowboy up and finish the goddam novel. Simultaneously, the people working on the 5th Floor Upgrade began heavy demolition directly below me. They make a lot of use of a hammer-drill that sounds like a jackhammer. So I put my laptop in a bag and headed out to the good old P.A. Cafe. Sat down at a table with a coke and a scone to write, just like Adam@Home:

Screen Shot 2020-03-10 at 4.29.47 PM

And I damn well did write the whole climax of the story, foiling the bad guys in a totally humiliating way. Still need a closing scene to wrap things up and tie loose ends.

The committee that keeps the art display in the lobby fresh had requested new material, this time themed “your island getaway”. I have that excellent shot of a blue doorway on Pyrgos, which is an island, so I had printed it out 11×14 and put it in a frame, and on the way out this morning I offered it to them. Unfortunately the frame I was using did not hang on their particular picture rail. So from the cafe I went to Michael’s crafts store to look for another cheap frame. There are lots of cheap frames, but none of them have good hanging widgets, and none are set up to take a wire across the back. I got one frame that might work.

Since I was just a block from Bed Bath and Beyond, I went in there and bought another pillow, identical to the one I bought last year and which was getting lumpy and floppy. It is also comfortable. If I have to replace it annually, so be it.

Back to CH with lots of time in hand. Sat down at the big computer and wrote a satisfactory closing scene, one which wrapped things up for the moment but which leaves it open to continue the story in the future.

Done. It only took thirty years. Well not really; but I first imagined the planet, Pelajis, and the idea of setting an Arthur Ransome style of children’s story on it, in 1987 or so. I started actually writing it in 2017, so only three years really.

What next? Well, I am going to reformat the text into a Google Doc so I can share it. Then I need to find beta readers, preferably, young ones — since it is after all, meant for the “middle grade” demographic. Would middle-graders actually read it?

Second, submit cover and opening chapters to some agents. I am not going to try to self-publish this book. Self-publishing is a great vehicle for people who can promote themselves. I have amply demonstrated that I can’t. If I can’t get a legit publisher, which means, via an agent, then too bad. It’s a failure.

Think I’ll go out for supper.

1.098 closet design, FOPAL, novel

March 9, 2020

Went for a run and timed myself. The run breaks naturally into four segments: east along Webster to the creek; west along the creek to Bryant; across the footbridge to Willow road and west to Alma; along Alma back to University. From there I walk on home. So these four legs timed in at approximately 11, 6, 10 and 7 minutes, a total of a shade under 33 minutes. In future I will see how consistent those numbers are, and maybe reduce them a bit.

During the morning, SWBB sent out an email offering season ticket holders a link to buy a seat in the sub-regional that Stanford will surely host, probably on 3/20 and 3/22. The link didn’t work of course, so I emailed my personal ticket rep Kevin (whose name shows up when I go in to “manage my account” at Stanford tickets). Later in the day he called me directly and finalized the ticket over the phone.

At 11:30 I presented myself at the Campbell office of Valet Custom Cabinets to review the design that Ward had made for my two large closets. I made some suggestions and he added those changes. I approved his choice of hardware (drawer pulls, mostly). The closets are going to be very nice, much more usable and many times nicer to look at.

From there I went to FOPAL and, finding no boxes of computer books (yay!) did two hours of sorting.

Back home I did a little work on the novel. Over the last couple of days I have figured out how to do the big dramatic finish. To work, it will require a change in the layout of a boat that is an important prop in the story. So now I went back and altered the description of that boat where it first appears, so it is suitable for the finish I have in mind.

At supper I sat with Patty and David. Much talk about The Virus and its effects on our respective travel plans. Patty noted that Kim Krebs, CH marketing manager (who showed me my unit back last year) was on holiday in Italy. After supper I sent Kim an email, suggesting she write to the CHBB mailing list to give her status because “we” were all worried.

1.097 errands, FOPAL, SWBB

Sunday, 3/8/2020

For my Sunday Morning Coffee I walked over to Mlle. Collette’s. Continued on up University avenue to buy deoderant at CVS (the excitement grows) and over to Ace Hardware to check on their hummingbird feeders. I’m not happy with the one I got a week ago.

After lounging around home for a while, I took off in the car to go to Bed Bath and Beyond for a new pillow. The one I bought about a year ago, before moving into CH, has turned into a lumpy mess. From there I checked the big Ace Hardware where Orchard Supply used to be, partly for feeders and partly to browse their plant selection, which turned out to be slim and uninteresting. Although, they had a few succulents, and I remembered with pleasure the row of little succulents we had on the kitchen windowsill at Tasso street. Possibly, if I can find a tray or shallow plant dish about 4 inches by 12 or so, I could put a row of little succulents in my side windowsill.

Next I stopped at FOPAL where I found some changes. All the snacks that are usually open for volunteers to take have been cleaned away, and a new sign says no public snacks for fear of spreading the virus. And a supply of exam gloves with the suggestion that you wear them while handling donated books.

So I put on gloves and processed five boxes of books for the computer section, sending most of them on to the bargain room. There were a few possibly valuable items. C. Gordon Bell is a well-known computer person, designer of the original PDP-1 computer and many other things, whose library apparently was at least in part donated to FOPAL. So there were four pristine copies of one of his textbooks, all signed by him. On Amazon, used copies were going for over $100. So that was a bit of a gift for the High Value section.

At 5:30 I started watching the PAC-12 Tournament championship game, Stanford against the formidable Oregon Ducks and Sabrina Ionescu. The game was close at first, and Stanford ended the first quarter ahead by 2 points. Then the Ducks took off on a 20-point tear and put the game away, ending 30 points ahead. If the Ducks aren’t in the Final Four it will be very surprising, and they could very well be national champions.

I was on my way out to find some supper up the street when I checked the menu at our dining room. Quesadillas and pulled pork? OK, why not. I had those items and some vegetable medley put in a box for eating in my room. It was only OK, not great.

But the new pillow was fine.

1.096 Novel, Baseball, SWBB

Saturday 3/7/2020

With the goddam taxes out of the way there is no further excuse not to work on the goddam novel. But it has been weeks. So I once again sat down to read the whole thing through, all 35,000 words of it. That took only a couple of hours; and again, as after previous readings, I was pleased with my work. There is a lot of good stuff there. I just need to finish the goddam thing. I have most of the elements of the finale lined up; I just have to decide what will actually happen: how the bad people will be exposed and humiliated, and what part of that my protagonists, who are kids, can realistically play in making that happen.

(In fact, since I’m writing this the next day I may as well say: I was obsessing over, half-asleep, endings for this from about 4am to 5am Sunday, and I think I know what to do.)

Around noon I decided to go to a Stanford baseball game, even though the weather was overcast and a slight mizzle was in the air. Stanford had announced, as part of COVID-19 precautions, that they would be limiting attendance at all sporting events to about 1/3 the capacity of the venue. But the baseball organization had emailed season ticket holders specifically to say that if you have season tix, you can get in. So fine, nothing else is happening.

I dried off my seat with paper napkins and, since a very light rain was still falling, hunkered down under my umbrella.

sunken_diamond_umbrella

Note they certainly achieved limited attendance. The rain soon went away and the game was fine, Stanford winning 7-5.

At supper I opted for the newly-provided take-away option. Pick any combo from the menu and instead of putting on a plate the server puts it in a box to take back to your room. (Also, they have instituted a limited seating plan: no more than 3 people at a round table, where they used to set for 6, and no more than 2 at a square table. The dining room looks a lot like the above baseball seating.) One entree was a turkey-cheeseburger with sriracha aioli and arugula. That was my take-away, a box with a very nice burger, and a banana. The burger was really good, their spicy aioli sauce was excellent. I had it with a beer at my little cafe table.

At 8:30, it was time for the PAC-12 tournament semi-final, Stanford v. UCLA. The Bruins had won at Maples a few weeks earlier, in a game I didn’t attend because it was the departure day for my London trip. This game was close in the first half; then Stanford went on a 12-0 tear in the third quarter and put the game away. So the final Sunday will be Stanford v. Oregon.

A little grump: with the game in Las Vegas on Mountain time, it started at 8:30, ran to 10:30, on the night when we put the clocks ahead. Oh well, sleep is a luxury. See above about 4am obsessing.

1.095 taxes, virus closes in

Friday, 3/6/2020

I started the day with a run, which went well. I am pretty much back to where I was before taking a month off from exercise for the London trip. Next week I will try in a small way to pick up the pace, maybe actually timing myself to see what my baseline is.

Channing House has also hired a new fitness director, and it is in my mind to arrange a meeting and talk about resistance exercises, which has been an open issue since I dropped the YMCA back in July last year.

After the run I sat down to finish up my tax return, which I did. Happy to have uploaded all the PDFs and finalized the workbook. No doubt Katie at Wheeler CPA will have questions. Two unusual items for this (2019) tax year: one, about 25% of the initial fee I paid to join Channing House can be credited as a medical expense for continuing care. On the other hand: two, I sold 2340 Tasso for approximately $200K over the appraised value. I am very curious to see how those two offset, or don’t.

I had a delicious lunch of pizza. I didn’t mention that Wednesday evening I just felt like pizza, and walked out to a New York Pizza place on Hamilton avenue. I only ate half of a 12-inch pie, and brought the other half home. Today I pulled it from the fridge, nuked it, and had it for lunch. It was excellent.

Afternoon, I canceled two things and had more canceled on me. I love this XKCD cartoon. C’est moi, baby.

self_isolate

Some time ago I had bought a ticket to an SFJazz-sponsored concert with blues master Buddy Guy. It was to be this night, at the Paramount Theater in Oakland. Later I had accepted an e-vite from Suzanne and Chuck to a house concert at their place for tonight.

Realizing this conflict on Monday, I immediately decided, I don’t want the hassle of driving to Fremont, taking BART to Oakland, and return. Just… no. I had meant to just eat the ticket cost but today, SFJazz sent an email reminding everyone that (a) they are still holding concerts, just taking pains to disinfect all seats after every show; (b) but if you don’t feel well or don’t want to attend, you can turn back your tickets on our website. So I did that. I was too late to get a credit for the Buddy Guy show, but I will get an email showing its value as a tax-deductible contribution to SFJazz.

Which left the house concert. I’ve been to concerts at Suzanne’s place. She had commented on the Evite page yesterday that the concert was sold out. I pictured her living room packed with people, and thought to myself, no. Just… no.

Nobody there will have the virus, probably. But I do have some responsibility to my fellow Channing Housians. Somebody might have a cold, and if I get any cold symptoms, the CH instructions are to call the wellness nurse and self-isolate until you can be tested. Well screw that. I think I won’t take the chance. So I put my regrets on the Evite. And I’ll be staying in tonight.

Then, I had been booked to lead a tour at the Museum tomorrow, but today came the email: all public tours and demonstrations canceled until further notice. So my Saturday is suddenly open as well. Oh, and I was to meet Scott for a History Society thing on Sunday; that’s canceled as well. Kind of amazing how fast this is snow-balling.

 

 

1.094 closets, yosemite

Thursday, 3/5/2020

In the morning as scheduled, Ward from Valet arrived at 8:45. We talked at length about what he could and couldn’t do for my two main closets. He took a lot of measurements. We are to meet at the Valet showroom next Monday to see his design. Valet, and Ward himself, do a lot of work at Channing House, in fact his next appointment after me, was at room 612, just down the hall.

Oh, and there was a coincidence moment. When I led him back to the bathroom hallway he said, “Oh, you’ve been to Design Concepts!” Huh, said I. He pointed to the tall rosewood cabinet that was one of the pieces I brought from Tasso Street. He said he recognized it instantly as one that he had sold when he owned the Design Concepts store. Could have fooled me; all I know is we had that cabinet a good long time and loved it, and I still use it for all sorts of miscellaneous stuff.

Wait a sec. Checking the old home inventory file… wow! We bought that in 1994, it was custom-made, and we paid then over $3000 for it. No wonder I like it…

Anyway, Ward was done and gone at 9:30 and I drove right away to the Yosemite warehouse, arriving only a couple of minutes after the 10am start time. Spent the day continuing to open box after box on the hunt for the missing Ferrante plug-board. Saw some neat things in the boxes, including a huge (by which I mean like 3 foot by 2 foot) core plane. Zillions of tiny doughnuts on copper wire, just huge. Most core planes are relatively small and stacked in a module.

Back home to join an email discussion among the tech squad on whether, and how, to do video conferencing in place of things like floor meetings and events.

 

 

1.093 taxes, FOPAL (again!)

At 1am I woke up. Did the shuffle to the urinal, had a drink. Didn’t go back to sleep; instead came up with a new worry to gnaw on. I want to hang my big Carol Aust painting in the hallway, so it can be seen by others. Either outside my room, where only I and the lady across the hall would see it, or down by the lounge, where anybody going to/from the elevator can see it. That’s pending approval from everyone at the next floor meeting.

But then, my 2am brain realized, it would be so easy for anybody to steal it. Just lift it down, and down the elevator. To another floor perhaps. It might be a bit awkward to get a 5-foot by 2-foot framed painting out the front door, but it could be done. If the painting is outside my unit, theft is even easier; it’s only five steps to the freight elevator.

So I’m lying in bed, alternately wondering if I’d published a Tuesday blog post (I had written it but not hit “publish”) and wondering if there was such a thing as a theft alarm for paintings.

So I’m up looking into that. (clicky clicky) Surprisingly, there doesn’t seem to be any online info about how to secure a painting against theft, or any clever noise making alarms to prevent art theft. I can visualize something like a car alarm that is screwed to the inside of a frame, and triggered if the work is lifted off the wall. “STOP THIS PAINTING IS BEING STOLEN BEEP BEEP” and so on. But I don’t see that.

I believe I will consult at the frame shop where I had a print reframed last month.

Wednesday, 3/4/2020

So the actual day, when it came, was quiet. In the morning I worked taxes for a couple of hours and am at least half way through the workbook. Should be able to finish up on Friday.

Today, our new 6th floor rep, Jerry (who took over last month from Craig) announced the cancellation of the upcoming floor meeting. Shit being canceled everywhere. I should describe the Channing House virus actions, which are primarily in the Dining room. No more place mats (they are apparently hard to sterilize). No more salt/peppers on the tables (because they could pass virus from one person to the next). No more water carafes on the tables, ditto. No more self-serve salads or desserts; everything has to be served to you by a server, and once you have accepted your plate from them, you can’t hand it back for something else (because then their vinyl glove might touch your fingerprint and then be passed on to the next customer). All activities have been canceled, including two musical events that I was going to be the A/V person for.

After lunch I drove to FOPAL (yes, again) and did sorting until 4pm. Then back home and chill for the evening.