7.062 poetry, editorializing, tech

Sunday 02/01/2026

Sunday morning: read the paper, water plants, do crossword. Then I walked (2mi total) to the Rinconada (main) Library and browsed the poetry shelves looking for something to read at Poetry Out Loud tomorrow.

After lunch I worked on learning this great Minneapolis protest song, “Minneapolis: History Chooses You”. I corresponded with the author to get the correct lyrics and chords. Actually I am thinking I would either read the lyrics at P.O.L. Or perform the song? That would be presumptuous.

Famous NYT columnist David Brooks is retiring and his goodby column from the NYT was put up on our CHOpinion mailing list. I read it and got pissed off at him, and spent 2 hours writing a critique that I posted on CHOpinion. I’d put it here but it’s longish and really, who cares?

Then I spent an hour setting up the 11th floor TV so it can show NBC Peacock and all the Winter Olympics stuff. And wrote an email to the AV and tech squad mailing lists saying what I’d done, so “when your neighbors ask if there’s any way to watch the olympics on the 11th floor, here is all you have to do.”

Nice phone calls in between with Dennis and with Laurel.

Nice supper with Gwen, Susan and Harry.

7.061 cushion, lazin’

Saturday 01/31/2026

For a start I walked up to Town&Country. I wanted to browse Paper Source for Valentines cards. Then I figured to walk to CVS and to a grocery store.

As I was leaving Paper Source I got a phone call from the upholstery shop: my stool is ready! So I mentally rearranged my plans. I walked directly home, got in Fred, and drove basically the same route that I did yesterday. To the upholstery shop first, to get the stool. Which looks great. Compare to yesterday’s picture.

New padding and cover fabric, 24-hour turnaround, $180. I can recommend Morales Custom Upholstery. (They don’t have a website, find them via Yelp.)

Then to Safeway for a couple things I forgot yesterday, and to CVS to pick up the 80mg Atorvastatin, and back.

I spent the whole afternoon lounging in my chair doing not much at all. Well, it’s Saturday. My plans for tomorrow are even feebler. Going to dinner I noticed a full moon rising.

7.060 errands, meeting, play

Friday 01/30/2026

After a day of prednizone my foot pain was mostly gone, although the swelling was not all gone. Feeling feisty, I walked to Midtown (1.8 miles) for a cinnamon roll, then took a Lyft back

Then wrote an email to my doctor about a prescription. He had recommended raising Atorvastatin from 40mg to 80mg, and I realized I had enough 40mg tabs for a couple of weeks, but that prescription was from the prior doctor. Within 2 hours I got a text from CVS saying I had a prescription for ATO to pick up. Concierge medicine is nice.

Then cracked open the online tax workbook from the tax preparers. I couldn’t make a lot of progress in it because there are so many 1099-whatevers still to come. But a start.

A couple weeks ago I looked at the padded stool I sit on at my desk. I bought it new when I moved here in 2019, and I noticed I had put a bit of wear on it. Actually what got my attention was finding black snowflakes of vinyl on the floor.

So I asked on CHBB for upholstery recommendations and got two. I dithered for a while but today said, pick one, dude, and I picked Morales in Redwood City. Tossed the stool in the back of Fred and off. A nice young lady showed me a black vinyl fabric that looked better than what was on it, she gave me a quote, and said maybe they could have it done by tomorrow.

At 4pm we had a much-anticipated meeting to announce new parking policies. I had been slightly worried that I would lose my garage parking slot, since I don’t technically own a car. But no. Nobody is getting kicked out of the garage. All the changes are in the surface lot at the front of the building. Quite a few people, over 40 cars, park there, taking any available space, no charge. That’s how Joanne kept Fred until recently. And we’re still used to coming in and parking in the lot whenever we plan to go out again soon. But not after March. They are going to repaint and re-sign the lot, and assign personal slots. And the charge will be $85/month for such a slot. No more free ad-hoc parking.

There will be other changes, but they don’t affect Fred. Staff thinks that some of our Webster street neighbors use our lot. Now, if a person paying for a slot comes home to find a strange car in it, they will tell the desk and the strange car will be towed. In effect, making residents into parking monitors. Clever. Also it seems there have been instances of cars in the garage that were not being driven, semi-abandoned by owners who didn’t really drive but kept them “so when my son comes to visit he won’t have to rent a car” etc. No more of that; if a car isn’t moved in 30 days the owner will be contacted and told to get it out of the garage. All quite sensible.So long as we can keep stall #32, it’s ok.

So tonight I had tickets for The Yaga Play at the Bus Barn. Since Joanne is out of town, I invited Patty to join me. Patty is an old-timer here, she mentioned on the way back that in a couple of months she’ll have lived 20 years at CH. Anyway, the play was excellent, really well done. The lead, Joan, is CEO of a company that runs a chain of yoga studios. At the beginning she and her aides plan a major campaign to sell a new line of yoga pants. Then a BBC reporter does an exposé on child labor in their Bangladesh factory. How to counter the bad press? Obviously they need authenticity, and set out to recruit a guru to represent them. The guru, an absolutely brilliant acting job by Chris Mahle, who has been in several other plays at the Bus Barn and the Pear, turns out to be the very opposite of authentic, and hijinks ensue. Lovely job of staging and production and wonderful acting by all 5 cast members.

7.059 doctor, meeting, dinner

Thursday 01/29/2026

I finish Tuesday’s entry, that my ankle gout attack has continued for over a week now, and my right ankle and foot have become quite swollen and puffy. So yesterday I was thinking what to do, what to do, maybe wait and see if it gets better, and I could hear every woman ever in my life, including Joanne from down in Mexico where she’s on a tour, saying Really? You have a concierge doctor on call you know. So on Tuesday I called Dr. Chu’s office and got an appointment for this morning.

So out the door at 8 for an 8:30 visit to Dr. Chu. His take was that it is likely gout, my uric acid has always measured high-normal and I have a history of it. He prescribed a 5-day course of Prednizone to get the swelling down and “we’ll see.”

So I got the car washed and went to CVS and picked up my new med, and home. I did some other stuff, played the guitar for the first time in a week, finished off the fruit compote for tonight and took it up and stowed it in the refrigerator in the 8th floor dining room where the dinner will be. Then to the semi-annual Rsident/Trustee meeting where the staff breaks down the budget for the next fiscal year. Our rent goes up 4.5%, well, that’s inflation. Otherwise we are in good financial shape.

Then time for the planned “talk about death over dinner”. I covered the details on Sunday. Seven people including me. Was to be 8, but Marcia had a bad cold and couldn’t come. Delicious pot-luck food. Nothing profound, just people speaking honestly about deaths that had affected them. At our ages, we have had a lot of such experiences. One of us, my 6th floor neighbor Bob, was the only double widower, he’d buried two wives.

So it goes.

7.058 video, fruit

Wednesday 01/28/2026

Got a lot of complimentary emails from the drama group. Very unnecessary, they did all the work, I just flipped switches. Gigi stopped by with a gift of fruit. It’s a rule, it seems, you do Gigi a favor, you get fruit.

But that fit into my plan to make a fruit compote for tomorrow night, so I dug out all the fruit I’d bought on Sunday, and chopped fruit for an hour. The pineapple was nowhere near as good as I know pineapple can be, but it isn’t tart and has some sweetness. The berries had not broken out in mildew in the refrigerator, so that’s a win. I borrowed a big glass bowl from Dr. Margaret but I didn’t assemble the final dish. I need more juice, and it isn’t practical to get juice by manually squishing the spare fruit. So I’ll buy a bottle tomorrow.

I edited the video of the Drama Group performance. It’s uploading now. I am going to attend a lecture on the environment, but I am going to sit near the back. The guy better have a new slant on global warming or I am out of there.

7.057 performance, laundry

Tuesday 01/27/2026

Today was the day when the Drama group performed their skit show twice, once at 10am and again at 7:30. Both shows came off quite well. About 40 people in the morning, and a full house, 90+ at night. I didn’t screw anything up in the AV department. This was the first show where I attempted lighting changes, beyond simple blackouts. And we had a bunch of microphones in use. We (the director and me) told the actors they should not worry about switching their body mics off, we would mute them from the sound board. Which meant that before each of the 9 skits, I had to make sure to unmute the mics in use for that skit, and no others. And I managed not to screw it up, so yay me.

In between the morning and evening show I tidied my apartment and sorted and ran my laundry. Also nursed my right foot which is being slow about recovering from gout, if that’s what is causing pain. What else has a sudden onset and causes pain in one specific joint and not the matching one or any other. But Colchicine did not relieve it, so…

7.056 fopal, rehearsal

Monday 01/26/2026

First thing I drove down to FOPAL and in about 2 hours, cleaned out 6 boxes of donations.

Back home, after a quick lunch in my room and a nap, I went to the auditorium to set up for a rehearsal. The Channing House Drama group is a club of about a dozen residents who pay a professional theater person to organize and direct them in performing a program of skits and scenes. Today was their tech and dress rehearsal, and tomorrow they will deliver two performances, one at 10am mostly for people from the AL side, and one at 7pm mostly for IL residents in the tower.

My job was to equip this gang with microphones and stage lights, and to make a video recording of the final run-through. That took from 1pm to about 5:30pm. Then I had a quick supper and edited the video, and sent link to, to all the performers and director.

That’s done and I’m pooped.

7.055 fruit, tech, concert, dinner

Sunday 01/25/2026

Ah, Sunday ritual. Water the plants on the balcony. I am very pleased by the progress of a little cutting I was given by my across-the-hall neighbor Linda. It is a Plectranthus v. “Mona Lavender” (here is an online image of one). It started as a single stem about 6″ high. I stuck it in a pot and it is now a very healthy looking plant with dark green leaves with purple underneath. I am eager to see it blossom.

Then do the NYT big crossword. And then off buy fruit. On Thursday I am invited to a pot-luck dinner. This is a “Let’s Talk About Death over Dinner” party, based on a popular book. Since I wrote rather a complete and thoughtful chapter on death and bereavement in my book (available on Amazon, ahem), I don’t think I will have any surprising discoveries from this exercise, but ya nevah know. ANYway, my contribution to the pot luck is supposed to be a fruit compote and I wanted to get some good fruit that will hopefully be ripe when I do the prep on Thursday. I particularly want to get a pineapple that at least won’t make your tongue pucker up. Because I have tasted genuinely ripe pineapple (in Hawaii, of course) and it is just light years beyond what is usually served here.

So I went to Sigona’s in the Stanford shopping center and they did have some pineapples that were at least not solid green, some color change, maybe a hint of aroma. It’s sitting in a bag in my closet and maybe it will taste ripe by Thursday.

That brought me to lunch time, and I was sitting with Carol, who was talking about the drama group, which reminded me that the drama group is having their tech rehearsal on–OMG is it the 25th ALREADY? –tomorrow! And I remembered that I had promised their director that I would try to work out some custom stage light settings for her and had not done jack-shit about it. So into the auditorium to glare at our lighting panel which is capable of far more than we ever ask it to do. I know it can store combinations of lights as “scenes” you can call it by hitting buttons, but I had never done it. Fortunately Bert had printed out the manual long ago and stored it in a binder under the desk. So I spent half an hour with the manual learning how to program scenes. And then programmed in the lighting scenes that they will need I hope.

Which brought me to 2pm and time to get ready to go out on a date. Met Joanne at 2:30 and we drove to the 1st Cong. church to hear a chamber concert by the Ives Collective. I didn’t keep the program so can’t say what works we heard (three pieces, by Mozart and I forget who else) but they were expertly played.

Then we went to dinner a The Wild Seed, a vegan restaurant in Town&Country. Very nice supper, really excellent celery soup and a hawaiian-style pizza. And it wasn’t even 6pm so we wandered downtown and had dessert at Tong Sui, a new dessert place on Bryant. They serve a yummy coconut pudding with fruit in it,

So back home and settling down before 7:30 like a sensible old fart should do.

7.054 old stuff

Saturday 01/24/2026

First up I reran the nozzle cleaning on the printer a couple of times and managed to get it to output an acceptable yellow. Finished printing the pictures for my hall gallery.

During a long quiet day I spent some time reading in philosophy-of-mind books, and an equal time looking through the SOFTWARE folder of my Dropbox, reading old programs I had written. I have done some good work. I was actually looking for a project I could revive and improve using Claude Code but didn’t see one.

About 2:30 Joanne texted and we went for a walk down to Edgewood market. This 3-mile jaunt was not really a good idea; it worked on the gout(?)-inflamed tendon in my right foot which became quite painful.

Quiet supper in the dining room and so to couch.

7.053 printer, dinner

Friday 01/23/2026

Usual Friday morning walk with Joanne, this time up to Town & Country for coffee and shopping at Trader Joe’s.

Did some more reading. Did some practical things on the computer, and then set to work to print a new set of pictures for my hall gallery. And my trusty printer broke! I printed three pictures that were fine, then the next one came out too blue. I haven’t had a problem with printer color not matching the screen color since, oh, 2000? So I thought to do a nozzle check and what do you know? The yellow ink jet nozzle was producing no color. So of course the print came out too blue.

I ran the nozzle cleaning procedure a couple of times, no help. I tried to run the so-called power cleaning but it didn’t seem to do anything. So my printer is down, at least for color work. It could probably be fixed, if anybody worked on printers. At worst, by replacing the print head with the nozzles. But nobody does work on printers. They are cheap enough that any reasonable repair fee is close to the cost of a new printer.

I bought this printer in 2019, just after moving here (Day 328, 10/26/19). So you could say I’ve had my money’s worth out of it. But damn.

Anyway changed to nicer clothes and went up to the 11th floor for dinner at the Webster Street Grill. That’s a monthly event that Dining Services puts on. They do their best to emulate a fancy restaurant, multiple courses of fancy cuisine and wine. I had been invited by my neighbor Bob, and then he had invited Ian and Joanne to fill out his table. A good group, we chatted happily through the 2 and half hours it takes to serve a 6-course fancy dinner.