meanwhile, back at the townhouse

Life proceeds apace.

I have been doing responsible things, like opening up an IRA I can roll all my 401(k) accounts from pervious jobs into, and applying for new jobs. (No nibbles yet. I have to say that I’m not feeling reassured by the vagaries of some of the websites these companies are using; yesterday I applied for one that sounds like a great fit, but the website skipped some of the steps it was supposed to do, like pulling previous job information from my resume and asking me to verify it. I did eventually get my information into their system by dint of switching to Ted’s computer, but I’m not sure now if that went to the application for this specific job rather than into their general pool of information. Worrying, since this is a position I’d really want and that I think (hope) ought to be a close enough fit to get me interviewed. I did repor the issues via their contact link.)

We’re into the last few days before competing in the Covered Bridge Regatta, for which I am not feeling at all ready. I’ve been training fairly rigorously, except for that week’s break when I visited my family (though rough-housing with a toddler ought to count as exercise), but what with one thing and another, cold weather and furniture deliveries and house-buying, it’s all been on the erg. I’ve only been on the water a few times. We went to the lake house weekend before last, which was a good thing because the weather was so glorious that we’d have been kicking ourselves otherwise. At least my racing starts then seemed OK. We were considering going last weekend, but Ted’s parents came up to town so we stayed home, had them over for dinner, and then hung out with them the next day. We also went for dinner with them to Hall Street Grill in Beaverton, which was excellent. We plan on heading down tot he lake on Thursday night, so at least I’ll be able to row on Friday before my scheduled race on Saturday.

Ted races on Sunday, then we take him to the airport to fly out on a business trip. Since he’s flying from down there, I’ll be staying in the lake house all week, which will be good, because we really haven’t had enough time there to do some essential work on the house and garden. My in-laws have promised to stay for a few days and keep me company, which I appreciate both because I like having them around and because it’s a very large house to be rattling around in by myself. We’ll be taking the cats, though, so even after the in-laws leave I will have some co-rattle-arounders and can ascribe any strange noises to the cats.

Today we’ll be getting the futon delivered, so we are now guest-ready. That’s the last major furniture purchase, though we’re still waiting for delivery on a few others. Two high chests and a bookshelf should be delivered at the beginning of May, and the major wait now is for the sofa – they brought that last week, but they brought the wrong configuration of sectional! (Partly the salesman’s fault, for writing down the wrong numbers after highlighting the right pictures, and partly ours, for not noticing.) They’ve put a rush order on the new sofa, so it should take “only” 6 weeks. It would really have been nice to have last Friday when we had company!

My new Kindle arrived yesterday, so I spent part of the day getting that loaded up – I didn’t need it, as my Kindle Keyboard is working fine, but my brother and SIL gave me a gift certificate to Amazon, so I decided I needed to use it on something special. I’m not sure I like the way the touchscreen controls work; in particular, when you’re looking at your library in cover view, there’s not much blank screen real estate, so it can be hard to move to the next page without opening a book. I do like the front-lighting, though; our living room is a bit dim so it makes reading easier.

At the moment, I’m reading Riding Rockets by Mike Mullane, a Space Shuttle astronaut, and liking it. Based on my own years working at the JSC, it’s a fair picture, but he’s also mentioned a lot of information that’s new to me about just how risky the Space Shuttle program was. (I worked on the simulators used to train pilots and astronauts.) He’s right that they should have taken the Outpost bar and put it in the Smithsonian. It’s fascinating to see his portraits of some of the people – John Young is a legend to me, but he was less than impressed; he liked and respected Judith Resnick, which is a different picture of her than I have from some engineers who worked with her. It’s also fascinating to see Mullane’s own evolution. He came into the program a complete sexist, his whole schooling and previous career having thoroughly indoctrinated him in that direction; he quotes a guide his wife was given in Catholic school, which claimed that “men are emotionally stable, whereas women are emotionally liable (sic – I think they may have said labile) … men are usually right, whereas women are often wrong.” And then he makes it into the astronaut corps and works side by side with women like Sally Ride, Judy Resnick and Shannon Lucid, not to mention dealing with people who weren’t military for almost the first time in his life. It was apparently quite a culture shock, and it’s fascinating to watch him adapt.

And yes, I should really update more often so the brain dumps are a bit smaller and more coherent.

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One Response to meanwhile, back at the townhouse

  1. LA says:

    Made perfect sense to me. The topic jumps are logical. Good luck with your race! ~LA

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