Saturday, February 13

Bubble People

After Monday eight of our ten bubble people will have their first Covid-19 vaccine. The last couple, 9 and 10, have been traveling and are in their 5 self-isolating days required by the park and I don't know their intentions currently. It is a relief to have the process started. 

The rules around Covid that have been in place in South Texas, the Rio Grande Valley, Hidalgo County, the city of Alamo, and Trophy Gardens Resort have gone a long way in keeping all of us winter Texans in good health. When we all go back to our home states we will not be seeing the same considerations but we do have hopes that the vaccine will do its best and keep us safe.

Last night our bubble people played the Sticks Card game: https://www.instructables.com/Sticks-Card-Game/ The games we choose are changed on a regular basis so we do not get bored or frustrated. Sometimes it is inevitable, unfortunately. The other games in rotation are, Dirty Board, Fast Track, 65, Cribbage, and CrossCrib. CrossCrip is a variation of Cribbage. Not all of our bubble pals play cribbage.

Thursday, February 11

Quick Tip

Keep your shower sparkling

Many have heard of the 50/50 vinegar and dish soap method to clean a shower. I “modified” that method a bit and it works fantastically on our RV’s shower – fiberglass, tile, or whatever, this stuff cleans anything.

Here’s my recipe: Mix 1/2 cup plain white vinegar with a little LESS than 1/2 cup Dawn blue dish soap (use ONLY Dawn and ONLY the regular blue stuff) in a large measuring cup. Mix, then microwave the mixture till just hot enough to still be able to put your hand in the mixture (do NOT boil it!). Using a Scotch Brite pad (ones w/sponge on one side, a bit rougher on the other), I simply spread the mixture on the walls, doors, and, lastly, even the floor, with a tiny bit of scrubbing. Let the mixture “sit” as long as you can handle the vinegar smell (20-30 minutes is fine; I usually let mine sit ~1 hr). Then get in (as if you’re takin’ a shower) and rinse everything off. That’s it. Your shower will sparkle!

Weather and other stuff

 We too are looking at a streak of less than ideal weather. One of the advantages to being this far south is that we can see it coming from a long way off. We are all getting prepared to hunker down and enjoy a few days of deep south Texas winter. It will be fun, I say! The pool hall will be open, we have lots of food on hand, and our propane tank is full. There are many other good things too but too many to mention off the top of my head. Monday is the day we are all most focused on.


Getting the first Covid vaccine has had unexpected thoughts for me. It is a bit like Christmas as a child. It was always a long way off and a bit out of reach and then it happened! My main feeling is one of relief, surprisingly. At last, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Another surprise is the number of people who say they are not getting it. Some are understandable, health reasons, a waiting game to see that we who do, don't drop over dead like a bunch of flies and those with a bit of simple apprehension. The ones who aren't getting it for political reasons or just plain stubbornness are the most troublesome as they continue to put the people around them at risk. We will still wear our masks, socially distance, and wash our hands to guard against the naysayers and do our part to aid our fellow humans. To me wearing a mask is a bit like a visual handshake. It says I care about your wellbeing as well as my own.

The trees in south Texas are budding! In a short time, we will be having full-blown leaves on the trees. It happens so quickly. The birds are happily singing away looking for a hook-up so they can settle down, build a nest, and carry on with the next phases of their chirpy lives.

Love ya' all!!

Tuesday, February 9

Covid-19 Vaccine Experience

 

We previously registered online at UT Health RGV. It is the Medical College in Edinburg TX. I think it was early January when we registered and Monday we received notice that we could get the vaccine. So I went online and followed the directions for both of us and made appointments for today 2/9/21. A contact called us last night and helped me finish up the details of it all including online check-in. So this morning we headed to the college in Edinburg, an 11-mile trip, and foggy conditions but it all went smoothly. While on the phone with them last night we also made an appointment for the second dose on March 2nd in the same place. I never dreamed the process would go that smoothly. Our appointment was for 8:30 but if you are there and ready, in you go! We did not wait for even a minute and we were back home a little after 9. We did have to wait for 15 minutes to rule out a reaction. We were each given a folder with our beginning time on it and shown to a waiting area with chairs 6 feet apart and a big clock on the wall. When the time was up we checked with the woman at the door and she gave us a card saying we had the first dose and the appointment time for our second dose. I was greatly impressed with their efficiency. 

So we are on our way to being fully vaccinated. I feel it is the first step to getting back to some degree of normalcy. We will continue masks, distance, and handwashing until we feel it is safe to relax a bit. In case you wonder it is the Pfizer vaccine we were given. 

Monday, February 8

Column by Colleen O’Brien

 Nostalgia, redux

February 3, 2021

~a column by Colleen O’Brien


Looking into old boxes as I putter around my house in reclusive pandemic mode, I find two years’ worth of columns dated 1984 and ’85.


“That’s 37 years ago!” I exclaim aloud, unbelieving that that much time has elapsed. I do not feel nearly 40 years older, I think, not looking in a mirror.


The columns were timely to the time or just nostalgia. If it was nostalgia then, it’s ancient history now….


“Sounds’ silent memories,” A Moment with O’Brien,


North Lake Tahoe Bonanza newspaper | February 1, 1984


“A sound can trigger a memory that takes us to a time and place far away and long ago. Music will do this easily – ‘How much is that Doggy in the Window?’ takes me directly to my grandparents’ living room circa 1952. My sisters and I are singing our hearts out for the adoring relatives.


“The drone of a propeller plane is just as effective at removing me from today and plopping me into my childhood. I am lazing in the grass of my backyard identifying shapes of cumulus clouds and feeling an unfamiliar yearning as I track the occasional airplane passing over my town.


“Today when I hear a prop plane I return immediately to that scene from my childhood, and I can feel the tickle of warm grass on my neck, I can see my white house with the green shutters out of the corner of my eye, and I’m that little girl again imagining tiny people in the tiny plane overhead.


“Memory is not the most accurate recording device. It’s possible that scene I see so clearly when I hear the prop planes is an accumulation of many different days spent dreaming in the sun. Maybe it was my sister, or Mikey Steve, the neighbor kid, who said, ‘Think of those tiny little people in that tiny little plane.’


“The sound of sawing and hammering fills me with a sense of well-being and prosperity. I’m the Kool-Aid entrepreneur of the south end of town, where major house-building is taking place. I’m racking in the coins as the carpenters file past for a tall cold one. They flip nickels into my dish, and my Kool-Aid costs only two cents a glass. They don’t want change. Rich, I’m rolling in the dough, jingling the coins in my pocket. I really love the tune of a hammer and saw.


“Not all sounds conjure up pleasant scenes of bucolic days or memories of childhood affluence. One pitch employed by crying babies transports me to that bewildering, exhausting first week of the new mother with her first baby, living again with her parents, her husband in Vietnam. The sound gives me the shivers and makes me feel so sorry for the mom who doesn’t know what she’s doing and for the kid who’s getting madder by the minute because his mother (supposedly his mother, maybe he got the dumb one because of a mix-up in the nursery) is so dense.


“I could go forever and be happy never hearing that breathless, choking ‘lah, lah, lah’ of the newborn. I get suddenly tired and feel ridiculously young and stupid and trapped.


“The rhythmic clank of chains on crunchy snow, a sound common to this area, is a sound I hadn’t heard for 15 years. I didn’t know till I moved to the mountains that the sound of tire chains would jog a scene out of the back of my mind that I’d not considered for nearly two decades. It’s a day in the life of a teenager, where we clung to car fenders on the slick winter streets and got a thrill of a ride – until one of the kids hit a patch of pavement that sent him sprawling all over the street, blood gushing from his head.


“The car he’d been hanging onto drove clinkety clankety down the street, unaware of the foolish kid left bleeding in its wake. The sound of snow chains does it to me now – triggers that memory of blood on the snow and my friend lying there looking dead.


“He wasn’t. He was barely hurt. But for a few seconds it was horror and shock, and for that incident to return in full Technicolor simply because I hear a sound of chains on snow is still frightening.


“Not every sound triggers a scene from the first time we heard it or because of some significant even that occurred when the sound was going on. If that were so, we’d be deluged with memory scenes at every sound, on overload in no time. The brain is, if not discriminating, at least selective, in its cause-and-effect memories.


“The certain sounds we hear that put immediate fear in our hearts are often connected with scenes we don’t remember. There is no time and place that we can figure out, simply a fear that seems to have no basis: a door slammed loudly makes me unwarrantedly apprehensive. I don’t know what occurred in my past to instigate this anxiety, for there is no accompanying scene. It’s probably just the reaction to a loud noise, but the fast-beating heart continues for some time.


“The idea of sounds triggering memories might be put to good use. And it could be tested: Teaching algebraic equations and chemistry’s periodic table of elements accompanied by a loud bong on a bell or a growl or a squealing tire? Like Pavlov’s method, it might prove to be a more effective way of utilizing that great storage area in the head. Waiting for random sounds to reveal memory is such a haphazard way to live and learn.

Vaccine News

 Butch and I have an appointment to get our first vaccine injection tomorrow morning at 8:30 AM in Edinburg TX at the Medical College. We are pleasantly surprised!

In Case You wonder...

 As you know I am a fan of  RV Newsletter and saw this today and thought you might be curious too. Butch and I usually take their polls and when I went to answer I was surprised by the results.

Have you lost a friend or family member to Covid-19?

https://www.rvtravel.com/poll1531/