Friday, December 12, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,096 (Friday) – tooth and won ton

Last Tuesday, one of my teeth broke. Last Wednesday, I was in the dental office having the situation addressed. Ever since, the tooth has been sensitive to heat, which is highly unfortunate with it being winter and me on the preferred hot food and drink meal plan. Every time I ate or drank anything, beginning with morning coffee, the tooth would throb and I would feel cranky and think that I needed to call the dentist office or punch a wall. Once I was finished with the eating or drinking it would stop and I would feel fine, forget to call, and merrily move on with my day.

Yesterday, after a throb-inducing feeding of soup, I called the dental office. This morning, there was a return call from the office with an appointment offered at 10:15. One of my concerns was that the heat sensitivity and gum puffiness might be an infection or something else that could affect the procedure scheduled for next Wednesday and I jumped at the appointment.

The professional opinion was that the current filling was causing a bite issue and pressure on the tooth. I can’t say I agree with that, because it was heat that triggered the pain, and while I like my coffee strong-ish, it’s not like I’m chewing on the grounds. The tooth was drilled a bit to allegedly align the bite more. As I drove away from the office, my tooth felt extra throbby. It continued as I shopped in Hannaford, where I had a coupon for $10 off a $25 order, and then suddenly, it stopped. Just like after drinking hot coffee or tea.

As for the grocery shopping (my new hobby?), it was an unfulfilling search for won ton wrappers, despite a claim online that the store carried them. I checked the produce coolers and the dairy coolers, and took the misguided advice of a store employee who sent me to the Asian foods aisle where there were spring roll and sushi wrappers, but those are most definitely not the right wrappers. Despite the absence of won ton wrappers in my cart, I managed to overshoot the $25 target.

The surprise item in my Hannaford cart was powdered milk. This is a product I detested as a kid. When Mom mixed up the powdered milk, if we were lucky, it was used to stretch the “real” milk, and if we weren’t so lucky, it was the only milk we had. I would choke it down at the supper table, but the taste of us being broke until Dad’s next pay day was basically the flavor of tears and misery. Today, powdered milk signaled the key to baking/cooking freedom. There have been many recipes that were temporarily cast aside due to a lack of milk in the house because I don’t drink it so buying it is usually for a specific meal item.

Won ton wrappers for the win.
As if Hannaford wasn’t enough excitement for one day, later, I went to Wal Mart to continue the search for won ton wrappers. As much as I hate supporting the organization that pays many of its employees poverty-level wages, sometimes I choke the sentiment down, just like I did with the powered milk of my youth. 

Market Basket and Hannaford had already come up empty, but the third time was the charm and the evil empire of Wal Mart delivered. In the produce area cooler next to the tofu and the eggroll wrappers, sat the won ton wrappers. My Christmas Eve menu is saved!

Thursday, December 11, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,095 (Thursday) – therapies

Today’s was the last physical therapy appointment. I filled out my breakup paperwork by circling the current level of discomfort and mobility issues on a list of items (all better!) and then we went through the maintenance exercise program I will need likely forever to manage neck strength and the pinchy issue. There was my last manual cervical traction which I am going to miss immensely. My therapist has magical hands.

From PT, there was a little drive to Athol to visit a church thrift shop with limited operating hours that has been on my radar for a few weeks. As usually happens, and despite my effort to reduce the volume of Christmas ornaments before moving, I ended up buying more ornaments. I also got a very basic black winter weight dress that will be perfect for the social engagements and dates that live only in my imagination with mostly imaginary people. A glass dish, ornaments, and a dress for $6 was certainly a bargain. I asked about what sort of donations they are in need of and the answer was “women’s clothing” so now I know what to do with the stacks of clothing that Mom and I have been compiling.

From the thrift store it was a stop at Market Basket because it had been nearly 24 hours since I last set foot in a grocery store. The quest was Lebanon Sweet Bologna, tube sausage, and won ton wrappers for Christmas Eve appetizers. The won ton wrappers were not found, so that was logged as a fail. It was offset by a level of “overachievement” with addition to the cart of onions, carrots, frozen Korean dumplings, sliced deli cheese, golden raisins, frozen vegetables, and bonus crab rangoons from the prepared food warmer for lunch which became a car snack as soon as I was in the car.

The real highlight of Market Basket was seeing a friend not seen in person for several years as I was looking for the golden raisins I had remembered I needed to make noodle kugel. Yes, we became the ladies chatting in the aisle, but to our credit, we were very mindful and aware of other shoppers and took up as little space as possible, moving as needed. It was a great catch-up and we intend to do it again soon, just not in Market Basket. 

Ornaments from the thrift shop.
The new ornaments were added to the window and the trees. Silver balls on the black tree, dark navy/black balls on the silver tree, and pale blue and pink retro styled trinkets in the window and tree. The ornaments on both trees were shifted and adjusted because once a tree is up, that is what happens until it comes down. The blank spots or similar ornaments that are too clustered don't show up until later. Making the revisions can be relaxing (until it crosses the line and suddenly feels psycho).

It was a therapeutic day on multiple levels.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,094 (Wednesday) – sweet bologna

It was cold his morning but the remote start on the car works again thanks to the new fob, so it was all okay. Mom and I made plans to “go out.” At noon, we headed to Smith’s Country Cheese, but not the way that Waze said to go (Route 2A) and along another route Mom knew. She has always been great at navigation so I always let her co-pilot.

When we arrived, there were at least a dozen empty cars in the lot and we expected a mob in the store. There were two people, plus the worker at the cash register. We had no idea where the people were for all the other cars. Mom bought a small tub of port wine cheese and we headed back out to the world. When we stepped outside the shop maybe 20 minutes later, the parking lot was empty except for my car. So weird. As we drove around Winchendon, we puzzled over the disappearing cars and the big historic homes and how it felt like we were suddenly in a Stephen King novel.

Our other big stops for the day were Family Dollar, where I bought a 12-pack of toilet paper and a can of coffee, and Price Chopper, where I bought maraschino cherries for a cookie recipe and a can of mixed nuts.

Somewhere during the course of the afternoon, we had a conversation about Lebanon Sweet Bologna, my favorite Pennsylvania delicatessen delicacy. X2 and I used to buy it when visiting his family in Pennsylvania and they would bring it to us when visiting. We would also special order entire logs of it through the Fort Campbell Commissary, which, as I recall weighted about eight pounds, and the deli team would slice it for us. Eventually, other people special ordered it as well and the deli began stocking it so we didn’t have to buy so much of it at a time. 

When Mom and StepDad visited us in Tennessee, X2 and I introduced them to Sweet Bologna, and they stopped in Pennsylvania on the ride home to buy some. The locals were quite surprised by the couple that was buying pounds of the stuff.

Since leaving X2 and losing access to the Commissary, finding Lebanon Sweet Bologna was difficult, but I had military friends who could help a gal out. When I left Tennessee, Lebanon Sweet Bologna was nothing but a memory until I finally discovered that Market Basket in Lowell sometimes had the Seltzer brand sliced shingle pack with six or seven slices in a package for about a zillion dollars. 

Since talking about it earlier today, there is nothing I want more right now than Lebanon Sweet Bologna. Price Chopper had no such thing, but they had hard salami, which I also liked once upon a time and is another story for another time. The current quest is to find Lebanon Sweet Bologna, sliced in the perfect thickness, which I will know when I see it. Hopefully, I will find some locally and won’t be tempted to take a quick trip to Pennsylvania.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,093 (Tuesday) – service and oil and dance

It was cold again, but instead of hiding in the house like yesterday, things got done. There was PT and after that, I picked up Mom and we went to CVS, then the post office. I dropped her off at her house and went to the Jeep dealership. The call had come in the morning that the new fob had come in and I had a service appointment at 1:00. 

In the service lounge.
The fob and programming cost a chunk of change equivalent to my monthly car payment, but it’s a huge relief to have it fixed. No more messing around with pulling out the valet key and that is good. 

There were five of us in the customer lounge where the TV silently played a series of photos of landscapes, animals, and birds in fresh snow. Three of us were quietly reading -- I had a book, one guy was on his phone, and another lady was using a tablet. The final two customers blew in like a windstorm. They talked while they waited for someone from a car rental place to come pick them up, which is information I didn’t need know, didn’t want to know, and wouldn’t have learned if they weren’t such loud talkers. Some people have no concept of space and volume.

The woman, who was older than the rest of us,  slipped into coffee shop server mode and asked her similarly aged companion what he wanted for a hot beverage, and even though he said “decaf” right away, she still chose to read aloud the labels on all the Keurig cups. She made cups of whatever and narrated every step (taking the cup, adding the K-cup, looking for sugar and creamer). Then they sat at a small table and talked in stadium level voices which were intruding in the sentences I was trying to read. I even whispered a couple times “Shut. Up.”, knowing they would never hear it but it made feel like I tried and maybe the Universe would help. It was a very long ten minutes until the car rental guy appeared like an angel from heaven to deliver the rest of us from our punishment.

Later in the afternoon, as I sat on the couch going though the mail, the oil truck for the company Mom and I both use was at Mom’s house and I realized I hadn’t checked the level in my tank for a week or so. Luckily, even though I hadn’t called to order oil, the guy came to my house and topped off the tank. The learning about the house period continues and the day’s knowledge is that today’s bill plus the one from October equal the total year’s natural gas expense at the house in Lowell in 2024. Ugh.

Move the chairs, then dance.
Dance group was fun, but I overdressed. There had been a comment in the group chat that the meeting place might be cold, so I kept on the turtleneck from earlier today and added a velour hoodie with the fleece pants. It turned out, however, that it was not cold in the dance place. It was hot. The place was set up with chairs from a meeting or event that we needed to move out of the way, which was a great warm-up to the dancing. Usually, we just need to move a couple long tables.

Monday, December 8, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,092 (Monday) – cold and time

The light and loose plan for the day was to go to the post office for some stamps and mail the Christmas cards. It looked cold out and the car fob is being difficult, which added up to staying in the house all day, on purpose. Mostly all day. I stepped out twice. Once to drag the trash and recycle bins to the curb, the second time to take them back up to the house. The “looking cold” aspect of the day was accurate. It was cold. And I was tired, having slept poorly and waking at 2:55 a.m. and not sleeping much after that. The cold was the perfect cover for doing next to nothing (not that I ever really need one). 

Cold days are great for using the oven, which might be why the electric bill that came a week or two ago was high compared to the month before. After flirting with the idea of beginning the holiday baking, today’s oven usage was instead designated for roasting a baking sheet of broccoli, carrots, and onion. The thinking was to eat a little for supper and save the rest to enhance a meal tomorrow, but the first little plate was good so there was a second and then a third, and after that it was gone. Those crispy, charred bits of broccoli are irresistible.

There was a small amount of work done in the guest room in an effort to empty a box that was in the middle of the floor, whish is easier than it sounds and also why it has sat there untouched for months. It held (and still holds) journals. I have been conducting brain dumps in spiral bound and hard bound books since I was in college. In addition to the diary type books, there is a stack of desk calendar/day planner books. I’m not entirely sure why I kept all this stuff, but at least once when I was a kid I thought I’d be famous when I “got older” and then my biographer would find the minutia of my days fascinating details of my daily life. So far, there is no whisper of remarkable achievements and fame, but I wrote that off years ago anyway. Sometimes, though, I flip through the old planners and find the records of my olden days mildly interesting when I can actually understand my own project shorthand. 

When I worked at an agency, we tracked client project time in six minute (tenth-of-an-hour) increments and I logged my time spent on client work in the desk planner as it happened to make it easier to log it all on the time sheets later. Some of it looks like gibberish now.

Once I get done amusing myself with skim reading days, weeks, and months of fascinating entries like time off for trips I don't recall taking and client entries for things like “SHB web copy - 10” KB- SHB Icon ads - 10,” “memo - web edits - 20,” and “Storm – servers out,” I can figure out what on earth to do with 20-some odd years of yearly planner books. Exciting stuff.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,091 (Sunday) – dancing and shopping

Dance troupe season 2025 is finished, after our performance at a benefit for Home for Little Wanderers at the Middle East in Cambridge. The day was fun. The other dancers in the show were amazing, and the costumes were all impressive. So much beading! Gorgeous colors! Veils, fan veils, and zills! Our troupe had seven dancers today and we adapted to the smallest space we’ve ever performed in. If there had been all nine of us, it would really have been a spectacle.

Turkey wants in.
Three of us carpooled. The traffic didn’t seem too bad, but I wasn’t driving so that might be inaccurate. At a red light near Boston University we saw a turkey walking on a patch of grass, and then it started following a woman as if to try and enter a building marked “Administrative Offices.” She managed to slip in and shut the door behind her to keep the turkey out, and it stayed there looking through the glass. Or maybe it was admiring its reflection in the glass. Who knows. It was amusing either way.

We arrived at the performance site early enough to walk around and grab some lunch before we had to check in. The energy on Mass Ave was invigorating. There were lots of people on the sidewalks including many sporting runners bibs and many restaurants were crowded but we found one with open seats. My lunch/late breakfast of scrambled eggs and coffee was energizing. Restaurant scrambled eggs are almost always better than what I make at home and I don’t have to deal with eggs stuck on a pan. Spending casual time walking with two dance sisters was good for my soul.

After the show we visited Goodwill, conveniently located on the way back to the garage. I found a light blue and gold lace patterned dressy turtleneck top (if there is such a thing as a dressy turtleneck) that I don’t know what I’ll wear with, but also knew I might regret not buying. 

Dance and street shoes
crammed in a shop.
A few doors down the street, my eye was caught by a window full of shoes including those worn for ballroom and salsa, and sky-high platform stripper shoes, and when I spotted the jazz flats and pointe shoes and we saw some costumes it registered it was a dancewear shop. The small shop was crammed with everything dance – and we’re talking all kinds of dance, including a couple dresses perfect for some styles of belly dance. What a find.

This was our busiest performance year with appearances at events new to us including some in New Hampshire and the Natick Dance Showcase. Now we will relax for a few weeks before beginning rehearsals in January for a performance in February.

I won’t have much time to collect any rust though. There are a couple weeks still left in the Tuesday night dance group classes where we are working on some fun dances. The coming year looks like it will be another good one for dancing.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

random thoughts – Day 2,090 (Saturday) – technology

It was another morning with snow flying and creating a pretty scene outside the window while I drank coffee. The ground became coated, but it wasn’t anything that seemed to need shoveling and most of us on the street didn’t. The snow stopped, the sun came out, and the streets were eventually just wet.

An errand required a trip out of the house. The persnickety key fob, which was looked at and tested by the dude in the Jeep service department on Friday, is worse than before. The guy was going to pull the new battery he had tried in it so I didn’t have to pay the $10 sales price, but I think he neglected to put the old, semi-functional one back in because things are all kinds of nutty now.

Before the tech touched it, having the fob near the door handle would unlock the door, avoiding the need to fumble with fob buttons or juggle packages and bags. Now, I have to extract the metal key from the fob and insert it into the lock to open the door. To start the car, I have to touch the fob to the start button, then depress the brake and push the start button. 

Excuse me, the key fob is right here.
If the door is opened after the car is started, the dashboard displays the message, “Key fob has left the vehicle” like it’s Elvis exiting the building or something. But no, dear technology demon overlord, the fob and I are still right here in the car, and dear fobby appears to not be speaking to you at present. Hopefully the new fob will arrive on Tuesday, everyone and thing will be on speaking terms again, and this will be nothing but a memory by Wednesday.

This nonsense with unlocking and starting the car, constant dashboard messaging, the navigation system that frequently glitches out when I need it most, and the expense of fixing the many things expertly engineered to break on a profit-enhancing corporate schedule makes me really hate technology, in cars and elsewhere. I miss the pre-computerized cars that didn’t need a $300 key fob. I don’t need my appliances to communicate with each other or tell me I need milk.