Tag Archives: blather

Happiness challenge for August

So in the spirit of the Happiness Challenge for August I’ve read about elsewhere (no linkage because I don’t have permission to do so), I’m going to try to post about things that make me happy this month, one a day.  2012 has been a horrible year in many respects so it needs some positives.

And since it’s the 6th of August, you get six things.  Not necessarily in order of priority…

#6 Curiosity landed safely on Mars, and the ski bums are arguing over who’s gonna get eventual first tracks!

#5 Finding out that the medication adjustment for DH is fixing some things other than what it explicitly was intended to fix (as in the damn medication affected stuff other than pulse rate!).

#4 That DH and DS are currently healthy and happy.  I don’t know what I’d do without my guys, father and son.  Love them both intensely, and part of this year’s horrorshow has been the sudden fear that I might lose one or the other of them.

#3 I still have a day job and it appears that things are looking up there.

#2 The garden is magnificent this year.

#1 Miss Mocha.  She truly is my heart horse.

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Ugh. Somehow I expected better with weather heat transitions

So I thought that losing all this weight would help me deal with sudden transitions in PNW temperatures during the summer.

Fool.

Yesterday we had a rapid swap from cool and damp to sunny, humid and warm (80s Fahrenheit).  I had plans, including taking in a yoga class at a new studio, working on the novel, and other things.  I took DS to the doctor’s office to start up the new medication (Humira).  We came home, I realized it was too late to get started at a new yoga place, so I ate lunch and began work on novel revisions.  My office is in the back of the house, which gets hotter during the day than the front.  Despite all of my preventatives, it got warmer.

I finished the rewrite section, then started walking around the neighborhood to do my errands.  Halfway through, I started feeling sick.  Ruh-roh.  Came home, did chores, and then collapsed, feeling shaky and sick, my gut cramping and showing all the other symptoms of heat problems.  Damn.

It doesn’t appear to have lasted very long.  I did the smart thing, remained hydrated throughout, and simply faded onto the bed and read a book.  Well, two books.  Today, the lingering result is a little bit of fatigue and a little bit of gut spasm.  Fairly typical.

But this is dang annoying.  I’ve never been good at quick weather transition changes from cold to hot.  In the past this difficulty might have been attributed to weight.  But considering I’m pretty much at where someone of my age and height should be (by one calculation I’m probably at 7.1% body fat with a BMI of 20.9), that’s not a factor now.  So the issues run deeper than that.

Part of the problem is that I am such a stereotypical Northern white girl in body type that it isn’t funny.  Born strawberry blonde, now bottle redhead.  Burn easily, stay pale compared even to other white folk.  Much over an hour in direct sunlight early in a hot summer, and I start feeling shaky, upset gut, and light-headed.  Even later in the summer I have to pace my exercise and seek the shade.  Needless to say, I’ve never been a sun worshiper.  For me the sun really is a bright hurty thing.

It doesn’t work that way in winter.  I can caper all over the slopes on a bright sunny ski day in temperatures below freezing and, as long as I’m properly layered up, I do fine.  As long as the temps stay below 50 degrees F I’m pretty good–heck, I’m good even up to the low 70s.  But 80 degrees F and above?

Fergitaboutit.

Humidity is also a factor, as are allergies.  I do better in hot and dry (though not in Las Vegas three digit temps, BTDT.  No.  Freaking.  Way.  Even with AC).  Hiking in Tucson on a warm winter day brought on the beginnings of heat issues and humidity and allergies weren’t raging then.

Grr.  It’s annoying.  Clearly I’m a creature of the Pacific Northwest, especially the wet side.  Looking at a temperature map of the past spring, what area’s been below normal for temps and above for wet?  Yep.

Oh well.  Eventually we’ll get past the see-saw temperatures and settle into a warm pattern.  After a week or so my body will adapt and I can resume an active life without worry, as long as I wear a hat, take frequent breaks in the shade, and don’t sit out in direct sunlight.  It’s just freaking annoying that I can’t use weight loss as a solution.

Of course it wouldn’t be this easy.  Of course.

And, of course, I own a horse who loves this hot weather.  Damn.

(And, please, I’m not really needing advice.  This is a grumble, not a request for advice.  I’ve tried a lot of things, and I still can’t get past the initial reaction to heat.  We do have AC in this house, temperamental as the damn thing is.  I stay hydrated.  I’m careful with what I eat, though in retrospect I suspect I ate too much fatty food yesterday which contributed to my issues.  Still, this is a regular pattern and trust me, I’ve tried a lot of stuff.)

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I miss Tom Peterson’s. Appliance shopping rant.

Long-term Portland residents know what I’m talking about when I say that I miss shopping at Tom Peterson’s.  For those of you who don’t know about Tom Peterson’s, well, here’s the link that tells you about Tom and his role in Portlandia culture.

Not that “hipster icon” is necessarily why I liked shopping there for appliances.  What I did like was that I could go to Tom Peterson’s looking for a moderately priced utilitarian appliance that worked.  No fancy bells and whistles, pretty much plain colors, no designer icons.  Just reasonably-priced, solid, functional appliances without trends or fads.

I can’t find that now, or, rather, I’ve yet to find a reliable replacement.  Many of the stores I’ve gone to have high-end or low-end, without the functionality of my older appliances.  I’m paying more for less functional appliances and the high-end appliances I’ve seen at these stores, while having more cosmetic and flashy bells and whistles, lack some of the useful pragmatic parts of the mid-range Tom Peterson’s line I used to like.

It’s annoying.

And dear lord in heaven, do I ever sound like an old phart.  I know stores like this exist.  I ran into this phenomenon when shopping for a new mattress.  I just haven’t found the right one for appliances yet.

In a word, it’s annoying.  And time-consuming.

I will say this, though–if I’m shopping on the Web, damn it, I want webpages that have a certain degree of search functionality which a.) displays features, b.) allows me to sort by specific categories, c.) displays prices, and d.) is reasonably intuitive and easy to use.

Two local chains failed miserably on that score.  One got ruled right out because they were clearly in the same high-end/bottom-end dichotomy, as far as I could figure out from their website’s descriptions–but that wasn’t the killer.  Killer?  No firm price listing.

The other was bloody impossible to use.  I’ve bought from them before and know they tend to the high end with absolute crap toward the bottom, but sometimes you can find a deal.  But I gave up on them because their webpage was impossible.

The web winner?  Best Buy, which allowed me to sort, get an idea of prices, select by features, and get a pricing idea.  I’m probably looking at reconditioned stoves at a local business first, but at least now I know what a reasonable price range is.

I’d much rather support a local retailer, but damn.  That doesn’t mean I want to pay boutique prices.

Where, oh where, are the Tom Peterson’s of yesteryear?  The retailers focusing on the solid middle group of people who don’t want flash, they want something that works without paying a fortune for fancy designer labels.  Or has that gone out of style?

Damn, I think I’m turning into an old phart.

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