11/22/2015

Grief and Blogging


I have opened the blog many times since April, and each time I see the post about my dad at the top of the page and I close the blog again. That post keeps drying up the words inside of me in a way that I cannot explain.

I'm not taking it down. As a piece of writing, I like it. I think it captures something about the beginning of my year that is as true as it was painful, and I want it to stay. On the other hand, I need to move it down the page so I can get back into the non-weight loss blogging again. I've been decently regular at my other (secret, boring) diet blog, but when I have the words for this one, I enjoy this blog a little more than the necessary navel-gazing of the weight loss blog.

I just need to scroll it down the page a little, so I don't relive it all over again every time I think I might like to blog. 

Love and miss you, Dad. I'm trying to do what you asked, and be okay. Some days, that's a lot easier said than done.




4/11/2015

Breaking Radio Silence--On Losing My Dad

I've been seriously absent, both from this blog and from my goals, basically since I set them back at the first of the year. I have a good reason, Life seriously interfered with me this time around.

On Christmas Eve, I found out that some persistent health problems my dad had been experiencing after he had replacement stent surgery for his heart In November were, in fact, cancer. That started a tidal wave of bad news, where every phone call was another ratcheting down of hope until there was nothing left.

Do you want to hear a dirty joke?
It was cancer, not just a bleeding hemorrhoid.

It had metastasized, but the doctor had a plan.

It was inoperable because he was in kidney failure.

He had three weeks or so to live.

Every phone call filled me with dread. Every visit, he was a little less with it. He started calling his current wife my mother. He confused me with her too, toward the end.

It turned out he made it a little over four weeks, but the last week was basically sitting a vigil with a person who didn't seem to know anyone was there. In that week, he moved to hospice, which was a blessing I cannot describe. If you have to die, and it won't be in your sleep after a long full life, find a way to do it in a hospice.

In a fairer world, my dad could have taken a handful of painkillers with a tumbler of fine Scotch and gone out on his own terms, before that last week of incoherent, pain-filled confusion and agitation. In other, more civilized countries, this would have been an obvious choice.

As I have worked to process this. To understand what it's going to mean to be a woman without a father anymore, I have realized there were a couple of things that I wanted to write down, to be sure that I would never forget.

Cargo shorts, Teva sandals, and a huge sense of the absurd.
First, my dad had named me to be his decisionmaker for his durable power of attorney. He worried that his wife couldn't do it for language reasons and for temperament reasons. She's Russian and very high strung by nature. I think he was right. I don't think she would have been able to do it. I was barely able to do it. After his stent surgery, but before the worst of the news had come down, I was talking to my dad about Christmas presents. Since I became an adult, the usual gift was cash, and he was making sure that cash would again be okay. I was telling him we had just dropped 500.00 that month on vet bills and that cash would be terrific. My cat was 17 years old, with a new thyroid medicine and a new regimen of weekly fluid treatments.

I could tell something about this was making him uneasy. He asked me if I was sure it wasn't time to let the kitty go. I think he thought I was being overly sentimental about it. I told him that her quality of life was good, and I didn't think anything we were doing was unreasonable to maintain that for her. I think he was worried that he had just declared a person who could be made irrational by the threat of loss as his health care decisionmaker.

I hope I reassured him, and I hope I fulfilled my duties to him. All he asked was to be kept as pain-free as possible, and I took that as my charge for the days he was in the hospice.

Clearly feeling mellow here. Cheers, Dad.
Second, as his time at home with a hospice service was winding down, there was a day that I had to sit down at his bedside with his hospice case manager to try to get him to accept more help in the form of a hospital bed in the house, or a move to an inpatient hospice facility. He was pretty fuzzy from the painkillers, and he didn't want to accept more help at that point. He wanted to be home as long as he could. He still thought he was fine. I thought that was up for debate, but he was able to articulate it clearly--though sleepily--so I relented. I said we'd talk about it again in a few days.

I leaned in to kiss his forehead, and he thanked me for my kiss, all drowsy and sweet.

Thanked me for loving him, basically.

I miss him terribly. I loved him so, so much. These are things that I don't think will ever change, but I don't want them to fade to the broad outlines of my life, either. I want to remember the little details. The phone calls. The sleepy 'thank you.' The cranky way he left voicemails he knew I probably wouldn't listen to before I called him back.

I have two voicemails from him saved on Google Voice. I'm not sure I will ever be able to delete them.

4/07/2015

Review: So Much Pretty


So Much Pretty
So Much Pretty by Cara Hoffman

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




I am really torn about this book, so let me see if I can untangle that a little.

I read this as an audiobook, and I find myself wondering if I would have liked this book more if I had actually read it instead. It has a really unusual structure that doesn't lend itself well to audiobook format. It's comprised of snippets of interviews and articles, as well as more conventional book chapters. All of that is fine, but it's also told in a non-linear fashion, jumping back and forth along the timeline of Alice's life. I found myself wondering if the book wouldn't work a lot better with a more conventional structure.

There's a good idea in here, but it's fractured by the structure of the book and flattened by the leaden, two-dimensional villains. I made myself keep going, and the book did eventually hook me, but it felt like it was crippling its own efforts to do so for most of the book.

I DID reach a point where I had to know what would happen, so I guess that's worth adding a star to what would otherwise be a solid two-star book.



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3/11/2015

Review: Dark Aemilia: A Novel of Shakespeare's Dark Lady


Dark Aemilia: A Novel of Shakespeare's Dark Lady
Dark Aemilia: A Novel of Shakespeare's Dark Lady by Sally O'Reilly

My rating: 2 of 5 stars




Meh.

This book should have been amazing. It's right in my sweet spot of English history and women writers, but I really found huge chunks of this book to be dull. Not to mention that the protagonist is unlikable much of the time, which meant the book as a whole left me cold.

I really wanted to like this a lot more than I did.



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Review: Dragonfly in Amber


Dragonfly in Amber
Dragonfly in Amber by Diana Gabaldon

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



I consumed this as an audio book. I have a very mixed set of reactions to this series. I'll keep reading, I think, but I hate myself a little.



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3/06/2015

Review: The Mad Scientist's Daughter


The Mad Scientist's Daughter
The Mad Scientist's Daughter by Cassandra Rose Clarke

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




I struggled with this book a little at first because the protagonist is more than a little self-absorbed. I fumed at some of her choices, and a few of the chapter breaks seemed to be designed to intensify the selfishness of our heroine.

But I liked the story, and the world building was remarkably deft, so I kept at it. To my surprise and delight, our heroine grew and changed as the story progressed, and her arc was from selfish to a much more grounded, empathetic approach to the people around her. (As many of us walk that same path from childhood to adulthood, it was nice to have a character who did wrong, but when she knew better, she did better.)

I think this fits nicely into the reading lists of science fiction lovers (though lighter fare than some of the other robot-themed classics) as well as people who just love a good story, well told, and haven't really dipped a toe into science fiction.





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3/04/2015

Review: People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman


People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman
People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman by Richard Lloyd Parry

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




A meticulously researched crime novel, this book appeared on my radar several times in podcasts and articles about Western expats living in Japan. It's a grim look at how marginalized the people who try to work on a tourist visa in ANY country can become, since they feel they cannot turn to the police for help when they are victimized.



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2/26/2015

Review: Let Me In


Let Me In
Let Me In by John Ajvide Lindqvist

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




This feels a little like a book that a Swedish Stephen King might write. I'm torn between 3 and 4 stars, but I'm rounding UP for delightfulness of the mid-book plot twist that was built up SO well, but was still a surprise for me.

I am definitely going to read more of these.



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2/25/2015

Review: Middlesex


Middlesex
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides

My rating: 5 of 5 stars




I loved this book, though I have always liked Jeffrey Eugenides's books since I read The Virgin Suicides a million years ago. I'm not sure what took me so long to get around to reading this, but I'm glad I finally did.



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2/18/2015

Review: The Apple: New Crimson Petal Stories


The Apple: New Crimson Petal Stories
The Apple: New Crimson Petal Stories by Michel Faber

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




I didn't know until recently that these short stories, set in the same literary Universe as The Crimson Petal and the White, even existed. They offer the tiniest bit of clarity to the famously ambiguous ending of that novel, though I won't say that I had every question answered.

Still, this was immensely satisfying for such a slim volume.




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2/15/2015

Review: Never Judge a Lady by Her Cover


Never Judge a Lady by Her Cover
Never Judge a Lady by Her Cover by Sarah MacLean

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




Someone really needs to ask MacLean to stop describing women's nipples as straining tips. I can't figure out the biology of that word combination, and since it appears in at least three of the four books in this series, it pulls me out of every. single. story. for a moment to think: "I wonder what she means when she says that..."

The story is solid, and the characters are charming. I loved this trilogy as a whole, though I think this was the weakest of the four, I still liked the book.





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2/11/2015

Review: No Good Duke Goes Unpunished


No Good Duke Goes Unpunished
No Good Duke Goes Unpunished by Sarah MacLean

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




A regrettable side effect of having read so many of this series in the last couple of weeks is that I have started noticing the author's verbal patterns. I'm not sure I'll ever recover from so many uses of the words "straining tips" in reference to erect nipples on a woman. Once it jumps out at you, it will never be easy to scan past.

I'm so sorry for pointing it out, if you didn't see it.



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2/06/2015

Review: One Good Earl Deserves a Lover


One Good Earl Deserves a Lover
One Good Earl Deserves a Lover by Sarah MacLean

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




I am going to read every single one of these, and I don't care what anyone else thinks about it.

They are delicious.



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2/04/2015

Review: Poisoned Apples: Poems for You, My Pretty


Poisoned Apples: Poems for You, My Pretty
Poisoned Apples: Poems for You, My Pretty by Christine Heppermann

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




A younger version of me would have loved this book so much, but its themes don't really speak to me at all in full adulthood. It's cute in places, and moving in others, but overall, my impression is one of gentle, tolerant lukewarmness.



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2/01/2015

Review: The Moment of Everything


The Moment of Everything
The Moment of Everything by Shelly King

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




This had some charming moments, but on balance, it's a perfect example of what a pop culture reference does to your text. A lot of this book is going to feel really, really dated in about 20 minutes.

Sweetly spun, and hardly any real substance here at all. I liked it, but I won't be handing it off to anyone and insisting they read it.



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1/26/2015

Review: Golden Son


Golden Son
Golden Son by Pierce Brown

My rating: 5 of 5 stars




As finely drawn, as brutal, as the first in the series, with a raising of stakes and a darkness that all second novels should aspire to. This is the Empire Strikes Back of the Red Rising series, and it broke my heart and made me wish there were more yet to read.

I'll be waiting impatiently for the next installment.



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1/21/2015

Review: Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith


Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith
Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith by Jon Krakauer

My rating: 3 of 5 stars




This is really two books. It's the story of a double murder that took place in Utah in the 1980s, and it's the sordid history of the Mormon church. At times, the history portions seem out of place, but they do ultimately fuel an understanding of both historical and fundamentalist Mormon ideology/ideologies that contributed to the murder.

My particular edition could have benefited from an update: the discussion of Warren Jeffs did not include that he is currently serving a life sentence for sexually assaulting a child.



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1/19/2015

Review: Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic


Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic
Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic by David Quammen

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




This book is one of the best books on epidemiology that I have read, hands down. Its science is more rigorous than other "Ebola books" and it even takes "And the Band Played On" to task for some of its excesses. Spillover hits the tone just right between giving you the facts about zoonotic diseases and doing so in a wholly engaging way.

If you dig scary diseases, this is a solid entry in the genre.



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1/17/2015

Book Riot 2015 Read Harder Challenge


I've tracked my reading for years over at Goodreads. I'm pretty consistently reading 75ish books a year, but this year I was looking for something a little different. I want to read more books published in 2015, but I also want to broaden my horizons in other ways, too.

I just wasn't sure how.

Enter the Book Riot 2015 Read Harder Challenge. I think this is the thing I was looking for to take some risks and read some books that wouldn't have otherwise been on my radar.

Here's the list, for the click-averse:
They've created a Goodreads group for people participating in the challenge, too. I'm really, really excited to give this a whirl!



1/16/2015

Review: The Martian


The Martian
The Martian by Andy Weir

My rating: 5 of 5 stars




Here it is: my first five-star book of the year. I really enjoyed this, and though I found the breezy, goofy tone of the early log entries to be sort of irksome, eventually I felt like the novel HAD to have them. They gave you a way to know Mark Watney well, which is vital to make the stakes as high as they need to be for the payoff.

Ultimately, Watney and his logs grew on me, but it was the non-journal portions of the book that worked best for me. I really loved the snappy dialogue and the sparks of the tension between the various NASA personalities.

Andy Weir has written a monumental book that makes the science of the Mars mission accessible and fascinating. It might be the best thing anyone's done for the space program since President Kennedy.



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1/15/2015

Review: A Rogue by Any Other Name


A Rogue by Any Other Name
A Rogue by Any Other Name by Sarah MacLean

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




I found this book to be sweet, clever, and a really enjoyable read. I haven't made romance a regular part of my reading rotation in a long time, but these author kept popping up on the feeds of people I trust to recommend books.

I'm totally going to keep going with this series, and I would recommend this book to anyone who can have an open mind about the genre.



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1/10/2015

Review: Blue Lily, Lily Blue


Blue Lily, Lily Blue
Blue Lily, Lily Blue by Maggie Stiefvater

My rating: 4 of 5 stars




I still love love love this series, but this one had me thinking it was the last one, then it ended with next to nothing resolved. Compounding this, I read it as an ebook, so when I ran out of pages, I was baffled as to how it could be over already.

I need the last one. I need to know how it ends.

I love this author more than socks.



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1/05/2015

Always good to reread this

Desiderata 
-- written by Max Ehrmann in the 1920s 

Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, 
and remember what peace there may be in silence. 

As far as possible, without surrender, 
be on good terms with all persons. 
Speak your truth quietly and clearly; 
and listen to others, 
even to the dull and the ignorant; 
they too have their story. 
Avoid loud and aggressive persons; 
they are vexatious to the spirit. 

If you compare yourself with others, 
you may become vain or bitter, 
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself. 
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans. 
Keep interested in your own career, however humble; 
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time. 

Exercise caution in your business affairs, 
for the world is full of trickery. 
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is; 
many persons strive for high ideals, 
and everywhere life is full of heroism. 
Be yourself. Especially do not feign affection. 
Neither be cynical about love, 
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment, 
it is as perennial as the grass. 

Take kindly the counsel of the years, 
gracefully surrendering the things of youth. 
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune. 
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings. 
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness. 

Beyond a wholesome discipline, 
be gentle with yourself. 
You are a child of the universe 
no less than the trees and the stars; 
you have a right to be here. 
And whether or not it is clear to you, 
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should. 

Therefore be at peace with God, 
whatever you conceive Him to be. 
And whatever your labors and aspirations, 
in the noisy confusion of life, 
keep peace in your soul. 

With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, 
it is still a beautiful world. 
Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.

1/04/2015

Review: Fiendish


Fiendish
Fiendish by Brenna Yovanoff

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I loved the unique voice of this novel as well as the vivid setting that it conjured. I've enjoyed most of Brenna Yovanoff's works that I have ready, and this was no exception.

A good YA read for adults of all ages.



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1/01/2015

Happy New Year!


I declared 2014 "The Year of Finishing Things," almost a year ago, and I wouldn't say I just knocked that goal out of the park. I'm not terrific with finishing things, but I want to be. I'm going to carry this idea over into this year and give it another go.

I'm terrible with resolutions, so I'm just going to make a list of some things I'd like to accomplish in 2015, with no expectation that I will achieve all of them. I'm a work in progress, into 2016 and beyond. I don't doubt I'll be back here 1/1/2016 reaffirming some of these goals to be carried forward into the next year, but that's okay.

The trick is to keep moving.

Goals for 2015

  1. Get my average steps per day up to 10,000.  I have lots of data here, since I've been wearing a Fitbit every day for over a year.  My steps per day took a dive when I stopped working at Target (praise god, though, really.) and since I've been at my current (desk) job, Since then, my daily steps have dropped to an average of 4272. So I need to get 6k elsewhere, probably before work, and I don't think that will be that hard. I'm determined to do this one. It's my number one priority. That leads to the next goal...
  2. Gym. Oh, the gym. I belong to Planet Fitness, that notorious gym. I'm one of the people who pays 10.00 a month to feel healthier without actually going to the gym. I really want to turn this around, though I know the Resolution People will be there with me, making the gym crowded for the first few months of the year. I'm going to be one of them. I confess, I'm a little curious how many other slackers like me are about to go back to the gym because of the principle of the thing.
  3. Read 75 books, including clearing the backlog of to-reads I've been dusting and living in proximity to for two years or more. 
  4. Blog three times at least three times a week--twelve entries a month, not including book reviews. 
  5. Use Chuck Wendig's Novel Writing Plan to finish my NaNoWriMo 2014 project as well as the Improbable Romance Novel. 
  6. 100 Happy Days--I started this last year, and fell off immediately. More pictures of more things that make me happy. It's a good practice, to be present and grateful and aware of when I am happy.