Today when Travalon was at work, the kids drew more flags. I like the weak attempt at a Mexican flag.
Today when Travalon was at work, the kids drew more flags. I like the weak attempt at a Mexican flag.
Today I worked on campus, and Hardingfele and I went to the nearby greenhouses over lunch. To my surprise, the leaves I had wanted to pick up last time when the students suddenly invaded were still lying there, alive, so I took some back to my office and stuck them in dirt. We'll see if they survive. I was working on a big project for my sorta-boss, and I had some questions for him, but from his response he seemed annoyed by my questions. That was the first time I felt kind of yelled at today. I did get the project mostly done.
Meanwhile, Travalon was drawing flags with the kids at work for the Winter Olympics. He drew the Croatian flag.
After work I went to Moldy Jam for the first time in over a month, and it sounds like a lot of other people were also gone recently, because everyone was saying how large the group was but to me it was normal sized. For some reason we played a lot of minor-key and Irish stuff tonight, and some people were complaining about it, but I was loving it. A new couple came and said they wanted to do a song called "Groundhog" since it's Groundhog Day; the group didn't know it, but we had fun learning it. I noticed that early in the evening I was doing really well with learning tunes by ear, but as the evening wore on, I got worse at it. After we took a break (and I ate way too much cheese), some of the leaders called us back by launching into one of my favorite tunes, "Butterfly," a slip jig in E Dorian. Since I know the tune well, I played it with great enthusiasm until noticing people were signaling at me, so the tune had changed, but it was another slip jig in E Dorian so I hadn't noticed. Oops! That was the second time I felt a bit yelled at. It's probably a bigger deal in my mind than in theirs. Once when I sang with the OTHER choir, we were doing a Sweelinck piece I knew well, and I was singing very confidently but was apparently off the beat, because the choir director was signaling at me frantically, so I stopped, listened, and got back in. He probably doesn't even remember that, but it will be forever seared into my memory.
There was a post today about a new Irish session on the first Thursday, so I put a comment asking if it was an open jam. When I got home, I saw the local fiddler had answered "NO" in all caps, and he had sent me a private message that read like an email that I hadn't gotten with more details about how it was only for advanced players, etc. That was the third time I felt a bit yelled at today. There must be an email list I'm not on, because I only know when the Lakeside sessions are by checking the Lakeside website, or when the red-headed flute player mentions them. This session will be this week, in a location I've been dying of curiosity to see, but there's also a Scottish fiddling class at the same time. Maybe I should do that instead and go to the new Irish session next month. Decisions!
Today after Mass Travalon and I recycled the plastic, again with some help from the guy who always used to do it, then when we got home my aunt texted me a photo of an envelope from a card I must have sent to my cousin back when I was in college. I drew this on the back:
This morning Travalon and I hit the road, stopping at Lapham Peak to powder our noses. Was it ever crowded there! The whole world seemed to be there for cross-country skiing. Then we met Tiffy at the Park and Ride we usually meet at, and we drove downtown to the parking ramp for the Milwaukee Public Museum. We walked to a nearby "fast food" Mediterranean restaurant for lunch; my chicken shawarma "sandwich" was actually a wrap, which is a bummer because I love pita bread, but even with less bread I could only eat half of it. (Fortunately in this weather, I could leave the other half in the car and it would be fine.) Then we met my old college pal (who is Tiffy's old high school pal) and her friend at the Milwaukee Public Museum. Because our old pal is a member, she could get Tiffy in for free, and the other lady became a member right then, so she could get me in for free. Only poor Travalon had to pay for his entry, but it's not that expensive. He'd been wanting to go, since this is the last year they will be in their current location, and the new location is smaller and will not have room for the Streets of Old Milwaukee display.
We started with that display, which was still decorated for Christmas and still had Christmas carols playing in the background. Travalon took some photos. For some reason these loaded in the opposite order I requested, so this is a balalaika and a mandolin at the end of the exhibit.
This is the Polish House.
I'm pretty sure this is the Croatian House. Note the tamburitzas, or small stringed instruments.
We went to all the exhibits in the museum. Travalon took some photos from the Butterfly Room.
Today I worked from home; I thought my sorta-boss might make me go into the office today to make up for working from home on Monday, but he was off today, and my actual boss didn't care. She and I had a meeting late morning that really helped me with a couple of issues, and my morning pop-up meeting was very helpful too. I wanted to go to the protest downtown and could leave a little early, but my neighbor was already going in a full car, Hardingfele said it was too cold, and my Union buddy who looks like a leprechaun never responded to my text. I didn't want to go alone, so I just stayed at home and worked. Usually I take a walk at three, but I went a little later and thought, "Man, it's so cold, I could never make it through a whole protest! I can barely make it through this Divine Mercy Chaplet!" I headed toward the bridge where you can see sun art this time of year, when suddenly there was a sound like a helicopter was approaching, and I wondered if it had something to do with the protest, but it was in fact a cute little train with one engine and three cars. I never see trains midday anymore, and it seemed like a sign from God that I was in exactly the right place at the right time, so I was never meant to go to the protest. Then when I got home, there was a wonderful package in the mail:
When we went to the Burns dinner, I just loved the highland dancers' plaid kilts and knee-high argyle socks in matching colors. While I would never look that cute at my age in a kilt and socks, I still googled knee-high argyle socks, and the first one that came up was this pair in neon colors.
Today I worked on campus, and when I had mentioned signing up for the blood drive yesterday with my FART 5 peeps, one of them signed up for the same time so we could go over together. She did mention that she is a type they aren't really looking for, I think AB, whereas I am Type O so they are always pestering me to give. I sometimes feel like I'm being followed by a vampire toddler: "Give me your blood! Give me your blood! Give me your blood!" So today we went to the blood drive, and she got through the preliminary stuff quickly while I had the odd luck of being the person they used to train a new guy, so it took quite a while. On the other hand, I'm a very quick donor, like five minutes and I'm done, while she had said it takes her a while to fill the bag. I got a phlebotomist who asked my birthdate and then said, "Capricorn sisters!" so I made the mistake of thinking we were now friends and kept talking about random things. She must have gotten fed up, because she had some other phlebotomist finish taking care of me. Then I was sitting in the canteen, eating all sorts of snacks while waiting for my fifteen minutes to be up, when my FART 5 buddy finally got done. She said, "You didn't have to wait for me," and I said, "Well, they told me to wait fifteen minutes, so I'm still not supposed to leave." Apparently they didn't give her the same instructions, so she just had a couple of snacks (and took some to go), then we left. When I got back to the office, my coworker said once he and some other people were having a contest to see who could give the fastest, and you can speed it up by squeezing the ball more often than they tell you to, so I wonder if my speediness is just me squeezing the ball too quickly. My coworker said they tell you not to do that, because if you give blood too quickly, you'll get light-headed. However, I felt fine.
Because I am the Queen of Planning, I scheduled this blood donation on the day I was supposed to have a Bollywood dance lesson right after work. I asked four different people at the blood drive if this would be okay, and I got four different answers, ranging from "No way!" to "I don't see what the problem would be." The lessons at the Monona Terrace are free ones with tons of people, like the bachata lesson I went to last year, and although they make you get a ticket, I doubted anyone would notice if one person who signed up didn't show up. I did decide to brave the dance lesson, figuring I could always leave if it seemed too strenuous. Not a problem at all - nobody was watching me, we were all too busy watching the instructor, so if I wanted to do a move less energetically than everyone else, nobody cared. It was so much fun! It turns out the instructor gives regular lessons, and I am tempted, because if there's one thing I need in my life, it's yet another crazy hobby. She played this song that I loved so much that I had to ask her about it afterwards, and she let me take a photo of it on her phone.
Today I worked on campus, and my brain was mush. I locked my keys in my office, which I have never done before (though other coworkers and faculty and grad students do it all the time), so the coworker whose office is next to mine came to my rescue. Then, a little later, I walked into his office and we looked at each other, confused.
"What's up?" he asked.
"I thought I was going into my own office," I said, and he laughed and reminded me that he had done the same thing to me some years ago.
Seabird told me there were donuts, so I went up to the shared office where a bunch of FART 5 peeps are, but they were just lame donuts, not like Bismarcks or anything so not worth the calories. We all talked about all kinds of stuff, work and sailing and me trying to convince my one coworker to take my grandmother's Cancer pendant made of a coconut because it's super cool but I'm a Capricorn. Then our boss came in, so we all yakked some more. Finally I thought I'd better get down to my own office, but I ran into Famie in the hall because she works on that floor. While I was talking to her, I felt like I could smell my own body odor, and I thought, "Oh no! Did I forget to put on deodorant too?" And then when I got downstairs, I once again forgot my keys in my office, but at least this time I hadn't closed the door, so it didn't matter.
At lunch Seabird and I braved the elements and went to the nearby greenhouses. I saw a jade plant had lost some leaves, and I was going to pick them up to grow one in my office, but just then a bunch of students came into that greenhouse and were doing some kind of Botany 101 treasure hunt. I did pick up a peperomia leaf in another greenhouse, but it might be too far gone to grow. I mean, there was a reason it fell off the plant in the first place - it's not in good shape. Still, I took it back to my office and stuck it in a pot with another succulent leaf, that one from a plant that a faculty member asked me to take care of over the summer. It isn't dead yet, but it's been months and there's no sign that it's growing. Kind of like my black ZZ plant that I injured by watering it with old coffee - it's not dead, the leaf stumps are still green and alive, but it's been almost a year with no new growth. Will it ever recover?
Speaking of plants, my aunt sent this cheery photo of geraniums she's growing inside.
More random than a rabbit on a B-17!