Free time... or not (zaibatsu), 07/18/2019 ------------------------------------------------------------ I thought I'd have some free/down time while I was in Oregon, but it didn't turn out that way at all. On the plus side, I got to see my mother and grandmother, and spend some real time with them, and that's worth more than free/down time. This was just a "strategy meeting" trip for my client. We did meet, and we did come up with a few things that their company needs (or needs to do), so it wasn't a waste. I'm a little bit of a stickler about people spending money to fly me around and rent cars and hotels and such, but it's their money, and they wanted to spend it, so I can't complain. Here's an odd thing about humans (I can't be the only person that feels this way): when I'm at home, I think about eating out more, fancy restaurant food, etc. When I'm traveling and eating out all the time at fancy restaurants, I think about eating at home. In all honesty, I've come to a point where I already know that I'm not going to like eating at restaurants over and over. It gets old. I want to be at home eating my rolled oats and sandwiches and whatever anyone is willing to make that day for dinner (sometimes it's awesome, sometimes it's so incredibly lazy that it's hardly worth eating at all). But, it's home. Plus, they use way too much cream and meat in so many foods. My mom is doing well, except that her health could be better than it is. I say that specifically because it's not that her health is bad for reasons outside her control (which is the case for many), but for reasons that she could have major impact on *if she wanted to*. My grandmother is the sweetest, brightest person you could imagine. After decades living in the US, she still has a Swedish accent. She smiles endlessly. Her life has been active and full, and even at 92 she still can't really sit around for very long. Her memory is only recently starting to fail for short-term. While I was there, she asked if I had seen her project room; she walked me through and showed me her paintings and dolls and audio tapes and instruments. We had some ice cream and chatted, and twenty minutes later she asked again if I had seen her project room. We walked through it again and I asked her some questions about things she hadn't already mentioned much about. It's a blessing to be around people her age. It's a blessing to be around people of all ages, for different reasons. Now I'm sitting in PDX, and for the first time in what feels like a long while, I have some time that isn't ear-marked for something else. I don't have access to any of the things "that I should be getting done", so I can just sit here and think. I haven't perused gopher in a while, but I miss it. I miss reading about Palm pilots and old workstations and life in general. I miss updates from all over the unix world (and all over the real world). I miss it, but at the same time I know that it's there, and that I'm not falling hopelessly behind, even if I'm gone a year. That's kind of nice. Visiting Portland in the summer makes me really miss Oregon. I need to visit in the winter, when it's raining for 4 months solid, so I can remember that part of it. The summer is full of so many memories, it's hard to leave.