A Little Soggy

This unflattering self-portrait was taken on our doorstep about 10 minutes ago. I had just arrived home on foot after spending part of the evening with an old friend, Lance, getting a beer at a nearby pub.* It’s pouring rain outside and the pub is about a 10 minute walk so I am reasonably wet.

Anyway, one of the things I intended to do post sabbatical was spend more time connecting with old friends. I’ve found I haven’t done that as much as I planned. Often, after work, I just want to come home and not go out again. But connecting is a good thing; in fact, it’s related to the theme in the current kindness class I’m facilitating. Take a look.

*Incidentally, Melinda was excited to learn from our Downton Abbey viewing that “pub” is short for “public house.” FYI, in France, pub is short for a TV commercial.

Coming Home With Dan

Meet Dan, a former PSCS student (from last century, by the way). Dan came over for dinner tonight to interview us for a college project he is working on. He is studying what the term “home” means to people and interviewing people from a variety of cultures. He even traveled to Germany to work on his project (check out his blog) and is now back in Seattle.

You know it’s a good interview when someone gets me to talk about (in no particular order):
— having been born in Omaha
— my first day of school in Bellevue, Wash (5th grade)
— hockey cards, specifically the 1955 Topps Lorne “Gump” Worsley card
living in Alaska as a deejay
— The Evergreen State College

And more… Thanks, Dan!

Downton Abbey

Okay, it’s time for all of you Downton Abbey fans to reveal yourselves, starting, I guess, with me. I’m not going to suggest that you don’t know it’s a British TV show, part of PBS and Masterpiece Classic. I’m not going to suggest that you aren’t hanging on to every episode, like Melinda and me (who this very minute is waiting for me so we can watch the next one).

You know who you are, just like me.

Melinda and I paid $21 to Amazon for the right to stream episodes online in high definition, which we are doing through our TV (see today’s photo). And apparently there is talk between Melinda and her mother for us to have some kind of Downton Abbey theme dinner party. But just who will play the part of my valet?

“I’m coming, Melinda!”

Sundays

Sundays in Seattle are very different than Sundays in Nantes. I found myself thinking about this today as Melinda & I were sunning ourselves in our backyard. I’m sure the mid 70 degree weather in Seattle today contributed to me thinking about Nantes, too, so many times did Melinda, the girls and I lay out in the sun next to our pool.

Anyway, I found myself thinking about Sundays and how in Nantes all the grocery stores are closed. I just returned from making a quick Sunday afternoon grocery store run in Seattle. Wanting a few things for school lunches this week and deciding to pick up a cold roasted chicken for dinner tonight, I didn’t have to give a second thought if it would be open.

In the spirit of all the posts I made about our neighborhood grocery store in Nantes, I took this picture today of the Safeway not far from our house.

A Post About Rabbits for Perrin

When I was a little kid, my brothers and I raised rabbits. It’s fair to say my parents helped, but I really look back on this and say it was something my brothers and I did. We were responsible for feeding and providing drinking water, which was especially challenging during the Nebraskan winters. The rabbits all lived in hutches in our backyard and the water in their crocks would freeze. We’d bring in the crocks and soak them in hot water in the kitchen sink, then take the crocks back out with fresh water.

There are SO many stories I could tell, the most memorable being when my older brothers locked me in the hutch with Sniffles, my rabbit, and ran inside to get a camera. Little did they know they not only locked me in there with Sniffles, there was a wasp nest in there, too.

Anyway, here you go, Perrin, a post about rabbits, complete with a picture of two bunnies from the the first litter we ever had.

Barefoot Shoes

Let me introduce you to a pair of running shoes I’ve used in each of my last two runs. I’m not calling them “my new running shoes,” not yet, at least, because they have just been loaned to me to try out. A generous neighbor, Kevin, runs a couple of local stores (including Queen Anne Dispatch) that distributes these shoes. They’re by Merrell and are called “Barefoot Shoes.” I’m totally taken by them.

Like I said, I’ve worn them in each of my last two runs, 30 minutes each, tonight and on Wednesday. To use them properly, you have to shorten your stride and place your foot flat on the ground, not the common heal-toe placement. The shoes are very light but provide surprising support. And when you get in the groove with them, it’s like you just start to float over the ground.

Can you tell I’m a convert?

Double Solitaire

Isn’t that a contradiction, double solitaire? No matter. That’s what’s taking place behind me right now. Ella and Carib (er, Granny, er, mom, um, MY mom) are playing double solitaire. It’s a good thing, grandmother and granddaughter hanging out together on a drizzly Thursday night.

Each Thursday I drive my dad home from PSCS where he has been volunteering. I then stay for dinner and chat with my folks. Ella came today because her normal Thursday night ballet class isn’t happening due to spring break. We’ve stayed a little longer tonight than I usual stay by myself, both because of the solitaire game and because my dad needed help getting their car dropped off at the mechanic’s.

The baseball and hockey games on TV didn’t hurt matters, either.

Root (Beer)

Granted, this may seem like a strange post. But over the weekend Melinda and I got to talking about root beer and how it was impossible to find in France. In fact, when a teenage neighbor in Nantes for whom we provided English lessons was planning a visit to Washington DC with her school last year we insisted she try root beer. She posted to her Facebook page that she had done just that, but didn’t sound too enthused.

Anyway, Melinda and I like an occasional root beer but really want it to be a good one. We also enjoy an occasional cocktail. Combining those enjoyments turned up this liqueur, Root. Mixed with a ginger beer and poured over ice and you have a fine sunny afternoon drink.

Learn more.

Andy at Work

Look at me there, hard at work at PSCS. I know what you’re thinking – just how hard is it to work at PSCS? For me, not hard at all. Frankly, I love it. And as I have often told people over the 18 years of PSCS, every day I have the privilege of getting up and going to work at a job I love.

Speaking of which, today I met with a person named Richard Hartung who connected in to PSCS through the online kindness classes I’ve facilitated for years. He’s an American who now lives in Singapore. He grew up in Seattle and still has family in the area; in fact, he came in to PSCS with his father. What a delight it was to talk to them and tell them about PSCS. It’s one of my favorite parts of my job.

Richard wrote an article about his experience in the kindness class and I went online to find it. While it appears to have been removed, I did find this blog post that references it. On top of that, I found out Richard made a TEDx talk!