Monday, March 30, 2026

4-Carrot Dream

 I've written. O Blog, before, about how having dreams affected me, but I was surprised to have come across a purportedly scholarly article about "How to Remember  Your  Dream" and cited  the findings of studies which showed exactly how long it takes for a dream to slip away into oblivion before it is lost forever. I have found that to be true, except for the times dream "scenes" pop into my consciousness. I've found writing them down helps to calm them down. 

  I can recall last night's dream only by the single word---red. That stirs up a dream where I am in the parking lot of a store, very like that in Schaghticoke, when a woman drives her car, loses  control of it, narrowly misses hitting my car, but seemingly does not consider herself at fault. I wait patiently in my car for her to leave but as she heads toward the exit, she strikes a red car. This time attention must be paid. I want to avoid being a witness, so I drive away, to the home of one of my children. No one is home but I go into the house and when they arrive home, I explain why I am there, a rather awkward and feeble explanation, as I recall.

But wait, there's more. I went back to sleep, to what seemed like a non-dream. 

     When I cooked the St. Patrick's Day dinner, I bought new carrots. Those in the vegetable drawer of my refrigerator had been there a while, and were starting to look their age, with those little white rootlets starting to form. There were 4 such shriveled carrots, so I opened the kitchen window and started to throw them out. Maybe a hungry little rabbit might want to nibble on them. One, two, three--out they went. But I held one back. 

 For some reason, I remembered an old friend from my days as a telephone representative in Troy. Ann  lived in a downstairs apartment in Lansingburgh, then a peaceful and reputable neighborhood.  I used to drive her home when her boyfriend had her car, and Ann and I attended events here and there and I always drove. Her home was very well kept; she had a cat and a dog and many well tended houseplants. I particularly recall a carrot plant that trailed around the windows of her living room, a remarkable sight to see such a  green and flowing carrot plant.

 So I decided to keep carrot number 4, even though it looked dry and dormant. There was a plastic bottle in my sink, so I filled it with water and stuck the slender carrot inside it. A few days later the carrot started to grow its foliage on top, and in a few more days, it looked rather nice, so I kept it on the windowsill and refilled the water as needed.

I try to restrict my mundane, yes, boring, activities to my own personage, but one day when my daughter was here, I decided to show her my thriving little carrot. I went to the kitchen to get it, but to my dismay the once green growth was now brown, dead and dessicated. So I said nothing, and after my daughter left, I eventually went to bed. 

  The next morning, I went to the kitchen to throw #4 Carrot out the window to join its tossed out kin, but there was the plant, green and thriving, as it still is. 

So maybe a dream? Or maybe a Vegetable Resurrection?



 

  

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Victory Is Mine (small though it may be)

 Since I have nothing important to do, I can indulge myself in trivial pursuits. Justice was done, finally.


Monday, March 9, 2026

Epilogue (sorta):

 I had a dream last night. I was driving my car  with my daughter and grandson as passengers. M. had some type of appointment in Troy, interview, audition or something. She depended on me to drive her there. Her son was apparently just along to keep her company, as he was meeting someone else after her meeting. I knew the way to where we were headed, as I'd been on that route before. But somehow, instead of driving straight ahead to her destination, I forgot and made a right turn as if I were going to Albany. I realized I had made a wrong turn and tried to correct my course. In so doing, I drove through every brick that had ever been placed in a building in the city of Troy. City block after city block, back streets, buildings after buildings, some familiar and some I'd never before seen.  

  Somewhere along the way, her son said something like, Hey, Did you hear Mom broke her teeth? I was horrified at the thought of her missing teeth, and asked what happened. Instead of answering, she embarked upon another subject, on a rather  innocuous topic. I was anxious to find out about the teeth, so I said, "That doesn't matter." Well, she said. it matters to me, and she opened her mouth to show a chipped back molar. I was relieved and asked how it happened, but she was angry at my perceived lack of concern, and did not answer. And she also told me that she would be riding home with a friend, not me. I was worried that I would be unable to find my way back,  certainly not by the long and adruous journey by which we got there.

But that concern was to pale in comparison with what was to come. After I parked the car, we had to walk to the designated building. That journey was even more complicated and exhausting, at least to me. It seemed it was all uphill.  And it was getting dark and it started to rain.My feet were getting wet.  I was afraid I might not make it, but after  another  long and complicated journey, this time on foot, we arrived at the building. 

One might think that would be the end of the tale, but that would not be correct. This was the largest building I'd ever been in, in terms of long and tortuous hallways and foreboding-looking doorways, but we finally got to her appointment. 

  From what I gathered, the visit accomplished for her what was intended, but the rest of the adventure faded into oblivion. My dreams never seem to have a beginning and an end. So far anyway. 



Sorry Tale

 Grab your kleenex, O Blog, and sympathy card.

Friday,  February 27, 2026:  The bitter cold weather broke, and I had several places I really needed to be, or at least I thought so. I gathered my belongings and went to my car, but the battery was dead---again.       

Previous jumpstarts  were needed several weeks before.  Granted, I don't drive a lot but the battery was installed in 2025, and the driver from Roadside Assistance remarked on it. Then, during the bitter cold spell, the battery died again. Ben jumped the battery with his car. I'd heard that batteries can be weakened after several jumpstarts, so I called Valley Auto and ordered a new battery, and was told I'd receive a callback when it arrived. 

  The car ran well until it no longer started on that fateful Friday afternoon of February 27.  First Greg arrived to attempt a jump start, but couldn't do so.  Joe arrived later with his charger, which brought the engine alive, but it would cut off, not starting. He thought it must be another matter.

I attempted to call  V.A. to see if the new battery had arrived, but she could not hear me, telephone issues. I called back, but V.A, was closed for the weekend,  and left a message, and then after Joe suspected an issue other than the battery, I called back and left another message.

Monday, March 2, I waited until 11, and called V.A. back.  I was told she was just about to  call me back. I  apprised her of the situation, and she said their schedule was already filled until Thursday or Friday, but if time allowed they would look at it earlier in the week. 

 Roadside Assistance towed the car to Valley Auto March 2, 2026 at 3:30 p.m.  

Friday, March 6, at 2:45 p.m. V.A. called and said they could not do the repairs and it had to go to the dealership. That's where the fun part begins.

 I called Roadside Assistance (Allstate) through AARP), and arranged a tow for Saturday, March 7. I'd called Honda Repair to confirm and they said they might be able to look at it Saturday, but set my appointment for Monday, March 9 at 10:00 p.m. Several other calls to advise of this to Valley Auto, that the car would be towed from their shop on Saturday. PHEW!  

 I called back Roadside Ass. and learned that they were NOT able to tow the car on Saturday but could on Monday morning. They said they couldn't find any tow truck availability. I told them appt was at 10. They'd be there early enough, he said. Honda Repair said  they'd notify me when the car arrived. I'd heard nothing  this morning.  So  I called R.A at 9:a.m. this morning and "Chris" said   the towtruck would arrive today  between 10:15 and 11:15a.m.  

If my car has been towed, I don't know anything about it. Chris might be doing his job to the best of his ability, but he is most likely in another country, and admittedly does not know from what area or garage help may come in the way of a tow. 

 I have not had a car since February 26, so I guess it doesn't matter to me that gasoline prices are soaring. 

I can handle these issues as well as I  need to. I'm not angered or even frustrated: I understand the shortcomings of others.  What is most annoying is that NOW, the assumption is that I am the one confused or befuddled.  Karma, do your job!

3:00 p.m. Update:  I heard nothing, so I called R.A. and am told my vehicle has been towed to Troy at 11.   Now we wait...


.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Good Luck, Horseshoe.


 I have had this  horseshoe a long time, ever since  I looked into the top part of the barn addition where the pony stall was and saw it hanging on a nail in the wall. I went in to retrieve it, for good luck, you know, and I stepped on a board that had a nail protruding from it, probably covered by some old hay. I was wearing shoes with rubber soles, must have been high style back then, and the nail went right through my foot, the right foot I think. I remember going to the back door of the Madigan house, and Rosemary came to the door. I explained my plight and took off my shoe and the blood poured out. R.  told me later that she almost fainted at the sight. I don't remember what came next, but I'm sure I sought medical attention: after all a rusty nail after mouldering away for years in an old barn. Full penetration of the foot. 

  I must have been limping a little because soon after, on a tutoring visit to one of my students, I'd explained what happened and the Mom asked how the horseshoe had been hanging when I took it down. I told her--- suspended over a nail. "Well, no wonder," she said, "that it didn't bring you good luck. If the horseshoe is hanging with the open ends pointing downward,  the luck has drained out."  She may have been right; I need to reverse the picture.

There. Good luck!

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Thanks, Kenny:

 "...the secret to survivin' is knowin' what to throw away and  knowing what to keep."  I'm still working  on it, still a long ways to go. I have previously eliminated probably about 70% or so of the communications related to pursuit of VA claim. A lot remains, as pictured, although the most important paperwork is in another location, not pictured. I know that I could probably get rid of all that's pictured here, but I'm so far unable to discard without reviewing all the hard-sought information needed before due process could occur. For instance, filing a NOD, Notice of Disagreement,  while a petition for review is in process violates procedure, and, though now forgotten, documented steps of correction had to be taken, amid several pleas  for  notification. This is just one paper bag of what I threw away this time; I have to go through again what is in the green bag, which at least is now light enough to lift. ***And I




did not start the fire.

P.S. While I was downstairs, I noted the furnace still leaks. Thousands of  dollars later, who cares?


  

All In A DAY

 Friday, February 27, 2026:   Auto  Incident/ Accident Report: NY---Minor,  MD---Serious, MA---Severe