Online Classes Via Edx.org

Online Classes Via Edx.org

I signed up for an online class in positive psychology at UC Berkeley via Edx/MOOC (Massive Open Online Classes).  There is a free version with no credits or a paid version for $250 with credits  Class starts September 9th and goes for a 10 week quarter.

This should be good.  I like taking classes and have enjoyed studying positive psychology on my own.  I am happier already.

There are radical changes in how knowledge is shared in structured ways/education.  MOOCs will be a big part of a much more literate world.


I am grateful for free classes and better access to education for all.

Morbid Reflection


Lately, my mind has been more frequently replaying “old tapes” of negative thoughts from experiences where I felt guilt or shame  It takes me out of living in the present moment, I feel bad and don’t like it.  The big book calls it morbid reflection cautioning us not to drift into for that would diminish our usefulness to others.

While those old tapes suck, I have many tools develop along the way in my recovery to help me do a better job of staying in the moment and not getting sucked into a black hole of depression.  They are just thoughts.  I am a good person.  I deserve to be happy.  Playing those tapes helps no one.

I am grateful for better mental health tools to resist morbid reflection, depression and using.  Self-compassion was one of the better tools for today.  I am doing the best I can and it is a lot better than how it used to be while in active addiction.





Almost Ready

Three months ago I decided to get into jewelry making via wire-bending.  That immediately evolved into silver and copper smithing.  After taking a class in June, I have been reading books, acquiring tools and material while preparing a work bench.   There is a bit more of putting stuff in its TBD place (which drawer for what) and then I will be ready to go.  It has been an enjoyable process so far and just what I wanted for a new hobby.


I am grateful for the progress, help and enjoyment I had and will have with my new hobby.

Married In Twelve Days!

My really good friend Sandy is getting married in 12 days.  I am very happy for her.  It has been a total blessing in my life watching her progress along from dating to moving in together to engaged and now so to be married.  Congratulations to both of them.

I have learned much about how to have and maintain a long-term friendship by practicing with her.  We make our lives better together.  Plus, today when we met for lunch she had gone from the bummed-out Alanon in recovery having to banish an angry alcoholic friend from her wedding to being the radiant engaged active bride she deserves to be.  Also going from first pic of getting shipped wrong wedding dress last Monday during lunch to having bought exactly what she wanted helped a lot!  Loved her logic…it is not an expensive dress—it is a mental health investment!  LOL


I am incredibly grateful to have Sandy in my life.  She has been my most reliable meet every week friend I ever had in my life.  I love you very much Sandy.  Best wishes forever to you and V.

A Great Home Group

We did a group inventory before the meeting tonight facilitated by Laura.  It went really really well.  We had a nice potluck before the inventory.   It turns out that our home group members really like our home group.   We even had two non-members, albeit regular attendees, show up for the inventory.   We are not going to change a much about our group.  It is a small meeting and we like it like that.

I am grateful for a nice small homegroup meeting that does a great job of carrying the message.








The “Worth” of Sobriety

Every A.A. group ought to be fully self-supporting, declining outside contributions.12x12, p. 160

When I go shopping I look at the prices and if I need what I see, I buy it and pay. Now that I am supposed to be in rehabilitation, I have to straighten out my life. When I go to a meeting, I take a coffee with sugar and milk, sometimes more than one. But at the collection time, I am either too busy to take money out of my purse, or I do not have enough, but I am there because I need this meeting. I heard someone suggest dropping the price of a beer into the basket, and I thought, that's too much! I almost never give one dollar. Like many others, I rely on the more generous members to finance the Fellowship. I forget that it takes money to rent the meeting room, buy my milk, sugar and cups. I will pay, without hesitation, ninety cents for a cup of coffee at a restaurant after the meeting; I always have money for that. So, how much is my sobriety and my inner peace worth?
            July 26th  Daily Reflections  

I don’t drink coffee and put a dollar in the basket at every meeting.  Early in my recovery I had some impossible to make financial amends.  I donated that money to AA to help carry the message of recovery that I had been so freely given.

I am grateful to be financially independent and self-supporting  in my life today.  That is a lot better than how it used to be.


Snoqualmie Pass

Lea and I gave B a ride to the Summit House at Snoqualmie Pass today.   It was a great day for a drive in the mountains—especially since the top of the pass is less than 45 minutes away.  The sun was out, the tree-covered mountains were beautiful shades of green and we had a nice conversation on the way.

B is going to spend the weekend with her dad, step-mom, siblings and two half-sisters at Suncadia near Cle Elum.  I hope she has a good time with her family.  She is lucky to have them.

I am grateful for good roads, green trees and the Cascade Mountains being right in our backyard.  They squeeze the water out of the clouds making Western Washington temperate, green and beautiful.  It is most beautiful in the summer time.






Helping Others

Our very lives, as ex-problem drinkers, depend upon our constant thought of others and how we may help meet their needs.  AA big book, p. 20

Self-centeredness was my problem. All my life people had been doing things for me and I not only expected it, but I was ungrateful and resentful they didn't do more. Why should I help others, when they were supposed to help me? If others had troubles, didn't they deserve them? I was filled with selfpity, anger and resentment. Then I learned that by helping others, with no thought of return, I could overcome this obsession with selfishness, and if I understood humility, I would know peace and serenity. No longer do I need to drink.   From the book Daily Reflections

I am much less self-centered than how I used to be. Still plenty of room for progress with the ideal goal of perfection—which will never happen in this lifetime.

I am grateful to be able to be of service and in healthy relationships with others where we help each other get and feel better.




A Rain Record

It rained 0.74 inches in Seattle today breaking a date record of 0.54 set in 1949.  That was a good thing since there is also a Washington State record size fire burning in the Methow Valley called the Carlton Complex Fire.  This fire is bigger than the previous record largest fire, the Yacolt Burn, which burned 239,000 acres (373 square miles) in 1902.

There is tremendous resistance by the winners of the current status quo to prepare and reduce the effects of global warming, err, climate change.  Progress is being made on that front by several media organizations that no longer provide coverage by the doubters to the “debate” that global warming is happening.

I moved back to Seattle from Santa Barbara 26 years ago hoping that global warming would make for a warmer Seattle.  Those hopes have come true with great costs such as the years-long drought ranging from Oregon to Texas.

It was clear to many back then that humanity needed to switch from fossil fuels to alternative energy sources.  Peak oil production is predicted to happen sometime in the next 20 years.  Coal and fracking could extend fossil fuel for decades.  They are filthy polluting technologies that exact a terrible cost on local and the global environments.  Fracking has resulted in unprecedented toxic destruction of clean drinking water supplies.

I am grateful for the record rain which happened from the early morning to the early afternoon.  I love the beautiful green summers in Seattle that need summer rains to avoid costly fires.  I am also grateful for the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.


Painting

Painting large surfaces from a wheelchair is difficult for two reasons: 1) I can only reach so far up, down or sideways; and 2) It is a total pain to clean paint off all the surfaces on a wheelchair such as all the spokes, handrims, frame and other crevices.

I have two sheets  of cut-up finish grade birch plywood that I decided to stain.  I gave them a sanding with a little electric “mouse” sander that was vastly less work than by hand that was focused on removing splinters from the sawn edges. 

It worked out that I had one large piece of plywood at desk height on my deck that I was able to use as a work surface and apron to keep the stain off my chair.  This was the first time I did much that much painting in the 33 years that I have been in a chair. It was a perfect day for outdoor painting with slightly overcast skies, temps in near 70° and a whole bunch of plants blooming on the far side of my deck. 

I thoroughly my time sanding and staining.  The first coat I was my version of neat and conservative with the poly stain.  Taking a break, I learned that it was relatively easily washed off my hands.  The second coat had my slapping that stain on as thick as I could without worrying too much over splatter.

Since I never planned on sanding & staining in the first place, all this work was way higher than spec’d in my original plans.  It will be a much nicer work surface for my table top.  I will need help from Lea to turn rotate the biggest piece that I used for a desk today so I can finish it tomorrow.

I am grateful for a nice afternoon making attractive splinter-free work surfaces for myself. 



White Center

Drove Danica and Jayse to their new home at The Willows in historic White Center (located between Burien and West Seattle) this afternoon.  It was a nice modern facility for single mothers struggling with homelessness, chemical dependency and more.

Danica needed a money order to pay her first month’s rent and so we stopped at the US Bank in downtown White Center.  It was the most multicultural a community I have seen in Seattle with stores serving a dozen different ethnicities within a block.

For a guy in a wheelchair, White Center stores were a throwback in time to the 1970s or earlier.  A large fraction of one story buildings built slightly above ground level did not have wheelchair access due to a step or two at the front door.  The last time I saw that was parts of Honolulu in the early 1980s.  It might not have been the 3rd world, err, a lesser developed country, but it clearly was not Bellevue.

Don’t get me wrong, I love different cultures. I find them exotic, mysterious and fascinating. Hopefully we will see Danica again and maybe go out to eat in White Center.  Based on White Center’s alias as Rat City, it always sounded like, at best, a rough neighborhood.  Googling Rat City revealed that R.A.T. during WWII stood for either Reserve Army Training center or Restricted Alcohol Territory a military term for a place designated off limits for service men.


I am grateful for places such as The Willows so that young single mother’s like Danica have a place to live with their young children have a much better chance at functional life than being forced to couch-surf their way life.  Being poor sucks.  Being poor and homeless makes for a Hobbesian existence.  I am also extra grateful for my apartment in Bellevue.  There are worse places to live that are far less safe and wheelchair accessible.

A Good Day

Had a nice quiet pleasant Sunday spent reading, talking, working on getting the front room organized, bought a small “mouse” sander, and had a great meeting at my home group.

I am grateful for another good day sober.

A Social Meeting

Our morning group and a Saturday night group had a combined meeting with a pizza/potluck social before the meeting.   It went really well.  There was people, pizza and recovery on a Saturday night.  Sounds simple.  For alcoholics like us, isolating from others has long been our default behavior.  The event went well and it was a good meeting.

I am grateful for those that organize these events and for the opportunity to participate in them.   That was the biggest party on a Saturday night that I have been to in a long time (about 25 people).  Thanks guys!






New (to me) Furniture

Bought a dresser and two 3-drawer nightstands off Craigslist yesterday.   The plan was to use them as tool chests for my metal work.  Turned that they are a beautiful matched set by Ethan Allen.  I put them in my bedroom and brought my old dresser and chest of drawers out to the front room.

This solution to storage should work pretty well.    There is more to do, but the big things were moved today.  Weeks ago, I bought some finish grade birch plywood.  Tomorrow I will get some stain and have Danica stain it to match the rest of the wood furniture in the front room.

Tomorrow I will work on sorting and discarding items that I am not using.  Worked on it for awhile today.  Stuff is useless until I need it and then it is not-free to replace.  I am sure I can let go of another dozen computer cords with divine guidance and some more help from Danica and Lea.

Lea rearranged my living room 16 months ago moving my PC away from the window.  It is back in the front window so that when I am on my PC, I can get a better look out the window to the front and the side where the deck is.  My deck is awash in a petite verdant jungle and sweet pea blossoms.

I am grateful for the help I got from the furniture guys, Danica and Lea today to rearrange what I could not have done by myself.  Today I have a classier set of problems. 


10 Great Ways to Show You’re Grateful Today

He is a wise man who does not grieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has. ~Epictetus

Have you said thank-you to someone to show how grateful you are for them today? It’s such a small thing, but it can have a huge impact on your life, and the life of that person.

Find little ways to incorporate gratitude in your life, and you’ll be much happier … and you’ll make the people around you much happier as well. That’ll have a ripple effect that will make the world a better place … with such a small gesture!

Saying thank you isn’t hard at all. But the words can lose meaning if they’re just words. You need to say them with sincerity, or show your gratitude through little actions.

Can you imagine a world where everyone showed gratitude? If someone did you a kindness, you’d give them a warm smile and say thank you. If you were having a bad day, someone else would take time out of her life to comfort you, out of gratitude for a kindness you did her yesterday. People would still get angry, or sad, but would know to find ways to be grateful, even in difficult situations.

I know, I know … I’m an idealist, and such a world will never exist. But that’s OK. I can accept the world as it is … and at the same time, show my gratitude for what a wonderful world we have. And what wonderful people (such as you guys) are in my life. And in doing so, my little acts of gratitude will radiate throughout the world, changing it in subtle but profound ways.

Corny? Perhaps. I can be corny at times. But let me tell you: incorporating gratitude in my life (even if I’m not always successful at it) has changed me and has made me happier. I recommend it heartily.

For those who’d like to do little things to show their gratitude, to a specific person or to life in general, here are a few ideas that work for me:

1. Create a Gratitude Ritual. As I described in an earlier post on this topic, on many mornings I do a little ritual: I just close my eyes, and take a couple of minutes to think of the people and things I’m grateful for. That includes those who’ve donated to this site, as well as all you readers. And of course, my loved ones, and others in my life.

2. Send a thank-you note. You know, it’s nice to get a little note thanking you for something you did. You don’t need to send someone a formal thank-you card (although that’s a nice touch), but just a little note (or email) saying thank you for a specific thing the person has done for you can go a long way. And it only takes a minute!

3. Give a free hug. OK, only do this when appropriate … but if you have a loved one in your life, give them a hug! Often we can go too long without showing our affection and gratitude, even to those who are closest to us. Don’t neglect this important part of your relationship. By “free” hug, I mean don’t expect anything in return — just give it as a gift of gratitude. If you give a hug to a stranger, be prepared to run very fast afterward.

4. Give thanks for today! You don’t even have to thank a person … you can thank life itself! Wake up, and greet the day with gratitude. Be thankful you’re alive!

I’ve printed this before, but here’s a favorite gratitude prayer of mine by the Dalai Lama, who tells us: “Everyday, think as you wake up, ‘Today I am fortunate to have woken up, I am alive, I have a precious human life, I am not going to waste it. I am going to use all my energies to develop myself, to expand my heart out to others, to achieve enlightenment for the benefit of all beings, I am going to have kind thoughts towards others, I am not going to get angry or think badly about others, I am going to benefit others as much as I can.’ ”

5. Do someone a free favor. Without expecting anything in return, do something nice for someone. Just something small. Get them a drink or a coffee, do a chore for them, offer to do an errand, anything they’d appreciate, really. Think of what the person likes, wants or needs, and try to do something (even something small) to help them. Actions speak louder than words, and doing something nice will show you’re grateful more than just saying it.

6. Give a little gift. It doesn’t have to be fancy or expensive, but a little gift can be a tremendous gesture. Here are 30 ideas.

7. Give someone a list of all they’ve done that you’re grateful for. Take 5 minutes and make a list of 10 or 50 things you love about someone, or things they’ve done for you that you appreciate.

8. Acknowledge them publicly. Who doesn’t love public praise? Find a way to acknowledge the contributions of someone, to show your gratitude, in a public way … in your office, among friends and family, on your blog, in your local newspaper.

9. Surprise them with kindness. Actually, this is mostly the same as Item #5, but with a twist: surprise the person. That little extra step of surprising them can make a big difference. When your wife comes home from work, have a lovely dinner prepared. When your mom walks out her front door in the morning, have her car nice and clean. When your daughter opens her lunch pail, have a little note and a treat waiting for her. You get the idea.

10. Say thanks even for negative things in your life. This is the hard part, in truth. When things go wrong, when we’re not happy, when people are mean to us, when we are worn down by the million slings and arrows of everyday life … we don’t want to say thank you. But in truth, this is the time when it matters most. If you’ve mastered the first 9 items on this list, you’re ready to master this one.

When life gets you down, when your hurt or angry or confused or frustrated, take a moment to stop and close your eyes and find things to be thankful for. Your health, your family, your job, the roof over your head, the fact that you’ll have a next meal, the beauty of the world around you, the good people in your life, your new Macintosh computer. Whatever you can think of, be thankful for them … and express that gratitude somehow. Realize that all is not bad in this world, and be happy for that.

And then, when you’ve mastered that skill, think of the negative things in your life … and give thanks for them. That person who was mean to you? Thank them for teaching you patience and understanding. That dog that tore up your trash? Thank him for teaching you humility as you pick up the trash. The natural disaster you went through? Thank it for reminding you of what is important in life. The illness you are going through? Thank it for making you stronger.

This post is a part of the Season of Gratitude hosted on Balanced Life Center.  Cut-n-paste from Zenhabits.net.



I am grateful for the thoughts, teachings and writings of others that illuminate my life today creating a brighter tomorrow breaking up the gloomy darkness of my own best thinking (crazy-making when left to my own devices).




Kidney Stones

Having had kidney stones in the past, this morning’s pain in the backside had a dreary familiarity.  I used to keep Vicodin around for these occasions.  Having had a problem with Vicodin in early 2013, I no longer have that for relief.

I stayed in for the day and drank lots of liquids.  The pain was gone by mid-afternoon. 

That was a lot better than how it was four years ago with a trip to Overlake ER where I was attacked by a crazed urologist that gave me a kidney tap and a nasty pseudomonas bacteria infection then refusing to follow-up on his surgical work.  I was overwhelming depressed by that deplorable healthcare treatment and will NEVER go back to Overlake unless the extra 10 minutes it takes to get to the UW medical center is life-threatening.


I am grateful for a quick and relatively painless kidney stone resolution.

Alternatives

My home theater PC (an Intel PC in a muffled case) shut down gracefully the other day and would not restart later on.  Once or twice a week the video would go black and not return for a minute or 10.  I thought it was the motherboard and replaced that with one that I had laying around.  No joy.  Next guess is the power supply.  I have an extra PS in an unused PC case.  I am not going to change that tonight.  I go days without watching TV so that is not a big deal.  I do like to surf the web and read email on my HTPC.

What is even better is that I have a laptop I got earlier this year with the intention of taking a class at Bellevue College that was only used a couple times before I gave up on the class.  I plan to take the class in the Fall from the beginning.  It would have been more work than it was worth to try to catch up on a one quarter fast-paced computer class starting half-way through the quarter.

The good news is that today I have solutions in my apartment now.   There were plants to water, books to read, metal projects galore, a laptop, my living room PC works fine and more.  In active addiction I would not have these alternatives.


I am grateful for the toys and many alternative projects I have in sobriety.  The plants are wanted.  I looked up my Home Group network password and will now go connect my laptop to my giant TV in my newly air conditioned bedroom.  Thank you god for the many blessings in my life today.
Got AC!

Bought a portable AC unit for my bedroom online from Costco last week.  It came today.  Put it in my bedroom with a cardboard & duct tape setup for my sliding patio door.  It is cooling the room nicely.

While I am not a materialistic person, I am really grateful to be able to afford a nice apartment, a car, 2 cats, plenty of food, a good start on jewelry/metalsmithing hobby and extras such as my new AC unit.  I really appreciate the economic security of getting a steady government backed pension check every month.

Willingness

So Step Six - "Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character" - is A.A.'s way of stating the best possible attitude one can take in order to make a beginning on this lifetime job. This does not mean that we expect all our character defects to be lifted out of us as the drive to drink was. A few of them may be, but with most of them we shall have to be content with patient improvement. The words "entirely ready" underline the fact that we want to aim at the very best we know or can learn.   Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, p. 65

I firmly believe that willingness is the most important component of any kind of successful life.  The willingness to try fail and try again, aka grit, is what makes successful people success.  Everybody has fails and setbacks.  Overcoming is the definition of success.

I am extremely grateful for my willingness to keep working on making my life better.

Complete Photo Book of Making Metal Jewelry -- Project #1

Complete Photo Book of Making Metal Jewelry
 Project #1  July 2014


I did my first project last month.  There are flaws in the workmanship.  I did learn a bit about using a jewelry saw to make fine cuts.  One thing to avoid is trying to make too sharp or too narrow a slice that blocks access to even small files that are about the size of small fingernail files.


I bought a bulletin board last week and placed in the hall of my apartment to document my progress through these projects.  Learning curve on that one is that the bulletin board is located a bit high for me to read.

My talk at the accessibility committee went well this morning.  I felt good about it.  Hopefully others learned something about what it is like to be mobility impaired in recovery.

Looking forward to getting an AC unit on Monday.  I am just a pinch more than pleasantly warm in our apartment after several days of near 90° weather.  Lea is having a much harder time of it.

I am grateful to be happy and engaged in life today.  It was a good day and I look forward to tomorrow.



A 20 Minute Talk


I have been invited to share my experience, strength and hope with the Western Washington Area 72 Alcoholics Anonymous (aka Area 72) Accessibility Committee summer quarterly meeting this Saturday morning.  It is an honor and a privilege to talk about using and sobriety from the perspective of a wheelchair using paraplegic.

I want to do a good job sharing an entertaining informative message of hope 20 minute.  Unfortunately, my  presentation experience is limited. The standard plan is to talk about what it was like, what happened and what it is like now.

In AA’s second step, we came to believe that a power greater than ourselves can restore us to sanity.  The converse of step 2 is that we had sanity until nature and nurture colluded to make us alcoholics at some point our lives—often before we ever even started drinking or using. 

In my case, I lost my sanity the first time I ever lit a match and burned down my father’s hay barn full of hay.  Family lore labeled me as a pyromaniac from an early age.  After a few years in Alanon recovery I realized that giving matches to an unsupervised 5-year old kid in a hay barn does not make a pyro.  Instead that was seriously irresponsible parenting at the time and into the present in which this gaff has remained forever unacknowledged.  The part that made me insane was waiting for and getting a beating by a large man with an old growth fir club until it broke and then having the beating continue with yet another club.  I was lucky to have not been permanently disabled or killed by that beating.

…taking a break for the night.  Hope to finish in the next 12 hours.

I am grateful for MS Windows, Word, my PC skills and a nice PC monitor.  Tonight we had steak & lobster for dinner at home.  It was delicious.  Thank you god for great food and plenty of it!




A Full Day

It has been a full day.  I am tired and am going to bed.


I am grateful for a day well spent doing my thing and helping others.

Getting Organized

After weeks of retail therapy via Amazon and Rio Grande online, I have the vast majority of what I need to start and complete copper and silver jewelry soldering projects.  I am still looking to get a used dresser and chest of drawers for toolbox/storage.  That will happen soon.

I put what I have in small boxes for now.  Tonight I got to do a tiny bit of torch work melting silver wire into tiny balls.  The progress was in getting a mini-crock pot setup to pickle (mild acid wash) the post-torch metal to get the oxides off it.  So my work area is not completely set up but I did get more of a sense of how it would go. 

I am wondering whether or not to put my PC or plants in front of the window.  Hmmm.  I had my PC in front of the window for a dozen years.  The plants have been in front of the window for the last year.  We’ll see.

Today was Lea’s birthday.  I bought her a cake.  Brittany got balloons and we sang her happy birthday at the meeting this morning.  That usually does not happen at meetings.  Coincidentally, it was also the birthday of a teenager in early recovery.  That was nice.  A couple of us took Lea to lunch after the meeting.   I got her a surprisingly inexpensive attractive synthetic ruby pendent and earring set from Sears.  The jewelry looks nice.  She liked her birthday.


I am grateful for my new toys, hobby, friends and being of service to others today.  It was a nice day.

Being Mindful and Thankful

Got a call from Merri today.  She was my spiritual advisor/sponsor for several years when I first started going to AA.  She has 26 years and turned 60 last month.  Both are huge achievements for any alcoholic much less for a girl that grew up on the Yakima Indian Reservation.  I had thought about her and her wisdom several times in the last month.  I am glad she called.  It was great to talk with her.

Talked with a friend of a friend that was in heinous pain today.  Took her out for a drive and upscale burger in the sunshine.   She was so terminally unique that her not being able to sleep last night was “not insomnia” as she snapped at me in my car in no uncertain terms.  I did not have a kind reply to that so I said nothing.  An hour or two later, I got passed making it about me and got to have compassion for her situation.  She is grown woman living in a “recovery house” with alcoholics and addicts that are not-sober with a new bed-bug infestation in her room.  I have great compassion for her pain and living situation.

I did get to spend most of my day living in the moment/being mindful with some degree of humility as described by Dr Bob,  “Perpetual quietness of heart. It is to have no trouble. It is never to be fretted or vexed, irritable or sore; to wonder at nothing that is done to me, to feel nothing done against me.
     "It is to be at rest when nobody praises me, and when I am blamed or despised, it is to have a blessed home in myself where I can go in and shut the door and pray to my Father in secret and be at peace, as in a deep sea of calmness, when all around and about is seeming trouble.”

Merri shared many great quotes with me.  One is “happiness is having what I want and wanting what I have.  I am pretty happy today.  I like what I have and have stuff I like.  That is another miracle after a lifetime of chronic depression.

I am grateful for my serenity, happiness and quietness of heart today.





Summer Is Here!

Seattleites joke about summer starting the day after the 4th of July—which frequently gets some rain.  Driving home on the evening of the 4th, there was 10 drops of rain on my windshield causing me to exclaim “see, rain on the 4th of July”.  Normally the rain is more detectable than a few drops of rain that evaporate in a minute.  What actually happens is that by meteorological standards it has rained on the 4th 32 times in the last 110 years which is a consider higher standard than 10 drops of rain on my windshield while going 60 mph on the freeway.

We are in the midst of a heat wave of ten days of 80°+ weather.  Home Depot and Costco were both sold out of portable air conditioning units this evening.  The average high for early July is in the mid-70s.

I am grateful for our temperate weather and lush green vegetation.  Seattle is as beautiful in the summer as any place on earth.

Missed A Post

My goal is to write a Gratitude blog post every day.   Missed a day yesterday for the first time in 4 months.   That is a darned good record of consistent posting for me.

I am grateful for (and pleasantly surprised by) my consistent Gratitude blog posting.  Maybe I will double-post in the future to keep up my average or maybe I won’t.  I am grateful to be sober and to have had 4 months yesterday. 

Independence Day

Had a nice holiday Friday 4th of July.  Went to the morning meeting with lots of different people there today with a topic of miracles.  Ran a few errands, come home, visited Danica and her baby Jayse, picked up TM on the way to get Greg at the airport and had a very nice dinner at Salty’s in Redondo.  Dropped off TM and Greg  Then made it home before getting stuck in fireworks show traffic.

All too often in the past (read always) I was possessed by a strong sense of there must be something more/else that I am missing.  Today I got to be present in the moment all day long comfortable with where I was and who I am.  That is independence from the tyranny of instincts run amuck.


I am grateful for a pleasant peaceful happy 4th of July:  Independence Day 2014!

A Natural Faith

. . . deep down in every man, woman and child, is the fundamental idea of God. It may be obscured by calamity, by pomp, by worship of other things, but in some form or other it is there. For faith in a Power greater than ourselves, and miraculous demonstrations of that power in human lives, are facts as old as man himself.  AA big book p. 55

I have seen the workings of the unseen God in A.A. rooms around the country. Miracles of recovery are everywhere in evidence. I now believe that God is in these rooms and in my heart. Today faith is as natural to me, a former agnostic, as breathing, eating and sleeping. The Twelve Steps have helped to change my life in many ways, but none is more effective than the acquisition of a Higher Power.
                        Daily Reflections, July 4th
           
I see miracles of recovery at every meeting.   Personally I don’t really know or care if god exists.  What does work for me is to act as if god exists.  The god of my understanding is vastly different than the Christian or Muslim gods.  I don’t have the educational background to discuss theology in depth.  I do know my spirituality today, tomorrow it will hopefully be different and better.  Spiritual progress not perfection.


I am grateful for the relief I get doing meditation, thinking positive thoughts and trying to live a better life as if god was watching out for me willing to help when I seek his guidance.

Progress On Being Methodical And Detail Oriented

Working my way through sawing three 2-inch squares of copper sheet metal as the first project in The Complete Photo Guide to Making Metal Jewelry, I was again reminded that being detail oriented and methodical is not now and never has been my forte. Thanks to getting a micrometer with nice square jaws that I got from Amazon today, I was able to file down what I had made into 1.9” squares. 

 

With a little practice and closer measuring, I was able make a 2.0 inch square this afternoon.  I am grateful for the flow (being in the moment while focused on work/creativity) that I enjoyed today.

 


That is enough detail for tonight!  

Overcoming Analysis Paralysis aka Paralyzed By Fear

I try to write about somebody or a relationship that I am grateful for.  Approaching 900 Gratitude blog posts with a handful of close friends and a score of others that I interact with intermittently, which would call for a lot of repetition.  Part of writing my Gratitude blog is to expand my mind to recognize the many people and things that I am grateful for without being trite.

I am listening to Neil Young on Youtube tonight while doing some paperwork, surfing the web and writing this.  He is definitely one of my most favorite rock-n-roll stars for his music and his continuously speaking out against in injustice.  “Ohio” is a song about the National Guard shooting 4 students at Kent State during Vietnam war protests.  One of the best anti-war songs ever.  I was always thought the UC Santa Barbara students burning down the Bank of America in Isle Vista made a prudent choice when Ronald Reagan was the Governor.  Ronbo could easily have shot students given the right opportunity.  A quick Google reveals The man who later became known as "The Great Communicator" vowed to send "the welfare bums back to work," and "to clean up the mess at Berkeley." The latter became a Reagan mantra.

[Topic tangent ON]  Almost 50 years later, Reagan’s vision has come true.  The policies he innovated as governor have lead to the wholesale destruction of the middle class by the .01% and American education headed for the crapper with skyrocketing tuition/expenses and student loan costs (or profits from the banking perspective).

My favorite Jerry Pournelle quote is “the poor are what the rich use to scare the middle class into working”.  Those with jobs clearly got the message after Reagan.  From 1950 to 1980, average hours worked in the US went from 1900 to 1700 hours per year.  Since 1980, it has essentially flat-lined at 1700.  Of course that does not count people left out of the workforce for over two years, Orwellian double-speak has changed them from “unemployed” to the long-term jobless like James Orr from an article written on my 55th birthday.  [/tangent OFF!]


The topic I started to write about is how getting started on a project has been a problem for me in both my writing and my wanna-be metalsmithing.  Back in junior high shop class I could have made tons of things with a well equipped shop class, instead I never really made anything and kind of just watched what others were doing.  I have done too much watching and not enough participating much of my life.

Five years ago I was given a Barnes & Noble gift card for $25.  When I checked last week the $25 was still on it.  Boy, talk about not getting started…  Today I bought a beginning metalsmithing book with 30ish skill building projects in it starting with measuring and sawing on up to soldering, setting stones and so on.  For the sake of both simplicity and getting started, I will do all projects in the book start to finish.  Tonight I measured three 2” squares then sawed my way through two saw broken blades.  I now have 3 somewhat square pieces of copper within a quarter inch of being the same size.  It is good that I am starting at the beginning!

Likewise my Gratitude blog writing tonight took me from many fleeting thoughts about positive things in my life to writing a story about being able to take action starting from where I am at versus where I think I should be.  THAT is the miracle of recovery—accepting life on life’s terms and working from there.

I am grateful for learning how to start at the beginning and work my way forward from there.  That is a lot better than how it used to be when I was stuck at the beginning, thought I should be close to a great finish and could not reconcile nor rectify the difference.   I was paralyzed by fear.


The Forces Of Nature

This evening I watered my plants before tomorrow’s one day heat wave of near 90° F.  Earlier today I watched part of Richard Feynman’s physics lectures done by the BBC at Cornell in 1964 (One of the world’s all-time great physics professors.  Feynman is the man on the Space Shuttle Challenger inquiry board that stuck a black rubber band in ice-water incontrovertibly explaining frozen rubber bands do not make good gaskets for rocket fuel.) Played around with wire wrapping and beading.  Sandy went to Central Welding Supply in Redmond to look at torches with me after lunch.  My car started and drove in its usually reliably way.  Made dirty rice with Hawaiian chicken and pineapple.


I am grateful for how the 4 fundamental forces (gravity, electromagnetism, weak & strong nuclear force) of the Standard Model of the Universe interact to make the universe as we know it so that I can water my plants, drive my car, breathe air, enjoy lunch, and look at pretty things.  The 95% of the Universe’s mass-energy contained in dark matter and energy presumably also makes our life better—somehow…