Meteorological Winter

Astronomical winter runs from the Winter solstice in around December 20th to the Spring equinox in late March.   Meteorological winter (MW) is December through February referring to the coldest time of the year in the northern hemisphere.   I have heard the term MW before, but this winter it has stuck in my mind.

It has been a mild winter for us with barely a trace of snow in the lowlands and only a few freezing nights with the coldest weather staying just a few degrees below freezing at night and warming up over freezing during the day.   There has been a good deal of that “Seattle mist” where it is wet and gloomy like rain with hardly any measurable precipitation.   That is the stuff that gave Seattle its reputation for being rainy.   According to this currentresults.com page Seattle has the 6th most days of rain and the 32nd most rain of 51 of the largest cities in the US.

Based on my anecdotal observations, global warming is changing that with many fewer days of Seattle mist.


I am grateful for more sunshine, another hour of daylight in January and meteorological spring only a month away.

29 Years vs Kicked Out

My sponsor and his wife celebrated 29 years of sobriety this month.   We went out to dinner at Azteca to celebrate with a group of fellow trudgers.   It was nice.

A young woman we know was homeless for months until she knocked on our door 16 days ago at 10 PM asking for help.   I don’t know if she was high or her brain was fried, she told an incoherent story with a lack of time continuity much like how a family member with schizophrenia talks.

She promised to work hard on her recovery and stay clean.   She had not seen her toddle since CPS took him two months ago.   She saw him twice in the last 8 days.   She left last night to “go to a meeting”, came home in the wee hours and left a note that she was going for a walk and we have not seen her in 30 hours.   I just kicked her out by text since she is not here and does not answer the phone I setup for her.

My roommate left her eleven year old son for a life of active addiction.   He is 25 and in prison for the first time.  The young woman gave up her year old son for a life of addiction.   This is going to negatively impact people for generations to come.  A sad and tragic situation.

I am grateful for my long-term sober friends and to not be stuck in the still using homeless lifestyle.

A Blah Day



Had a blah day today getting very little done beyond some vital work on my wheelchair and reading my Kindle.


I am grateful for blah days that are not so bad.

Liquid Nitrogen

Went to a dermatologist this morning for a few weird growths on my skin.   There was a couple of moles, warts and one pre-cancerous thing on my forehead.   They all got the same frozen treatment of being sprayed with liquid nitrogen to freeze them off or at least make them a lot smaller.

It was a fun visit to the doctor.   She was cute, smart and had a bedside manner.   Plus she examined, diagnosed and treated 5 questionable skin issues in under 20 minutes.  If only other medical professionals such as psychiatrists or neurosurgeons could do the same!  Medicine would be cheaper and vastly better.

I am grateful to Dr Gardner and her can of fixit spray.  There are now five less things to worry about in my world.



Solar Electricity

My friends have put solar-electric generating panels on the roof of their house.   On the open market, that would cost about $25,000.   Thanks to subsidies, it will cost about $10,000 and payout in 10 years.   They did it more for the geopolitical statements about global warming and not fighting wars for oil propping up corrupt regimes than the possible 10 year savings on breaking even financially.

I am grateful for the rapid expansion of solar power throughout the world.   It will provide increasingly less expensive power throughout the world freeing all of us from the tyranny of corrupt petro-governments such as the Soviet Union err Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Consistently Writing Here

Doing things that are good for me on a regular basis has never been my forte. I am pleasantly surprised and pleased by how consistently I have been writing on my NA step study workbook followed immediately by my writing here.  My self-talk is much more positive and less negative as a direct result of this.  

Experience has proven that just because things are good for me does not mean I am willing to do them.   Avoiding pain is a motivator, but still not enough to get me to do this.   My desire to be happy and healthy needs to be fostered with faith and trust so that I am better able to take right action in my life.

I am grateful to be writing about gratitude on a consistent basis.   It brings a sense of wellness to my body, mind and soul.



Compassion and Empathy for Myself and Others

I am working my way through the NA Step Study Guides [sic] workbook writing a page of cursive every night before writing this blog post.   Now I am on the 9th step where it was discussing compassion and empathy.   I have always felt for people in bad situations.   Since I was already emotionally shut-down, my sense of compassion and empathy for others was limited.  Part of me was afraid of making their problems my problems as if they were contagious diseases.

Today I am much better able to have compassion and empathy for others while having at least semi-healthy boundaries to recognize that their problems are not my problems.

I am grateful for my increased compassion and empathy for others while being less shut-down than how it used to be.   It makes me feel that much more a part of the human condition instead of being terminally unique and filled with self-pity.

A Variety of 12-Step Programs

After massive growth in the last year, it was time for me to start going to Overeaters Anonymous (OA) meetings.   Went to my first meeting this morning.   Listened to an extremely eloquent woman talk about having eating issues since childhood.   It was a tour de force 15 minute spiel.   Turns out that they started out with a mini-speaker meeting.

After that, I went to some AA for almost an hour and then went to NA for 75 minutes.  It was all packed together in a ridiculously convenient 3 hours at a place five minutes from home at the Belllevue Alano (both “a-lan-o” and “al-a-no” are used, I prefer the former) Club.   That was a great way to start my week.   I will continue to do that in the future.


I am grateful to live in a community and region with strong participation in 12-step programs.   A meeting isn’t any good when I am sitting there by myself.

Elasticity

I wear compression (support) socks to mitigate swelling in my lower legs while sitting in my wheelchair.   They are made out of a high quality elastic material.   A quick Google shows that they are made out of a higher ratio of Lycra and spandex than other socks.

After recent swim sessions dating back to last Fall, I had a problem with swelling in my lower left thigh.   Elavating my leg did not make it go away.   A trip to the ER and ultrasoud did not find any new blood clots or other damage.   The treatment was to wear a thigh high support sock on my left leg at night.

My regular MD evaluated my feet yesterday with the help of a diabetes specialist.   For most people, they would check for neuropathy (nerve problems) by sticking me with a needle.   Since that would not work, we did a visual inspection.   All things considered, my feet are in reasonably good shape with no open wounds.  In the 10ish years I have seen my doctor Lucy, this was the second time in memory that she gave me an exam.  It was discombobulating and I was babbling about bs.


I am grateful for elasticity.   It is an amazingly complex process at the atomic level.  One of my worst class comprehensions was ME 180 (materials) in college.   I did not get it. Wikipedia

Signs of Spring

Daylight is an hour longer than it was a month ago with 9 hours and 7 minutes today.  In two months there will be more than 12 hours of daylight.   Going out to my car this morning, I had a strong sensation of moving out of December’s darkness as early trees are preparing to start budding.

It has been record warm winter so far on the East coast.   That has come to an abrupt halt as “snowmageddon” has started from the Carolinas to Massachusetts.  It is predicted to be among the top 3 snowstorms in recorded history for the them affecting 85 million people.   That is a big snowstorm.

When I was first paralyzed 35 years ago, I vividly remember seeing a picture of a guy in a wheelchair in Boston shoveling out 18 inches of snow to get to his car and thinking “I am never moving to Boston”.  Never wanted to live in the northeast after that.


I am grateful for longer days and no snow.

Swam Twice This Week

I burned my ankle 53 weeks ago.  The day before that, I bought a 3-month unlimited pass planning on swimming every day.   I swam 4x in the last year.  My weight went up and my strength went down commensurate with that level of not-exercise. 

Tonight for the first time in over a year, I swam twice in a week.  Got in an argument with my roommate before I left and this weird lady kept splashing me with her 3-toddlers in a not-so-crowded pool.   That was annoying and I had a great swim.

I am extremelygrateful for a 90° pool with a lift that is conveniently located two miles away.


Glad It is Not Me

I have to six funerals in my life.  Two for my brother and sister when I was a teenage that were especially traumatic and intense in their loss.  My dad’s closest cousin, Berkeley Johnson.   Friends were Mark Adams, Lemeal J. and Jeanie Turner.

A friend who has tried recovery several times and is doing really good this time with the most sobriety he ever had—4 months—has had five family members and close friends die in the last two months.  His teenage daughter died yesterday.  Brutal.   I am sorry for his losses and glad that he is staying sober.

Another friend had 18 months and went back out.   She is homeless, struggling and defiant.   That is a scary painful place to be.   Having proved several times beyond a shadow of a doubt that her way does not work, she is going to give it another try.   It is the recovery equivalent of watching somebody beat their bloody head against a brick wall while chanting over and over again “I don’t need a door, I can do this myself”.

I certainly need to work on my issues, but they are way less painful and intense than what many others are having to deal with.


I am grateful for the chronic nature of my problems and lack of visceral intense pain in my life today.  My crap sucks, but it is the same old crap and I know how to deal with it…just keep working on it.

Martin Luther King Day

Today is MLK day.   Lea, Danica and I went to a meeting and then lunch with Sandy.   It was a nice way to spend MLK day with friends.

I am grateful for civil rights leaders such as MLK and for the fact that we get to have them in our society.  Sucks that we need them, great that we can have that sort of free speech.    Kudos to Arizona and South Carolina for getting on the MLK holiday bandwagon …eventually.



Pot Roast

My mother was a terrible cook.   We butchered our own farm raised steers.   Dinners were nutritious, but never delicious.   My grandmother lived in her house several hundred yards across the field.   She was a great farm cook and liked to use a woodstove even though she had a moderm electric oven and stove-top range.

Perhaps my favorite meal cooked by grandma was potroast.   She would cook it in an electric skillet so that the roast was dark brown, tender and delicious.   I got a chuck roast from Whole Foods yesterday after a nice talk with the head of the meat department about various issues.   I put the roast in a crock pot for hours and then pan fried it on low heat until dark brown.   It was just the way I like it.   Apparently so did my roommates judging by how quick it disappeared.

I am so incredibly grateful for having had my grandmother in my life.   She was a bastion of sanity in a dysfunctional world.  It was a joy to eat lunch with her and my brother Bryce while working on the farm as an adolescent.   He got her to tell great stories about our relatives that I never knew.


Republic Wireless


My buying habits are bizarre.   I will waste all my money on drugs while using.  While clean, I tend to be a parsimonious purchaser.  I don’t have cable TV due in great part for feeling like it is a grossly overpriced, and hating the idea of having to deal with Comcast customer service.

I held off on getting a smart phone for 5 years after the first iPhone came out.   I felt no compulsion to spend $100/month for internet access on a tiny screen when I had much faster access at home on large monitors.

I finally got an Android Moto Defy smart phone 3 years ago.  It worked on Sprint’s 3G cell network via the Republic Wireless wifi-hybrid rebiller system.   Two years ago, I upgraded to Moto X 2nd generation phone on 4G.  It was a larger screen and faster internet connection.   I still don’t use much data.  My 4G phone plan with little usage is about $17/month.   That is the best deal I know of in the US and it works great for me.  I am limited to a few specific phones.   Having a ginormous phone (phablet) seems attractive at times but I also know that I don’t want to carry around such a large device.

Anyhoo, I setup my old Defy XT for Danica tonight.   Compared with a Best Buy phone buying experience 3 years ago, this was a treat to be able to do it online.  Admittedly the Defy XT is not working yet.  I think she has to go outside the apartment to get a better cell connection on the Sprint Network.


I am grateful for the commodifaction of Smart phone cell service.   It has been a blazingly fast revolution since that first iPhone in June of 2007.

A Knock On The Door

Two years ago, Lea and I met Danica at a meeting and became friends with.  Lea is the godmother of Danica’s young son.   We had not seen Danica in a year.   Last night she unexpectedly knocked on our door at 10 PM.   We were delighted to see her after no contact for a year.

She had relapsed, lost her son to CPS and was homeless.   That is what addicts usually do when they drop off the radar.   It was not a surprise.

She is going to stay with us until she leaves, whenever that might be.  I need help with getting around, Lea needs help with cleaning and Danica needs help with life.   This should work out well for all of us.  She is a sweet young woman and we missed her.

As a guy in a wheelchair, I don’t get a chance to go make “12-step calls” to homes of alcoholics wanting to get sober.   It was a joy to have the chance to make one in my own home.   Danica was the person I would have most wanted to do a 12-step call with.

Using synthetic marijuana aka “spice”, methamphetamine, heroin, marijuana and losing her son did not make Danica a brighter smarter happier person.   That is to be expected.   It took almost three hours to buy some pants, shirts and shoes at the Goodwill today.   It was sad to watch a woman that did not  like to shop spend 30 minutes looking at a row of tank-tops over and over again in an OCD sort of way.  That was after discussions about a quick trip.

I am grateful Danica came by and look forward to helping her get her life back together and having her help us make our lives better.

Our Local Economy



The Washington State economy is the fastest growing in the US according to Business Insider Washington state scored extremely well on most of our metrics. Its Q2 2015 annualized GDP growth rate was a stunning 8.0%, by far the highest among the states and DC. The November 2015 average weekly wage of$1,073 was the second highest in the country, and was 5.6% higher than the weekly wage in November 2014, the third highest wage growth rate.”

There are many voices of Cassandra predicting doom and gloom especially in an Presidential election year.   The reality is that we are still the richest country in the history of the world and getting richer.   Unfortunately income inequality is leaving many people behind while insanely greedy others fight to increase their share of already incomprehensible wealth preying on racial, religious and medical FUD.


I am grateful for a growing economy that provides opportunities for all.

Many Things

According to https://www.givingwhatwecan.org, my income makes me among the richest 0.7% of the world.  With a million millionaires in China, that can’t begin to be right.   Wherever I am in the rank world per capita income, I know it is way up on the well-to-do side.  I believe something more like in the 80th to 80th percentile of the world or below average in Bellevue!

I have a hard time with depression and negative thinking.   I can’t imagine how tough life is when even getting clean water is a near impossible task much less acquiring food, fuel and shelter.   I am not nearly as tough as I would like to be.

I am grateful for all the material resources in my life including unlimited hot & cold water, food, a nice shelter, fuel/energy, and as important as anything—friends that love and care for me.


Alabama Wins College Football Championship Over Clemson



This is the second year of the college football playoffs.  The semifinal games were not close.   The championship game was an extremely well-played game with few penalties.   It was two heavyweights going back-and-forth for four quarters.  It was the perfect ending to a great college football season.  

Kudos to Alabama coach Nick Saban on his 5th National Championship.   He is an amazing teacher turning boys into men.

I am grateful for the optimism of youth.  These guys worked really hard all their young lives to achieve greatness that will stay with them for the rest of their lives.



Baby Steps

After some setbacks in the last week, I am working on taking baby steps to get back on track.  Going to a meeting, shopping, and writing is a good start for now. 

I am grateful for taking baby steps to get out of a funk.



My First Swim in Months



Went swimming tonight for the first time in 4 months and the 4th time in the last year.   Swam for 45 minutes.  Normally that leaves my mind and body cooked like a wet noodle—especially after months of not swimming.   After swimming, we got a few groceries, came home, did swim laundry, had some dinner and wrote.   That is all for now.

I am super grateful to have made it swimming tonight.   It is good for my mind, body and soul.



It Could Have Been Worse



Had an appointment to get my teeth cleaned this morning.  Went to the dental clinic and tried to transfer from my car to my wheelchair.  I fell three times before giving up and going home.  I had my roommate hold my chair when I got home.

Since I burned my ankle 50 weeks ago.  I have been fighting a cascading series of health problems resulting in my gaining weight with a concurrent loss of strength and fitness resulting in a catastrophic loss of mobility and freedom.  I woke up this morning with anxiety about being able to transfer to my chair from my car.  Turns out I was right to be concerned.

Fortunately I did not hurt my upper body and was able to get back in my car which I was not sure I could do by myself.   I was exhausted when I got home.   After a nap, I woke up slightly sore.

The obvious solution is diet and exercise.  I will try getting back in the pool soon.  There are some problems with swimming.   Hopefully they will not be too big an issue.  I have a stationary hand-bike that I will use along with other activities.

A big part of the diet change will be swapping nuts, cheese and dried fruit for fresh vegetable snacks.

I know what to do.  Mustering the discipline is the hard part.   I have found plenty of reasons for motiviation.  If I can’t use my car, I am homebound.   That is a horribly drastic consequence for lacking motivation and discipline to become more physically fit.

I am grateful I did not hurt my upper body after falling and getting back in my car three times today.   It could have been worse.



Better Gift Giving Skills



All my life, giving gifts to others has been a loaded experience filled with trepidation.   I got most of that from my alcoholic mother.   Never knew when she was going to go off after having made some effort to be nice to her.  Xmas and birthdays were the worst.

I have spent years working on giving gifts to others a better experience for both me and the recipient.   This Xmas went very well.   Instead of donating to charities in an emotionally detached bloodless sort of way, I took two guys needing shows to Factoria Mall and bought them the boots of their choice.   They made good practical choices that will help them get jobs and I got to give them an atta-boy for working hard to make progress in pulling their lives back together.  It went well.

My rooommate loves purple clothes.   We found a winter coat at Target that was exactly what she wanted and certainly exceeded all expectations for a garment from Target with a hood, deep pockets, and thumb-holes at the end of the sleeves.   She loves her new coat.  I liked the whole experience.

I am grateful for better gift-giving experiences in my life.

American Football



I went years without watching American football on TV.  This season I watched a lot of college games and many of the 16 regular season Seahawk games.   Individually the players are amazingly athletic.   As a team, it is incredibly choreography to get your 11 players in a better position than their 11 players in a 5-second burst of activity.   I don’t have great “football knowledge” of all the details that go into winning.  Great plays and the final score are enough for me.

This weekend was the last of the bowl games on Saturday night.   Sunday night was the last of the regular season (not playoffs) for the pros.   Both games went done to the final seconds.  It was a thrilling finish.

Now it is time for the pro playoff to determine who will play in the Superbowl.   The Seattle Seahawks played in the last two Superbowls.  Their record was not as good this year.   They ended the season beating up on some of the other contenders with better records.   It is a lot more fun to watch them win—surprisingly so.

I am grateful for all the entertainment I got from watching football this year.   It was a great season.


A Young Man To Admire and Appreciate



I am in awe of what this guy has already achieved at age 19.   A small percentage of the population but still many people graduate college at a young age.   Very very few bring water and power to thousands of people on the far side of the world.  Wow!     

From the Seattle Times.

19-year-old engineer from North Bend puts smarts to work around the world

Alexander Anderson, 19, of North Bend, talks about the airborne wind turbine he built with money from a grant from the American Public Power Association.

Alexander Anderson won a grant to build an airborne wind turbine — held aloft by balloons and tethered to the ground. (Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times)
The blades in the airborne wind turbine that Alexander Anderson constructed are big and visible to bats and birds so not as many are killed, unlike the current wind turbines. (Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times)


Alexander Anderson, 19, of North Bend, talks about the airborne wind turbine he built with money from a grant from the American Public Power Association. (Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times)
Alexander Anderson’s skills in mechanical and electrical engineering have already brought clean drinking water to a village in Papua New Guinea.

Educating Alexander Anderson has been a family project.

His parents, Alex and Olga, recognized early on that their son was unusually gifted. For the first dozen years they home-schooled him, with an emphasis on the humanities and languages.

By the time he was 12, Alexander had surpassed his parents’ ability to educate him.

They enrolled him at Green River College, but the college said it couldn’t let a boy his age attend on his own, and the Andersons thought it would be a waste of time to hang around while Alexander was in class.

So, everyone in the family went to school — first to community college, then to Saint Martin’s University in Lacey, where all three earned degrees in mechanical engineering.

Today Anderson, who is 19, has already amassed a list of accomplishments worthy of a lifetime. Not only has the North Bend man earned a master’s degree in electrical power engineering, he has also:

• Built and tested a low-cost, lightweight airborne wind turbine that will get a real-world tryout this year in Papua New Guinea;

Alexander Anderson, 19, of North Bend describes the low-cost, lightweight airborne wind turbine that he built and tested. The technology will get a real-world tryout this year in Papua New Guinea.

• Designed a rainwater-collection system that brings clean drinking water to 5,000 people in a rural village, also in Papua New Guinea;

• Started designing a solar microgrid system that could provide electricity and jobs to villages in the developing world;

• Published and presented a mathematical formula that allows engineers to determine how much more energy they could generate using an alternative turbine design that concentrates the wind’s power;

• Applied for two patents, then scrapped that idea in favor of making his work available to anyone, so others might benefit from his ideas.

Engineers and educators who know him say there’s no doubt that Anderson is brilliant, perhaps a genius.

And he’s also a very nice guy.

“He wants to serve — he wants to be helpful to people,” said Larry Hull, a Centralia orthopedist who has traveled extensively to developing countries on health-care missions.

As a capstone project in college, Anderson worked with Hull to design the rainwater-collection system that involved “jillions of calculations,” said Hull, who received the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons’ humanitarian award in 2010.

Anderson, who has a gentle demeanor and who looks even younger than 19, is matter-of-fact about his skills.

“I’ve always been at the top of my class,” he said.

Over the past year, he finished an online master’s degree in electrical power engineering from Washington State University. He was able to accomplish that from his family’s home in North Bend — a neat-as-a-pin, cozy cabin on the banks of the Snoqualmie River, its shelves lined with volumes of calculus, physics, Latin, Greek and French.

A large reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man hangs on one wall, and a wood stove crackles in the kitchen, where the family’s 20-year-old tabby cat winds her way around the table.

Associate degrees
Olga, who has master’s degrees in education and linguistics, has schooled him in Greek, Latin, French and Hebrew.

His father, an aircraft inspector at Boeing, has given his son a mechanical background. “He has been teaching me how to fix things as long as I can remember,” Alexander said.

After all three earned associate degrees in aeronautical and mechanical pre-engineering at Green River, Alexander enrolled in Saint Martin’s, his parents’ alma mater, in Lacey.

While at Saint Martin’s, Anderson was introduced to Hull, who works with Rotary International to bring health care to Madan, in Papua New Guinea.

Anderson needed a capstone project to finish his mechanical-engineering degree. And clean-water collection was a critical need for the village. “That’s why we really needed his help,” Hull said.

Anderson, along with his parents, designed a system to collect rainwater from rooftops, store it in tanks, and pipe it to three community centers and a medical clinic. It will help prevent the spread of disease, in a country where only 32 percent of the rural population has access to safe drinking water. The system is being built by the villagers.

For Anderson, it was magical. By using mathematical calculations, he designed a system that could help prevent deadly diseases in a village on the other side of the world.

“After I finished the water project, I said, what else can we do?”

Needed resource
Well, there’s electricity, Hull told him — a needed resource in Third World countries. And so Anderson has been working on both solar- and wind-energy systems.

He’s been exploring how using a flared, tube-shaped device called an augmenter can concentrate wind power, making turbines more efficient.

Augmenters are sometimes used on wind farms, but engineers have had no way to predict whether adding one justified the extra expense and weight at a given location.

The Andersons designed models using 3-D printers, and tested the devices in a low-speed wind tunnel they constructed in the garage. Eventually, Anderson developed a formula that could predict an augmenter’s efficiency.

In 2014, he won a grant from the American Public Power Association (APPA), a service organization run by publicly owned electric utilities, to build his own airborne wind turbine — held aloft by balloons and tethered to the ground.

Airborne turbines can be raised or lowered depending on wind speed, and they can be used in areas where constructing a tower isn’t practical. Building the turbine also gave Anderson a chance to test his augmenter formula, and last year he flew the design at Puget Sound Energy’s Wild Horse Wind Facility.

The engineers at the power association were impressed.

“Think of the Third World opportunities,” marveled Michael Hyland, senior vice president of engineering and operations for the association. The balloon could be shipped in a box, set up and deployed quickly in a remote area, for a low cost — providing enough power to run lights and charge cellphones. Indeed, Hull will do just that in 2016, bringing it with him to Papua New Guinea.

Hyland called it a smart, creative design with lots of potential. And Anderson’s report to the American Public Power Association was equally impressive.

“His final report to us was 60 pages,” Hyland said. “Think about that. I don’t know where the kid has the spare time.”

Anderson said the airborne turbine went from a concept drawing to a full-scale test in just five months. When it came to the paper, he just couldn’t stop writing. “There was a lot to talk about,” he said, grinning.

Last year, Anderson presented his work at an Everett conference of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Family’s company
In 2014, Anderson applied for WSU’s new online master’s program, designed for electrical power professionals who needed both technical and managerial skills. The Andersons by this time had started a company, Odin Energy Works, and the professional degree seemed like a good fit.

When he first applied, WSU engineering professor Bob Olsen was somewhat mystified by this young student with a 4.0 GPA who wanted a graduate degree. He called up the dean at Saint Martin’s, who told him that Anderson was “genius level — he was a very, very good student. Definitely — take him.”

His work, Olsen said, was top-notch.

“He’s very interesting, very articulate, and what he’s going to be doing — I really don’t know, but maybe the sky’s the limit,” he said.

In October, Anderson presented a paper on the rainwater-collection system at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ Global Humanitarian Conference, winning first place.

He plans to work with the institute on the construction of “smart villages” — bringing solar energy to third-world villages.

Robin Podmore, a Bellevue engineer who is closely involved with the institute’s Smart Villages project, says he’s impressed by Anderson.

“I think this young man is going to change the world,” Podmore said.



A Good Start to a New Year

Went to a meeting, talked with others, watched college football bowl games, made some phone calls, made a yummy steak dinner and the first part of a beef stroganoff for tomorrow, trimmed Baby Kitty’s claws and finished a jigsaw puzzle with my roommate last night.   This is a good start to a new year.  When I get done writing this, I will work out on my hand-bike for a couple minutes.   That is progress.


I am grateful for the knowledge, wisdom and skills to build a better life a little bit at a time.  I plan to work out and write every day until I finish the last 6.5 steps in my NA step study guide workbook.