Maintenance trick

I took my car to the mechanic yesterday because the air
conditioner didn’t seem to be doing anything. Not that we’ve
needed it for cooling this Spring in this part of the world, but it wasn’t defogging the
windshield, which we have needed.

He checked it and found the fluid was low, which was probably
from a leak, but there was no way to tell what was leaking, except
by filling it up and seeing where it came out.

In this case, he only had to start putting more in, and it was
clear what line was spewing expensive ($150/tank) fluid.

But if it had been a slow leak, I would have had to come back a
week or even a month later. And I wouldn’t have come back until
quite a lot of environmentally destructive stuff had leaked out on
the roads.

So what my mechanic has started doing about this is putting in
fluid with a flourescent dye in it, so that he can see as soon as it leaks where the leak is.

This seems like a very good idea, and I would encourage
manufacturers to put the flourescent dye in in the first place, so
that a leaky air conditioner can be caught and fixed in routine
maintenance.

In general, manufacturers who aren’t also maintainers should
look for tricks like this that make maintenance easier, cheaper,
and greener.

Marley and Me

This
film
is exactly what you’d expect — Hollywood’s take on a
family’s love for its dog. I enjoyed it.

One thing some critics have said is that the
book
is a little bit less of a Hollywood picture of a
marriage. So that might be a good thing to read, some time when
you need an easy read, or one you can get from the drugstore or
airport bookstore.

The end of the movie is a tearjerker, but putting down a dog
you love is a difficult decision, and people should have seen
versions of it in other people’s lives. I thought the John Grogan
character’s verbalization of it was apt: Marley, you tell me when
it’s time. And the funeral where the children write letters to
Marley is beautifully done.

Of course the “world’s worst dog” subtitle is completely
unjustified; Marley doesn’t ever do anything that any dog doesn’t
do. The Kathleen Turner dog-trainer turn is brilliant, but not at
all fair to the dog-trainers I’ve known.

The least well-captured aspect of dog-ownership in the movie
was the other dog-owners in the park — my experience is that you
can get a great deal of support for dealing with a difficult dog
(and they’re all difficult sometimes)
from other dog-owners.

Hollywood doesn’t really try for the kind of accurate depiction
of a lifestyle that some of the European and Independant
film-makers do, but they really should have done better in the
scene where Marley decided stairs are too hard, even to sleep with
the family. He lies down in front of a blazing fire, which the
family is just leaving there as they go to bed. I’m sure this
isn’t what the real Grogan family does.

In terms of my personal situation, Sunny is at the stage where
he doesn’t always hear me come in, but he’s still dealing with
stairs. It will be a major decision point if he decides he can’t,
since I can’t carry him, and our apartment starts on the second floor.

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Last day stew

One of the things you have to do when a farm share is dumping a
large box of produce into your car’s trunk every week is have some
general recipes to use up the stuff from last week when the stuff
for next week is coming.

So Tuesday I put all the salad greens I still had into a salad
and fed it to the band. Then yesterday I made a stew of the
cookable stuff still hanging around.

This was basically the Bok Choy from the first week and the
Kale from last week. So I took two cans of tomatoes, a cup or so
of quinoa, two cups of liquid (in my case, a cyser that’s too dry to drink straight) a can of pinto beans (if I’d been organized, I would
have soaked beans early in the day, but I wasn’t), two medium
onions, several cloves of garlic, and some seasonings, and threw
everything in a pot. I sauteed the onions, the garlic and the
stems from the leafy vegetables in olive oil before adding them to
the pot. I let this simmer while I practiced tuba and recorder
and vocalized, and then had it for dinner.

I don’t have feedback from anyone else, but I went back for
seconds. It will be a good thing to have around for meals when I
don’t feel like cooking any of the wonderful things in this week’s
share.

Blu-ray discs

It took a while, but I finally convinced my new
computer
(not the exact model) to play a blu-ray disc. (The problem was that the
system as shipped needed at least two upgrades. It wasn’t
trivial to set up the sound either.)

The picture on blu-ray is indeed better than with a standard
DVD, and I don’t have a problem with paying Netflix an extra
$2/month to get blu-ray discs when they have them.

Unfortunately, the plan is to move this computer upstairs to be
my desktop. I don’t think the old computer is powerful enough to
play blu-ray even if I bought it a drive. So I’ll probably go
back to watching regular dvd’s when I finish setting up this
one.

If I decide after doing that that I miss the blu-ray enough to
buy a player, I’ll let you know. Of course, ideally I would be
able to play the disc on the computer upstairs and watch it on
the TV downstairs, but I think they work pretty hard to stop you
doing things like that. I’ll definitely let you know if I figure
that one out.

In case you’re wondering, the movie I watched was Slumdog
Millionaire.
I was a bit disappointed, given how much some
of the people I know had liked it. It was a good movie, with
one likable character, and good acting and photography, but it
was just a Hollywood movie. It was about an interesting
culture, but didn’t really have anything very enlightening to
say about that culture.

The advantage of watching this kind of movie at home
instead of in the theater is
that you can go feed the dog during the scene where they gouge
the child’s eyes out. So it is expecially nice to have the
extra resolution on a movie where there’s one scene you want to skip.

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Massachusetts health care

There’s an article on slate.com
this morning called
Bringing Down the House: The
sobering lessons of health reform in Massachusetts
. Slate
is a large organization, and some of the writing is a lot better
than others. This one isn’t one of their better efforts.

The gist of the article is:

The expensive Massachusetts plan is not well-designed to systematically improve anyone’s health. Instead, it’s a superficial effort to clear the uninsured from the books and then clumsily limit further costs by discouraging care.

In the heat of the moment, I posted this comment:

I think this article ignores the managed care option. I’m sure the discussion of up-front costs and copays is true for some plan that’s available, and it may be the cheapest per month, but my impression is that the purpose of the current cost structure is to drive people to managed care. This gives them hefty copayments for some expensive services, but makes routine preventative care practically free.

My own plan (one of the subsidized ones) has more copays than some
really poor people have, but the choice for the mother whose
baby has a fever would be between paying a $50 copay for the
emergency room and waiting for the doctor’s office to be open
and paying a $5 copay.

Thinking about it while walking the dog, I realized that a
better criticism of the article would be to point out how divorced
from any facts the author’s thesis was. If you want to argue
that a given system discourages care, shouldn’t you feel that you
have to present some statistics that show less care is being used
under the current system than under the previous system?

I’m not an expert, but certainly there have been reports in the
press suggesting the opposite — for instance, that the number of
primary care providers (PCPs) accepting new patients has dropped because
all the people who have insurance now and didn’t before have
signed up for a PCP and are using him or her.

My personal experience of the new Massachusetts system has been
pretty good, once I gave up on figuring out how to apply for the
subsidized care myself and got the social worker at the clinic I
go to to help me.

There are several major things wrong with health care in
Massachusetts, but the insurance requirement discouraging use of
health care really isn’t one of them.

Successful party

It wasn’t great day for it — I’d hoped to be out in the back
yard with the grill going. If we’d been fanatical outdoor
cooks, we could have done that; I don’t think the rain ever
exceeded a heavy drizzle. But we all decided there was nothing
wrong with cooking on a stove and staying dry.

So it was good that in spite of having invited the whole
attendance of the Boston Early Music Festival, the people who actually
showed up fit comfortably in my living room.

One thing I mean by a successful party is one I’m excited
enough about to get housecleaning done in advance, and this one
worked quite well for that. While little
roomba
vacuumed the living room, I sorted music from the
stack that had accumulated on the sideboard where I leave music
when I’m running a rehearsal, but put drinks on when there’s a
party. There’s still lots more music to put away, but it isn’t
getting in my way as much as it was yesterday morning.

I said in the invitation that if poeple told me what they were
bringing, I could coordinate. Of course, this is true only if
people tell you what they’re thinking about bringing before they
actually cook it, or do the shopping for it. One guest asked me
whether I’d prefer a green salad or sweet potatoes, and since
one point of this party was to use up the greens that Picadilly Farm has
been sending me, I told her sweet potatoes. Then the next email
I get is from another guest who has just made a sweet potato
salad. So I decided we were just going to tell everybody that
sweet potatoes were this summer’s trendy health food, and
suggested that the next person who emailed me might want to get
in on the fun, too. She said she’d done her shopping the day
before and already had the cookies in the oven. In the end, one
sweet potato dish was mashed with pecans and maple syrup and the
other was a salad with peppers and scallions, so it wasn’t a
problem.

I have my friends pretty well trained to bring stuff when they
come to parties, so all I did was provide beverages, a large
green salad, and sausages and veggie burgers. I’d planned to
make the veggie burgers, but I decided more cleaning was more
useful than more cooking, so I bought them.

The less successful aspect of the party was that nobody new
came, but the flip side of that was that everybody liked each
other, and the conversation was pretty good. My sister was
there, so we did singalong around the piano (with serpent and
fiddle) instead of playing Renaissance or West Gallery
music.

Another good thing that happened was that one of my friends
borrowed my xaphoon.
I forget why I wanted to buy it a few years ago, but I did learn
to play Never on Sunday on it at the time, and
concluded that getting saxaphone chops was going to be too much
work. I couldn’t demonstrate it at the party. Anyway, he might
end up buying it, or even if not, it will clutter up his apartment
instead of mine.

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Bonnie’s major blood loss on April 1, 2008

I mentioned yesterday that
reading about the Silverwood family sitting on the coral reef with
the father dying from blood loss because his leg has been mostly
amputated by a falling mast reminded me of the afternoon I sat
with Bonnie while
she was bleeding from her gastrointestinal tract and getting
transfusions so she wouldn’t die. The
timeline says this
was April 1, 2008, a couple of weeks after we were officially told
to assume that she wouldn’t recover, and a month and a half before
she actually died.

I was driving to a physical therapy appointment, planning to go
on from there to visit Bonnie a the rehab hospital in Salem. I
don’t believe in doing phone calls while I’m driving, and
certainly not the kind of phone calls where doctors are explaining complicated
procedures to you and asking you to make treatment decisions. The
part of Cambridge and Somerville I was in has pretty busy traffic,
but you can sometimes find a parking place to pull over into. So
with these several calls, I was sometimes able to pull over and
answer the phone, and other times I had to attempt to call the
busy doctors back and deal with the switchboard trying to find
them. (This is in a parking space, but with a lot of truck traffic
going by.)

So the first phone call said that she was bleeding heavily and
they wanted my permission to do a transfusion. So I said OK.

But then the questions got harder — did I want them to do an
endoscopy? Did I want the blood thinning medications stopped? (I
was surprised they were still doing blood thinning medications.)
Could I give permission to move her from the rehab hospital to the
Lahey clinic? I said I’d be there in about an hour, and we could
talk about it better then.

When I got to Bonnie’s room, it was bustling. Normally there
were the two hospital beds with patients in them, and the noises
the machines made that were breathing for the patients, and an
occasional visitor or nurse speaking quietly. But this time
they’d cleared a fairly large area around Bonnie’s bed, and there
were several people standing around doing things. Eventually I
sorted it out that there was a special nurse keeping an eye on
Bonnie because she was critical, and the people actually doing the
transfusion.

They were telling Bonnie she shouldn’t go to sleep. She was
conscious, and writing fairly clearly — one thing I remember
vividly was that she wrote “Will I die?” We asked her whether she
wanted the endoscopy. I think the way they put it was, “Do you
want to go to the Operating Room again?” She said, “Yes.”

At this point the decision had been made to stabilize her as
well as they could with the transfusions and then move her to the
Lahey Clinic, which was better set up to deal with patients like
her, and the endoscopy would be there if there was one. So I
stayed around to keep her awake until the ambulance people
came to “pack” her. (That is the word they use.)

I had left hymnals in her closet, and one of the things I
carried in the bag I brought when I visited her was Rise
up singing
. So I started with the lullaby section in that,
but then moved on to the other sections. I must have sung
several things I probably hadn’t sung since high school. One of
the nurses sang along. When I started having trouble singing
because I was crying, a nurse would come hug me. The special
nurse who was staying there was afraid of Sunny (one of the good
things about this rehab hospital was that they were tolerant of
well-behaved pets visiting the patients), so I kept him leashed on
the other side of the bed from her. He was unusually good about
getting out of the way of the people working on the transfusions.

It was a couple of hours later that the EMT’s came to put her
in the ambulance. By then, I think she wasn’t as cold from the
blood loss and the transfusion process. For reasons which are
completely obscure to me, I let them talk me into taking all her
stuff, which took up most of the available space in my car.
(There were things like the walker with the seat which she wasn’t
ever going to use again, and a giant teddy bear someone had given
her.)

I had a recorder lesson that evening, and it was interrupted by
calls from the emergency room at the Lahey Clinic. Some of what
they wanted to know was why she was on medications I’d never heard
of. They wanted to know how she was “coded”, which meant nothing
to me, but then they explained that she was “Do Not Resuscitate”,
which we had agreed to verbally, but I’d never signed anything.
(I’ve talked to people who believe that doesn’t happen.) The
doctor I spoke to told me that it was unclear whether she’d make
it through the night.

Of course, when I called the following morning, I wasn’t able
to get any information about her status because the nurse didn’t
have a “code” for her. (Different code — a password you can set
up when you’re there so they know you’re someone they can talk
to when you call.)

Eventually, they did do the endoscopy, and found no problems in
the part of the colon they were able to access. There was a
section that was so squeezed in by the cancer that they couldn’t
get to it to see it. But it looked like all the bleeding must
have been caused by the blood thinners, not by actual ulcers.

It was shortly after this that the doctors started discussing
hospice care with us. One of the things they emphasized was that
if she were in a hospice, she wouldn’t get the transfusions if she
started bleeding again. But they also wouldn’t be giving her IV
medication like the blood thinners, so in fact, she never did
bleed seriously again.

If I had it to do over again, I think I’d be more pro-active
about making sure I knew what medications were being given and
why.

I actually think it would have been better to die of the blood
clots earlier in the process than the way she actually died, but I
given all the decisions she made both before and after the stroke,
I can’t say I believe she agreed with me, so I really couldn’t
have made a different decision about the blood transfusion and the
endoscopy.

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Black Wave

I read this
book
because I’ve always been fascinated by books about life aboard ships, and I thought it would be interesting to hear how it worked
out with a real, contemporary family.

That part was interesting, although it’s mostly from the
mother’s point of view, so you wonder how well it meshes with what
the children would have said. The short version is that the kids,
especially the oldest one, were grumpy about leaving their friends
and toys behind at first, but then settled down to become
amazingly adult crew members.

What was more interesting was the description of the night they
were shipwrecked on the coral reef, with the father’s leg having
been practically amputated by the mast falling on it.

And probably the best-written section in the whole book is the
one comparing their shipwreck experience with the shipwreck in
almost exactly the same place in 1855.

Some things I thought while reading the book:

  • Definitely not very good “experience of alcoholism” writing
    — there’s description of the family reaction to the idea of the
    father taking a drink, but no description of why this would be
    something to worry about.
  • The area where the shipwreck happened had been mapped by the
    Bounty under Captain Bligh. Both the 1855 and the 2005
    shipwrecks occurred when the captains believed they were 16
    miles away from the atoll. It’s apparently possible to believe
    that the chart was compiled with an error by the disaffected
    crew of the Bounty that has never been corrected. (John
    Silverwood thinks it’s more likely that some of his electronic
    equipment didn’t work quite the way it was supposed to, but he
    still likes to think about the other possibilities.)
  • I still don’t really know why you aren’t supposed to go to
    sleep when you’ve been losing a lot of blood. I spent several
    hours with Bonnie once when she was hemorrhaging, and the
    doctors and nurses thought it was important for her, and John
    Silverwood’s family and the medical personnel who rescued him
    tried hard to keep him awake. After the fact, he denies that he
    was ever unconscious, but you apparently could have fooled all
    the people closest to him.
  • It was hard to stay oriented in time — a timeline or even
    just some dates on the map in the front of the book would have
    been helpful.

It’s a pretty quick read, and I enjoyed it in spite of some
flaws, so you might, too.

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Age of consent

I was feeling uninspired, because what I’ve been thinking about
is the site, and even if you’re technical, you don’t want to know
the details of how I’m setting up the database queries to list the
most popular downloads.

So I decided to look at the movies I’ve seen in the last year
or so and rated 4 stars on Netflix.

I watched Age
of Consent
in February, shortly before I started this blogging
every day routine, and I recommend it highly.

I think I got it because it was Helen Mirren’s first movie
role. It also has James Mason at the height of his career. And
there’s gorgeous underwater photography of the Great Barrier Reef,
which you couldn’t take today because it doesn’t look like that
any more.

I’m not sure it says anything very useful about how artistic
inspiration happens, but you can’t have everything.

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