blowin’ in the wind

With all the recent talk about Bob Dylan and his Nobel Prize in literature, you might think this post would be about him and that. Well it’s not. It’s about something that is also timely – but more of a regular occurrence rather than a groundbreaking phenomenon.

I’m talking about leaf blowing!

Argh. The sounds of suburbia.

When one neighbor’s landscaping crew finishes their autumnal symphony, a new crew a few houses away takes up the chorus.

But as much as the noise from all of the dueling jetpacks annoys me, the greater affront is the seeming lack of concern for where the blown stuff actually goes.

It’s like somehow the act of blowing the leaves, clippings and other detritus makes them disintegrate like something out of a cartoon. Poof! Gone.

In the last 24 hours I watched 2 different landscaping crews perform similar rounds of hit-and-run landscaping. They did their mowing and weed-wacking, blew the debris around a bit and then hopped in their trucks and drove off – leaving a trail of yard waste on the perimeter of the property they had just cleaned. And a whole bunch of it just wafting in the air. Eventually settling back down into the lawn where it will await its next interaction with the leaf blower. And the process repeats.

It’s like “as long as it’s not on my property it doesn’t matter to me!”

So frustrating. And don’t even get me started on aerosol sunscreen! Although it looks like someone has beaten me to the punch on this pet-peeve of mine.

Source: Aerosol Sunscreen aka The Devil’s Mist

everyday I write the blog

Yeah, so that every day thing didn’t really work out for me.

I’m not sure what I was thinking when I set a goal of daily posting. Possibly the only thing I do daily is brush my teeth. At this point I’ll be lucky if I can handle sharing something weekly with my mythical audience.

Part of the problem is my lack of discipline and structure; I am just not really good at routine. I can barely get up each morning to make sure my high schooler gets to the bus on time (in my defense, the bus comes friggin’ early!), let alone figure out how I’m going to eat breakfast, go for a walk, take care of the things on my to-do list. And I’m lucky enough to not have a full-time gig that eats up my time.

Although I do have a teenager who still requires a decent amount of care and maintenance. Primarily of the “ubering” sort. Until the driver’s license comes (but that’s a topic for another day).

Another big issue is my inability to focus. I’m quite easily distracted. So many thoughts bop around in my giant head, but actually sitting down and putting them into writing is painful. It’s easier to just let them swirl around out in the ether and… “Wait, what day do those Lumineers tickets go on sale?” “What’s the admissions rate for Georgetown?” “Is it going to rain today, because I really should mow the lawn?” All of those answers are just a Google search away. Hence my love/hate relationship with my electronics.

A different matter all together is my lack of confidence in my writing for public consumption. I was a statistics major not an English major for crying out loud. I think I took one formal writing class in college – way back in freshman year. All I remember from high school English is diagramming sentences and reading Beowolf. My grown-up writing has been limited to some powerpoint presentations back in the 90’s, and more recently some persuasive emails and a few successful grant requests. I’m sure I’m really mangling all sorts of proper elements of writing and that makes me a bit nervous.

Oh yeah, and that whole perfectionist version of procrastination fits in there somewhere. Overthinking, internal criticism, the sudden urge to clean out the refrigerator. You know the deal.

Plus, I’m not really sure what I’m doing. I’ve never really done this before. I’m still figuring out the technology piece. For all of the power of digital, I still tend to be a bit analog.

So if I were to run a regression analysis on why you are not seeing much output from me, those variables would probably soak up a good amount of the variation.

“And I’m giving you a longing look…
Everyday I write the book.
Don’t tell me you don’t know the difference
Between a lover and a fighter.
With my pen and my electric typewriter
Even in a perfect world where everyone was equal
I’d still own the film rights and be working on the sequel

p.s. Happy Anniversary to my husband of a quarter century!!!