I was today years old…

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We’ve all seen the bell ringers standing in front of stores during the holidays. They’re raising money for the Salvation Army which is one of the few charities you can trust not to spend 80% of donations on “administrative” costs.

Standing outside in Maine in December can be tough. I’ve seen bell ringers wrapped up in so many layers of clothing they look like the Michelin Man.

Hell, I’ve bought coffee and hot chocolate for those poor volunteers to keep them warm.

Because, you know… they volunteered to help.

Or did they?

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Whaaaat!

Is this a new thing… or am I just woefully out of touch.

What happened to the volunteers?

🥴

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News you can’t use.

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Because the world is filled with useless things.

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If that’s the case, I’m guessing he’s doing it wrong.

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No, it’s not nails or ears.

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If my gut bacteria is going to outlive me…. why am I so concerned with pre and pro biotics now?

And speaking of dead bodies.

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Damn, and here I have a hard time getting the husband to mow around my flower beds.

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I don’t believe I’ve had the pleasure. But I’m also not clicking on that story.

🤣

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He’s very helpful.

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Husband is back to work, and back to work these days means teleworking from home. While I’m not exactly thrilled with this situation, Lord Dudley Mountcatten is ecstatic.

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He’s been a daddy’s boy from day one and simply tolerates me because I am the opener of the can.

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Having a home office with a cat in residence can be challenging.

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Reports and correspondence take a back seat when the royal feline says attention must be paid.

❤️

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Bedroom renovation project, part 7… a recap.

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Eleven days in, this is where we are.

Status: Suspended. No progress. Work stoppage until further notice.

Mood: Annoyed. Aggravated. And basically bat shit crazy.

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Part one, the windows –

We have two brand new custom built windows that are leaking air, gap ridden and nonfunctional. Our bedroom is still empty, torn apart, blind and curtainless.

We’re waiting to hear from one of the five specialty crews from the manufacturer who have been assigned to fix our problem. They cover the entire state and while they could be here tomorrow? They could also be here two weeks from now.

We are not happy.

Part two-

When last reported, our contractor had been sent out into the world to procure a door.

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A stinky little nothing special door which I figured everyone would have in stock and didn’t bother to special order because it would take too much time. I was wrong.

Boy, was I wrong.

Our contractor scoured the area, checking big box stores and small mom and pops. He even tried the Habitat for Humanity re-store.

Nada. Nothing. Zilch.

There isn’t a replacement door available in the size we need anywhere within a 300 mile radius. And probably beyond that. Hell, at this point I’m beginning to wonder if they exist at all.

So we’re going to have to do the thing I didn’t want to do in the first place, special order one. The contractor has been tasked with that job because if I have to think about doors any more than I already have? My brain will explode.

And because he’s special ordering one door?

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We’re having him special order a replacement for the other door which will eventually have to go as well. At least this way they’ll both be new at the same time.

As I write this, I have no idea of the lead time on special order doors. With my luck it will be sometime in mid December when there’s 3 feet of snow on the ground.

As always…

I’ll keep you posted.

🥴

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In memoriam.

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This is what gun violence looks like.

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18 innocent lives lost.

They were bowling.

They were playing corn hole.

Yes, the gunman was found dead so we’re safe.

Or are we?

I’m not going to type his name because he’s not who I want to remember.

I’ll type these names instead…

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Ronald G. Morin, 55

Peyton Brewer Ross, 40

Joshua A. Seal, 36

Bryan M. MacFarlane, 41

Joseph Lawrence Walker, 57

Arthur Fred Strout, 42

Maxx A. Hathaway, 35

Stephen M. Vozzella, 45

Thomas Ryan Conrad, 34

Michael R. Desiauriers II, 51

Jason Adam Walker, 51

Tricia C. Asselin, 53

William A. Young, 44

Aaron Young, 14

Robert E. Violette, 76

Lucille M. Violette, 73

William Frank Brackett, 48

Keith D. Macneir, 64

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Maine is still reeling from the shock.

We thought things like mass shootings couldn’t happen here.

We were wrong.

Hold your loved ones close tonight.

đź’”

Weirdest book I’ve ever bought.

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As you know, I’m an avid reader who buys a lot of books. Some I love, some I don’t and some I want to enjoy but can’t.

Enter S.

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It arrived wrapped in plastic with a removable hard box and seal.

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I’d read good reviews of it and was eager to jump in.

S, conceived by filmmaker J. J. Abrams
and written by award-winning
novelist Doug Dorst, is the chroni-
de of two readers finding each other in the
margins of a book and enmeshing themselves in a deadly struggle between forces
they don’t understand. It is also Abrams
and Dorst’s love letter to the written word.

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Made to look like an old library book, I admit I was intrigued.

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The synopsis:

One book, two readers. A world of mystery, menace and desire.
A young woman picks up a book left behind by a stranger.
Inside it are his margin notes, which reveal a reader entranced by the story and by its mysterious author. She responds with notes of her own,
leaving the book for the stranger, and so begins an unlikely conversation that plunges them both into the unknown.

THE BOOK: Ship of Theseus, the final novel by a prolific but enigmatic writer named V. M.
Straka, in which a man with no past is shanghaied onto a strange ship with monstrous crew and launched on a disorienting and perilous journey.

THE WRITER: Straka, the incendiary and secretive subject of one of the world’s greatest mysteries, a revolutionary about whom the world knows nothing apart from the words he wrote and the rumors that swirl around him.

THE READERS: Jennifer and Eric, a college senior and a disgraced grad srudent, both facing crucial decisions about who they are, who they might become, and how much they’re willing to trust another person with their passions, hurts, and fears.

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As soon as I opened it I saw reading was going to be an interactive experience.

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It was positively crammed with letters, newspaper articles, post cards…

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There was even a hand drawn map on a paper towel. You actually had to be careful how you held this book when reading because things fell out all over the place. And while that might sound like fun, to be honest… it wasn’t.

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It was a confusing mish mash of multiple voices and long drawn out tales. The book itself was a story, and a pretty lame one at that. Then there was the translator who wrote the introduction and footnotes about the mysterious author. But the most maddening part? The margin notes conversation between two people who tell yet another story.

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There are so many of them they completely take over the pages. I found it virtually impossible to follow all three narratives at once and tried various ways to finish this clearly epic undertaking.

Did I mention the book literally stunk? As in physically smelled weird. I think they were going for eau de la musty library but it came across as noxious chemical to me. 🤢

As much as I hate to admit defeat when it comes to reading, I couldn’t finish this book.

Well… okay, I could have.

I simply didn’t want to.

J.J. Abrams needs to stick to Star Wars and the visual medium of film because this thing was a mess.

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I wish I could laugh about it, but I’m not there yet.

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Remember the long searched for door we bought the other day?

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The one the salesman assured us was rated for exterior use?

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Turns out it wasn’t.

And according to our contractor, it’s not even close.

Of course it wasn’t what we needed. This is a renovation project at our house where all attempts to improve things are doomed.

Destined to fail.

And more than likely cursed by an angry pickle God.

As I said previously, I’m done. We will take this useless door back to the store and send our contractor out to buy the next one. Maybe he’ll have better luck.

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I love my state.

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It’s a sad irony that the following post was scheduled for today. A mere 41 hours after a gunman murdered 18 of my fellow Mainers.

Our beloved state is still reeling from the shock and my area is still sheltering in place. Crazy times.

My neighbor posted this on FB today.

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Another child has lost another parent. It’s heartbreaking… and no state, no city, no town can ever be immune.

We thought we were.

We were wrong.

And now… my post.

Even with all the bad luck we’ve been having trying to renovate our house, there’s no place I’d rather make my home than Maine. It’s laid back, scenically beautiful, has abundant seafood and the most craft breweries per capita in the nation.

Here are a few other reasons I love it.

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That’s my kind of library.

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🤣

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Thanks mom.

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Someday I’m going to have to drive by this woman’s house and take a peek at her gardens. Judging from the amount of flowers she gives away, it must be amazing.

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Halloween is right around the corner and these are some pretty impressive arachnids.

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Yes sir.

That’s a spider.

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