Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Quote for the Weel

In view of the Tax Day flood in Houston, quotes about rain seem appropriate:





Sunday, April 24, 2016

Tax Day 2016

Houston, Texas, Memorial Day 2015; Tax Day 2016.  Another year, another flood.  Last year the bayous overflowed in scattered pockets of the city, including Meyerland, my neighborhood, and Dumfries, my street.  This year the entire city was under water.  Cars were submerged on flooded streets, people were rescued from their homes, other people waded to safety through waist-deep water.  Schools were closed, courts were closed, The mayor and the county judge appeared on television, promising help to the stranded, listing shelters where people could stay, saying they were sad and sorry, sorry, so sorry for the devastation in our city.

Residents of Meyerland who had just moved back into their renovated homes were flooded again. My heart goes out to them, faced with trauma after trauma.



I'm fortunate to have sold my house, and I watched this storm from my fourth floor apartment.  My car was flooded and I now have a rental with roll-up windows and 4 doors which have to be locked separately.  But I'm lucky to have a rental.  By Tuesday afternoon, the day after the flood, they were hard to come by.  Who knows how long it will take the adjuster to check my car?  I'm probably 100th in line.

People here are angry.  Apologies for delayed rescues aren't enough.  The mayor has promised to appoint a Flood Czar.  Fancy title and all, what will s/he do?  The city has been over-developed, wetlands have been paved over, bayous have not been widened or deepened despite promises to work on flood control.  Here we are, the 4th largest city in America, flooded to a standstill and hurricane season fast approaching.  Maybe we need to take a lesson from the Netherlands, maybe we need to find the money to repair our broken flood control system.  Because we can be sure this isn't the last disaster.  Now that most of the water has drained off, now that flood insurance companies have been contacted, now that sheet rock has been torn out of soaked walls, we're waiting for some answers. Meanwhile we can only mutter, "Rain, rain, PLEASE go away."

Not likely.  It's a gray. gloomy day.  Rain has been coming down all afternoon, and the clouds look heavy with moisture.  Thunder has begun to rumble.

Here's a quote from an article by Cort MacMurray in today's Houston Chronicle:

"It's not easy being a Houstonian.  Here we sit, soaked in our soggy bayou homeland, scraping the contents of the neighbors' float-away trash cans from our front lawns and wondering if there's an automotive potpourri strong enough to mask Flooded Car Smell, thinking the thoughts that only Houstonians can think.  The rain isn't over."

Keep us in your prayers, you dry people in other parts of the country.  We need all the help we can get.


Sunday, April 17, 2016

Sadness. Depression: They're Not the Same


Most of us use the terms "sadness" and "depression" interchangeably, but they aren't the same.

Sadness is part of the human experience.  If you've lost a spouse, of course you grieve.  You miss the most important person in your life, the shared experiences, the private jokes, the person you shared your innermost thoughts and feelings with.  Part of grieving is allowing yourself to feel sad.  You don't have to keep a stiff upper lip.  Part of your life--the most important part--has ended and you're faced, not just with loss but with a new reality.  The members of my widows' group are sad, but after we share our sadness and comfort each other, many of us go to lunch, enjoy the meal and laugh at each other's jokes.  And that's okay, too.  Even when you're sad, even when you go home and cry at night, you can still find pleasures in life.  In fact, you can realize how precious life is.

Depression can be a result of prolonged sadness that doesn't go away.  It can be a dark cloud hanging over you so that you can't enjoy anything.  It can affect your sleep, your eating habits, your energy level, your ability to engage with those around you..  You can feel hopeless and see no end to grief.
Depression needs intervention and if you're depressed, you shouldn't be reluctant to seek professional help.

Here's a quote from Dr. Robert B. Thompson:  "Sadness requires acknowledgement, assimilation and sharing hope with others as it carries you into a  new life,  Sadness ultimately becomes a thread in the tapestry of your life that provides color and meaning, while depression blocks your spiritual progression."

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Books of March

Reading Daniel Silva's Gabriel Allon series is one of my guilty pleasures.  Yes, he is a spy and an assassin and, strangely enough, an art restorer.  I enjoy most of the books in the series, especially this one about a young woman who falls to her death while she is surveying books for the Vatican library.  Why is an Israeli secret agent investigating her death?  Why is he buddies with the Pope?  Read and find out.


 A truly disgusting book that I read because I get a free Kindle selection each month.  I chose this one and it was a really bad choice.  A horribly disfigured family lives in a locked underground basement--the boy, the brother, the sister, the mother, the father and the baby (None of them are given names). The father is abusive, the sister wears a mask so no one will have to look at her face, the boy collects fireflies.  Characters' motivations make no sense and I agree with Amazon readers who labeled the book "sickening."  Forget about it.

I love the Iliad, but I didn't care for this retelling that focuses mostly on Achilles and Patroclus.  My recommendation:  stick to the original.
 

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