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Back From The Black Hole

We slipped into a Black Hole of non-existence. I do not even know where to start.

I blame Comcast. I am fairly certain they did some not-quite-ethical maneuvering, but I am wise enough to know I probably cannot prove it. Still, this whole bizarre journey began with their bungling of a simple request to change Internet and telephone providers in an effort to save money. Instead, it cost me a lot of time and frustration, the loss of the telephone number we have had for 12 years, and the loss of telephone and Internet service.

We received a nice letter from some airhead at Comcast thanking us for our complaint. I am still undecided about posting that on my blog with a reply (so much time has elapsed in the meantime, mostly because of Comcast’s bungling. CenturyLink was not a whole lot better, but everyone I spoke to on the phone was helpful, nice, polite, and empathetic. I think C-Link only put me on Interminable Hold twice and I only dealt with two people at C-Link who simply could not help me.

I learned a lot about how Big Corporations do business poorly.

Comcast has a Public Relations problem that will never be fixed until they decide to restructure and fire their Voice Activated Automated Answering System (or whatever the hell that quagmire is called) and hire real, trained, local people to answer calls. Not gonna happen, so the best advice I can give anyone is this: DO NOT GO WITH COMCAST UNLESS THEY ARE YOUR ONLY OPTION. And if they are your only option, complain loudly, publicly, online and with Letters to the Editor.

CenturyLink outsources all of their 1-800 calls that are made after working hours (8-6PM locally). Any orders placed after hours is probably going to be lost into the Ethernet connection, never to be retrieved. You may (or may not) receive actual equipment, but the service will never follow unless you call during regular working hours and are willing to talk to someone for at least 30 minutes.

I would not recommend CenturyLink to anyone, either, but it is my only alternative choice to Comcast.

I also learned that it would probably be wise to cave in to the peer pressure of the 21st Century and get a Smart Phone. If one of us had a Smart Phone (which everyone assumes you have), we could have connected to the Internet and posted regular (and scathing) reports to FaceBook. The Smart Phone will have to belong to me because I actually own an old cell phone and have an old pay-as-you-go plan that has worked great for my needs until this past 4 weeks.

My husband’s concession to the 21st Century is to own a SPOT GPS and he only has that because he hikes alone in the Cascades frequently. A cell phone would not help him in the Cascades: there’s no reception. He can almost always ping off of a satellite to let me know he is safe and sound, hence the SPOT. If you have a loved one who spends inordinate amounts of time alone in the wilderness somewhere, make them carry a SPOT.

I digress.

Comcast had our land line disconnected on 11/29 before I had a chance to Activate the order for our new (cheaper) Internet/Phone bundle with them. I was already fed up with their ineptitude which you can read about here and here, if you are so inclined. I mailed their modem back to them on Saturday, December 1.

C-Link was supposed to retrieve our old phone number and set us up with a brand new account on 12/6. The Internet was disconnected on 12/6. But our old telephone number was lost to FCC Cyber-space because Comcast never made it a freaking billing number because Comcast never Activated out <insert several swear words> account because I could never get through to anyone who had the actual ability to flip the freaking switch.

And because (I know, that’s terrible grammar to begin a sentence with “and” and a preposition, but deal with it, OK?) Comcast never made out old phone number a “billing number”, C-Link could not retrieve it and because they could not retrieve it, our order fell through the space between the bars into the Black Hole.

I called – after hours – and reordered a phone/internet connection with C-Link. By now, it was as much a matter of pride (I will NOT use Comcast unless forced to) as it was necessity: we need a land line and CenturyLink is the only available carrier in our area that I will do business with. Barely.

I did not know then what I know now: DO NOT CALL CENTURYLINK AFTER HOURS AND ORDER ANYTHING BECAUSE IT IS A THIRD PARTY VENDOR WHO WILL NOT FOLLOW THROUGH AND WHO DOES NOT CARE ABOUT YOUR ORDER.

Connection date was 12/17. I called C-Link on 12/18 during business hours and reached a wonderful employee name Jolie in the Boise area. Jolie listened to my story, muttered under her breath about third party vendors and then called the Portland area dispatch. Jolie was the person who told me that C-Link outsources after hours and this happens FREQUENTLY.

Long story short, this woman got our telephone line hooked up on 12/19 with a 7mbps Internet connection to follow on 12/24. The out-sourced people told me I could have 12mbps, but that is not true: Portland isn’t set up for 12 mbps. 7 is the highest we go as of 12/12.

MEANWHILE. If you thought all of that was difficult to follow, my life got even more bizarre at work. Or maybe that’s non-existent? I mean, where do you go when you slip into a Black Hole? Out the other side? And what is there?

On the day our Internet was disconnected, I arrived at work to find my computer completely shut down. I never shut down my work computer. I just lock it. The darn thing would take over 30 minutes to load if I shut it down and restarted it every day. Operating system: Windows 2003. Apparently, hamsters had moved into my machine overnight and were working the hamster wheel rather furiously.

I turned it on briefly to check. Yep. There were definitely hamsters running the ungreased wheel. It sounded awful and I shut it off. A co-worker took it apart and tried to save the fan. No Go. A new computer was ordered, but it didn’t arrive at the IT Dept. for several days. In short, for 9 days I was without a working computer of my own at work. My entire job is on a computer. I spent 4-6 hours a day on my boss’ computer while she twiddled her thumbs. She used her computer when I was not on it.

I couldn’t even sneak in FaceBook time at work because I wasn’t at my own work station and I didn’t have my break or lunch time available to me.

I did have my Kindle Fire that Don got me for my birthday. But in order to use that, I had to either set up shop at a local coffee shop or the library – and that had to be on my spare time. Interestingly enough, there are more free WiFi spots in the little town where I live than there are in West Portland where I work – so I had to schedule WiFi time for weekends.

My Kindle saved Christmas. I just wanted to say that: I got all the grandkids’ gifts ordered and shipped while sitting at the local library and accessing Amazon.com.

ANYWAY… On December 22, we got Direct TV. I didn’t really want a TV package, but Jolie worked it in at a really cheap discount and my husband is going to be down for a month after a surgery, so I figured it would be cheap entertainment. He’s already addicted. I knew he would be. I read to decompress and he watched TV to decompress after a long day at work.

But NO INTERNET.

How hard is this? Oh, you do not want to ask. I called CenturyLink on 12/24 but they were off for the Holiday. I couldn’t be mad: I was off for the Holiday, too. A bonus Holiday day, gifted by the president of the company I work for.

I called again today. The gal I reached insisted the Internet was turned on on 12/24.I insisted it was not. She insisted I should check another phone jack. I sighed. OK. I already blew up at Comcast people, but this gal was trying very hard to be nice and let’s put things into perspective: my grandchildren are all alive. None of my relations lives in Newtown, CT.

I told her I would try one more time.

And in the most bizarre twist of all: another phone jack worked. Our freaking phone jack by the main computer is DEAD. Sometime between the disconnection on 12/6 and today, it died a terrible death.

I hope it did not involve hamsters. I doubly hope it did not involve mice. We have big dogs. Big dogs should eat mice. This is why I want a cat.

We made a trip to the local Kroger’s, got a longer phone cord, and jury-rigged* the modem/router.

And we have Internet. Ta Da!

*jury-rigged: “Jury rigging refers to makeshift repairs or temporary contrivances, made with only the tools and materials that happen to be on hand. Originally a nautical term, on sailing ships a jury rig is a replacement mast and yards improvised in case of damage or loss of the original mast.” (Wikipedia)

It is *not* “jerry rigged” as most people mispronounce it. It’s one of those grammatical things.

I’m just happy to have Internet. And a Land Line. And my husband is happy to have Direct TV.

 

A Christmas Horse

Every year I put it at the top of my Christmas Wish List:

A HORSE.

Every year, Santa failed to deliver.

I was barely toddling when I first fell in love with horses. I turned ten thinking I could still grow up to be a horse. By the time I was 13, Wild Horse Annie was my biggest heroine. By the time I was 17, I was resigned to the fact that I probably was never going to find a horse hidden in the garage on the morning of December 25th.

I married, had children, and moved to the city. And I still wrote it on the top of my Christmas Wish List: A HORSE.

My husband just smiled.

1990. We joined a small church congregation in 1988, one of those “name-it-and-claim-it” congregations coming out of the 1980’s. One of my church friends told me how she had “prayed in” a free horse: a 28-year old Thoroughbred retiree with an attitude. The horse was so old, she was beyond riding. But she was a horse and she was free.

I’m not always known for being tactful. I told another friend that, “If I prayed in a horse, she’d be 2 years old, a strawberry roan, and gentle. She’d be a free Arab.”

Bragging is a sin, but apparently God didn’t take it that way. The next thing I knew, the second friend placed one of those grocery store bulletin board ads into my hand:

FREE HORSE. 2 YEARS OLD. GREEN BROKE. ARAB. KIDS WON’T TAKE CARE OF HER SO I SAID I’M GIVING HER AWAY.

I showed it to my husband. To my surprise, he said I should inquire. We were moving out to a rural location where we could keep a horse.

With shaking hands, I dialed the number.

With shaking heart, we went out to see the horse.

It was love at first sight on both ends.006

Her name was Shandar’s Whisper. She was half-Arab and half-Appaloosa, a descendant of Hallany Mistanny.

She wasn’t worth any money because the man who gave her away didn’t have her dam anymore, and her dam carried the pedigree. She should have been a papered Appaloosa, but the owner of the sire refused to sign off on the paperwork. So she was a Mutt of a horse, an unregistered half-Arab/Appy mare with no future. The teenagers loved her, but they kept forgetting to feed her and the man was making good on a father’s promise:

“If you don’t feed that horse, I am giving her away.”

Christmas, 1990. Whisper came into my life. We had many good years together.

She taught me to overcome my fear of horses. She reminded me why I feared horses. She kicked me. I taught her not to even lay her ears back at me. With the help of friends, she even got some basics in reining down.

My son rode her. My daughter showed her in 4-H (they didn’t win much for ribbons: Whisper hated 4-H and Arwen was not a fan of Whisper’s). As we aged, Whisper and I learned to take solitary rides in the woods.

That was a huge step for me: to ride a horse where there was no one to help me if I got into trouble. But I found Whisper to be a reliable horse, a great bush-whacking horse, and a willing horse, even if she picked up her pace when we headed back to the pasture.

She had a sense of humor.

Last night, I dreamed about her. I dreamed that we rode along a long stretch of river with wolves howling after us and danger all around. I dreamed we rode into a town. I dreamed someone else took her from me and rode her and declared her a wonderful mount.

In reality, we gave her away to a family with grandchildren. They rode her for a few years before they gave her away. She would be 24 years old now.

I don’t know where she is now, but I sure do miss her some days. My Christmas horse.

The Christmas horse God gave me. She was 2 years old, technically was a varnish roan, and gentle. She was a free Arabian.

Never give up on your dreams. You never know how they will be fulfilled.

(read the Wiki article to find “varnish roan”)

the World of SPAM

And I don’t mean the Museum of Spam, which some relatives of mine have actually visited.

Here’s a sampling of the SPAM I have accumulated on this blog over the past couple of weeks:

From Viviscal Hair Loss, there’s the profound comment: “It’s enormous that you are getting thoughts from this piece of writing as well as from our discussion made here.”

Makes me want to wear a metal colander on my head. Maybe that would protect me from the “thoughts”.

piracetam (a pharmaceutical company?) commented: We corresponded and spoke on the phone. I heard her passion and engaged. One thing led to another and all of a sudden I found myself on a plane to LA to photograph on a movie set with some of the most impressive, talented people in Hollywood film. I have to admit that part of what captured my attention is that Stephanie Martin co-wrote a script with her Wellesley classmate Jessica Walsh to point out the issues surrounding mustangs in the American West. She happened onto my web site and found some inspiration and formed a story where a magazine photographer has an encounter with a mustang named Phantom and ends up photographing a BLM round up of wild horses. No, it isn’t about me specifically–I wasn’t arrested (that would be EARLIER in my career) and I didn’t grow up in Nevada (Indiana), but I was intrigued that my life and my photographs of wild horses triggered a reaction from her, and something told me this would be an interesting experience.”

Say what?

The odd thing about this item is that 1) I grew up in Nevada and 2) one of my high school classmates is very involved in wild horse photography. This could almost be a believable story plot, except for the Hollywood portion. Maybe I should save it and use it for a NaNoWriMo novel plot in 2013. I wouldn’t think it’s plagiarism, since I’m stealing it from SPAM. What do you think?

maheshkumar235436886 had this dandy to say: Wonderful information, I had come to know about your blog from my friend nandu , hyderabad,i have read at least 7 posts of yours by now, and let me tell you, your website gives the best and the most interesting information. This is just the kind of information that i had been looking for, i’m already your rss reader now and i would regularly watch out for the new posts, once again hats off to you! Thanks a ton once again, Regards, Plots For Sale in Manitoba.”

There was a hyper-link in there that I deleted: Plots for sale in Manitoba? What kind of plots? When I think “plots for sale”, I think cemeteries. Why would I want to buy a plot in Manitoba? Isn’t Manitoba on the flat side? If I was going to go Canada, I think I’d go Yukon Territories.

Truth is, I am planning to go more “Sam McGee” a la Robert Service.

We Buy Any Car says: “I vindicatory like the rich substance you engage for your articles. I’ll bookmark your weblog and control erstwhile solon redress here regularly. I’m clean sure I leave hear plenty of new matter ethical here! Champion of hazard for the succeeding!”

I’m glad I’m ethical. I’ll take the title. “Champion of the hazard for the succeeding!” (vindicatory? is that a word, even?) (“erstwhile”? “redress”? – Sorry We Buy Any Car: “I do not thin’ that means what you thin’ it means” – Inigo Montoya, The Princess Bride.)

tn pas cher: “Its like you read my mind! You seem to know so much about this, like you wrote the book in it or something. I think that you could do with a few pics to drive the message home a little bit, but other than that, this is magnificent blog. A fantastic read. I’ll certainly be back.”

Hey, I like this one. A magnificent blog! A fantastic read! It’s like I “wrote the book in it or something.” (Nevermind the bad grammar – this person is full of praises for my blog. It’s probably a translation problem and should be “on it or something.”) I should have approved that comment.

Stephen Abramovitz: “Hello Web Admin, I noticed that your On-Page SEO is is missing a few factors, for one you do not use all three H tags in your post, also I notice that you are not using bold or italics properly in your SEO optimization. On-Page SEO means more now than ever since the new Google update: Panda. No longer are backlinks and simply pinging or sending out a RSS feed the key to getting Google PageRank or Alexa Rankings, You now NEED On-Page SEO. So what is good On-Page SEO?First your keyword must appear in the title.Then it must appear in the URL.You have to optimize your keyword and make sure that it has a nice keyword density of 3-5% in your article with relevant LSI (Latent Semantic Indexing). Then you should spread all H1,H2,H3 tags in your article.Yada yada yada” (he went on and on and on)

Well. Stephen. You should have read the other comments first. tn pas cher likes my blog. It’s “magnificent” and “fantastic”. I reject your criticism, Stephen. I don’t need all that SEO, H1,H2,H3, mumbo jumbo. But, hey, in all fairness, maybe it’s constructive criticism. Right?

Jorge Bella is clearly another fan of mine: “Hey there, just became aware of your blog through Google, and found that it is really informative. I will be grateful if you continue this in future. Numerous people will be benefited from your writing. Cheers!”

Thank you, Jorge, thank you. You may now cease to applaud. Sit down, Jorge. Jorge! You’re embarrassing me! Shush!

Aw shucks!

Canada Goose Parka Trillium: “The truth is quite other than what you think.He was born in New York.I wish I knew my neighbor.He holds a position of great responsibility upon him.It’s very thoughtful of you.I’m happy to meet youI’m happy to meet youHe ran his horse up the hill.There comes a bus.There are mice in Mrs.”

I think Canada Goose Parka Trillium is just trying to type in enough words to win NaNoWriMo for 2012. If you just keep typing, maybe you’ll come up with a plot.

Oh, hey – I completed my novel for NaNoWriMo. 50,944 words. It reads a lot like Canada Goose Parka Trillium’s comment to my blog, but who cares?

Winner-180x180

I did not think it was possible to have any more to add to this story, but that was before I got up this morning and checked the messages on my cell phone.

When I had my brain fart last week and ordered Comcast, I wrote down the instructions given me by the very nice man who sold me this bill of goods. “Do NOT call CenturyLink and cancel your phone until you have your modem and you are ready to go,” he said. “You will need your phone to call us if you have any problems and to activate the account.”

There was one voice mail message on my phone. It was from the CenturyLink telephone repairman who apparently called shortly after I put in my service request online. How I missed the call, I don’t know. I’m kind of glad I did:

Comcast put in a disconnect order for me and had my land line disconnected. This is wrong on so many levels that it boggles my mind. I hadn’t even connected with a person who could activate the work order to start our cable internet service yet, so why would they have my land line disconnected?

Whatever.

So now I have a disconnected land line. Thankfully, Comcast did not put in a disconnect order on our Internet, or I’d be without Internet.

I had a root canal scheduled for today (as if dealing with Evil Entities wasn’t enough). I had some errands to run and ended up at the endodontist’s half an hour early, so I thought I’d just finish this business while I waited for my appointment. You know, something to take my mind off of the oral surgery I was facing (which was actually a little more complicated than a simple root canal and involved an incision into my gum and stitches and an $800.00 down payment).

I dialed 1-800-XFINITY and selected the right buttons to put me through to the right person. Her name was Jamie. I explained all of the past few days to her, as briefly as possible. At this point, I was polite. I calmly told her that we wanted to cancel our work order, we’d changed our mind, and that I had to call from my cell phone because Comcast had managed to get my land line disconnected already. And, yes, I knew that I had authorized it but I didn’t understand why it was done before we got the cable Internet activated.

She pulled up our account and said. “You can’t cancel the work order. Your account is under one name.”

Say what?!

It’s only under my husband’s name.

I said, “ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME?”

She assured me that she was not joking, that only Mr. Presley could cancel the work order.

I was no longer calm. *I* could call and activate this account, *I* could call and activate the work order, but *I* could not call and CANCEL the damn thing? What is wrong with this picture? I had to have his SSN# to open an account. How could *I* open the account if *I* could not close it?

She actually asked me if Mr. Presley was available to speak to.

I started calling her “honey” and “sweetheart” and I didn’t mean it in an endearing way. I wasn’t very nice when I told her that Mr. Presley worked for a living and he was not available. Of course, I put her on the defensive, but I forewarned her that I was already irate and why.

I hung up.

I called CenturyLink to see what they could do about hooking our land line back up. As mad as I was at Comcast, I thought it couldn’t get any worse. So with shaking hands, I punched in the number at 12 minutes to 10:00.

Enter China, a Customer Service person for CenturyLink. China looked up our account. Bad news: because I had a brain fart last week and decided to switch to Comcast and because Comcast had our land line disconnected by C-Link, our account with C-Link no longer existed. In order for us to get a land line reconnected, we would have to open up an entirely new account with an entirely new telephone number. China explained that unless the work order with Comcast was in place, Comcast owned our phone number.

She wanted to put me on hold, but it was now 3 minutes to ten and I really had to go. So she offered to call me at noon (“If you can talk then”) to work on fixing the mess. If she couldn’t reach me at noon, she would call me again on Monday morning, but she was shooting for the noon appointment.

I went in to have the root canal. That was fun. The endodontist cut open my gums and took one long look at the tooth with the infection before announcing, “That tooth is fractured. I have to pull it.”  Yes, dear readers: I donated a tooth today, on top of everything else. It’s not right in front, so you can quit sniggering.

The good news is that the $800 co-pay dropped to a $60 co-pay, effectively saving us a lot of money.

China called at noon. I held an ice pack in one hand and my cell phone in the other hand.

35 minutes later, we had a new CenturyLink Internet/telephone bundle with our same phone number because China worked magic (and asked her supervisor questions). We are going from 5mps to 12mps, we get a new wifi modem/router to handle the bumped-up speed, and it’s $30/month less than our old contract with the same company. Ten dollars a month cheaper than the package Comcast sold me.

Bad news: it can’t be connected until 12/6/12.

Good news: we get to keep the 5mps Internet until 12/6/12.

All that was left was canceling the work order with Comcast.

Oh, but wait – it gets better.

I waited for Don to get home so I could put through that call to Comcast. Our marriage has a few rules and one of those is this: I do all the business calling, setting up of accounts, and dealing with automated systems. Don doesn’t do that. Don doesn’t even own a cell phone. So in keeping with our unspoken set of rules, I made the call.

I got through to Bob. I explained to Bob who I was and what I wanted to do while Don waited for his turn.

Bob asked me one question, “What relationship are you to Mr. Presley?

“Oh, you’re his wife? Well, for security purposes, we have to verify who you are before we can go through with this. Do you know the last four digits of his Social Security Number?”

I rattled them off. Bob canceled our work order. I asked if he needed to speak to my husband because he was sitting right next to me.

Bob answered cheerfully, “Oh, no, we don’t have to do that. As long as you can answer the security questions, we’re good.”

Comcast: Bob needs a raise. Bob is a really great employee and he understands the concept of Customer Service.

CenturyLink: China deserves a raise. She deserves a promotion. She deserves to be Employee of the Month.Give her a Christmas Bonus, too.

I take back every nasty thing I’ve written about Qwest (CenturyLink) in the past. Comcast has been elevated to Evil Entity #1.

*The End*

I had a major brain fart this past month. I actually thought I could switch Internet Providers and save $20 a month for a year and I could be happy with that choice.

I had been debating this change for several months with my dear husband (who is pretty cool about whatever decision we were going to make) and my techie brother and my son. Nobody really was very helpful because there isn’t much to be helpful about:

Do I trade in the one Evil Entity (CenturyLink) for another Evil Entity (Comcast)?

Nobody had conclusive answers. they are both Evil. But my Qwest – er, CenturyLink – wireless modem keeps locking me out and Comcast had a better deal on the table, so I caved and called the cable company. I didn’t even have to wait on HOLD. In less than 10 minutes, we were signed up for Comcast’s “high speed internet” (the salesman never did tell me exactly how fast that high speed internet is) and their phone system. The new modem would be arriving via FedEx by Monday.

Tuesday afternoon I came home with a clanging migraine in my head. The new modem had finally arrived and was waiting to be installed. The instructions that came with the modem were generic and not specific to the modem we got. The manuals weren’t manuals at all, but some sort of advertising pamphlets with lots of reminders to call 1-800-XFINITY if we had any problems at all.

We muddled through the instructions and hooked the modem up.

Nothing.

The phone still worked because I still had not called CenturyLink to tell them we were jumping ship. So we had a phone but no internet.

And I had a migraine.

I called Comcast to activate service. They have one of those wonderful automated Voice Activated systems that we all love so much. I told it OPERATOR and it said, cheerfully, “So you want to speak with an associate? Is that correct?”

Then it put me on hold with a little recording that everyone was already busy and the wait was estimated to be about ten minutes.

My migraine made me hang up. I’d just call in the morning when I felt better.

Here’s a short synopsis of Wednesday:

6:50AM – voice recording that Comcast high speed internet is experiencing technical maintenance and if you are having a problem connecting, this is why. Please call later.

Because I am a good employee and I do not make long personal calls at work, either by cell phone or work phone, I waited until I was home to make this call. Besides, I was slammed at work and didn’t have time to make any personal calls. My husband doesn’t have access to a phone during work hours and he doesn’t do this sort of thing, anyway.

6:30PM – I call and get a live person. Yay! Greggor verifies I am who I am and looks up my account. “Hm. That’s interesting. Wonder why… I need to look into this. May I put you on hold?”

Sure. Why not. He can’t be gone for five minutes, right?

Fifteen minutes later (and I-don’t-know-how-many-replays of Flight of the Bumblebee later, there was a little click on the phone and the music changed. A feminine voice intoned, “All of our representatives are busy. Your expected wait time is over ten minutes.”

Say what?

I hung up and redialed, thinking that Greggor accidentally lost me. Someone else answered and I explained that I was talking to Greggor and he lost me. Instead of offering to reconnect me to Greggor, this person asked me all the verification questions again. Then she said, “Oh. I work in CABLE. You want INTERNET. Please hold while I transfer you.”

Cue:  “All of our representatives are busy. Your expected wait time is over ten minutes.”

I hung up and redialed. I pressed all the right buttons in the automated Voice Activated system, indicating that I wished to activate a new service and I was calling about high speed internet.

Repeat the above.

I hung up and redialed.

Repeat the above.

I sort of went off on him. Hung up. Went upstairs. Cooled off. Tried again. Got the voice message: “All of our representatives are busy. Your expected wait time is over ten minutes.”

I waited until 9:00PM when I figured volume would be down. Got through to someone named Isabella. She had a soft Hispanic accent. I explained to Isabella what I told the outsourced Entity. Isabella believed I was irate and did her very best to help me. She worked in CABLE (are we sensing a trend here?) but she didn’t try to put me through to the internet people. Instead, SHE looked up my account and she did it while I was on the phone. It did not take her 15 minutes, but took her less than 5.

“Oh. Your work order is not completed. I can’t do that. That has to be done during regular business hours. You will have to call back during regular business hours.”

For the record, Isabella deserves a raise. And a promotion. Comcast, get that woman off the phones and put her to work where she’s appreciated. She had the courtesy to tell me what I needed to know, even if it was unpleasant news.

I called Comcast from work this morning.

Repeat this scenario: “Hm. That’s interesting. Wonder why… I need to look into this. May I put you on hold?”

Sure. Why not. She can’t be gone for five minutes, right?

Fifteen minutes later (and I-don’t-know-how-many-replays of Flight of the Bumblebee later, there was a little click on the phone and the music changed. A feminine voice intoned, “All of our representatives are busy. Your expected wait time is over ten minutes.”

ARE YOU SERIOUS???

I acquired permission to call Comcast one more time on the work dime.

One can always hope, right?

I got this nice man, Pat. Pat listened to me as I explained how many people I had spoken to since Tuesday night and all I wanted to do was activate my account so I could have Internet and phone. And then Pat said he was in CABLE. But he understood how angry I was and he would personally make certain I got through to the RIGHT person. So he transferred me.

I waited about three minutes before someone picked up the transfer. Pleasant woman who listened to the whole story and then asked me to verify everything. And as I rattled off our phone number, she said…

“You’re in Oregon?”

“Uh – yes.”

“They transferred you to SEATTLE. I am in SEATTLE and I cannot access Oregon accounts. I can’t help you.”I hung up.

Here’s the summary of the past 3 days:

1. I have no computer at work and no idea when I will get one. My boss took a vacation day and let me use hers today. She may do that again on Monday. She has lots of vacation days, so this does not hurt her at all.

2. We have Internet, but it’s through CenturyLink. I promise to never lose my mind over this again. 3. I came home tonight and Don had hooked up the CenturyLink modem. But our phone line is now down. I put in a service request with CenturyLink. You know how that goes. (See my links above for those stories).

4. I have a root canal scheduled for tomorrow morning. On my way to the endodontist, I will drop off the Comcast modem and get a receipt for it. I’m not sure which is more painful: dealing with Comcast or going in for the root canal. I am certain you do not want the gory details on the latter but it involves peeling back the skin on my jaw and going in at the root from the bottom and then stitching the skin back in place.

5. I’d sooner have the root canal than deal with Comcast Customer Service again. And I thought I hated CenturyLink (Qwest).

I Think I Need Help!

It starts the day after Thanksgiving.

No, it isn’t Black Friday.

It’s Christmas Decorating Time. And I think I may have a problem.

No, the problem isn’t my incredibly small storage space. (This is what it looks like when all the Christmas boxes have been pulled out. Before the boxes are pulled out, you can’t see into it.)

And that is the problem. I have TOO MUCH CHRISTMAS STUFF for this house!

Pretty much every square inch of available space is taken over by Christmas. And while I am deeply spiritual about Christmas, a lot of my stuff is about Santa Claus.

I picked up this set of Lennox figurines depicting Saint Nicholas/Santa Claus for very little money at a charity auction one year. I absolutely love it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Each figurine is beautiful, but I really like the one of Santa and the little girl.

 

I even have retro Santa in plastic “stained glass” – I found these at a yard sale for a quarter. You can imagine my husband rolling his eyes.

Santa is everywhere in my little Christmas Village.

Santa even makes it to my front yard – with a couple of his reindeer and a sleigh full of toys.

Then there are Boy Scout tins. My son grew up and quit Scouts, but I can’t bring myself to discard the tins that popcorn came in.

(Okay – I store lights and ornaments in the tins)

The snowman has nothing to do with Scouts, but he fit in the corner with the tins.

I like Nativity sets, too. Even tacky ones, like this Eskimo Holy Family. I assume the eagle, the moose and the husky are the Magi and the baby seal is the equivalent of a lamb?

How about an African theme? No Mary or Joseph here, just a miraculous Baby Jesus/Mowgli in a land where lions lay down with zebras, giraffes and elephants.

Another African Nativity, but one that is not so tacky as it is simply stated.

You can’t see it in the photo, but the Babe has no hands.

It was a Nativity that my Grandmother Melrose hand-painted. When I inherited it, Jesus had been broken. I should just toss it, but it has my grandmother’s name etched under each piece.

A friend gifted the two Magi to me last year. I think they sort of round out the whole scene.

I do have a big Nativity scene, but it isn’t up yet. It takes up a lot of room and these days it is relegated to the loft, safe from dogs’ wagging tails.

I will set it up next weekend when we get the tree and put it up.

I really do not have room for everything. I couldn’t photograph it ALL because it is strung out through out the house.

I think I need help. I think maybe I have too much Christmas stuff.

Is that even possible? To have too much Christmas stuff?

(Don’t answer that.)

I wanted to pop in and let you all know I am still alive (assuming “you all” means more than one or two people who follow my blog). It’s November and I am (once again) participating in National Novel Writing Month. This year, I might actually make the 50,000 word requirement and I might actually like what I have written. So far, so good.

I’m on a roll and, creatively, it feels GOOD.

It means, however, that I do not have much time for blogging. I’ll just have to do that in December, after I finish my quirky little sci-fi novel.

In the meantime: have a very Happy Thanksgiving.

Beautiful November!

Today was such a beautiful and mostly dry day that I decided to take advantage of the break in the weather and get some last minute gardening done. I rarely get an opportunity like this in November, and I had a number of peonies that I wanted to rescue from the choke-hold of the Creeping Myrtle.

The Myrtle is pretty, but it grows thick and deep and eventually it chokes out everything that was there before. Fortunately, it does not spread as quickly as an ivy, and a gardener who pays attention can hold myrtle at bay, confining it to one corner of a garden by pruning it back.

I like Periwinkle. It has several names: vinca minor, Periwinkle, Creeping Myrtle. I call it all of those names. The flowers are pretty in the Spring and it makes an excellent ground cover that springs back from a lot of abuse. I did not plant the Periwinkle in my yard, it came with the house. It wasn’t as widespread at it is now, but I neglected that corner of the garden a little too long.

That’s how it looked after I was finished digging and pulling and walking on it. It will spring back.

That corner is also choked with grape hyacinth bulbs. I did not plant them, either. I do not particularly care for them, but the ground in that corner is so littered with their bulbs that I can’t make any headway in getting rid of them. I’ve tried.

I divided five peonies and moved them to new plots. I dug up my purple aster and moved it to a sunnier and more open spot to allow for expansion. I also rolled back the Creeping Myrtle and dug out a handful of the dracunculus vulgaris bulbs (sometimes known as a “Voodoo Lily”I found enough bulbs to make two more clumps of the smelly carnivorous beauty.

As my husband said, I “shared the love” around the yard.

I wanted to weed the grass back from my Fothergilla Major Blue Shadow. It is supposed to be a showy plant through three seasons: when it flowers, after it flowers with it’s blue leaves, and in the Autumn when the leaves turn bright red. Hm. Not quite bright red, but it is pretty.

It’s behind a make shift “fence” because guess what dogs decided to use it as a marker?

All that digging and dead-heading and moving and bending over left me sore and tired, and covered with mud from head to foot. It felt good. I may not think so tomorrow. But I will think it was worth it next Spring, when the peonies bloom in their new locations and the “Voodoo Lilies” open their black hearts to spread the aroma of rotting meat around my yard.

I am so weird, I like that.

Some Odd Photos

I started this post a couple days ago and ended up writing about my mom instead. It’s so easy to get side-tracked.

I spent a couple days backing up all my digital photos and my (few) digital remastered photos. Of course, I found a few I really liked.

This old homestead is up on Hart Mountain, over on the east side. Hart Mountain is a fault-line mountain, rising gradually from the east and dropping off suddenly to the west. It’s the exact opposite of Steens Mountain, which is also a fault-line mountain, but Steens rises gradually from the west and drops off suddenly on the eastern side. Steens is a taller mountain, but Hart Mountain is not without its charms. Most of Hart Mountain is an antelope and wildlife refuge. The old homestead was located on Refuge land. (35mm, scanned and cleaned up)

I always wonder about the homesteaders: who were they and why did they give up? Did the water in the well dry up? Did they get tired of the icy winters and lack of firewood? Did the Great Depression drive them to town?

Mostly, I liked the patterns of the shadows and the texture of the wood.

(On a side note, we hadn’t gone five miles from the homestead when we busted one of the springs under the F-25o. It was over a hundred degrees and we had to unload everything to get to the wire in the bottom of one of the camp tubs. The chocolate melted in the cooler. Don wired the spring and we limped 90 miles into Burns where we had to buy a new spring. But that’s another story.)

I was having a blue day and Don took me for a walk along the Clackamas River, between Gladstone and Oregon City. I snapped quite a few photos that I still like. (digital photo)

More textures. It’s an old culvert sitting along the side of a road somewhere, waiting to be installed. I think it was along the 46 Road up above Estacada, but I can’t rememder. (digital photo)

That’s pronounced “es-ta-CAY-duh”.

We were picking huckleberries above Indian Henry Campground one lovely September. This huge bald-faced hornet’s nest was tucked into a vine maple. I had a nice telephoto lens for my 35mm. I’d forgotten that I scanned this and cleaned it up.

Another 35mm photo. I’m guessing it was February. The beaver ponds had flooded over their banks at the bottom of the horse pasture. The mist was just rising when I walked down to see if I could get some good photos. I’ve always liked this photo for the colors.

Film fades. This was taken along Utah Byway 128 in 1984, the first time we drove through there. it was very early morning and all the hills were purple, pink, orange. (35mm)

Same drive, different view. 35mm. I still think the 35mm captured the colors better than the digital camera does. I probably used Fuji film.

Wild flowering currants. I love the contrast in colors. (digital)

Long-nosed leopard lizard on a dead cow. Mickey Hot Springs, out in the Alvord country. The cow had been dead quite awhile and was mostly mummified, but this lizard was still making a living hunting bot flies. If you don’t know that’s  dead cow, it’s an interesting photo. If you know it’s a dead cow, well… I think the photo becomes more interesting. (35mm)

This isn’t a great digital photo, but it takes me back. Don and Samuel carrying our Christmas trees down off the hill. 2008. I just like the photo.

The trees were Charlie Brown Noble Firs. Pretty sad. The memories are precious.

Last one for tonight: A row of washed and weathered stumps along the flood line of the Clackamas River, looking east toward the old railroad bridge.

And that is a snapshot into my life. Be safe everyone. I am thinking/praying for the east coast tonight.

 

Got Rocks?

I paid for rocks today. It’s a crazy thing to do when you already have more rocks than you know what to do with, but there you go: I bought a bucket of rocks and paid for a couple rocks that have already been polished.

In my defense, I have a couple little projects that I couldn’t complete with the rocks I have in my own, personal, free collection. Nothing I own (or that my husband owns, which I own by default) quite fit the ends of a couple of “magic wands” I want to make, so I had to go out and find rocks that fit the wood.

And there’s the issue of the broken dragon I bought at Goodwill that I wanted to try to see if I could fix.

So when I got an email a couple weeks ago reminding me that this weekend is the Clackamette Gem and Mineral Show, I marked it on my calendar and notified my husband that I wanted to go. Not that he wouldn’t want to go, mind you: we’ve gone every year for probably 20+ years. We dragged our children to the rock and gem shows (great science class for homeschoolers: all about geology and rocks). There’s a black light show (some minerals glow in the dark or under black lights); plenty of rocks to bid on; a gi-hugic rock that you guess the weight of (and hope to win); plenty of beads, rocks, gems, and fossils to buy; and display cases of rock collections to vote on (Rock Club Member, Guest and Junior categories). Polished rocks, raw rocks, buckets of rocks, carved rocks. Rocks that sell for $3500.00 and rocks that sell for $0.25. Quartzite, moss agate, jade, crystals, picture rock, various kinds of obsidian, geodes, mica, coral, petrified wood, fossils.

I was looking specifically for a couple spheres and something to fit in to a larger grasp, like a moss agate or a quartz crystal.

I found a number of spheres, but they were a lot more money than I wanted to pay considering the piece of wood I wanted to attach them to was free and I am not sure how the project will look in the end. I do want to be able to sell my project(s) for more than they cost me to make.

I spent $4 on a bucket of rocks, $5.00 on a couple polished rocks that could work as substitutes of spheres, $2.00 on a lovely pink amethyst crystal, and too much on a sphere that I hoped would work with the above-mentioned dragon. I bid on a nice large quartz crystal, but someone out-bid me at the last moment. That’s how rock hounds are.

So here’s my haul:

I wish I was nerdy enough to tell you what all those rocks are, besides being the left-overs from a real rock hound’s collection. But I have forgotten nearly everything I ever knew about rocks: I just know what is pretty and what isn’t, and what is quartz or agate or obsidian. Looks like I need to invest in a good field guide and start teaching myself about rocks, doesn’t it?

I bought the bucket because I thought thas piece of moss agate would work well with the one magic wand/faerie staff.

It does fit. I could work with that.

But this fits, too. Amethyst crystals. I won this item in a bid.

This piece of moss agate was in the bucket. It could work, too. I don’t think the photo does it justice.

The sphere was too large for the dragon. The dragon had a broken horn, but you can’t tell because I glues a fake one on. It’s still broken and very fragile, however – a failure at fixing the dragon if I ever try to move it much. BUT – I found a small piece of quartz crystals in the bucket that fit just perfectly in his claws.

Not so much of a fail. Maybe this will work after all.

I have no idea what stone/gem this is, but the darn thing cost me more than I want to admit. It’s pretty.

And it does work in the smaller of the two magic wands/staffs that I am working on.

But so does this polished agate. I have some decisions to make.

One of the keys to looking at rocks is this: how does it appear wet? You know how it goes: you’re down on the beach, looking for pretty agates and seashells and you pocket all the ones you find. When you get home and dump out your pockets, the agates have dried and they are no longer as pretty as they were when you first saw them. You wonder why you ever picked them up.

That’s a nice piece of obsidian, by the way.

What is ordinary takes on a new beauty with the addition of water. It gives the serious rock hound an idea of what a gemstone or rock might look like, tumbled and polished.

I told my husband we need a rock tumbler and polisher.

He laughed at me.

I did not purchase this rock. I just added it to this blog because I am hoping someone will see and and will say, “I know what that is!!”

I picked it up in a mountain stream in the Oregon Cascades. I am certain it is fossils embedded in the quartz, but what fossils? What are those round things??

I don’t think they are cross-cuts of twigs because they do not appear to go straight through the quartz. But I could be wrong.

It’s a rather fascinating rock.

But I think most rocks are fascinating.