Weekly Photo Challenge: The World Through Your Eyes

Here’s what “stuck in traffic” looks like to me. Somehow my lot in life is to be behind a larger vehicle anytime traffic is slower than normal or stopped. I can’t see ahead to figure out if I should change lanes or not. Usually I don’t, only to find that when the larger vehicle in front of me changes lanes, I’m then right behind the traffic hazard (stalled vehicle, emergency vehicle, etc.).

Photo of a utility truck

The view in traffic

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This is my view when I take my morning break and walk around the Texas Capitol grounds. Beautiful trees: a pink crape myrtle against the backdrop of a majestic pecan tree.

Two Trees, Pink and Green

Two Trees, Pink and Green

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My view of the night sky. I took this photo on Monday, 24 June 2013, early in the morning as I walked to my office building. I took a moment to appreciate this chance encounter.

Moon and Texas Capitol

Moon and Texas Capitol

Weekly Photo Challenge: The World Through Your Eyes

Patient of the Quarter

I went to the dentist for my regular checkup. The good news: No new cavities. The bad news: A cracked tooth.

Are you sure?” I ask the dentist. Yes, he’s sure.

He asks me, “Does it hurt when I do this?” TAP TAP TAP “No, that doesn’t hurt,” I say.

“Are you sure?” he asks. TAP TAP TAP “Usually people have pain when they have a cracked tooth.” TAP TAP TAP

Bad luck: a cracked tooth. Good luck: not cracked enough to cause me pain.

I schedule two more visits and get a crown on top of my cracked tooth. As he’s cleaning up, my dentist mentions that there’s a 50-50 chance that the tooth is damaged enough that it will also need a root canal. I cup my hand over my cheek so the tooth cannot hear him. “Don’t listen,” I whisper to my newly crowned cracked tooth, “he’s talking about other teeth, not you. Don’t listen to him.”

About three weeks later, I’m congratulating myself on a crown without any post-installation pain. I am on my way to forgetting that ever happened. You know what’s next, right? That’s right, a few days after my celebration, my tooth starts hurting. I ignore the pain on Wednesday. The tooth is just unsettled, I tell myself. On Thursday, I decide that it is definitely unsettled and it is not going to settle down. I call the dentist office and ask for advice as to what to do over the upcoming three-day weekend if the pain worsens.

They work me in for a look-see (4th visit). TAP TAP TAP “Does it hurt when I do that?” he asks. “WELL BY GOLLY YES IT DOES!” I need a root canal. Rats!

I schedule an appointment for a root canal. As it turns out, this root canal will take three visits. “You’re joking, right?” I ask. No, he is not joking. The first one is to drain out the infected gunk (5th visit). (Ick.) Second is to drill out the roots (6th visit). Third is to plug up the roots (7th visit).

I decide that if I’m going to be spending so much quality time with my dentist and his assistant, I should get something for it, something not painful, I mean. They can start a new tradition: Patient of the Quarter. A Wall of Fame, if you will, of patients who spend a lot of time in Chair Number 3. I announce that I will be the first Patient of the Quarter and take my own picture.

Author in dentist chair getting ready for a root canal

Patient of the Quarter

Just imagine being called into the back and seeing a slew of photos of Chair Number 3 patients, each with a gaping maw of green plastic. Each of us will have our photo taken while in The Chair, making it easy for the dentist and his assistant to recognize us. “Oh yes,” they’ll murmur as they pass by, “I remember her: Tooth #3, a classic case of cracked tooth, crown, root canal.

I appreciate modern dentistry, I really do. I just wish I didn’t need so much of it.

Search Engines

Google’s search engine is famous for its results and the secrecy surrounding the search algorithms. I appreciate that the results it lists are actually related to what I typed in. That is not always the case.

Take my local library’s web site. When I enter “Jon Winokur” and select the “author” category (looking for Advice to Writers: A Compendium of Quotes, Anecdotes, and Writerly Wisdom from a Dazzling Array of Literary Lights), the first two results listed are for James Garner. Then it includes nine entries for Jon Winokur, none of which are the book I want.

When I search for “Ruth Hayden,” the author of Mrs. Delaney: Her Life and Her Flowers, one result is returned: Sue Grafton’s Writing mysteries : a handbook by the Mystery Writers of America.

I have no idea how they arrive at these “matches.”

It’s not just books where I have search problems — fabric can be just as elusive. I had a jellyroll of Moda’s Summer Breeze II fabric and decided that I wanted yardage of one of those fabrics. I went to my usual super-duper online fabric web site. And when I searched on “Moda Summer Breeze II” (the specific name of the fabric line), I got 2,370 matches with the overwhelming majority of the results having nothing to do with that line of fabric. I wasn’t about to page through 2,370 line items, some of which weren’t even fabric.

So, thank you Google. When I search for Georges Seurat, I get “about 181,000” results and at least the ones on the first page are all related to George Seurat.

A Paved Road

Road closed due to water damage

Can't go that way

One thing I appreciate is a paved road. Here’s how our road looked on February 13, 2012. A few days later, they put in four new culverts, but the top of the culverts was unpaved. In no time at all, some of the dirt on top of the culverts eroded, leaving big potholes all across the road. Some drivers slowed down to cross the culverts, some did not. (I did.)

A newly paved road

All dressed up in black!

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Yesterday, they paved over the culverts.

I don’t know who “they” are, but I’m thanking all the “theys” out there who provide services!

Scratchless Labels

One thing I appreciate is a piece of clothing (usually a shirt or blouse) that has the label imprinted into it instead of having a sewn-in label. Those sewn-in labels are scratchy and frequently flip up to show themselves to the world behind your back — literally.

Cutting out the label sometimes does the trick, sometimes not, as the remaining sliver of a label can still irritate the back of my neck.

To the person who invented imprinted, scratchless labels: Thank You!