Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Today’s Business: 2012-01-23

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Today’s Activities

  • Shower. DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.  Cat duty involves cleaning the litter boxes, bagging the excess, feeding, and house cleaning cat dirt of all types.
  • Wash (3) loads of pending laundry.  DONE.

Log

08:30 AM: I’m up.

08:45 AM: Facebooked for perhaps ten minutes. Friend count: 623 (unchanged). Fan count: 114 (unchanged).

05:00 PM: Replaced basement windows 7 and 8 on the south wall with glass block upgrades.  This took much of today, as window 8 had lots of crumbling mortar around it.  I had to shovel a few buckets of gravel into the gaping holes in the foundation that surfaced when the old window was removed.  I then replaced that old mortar with a fresh new coat of a way more modern mixture.

07:00 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless   via the DVR.

07:45 PM: Watched today’s episode of  Dr. Phil,   called   Under The Influence.

11:00 PM: Talked with   [Emmy].  We watched tonight’s rerun episode of   Hawaii Five-0.

11:20 PM: I’m heading to bed.  Good night and do stop back tomorrow for more content.  :-)    Good night.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

  • 5-day sale coupon from Wolf Furniture.  Well, unfortunately, with the expense of all the new windows I’ve incurred, both in the basement and on the 1st and 2nd floors, I can afford no furniture.  Check back with me in a year.  :-)
  • Offer from American Express Personal Savings to set up a savings account with them.  Not at this time, thanks.
  • Credit card offer from Chase Freedom.  Not at this time, thanks.
  • Balance transfer checks from Chase Freedom.  No thanks.
  • Auto insurance offer from Mom’s bank.  No thanks.
  • Eleven month contract summary from the company who manages some of my investments.
  • $15 coupon from Dell; probably because I bought a computer from them last summer.  However, as it expires at the end of February, 2012, I’ll probably not use it.
  • Discover card offer.  Not at this time, thanks.
  • Sewage bill.
  • Misc. medical bills for Mom.
  • Updated rate sheet for 2012 from my cable television provider.
  • The Writer magazine; the 2012-01 edition.
  • Letter from the company that manages some of my investments, detailing the numerous changes to tax law for 2011 filing.  None of these changes affect me at present.
  • Misc. bank papers.
  • Gas bill.
  • Bill for Mom, for her transportation to the last leg of the Christmas Eve progressive dinner at sister Christine’s house.
  • Offer from my electricity company for exterior electrical line protection insurance.  No thanks.
  • Monthly bill from the nursing home where Mom is staying.
  • Consumer Reports magazine; the 2012-01 edition.
  • Talking book: The Examined Life; edited by Stanley Rosen.
  • Talking book: Get With The Program: Getting Real About Your Health, Weight, … Bob Greene.
  • Talking Book: Imperfect Control: Our Lifelong Struggles with Power and Surrender, by Judith Viorst.
  • Talking Book: Practical Philosophy, by Immanuel Kant.

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Book: James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Tonight I began reading the book:  James Madison and the Struggle for the Bill of Rights   by   Richard Labunski.  I’ll add my impressions as I progress through it. 

I hadn’t realized that the   Bill Of Rights,  which comprises the first ten amendments to the US constitution, was only ratified after fierce debate in the constitutional conventions. The constitution and   Bill of Rights   took over four years to ratify throughout the country between the first congressional convention in 1787 through the last ratification state meetings in 1791. But the rights did not take large effect until sometime in the mid 20th century.  We’re still fighting today over exactly what it all means and how far-reaching the Bill of Rights is. 

It described George Washington and his soldiers, marching through the bitter Virginia cold and how the footwear they had was so drastically inadequate, that as Washington commanded from the rear, he noticed blood in the tracks left by his men. 

Tom Hesley

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Today’s Business: 2011-01-30

Sunday, January 30th, 2011

Today’s Activities

  • Shower. DONE.
  • Cat duty. DONE.
  • Wash all (3) loads of pending laundry. DONE.
  • Vacuum the first floor.  DONE.
  • Wet-wipe the kitchen floor.

Log

10:00 AM: I’m up.  Today I plan on doing the laundry, cleaning up downstairs, and perhaps watching a movie or starting a new book.  Not sure yet which of these (movie or book) I’ll take on. I often dread watching unfamiliar movies because sometimes, it takes most of the movie to realize that I’ve picked  a dud.  The same for books, even more so, because it can take still longer to realize that I’ve wasted much time reading a bad one.  But I’m feeling a bit lucky today, and do have some time to kill.  So why not risk a little?

02:00 PM: Vacuumed the 1st floor.

04:45 PM: Watched the movie   Molly   this afternoon. First, a sad movie, then it lifts up in the middle, then goes sad again at the end. A great example of God giving-eth and then taking-eth away. :-) But that notwithstanding, I’d still highly recommend this movie. If you enjoyed    Rain Man,   you’ll love this.

05:00 PM: Nap time.  Back later.

06:00 PM: I’m awake again.

06:55 PM: Watched today’s episode of NBC’s   Meet The Press   news show on the DVR.

07:15 PM: Sister Christine called to say that she visited Mom yesterday.  Apparently, her UTI has returned.  Boy, she just can’t catch a break.

07:45 PM: Talking to   [Emmy]   now.  I was thinking that we’d listen to a hockey game tonight.  But it’s around the time of the all-star game, and the Pens aren’t playing again until Tuesday.

10:30 PM: Watched today’s episodes of CBS’s   Face The Nation   and   NBC’s Nightly News   news shows on the DVR.

12:00 AM: Added perhaps 50 more love songs to the   Happy Love Songs   piece.

12:15 AM: Bed time.  Catch you later, and may your own sleep be rejuvenating and restorative.  Good night.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None on Sundays.

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Book: Frankenstein by Mary Shelly

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Title: Frankenstein

Author: Mary Shelly

I read this book once back in 1987 for a literature / writing class in college. While I understood the basic story line of Frankenstein pretty well, I felt that the finer nuances of this work escaped me then.  So now, after twenty-three years, I thought I’d give Mary Shelly’s work another read and see if the plight of Frankenstein’s creature makes more sense.  Fortunately nowadays, there’s an extensive Cliffs Notes volume that extensively explores this book by setting the time-frame in which the author, Mary Shelly wrote.  It details the format of the book, explains the difference between Gothic and Romantic novels and why this book incorporates both styles, and it outlines how the book uses a concept called   framing   in that it tells one story that is framed by or contained within another.  These insights will hopefully bring greater understanding of Frankenstein and enable me to get more out of the tale. 

What continues to grab me about this book’s plot to this day, is how graphically the Frankenstein story illustrates how a being, repeatedly denied love, affection, and acceptance in general by society, might grow angry after years of exclusion and vengeful as a result, and how he might seek to hurt others to avenge this treatment of deprivation.  Indeed much of the crime that victimizes today’s society here in 2010, appears to derive from society’s casting out of the “misfits.”  Eventually, these people come back to harm us all. Barely a women herself at nineteen years of age, Mary Shelly possessed a deep and beyond-her-years understanding of the basic human need for love and acceptance as well as the potentially disasterous consequences of denying these.  She seemed to be aware of   Abraham H. Maslow’s work   a full one hundred fifty years before he completed it.  This time thorugh in fact, I’ll be reading the book with the Maslow slant in mind. 

Tom Hesley

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Facebook Tid Bits: 2010-06-28

Monday, June 28th, 2010

11:52 AM: Yes, that’s true. There’s nothing more frustrating than having a discussion with someone who knows not what they know not. :-) In that situation, I don’t even bother trying to teach them; unless of course, they’re a boss or something. Then, it becomes necessary to cope with the ignorance. Grrrrrrrrr.

04:45 PM: I got notified by [a big appliance store in Philadelphia] like that once when I ordered an entertainment stand. When I got there, they told me that I’d already picked the thing up. Well, we went around and around; to the point where the sales person and I were shouting at each other. I then called their main headquarters, and they instructed the store manager where I bought the unit to give me a new one; pronto. Then, when I went back again to finally get the furniture, that manager wouldn’t even speak to me; just stuck her nose in thei air and walked away while her subordinates carried it to the car. That happened back in 2001 and I never bought anything from them again; at least, not until this past February when I purchased my iPod Touch. Still though, they lost much business from me because of that fiasco in Philly.

09:41 PM: I think that books by self-described “average-looking” guys on how to seduce beautiful women, would be more believable if those fellows would include pictures of themselves. They rarely do however. That and their misleading tactics of trickery virtually destroys their credibility. Sure, they’re fun to read. But most  offer little practical value IMHO. Hmmmm. The things people say to make a buck. :-)

Tom Hesley

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Facebook Tid Bits: 2010-06-13

Sunday, June 13th, 2010
07:34 PM: [Advising a friend who's complaining about feeling sad a lot.]  Check out the book: You Can’t Afford the Luxury of a Negative Thought by Peter McWilliams. It’s positive, light, and makes lots of sense. Also, watch the refined carbs. Excessive white flour and sugar can depress you by upsetting your internal nutrient balance. Eat more whole foods instead. You’ll probably feel better.
08:22 PM: [Commenting on a lady's photo that depicted her, all splashed up with wet dirt]:   Wow, what happened? Did kids splash a mud puddle near you? :-)
08:24 PM: [She explained that she'd been out four-wheeling and that the wheels splashed her]: Ah yes. Looks messy but sounds fun. :-)
Tom Hesley

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Book: The Grapes Of Wrath

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Title: The Grapes of Wrath

Author: John Steinbeck

NLS Number: DB68308

Another classic I’ll start reading today.  The introduction says that this story is about a family of 1930s sharecroppers, who, forced to leave their dwindling farms in Oklahoma, move west, to California to find a better life.  But most of them found far worse; including famine and death.  There, among the ravages of greed, were born the Grapes of Wrath. Curious that I would choose this book at the very time that Arizona adopted a  tough immigration law  that would seem to encourage the sort of profiling and brutality perpetrated against the characters in this book. 

Tom Hesley

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Book: Happiness Now

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Title: Happiness Now; Timeless Wisdom for Feeling Good Fast

Author: Robert Holden

NLS DB # 67679

Copyright 1998, 2007

Reading Time: 8:40

The title says it all, and so much more.  Received this from the library the other day and was intrigued.  Certainly, though I’m happier than I’ve ever been (if you don’t count my earliest childhood days), I could still be happier.  Perhaps this work will offer a few useful gems of information to that end.  Let’s see. 

Tom Hesley

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Adventures of Pinocchio

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Title: The Adventures of Pinocchio

Author: Carlo Collodi

Reading Time:

I’ve been aware of key parts of this story since early childhood; how Pinocchio’s nose grows each time he tells a lie.  I may have seen bits and pieces of the Disney movie as well.  But never have I read the whole book.  Well, that will change in the next couple days.  They had it on the BARD site and I downloaded it to one of these new cartridges for the NLS DTB players I purchased this past February.  In my quest to make up for the literary shortfalls created in school by spending too many study halls out on the playground instead of reading, this is one of the many shorter but classic tales I hope to digest this year. 

Tom Hesley

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Reading Catch Up

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

06:15 PM: [Emmy] just emailed to say that the Penguins are playing the Washington Capitals this evening, beginning at 7:30.  I may listen to some of the contest with her.  But I have lots of reading to do in my quest to make up for all that wasted time in high school when, instead of the studious consumption of books, I spent most of my study hall periods out on the playground, listening to the radio.  I enjoyed the music supremely, and remember all of it today, just like then; I hold those memories in this highest esteem. 

However, filling my mind with popular tunes for hours each day while most of the other students studied, did little to advance me academically, and in fact, it may have hurt me severely; though that pain would not become apparent for nearly a decade.  Indeed, those leisure times in the late 1970s laid the road to a very disheartening subsequent era for me in college during the mid 1980s, as I struggled to overcome my academic short-falls while at the same time, trying to keep abreast of all the new material being taught.  Much of what the college curriculum assumed I already knew well, I actually knew not at all.  Nor did I ever quite manage to catch up either. 

As a result, though I got through college with a 3.0 GPA, I always felt like I was behind; like the other students knew so much more than me, though I had no idea of precisely what that was.  Now that I’ve begun reading the classics in earnest, I’m starting to understand that there were many, many things I needed to learn prior to college, but did not.  Remembering things was most difficult, and I suspect now that this was because I did not have a good level of high school academic knowledge in my head, upon which to build more learning.  I’d have done well to attend community college for a year or two, to better prepare for collegiate course work. 

I have only myself to blame, as many books were available to me in the WPSBC library during the music years.  But I just never felt like reading them.  It’s not that I never tried.  I did, but usually found the books boring.  They used so many words I did not understand, and wrote of many concepts that were foreign to me.  Sometimes, though written in English, I felt as though the books were actually speaking a foreign language; one that I’d never studied.  In those years, I rarely enjoyed reading; the activity nearly always left me confused and feeling quite inadequate.  So along about ninth grade, I decided that I’d probably never do well with books and academia in general.  Now, here I am some thirty-five years later, hoping to undo the ravages of that choice. 

I never liked writing in school either; no doubt because with my weak reading background, the task of writing seemed overly complex as I possessed fewer immediately recallable metaphors and similes to site in my papers.  As a writer today, I understand that reading and writing come as a package, and that one is not complete without the other.  It’s hard therefore to do one of them well without doing the other too.  Since I did neither of these very much in high school, it stands to reason therefore, that I’d find both of them difficult and pointless besides. 

So it’s ironic that I should choose a writing career as my final livelihood.  How did this come about?  As a software engineer, I had to write profusely to maintain and cultivate my business relationships, convey high and low-level software designs to team members, and to adequately document the software I assembled.  In a typical work year, I might issue nearly four thousand email messages and printed documents and letters.  Fifteen years of that sort of work therefore, went far to eliminate the dreaded writers blocks, that so plagued me in school.  Thus, by necessity, once the act of writing grew to be less of a struggle, I came to enjoy doing it. 

Then, when Internet blogs came into vogue, I thought that blogging would be the ideal job for me because I can do it all from home here, and therefore don’t need to worry about getting rides anywhere; at least not routinely anyhow.  The upfront investment costs for a blog-based business are very low (I’ve spent less than $500 on my three blogs), and the only thing you really have to put into it to make it fly besides a modest amount of money, is your dedication.  With blogging, you can also avoid the dreaded and nearly countless rejection letters you get when submitting articles to paper-based publishers.  As a blogger, I decide what gets published and when, and none of my choices requires the approval of a single person.  A sole proprietor’s bloging success (or failure) depends ultimately on the collective approval or disapproval of all those who read it.  It does not rely on a single boss who may dislike me personally and thus too-frequently rejects my pieces.  Nor does it count on an editor who thinks I don’t write well enough, a curator who doubts that he could find any publishers wanting to print my works, or publishers themselves who deem that my stuff does not fit well with their type of content.  With my blogs, I avoid all these problems, and at the risk of sounding cliché,  I write my own ticket. 

Since years working in the corporate world have left me averse to ever being employed again in any tightly-organized corporate command structure, I’ve come to see blogging as my way back to success, without all that corporate overhead and stress to interfere.  Not only does Internet publishing offer good money-making potential, but I can do it as I feel, and I’m rarely if ever forced to write about things I care nothing about.  In fact, it’s best that you don’t write about a subject you have no interest in. 

So it seems that, though I angrily resisted writing in school some twenty to thirty years ago, these days, the act of jotting down my heart has become my friend, my teacher, and hopefully my salvation.  I’m eager for writing to enable me to once again contribute in meaningful, respectful, and positive ways to society, without having to answer to pesky bosses.  But as I said above, to write well, one must read well too, and reading well cannot be accomplished in my opinion, unless you read  a lot.  I believe that the more I read, the better I’ll write. Further, the sooner I eliminate my high school academic deficiencies (by reading all those great books that I avoided back then), the quicker my blogs will become successful. 

This is why I have this driving (and perhaps obsessive) urge to read so much today, because I’m making up for much lost time.  So over the next year or two, you’ll read on this blog about many books that I’m reading myself.  I’ll use  Tom’s Diary to track my progress, and hopefully as time advances, you, my readers, will notice vast improvements in my writing style.  I wish more than anything to be learned; the older I get, the less tolerant I am to my own ignorance.  I want to be in the know.  The hope is that not only will blogging generate a good living for me, but will also make me smarter and thus, bring the solutions to life’s many problems closer to hand.  We’ll just have to see how it goes.  So stay tuned.

Take care.

Tom Hesley

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