Well, I wish I had something interesting to write about today. I really don't, unless you want to hear about my ongoing efforts to get library books back from recalcitrant teenagers. My latest struggle is with a boy who has a book that was due last September. He seems completely unconcerned about the need to return it, despite a million weekly overdue notices and appeals from me via e-mail and in person, even when I emphasize that it's community property and others may be waiting for it. The other day I asked him if he'd been looking for it, and he said, "No."
I think some kids just don't understand a library. When I come after them for keeping materials too long, I sometimes get a sort of attitudinal (but not literal) eye-roll. Like they're thinking, "What?! It's just a book."
And it's true that nowadays, books are more plentiful and more easily acquired than ever before. But I always try to explain to them that it's not just the hunk of paper. There are principles involved here. We are teaching them how to use community resources, so that when they go to college they aren't completely bewildered by the college library, and we're also teaching them respect for institutions and their fellow students.
Of course teenagers never want to hear about principles and respect from a preachy librarian.
Mysterious Pile o' Bread on Finchley Road |
Otherwise, life's been pretty routine. Have I mentioned that Dave is having hernia surgery on Feb. 20? Yesterday I got cleared to take that day off so I could be with him in the hospital and shuttle his doped-up self back home afterwards. February is going to be a busy month for us, with tree surgery, Dave surgery and our trip to California...
...which, I was just reading yesterday, is currently being inundated with rain from "atmospheric rivers," whatever those are. Can I pick a vacation destination or what? Hopefully things will be drier by the time we arrive on the 10th. I was really hoping for some sunshine. I mean, it never rains in Southern California, as the song famously taught us!
Here's something fun I was playing with this morning. It's my Merlin Bird ID app, which listens to birds and identifies them. All I have to do is step outside the back door, turn on the app and it tells me what's singing in the garden. So this morning I was hearing, as you can see, a blackbird, a robin and (momentarily) a blue tit.
Here are the bird songs themselves, which the app records in an audio file that I uploaded to SoundCloud:
Blackbirds are often what I hear singing most prominently in the pre-dawn darkness. Which always makes me think of The Beatles.
If you're wondering about that mysterious colorful ball shown on that audio clip, it's my profile photo on Google. This happened completely accidentally. It's a picture of the Kaatskill Kaleidoscope, which I visited way back in 2008. I uploaded a low-res video of the kaleidoscope -- my first upload to YouTube -- and YouTube turned it into my profile photo. It then automatically became my Google profile photo, because Google owned YouTube, and I've just never bothered to change it.
It's funny how so many things online happen accidentally. My e-mail address was assigned to me by AOL back in 1995, and includes a combination of my name and a completely random set of numbers. That has become my online identity for so many things, even though those numbers mean nothing. How did this become me -- a fuzzy picture of a kaleidoscope and a random numerical sequence?
I guess I found things to write about after all.