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Weekend of June 15-16 2024

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Good weekend. Good Father's Day. Susan and the girls took to me supper Saturday at Little Taste of Texas. Hannah and Emma gave me Father's Day gifts. Got to see Grant this Sunday morning at the Father's Day picnic.

Did some Anki2 studying on Glens Fork. Optimized one unprocessed photo from circa Christmas 2017:

Christmas Eve 2023

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Ken and Jake Hill treated us to a couple of songs accompanied by guitar on Sunday, 24 Dec. 2023. It was a good church service. Irene Harmon was there, and I saw Max Downey. Apparently his home church wasn't having Christmas Eve service. In fact, I think quite a number of local churches called off services.

Mark K. taught Sunday School, giving me a rest. I'll resume sometime mid- to late-January, 2024. Today, Monday 25 Dec. 2023, it's rainy. I have a truck load of boxes to haul off and burn, but it may have to wait till tomorrow.

Christmas number six without dad

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This will be Christmas number six without dad, bless his heart. But I sure am comforted knowing that his faith was solid, his eternity secure. Yes, I miss him. It's wistful, melancholic. But I know he is with the Lord, and therefore he is in perfect delight and security.

So while I'll be getting together with family and celebrating the Reason for the Season, dad is actually with Him. What a comfort and joy that is to know, and I'm thankful.

I'm going through old photos, optimizing, and blogging them. Here's one I found. I think it's when my nephew was born. This would have been in March 2018.

Head crud and last workday before holiday break

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I think I'm getting a touch of the head crud that some other family members have struggled with the past several days. Not a sinus infection, as far as I can tell, but annoying.

Today is the last day of work before the Christmas holiday, for me. Susan has been off all week — well-deserved, and much needed.

  Here are the Crocus Millers, in a picture taken in January of 2018. In March 2018, we lost dad (front right) to kidney disease, histoplasmosis, diabetes, and other factors including just old age. Then on August 31, 2022, we lost Allan (back right) to the decades' toll of alcoholism. The shockingly handsome one to Allan's left is yours truly. Mother was born in 1947, so I guess she's going on 71 in this picture, and dad would have been 80.

Well, I'm going to run my 9:30 am EST provider makeup group in a little over half an hour from now. It looks like a fairly relaxed day compared to my schedule earlier in the week. Someday over the break, I've got to finish some discharge reviews.

Me and Allan - the Younger Years

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Allan has been gone almost sixteen months now. I sure do miss him. I wish we'd spent more time together over the years. But we lived in different states. Contact was infrequent. There are so many things I wish we had done together: camping, playing D&D, hiking the Appalachian Trail, whitewater rafting — to name just a few. I worry about the state of his mind, attitude, and spirit at the time of his death. There isn't really anything I can do about that except pray for him. I think that prayer can be effective even across temporal boundaries. In other words, in my mind there is the possibility that after-the-event prayers may possible impact the event itself, even though it occurred already in the past.

Makayla's Wedding

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Here's a picture of me and my brother after my niece's wedding several years ago. I honestly can't remember what year (I'm getting old), so I'm going to send the link to my niece. Her memory will be better than mine.

Allan and I sure did enjoy our card games. We were both big fans of Magic: The Gathering. I have a lot of fond memories of afternoons and evenings whiling away the time playing, and just enjoying each other's company. What I wouldn't give to reclaim some of that time now. We never realize just how precious someone is to us until they're gone.

For this trip, I rode/drove with Bobo to Toledo with two other nieces, Katy and Lauren. We had a good time and a safe trip.

The trip home with Bobo, Lauren, and Katie seemed shorter than the trip to Toledo. We stopped at a McDonald's once for something to eat. I felt it was thoughtful and kind of mother to invite my two nieces on the trip. Those are the kind of events that make good memories, and I'm glad they had the opportunity. Now, in the tail end of 2023, I look back and those kids are grown up, and I'm past middle age.

Meihem In Ce Klasrum

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First published: 1946

MEIHEM IN CE KLASRUM by Dolton Edwards

BECAUSE WE ARE STILL BEARING SOME OF THE SCARS OF OUR BRIEF SKIRMISH with II-B English, it is natural that we should be enchanted by Mr. George Bernard Shaw's current campaign for a simplified alphabet.

Obviously, as Mr. Shaw points out, English spelling is in much need of a general overhauling and streamlining. However, our own resistance to any changes requiring a large expenditure of mental effort in the near future would cause us to view with some apprehension the possibility of some day receiving a morning paper printed in-to us-Greek.

Our own plan would achieve the same end as the legislation proposed by Mr. Shaw, but in a less shocking manner, as it consists merely of an acceleration of the normal processes by which the language is continually modernized.

As a catalytic agent, we would suggest that a National Easy Language Week be proclaimed, which the President would inaugurate, outlining some short cut to concentrate on during the week, and to be adopted during the ensuing year. All school children would be given a holiday, the lost time being the equivalent of that gained by the spelling short cut.

In 1946, for example, we would urge the elimination of the soft c, for which we would substitute "s." Sertainly, such an improvement would be selebrated in all sivic-minded sircles as being suffisiently worth the trouble, and students in all sities in the land would be reseptive toward any change eliminating the nesessity of learning the differense between the two letters.

In 1947, sinse only the hard "c" would be left, it would be possible to substitute "k" for it, both letters being pronounsed identikally. Imagine how greatly only two years of this prosess would klarify the konfusion in the minds of students. Already we would have eliminated an entire letter from the alphabet. Typewriters and linotypes kould all be built with one less letter, and a11 the manpower and materials previously devoted to making "c's" kould be turned toward raising the national standard of living.

In the fase of so many notable improvements, it is easy to foresee that by 1948, "National Easy Language Week" would be a pronounsed sukses. All skhool tshildren would be looking forward with konsiderable exsitement to the holiday, and in a blaze of national publisity it would be announsed that the double konsonant "ph" no longer existed, and that the sound would henseforth be written "f" in all words, This would make sutsh words as "fonograf" twenty persent shorter in print.

By 1949, public interest in a fonetik alfabet kan be expekted to have inkreased to the point where a more radikal step forward kan be taken without fear of undue kritisism. We would therefore urge the elimination, at that time, of al unesesary double leters, whitsh, although quite harmles, have always ben a nuisanse in the language and a desided deterent to akurate speling. Try it yourself in the next leter you write, and se if both writing and reading are not fasilitated.

With so mutsh progres already made, it might be posible in 1950 to delve further into the posibilities of fonetik speling. After due konsideration of the reseption aforded the previous steps, it should be expedient by this time to spel al difthongs fonetikaly. Most students do not realize that the long "i" and "y," as in "time" and "by," are aktualy the difthong "ai," as it is writen in "aisle" and that the long "a" in "fate," is in reality the difthong "ei" as in "rein." Although perhaps not imediately aparent, the saving in taime and efort wil be tremendous when we leiter elimineite the sailent "e," as meide posible bai this last tsheinge.

For, as is wel known, the horible mes of "e's' apearing in our writen language is kaused prinsipaly bai the present nesesity of indikeiting whether a vowel is long or short. Therefore, in 1951 we kould simply elimineit al sailent "e's," and kontinu to read and wrait merily along as though we wer in an atomik ag of edukation.

In 1951 we would urg a greit step forward. Sins bai this taim it would have ben four years sins anywun had usd the leter "c," we would sugest that the "National Easy Languag Wek" for 1951 be devoted to substitution of "c" for "Th." To be sur it would be som taim befor peopl would bekom akustomd to reading ceir newspapers and buks wic sutsh sentenses in cem as "Ceodor caught he had cre cousand cistls crust crough ce cik of his cumb."

In ce seim maner, bai meiking eatsh leter hav its own sound and cat sound only, we kould shorten ce language stil mor. In 1952 we would elimineit ce "y"; cen in 1953 we kould us ce leter to indikeit ce "sh" sound, cerbai klarifaiing words laik yugar and yur, as wel as redusing bai wun mor leter al words laik "yut," "yore" and so forc. Cink, cen, of al ce benefits to be geind bai ce distinktion whitsh wil cen be meid between words laik:

ocean    now writen     oyean
machine   "    "        mayin
racial    "    "        reiyial

Al sutsh divers weis of wraiting wun sound would no longer exist. and whenever wun kaim akros a "y" sound he would know exaktli what to wrait.

Kontinuing cis proses, year after year, we would eventuali hav a reali sensibl writen langug. By 1975, wi ventyur tu sei, cer wud bi no mor uv ces teribli trublsum difikultis, wic no tu leters usd to indikeit ce seim nois, and laikwais no tu noises riten wic ce seim leter. Even Mr. Yaw, wi beliv, wud be hapi in ce noleg cat his drims fainili keim tru.

Worked - did two groups

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I ran my two groups and did my notes today. This afternoon and evening I added some more pictures of A (some had me and M in them too). I read through Blood and Treasure this evening. Nice OSR flavor. I still need to read Labyrinth Lord, but B&T might be a contender for my solo system.

Prepping for solo adventuring

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This morning, I went to the track and walked three miles. It was the first real exercise I've had in months. I've been cutting back on my eating since August 21. So, almost a month, now. I haven't weighed yet. We don't have a scale. If I can remember, I'll weigh at my mother-in-law's tomorrow when we go over for lunch.

For breakfast, I had granola with blueberries. For lunch, salmon with vegetables, and for supper I had beef and broccoli with rice.

<a href="/content/images/AllanAtSixMonths.jpg""> Last night I started reading Stars Without Numbers. I'm thinking about using it as the system for a solo game. I've been reading a lot of hype about Ironsworn and Starforged. I haven't yet given either a proper read-through.

Programming and took mother to breakfast

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My last login was six days ago on the 5th. This has been a pretty good weekend. Found out that H may be pregnant. I took mother to breakfast at Betty's yesterday morning, then went through my brother's clothes. Tough, that. It's been twelve days since my brother passed.

I've gotten quite a bit of programming done for my diet.exe project; it's a console app in my repo that I'm building into a tool that can interact with my daily diet data in my Zim default notebook.

Also, this evening, I started reading through Paul Bimler's Solo Adventurer's Toolkit. I'm thinking about trying to walk a couple miles at the track in the morning, then grabbing a steak-and-cheese bagel from McDonald's.

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