These are some of my photos from my recent trip to Williamsburg, Virginia. I spent the day on my own, so I have a lot of photos of buildings and the re-enactors as well as the gardens and horses. I will write more about it, but it truly was a fabulous day with perfect weather. The one thing I would change would be to pay attention to the schedule. I didn’t buy a ticket, and therefore wasn’t allowed into the historic end by the Capitol since there was a performance. If I had realized I would have started at that end, and been gone before they closed it to non-ticket holders.
GGS
Security: Not as Easy as it Appears on TV
Standard
In Tickets, Please! I hinted at other stories from my past, and thought I would take some of my journal entries and my old Live Journal and include them here. Some of them are not so dated that they are not relevant any longer.
Prior to my most recent trip to Wales in 2009, the only other times that I’ve flown were when I was five (with my Dad to Canada, and I can picture my cute little outfit and pocketbook) and when I was twenty (to meet my college roommate who was student teaching in the UK). Obviously, both of these occurred before 9/11 and security was definitely not the same then as it is now.
In fact, for the overseas trip in 1986, I carried a paper bag of wrapped Christmas presents for my friend that sat on my lap the entire time because it would not fit in the overhead compartment. I’m pretty sure this would be frowned upon nowadays.
So, to recap, I’ve flown in 1970 or 1971, 1986 and then again in 2009.
Not a very good track record of airline travel.
I may have also mentioned in previous postings here that I am very anxious. At the time of the 2009 trip, I had not been diagnosed with depression or an anxiety disorder and just put it off to the normal anxiety of traveling alone and the lack of experience. I can tell you that while I was still nervous (and still undiagnosed) in 2011, it was still a much better experience as far as my anxiety levels, and my recent train trip had almost no anxiety at all. All of those stories will eventually come if you stick around long enough.
Wales, 2009: The lesson in how not to go through security.
Three times.
I honestly thought I was prepared. I like to be prepared. If I am nothing, I am prepared. I usually have the extra diaper, the napkins or pack of tissues, the spare change; so when I was planning my trip to Wales, I did not want to wait until the last minute to get British pounds or wait until I had arrived in Manchester.
I also did not want to wait until my departure from Newark Airport, which I pictured as a large foreboding place and where I’d be sitting alone for hours on end and everyone would know that I had money and I would be mugged. Or some other crazy scenario that never happens but everyone still thinks does.
I do think of everything.
Our local airport is big enough – they call it an international airport after all, although I don’t believe that I could fly overseas directly from here. I planned on popping in to buy British currency. The procedure is simple. You make an appointment, go to the information office, show them your passport, they give you a pass, you then go through security with your pass and your passport, and go to the business office to exchange (they call it buying) your currency.
Okay, no problem.
I do all that, and there’s a really long line for security. That’s okay though. It gives me time to get acclimated and get used to the procedure as I watch other people going through. I listen to the chit-chat. I reach into my oversized bag and feel around for Bob. (If you haven’t met Bob yet, he is my talisman, and he will make occasional appearances on my site.)
He’s there.
I feel safe.
I get to the front of the line, and I will have to recount about the elderly woman in the wheelchair with her identification problems at another time. After her, it’s my turn, and I hand the TSA officer my passport, and there’s this long pause.
Well, it wasn’t that long, but it felt like forever and I couldn’t figure out why. He informed me that the passport isn’t signed, and I think I said something like, “What do you mean?”
Apparently, you are supposed to sign your passport when you get it.
Laugh if you want, but I did not know that.
I thought they came like your driver’s license – already signed, but no, they don’t.
I was so embarrassed. I was lucky a manager was there and I had to sign it in front of them, show my driver’s license, get the manager’s approval, and then they let me in.
Bob was embarrassed by me too. It probably won’t be the first time.
Then it’s time to grab a bin, take off your shoes and put them and your liquids, jacket, purse into the bin. Or two bins. The woman ahead of me had three bins plus her luggage. Go through the metal detector and then you re-dress. Just to add that if you’re a man, you’ll need to also take off your belt.
They do not care that I’m not getting on a flight. If I’m going into the secure area, I need to go through security just like everyone else. I also needed the pass because I did not have a ticket, which is also required.
(At this time (and in 2011), they only had the traditional metal detectors; not the back scatter machines).
Okay, so now I’m through and I get my currency, which is cool, and I leave. No worries. I’m ready now for the next trip through security, which will be when I’m actually flying out.
Security, Take Two.
Newark is a bit crazier than our local airport. It’s bigger. It’s enormously bigger. The parking is color-coded. It’s expensive. My husband and kids leave me at the really long line to check my bag, and this is where I meet a lovely Scottish couple heading home to Edinburgh. We chat, we check our bags, we leave our bags in a corral where anyone can take them, but alas, that is a different story that I may or may not get to later on.
I’m looking for security now. Once I’m through security, even though I’m two hours early (the recommended time for international flights), I want to get through security and then pretend to relax. They have shops and a place to buy drinks and bathrooms on the other side of security. It’s really like a whole other world and I’m kind of looking forward to that part of this adventure. After all, eating and shopping isn’t anxiety laden like going through a metal detector.
I know I’m ready for security this time. I grab my bin. I take off my shoes. I very knowledgably explain to the German lady behind me about the shoes and the jacket, which I’ve laid under my bag in the bin. I give a quick look to Bob and send him and my other bags through.
As soon as I heard it, I knew it was me.
“Bag check.”
My heart began to race, and my mind was repeating over and over again, “Fuck, fuck, fuck, the laptop.”
I not only left the laptop in the bag (they must be taken out and put in a separate bin), but I also forgot the bag of liquids in the carry-on. Bob was the least of my problems, although I’m sure that after the nonsense that was the laptop/liquids, Bob would have kept me off the plane.
I apologized. I got eye-rolls times two. I did feel bad, but they really should be more instructional. I’m a first time flyer for all practical purposes, and I was in the first time flyer lane, but apparently those lane distinctions don’t really mean anything. I get through, but my heart is still racing, and believe it or not, the first thing I did was slip Bob in my pocket and then tie my shoes.
Security, Take Three.
At the end of my trip, upon leaving Manchester Airport, I, of course, went through security. This time, I was determined to be successful. I had put all of my liquids in the checked bag, and this bag did not go into the corral available to any passer-by. All I had was toothpaste in the plastic baggie in my carry-on. I remembered the laptop and even had the carry-on partially unzipped so that I would remember to remove it from the bag. I had asked the first security person if we’re supposed to take our shoes off, and they said no. I threw away my bottle of soda (500ml – too large to carry through.) I was home-free. The man asked for my passport. No problem. I put everything in the bins. I walked through the detector, and…
Beep.
Oh, no, I didn’t.
I looked at the security woman, mouth agape, thinking, “What did I do to deserve this?”
They move me just slightly out of the way, ask me to put my arms out (like a cross) and then a woman security officer starts patting me down. (Wasn’t I put behind a screen? No, I was not. She didn’t even say anything except to extend my arms. She really should have bought me drinks.) I was lucky I didn’t take a step back in startlement. I also now need to take off my shoes and they pass through a separate scanner. That was it really. I think it was actually my passport that set it off – all that new technology crammed into that little book. I hadn’t carried it through any of the other metal detectors. I always replaced it into my purse when it was returned to me.
Now I know for my next trip, I will either sail through or be arrested and my best friend will have to rescue me from a federal prison.
You will rescue me, won’t you?
Here are some hints that I discovered, and not just because of my mistakes.
1. Keep your pockets empty, including money and change. It’s just easier to get through security and then put that stuff into your pockets or just leave it in your pocketbook or briefcase.
2. Know that in the US, you’ll need to remove your jacket, shoes and belts.
3. Don’t wear clunky, metallic jewelry unless you really do want to get friendly with the security officers. Going, I had a really nice necklace, but I put it in my purse until I was through and then I put it on my neck.
4. Put your ID/passport away in your purse before you walk through the metal detector. There is also a detector that blows air on you. I did not go through that one (by choice).
5. Your laptop needs to be out of your bag and in its own bin (apart from your shoes and purse, etc.)
6. Your purse goes in a bin. Your carry-on does not.
7. The liquids need to be in a bin (with your other stuff except your laptop.) The TSA in the US allow 3 ounce containers inside a quart sized zipper bag. I found Ziploc brand travel bags. I think they were $0.99 for seven bags. I was also surprised by the amount of little bottles that fit in there. On the way over, my liquid bag was filled with things I would normally keep in my purse. Liquid, for TSA purposes includes gels and creams as well as solids (like deodorant) in addition to actual liquids. It’s 3-1-1. 3.4 ounce containers, 1 quart bag, 1 bag per passenger. I found the TSA website to be very useful.
8. The UK requirement to return is slightly less, so check with the airport security or online for the place you’ll be leaving from, or check your liquids in your suitcase.
9. Do not joke in the line. It annoys people, and you really don’t want to annoy security.
If I think of anything else, I’ll be sure to add it with another posting.
~ 10 June 2013 ~
StandardI had intended to be here a few times last week, but real life reared its ugly head in an especially ugly way.
My mother in law was hit by a car on Thursday and sustained multiple breaks in pretty much every part of her body. She is in very serious condition in a hospital several hundred miles from our home. I’ve been on single parent duty while my husband traveled to her with his siblings, putting a strain on our already strained finances.
One of the good news items is my teenager really stepped up in the first half of the weekend to help out with dinners and his siblings as well as being extremely reliable.
The other good news item is that my mother in law is doing well, as well as can be expected and a little better than that even, surprising the nursing staff. She is a tough person and I have no doubt that she will back to herself sooner than anyone can imagine even though knowing that the road will be a long one.
I don’t think I will putting many updates here as this is a public blog and I don’t know how she (or my husband) would feel about this, although as with most of my writings, if there is a greater need to provide information (as I plan to do with other parts of my life and have done with my depression and faith), I will indeed come back to this as a topic.
My summer plan currently is to do random free writes a few times during each week, and longer pieces as inspiration strikes. I still have ideas to share from my recent trip to Virginia.
Thank you for sticking with me in spite of my inconsistencies, which I hope to remedy beginning at the end of this week.
On Target with Money Practicalities
StandardEvery time I shop in Target they offer me a credit or debit card. I already have their credit card and usually ignore the quick hard sell for the debit card. After all, I don’t want another bank account and the credit card is great. They give you a 5% discount when you use it in store and they take a percentage of your purchases and donate that amount of money to the school of your choice even if your kids are not in school, so it’s great for grandparents and aunts and friends, etc.
What I didn’t know is that with the debit card, you don’t need to open a new checking account. You hook their card up to your regular checking account at your own bank. They need a blank check to set it up.
This is a great option for two reasons:
1. You still get the 5% off when you use the debit card.
2. You pay for the purchase with the money in your checking account, so it’s like using cash. No monthly bills.
I’ve had the debit card for a couple of months now. You use it like any other debit card, with a pin number, and you only use it in Target. Since we get a lot of our groceries at Target and all of our bathroom items and kids’ school things there as well, we save a lot of money with the 5% off and never pay an interest charge since it’s paid for out of our checking account.
If you shop a lot at Target, do yourself a favor and look into it.
Enthusiasm
Standard*I do exercises from the book, Achieve Anything in Just One Year by Jason Harvey. This is Day 107.
What is your definition of Enthusiasm – What does it mean to you?*
Most recently I felt this with joining the Supernatural fandom. I didn’t actually join it as much as hold on tight as it dragged me along.
I ate, slept, and breathed it. I wrote and I thought and I discussed. And I laughed! Oh my G-d, I laughed and of course, I cried. Fuck you writers. You know who you are and what you did!
This is the embodiment of enthusiasm. The excitement, the pulse quickening, the sweat beading, the building and building of something not tangible until it is, grabbing onto something to stop the room from spinning, the spiritual.
It is little things and so much more. It is quiet and roaring sound, a raging river over a waterfall and the quiet below the surface.
For me, it’s writing and traveling and waking up at five in the morning to birds singing, it’s children’s laughter, my children’s laughter, the best sound in the world. It’s the long forgotten click clacking of a typewriter’s keys. It’s the smell of rain. It’s lilacs and hyacinth. It’s the perfect yellow of a daffodil. It’s a few of my favorite things.
…
StandardThis is a selection of my tea paraphernalia. The one I use on a daily basis is the large mug there with the viney yellow flowers, although it’s not really all that large. I have two that are larger, but one holds my pens and the other (my very favorite snowman mug) went missing when we moved.
Second is the green tea cup that is attached to my tea strainer that I use for my loose teas. I have been much better at remembering to clean it out and rinse it than I used to be.
The third one, the teeny tiny one in the center was a recent gift from a friend. It is a necklace that she sent along with some crafty cupcakes (that I did not photograph) to keep with me during my special tea times in memory of my friend that I’ve written about before.
And last, but not least, this ceramic piece was given to me for Christmas by my best friend. His was the roommate murdered (who I write about fairly often and shared tea time with her memory) and she made this tea cup, so it is very special to me. It was kind of funny, but two years ago, I was visiting my friend and he gave me his bedroom for the week, and this cup was on his shelves. I remember seeing it, and I knew that B had made it.
I picked it up and held it, staring at it for a long while. I put it back exactly as I had found it and I never mentioned it to my friend. I was incredibly touched that he somehow knew that this would be so meaningful to me when he sent it as part of my gift, although I shouldn’t have been too surprised; he has a sixth sense about him and often knows me better than I know myself.
Jiffy Pop
StandardI have this wonderful childhood memory of Jiffy Pop. I know that it wasn’t my kitchen, but I can’t remember which friend it belonged to. I think the stove was aqua and it was next to the back door which was left open. It was a comfortable day. The sun was shining but it was not too hot. I think it was in fact, cool.
The kitchen was a very small square room. Not that my kitchen at home was any bigger, but mine was long like a galley, narrow enough that I could put one hand on the counter and one on the stove and swing like a gymnast. I think that cost me a ride to the emergency room and five stitches in my head.
But back to the popcorn.
I still picture the metal foil rising into a balloon and the loud crackling and popping until the popcorn couldn’t fit anymore. It was wondrous. There was no such thing as microwaves at least not in our homes and so certainly no microwave popcorn. This was easy. It was fast. Jiffy, in fact. It was buttery delicious and perfect. At least, that’s how I remembered it.
Two weeks ago, my favorite show (Supernatural) had a reunion of sorts and in the promo pictures next to the rescued man watching a reel-to-reel film was a Jiffy Pop package that he was eating popcorn out of. He took them and ate them one at a time. I noticed because who takes them one at a time?
Before the show I ran to the supermarket and bought myself some Jiffy Pop. I would eat it with the characters because fandom is weird like that. I couldn’t wait to get into my kitchen and make a memory come alive.
I read the directions carefully.
Hmm, I don’t remember shaking the pan when I was a kid. I don’t remember moving it in circles against the element. No flames on this electric stove, but the directions said it was fine. I didn’t remember the smoke I think was caused from the friction of rubbing the bottom of the Jiffy Pop package on the range top. Constant smoke rising; I had to turn the fan on. It smelled awful and it was taking forever. I hadn’t even heard popping yet. How long had I been standing over this stove? An hour? Two? More likely less than five minutes, maybe six.
It was taking forever!
Finally, the popping began. Still I shook the pan and made the circles and listened to the pop pop popping. The foil made a balloon and eventually, maybe five minutes more I gave up.
I cleared the smoke.
I tore open the foil with a fork and ate a piece.
Hmm, not very good. Not at all like I remembered.
I’ll wait for the show to start and try it again.
It didn’t get much better. I ate about half and then was grateful when my teenager asked for a handful.
“Take the rest,” I said sadly.
Some things should be left as memories.
WordPress Family Award
StandardThank Rachel for nominating me for this. As I said in my comment, I am truly touched that you would think so highly of me. A lot of my writing revolves around my life and the lives of my family and friends and so this kind of thing means a lot to me.
Nominate 10 blogs who are like family to you:
1. Bohemian Spirit: (http://bohoheart.com/)
2. Brucella N: (http://brucellanewman.com/2013/01/22/very-inspiring-blogger-award/)
3. The Secret Keeper: (http://thesecretkeeper.net/)
4. Shackled and Crowned: (http://shackledandcrowned.wordpress.com/)
5. Change for a Year: (http://changeforayear.com/)
6. Traveling Chair: (http://travelingchair.wordpress.com/)
7. Chatty Owl: (http://chattyowl.com/)
8. Pastoral Postings: (http://pastoralpostings.wordpress.com/)
9. A Penny for Your Thoughts: (http://wrightwritingdotorg.wordpress.com/)
10. Retirement and Beyond: (http://joanfrankham.wordpress.com/)
Very Inspiring Blog Award
StandardThank you http://brucellanewman.com/2013/01/22/very-inspiring-blogger-award/
I am truly touched that you found my blog inspiring enough to nominate me for an award. I am sorry that it has taken me this long to post it to my page.
Seven Things About Me
1. I have spent my whole life in the shadows and have decided to finally come out of them.
2. I’ve written my entire life and love the feeling of finishing a piece and seeing how many people it touches. I love love love that feeling.
3. I used to hide my geekery as an apology for liking Star Trek and dressing up for the SCA, but now I am in six fandoms and counting; I write fan fiction and meta and it makes me happy and I do it pretty well.
4. My depression was a very scary place to be, but it has allowed me to become someone new while I search for who I really am.
5. I went from watching television twenty hours a day(primarily the news except for about two hours a week of Doctor Who and The Hour) to two – three hours a week (Supernatural, Doctor Who) with a couple of movies or series on my Kindle. I only watch the news when my USA Today or NBC News app tells me something has happened. I am actually less stressed and I’m also writing more.
6. I have three kids who scare me with how like me they are and how unlike me they are.
7. I don’t care about the actual number, so it’s almost funny (but it’s not!) that I am very sensitive about my age and don’t like being teased about it.
Nominate Bloggers:
1. Bohemian Spirit: (http://bohoheart.com/)
2. A Life in the Day (http://saritzahernandez.blogspot.com/?zx=7d3585c4fb06f461)
3. EvilSlutopia (http://evilslutopia.com/)
4. http://andythanfiction.tumblr.com/
5. Brucella N: (http://brucellanewman.com/2013/01/22/very-inspiring-blogger-award/)
6. The Secret Keeper: (http://thesecretkeeper.net/)
7. Shackled and Crowned: (http://shackledandcrowned.wordpress.com/)
8. Change for a Year: (http://changeforayear.com/)
9. Traveling Chair: (http://travelingchair.wordpress.com/)
10. Chatty Owl: (http://chattyowl.com/)
11. Pastoral Postings: (http://pastoralpostings.wordpress.com/)
12. A Penny for Your Thoughts: (http://wrightwritingdotorg.wordpress.com/)
13. Retirement and Beyond: (http://joanfrankham.wordpress.com/)
Page Update
StandardI’ve made updates to the following pages:
Quotations
Snapshots in Time
Honors
as well as a couple of posts about the honors and some aspects of last week’s travel (there will definitely be more on this coming soon).
Unfortunately, the blog doesn’t automatically tell followers if a page is updated, only if there is a new post. You will notice that if you go to the Writings page, most of the pieces have a photo on the link even if there are no photos on the post itself. Most of these are my own photographs that I’ve incorporated into the essay. I intend to have more photographs posting on their own, so I look forward to any and all feedback.
So, take a look at some of the new things, and tell me what you think.
























