TheBanyanTree: Grave Robbers
paul
paul at remsset.com
Tue Jan 8 15:24:32 PST 2013
So many comments to make.... stealing flags from graves is pretty
strange.
How did the Christmas wreath fare?
Congrats on the new job!
Oven and fridge cleaning? No problem. I just wipe the char out of
the oven every few months and call it good. It's an oven and it's not
new. The fridge stays pretty clean though I don't know where the junk
under the crisper drawers comes from.... it's like dust bunnies in the
fridge. The old fridge didn't have the problem.
My hate is cleaning the bathroom. Tedious....
Margaret R. Kramer said the following on 11/18/2012 12:58 PM:
> A couple of weekends ago, I went out to the cemetery and placed a small
> American flag on Ray's grave for Veterans' Day. I got out to the cemetery
> yesterday, and the flag somehow moved from Ray's grave to the grave on his
> left. Hmmmmm . . .
>
>
>
> At first, I couldn't believe it was the same flag and then I kept looking at
> it and sure enough, it WAS the same flag. I guess whoever it was thought it
> would be OK to slide the flag over one grave and no one would notice.
>
>
>
> That happens a lot with flags. Whenever I leave a flag at Ray's grave, odds
> are 10-1 that someone will take it within a week of my placing it in the
> ground. I suppose people get out to the cemetery and realize they didn't
> bring flowers or anything, so they grab a flag, thinking no one will notice,
> and stick that flag in their own loved one's grave. Flowers can be too
> unique to steal, but flags are all the same, except for the size.
>
>
>
> At first, I was going to take it and throw it away. Then I was going to
> take it and put it back on Ray's grave. And, finally, after thinking about
> it, I just left it where it was. That's what Ray would have done. It isn't
> that big a deal. Whoever took it didn't mean any harm; they were just being
> thoughtless.
>
>
>
> Ray knows the flag was for him and he also was one of the most generous
> people I've ever known, so the flag stayed where it was.
>
>
>
> On the job front, my project came to an end after three years, so I had to
> find another project. My boss was kind enough to give me basically six
> weeks' notice, and also gave me permission to look for a job while I was
> still at work finishing up things, so I searched.
>
>
>
> I hate looking for jobs. I have a great resume, so all I had to do was add
> to it. But I hate sticking myself out there, hoping someone will bite and
> ask me in for an interview. Then I had to put on my business suite and act
> perky and passionate and knowledgeable and totally cool to impress someone
> to hire me.
>
>
>
> I'm lucky, because what I do is in demand, although recruiters told me that
> there is still a good deal of competition. I did have several interviews.
> Sometimes I wasn't the selected candidate. Other times, especially in
> interviews when I really thought I did well, the job was eliminated.
> Probably job elimination was the related to the jitters employers feel about
> the fiscal cliff. We're all ready to go over and hit the rocky bottom.
>
>
>
> Every day I would get up, plod through job listings, make phone calls, get
> phone calls, and try to remain optimistic.
>
>
>
> I got a call a few weeks ago from an IT consulting company. I met the
> recruiter at a coffee shop and the preliminary interview went well. Since I
> last looked for work three years ago, it seems most companies will conduct a
> telephone HR screening interview. If you pass that then they'll schedule a
> telephone interview with the hiring manager, and finally if you are really
> awesome, then you get to come in and meet everyone in person.
>
>
>
> Later that evening, I had a telephone interview with the hiring manager. We
> clicked. I was going up to the North Shore for a few days, so we scheduled
> an interview with the team when I got back.
>
>
>
> I met the team. We all were high fiving each other and I started the job
> two weeks ago. It took me a total of two months to land a job. I was
> actually only out of work for two weeks. That's not too bad. Three years
> ago, it took me 10 weeks to land a job.
>
>
>
> The salary is good, so I can maintain my lavish lifestyle. The job is in St
> Paul and my commute is minimal. I have a HUGE cube in a quiet area of the
> office.
>
> I really like my team so far. For the first time in three years, a team
> member asked me to have lunch with him on Friday. My last team was a little
> weird and uptight about social relationships, so it was always awkward to
> get together in a social manner, and there were other personality issues as
> well, but this team is much more grounded and comfortable with themselves,
> and that makes interacting with them more comfortable for me, too.
>
>
>
> We went to Taco Bell and just chatted about all kinds of different stuff.
> He's 32, married, and the father of an eight month old boy. It's so great
> getting outside my socially limited box.
>
>
>
> I've never had trouble connecting with my coworkers in the past before, so
> it was strange to spend three years kind of socially isolated at work. That
> was probably one of the best things, one of those new door opens kind of
> things, when my projected ended.
>
>
>
> I used my self-cleaning oven thing yesterday to clean out my dirty oven. I
> love self-cleaning ovens, except that the house gets pretty hot since the
> oven runs high heat for almost five hours and the initial fumes can be
> strong. But all I had to do once the oven cooled down was to vacuum it out
> and sponge out the inside. The oven looks brand new again!
>
>
>
> Joe and I cleaned out the refrigerator, too. I always keep the food under
> control, but the shelves and the interior needed a good scrubbing. Now the
> fridge looks new, too.
>
>
>
> Oven and fridge cleaning are two jobs that are right up there with job
> searching. I don't like doing any of them.
>
>
>
> I'm hosting Thanksgiving for the first time since 2007, the last
> Thanksgiving Ray was alive. I've been getting strong grief pangs this past
> week. I suppose that it's the holidays, when all those memories of what
> was, what is, and what will be start colliding in a major way, and I realize
> how much the what is and what will be isn't the same without Ray.
>
>
>
> Dead people sure know how to ruin holidays. They are still with us as we
> carve the turkey, but it would be nice if they would be able to join us at
> the table.
>
>
>
> Sometimes my brain doesn't realize Ray is gone, and I'll end up setting a
> place for him at the table. It's amazing how losing someone so close and
> dear can continually affect our lives, even five years later.
>
>
>
> I have Ray's Christmas wreath and stand ready to go. After Thanksgiving,
> I'll go out to the cemetery and place the wreath next to Ray's stone. The
> wreath isn't a flag, so it should remain safely next to Ray until Christmas
> is over. I hope.
>
>
>
> Margaret R. Kramer
>
> margaretkramer at comcast.net <mailto:mmargaretkramer at comcast.net>
>
> www.linkedin.com/in/margaretkramer
>
>
>
> The harmonizing of opposing forces is a key aspect of yoga - hot energy is
> united with cool energy, strong with soft, and masculine with feminine.
>
>
> - Tara Fraser
>
>
>
>
--
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