Needing photoshop guru

Any photoshop gurus want to make a few bucks?

My mom wants to use the following photo of her for the stand-up photo at her funeral. Except she doesn’t want my step-father in it, cause he likely won’t be dying at the same time.

If you think you can do a good job of removing him from the photo (the large version, not the small version Scrapbook creates), please let me know.

Comments arguing for leaving him in the photo will result in immediate unfriending. It’s what my mom wants. I don’t want to argue it.

mom-and-dad

2007 Year in Review

I wrote a 2006 Year in Review so here is 2007’s.

This year began fairly normally. My biggest focus was on mentoring. The first year mentoring program is one-on-one. But when the students are sophomores through seniors, it’s all small group. I had an incredibly great group of students in my group, and the mentors were as well. The groups disband at the end of the school year though. I miss my previous group, but the new group that started this fall has been awesome as well. And I really enjoyed volunteering at the freshman launch course, because several of the students I’ve worked with were Steps Up (a.k.a. student volunteers) there. It was an opportunity to see that they’d made something of themselves: more confident, more together, and able to set goals and have powerful relationships.

My big goal for the school year (everyone sets goals in the mentoring program) was to write a business plan for my bookstore. I was really up and down in my motivation though. In January I became incredibly unmotivated. But my business coach was pretty good in that regard and I pushed through it. I ran into a brick wall though on how to do a sales forecast without spending a ton of money on surveys. I never quite figured that out before things changed.

Work-wise, I didn’t do a whole lot. In 2006, I went from a high-powered job at Expedia to a low-powered job at Barnes & Noble shelving books. In 2007, I went from low-powered to unemployed. Barnes & Noble was a lot of fun, but when things changed, I couldn’t keep a regular schedule anymore. So the job went in June. But it was sure fun while it lasted.

Romantically the year started out hopefully. A long-time friend who I long have been attracted to reconsidered her rejection. However, she got scared off. Luckily we’re still friends.

I finally visited my brother Dan in San Francisco and spent a week with him and my nephew Victor. Victor is an awesome kid. Some kids have an innately smiley face. Victor though always looks worried. Dan and Brenda brought him up in November for Thanksgiving. He’s a smart kid, and he likes olives. He’s still willing to share though.

Late February brought the first signs of what would be the defining experience of my year though. Actually, the first signs were earlier, but because I wasn’t using the phone much, I missed them. My mom started having problems with her mouth in December. I didn’t talk with her from shortly after Christmas until late February or so, so I missed it. I talked with her on the phone around then though, and I thought she sounded like a drunk. She was slurring her words very badly. I was worried, but she told me it wasn’t any big deal and she’d tell me when the doctors had it figured out.

In April I got the word. Preliminary diagnosis was A.L.S. which was confirmed at the end of the month. That really threw me into a tailspin. I put my plans for a book store on hold, canceled dates, and holed up.

Watching my mom’s condition deteriorate has been the most emotionally painful experience I’ve had ever. In February it was slurred speech. Today she cannot talk except through a computer, and she doesn’t eat except through a tube. Her thumbs have lost strength, and the rest of her hands are following. She can’t hold her head up because she can’t control her neck muscles. Every new change makes me cry.

On the other hand, unlike when Matt died, I have plenty of forewarning. I didn’t get to see much of him since he was a kid because I’d been living in a different state. He in Washington me in Idaho. Me in Washington, him in California. And then he was gone. But as painful as it is to watch, I can spend lots of time with my mom. I started driving up to Lynden every one or two weeks. She and I went to Edward Scissorhands at the 5th Ave, and we both hated it. I got to help her raise money for the A.L.S.A. in September. And many many heartfelt thanks to all my friends who donated.

One other thing I want to mention is changes in my relationship with my family. Briefly, though. I want this year in review to be unvarnished, but not a source of drama. On one hand, I’ve become closer to my brother Joe. But things have become strained with my other brother Dan. Though there are hopeful signs.

In November, I started making plans to move north so I could help my mom. I rented a place in Ferndale, about 20 minutes from my parents house. Two days a week I’m in Seattle. Five I’m in Ferndale. So far that’s worked out quite well, though I have to say my Seattle place already doesn’t feel like home. Home is where the internet is.

I went on a few dates with Tamara this year before she headed off to be a sailor again. I spend a fair amount of time with my ex April in the beginning of the year as well. But I had a day of sudden reclusiveness and bailed on Folk Life with her (as well as other folks too), and she stopped hanging out with me after that. I also had my biggest fight with Jason in years. I stuck my nose where it didn’t belong, and he didn’t talk with me for about six weeks. We’re good now though. With Jason, I know that in the long run things will always work out. We’ve been friends for long enough, that even when we get mad at each other, we can forgive each other. Eventually. This time it was my time to fuck up. I did stop going to Losers’ Lunch regularly around that time though. It had nothing to do with Jason. It had become a social scene and less of friends catching each other up.

Those have been some down things things this year. Strangely though, other than the occasional crying spells, I’m really upbeat. My close friends have rallied, and I’m incredibly grateful. Thank you specifically to Jason, Kim, Erin and Deirdre. But nearly everyone I know has done something to help. The new year looks full of possibility. I’m looking forward to New Year’s Eve and the year to come. I feel braver than I have in years.

Trip South

Thursday morning I headed south.

First thing was a meeting with RBC Dain Rauscher. My former broker left the company to start his own. So this was a get to know you meeting with someone else there to see if I liked their investment philosophy. I need to decide whether to follow my old broker to the company he just started, or stay with RBC.

I got my hair cut.

Thursday evening I finished sorting two years worth of paper, then started filing it. By filing, I mean that 80% was ripped up and thrown in recycle.

Friday morning I had a meeting with the broker at his new office.

In the afternoon, I hung out with Kim at Remedy Tea. I love that place. Also, Kim gave me a present. She told me not to open it in front of my family.

Friday night I went to a yule party. Had goose for the first time. Also, bacon cookies. Yes, Daniel I have now had bacon cookies. They were good.

Today I drove up to Bow, where they have a little chapel. Watched my sister Elaine get married. I cried. Also cried thinking about my mom and Matt earlier today too. I’m a little emotionally fragile, but I got it under control before I picked up Gram and Gramps before heading to Bow. My sister looked really good, and I really like Brian’s parents.

Plans for the next week

Tomorrow morning I’m heading back to Seattle.

My broker left RBC Dain Rauscher. I have a meeting with RBC tomorrow, and another one with the broker on Friday. He’s started his own independent firm. The purpose of these two meetings will be to decide whether to follow him or stay with RBC.

Tomorrow night is mentoring. It’s a fun night. We’ll be playing video games.

Friday night I’ve been invited to a dinner party. I’m excited.

Both days are fairly free though.

Saturday my sister Elaine will be getting married. I’ll be driving my grandparents there, because it’s in Bow. It’s going to be immediate family only, except for the grandparents. There will be a small dinner afterward. Joe will drive Gram & Gramps back, and I’ll continue to Ferndale.

Sunday is a bigger family shindig at an aunts. I guess I will make an appearance.

Tuesday will be Christmas at my mom’s. Elaine is doing most of the cooking. I’ll be, get this, making some pies.

Thursday is an appointment I’ll be driving mom to. No mentoring. I can’t decide if I’ll be in Seattle for Fri/Sat, or for the 31st. Or both. I don’t have a date for New Year’s. Yet.

Moving

I got extremely anti-social last night. Didn’t go out. Didn’t go to a couple of functions I should have. Just couldn’t shake the sense of otherness.

Today though is the first step in moving. I’ll be doing my move in one of the most inefficient ways possible: in pieces. The big reason for that is that I will not be in Ferndale full time, so I’m not moving most of my furniture. I’ll be taking up my desk, my kitchen table, chairs, and some miscellaneous stuff today.

After unloading stuff, my intent is to head over to Ye Olde Cheap But New Bed Store and pick up a bed for the new place.

Tonight I will be staying in Seattle. Tomorrow I will drive up with my clothes, kitchen-ware, and Guinevere. I will be staying in Ferndale tomorrow. During the week I shall find even more furniture for the place: dresser, sofa, end tables, stereo.

I won’t have a computer there until next week. This week I will be mostly offline. I plan to charge up my Blackberry. It will be my primary internet access for the week. The following week I’ll bring the computer up and get the internets working. Then, every week I shall bring a few more items to Ferndale.

This will also serve as spring cleaning. I need to get rid of stuff. While I am keeping my place here, it’s mostly going to serve as a crash pad and not as a living space. So I don’t need some of the things I have here, and some of them are kind of beat up. The nicer stuff will definitely stay. The most comfortable bed in the world will stay.

Jason is helping me today. Erin has offered to help tomorrow. Several other folks have offered as well, but I won’t take you up on it. Since it’s not a wholesale move I don’t need people. There will be other opportunities later for y’all to keep tabs on me.

I feel like there’s something else I need to say/write. Or that I’m forgetting something important in the move. Damned if I know what it is right now.

Thanksgiving

Joe hosted the family Thanksgiving tonight. Even Dan came, with Brenda and Victor. My mom did not. My parents started to come south, but freaked out about the snow and ice and turned around. I don’t blame her for freaking out. But I’m upset that I didn’t find out in time to go get them. And I’m upset that it didn’t work out.

I’m increasingly skeptical that my mom’s remaining family will ever be together with her at the same time and place before she dies.

I don’t really want to talk about it. Not right now.

I am going to go cry myself to sleep now.

Moving & dating & nobility & selfishness

This is somewhat for the benefit of my mom, but also for the numerous people who keep telling me how noble I am. Here’s an email I am sending to my mom:

I’m somewhat frightened to move. Not hugely. It’s something different, and it means that of necessity some things will change in my life. That can be good. I’m somewhat in a rut. Something you will be happy to know is that I haven’t completely given up on the idea of meeting the right girl and getting married after a suitable period of dating. Thing is, not to knock the women I know here, but the chances of that happening with my current circle of friends is dropping rapidly. I’m not the new and fresh face anymore. I’ve been considered and discarded by everyone left in this crowd. It’s not 100%. There are new people coming around. Some folks get recycled. But by and large, my chances are much less than what they used to be in 2002-2003 when I was the new guy.

A change of scenery would help. That can happen here. But it’s hard for me to get myself away from the comfort of my friends. So a new place will kind of force me to do something different. I’m not generally a believer that a change of place changes lives. Wherever you go, there are you. You don’t get away from your problems by moving. But dating, to a decent extent, is a numbers game. If you don’t meet new people, you don’t date much. Numbers aren’t a substitute, for sure. Adding 100 more married people to ones circle of friends doesn’t help much.

Anyway, I noted the other day that I am scared. Changing anything is scary for me. I am a creature of habit, particularly socially. But I’ve never gotten anywhere in life without changing things up, scary as that is. It isn’t going to change me. But getting me out of my routine isn’t changing me.

Helping you? While it has a side benefit to help you, in the end, even my plans to stop by to help you are selfish in nature. You get really upset by the inability to communicate as well as just changing things up (I get my don’t want to change nature from you, I’m sure). If I have a year or two left to spend with you, I’d rather it be fun times rather than constant upsetness. My plan is to put my manager experience to use so that you doesn’t have to be upset as often. Dad and some of the other folks helping you at least currently aren’t really able to fill that role. So you have to make sure things get done, but it’s really freaking hard when you can’t talk and are worn out all the time. That would be upsetting to me. And that affects me emotionally, as well as just messes with the time we have together.

The blunt truth is that I want you to be happy so I can be happy. It isn’t particularly noble. I don’t give a rat’s behind about the suffering of random people. If you were Cruella, I’d have walked away. If I had a career to lose or a family or something else, I can’t say that I’d give them up. I saw a movie within the last year, I can’t remember the title, which was about love. Mostly people meeting each other. One of the characters has a crush on an officemate, and eventually they go out on a date. And given the theme of the movie, you’d think her piece was about her falling in love with this guy. But it isn’t. She constantly is pulled away from opportunities at love with this guy and others because her brother is institutionalized or something like that. At the most inopportune times she helps her brother instead of herself. It’s really sweet, and somewhat sad. The point being, I don’t know if I could walk away from that. I’d certainly give you a lot of my time. I love you. I’d give up free time. I’d give up some career advancement. I’d give up a lot. But I don’t think I would give up all my future just to do the shit work.

Thing is, right now my future is wide open. I’m in a position where I can do more and not give much up. Some money. The bookstore is postponed, whether I move there or not. That would require nearly 100% of my mental energy, and I don’t have that. Moving involves some scary things. But I’ve never gotten anything good by staying comfortable.

So here’s my math: +more meaningful time with you. +less emotional upsetness for you and me. +changing up my routine. +finding new friends. +new activities (Erin says I will go snowboarding at Baker for example). -discomfort. -less spontaneity with existing friends for a couple of years. -money.

I add that up, and it tells me I have an opportunity to move, however scary. Not the other way around. If you can find someone else who really will fill the role to get things done, I will step back and not fight you on a move. But if you don’t want me to move because I will be discomforted and you don’t have someone else who will do this, I will get really upset. In the end, it’s your choice. I am not going to do anything against your wishes. But spending quality time with you is worth a lot to me, and definitely more than I think give up.

I sent an edited version of that to mom in response to her freaking out about me moving to help her.

Moving to Lynden

I’ve mentioned this as a possibility before, but it’s official now. I will be moving to Lynden soon.

My current plan is to retain my condo here in Seattle. I will also get a place in Lynden, where I can be closer to my mom and help her arrange things and communicate. Thursday mornings I will drive to Seattle. I will spend the day here, and the evening mentoring. Then either Friday or Saturday, depending on social activities, I will drive back to Lynden.

I’m not sure what I’m going to do for Guinevere though. I don’t want to transport her back and forth. If she stays here and I get someone to feed her, she’ll be alone most of the week. If I take her to Lynden, I’ll have a harder time finding someone to feed her the couple of days I’m in Seattle since I don’t know as many people there. But there’s a chance I’ll rent a house, so she would be able to go outside again and have more room to roam around inside as well. Not to mention it’ll be fewer days alone. Another option is to find her a new home, whether a temporary foster home or permanent. Really don’t want to do that, as she’s been with me over a decade.

A.L.S. clinic at Virginia Mason, visit the second

Today I, along with my dad and brother, accompanied my mom to the Virginia Mason A.L.S. clinic. The idea behind the clinic is that you go to one place and sit, and all the A.L.S. specialists in various disciplines come to you. There was a nurse, the A.L.S.A. patient care coordinator, two respiratory therapists, a speech therapist, a nutritionist, two occupational/physical therapists and a student P.T., a psychiatrist, a doctor specializing in A.L.S., and a neurologist who specializes in A.L.S.

In theory it’s awesome. In practice there’s one huge drawback. Because there are so many people to see, they don’t share notes until the end of the day. Which means they all ask the same questions, since the disciplines with regard to A.L.S. overlap. Here’s an example:

My mom can’t swallow. That obviously impacts her eating, and she has a feeding tube that allows her to get her caloric needs met. But after that, her mouth is still producing saliva which she can’t get rid of. She can choke to death or drown in her own fluids. There are basically two solutions: medication or a suction device. Medication dries the saliva production, but it also dries your eyes. My mom doesn’t want to do this because of previous eye disease that could return if her eyes dry out which they have a tendency to do as a result of that disease. She uses eye drops. The suction device she had but returned after three or four weeks because it is not portable. The doctors have basically said, “put it by your favorite chair and then don’t move.” So her solution has been to carry a handkerchief and dawb the saliva away. It’s portable and doesn’t dry her eyes.

Anyway, about 5 of the folks we met with wanted to put her on medication to stop the saliva. So she’d tell them she didn’t want to do that. The doctors (term used generically, they aren’t all doctors) wouldn’t just say okay, moving on to the next item. There’s good reason for that. They want to make sure she’s not rejecting medication out of hand simply because she has some sort of fear of medication or other irrational belief that prevents her from enjoying the remaining time she has. But since there isn’t a common chart, and even if there was there wouldn’t be time to share the information between each specialist, we have to go through the whole explanation from the previous paragraph every time.

That’s really tough for someone who can’t talk, and who has to type up the reasons and responses on a speech device. What I can explain in about 30 seconds will take her 4 or 5 minutes. Now, actually a few times I did step in and explain this, after asking mom if I could do the explanation. But it still takes a lot out of her, and there’s always a slightly differently worded well, could you consider it this way thing from the doctors that my mom needs to answer.

By and large, I’m really impressed with the A.L.S. clinic. Having access to people who know the latest and greatest with regard to A.L.S. treatment is wonderful, even if there’s not a lot of practical results. And it sure beats having to make two trips or worse nine trips to each kind of specialist. But it’s tough on my mom. A.L.S. often causes exaggerated emotional responses, particular laughing and crying, clinically. Add that on top of dealing with a fatal illness that requires major life changes. She’s fatigued and tired and emotionally raw. That’s the base. Then 9 visits one after the other with many of them very pressure filled. It’s been a rough day for my mom.

Watching that is pretty rough for me too. Participating in it takes a huge emotional toll. My mom being unwilling to let me help more is hard. I have some skills as a former manager that could make a lot of her daily life less stressful, without her losing any independence. It would mean living nearer to her most days. She has told me not to do this though. She doesn’t want me to distance myself from my friends, and she wants me in Seattle to take care of my grandparents. Plus, there are other family things tied in to this that make it even more troubling for me.

I really need to see a counselor.

I also need an emotional refuge, and I don’t have it. I’ve got some pieces of it, but not everything. Mentoring is my lifeline. Jason gets my mind off my troubles. And a small group of friends has gone above and beyond to prop me up. But what I don’t have is a tight-knit group of friends who yell out “Norm!” as I go to a familiar place every day. No June Cleaver waiting to hang up my coat either. I know, having such things isn’t actually that common. T.V. isn’t reality. But goddamn it sure is attractive, and I wish I had it right now.

Fuck. I really am a wreck tonight.