The Burrow
"If you always do what interests you, at least one person is pleased." (Katherine Hepburn)
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Apparently, I Hit A Nerve
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Nobody Understands TV
Little Cuter and SIR are considering cutting their cable.
Our provider is no longer contracted with ABC, which is now a problem since TBG has entered his Sports Deprivation Season and is forced to follow professional basketball, many games of which are on ABC.
You would think that this would be a problem with a solution, and I'm sure you're right. There ought to be a way to send my computer's input to my television. They tempt me with apps names like CastTV, which I download and then am unable to use.
We pay Xfinity a hefty fee each month for cable and internet. There's streaming music on a surround sound system inside and outside the house. It's fun when I'm swimming laps, not so much when I'm trying to have a conversation in the living room.
Since I first posted about this I've been asking random people if they understand TV these days. The first person who says yes will be hired to explain it to me.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Here's Monday's Post
I was peeved and I used you to hear my rants and I typed until I felt better and that was supposed to be Friday's post. At least it was supposed to be Friday's post, if only I had remembered to click Publish.
Not wanting you to feel neglected since I messed up my every day schedule, here, without extraneous verbiage, are the pictures from Grandma's Garden that were to be (with extraneous verbiage) Monday's post.
It's a follow-up to Thursday's post about painting pots for the faculty and staff. (And yes, this is a shameless plug for someone new to The Burrow to jump around and see what we're all about.)
Monday, April 27, 2026
I Am Taking It Personally
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Don't Worry
I went to sleep before I published Friday's post.
It will all work out over the weekend, I promise.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Notes from Grandma's Garden
asked to be dizzy-fied, and threw the offending particles herself never really came up.
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| We don't remember what the dead plant was, but it really doesn't matter. It didn't take long for a 5th grader with the snips asked permission to prune it. |
Today, another solitary gardener and I watered those soil filled pots and planted basil seeds in one row of them. Pre-watering is an experiment I'm doing. I don't want to drown the seeds but I want them to have moisture to germinate. Tomorrow we will plant others in dry soil and we will see if this makes a difference.
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Happy Earth Day
This is the 8th post I ever wrote, back in 2009. I've updated it just a little, but republish it here for the 17th time.
Created in large part by U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson, in the world of 1970 it was a touchy-feely alternative to the harsher realities of the anti-Vietnam War protests. War was such an uncomfortable subject and arguing against it made your parents wonder why they were spending tuition dollars while you were telling the lawfully elected President of the United States of America that you knew more than he did. With your picture in the crowd on the front page of the NY Times, at 18 years of age, no less.
Earth Day had teach-in's. They were more fun than sit-in's, which invariably involved police and disciplinary action. They were less fun than be-in's, which owed more to Timothy Leary and The Grateful Dead than to anything political or practical. Teach-in's were earnest and had hand-outs and statistics and pictures of desolate landscapes ravaged by the cruelty of man. There was science and legislation and outrage and lots of free tree give-aways.
Earth Day had no mandatory family gatherings. It required no gift giving, no card sending. You went outside and did something - cleaned a playground, weeded a median strip, planted one of those free trees. You felt good because you were doing good.
And Mother Earth was grateful.
Now there is Earth Week. Were this still 1970, there would be protests about the idea being co-opted by the man. Instead, Sheryl Crow is designing re-useable grocery bags for Whole Foods and Wal-Mart is selling others next to the discounted paper towels.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Fact and Fiction
I have been re-reading John Scalzi's Old Man's War series. Science Fiction is not my favorite genre. If not for the books Big Cuter recommends I wouldn't read it at all. It's too much science and the fiction gets lost for me in the details, most of which I don't understand at all.
Ender's Game came to me after he read it in middle school. It's still one of his important books (along with Plato's Republic.... yes, I know.....), and for good reason. It opened my eyes to the possibilities within the genre, but nothing grabbed me that way until I found John Scalzi.
I saw him at the Tucson Festival of Books in March and picked up the books soon thereafter. They are filled with many types of sentient beings. Some are asteroids. Some are room sized bugs with arms designed for slashing. Some are human, although some of those humans are green, with self repairing bodies.
Not all of them have consciousness.
What that meant was hard for me to grasp, and Scalzi seems to recognize that some of us might have issues. Several times the story takes a little leap backwards, with someone/thing explains the gift of consciousness once again. Two of the major characters were part of a race that was sentient but had no notion of being individuals.
I'm still grappling with it.
So, apparently is the robotics community.
NPR told me about robots that can be trained to make my bed, empty my dishwasher, wash and fold the laundry.... the list went on. The question facing the designers is not Can they be taught to figure other things out on their own? but Should we really be creating thinking robots?
And there I was, back trying to figure out if the robot thinks but doesn't recognize another robot as a similar but distinct being does it lack consciousness? And is that a good thing or a bad thing?
This post has taken a long time to write, because my brain is off on tangent after tangent, trying to figure it out. I'm having a hard time finding the words. That's not a bad thing. I love it when a book captivates me this way.
Monday, April 20, 2026
Standing Up
Friday, April 17, 2026
Buying Gas
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Ooops
How do you know that you don't know something if you don't know it?
This was the question TBG posed after recognizing that 75% of the kerfuffle over the doctor's return call was not because the doctor didn't make it but because modern technology was, in this instance, totally inaccessible to him.
He was unaware of the feature that would have avoided a lot of angst.
And so he asked how we could hold him responsible for not knowing something he didn't know. If he didn't know it how would he know to ask for it?
All of these are reasonable interpretations of an uncomfortable situation. But TBG is right - he was an idiot.









