Lucky, Licensed, and Laughing

Luckily for me, I was able to join AAA for free and renew my license, complete with Real ID upgrade. But, I’m troubled by how the licensing system appears to be working. While I was at the AAA office, quite a few other people came in for DMV-related business. It seems to me that if the if AAA weren’t picking up so much of its slack, the DMV would never be able to get away with offering so few appointments. But AAA is not a free service (I was only able to join for free because my husband has a paid membership). For something as important as a driver’s license–which is needed not just for driving, but also for voting–there should never be anything standing in your way. You shouldn’t have to drive to distant locations, or pay for a AAA membership, or worse yet, be completely unable to renew your license before it expires. I can’t be the only person to have run into problems finding an appointment, and I wonder how others are faring.

P.S. I found out that the birth certificate that I have always thought of as official because it’s original is in fact totally useless for identification purposes. It was issued by the hospital, not the state, and its fancy seal, which looks at first glance like a notary seal, only has the name of the hospital on it. Huh. What’s the point of the certificate then? Why did my parents give it to me, and why have I bothered to keep it all these years? Anyway, it’s a good thing I have a notarized copy of my “real” birth certificate and that I brought it with me to my license renewal appointment.

P.P.S. I didn’t have to get Real ID at this time, but I decided to do it just because I was going to have to eventually anyway. Yes, I was annoyed at having to jump through the same stupid hoops that I’d had to jump through to get my original driver’s license. But I didn’t say so while I was at my appointment. I had promised myself that I wouldn’t, and when, inevitably, I felt the urge to say it, I turned it into my own private joke and had a quiet little laugh instead, thereby sparing the AAA employee from having to listen to me gripe.

I grow more saintly with every passing year. 😉

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WTF, DMV!

After WEEKS of trying to get a Real ID appointment at the DMV, and being offered only appointments at impossible times and improbable locations, today I was FINALLY offered a whole week’s worth of appointments at various times, including some appointments at the closest DMV. It was like finding the Holy Grail.

Or so I thought. When I looked a little closer, I realized that all of the appointments were for the week AFTER my birthday. WTF! Seriously, does the State not want me to get a Real ID, ever?

My next thought was, “You want to play that way, DMV? Fine. I’ll just get a regular renewal.” The DMV’s response was, “Ha-ha, no. This time you need a new picture, so you still have to come in, and you still can’t have an appointment before your birthday. Gotcha!”

So now it looks like my only option for renewing before expiration is through AAA. Am I a member? Good question. If my husband followed through with adding me when there was that “Add a Household Member For Free!” promotion, then I’m a member. If he didn’t, then UGH, I am going to be twice as irritated, because I am going to have to pay extra money to renew my license. The bright side: it looks like AAA does Real ID, so maybe I can get the upgrade while I’m at it.

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Reading Report: Late July 2023

I recently finished reading A Crossword to Die For by Nero Blanc and gave it a B grade. In this mystery, a crossword editor suspects that her father, who died from a heart attack on his way to visit her, was in fact murdered, so she and her PI husband investigate his death. The story leaned a little too heavily on certain red herrings, but it kept my interest for the duration, which is one of the most important things when it comes to murder mysteries. The book contained six crosswords, some of which provided hints regarding the mystery, but I was disinclined to stop reading long enough to solve the puzzles and also unwilling to write in the book. So, I skipped all but one of them, which kinda defeated the purpose of the crossword gimmick. Whatever. I like reading, and I like crosswords, but I don’t like them together.

Currently reading: This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone, Taran Wanderer by Lloyd Alexander (Book 4 in the Chronicles of Prydain), Aimless Love by Billy Collins, and Le petit fantôme by Emma Tennant (traduit de l’anglais par Lan du Chastel)

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7/25/2023

  • It was a long drive, through thunderstorms and flooded roads, to my new music teacher’s house. I went to two wrong houses before I found the right one (so embarrassing). But I did finally get there. And now I have homework…
  • Today was Livia’s second day of theater camp. She’s been upgraded from “ensemble member” to a speaking role. Hooray for Livia!
  • Last night my father called to tell me that my Aunt Laura had died. Laura was my aunt by marriage, and I didn’t know her well. She was a part of my childhood world, though, and forever a part of my memory. I’m sorry that she’s gone.
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A Loss

https://www.npr.org/2023/04/02/959184720/ryuichi-sakamoto-a-godfather-of-electronic-pop-has-died

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Hi, Kiwi!

We have two hummingbird feeders in front of our dining-room window, and they get a lot of traffic. There is one particular hummingbird–short and squat, with an incredibly bright orange throat–who not only visits the feeders, but also perches on a nearby tomato cage to preen himself. Livia dubbed him Kiwi, and the name stuck. He’s become such a familiar presence that it’s not unusual to hear someone say “Hi, Kiwi!” as they pass by the window.

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To Be Chopin

As I’ve said before, these days I don’t want to play Chopin as much as I want to be Chopin. But music composition is complicated, and I can’t figure it all out on my own. I tried the book route, but without anyone or anything to keep me trained on the task, I soon got distracted from it. Berklee, alas, is still too expensive. There’s only one other thing left to try: a music composition teacher. So I looked for one, and found one, and my first lesson will be on Tuesday. Wish me luck.

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Into the Woods

I went for a walk in the woods today, inappropriately appareled, and will no doubt bitterly regret it tonight when I can’t sleep because of the dozen mosquito bites on my arms. My goal initially had been only to check my property for blueberries. But aside from the blueberry bush next to the house, which is just ripening now, I found no berries. Disappointed, I headed deeper into the woods, knowing that I wasn’t dressed for it, but determined to find blueberries anyway.

I eventually found a lot of what were probably huckleberries, most of them not quite ripe, as well as a few low-bush blueberries, most of them small, even for wild blueberries. Oh, well. Maybe I’ll have better blueberry luck next year.

And stupidly, because I had expected to stay on my own property, I didn’t take my camera with me into the woods. So naturally there were things I wanted to take pictures of. The rattlesnake plantain was starting to bloom, and I found a whole new wildflower. I’m going to have to go back into the woods soon if I want to capture them with my camera. But if I do, I’m going to wear a long-sleeved shirt, that’s for sure!

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Reading Report: From Earlier This Year…

1. The Last Magician by Lisa Maxwell. Story: Among the millions living in New York City are those known as the Mageus, people born with powerful magical abilities, but they are trapped in the city by a magical barrier known as the “Brink.” If they cross the Brink, they lose their magic and their will to live. It was a powerful group known as the Order who made the Brink. Having no natural magic of their own, these wealthy men depend upon the power of “elemental magic” (alchemy, etc.). They despise the Mageus, and are determined to eliminate them. A Mageus named Professor Lachlan has a plan to stop the Order and destroy the Brink. His ward, Esta, can travel through time, so he sends her back to the early 20th century. There she joins the gang of Mageus who are planning to steal the “Ars Arcana,” a powerful book of magic that contains the key to bringing down the Brink. My take: I loved the premise, and the characters were interesting enough, but the book dragged. It seemed like it wanted to be a heist with a magical twist, but the plot got bogged down in a slow-to-ignite romance. Toward the end, the pacing became erratic, sometimes plodding through dialogue, sometimes rushing confusingly through action scenes. Then, during a dialogue scene heavy with exposition, a character said, “You’re standing here monologuing like some cartoon villain.” Indeed, that’s exactly what was happening. Maybe the author was trying to be funny, but to me, the line implied that she knew there was a problem and decided to hang a lantern on it instead of fixing it. The scope of the novel had suggested that it was a standalone, but I was left with the incomplete and unsatisfying ending of a series starter. Ugh. I gave the novel a B grade for being interesting but not a keeper. I will not seek out the sequel.

2. Winnie-the-Pooh by A.A. Milne. All the characters–Christopher Robin, Pooh, Piglet, Owl, Eeyore, Kanga, and Roo–are simple and silly and totally delightful. I gave the book an A+ for pure charm, and I’ve added the sequel, The House at Pooh Corner, to my mental list of books to read someday.

3. The Great Gilly Hopkins by Katherine Paterson. Gilly Hopkins is an unlikable character, mean to everyone who tries to help her, not to mention a racist. She’s in the foster care system, though, and everyone knows that kids act out when they’re in pain. I thought I’d be able to forgive her as long as she grew as a character by the end, which she did. BUT, the ending was a huge downer, so I gave the book only a B grade.

Currently reading: Taran Wanderer by Lloyd Alexander (Book 4 in the Chronicles of Prydain), A Crossword to Die For by Nero Blanc, Aimless Love by Billy Collins, and Le petit fantôme by Emma Tennant (traduit de l’anglais par Lan du Chastel)

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Midnight Poetry

I’m only just a few pages into Billy Collins’s Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems, but I’m already a huge fan. I loved one of the poems so much that I felt compelled to go downstairs in my PJs to read it to my husband. Now here, for your enjoyment, is an animated version of that poem.

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