Topic: Daily Eruptions
Just after I uploaded my last post, I stumbled onto a site called The Diary of a Reluctant Housewife. I haven't read far into it, but the current post at the time was for December 27 in which she talks about the expensive ways in which she's tried to get organized. She goes on to suggest a free pocket organizer, called the PocketMod--made from a single sheet of paper--which you can make yourself at www.pocketmod.com. It's an interesting concept, and I have already created one for myself as a test. The difficulty I'm having is in deciding how I want to use it. It has pages that are meant to be used all year, pages for one month, pages for one week, and list and note pages that could be used daily. The one I created has a yearly calendar, a monthly deadlines page (for one month only), an interesting although somewhat mystifying weekly page about Benjamin Franklin's chosen virtues to live by, and then lined pages for notes. I think I need to decide whether I want to use this as an annual reference book, as a weekly tool to help me keep track of my priorities and deadlines, or as a daily tool to help me track to-do tasks and priorities, much like the system I used in college with a daily notecard. Then, of course, I need to redesign my PocketMod for the intended purpose. The other option I'm considering is making several of them and stapling them together into my own little book. That way I could get longer use out of it and use it for more functions. The downside to that option is that as it gets bigger, it becomes less likely that I will carry it with me everywhere I go as it is intended. Check it out for yourself....
I must have been on something of a caffeine buzz last night from the amount of Ghirardelli I've been eating (thanks to my Aunt Helen ;) ), because even though Hans and I went to bed after midnight, I couldn't sleep. I got up at 1:00 and read three more hours of The Time Traveler's Wife. I'm still absolutely in love, although I was reading the section about a particularly difficult time in their relationship. I was amazed when one of the entries was for September 11, 2001. The attacks were not a surprise to the two main characters, but they sat in front of the television holding a baby and watched the second tower get hit and collapse. I sat on the couch by myself in the middle of the night holding the book and bawled. It is still amazing to me how much power that event has over me and how easily accessed the emotions of that morning are even four years later. I think the passage struck me especially because it mirrored my experience that morning. Candy dropped Brendan off to us on her way to work just after I'd seen the second tower come down live on television. I sat and clung to him and cried and felt like the only thing that was real was the baby I was holding in my arms as I watched the continuing coverage and the slow release of information about the Pentagon crash and the Pennsylvania crash, until Hans finally made me turn it off because he thought I was causing too much stress in Brendan. We sat and watched the Seattle Space Needle out our back patio door and waited for it to collapse in the wave of attacks we fully expected to flow from east coast to west, and stood on our balcony listening when we realized that all the air traffic had been grounded. We were used to seeing anywhere from three to eight planes in the SeaTac air space any time we looked. I know lots of writers have written about 9/11, but this is the first time I've encountered it in a book. Jarring, and amazing, and yet it felt only right that she included it. It had to be there in this book about love and time and dislocation and the possible next evolution of the human species.
Thoughts captured by Kristine
at 10:44 AM EST
Updated: Friday, December 30, 2005 11:13 AM EST