Deb, so sorry for your loss.
Deb, so sorry for your loss.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Thanks for the condolences. Oddly enough, after the funeral I heard lots of family stories that my Grandmother never told, like how she almost died of a miscarriage, how her father killed a man in a pool hall and later shot himself, some inherited schizophrenia in at least 4 generations of the family (not my branch, luckily).
Oil is good, grease is better.
2007 Peter Mooney w/S&S couplers/Terry Butterfly
1993 Bridgestone MB-3/Avocet O2 Air 40W
1980 Columbus Frame with 1970 Campy parts
1954 Raleigh 3-speed/Brooks B72
Deb, so sorry for your loss. The family stories are often fascinating.
Pam
Deb, I'm sorry for your loss.
My grandmother lived to be 100. Her father shot a man, too, for stealing a hog. When he appeared before the judge, the judge let him go, because my great grandfather had 9 kids and the man was stealing their livelihood.
It was a different time.
Karen
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insidious ungovernable cardboard
Yea, I found out lots of weird things about my family. One of my great grandfathers was the first Jewish policeman in Massachusetts. He was sent to quell the riots in Lawrence, MA (a big union-management thing, I think it's called the Bread and Roses riot) in the early 1900s, got his head bashed in, and never was the same after that. He died when I was 2, so I have no memory of him. One of my grandmothers grew up on a potato farm on Long Island; I found that out at her funeral and was shocked, because I only knew her as a very snobby fashionista, who still looked perfect when she died at age 91. Oh and the great grandfather who escaped from Russia, rubbed soap in his eyes, to get out of the Czar's army. It gave him permanent cataracts. My grandfather who worked until the day he died was a football and track star at Boston University in the 1920s. I didn't find out that he went to law school and never practiced because he flunked the bar due his poor handwriting until I was in my twenties. He refused to take the test again. I think I found out when he got invited to attend his 50th class reunion to get an honorary PhD!
I have a job interview with another hospital next Fri. Right after 3 double shifts in a row on t/w/th. Anyone have any thoughts on how to look bright and fresh at 7am, without caffeine, after working from 8-midnight for three days? I'll take all sane suggestions.![]()
Oh, that's gonna bruise...![]()
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Only the suppressed word is dangerous. ~Ludwig Börne
Make sure you get good sleep between shifts. If you get off at midnight, can you get home and to bed at a reasonable hour? At least get some sleep before your 7:00 am interview? Make sure you take a shower before you go - usually most folks look fresh after a shower no matter how tired they are, they just wilt later. Why not have a cup-of-jo enroute? And it is a hospital interview, so they should understand crazy shift work. Not quite like trying to get into something completely different, where getting off at midnight would strike them as odd.
Beth