We started practicing over a month ago. Over a week ago the human clipped my bridle path. This week preparations got intense with clipping my feet and ears. Yesterday morning, Phil backed the truck up to my horse trailer, saddled me and we were off to the horse expo. We found a great parking space so Mags wouldn’t have too long a walk to the expo center where we perform. It was also away from the scary trains.
Tonight we commit gluttony for the philharmonic. This is the big fund raiser of the year. Tomorrow Timer and I perform at the horse expo. I'll need to report on both with some help from him.
We spiffied up Timer yesterday given our schedule today. He'll need a bit of brush up tomorrow as he'll likely find some sand tonight. He's apprehensive I think. Something must be up. We've been drilling weekly for 5 weeks and now a bath. He also had his annual maintenance fromt vet: teeth, shots, and ahhh etc.
The weather continues to be great until this morning when we woke up to a snow covering the grass but it was gone by noon. I swim 1800 to 1900 yards every Tu and Th and pump iron Mo and We.
I ride most days. I rode to today as th snow was gone by PM.
Marg
We are getting ready to start tearing apart the kitchen tommorrow.
I'm trying to load a copy of Sue doing archeology in New Jersey. In February. I guess you can see the cold from the white stuff on the ground and the way they dressed. I'll try and figure it out. If not, let me know and I'll email you a copy.
Phil
We seem to have the kitchen almost ready for remodeling. The plan in new counter tops and floors. Perhaps Marg or I will post some photos when it is completed.
Timer and I are going to start drill practice tomorrow. He gave me the day off so I could rest and be ready. I also have some sore muscles from my new exercise program. I've been working out for a couple of years, but the Y has new equipment that will be better once my muscles catch on to it. I did ride a bit yesterday and worked on some of the kinds of turns that will be in the drill.
I understand that unless you are "members" you have trouble commenting on these entries. One of the reasons M and became members is so we could better read and I guess respond to Tim's entries. Membership at this level -- note the advertisement--is "FREE". were I willing to pay you would be subjected to ads but I'd have to spend money.
We are off to gymnastics at BSU this evening. Inexpensive entertainment and we 've been going to long we have favorite gymnasts to watch.
We are really enjoying the Big TEN network. Go Badger Basketball. It was great to see them beat up on Iso and the Spartans last night.
Yesterday the contractor competed the template for our new kitchen. The equipment is fantastic for doing at template.
Picked up Sue and one of her crew at the airport from her excavations in New Jersey. She says the weather back east is not as good as we have.
I had a good workout on the Strive equipment at the Y this morning. Check it out on the net. The philosophy interests me.
Beautiful warm spring day. Swam 36 laps -3,600 feet at the Y today in less than an hour. Old standard! We had our kitchen template done for new counter tops.
Phil
I just got back from my work out on the strive machines (like nautilous). This is my second series and I think I now have most of the adjustments correct and the starting weights figured out. I'm keeping a paper record--too hard to take the laptop to the Y--which I 'll adjust in a month or so.
> having an "msn" website where their own tech folks say the spell checker
> is incompatible with their newest and greatest operating system, Visa? Is
> idiocy to big a word for them? You know one that says just cause you're
> rich doesn't mean you're really smart.
For weeks since moving to msn, a minor irritation is that the msn editor doesn't spell check and when it does, it's inconsistent. Having had better luck with Quest tech support then microsoft's, I called them. They called MSoft who said it's an ongoing issue we don't know how to fix. Cretins? Imbeciles?
Great concert last night.i
A few months ago, I switched from just swimming an hour to counting laps. My pattern is 100 one lap ( two lengths or 100 feet) of breast stroke, one of backstroke, one of free, and one of modified backstroke. I repeat this pattern three times (12 laps of 120 feet. Then I slip on finas do 12 more laps to keep the cardiovascular moving. On 8 of the laps I use a kick-board and vary my leg motion. On the other four I service dive to the bottom of the pool 13 feet unless my four year old swimming buddy is going to the 1 or 3 meter board. Finally i shed the fins and kick board and do 3 more of the first pattern reversing the order--modified back...breast. I've been slipping in bonus laps. If at the end of any pattern I'm 2-3 minutes ahead of schedule I do one more lap. I completed 39 laps of 3,900 feet Thursday. I'll report to myself next week since I doubt anyone else cares.
A few weeks ago when I was swimming my laps in the 5 lanes or so that they leave for diving, a woman with a little boy asked if he could try the diving board. I moved my laps two the lane marker side. He is about 1 meter high, so he's diving at least his own size each time. One he dove three times his size. Once. He now does tricks when he jumps with the creativity one expects from a four year old. He waves at me as he goes by presumably to let me know to get out of his way.
Go Badgers! We are really enjoying the BIG TEN network. Mostly Badger Men's Basketball but we've watched some wrestling, gymnastics ....
Last night we watched BSU gymnasts beat Sacramental State.
A Modern Conundrum:
When Work's Invisible,
So Are Its Satisfactions
When David Fahl worked for an energy reseller, which bought and sold energy from generating companies, he noticed that getting things done right wasn't always as high a priority as making deadlines, meeting deliveries or being on budget.
"You can get all those things done without doing any good work," he says. It wore on him and didn't give him a sense of accomplishment. "Not even the marketing people could come up with a plausible explanation for why the company existed," he says.
In the information age, so much is worked on in a day at the office but so little gets done. In the past, people could see the fruits of their labor immediately: a chair made or a ball bearing produced. But it can be hard to find gratification from work that is largely invisible, or from delivering goods that are often metaphorical. You can't even leave your mark on a document in increasingly paperless offices. It can be even harder trying to measure it all. That may explain why to-do listers write down tasks they've already completed just to be able to cross them off.
"Not only is work harder to measure but it's also harder to define success," says Homa Bahrami, a senior lecturer in Organizational Behavior and Industrial Relations at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business. "The work is intangible or invisible, and a lot of work gets done in teams so it's difficult to pinpoint individual productivity."
She says information-age employees measure their accomplishment in net worth, company reputation, networks of relationships, and the products and services they're associated with -- elements that are more perceived and subjective than that field of corn, which either is or isn't plowed.
Companies should create meaningful short-term goals. Instead, "managers create all sorts of surrogate measures that they can measure, like PowerPoint slide counts and progress charts," says consultant Tim Horan. "The person doing the landscaping has a better sense of accomplishment."
Jon Williams once worked in an auto-claims department where the number of new-claim calls, which could take a half hour, were tallied with the same weight as brief reminder calls to customers. Even so, his greatest sense of achievement was transforming an initially angry and frustrated customer into someone who was satisfied and even laughing. "That wasn't measured at all," he says.
The difficulty of putting your finger on what you've accomplished gives employees pangs. James Ault recently visited a municipal park where he worked in maintenance while in college. He saw the same signs he painted, the same electrical job he wired, and the same trees he planted 35 years ago. Now, he works on state energy policy where he spends countless hours debating policy issues.
"I've said to my wife on multiple occasions, 'It would be nice to be an electrician,' " he says. "You can take pride in what you've accomplished."
At closing time, work doesn't seem completed, just temporarily abandoned. As much as he loves his job, insurance broker Ryan Bowles envies Fred Flintstone's exit from work in the quarry at day's end. "He seems so happy sliding down that dinosaur's tail when the whistle-bird blows," he says.
Similarly, Jane Vawter, a management consultant, is jealous of ground-control engineers celebrating their spacecraft's first flight. "That must be a tremendous feeling," she says, "one I will never know."
She has learned how to garner a sense of accomplishment from the work she produces, instead of the response it receives. She loves to do needlework in her spare time just to control the process from start to finish.
The loss of such control over how and when a job is done is one reason the Industrial Revolution was resisted, says Gregory Clark, a professor of economics at University of California, Davis. "It seemed like the complete destruction of the value of work to people," he explains.
Consequently, many employers had to pay workers up to a 40% premium to live under the employer's control, he adds.
These days, we're one step further removed from the finished product. Employees have to wait for the gratification that comes with seeing a goal finally realized. "The average delay is much, much longer for the average worker today," says Robert Frank, a professor at Cornell's Johnson Graduate School of Management. And behavioral science notes we have difficulty with a reward delayed.
Maybe that's why Home Depot's aisles are packed with do-it-yourselfers and why a colleague is complaining of soreness from spreading mulch.
Mechanical engineer Robert Schneider at least gets to see the ball bearings he designed being produced in the manufacturing plant downstairs from his office. But he spends a lot of time researching things that don't directly translate into a finished product. "Much of the work I do goes unnoticed by anyone but me," he says. "I need to rely on myself to know I am doing worthwhile work."
Write to Jared Sandberg at jared.sandberg@wsj.com
Back for the Wisconsin Game. They managed to squeak by the rodents from Minnesota but they certainly didn't eat them up or beat the spread. Idaho Badgers eat yellow gophers.
Sue came over to use Mag's software to do her income taxes.
I took my second ride in February today and find that the blasted snow has caused my riding muscles to get a little out of shape. I could feel a little sourness which will stretch out but I do wish I'd been on horseback more in December and January. I rode further today so I should stretch things well. M and Razi exercised too though it's hard to give the Raz enough. All told not a real busy day.
