Oh, Dear!

Betty
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Another “oh, dear!”:

It wouldn’t be hard to find a lot more — I spend a lot of time learning about what is going on in the world, and also countering it with some of the suggestions in the food-for-thought videos. And I’m blessed with a taste for unsophisticated, silly things.

For instance I love Henry the dragon.

Wizard of Id
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And Snoopy. I think of this one a lot when I manage to write something I like.

Snoopy
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And this one is crazy enough to be included.

Andertoons
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Hurray for silliness! Sometimes for me it’s the only way to cope with the craziness of the world.

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More Great Teamwork

Betty
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I love the way their different interests mesh.

Here is another food-for-thougth video:

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This Part Will Be a Lot More Complicated

Betty
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Balloon Update:
After 17 weeks we finally disposed of it.

It had a long run!

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They Make a Great Team!

Betty
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And here is another food-for-thought video.

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We Can’t Believe Everything We Think

When I wrote Wasted — A Golden Opportunity I assumed Betty and Bub’s boy was still a young child because he was so short. But then I realized if he were a teen Betty and Bub were doing the right thing. Teens need to start separating from their parents and vice versa.

I checked with AI and sure enough, the boy is a teen, and his name is Junior. Hurray for AI for making it easy to check our assumptions!

This was yesterday’s strip:

Betty
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It looks as if Junior will do just fine in life.

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Secrets of Happiness

Betty
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That reminds me of

The secret of happiness is to ask yourself every day:
  (1) What’s good about my life?
  (2) What needs to be done?
  (3) How can I get this done and enjoy the process?

And this,

This is the real secret of life — to be completely engaged with what you are doing in the here and now. And instead of calling it work, realize it is play.
—Alan Watts

And this,

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Good for Them!

Betty
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I love Betty and Bub because they are so good-natured and unpretentious. And here they are enjoying the process of renovating their basement, not just focusing on the end result. Good for them and their creators, Gary Delainey and Gerry Rasmussen. They make me happy, and I’m grateful.

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Wasted — A Golden Opportunity

Betty
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I didn’t expect this, but Andy and I can identify with plunging into a project and seeing what happens. We bought our land up in the mountains in 1976, fifty years ago this fall. And the number of projects we’ve started without knowing exactly what we were doing are too numerous to count. If we didn’t get the results we wanted, we would just try again — or something else — using the new knowledge we gained.

So I have no problem with what Betty and Bub are trying, the only thing that bothers me is they are shutting their child out of the process. For me one of the best things about the land is that Kaitlin was involved in it all for the first 8 (?) years, from when she was 7 to about when she was in high school. (She and Torben are involved again now, but mostly from a distance.)

Here are a couple of pictures of hooking up the pump for our first well. (The well wasn’t deep enough and we eventually had to dig a deeper one.)

I understand that the comic strip Betty is mostly about Betty and Bub, but it still bothers me that they are depriving their son of a golden opportunity for learning and sharing.

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I Trust Betty on This One

Betty
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I’m guessing Betty won’t have any problem breaking the job down into smaller steps. What do you think?

On another subject, I read about this alarm clock, Clocky, yesterday.

It’s for heavy sleepers who reach over and shut off the alarm and go back to sleep. It’s not only loud, it moves — the person has to get out of bed and sometimes chase it to shut it off.

It’s not something Andy or I would ever use, but the idea cracks me up. I especially liked this review by A. Bartoli:

I needed help. I like to sleep, and sometimes things like work get in the way of my sleeping. In general I enjoy alarm clocks of various sorts. Rather, I should say, I have had alarm clocks of various sorts, since I get used to them and then I just turn them off and go back to sleep. I would get to the point that I could get up, walk across the room, turn off the alarm clock, and go back to bed. Or I would just hear the alarm and ignore it until it stopped. With some alarm clocks this can take 10-20 minutes. This is the mark of a true professional Sleeper, like myself.

When Clocky arrived, I was skeptical, but the little robot looked quite friendly. With the operating manual, everything was simple enough, and easily programmed. Clocky came to me all the way from China, but he was the genuine article. I set him down on the bureau in my bedroom. “Hello, Clocky!” I said. He was silent.

“Clocky, is the alarm active?” Still, no reply. He was not very friendly to start out. Very quiet. Not like Siri. I double checked him, and everything seemed to be operating properly though.

Well, the next morning at 5 am, he suddenly broke the silence. My god, he was speaking in tongues at top volume. The constant variation in tone, pitch, and pattern was disconcerting, even … alarming. I literally leapt out of bed and walked over to where the little robot was whirling about. A gentle pat on the head soothed him instantly, and he quieted down. I went back to sleep promptly, only to be awakened mere minutes later when he let out another series of cacophonous wails. Again I ran over to him. Now he had hopped down on the floor, and had got part way under the bed. This time I picked him up firmly and poked him in the right eye. He quieted down in a hurry. I was wide awake now, heart racing. I could almost hear Clocky saying: And why consider the mote that is in my eye, but not the log in your own? He was quite right. I got up to face the day.

The little robot has fast become an essential member of the household. No matter how many times his alarm awakens me, I never become accustomed to it. On one occasion, after jumping from the bureau, he developed a rattle, but a quick disassembly proved it to be a loose fleck of solder that had broken off, and all connections were in perfect order. Except for his piercing wail in the morning, he remains taciturn, but I think now this simply reflects his serious nature.

He clearly enjoyed writing the review, and I’m guessing the creators had fun designing and making it. Good for them!

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I Needed Help With This One

Betty
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I didn’t understand this one, especially the word “reno” so I asked AI. The “reno game” just means renovation, and Harry Potter would have been good at it because he has a magic wand to do the work. Bub doesn’t so he’s going to stop dawdling and get to work.

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