How to Blog – 100 Memories, from American Airlines to Family Feud

We are closing in on 100 episodes of “Downsize, Maybe” since the blog began appearing in ChicagoNow. Over 32,000 reader hits (I know, some sites do that in 20 minutes.) The name of the blog refers to our construction project, but regular readers know that we have talked lots of things in addition to whether the windows should have muntins, or how high should the ceiling be in the loft. Some politics, some medicine (particularly laboratory based) and some attempts at humor or satire have found there way here. As the century mark approaches I thought I would look back at some of my favorite pieces as well as some of the most widely read ones.  Each is linked to the original posting. Feel free to read, reread, or just browse.

And there were many, many more. So thanks to all the readers, the commenters, the e-mailers, and the biggest thanks to Barb, for never once saying “Why did you write that???”

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Five Things We Have Learned About New Home Construction

kevinIf you build it…

…they will come.

It has been fifteen months since we started this project.From an idea, to an empty lot, then a plan. The excitement of a hole in the ground, and finally a real structure. We have walls and ceilings. We have plumbing pipe and electrical conduit, insulation and dry wall. Each room has its shape. The main floor, loft and basement each have their own flavor. The finished product, while not quite in sight, will soon be rising over the horizon. Thanksgiving in our new home may yet be possible.

What have we learned so far? Five rules we can share:

Raff Construction Rules

  1.  Raff’s Rule of Time Frames: In a construction project, time is meaningless. Financing delays, weather delays, contractor delays. All can make the project schedule evaporate. Balancing patience with cracking the whip is an art, as is finely tuning the good cop-bad cop approach. Learning to laugh also helps.
  1. Raff’s Rule of Hidden Surprises: In a construction project, you never know what is going to hit you next. Soil borings are great, but they aren’t perfect. Who knew about that one corner of the lot where the ground water level was higher than the borings predicted. And who would have known about all the extra water-proofing, sump pumps and architectural changes that higher water lever might lead to. I still don’t understand all the mechanics and engineering involved, but somehow our basement seemed to grow and grow.
  2. Raff’s Rule of Perspective: In a construction project, things look different when built then they did on paper. Perfectly adequate spaces on architectural drawings have a tendency to shrink when walls and ceilings close in. Sometimes the issues that arise are remediable. In our entrance foyer a change in lighting plans and furniture arrangement will solve the “problem.” Sometimes the issues are less remediable, as with our mud room coat closet that now looks much more like a broom closet. That’s OK, who ever wears a coat in Chicago?? We were given a warning on this before we started. A friend suggested we have the architectural drawings rendered in three dimensions. We didn’t do it. Our bad.
  3. Raff’s Rule of Ca$h Out: In a construction project, dollars flow downhill. The Hoover Dam couldn’t stop the tide of dollars rolling to the sea. Barb has found some cost savings measures, including finding the perfect floor tile at a warehouse type store we weren’t expecting much from. But since one of the reasons for making this move is to make my commute to work shorter, it is poetic justice that every change we make will just mean my retirement will move further into the future. As I have said before, it is all just karma.
  4. Raff’s Rule of Find the Fun: In a construction project, the opportunities are endless. Barb and I aren’t construction virgins, but this was the first time we really had total control and say over virtually every detail. Yes, that leads to sleepless nights and sometimes endless flip-flops. But it also gives the ultimate satisfaction when the bits and pieces do fall together and the vision that began 15 months ago starts to come together. Peace awaits us.

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In Tribute: My Mother and Aunt, the World’s Longest Sibling Rivalry

simon and garfunkleOld Friends,

Sat on their park bench like bookends.

Paul Simon- 1968

It is not very nice, but we call them “mushrooms.” Those elderly folks nudging their Oldsmobile’s and Cadillac’s along in front of you in the right hand lane, their white-grey puffs of hair just visible from behind, clouds above their seat backs. There were two of them in the car next to me, and as I sped ahead I could read GEMINI on the vanity license plate. Two sisters, two who would never be alone.

The ladies were not my mother and aunt, but twenty years ago they certainly could have been. Although they were not twins, in fact they were six years apart, my mother and her older sister lived the intertwined life of a love and sibling rivalry that stretched from cultured Vienna to Mayor Daley’s Chicago, from Freudian therapy to Aricept and Namenda.

My aunt Paula and mother Litzi were born in Vienna in 1913 and 1919, bookending the Great War. They didn’t speak much of their early lives, or perhaps I didn’t ask enough questions, so my knowledge of that time is sparse. I know they idolized their father, a small, quiet, artistic man holding a civil service job “with the railroad.” Paula, as the eldest, carried the imprimatur of the bright one, progressing through the best schools with the highest marks. My mother, perhaps a bit jealous, became the behavior problem. I believe it was an incident with a kitten that led to her visit with Sigmund Freud’s daughter Anna, a practicing child psychoanalyst. Ms. Freud was herself the youngest of six children, and apparently well versed in sibling rivalry. I can only surmise that whatever assistance she provided for my mother didn’t quite take.

Mom’s family was of the secular Jewish variety, but following the Anschluss in 1938, no Jew in Austria was safe. Paula was the first to escape, using little-spoken of family connections to receive a visa for the US. We recently stumbled across some of her documentation, chilling to see the Nazi symbols, surprising in the lack of the word Jüden. My mother and “the parents” were required to take a more circuitous route, including a year in England where my mother worked as a maid and somehow found herself spending a night in jail for some never clearly explained offense. Eventually they received the necessary papers and joined Paula in Chicago.

First in Hyde Park and then in Rogers Park, the family, including husbands for both of the sisters, stayed close. But there was one very significant difference. Paula, childless, continued her education, and having inherited her father’s artistic talent, earned a Master of Fine Arts Degree from the Art Institute of Chicago. She went on to become a leading art educator, taaching art history and becoming Assistant Dean at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. And Litzi? She became a mom. Linda and I were both born in the 1950’s, five years apart, and were her focus. We were public education, public transportation kids, easily the equivalent of a full time job.

The sibling rivalry entered the stage of “you have an education, and a job, and travel” vs “you have children and grandchildren.” Then the losses started coming. First Paula’s husband Poldi died of congestive heart failure, barely a month after saying the HaMotzi (blessing over bread) at our wedding. The next 15 years were a heated triangle, with my father resenting Paula and Paula resenting my father. After Dad passed away the ladies were alone together. Paula, who began to drive at age 60 on Poldi’s death, was the chauffeur, my mother was the grumbling passenger. The mushrooms were on the loose. They were inseparable, except for Paula’s activities at the Evanston Arts Center.She spoke fondly of her Print Class teacher Audrey, who was also a writer. It was not until many years later we made the connection between teacher Audrey and Audrey Niffenegger, the author of “The Time Traveller’s Wife.”

My sister’s tragic death in 1999 knocked the teeter-totter of its fulcrum. Mom’s sadness kept her from continuing to cover up just how much Paula’s ability to care for herself in her own apartment had faded. Barb and I intervened, insisting on, and assisting in, Paula’s resettling in a senior citizen apartment. Mom followed into her own apartment in the same building a few months later. It was environment in which Paula, as always the more sociable of the sisters, thrived, while my mother stewed. Paula still “had wheels,” and it was only after she drove my mother into a brick wall that we belatedly pulled her keys.

That car crash precipitated the slow decline that eventually led to Paula’s dementia and death. Mom’s final years followed a similar path, although we did discover the  cocktail of Aricept and Namenda that gave her an extra year or two of fairly good mental status. In the final moment of symmetry, the same devoted care giver was with each of them as they passed peacefully away.

Seeing those Gemini sisters slowly driving along brought it all back. May your sibling rivalry never keep you apart. Mushrooms rule!

 

 

 

Going for Gold in a Different Competition

Team LaboratoryI have never been a super fan of the Olympics, but like many of you I have been thrilled by the grace, strength and joyfulness of the US Women’s Gymnastic Team. The incredible aura they project, and their spirit of camaraderie and affection for their coaches has made watching them a pleasure. So in honor of the US team and the Five Olympic Rings, I thought I would explore the five part team that provides the results that leave our laboratory every day. Though I will describe them separately, just as the Olympic Rings are linked, so is each part of our team, all interdependent on each other.

In our first ring, we have our lab assistant team. While lab assistants vary in duties and titles at various labs, in our enterprise they are the like the springboard that gets the Olympians onto the balance beam. They get us going!  Arriving to the lab early in the morning, they are the first to get a look at the days specimens, matching containers, labels, test orders. As I have mentioned before, keeping patient identities correct on specimens is Job One. Our assistants are also responsible for the Gross Description of our biopsy specimens, counting the pieces of tissue in each jar, measuring the dimensions of each piece and preparing them for processing.

Our second ring, keeping the fast pace,  goes to our histology and cytology staffs. The histology team takes our biopsies and through multiple steps converts human tissue to ultrathin stained slices on glass slides. Patience, concentration and a deft hand are key, especially when operating the rotary microtome, the lab equivalent of the delicatessen salami slicer.  Our cytology staff is responsible for preparing urine specimens (yuck-but we ARE a urology practice) for bladder cancer evaluation. We use basic tests that are almost one hundred years old, as well as much more sophisticated tests that examine individual chromosomes as we help our clinicians battle this common malignancy.

The middle ring, the tent pole, is for our technologists in the areas known as “clinical” pathology. In a hospital or large commercial lab, this may constitute thousands of tests on blood and other body “fluids.” In our more specialized lab, we focus on a a handful of relevant blood tests, including PSA and testosterone, and bacterial cultures of urinary tract specimens looking for the microbes that causes pesky urinary tract infections. We also perform a special test to cut down on the risk of infection in men who will be undergoing prostate biopsies.

Pathologists get our next ring, heading for the home stretch. Trained physicians with extensive experience in laboratory medicine, it is our job to interpret the various findings in the lab, make diagnosis on the biopsy specimens, and generally guide the lab in the direction that best serves our clinical colleagues and their patients, while maintaining the lab accreditation by guaranteeing we meet all applicable laws and regulations. It means wearing a few different hats and keeping a cool head.

The final ring, the one that gets us across the finish line, belongs to our administrative department. Fielding questions from the clinicians offices, resolving discrepancies, managing the endless stream of consultation requests, they make sure the right result goes to the right physician for the right patient. As we know, the job is never done until all the paperwork (or electronic report) is completed.

Five rings, five squads working  together. Our team may lack a stirring theme song, and we don’t have the time to stand up on a podium, but in our behind the scenes way we earn gold medals every day.
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Trump for Veep? Why Not?

selena donIn a New York Times opinion piece, Matt Latimer, a former speech writer for President Bushes I and II suggests that Mike Pence, Republican Vice-Presidential Nominee, should convince Donald Trump to resign his candidacy making Pence the new presidential candidate. Latimer gives all the usual reasons why we don’t want a Trump Presidency including a lack of “negotiation, diplomacy, discipline, finesse and some semblance of intellectual curiosity.” What the piece doesn’t do is tell Mr. Pence what to do with Trump after he steps down. As a dedicated viewer of the antics of Selena Meyer and Tom James on the HBO series Veep, I think the answer is obvious. Just as Tom and Selena more or less changed places on the ticket, why can’t Pence and Trump do the same?

Think of the opportunity! Pence, the conservative governor that the Republican establishment can get behind. Trump, the mad attack dog on the loose. No one takes a VP candidate seriously, the candidate can say whatever escapes his or her lips without critics warning about nuclear warfare and end of the world catastrophe. And unlike Sarah Palin, a previous wild card VP candidate, Trump has a national following.  His fan club should stick with him through a humiliating demotion, as long as Trump gives it the right spin.  He can declare that he is easily the greatest person ever to run for Vice President. I can see the polls soaring already.

Now just suppose this strategy works and we wind up with Pence/Trump taking office next January. Trump as Vice President is perfect to follow in the footsteps, and missteps,  of Selena Meyer. Snub foreign officials, make embarrassing proclamations, hire a staff of fools, nincompoops and losers. Who cares? He is only the Veep. In the words of Johnny Carson “Democracy means that anyone can grow up to be President, and anyone who doesn’t grow up can be Vice President.” Johnny was foreseeing my scenario without even getting into his Carnac the Magnificent garb.

What’s that you say? Trump would still be only one bullet, one Booth or Oswald, from the Presidency? We can solve that too. Before making the deal, Pence can  require Trump to provide a signed, notarized letter, securely held in a mayonnaise jar on John Robert’s porch, abdicating any claim to the Presidency. The Chief Justice can produce this immediately upon a Pence fatality and following the Order of Presidential Succession, swear in House Speaker Ryan as the next President. Sounds like a plan to me!

One last thing. If you watched the last episode of Veep you know that when Meyer/James pulled the President/Vice President flip flop, they lost anyway. Do you think I would  I be so sneaky as to suggest a losing strategy to the GOP?
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“Hamilton, Tear Down This Wall!”– Bringing Our Construction Up to Date

reaganWalls have always been big news. From Ronald Reagan’s famous 1987 speech imploring Mikhail Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall to our current political situation, walls create a barrier and an image. So it is no surprise that we have been using a very critical eye in assessing where the interior walls are to be located in our new home. A particular sticking point has been the walls for the stairway to the loft space and upstairs bedrooms. Since the new house is predominantly a ranch style home, the second story has been downplayed in importance, with some concessions being made to accommodate roof trusses. But we want to make sure the stairway has sufficient overhead clearance, is wide enough to allow easy transport of furniture, and doesn’t feel claustrophobic. There are building code issues to consider, and a crown moulding question as well.

So the stairway has undergone several revisions on paper to meet all of our requirements. Each do-over has reconsidered how many steps will protrude onto the foyer, where the mid-stairs platform will be, and where the required hand railing will go. The end result included a new interior wall that was constructed last week. Walking through the house with Jefferson-the-Builder the next day we got our first view of the Wall. I could see Barb’s brain churning. This was not looking right at all. But I could also see that she had the answer. Guillotine the top part of the wall, put the hand rail just so, match this to that, and it could all work perfectly.

barb and jeff
Barb and Jeff-the Builder sweat the details.

Jeff didn’t have any reasons why the revised plan couldn’t work, but we still had to present it to Hamilton-the-Architect. “Tear Down This Wall!” Barb proclaimed. And just like Gorby in Berlin, Ham agreed. He even liked the idea. The wall chop has now been done and it looks great. Once again Barb has put her touch on a problem and found a diamond in the rough. Now we just need to convince Ham and Jeff about our crown moulding preference.

Otherwise the construction is progressing, although at times the pace seems a bit too protracted for our taste. Rough plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and low voltage wiring should be completed within the week, to be rapidly followed by inspection, insulation and wall-boarding. If the wall-boarding doesn’t happen soon, it might be time for some water-boarding to get things moving along! In the meantime we are busy working out the shape and materials for the patio, completing lighting and flooring choices, and pushing hard on Stan the Cabinet Man.

Since we plan to close on sale of our Long Grove house right around Labor Day, we have rented interim housing beginning in September. In another of those karmic events that have been inexorably linked with this process since the beginning, I have found a furnished two bedroom apartment in the same housing complex we lived in 26 years ago while waiting to move into Long Grove. Instant Karma’s Gonna Get You!**

One last thought. If Trump could really get the Mexico to pay for his wall, do you think he could also get it to pay for building our house? If he can accomplish that, I might vote for him after all. (Just kidding, folks!)

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** Music Trivia–What other songs have “Karma” in the title? I can think of three more. Email your answers to les.raff@post.com

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It Is What It Is-OY!

seder plateThe Passover Seder is a time for the joyous retelling of the escape by the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt about 4000 years ago.  Unlike the lucky slaves who built the White House, the ancient slaves were not particularly well-fed, and freedom was a definite step up on the social ladder. The retelling can take hours, buffered by ritually prescribed four glasses of wine, a variety of sweet, bitter, and salty symbolic foods, and a visit from Eliyahu, the Man Who Wasn’t There. For our family the highlight of the evening is always a rollicking rendition of the song “Dayenu.” Each verse speaks of another, greater, service that God provided for the Jews on their exodus from bondage, while each chorus is a repetition of the single Hebrew word “Dayenu,” translated as “It would have been enough.”

Why bring up Passover, a holiday celebrated during the spring harvest, now? Because “Dayenu” came to mind while hearing, for the 40th time this week, my least favorite phrase-du-jour, “it is what it is.” The phrase goes back more than 65 years, but it is just in the last year or so that it seems to have spun out of control, replacing “whatever” as the sign of universal acceptance. I hate it! But I did think it would make a catchy chorus. So in the spirit of “Dayenu,” here we go:

  • Another stormy day in the 90’s-It is what it is
  • Because of the storm Southwest just cancelled 125 flights out of Midway-It is what it is
  • I missed my job interview in New York because of the cancelled flight-It is what it is
  • I’m out of a job because I missed the interview-It is what it is
  • I can’t get another job because everything is made overseas-It is what it is
  • Everything is made overseas because of those stupid trade treaties-It is what it is
  • We have those stupid trade treaties because Democrats are idiots-It is what it is
  • Because Democrats are idiots I’m voting for Trump-It is what it is??????????????

Please, Dear Lord, make it all stop. Make The Donald and that stupid phrase go away. Then it truly will have been enough-Dayenu!

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Having Fun Re-Examining Flossing, and Seven Other Health Care Rules

no flossMight be movin’ to Montana soon
Just to raise me up a crop of
Dental Floss

Frank Zappa —  1973

I can now admit it. I am a crappy dental flosser. I have carried the excuse that vigorous flossing either inflames mouth sores I already have, or aggravates my tendency towards getting them. While that is true, my bad habit was more because flossing just seemed like one more thing to add to a nighttime ritual that already was too bogged down with minutiae, when all I really want to do is read a few pages of whatever thriller is at my bedside, kiss Barb goodnight, and fall asleep. And each of the multiple dental hygienists my dentist has employed has complemented me on the appearance of my teeth since I stopped getting cola stains all over them. So why bother with flossing? But I did feel guilty.

Guilty no more! As reported in the New York Times, the Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services no longer recommends flossing in its dietary guidelines. It seems there aren’t any good studies demonstrating that flossing really does prevent cavities. It may help against gingivitis, but even that evidence isn’t the strongest. I can now read my latest potboiler with a lighter heart. But just so you don’t think I am becoming a total libertarian, here are some current health rules I believe we should all still follow:

  1. Going swimming less than one hour after eating is still a bad idea, especially if you are swimming in a school of very hungry sharks.
  2. Spraying lighter fluid onto a glowing grill fire is verboten UNLESS you want to start global warming on your face.
  3. Texting, either while driving  or while sitting in the front row of a ball game still sucks, unless you enjoy getting the imprint of your steering wheel or a Rawlings Major League Baseball on your forehead (Note–an exemption to this rule can be given when White Sox are batting at the Cell.)
  4. Don’t crack your knuckles in the middle of an emotional love scene at the multiplex. It might not cause arthritis, but it will cause dirty looks to be aimed your way, and possibly a punch in the nose if a particularly sensitive soul is in the seat next to you.
  5. Picking your feet in Poughkeepsie–still not recommended. At least as long as Gene Hackman is alive.
  6. Drink lots of coffee. No wait, don’t drink coffee. Or feel free to drink all you want. Who knows? I’ll stick to tea.
  7. Have your men get a PSA  blood test. Have your kids and grandkids get immunized. No Joke.

Stay health, stay happy, and keep on the lookout for our next edition. Housing updates to come–I promise.

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