Monthly Archives: November 2017

Feline Friday: Aloha to Mr. Toby

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The week started with the sad realization that it was time to say goodbye to Toby. We rescued him when he was just a couple of weeks old, and he lived with us for just over 15 years. We all tried our best, but his failing kidneys finally just overwhelmed him. When that special spark in his eyes went out, it was clear that it was time to let him go. And we did, early Monday morning.

Before stocking up on tissues and taking Toby on his last journey, we had our living room set up as a kitty hospital room, so he could be out where we were eating breakfast and getting ready for the day. When I got the camera out, he responded, looking up for one last photo. You’ll have to click through to today’s photo album to see that shot.

Aloha, Toby. You were a very fine cat!

The other cats were a little perplexed by his absence. They probably still smell his scents but not his physical presence. And they’ve been just a little “off” since he’s been gone. I presume we’ll all get back to a semblance of normal soon.

The last time we had a population of just three cats was in mid-1988, when we bought our house in Kaaawa. And these are three geriatric cats. So things seem a bit quiet right now.

–> See all of this week’s cats by clicking on the photo above or just clicking here.

A Throwback Thursday Thanksgiving

It’s a Thanksgiving Throwback Thursday!

I wandered through various Thanksgiving memories, looking for something worth giving an encore reposting, and settled on this entry from 2009. My dad was in a Honolulu nursing home. He suffered from dementia, but he could interact and carry on a conversation, with a few unexpected twists and turns. So Meda and I went to join him for the Thanksgiving meal they were serving.

This is the story, retold.

But first, please have your own Happy Thanksgiving!

———————

The good news was that we arrived well before lunch and found my dad sitting at a table with three other men in the third-floor common room of his nursing home. Small paper turkeys decorated the walls, signaling that Thanksgiving had arrived. There was a little sign on the table in front of him, a single piece of heavy blue paper folded lengthwise into a triangle, resting on one side, with his name hand-written on the side facing him: “John Lind”, it said simply.

John LindHe was dressed in the Winnie-the-Pooh t-shirt Meda found recently in the Kaimuki Goodwill Store, and a pair of flannel pants from Costco that he enjoys.

He insists on t-shirts with pockets so that he has a place for his glasses, and Meda’s been on the prowl in the thrift stores she visits.

He was surprised to see us. We explained we were there to have lunch with him.

“Oh, lucky you found me here,” he said, as if he might have been out and about town instead of here at a table with several other men on one end of a big room with dozens of other elderly patients in various degrees of ill health.

He quickly asked if Bonnie, my sister, was also coming. We said she wasn’t expected. It didn’t sound quite as bad as “no”.

“And Helen?” he asked, referring to my mom.

I told him that her knee has been hurting and she hasn’t been getting around much. All true. I didn’t say that at age 95, she also finds visits to the nursing home to be a trial.

Then he asked if I had a pen. Nope, but Meda produced one from her purse.

“Write a 4 on the sign,” he said, pointing to the paper in front of him. Meda dutifully wrote “4” in small print next to his name, then asked what it meant.

“That’s so they won’t forget our reservation,” he said.

In his mind, we’re in a restaurant where he had a reservation.

After a few references to the holiday, we quickly figured out that he wasn’t making the mental connection to “Thanksgiving” and all it entails.

First, he told us that he was expecting an eight-course Chinese meal to be delivered.

“It’s all supposed to be arranged,” he said, a little friendly conspiracy in his voice.

“Do you like Chinese food?” Meda asked, surprised by the idea.

“Some of it,” he responded somewhat noncommittally. Actually, come to think of it, that was probably a very honest answer.

We explained that it was Thanksgiving, and that they actually would be serving a special turkey dinner. That’s why we were there, along with other residents of the third floor and a handful of their family members. Not as many visitors as I had expected. Perhaps some people took their old folks home for the occasion. We weren’t prepared for that.

I did tell him the good news that Bonnie would be cooking a pie or two.

He asked quickly: “What kind?”

“Pumpkin,” I say, realizing again that the Thanksgiving connection isn’t being made.

But, obviously, it could be a lot worse.

Then he was off about his car, a theme that returns, like the seasons but on a shorter cycle.

“I’ve lost my car again. Both cars,” he told me, somewhere between worry and anger. “I can’t find the keys. I don’t know if someone is playing games with me.”

To Meda, who was sitting over on his right: “How do I report a stolen car? Actually, I’ve got two cars that are missing.”

I don’t press for a description of the missing cars, because the last time he couldn’t remember anything specific about them, just the concept “car”, and I don’t like to lead him down the trails of dead-end memories.

“Maybe I’m better off without them,” he finally says. “I should just ride my bike.”

We encourage that line of thinking, and soon he’s forgotten that the cars were an issue.

He’s now anxious for lunch to be served, although it’s still early, only about 11 a.m.

He asks if I’ll go remind the waitress of his order.

Then he asks, “How was the weather in Waipahu when you left?”

He’s surprised when Meda says that we came from Kaaawa. Waipahu was where my mother’s parents lived when my folks were first married back around WWII. Does he think I look like my grandfather? Another chip away on the self-esteem front.

He posed for a few pictures, pleased by the attention, although he worried that he hadn’t shaved.

Somehow, in the midst of keeping small-talk going, Meda asks if he ever has trouble sleeping.

“I have trouble not sleeping,” he responds without a pause. “If I put my head down”–he acts it out, his head going down onto the table in front of him–“I’m asleep.”

Then he looks at me and asks: “Who’s paying for all this?” The bed, the “hotel room”, the food service?

“Oh, it’s covered by your insurance,” I reply, lying. “Don’t worry, it’s all taken care of.”

In fact, it’s an expense that is quickly draining the assets he built up over the past 95 years, including over 60 years in business. But he doesn’t need to hear that. He’s obviously got enough to worry about, what with missing cars, lost freedoms, unknown locations. The money part keeps me awake now. It’s our problem at this point, not his.

Luckily the food arrives. All attention goes there.

Meal served

He quickly observes that we’ve got small plates of turkey and gravy, while his plate has mashed pototoes, vegetables, and ground turkey on a bed of bread stuffing. We pointed out that his ground concoction was also turkey, just easier to eat. A nibble on the first fork full from his plate seemed to do the trick. He slowly dug in.

A bite of turkey. A few vegetables. Very soon he cut into his slice of pumpkin pie and took a bite, and I thought he would just fast-forward to dessert. But, no. He ate slowly but methodically. Meda shared her little container of cranberry sauce. His fork was a little unsteady, but he managed to eat through everything on his plate, then his pie, and then he asked about the pie sitting uneaten in front of Meda. She moved it over onto his tray, and he was happy.

Clean plateThe result: Meal declared a success.

We asked if he wanted to go back to his room for a post-meal nap.

“No, I think I’ll go home.” He started to look for his walker, which was parked just out of reach, to start the journey.

It’s another awkward moment, repeated quite regularly, but we still haven’t gotten practiced with a graceful reply.

At this point, “home” is a jumble of memories. He usually means the modest single-wall wood frame home in Kahala where he lived for over 65 years before finding himself in a single bed in a narrow room shared with three other aged men. Sometimes it’s the house on Vista Street in Long Beach, built by his father after the family moved down from the northern part of the state. It might be his childhood home in Berkeley. It might even be the bunk on his boat at the Ala Wai harbor.

Luckily, one of the nursing assistants sees him struggling to stand and comes over to take charge, tells him to wait for her to come right back. He wants to get going before she returns, but we keep him in check. She’s back in a few seconds to help him stand, then transfer his weight to the walker, then slowly make his way out of the room. We somewhat sheepishly say our goodbyes and slip out towards the elevator as she steers him back to his bed. He’ll quickly forget that he had intended to go “home”, wherever that is now.

But, just in case, we decide not to wait for the elevator and take the stairs instead.

It’s not a graceful exit.

UH closing Off Campus Housing Program

The University of Hawaii at Manoa has long had an office that assisted students and faculty to find rental housing.

The program’s website provides this description:

The University of Hawaii Off-Campus Housing Referral Program (OCH) is a rental referral service provided by the University. Our on-line listing service is available to the public for listing available rental properties to all students, faculty and staff of the University of Hawai?i and UH affiliate schools. We have a variety of information regarding renting in Hawai?i to assist the university community in finding suitable accommodations.

Our website serves as a primary resource for all University of Hawai?i students, faculty, and staff who are searching for, or offering, rental properties. To access and view our listings you must be a current UH student, faculty, or staff member. To use our on-line listing service, members of the university community will be prompted for their valid UH username and password. You may also contact us with your questions, suggestions, or concerns anytime.

But the office is now set to shut down at the end of the year.

According to the website:

Due to changes to our services and the rise in resources providing rental referrals, the Off Campus Housing Listing Service will officially shut down on December 31, 2017.

A friend in Manoa emailed several university officials upon hearing the news.

To Whom It May Concern-

I am an EWC Alumnus and long time ( 53 years) Manoa resident. For several decades I have made 2 rental units I have on my Manoa property available to UH and EWC affiliated students and faculty significantly below market. As we all know, housing is especially scarce and often ruinously costly in Honolulu, especially in the Manoa/University area.

One uniquely valuable resource for landlords and more importantly UH and EWC affiliated students and faculty has been the Off Campus Housing Office , long located on Dole Street. This morning they have posted a notice that the office will be closing permanently on Dec. 31. When queried about why they made this decision, I was told that there had been to many complaints about their web site so rather than repair or upgrade a simple web site, they decided to close the office. That makes about as much sense as deciding to shoot the patient because he has a cold as opposed to giving him some aspirin.

If this office does in fact close, it will end the only portal available to the many members of the UH and EWC community who seek housing in a very limited and costly market and simply reinforce the notion that Honolulu is just too expensive with to few housing alternatives available to attract quality students and academics to the UH and EWC community.

I hope that you can take measure to insure that this valuable resource is not lost.

Is cult tied to Congresswoman Gabbard launching cyberattacks?

That would be a reasonable conclusion based on the recent experience of two local websites, as reported on Sunday by Andrew Walden’s Hawaii Free Press.

According to Walden, the server for his Hawaii Free Press site was hit with a  distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack just a day after linking to a New Yorker profile of Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard.

And Meanwhile in Hawaii, a new website created by Hawaii writer Christine Gralow, was similarly attacked immediately after posting a long, critical investigative piece on the Krishna-spinoff cult with many ties to Gabbard and her campaign (“Butler’s Web: Krishna, Politics, and QNET’s International Pyramid Scheme“).

Walden’s comment: “Krishna Consciousness is when you know the Krishnas did it.”