My two grandchildren, each not quite a year old had scheduled visits. With a $50 Amazon gift card as an honorarium for serving as a university research subject, I spent the majority of it on a VLog kit, anticipating not only my grandchildren's encounters but some other summer travel.
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Learning a VLog
My two grandchildren, each not quite a year old had scheduled visits. With a $50 Amazon gift card as an honorarium for serving as a university research subject, I spent the majority of it on a VLog kit, anticipating not only my grandchildren's encounters but some other summer travel.
Friday, June 12, 2026
Overscheduled Week
Retirement usually offers ample, maybe excessive, time flexibility. Appointments are few. During the academic year OLLI classes require me to be at a certain place at a certain time. Shabbos comes every Friday night. Saturdays are more flexible depending on what synagogue obligations I've undertaken. Doctors' appointments and prepartory lab testing appear on my schedule more than they once did, though not in a burdensome way. And I have special events: birthdays, anniversary, Seder, Thanksgiving, Mother's Day. But mostly not much needs entry in a scheduling grid. I can travel when I want, mostly. Shop at times I choose. Find time at My Space and in my kitchen. I've committed to doing things, but mostly control when to do them, sometimes at the expense of accountability.
So with some trepidation, I look to a rare upcoming week where other people impose my activities. My children and grandchildren who live a distance away will each be coming my way a few days apart. Very high priority. I will have an overnight trip for one, have to prepare a luncheon for the other. At mid-week, other events appear. An organization to which I have done important things sponsors a semi-annual reception. It is my chance to meet the remarkable students that my committee has awarded scholarships. As that early evening gathering concludes, my synagogue holds its annual meeting. I contribute or reap very little from that event but as a Board Member and frequent contributor of skill to their ongoing worship program, I probably ought to go, at least via Zoom. While I do useful things for them, I create nothing, unlike the scholarship committee where my analytical input has transformed how the committee decides which applicants to award.
The next day I have a doctor's appointment with my most irritating practice. They are tracking a few things, not always in the most expedient way. Appointments for office and procedures are at a premium, so I take what I can. For this encounter, an online visit, I know what I want to accomplish.
Then travel the next day, leaving me about 24 hours with daughter and granddaughter. They will have traveled from SF to NY a few days before, so should be rested. I do not desire much tourism. From there, I drive home in time for a pre-shabbos barbecue at the synagogue. I have mixed feelings about these events, as the last cookout I found problematic. Shabbos services the next day, with my wife a key participant. Then Fathers' Day where I make my own special dinner.
These events of specified times add up. They come with the opportunity cost of what I could be doing instead, but seeing kids and scholarship recipients offers high value. A doctor's visit by Zoom takes less than a half hour. The synagogue activities disrupt a bit more, though not having to make Friday night dinner at home offsets what I would usually find myself doing. Even travel slows down from the norm. When I go to NYC once or twice a year, I center it around attractions of a tourist destination. Focusing on people this time reduces some of the decision stress, though I still do not know where I will park my car near my destination in Brooklyn.
The cluster of events forces me to immerse myself in other people. Less time at my laptop, more holding grandchildren and shaking hands. Not that much more in my car. Less with myself, less checking off what tasks I've completed each day. Probably a beneficial reset for the more usual weeks that follow.
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Paper and Pen and Mind
They made me take typing in 9th grade. Manual typewriter. Office model that could not be stolen easily, though the Junior High did not chain them to the desks. I typed poorly. Fewer Words per Minute than most, but also fewer typos than most. I peeked at the paper, something the teacher discouraged. It became a useful skill. When my mother typed my term papers, the Greeks became Freeks. When I left enough time to type them myself, using high grade erasable paper, my spelling upgraded to flawless. In college I moved up to an electric typewriter, which I still have in its case, placed in a nook in My Space. I cannot remember the last time I used it. And then came Word Processing, which transformed not only how I typed and edited, but how I thought.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Strangers Responding
I posted requests on Reddit's r/long island and FB's Visit all 50 States. My wife accepted an abbreviated vacation this summer, with more arduous travel vetoed for now. We opted to visit Long Island, a three hour car trip. I had been to various parts many times, though always purposeful. Weddings, Bar Mitzvah's, Funerals. Visiting my grandfather's siblings, including an outing onto Rockaway Beach. Stony Brook as a likely place I might attend. Tourism only occurred one time when my daughter, who then lived in Queens, suggested Father-Daughter Bonding for Father's Day. She drove me the full length of the Island's North Shore, a very pleasant afternoon, though a lot of time in the car between my round-trip drive home and the east-west dimension of America's largest island.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Choosing a Place
At one time, though a number of years ago, at least one coffee outing a week took place on schedule. Every Sunday morning I would slip my black nylon pouch which contained my weekly planning supplies and head out for coffee. One place dominated, a local shop that offered a choice of three blends and a table to customize with sweeteners, lighteners, and spice shakers. Then I would spread paper, pen, and markers across a table. By the time the last drop got sipped, I returned to my car with two completed lists, one enumerating projects for the week, the other with initiatives for that Sunday, all coded by color. Sometimes I'd order a pastry, mostly not. I changed the destination occasionally, preferring Einstein's across the street when I had a Bagel and Schmear coupon, or the Starbucks around the corner. My local shop had the advantage of offering the coffee in a porcelain mug.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Treadmill Respite
Every month at the end I offer myself three consecutive days without treadmill sessions. Those days are 29-30-31 or 29-30-1, depending on the month. They are welcome, they are needed. Often I find myself sore, mostly legs, as most recent months I push myself to a new walking duration or up the speed by 0.1mph. Many months, including the one currently transitioning, have setbacks, days of illness or injury. I do my very best to avoid any zero days, mostly succeeding. But a drastically reduced session rarely resumes at the full level of where I left off. This allows me to reset at sessions 5-10 minutes below where I had exercised previously, then resume to full sessions, usually by month's end.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Best Hours
Retirement mostly allows me to choose what I do when. No commuting times, not many scheduled meetings, few appointments. That's not to imply lack of schedule. One reason for a very successful last couple of years has been to assign times for certain activities. Up at the same time each morning. Treadmill as close to 7:50AM on scheduled days as I can get it. Big mug of water consumed every morning as soon as I go downstairs, which usually follows dental hygiene, then coffee goes into that mug with a splash of creamer. All goes to My Space where I select three priority activities for the day. Email follows, not before. While coffee brews and I sip water in the kitchen, I head outside to retrieve my wife's newspaper. I also wash some dishes. The mornings are subdivided into times for specific activities. Some of these assignments do not always serve me in the best way. It is convenient to take my blood pressure when I make coffee, before exercise. However, assessment of where my blood pressure ranges requires that it be taken at different hours, which I try to do. By 9AM, my Daily Task list has a few items crossed off. Other than treadmill, none of these activities are things I might make excuses not to do.
Deep work, focus with a timer, has not adapted to scheduling quite as well. Some hours link to creativity or perspective. In my working years, mornings generally found me more engaged than afternoons, though I did some of my best reflective work closer to quitting time. There may be a difference between my motivation to perform and what I accomplish. Some tasks require mental acuity, others require attention to routine.
I think my higher CNS centers do best after a second cup of morning coffee. I can compose new thoughts and express them in the best way. That 9-11AM window has very little structure. During that time, I should be typing, not shopping for groceries, and certainly not scrolling FB. That's time best suited to create something from a blank screen or page. Yet it has not acquired an inviolate protection of my schedule the way the scheduled treadmill efforts have.
In the afternoons, tend to read and respond. The Atlantic now has a section to invite reader comments after each article. So does eJewish Philanthropy and Moment Magazine. I guess their editors figured out that Twitter, where journalists prefer to interact, has repelled enough readers, myself among them, that they need to offer a more acceptable forum. I read and respond, mostly early afternoons. My thinking prowess seems a little diminished from its peak, but still adequate.
That mid-day segment, 11AM to 1PM seems something of an ebb for me. OLLI classes during the school year cluster during that time. When not engaged in classes, struggling to stay attentive, I gravitate to my activities that do not require much mindfulness. That's the time to go to the supermarket or scroll FB.
Late afternoon becomes another lull, a time for my mind to retreat. There are studies which show doctors are least attentive in those hours and make more faulty decisions than they do before lunch. I find myself struggling to express myself in an articulate way at that part of the daily cycle.
The evening restores an element of routine, though perhaps not the best routine. I make supper, one usually planned much earlier. I'm not very creative but don't have to be to boil some pasta or sautee some garden burgers. Then eat, PM medicine, and return to My Space, though this time surfing YouTube instead of actively engaged at my desk. It's not dead time. I choose videos that add to my knowledge. I often read the books I am tackling. But I do not engage in expressive, creative work in a meaningful way after supper, other than planning the activities for the following day and checking off what I did that day. I have a late-day routine, less rigid than my morning one, but there is a set time to shut down the laptop and phone. At the end of the day, I read some more, rehearse any Torah readings I have committed to performing in the near future, and recap what went well and what did not over the course of the day. Then lights out at 10PM unless my wife needs to keep them on to read.
I think there are parts of each day best suited to different tasks. Identifying that slots suit what activities has a lot of uncertainty. For jobholders, assignments determine them. I retirement I have control. It's still not clear if what I choose to do at different times enhances or undermines actual performance.
The routines at the beginning and end of each day have served me well.