# Wednesday, July 19, 2006

A few bumps, but all is good in ‘ole Dublin

We arrived safely Friday morning Dublin and after a ride in a hired car with WAY too much luggage.  We stayed at the Beacon hotel which we called home for two nights in order for us to get settled in and get our new house set up.  We started the day off with a very quick shower and went straight to the bank to get our account set up. (MS has really had some great relocation services including someone to take us around to do all these ‘administrative’ issues who is local and knows the process.) Since Ireland has so many of the utilities paid by direct debit only, this was very important to set up quickly so we could have the utilities set up in our name. I however could not sign up for account or even as a joint account since I did not have proof of residency (i.e. lease with my name on it, utility bill, etc. There is so much of this circular proess it is amaizing - can't get an account without a proof of residency, but can't get residency without proof of an account - I don't know how the average person does all this without a large company to vouch for them) so Reeves said I have to be really nice to him. J  After the bank we headed to the Garda Immigration Office (The Garda are the police here - from the Gaelic) This is where we get our “official” card to state we are in the country legally and are able to stay (equivalent to the American Green card).  That took a couple hours since it is first-come, first-served system and is as slow as most government offices, for which America does not have a monopoly on!

End of Day one in Dublin……

 

Day two started early with a retail spree spending all the money we earned selling off everything in San Jose.  We knew we were going to need to replace many things (everything you plug in to start with) so we started with stuff like a convection microwave oven, toaster, iron, etc. in addition to things like paper towels, laundry detergent, and dish soap.  It is amazing how many things you forget about which take to start a household!  Every time I go to do a task I have to think through what it is going to take and if I can do it or not!  One important item I had forgotten the first night was a wine bottle opener, but thankfully with the Irish drinking laws being what they are, the Italian delivery delivered my bottle of wine already corked! J  We have purchased a couple more ‘fun items’ including a really great sat/nav system which has all the maps for IE/UK and the whole of Europe.  I hope we put it to use very soon! Additionally, since we want to have a TV in the kitchen and eat-in area, we decided to purchase a windows Media Center edition computer with 19 in. screen to eventually keep in the kitchen for me to use while I am cooking and if we want to watch something while eating dinner.  We have it in the living room right now, with 2 lawn chairs in front of it, and we are watching dvds since we won’t have cable till next week.  

 

Our new little home is very cute and has many of the things we wanted including character.  We have gotten a few more things than we wanted, however, including an army of spiders!  If you know me you know I don’t do spiders – bugs yes, spiders no.  Since the house has been sitting for several months it was needing a good shaking and we have shaken out more than our share including one last night that was actually big enough it audibly bumped its way down the death-tube (aka vacuum) – yuck!  So this morning we looked up exterminators. Interesting note, there is not a single pest control company in the yellow-pages which lists “spiders,” nor, when we looked for our own spray, did any of the products list spiders, just “crawling pests”.  I don’t know what the issue with killing spiders is, but I am not going to be shy about this one. J 

 

We have also been getting used to new appliances and new ways of doing things.  So far I have managed to turn some of our whites grey in the washer.  Weird thing however is that it was not the whole load, just certain pieces and certain parts of clothing.  From what I can tell it was certain synthetics that reacted with some process/chemical in the washer.  For example, a pair of Reeves underwear (which was white cotton) had just the inside of the waistband turn grey and the rest just fine and a pair of my underwear which were beige turn a strange light grey-green.  The plane white t-shirt and a button-down turned out just fine….hmmmm…..if anyone out there has a solution please let me know as I am scared to do any more “good” pieces for fear of ruining them!

 

On the upside of our house is the location – we are about ½ block from a small row of shops which includes a dvd rental store, cleaners, pharmacy (which carries some fancy products like Dior makeup/skin care), the very cute little fancy café Inna run by a young German woman and the best of all, a day spa with mani/pedis and salon!  Right next these shops is a Spar shop which like a cross between a 7-11 and fancy specialty market.  They have a full wine collection, made-to-order deli in addition to the selection of other groceries and small sundries. It is a very handy corner and on the way back from the LUAS (Dublin’s light rail system) to our house!  In addition, we are only a 10 minute walk from the village of Ranelagh. For those from California, it is like a little downtown Palo Alto or Los Gatos, but older and with more pubs! We have eaten at a few of the restaurants and like what we had had thus far, including the take-away Chinese we walked to get last evening. 

 

One of my favorite things about visiting, and now living, in a different country is the comparison/contrast with all aspects of life from how you order coffee to driving on the other side of the road.  I am going to try and keep track of these and share them as I guess I am a sociologist at heart!  

A few I have noticed so far:

  • You can’t buy a blanket to go on your bed.  Everything is duvets, coverlets (to put on top of your duvet) or small throws.
  • People don’t have screens on their windows – there are still bugs, but no screens
  • The smart card is king & your credit card never leaves your sight which is great for security
  • Shops close quite early and even the main phone company that owns all the telephone lines, isn’t open on Sundays to open a phone account.
  • There are few to no street signs on roads so finding your way without a map or sat/nav system is nearly impossible
  • You rarely get a bag to put your products in when making purchase at grocery stores, diy stores and the like
  • Every shopping cart we have used thus far require a 1 or 2 euro ‘deposit’ inserted into the handle (which then releases the latch which holds it onto another cart) You get it back when you return the cart and re-latch it to the other carts.

 

The weather has also been unseasonably warm – into the 80s (low 30s Centigrade) which means you sweat a lot here since very few places have air conditioning.  It has been great to get us eased into the climate here, but I am afraid it is lulling us into a false sense of security! J

 

Enough for today, I am afraid I need to return to cleaning and updating my resume.  I have started submitting my resume, but need to really get serious about it so I can have some other distractions outside of the house.  Until next time…..

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# Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Time to go

It has been almost a month since my last post, but so much has happened it will take a bit to get it all in here, which will happen over the next few postings.  In a nutshell, however, we sold our house, our three cars and about 1/2 our possessions. Had the rest packed up and it is right now on a boat somewhere in the Pacific ocean on its way to Ireland. Right now we are about to shut up the house for the last time as owners and leave it to its next chapter with the new owners, Michael and Gayle. 

Our new life starts tomorrow and with a wonderful forecast to greet us when we arrive on Friday morning in Dublin!

 

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# Friday, June 02, 2006

So much to do….

…so little time.  Isn’t that always the case!?!?  For the few of you out there that do not know yet, we are moving to Ireland and selling our house.  We have been killing ourselves trying to get our house ready to put on the market, and as of today it is there! If you want to check it out, her are some links…

 

SeeItBuyIt.com and our Realtor’s site.

 

Hope we can sell quickly as we already have a townhouse waiting for us in Dublin!

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# Monday, April 03, 2006

Do you care if more than your mother reads this?

If so, you need to read this article.

 

Just when I thought this was a ‘fun’ ritual, I come across a list of “rules” you should follow when blogging!

 

Geeze, call me crazy if I thought blogging was about the organic growth of ideas and thoughts spread thorough a digital web by those who were not bound or restrained by the bonds of society’s intellectual grasp…also know as those trying to avoid their real work by posting the potentially self-incriminating details of their private life on the web for all to critique and tear apart.

 

According to this article (found while I was doing my reading for my Internet tool and Technology class on usability) it looks like blogs are all about the “usability” and the rules you have to follow to market your blog for a better readership!!! 

 

Holy cow, now even our pastimes are work!

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# Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Quilt one, pearl two

After more than 2 years I am finally done with my quilt!!  I started it shortly after I quit my job at Gartner and it proved a cathartic experience in relieving my stressed-out mind and body from their clutches.

 

The process involved taking cast off jeans and using pieces of them, in addition to some other fabric I got at Goodwill (as clothing was cheaper than buy fabric by the yard) and somehow it just fit better for the soul of the piece to have the history of a stranger’s life woven into our own. 

 

As you can see from the pictures this is not your ‘traditional’ structured quilt. My inspiration was two fold…..the first source inspired the project and the second connected it to my own past. 

 

So onto the inspiration…I was watching  a segment on the quilting women from Gee’s Bend  (I think on a segment from Martha’s pre-jail and much better show) when I knew THAT was the project I have been looking for but could conceptualize on my own. These amazing women, who in the process of trying to provide basic necessities of warmth and cover, as well as occupy the seemingly endless night at home, created a distinctive folk art.  The uniquely varied and seemingly haphazard creations have a simplistic yet powerful impression of strength and hidden source creativity.  They didn’t have fancy patterns or machines to make complicated appliqués or cuts, but creativity came from a purer genius; from the ingenuity of necessity.    

 

The Gee’s women’s style appealed to my design technique I would loving refer to a “winging it” J  In projects I frequently jump in with both feet first and just ‘try stuff out’ – most work, but some fail miserably. (I don’t think I ever need to mosaic anything ever again!!)

 

It was about at this point I realized there was actually a second inspiration subtly and oh so subliminally lurking at that very moment in my own closet.  For years I had been collecting old jeans, cast offs we didn’t wear anymore, with the thought I would create a ‘utility’ blanket of sorts, like the one my mother had made many, many years ago we used to haul dirty items around with, take on picnic to cover the grass and mud and other sorts of unromantic functional actions. I dug out that old jean blanket my mom gave to me as part of my trousseau of sorts when I moved to CA with her other functional items she was handing down like my 40 year-old ironing board and almost as old tea towels for drying dishes.  

 

I looked over that old jean blanket and knew it was now my quest to follow in the steps of many and much more talented women to try and emulate their work.

 

I decided to piece the quilt with the sewing machine (that is sewing the pieces of the quilt together) and then hand-quilt the sandwich (the pieced top layer, the batting in between and the backing together in a ‘sandwich’) The quilting the sandwich is what took the 2 years – since the quilt was pretty thick, I couldn’t do multiple stitches in one needle, but had to resort to the up-down of each needle stroke – much more time consuming.  Needless to say I would lose motivation for periods and leave the project and come back a month or so later.  The end result however is a great sense of accomplishment, not necessarily the quality of the finished piece, but just in the fact I didn’t give up on the thing!  Now I have a great useful object that is big enough for two to cuddle under……J

 

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# Monday, March 06, 2006

Simple pleasures

I LOVE getting postcards!  It is one of those things in life which gives me an un-explainable giddiness when I find the little treasure among all the postal spam.  I received a postcard today with some beautiful art from the British Portrait Gallery from my friend Amy and her recent trip to England. 

 

I guess one of the reasons I love postcards so much is the little visual and mental escape you get when reading the happy personal message and gazing at the exotic scene.   What a fun tradition!

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# Wednesday, January 25, 2006

New Glasses and the worst customer service….EVER!

I am still fuming over my horrific treatment and it is five days later, therefore, as a cathartic exercise, I am posting this. You however ask, what could possibly be.the source of this extremely verbose dissertation and my antagonized state? The store, Optical Illusions, on Santana Row in San Jose.  

 

The tale of woe begins when I bought a pair of glasses from them in August of 2004. They were my first ‘fun’ pair of glasses, breaking out of a traditional frame into a bit more avant-garde style which I grew to really like. (although it did take some convincing from Reeves at first) At the time of purchase, I ignored the fact I paid WAY too much for these glasses, justifying it by thinking I would have them for awhile.

 

When I purchased the glasses, the service people at the store were nice enough, although the shop is pretentious and their staff does subtlety exude this presence, but I wanted my glasses too much to care at that point.  Over the past year and a half, I have visited the shop about every 4-6 weeks to have my glasses adjusted because my chosen frame-lens combo led to the glasses splaying out, causing them to be too wide for my face.  Several of the times I went in to have them adjusted they made me feel like Vivian in Pretty Woman when she walked into the snobbish boutique the first time, that I couldn’t have possibly have purchased glasses in THEIR store.

Side note: I am VERY picky about how my glasses are adjusted since I wear them (over contacts) about 85% of the time – therefore, they must be comfortable, without pressure points and tight enough they don’t slide down my nose every time I look down at my keyboard. All of this said, I would only leave their adjustment to the professionals since I don’t want to have my glasses damaged or unusable.

 

As luck would have it, about 6 weeks ago I somehow managed (and I still can’t figure out how since they have never bee dropped to my knowledge) to put a deep scratch in the left lens, just slightly to the right of my center focal point.  It was really annoying, but I had to get used to it for awhile since the holidays hit and with traveling and school, I just didn’t have time to get them repaired.  I also have to say, as a preface to the upcoming conclusion of this tale, in my almost 25 years of wearing glasses, I have never had to have lenses or frames replaced from my carelessness.  

 

To get onto my rant….I went into Optical Illusions on Saturday night (accompanied by my friend Leslie) and went up to the counter and stated I would like to have a price quote for replacing the lenses since one had been damaged. The woman I was speaking to went in back and another gentleman (and I use that term very loosely here) came back with my file and glasses.  He quoted me $280 (admittedly the same price I paid before), but I knew this was high (from my many, many previous purchases) and asked if there was anyway he could price match another quote.  He proceeded to hem and haw about how their lenses were superior to other lenses and how the lenses could not match their quality.  Now, I have been around the block a few times and there are standards to which all lenses need to adhere and there is not that much difference in the quality, years ago maybe, but now, no.  At this point, another employee came over and tried to tell me the same thing, that if any other store could sell them for less, they must be sub-standard, especially the thin ones I ordered, which most places charge a considerable amount for or don’t carry. This sealed my opinion of him, that he was full of it - I have been getting the ‘thin’ lenses for years and it is pretty standard as ‘normal’ these days.

 

At this point in the conversation, I am still quite composed and polite and ask if there is anyway to reduce my cost again – they both state that if I don’t get the anti-glare coating, it would reduce the cost by $80.  I agree, and we settle on this solution…..the price is reduced to $200.  OK, not what I hoped for, but still it is costing me less.  Content enough. I pull out my credit card and think things should go quickly from here….HA HA HA!

 

I also want to mention at this point the attitudes of the sales people – the moment I stated the cost seemed high and if there was anything they might be able to do, they immediately got VERY defensive, hence all the hemming and hawing I got…..all I  can say is “me thinks thee doth protest too much…”?????

 

Little did I know the drama about to begin when the first gentleman proceeds to inspect my frames and lenses closer and notices the frames seem to be miss-shaped.  I had sort of noticed this a few months ago, but really didn’t think too much of it since I had them adjusted by them several times since and nothing was said to me about it. They still stayed on my face and I could still see out of them, so all should be good with the world.  I stated this same think back to him and his response, in an accusatory tone, as he starts popping the lenses in and out “have you had these glasses adjusted by anyone else?”  I responded with a firm but polite ‘no.’ Next came from him, almost spitting it at me, “well who adjusted them?”  Woaaaa, where did the attitude come from again, and more importantly, what sort of question is that????  In 1 ½ years did he really think I only had them adjusted only once???  

 

I proceed to tell him of my routine of every 4-6 weeks coming by and again he throws back to me the same question “who has helped me” in his now growing snooty-ness.  At this point I am starting to loose my patients, but still trying to keep my cool I calmly state that “unless you have a policy of writing down every time I come in, how can I possibly remember who has helped me each time” and go onto to say that each of the employees in the store at that moment had helped at least once. (I already knew they didn’t have this policy since I had only been questioned a couple times if I had purchased my glasses there when I came in to have them adjusted) This response causes him to quiet down for a minute and shuffle his paperwork around as if look for such a log that I knew, he knew, didn’t exist.  

 

Again, he goes back to futzing with the frames, knowing that his line of questioning was going nowhere, so then states, almost spitting it, “well, you must had stepped on them or something”………..THE NERVE!!  At his point I am starting to silently fume, how dare he accuse me of this!  I firmly (but still politely) state, while looking him straight in the eyes, this has NEVER happened. 

 

Again, more futzing and the final question “well, if you didn’t step on them you must have left them in your car on a hot day.”  Ok, now I am ready to jump up and down and as him if knows to whom he is asking this question (which obviously he does not or he would know I would never do any of the accused), but I know if I cause a fuss, he really won’t do anything to fix them, since I am starting to realize this must be something pretty serious going on with the frames for him to be going on like this.  More firmly this time, I look him in the eyes again and slowly respond to emphatically emphasize my answer while still trying to hold back the distain in my voice,”I NEVER leave them in the car.”  

 

I speak my statement and just keep staring at him, which causes him to again start messing with my glasses. He then decided to take the passive-aggressive approach and mumbles that I must have stepped on them once again.  I ignore his comments and becoming more concerned about my frames, ask if they can then be fixed or replaced since the only place I have ever had them adjusted was with them.  He fumbles with them more and realizing I am obviously not backing down, says we will get the lenses in and we will go from there.  At this point I can tell from the way he say it and from the way he is handling the frames, they are, and will be unusable.  

 

We finish the transaction as Leslie and I chat about other things, basically trying to distract myself from my flustered state of being, incurred from the accusations and the inquisition I was not expecting.  Feeling like I was between a rock and a hard place without time to contemplate all the repercussions, we finalize by him trying to hold onto my (only!) pair of glasses for a week till the lenses come in for their instillation. He acts like it is a HUGE favor he is now doing for me by letting me keep my glasses for a week, stating he will then install the lenses in “only an hour” when they come in the following week.  Just wanting to get out of there by now, we leave, still dazed by the whole incident.

 

At the time I thought my only choices were either not having my lenses replaced and having to just throw out the glasses (since he was so convinced they were ruined and their store was the only ones who could replace the frames since it was their fault they were in that state, although he didn’t believe me) and having to invent another $200 in them to not loose my previous investment…..I choose to continue with the transaction and go from there.

 

In fuming, mulling, and being distraught about it all night, I relayed the story to Reeves and he made me realize that loosing my original investment (which truthfully I had been able to use for 1 ½ years) was a VERY small prices to pay to a) not invest $200 more in this horrid company and b) to never have to return to their shop again!!! 

 

The only catch was if I would be able to cancel the order…..

 

The next morning Reeves and I went into the shop (because if there was going to be a confrontation, I wanted to do it in person and with witnesses, just in case) to cancel.  I asked one of the two women who were working if I could cancel my order from the previous evening. She went in the back and brought out an empty tray, which I assume, was the beginning of my order, stating it seemed like it would be ok, but she needed to get managerial approval the next morning and would call me first thing since she was working, letting me know my account was credited.  I thanked her kindly (sort of hoping she would ask me WHY I was canceling so I could tell her it was the horrible customer experience I had) and left.

 

The next day, not hearing anything by almost 1pm, I called the store and asked for her.  She was at lunch (of course), so I told the woman on the phone I had spoken with her yesterday and she was going to call me back about a managerial approval for a canceled ordered.  I barely got out my explanation when the woman on the phone cut me off and stated, with the store’s now infamous snobbery, it was credited to my account.  I quick thanked her and she said something like “yeah” and hung up!

 

I can’t even begin to list all the things wrong with this horrible, horrible experience. Not only was this not just one person, but a pervasive attitude for ALL the employees!!  I will NEVER set foot back into Optical Illusions again and will beat my friends silly with a wet noodle if they ever thing of patronizing this establishment.

 

The happy conclusion to this story…..I went back to Lenscrafters, but their Optique store this time, which has more trendy and fun frames, for which I had strayed for before, and found a pair of frames I actually like better than my previous ones!  The best part, I was quickly helped by friendly, efficient people (without the pretentious attitude, even though the brands they carry are almost identical to those at Optical Illusions) and the lenses WITH the anti-glare, featherweight size were only $240!!!!  Additionally, with the Blue Cross discount that we have (and Lenscrafters honors), the lenses were only $140!!!!! 

 

Ok, feeling better now. J  (and it is all about me you know) ;-)

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