Snowstorms and shovels

February 10, 2010

I teased my colleague Kathy this morning that, with that adorable little 3 year old she brought back from Russia, she also brough unending WINTER! 

Not since New Years weekend of 1996 do I remember getting snowed in for so long…and with so many house guests on top of our 4 roomies.    The mid 90s were the days of our 20s!  When that snowstorm hit, it was my first year of DC group house single living –  My BFF Missie and I, who had just moved to DC from Lancaster, our high school buddy T (who, since moving on to LA is now “Shad”), his girlfriend (announced to us on move-in day) Wendy, all of us living in a McLean couple’s home for a few years while they were overseas.

On that fateful holiday, trapped with us for days, given the icy blast and the trecherous road conditions, were Jere, Hoyt, and Jim and Kate….all faithful friends from PA who had not planned to stay all week in Virginia.   I don’t remember how much we shoveled that weekend.  I do remember pasta dinners and drinking games, scrabble challenges, movies and phone calls to see if the PA roads had opened.  I remember us getting sick of each other too (“How the heck can Jere sleep til noon?!”).  Nevertheless, the weekend was etched in our minds.  And, still friends, as we gathered over this past Christmas holiday to catch up, we recounted that 96 blizzard with the whitewashed sort of fondness that time brings. 

Today, our blizzard day lives are quite different.  In our household, we wake to snow at 6 AM, not 10.  Usually the first words out of the mouths of babes are ”Mama, are we going to school today?”  Followed by long hugs, wishes for cereal (or chicken nuggets) for breakfast, and then the making of a to-do list for the day.  There are snow day playdates, attempts at helping Daddy shovel, and slides down the driveway…

For me, there’s a little more time to read.. especially the work of two columnists writing about men and shoveling “it” — from different perspectives….

Ruth Marcus, continuing her unique view (which I”ve agreed with before) on the heroine Jenny Sanford,  in light of Jenny’s book.  She rightly lambasts Mr. Sanford as a cad (putting it nicely), and blasts Jenny for sticking around as long as she did.  There is a lot hereto ponder on a cold snowy day, given what we want to believe about “til death do us part” and redeption. Whether you’re Hillary Clinton, Jenny Sanford or Elizabeth Edwards, the path you must follow is probably not framed in Vegas lights.

On a lighter note, Kathleen Parker has a refreshing and interesting take on men, why we want them, and how the shovels of 2010 have unearthed many innate desires to demonstrate worth.

Happy snow and happy reading!

True Model

December 2, 2009

There have been some amazing women in my life under whom I’ve had the privilege to learn… starting of course with my Grandma Naomi Good (the essence of faithfulness and humility) to the model my mom is to me today — demonstrating the priority of taking care of family, while simultaneously pursuing excellence in career.   Even my sister-in-law’s creative spirit sparks my own energy day after day as I read her blog and talk to her when I drop the kids off at school. 

There are many others, but one of my mentors who comes to mind is State Rep. Katie True.   In short, she rocks. From her I have learned the following:

 – what fantastic customer service looks like  (in part, thanks to her right hand, Barbara Kauffman)

 – how to tell someone no with humor and kindness 

 – when to be blunt

 – how to articulate what the gal next door is feeling

 – how to keep your promises  (Katie term limited herself and always stuck to that commitment)

 – how to choose a few issues and really own them — she’s done this consistently on womens issues, childrens’ issues and in the fight against drugs

 – the importance of sticking to conservative principles but in a way that still allows you to be a bridge builder and catalyst for change

The Lancaster New Era just had a great editorial on her impact.   All the usual suspect Lancaster County white boys are lining up to take her spot, but they won’t be able to fill her shoes…  Two of my favorite quotes from the Editorial:

“Over the years, True’s tireless advocacy for children and families sometimes put her at odds with House leadership. She is a conservative, but one who has put principle above blind obedience to party.”

“Because of True’s work, children are safer in their schools and women are safer in their homes. All Pennsylvanians owe this remarkable legislator a note of thanks for making Pennsylvania a better place to live.”
 

 

Windows 7 Takes Off!

October 27, 2009

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From Seattle to West Hempfield township, Lancaster County, Windows 7 Parties are taking place all  over…honestly, I should have launched it here at the House of Klause — not only because I am loving it (I work for Microsoft, what do you expect), but because my Mac husband has been using it longer than me (on one of his 7 machines) and loves it… Here are some direct quotes…from me and from him… guess which one is from whom..

“It’s fun to shake the screens have all but one disappear”

“It’s 64-bit goodness rocks”

“The Sticky Notes function (start, all programs, accessories, stickynotes)”

“It starts up wicked quick”

“Stability, reliability, security”

“The new tool bar allows me to manage about 50 windows at once!”

Yes, some of these are from the very guy who made my life difficult this week by re-launching White House.gov in Drupal/Open Source.  (big sigh…)   But I digress.    Just for fun, here are some glowing stories on Windows 7…

First is my colleague Kristin’s summary blog post on some of the cool stuff happening around the launch…she highlights a very cool campaign that our citizenship team launched called “7 ways to change the world’ — looking specifically at how Windows 7 features can benefit the work of non profits and governmental efforts to address the world’s challenges.

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eSchool News: Schools give Windows 7 favorable reviews

Wall Street JournalA Windows to Help You Forget….“After using pre-release versions of Windows 7 for nine months, and intensively testing the final version for the past month on many different machines, I believe it is the best version of Windows Microsoft has produced. It’s a boost to productivity and a pleasure to use. Despite a few drawbacks, I can heartily recommend Windows 7 to mainstream consumers.”

WiredSeven good reasons to switch to Windows 7…..“Because no matter how comfortable you are with XP, you do deserve an OS that’s both newer and better, and Windows 7 will deliver.”

CNETMicrosoft Windows 7 (Professional)…CNET editor’s rating: Outstanding

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    • Tonya is a Community Content Producer forWUSA9.com, DC's CBS affiliate.