Yesteryear
One year ago today: April 11, 2025, the owner himself.
Five years ago today: April 11, 2021, Ayock.
Nine years ago today: April 11, 2017, candle economics.
Random years ago today: April 11, 2014, we want real adventure.
It you later find the phrase “celebricity stunt” on-line, I coined it here just now. Another mediocre actress is claiming the authorities pounced on her, in this case ICE. Am I the only one who has never seen ICE going after White folks? What’s this, pressure from Islamics to portray their beliefs in a “more positive light” has a group declaring the Alamo was a Muslim affair.
Why such a good mood? My first ten hours of good sleep since January 29, folks. Plus, while I don’t know if there is any connection, the ceasing of 70% of my post-op anti-infections has accelerated return of my taste buds. That is why I made up this victory breakfast around an hour ago, with unlimited refills. No crazy partying yet, only a slightly faster return of normalcy.
Is it finally time for Ireland? The news reaching here is either censored or obviously tainted. I opted for a morning off so you get another tale from the trailer court. It’s the stifling of my career as a portrait painter. When I was nine, I got a beautiful 24” wide pad of painting outlines that mother had mistaken for a coloring book. In the back were instructions how to gradually start and learn color complements. I had no paints, so I bought a package of 48 colored pencils. What could go wrong?
There was a pencil sharpener by the back door that the old man had liberated from the school supply room. Without thinking, I proceeded to begin sharpening. I got about six done with the bellowing came about how rotary sharpeners “waste” the pencils and to cease immediately. I had no idea there were any pencil sharpener experts in the vicinity until that moment. Father had spoken.
This “waste” only occurred when sharpening several pencils, so I was the only family member affected by this new edict. Since it would take weeks to sharpen one pencil per day, I tried to sharpen them with a jackknife. This did not allow colors to be smoothly shaded to match the color templates in the book. In the end, none of the pages in that book ever got colored, but I kept it for years—to have it lost in a basement flood. I kept the crayons and a couple years later won second prize in a local art contest that I did not even want to enter. But that is another tale.
It says here the richest woman alive today is Alice Walton. She rings in at $134 billion, not bad for 76 years of being born right. Poor old gal, it must be so hard for her to meet sincere, natural men tho’ by her age, she should know that Saturday is Karaoke night. Not that I’d recognize her right away but there would be signs. Like when the bar suddenly goes silent and are just the two of us left at the counter when the DJ says, “We have a request for ‘Folsom Prison Blues’.”

ICE is now looking into birth tourism schemes, some 41 years after I wrote about the topic. Yep, 1985, while I was in Asia, sadly, the records are hand-written and unless I get some help, may never be published. Smartphone trivia, the average user checks his phone 144 times daily. If he checks while on the job, there is a 23 minute loss of productivity over the distraction. Here is a video of testing a motor without using PWM, it's here for looks, and I had no other place to post it. So there, compare that to what's doing.
Productivity is usually defined as profitable in the end. I am finishing the excellent book “How We Got To Now” by Steven Johnson. He eloquently shows how inventions are dependent on far more factors than being first with an idea. Some thirty inventors produced functional light bulbs with a glowing filament in a vacuum up to forty years before Edison. The one concept the book barely mentions is a common fact in this blot. It is that all the traditional conditions for success are missing something. Rather, they inject a type of fake social reasoning after the fact. Work hard, believe in yourself, never give up, and more blah-blah. I will never be heard but I’m here t tell you that all of those factors put together are not enough.
It is the organization of society itself that stifles so many ideas. Unless it can be packaged and sold, it will not fly. Few people have tried as hard as me to invent or innovate or create something that will last, but there will always be somebody who points out I did not quite do enough—in their thinking. I did not even have a work shed, which I can avow is far more important than your average university degree, until I was almost 60.
There is one facet of all this that has intrigued me more. How did these inventors learn what to invent? I took computer courses for years, and there was no mention of search engines. How did Jobs learn about the personal computer concept? I was just short of desperate to find something in my 20s, if there had been a source of these ideas, I think I would have found it, yet I was twenty years ahead of the pack and could not even find a job to use my computer skills. Now apply that to dozens of other aspects and fields.
Nowadays, I know much more about the process. I realize now I did not have the resources to wait until my name was called. I had to take the highest paying job I could along with the rest of the working class, no matter how unrelated the work or the location to a career. And you can add in that on the shop floor, the working class are not your best friend but more.usually a nasty, dirty enemy who see your education as a threat to their job. Like my family, their attitude is if you were really tired, you’d be able to sleep through their deafening roar.
Picture of the day.
1902 Studebaker.
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A perfect mildly warm day got me out to the silo, where boxes had been tipped over. No critter much bigger than a rat could get in there. I heard a buzz, finding my old 3G phone still plugged in the charger. It was still receiving a signal from Google. Today was only four hours, but it was a solid four. I worked bare-chested and that warm sun felt great on the damaged spots. There is no shortage of small tasks and clean up, the point is I was able to get it done without once feeling any strain and I know I lifted or shoved 20-pound objects without thinking. I’m getting there.

Still unable to locate my fancy breadboard, I put in time with the birds, they know human movement means grub, but I not tame them. Memories of Memhis won’t allow that. We have a juvenile male woodpecker with a red crest, I set the game camera to try for some movies for you. I also boxed up a few hundred vacuum tubes, I’m not going to be around to sell them in eBay. Find the buyer, move the tubes out. There was supposed to be a little room in the shed for a work space at one time.
One tool that did not get properly sited was my large radial arm, the one with the jammed tilt. It is jammed at 45°, which is good for it is my best tool for cutting that angle. No way I can move it around, but it is on my list. Here’s my stunt double lasering a front panel for some capacitors, making it easier to fine tune amp circuits. I still have not got one working because of the widely varying parameter for the resistor ranges. The plan here is to set one resistor, then use this new variable assembly. Screw the calculations, which seem to apply only to theoretically perfect components.
Here is the small power supply I got together, but maddeningly, it does not work. All the wiring and joint test okay with bench power. But switching to battery, it sits there and I busy connected in series, so the independent switches can supply 3, 6, or 9 volts. But at the lowest setting, it will not power up. I’ll tear it apart for a complete rewire.
Other than that, I could simply have a batch of LEDs that need more than3 volts to trigger. That would be most rare. I’m glad I still like this challenging desk work, thinking ahead. I don’t care if I’m an invalid long-term, this hobby far beats anything else. Like television, I mean. This is week four that I’ve kept confined mostly indoors. It’s peculiar in the sense I planned just in case for this type of retirement a good ten years ago. True, this place is not fixed up, but who was to know Tennessee would happen?
Later, I awoke near midnight with an opioid withdrawal. I know what they are now and this was mild. Id fallen asleep reading with the book in my hand. The pages were just beginning to turn black with tiny golden flame outlines around some of the letters. Don’t fight it, the illusion will not last. How anybody could enjoy this is a puzzlement.
Something has to be done in case inflation keeps eroding the money. I have exact records as well as experience to guide my decisions. This is why I am concerned now, rather than behave like those living off credit cards. I do not track every expense, rather those unavoidable expenses of operating the household. Items like auto repair and gasoline are considered part of it. And I have calculated the amount of income needed to keep ahead of the wolf. This is a concept that has not let me down. Arrange my affairs, that is, so by the time I’m hurting, the situation for others will be so dire that something will give.
The stats I use date back ten years. I know my worst years was 2022, during which I instituted the cost-saving measures I still use today. Household expenses of that year were $10,410 and that dropped to $7,540 by last year. But cost-cutting is not the answer. And household is now my smallest living expense. Gas and groceries have burgeoned to $340 per month. I anticipated this overall situation more than twenty years ago and have guidelines, one being I must not rely on being able to work at all.
This is not just having a job. It includes a lot of the work I do for myself around here that otherwise would cost. Essentially, I need to invest in something that pays me just $10 per day. At my historical performance rate of 7%, this means cobbling together $53,000 just for starters. I’d be remiss to not notice that would have been the amount in Caltier by now if they had performed as promised. Anyway, all this has to wait until I can back on my feet.
ADDENDUM
Europe, which essentially means Germany, is considering a law that prevents people with “anti-constitutional” views from buying a house. No conviction or criminal record needed, as the government would have absolute rights. Yes folks, it is only a matter of time. Dugan, the “judge” who helped an illegal escape out the back door of her court has failed in a final attempt to claim immunity. The illegal has been deported to Mexico and she could get five years. Bring it on.
IBM, notorious for hiring illegals and DEIs, has been fined a piddling $17 million. They were accepting government money while abusing guidelines for hiring Americans. It is common knowledge IBM is notorious, but my surprise is why is IBM getting any government money?
Last Laugh