a tale of a pair of old moccasins


You’re looking at a pair of Hideaway moccasins that were purchased somewhere in the dim mists of time, at least five years ago. My wife purchased them for me through one of her on-line sale sites (not Amazon). As soon as I put them on I immediately wanted to wear them just about everywhere. When they were in better, newer, shape I would use them to take the girls out for short walks. As they got older I kept them indoors, preferring to slip into them at night before I finally went to bed.

It was thus with great annoyance when the seam on the left shoe unraveled and the right top half lifted away from the shoe proper. I wore it that way, curling my left foot, toes down, to keep from losing the shoe as I walked around the house. I finally asked my wife, who’s quite an accomplished seamstress[1], if she could somehow find a way to sew it back together. Within 30 minutes she’d found the right needle (some big, curved, dangerous looking needle like you’d use to fish for Great Whites) and the right type of thread to sew it all back up. When I put it up it fit perfectly, which is to say, just like it had before the original threading broke.

I have to take a moment and say just how good my wife is at tailoring interesting and very well-made clothing. She has multiple machines, from the simplest to a complex behemoth called a Viking, and a weird little machine with four spindles called a serger. She owns multiple sewing machines the way I own multiple cameras. But she’s not afraid to work directly with her hands. When the machines won’t quite do what she wants, she finishes the work by hand; there’s no way I can tell the difference, it’s all excellent. Granted, it didn’t take much to stitch the shoes back together. But still, I stand in awe of my wife’s creative sewing abilities. What’s more significant, and saddening, is my wife is practicing both skills and a high level of competency that is disappearing from this society. Her clothing that she makes for herself (and lately for me) is better quality by far than anything I can get at any of the big box stores or on-line.

Which brings me to my final thought. I could have easily just thrown those shoes away and bought new ones. But I didn’t. There’s nothing wrong with them that a little time and materials couldn’t fix. And there’s the little bit more I would have added to humanity’s near-infinite garbage dump, which buying new shoes that have their own carbon footprint in manufacturing and shipping. My desire to fix rather than replace has been growing over time. I’ll fix it if I can, and if I can’t, I’ll take it to someone who can. Even my Apple hardware is getting a bit long in the tooth. And we know how notorious Apple is about building devices that are nearly impossible to repair. And yet, if the screen gets cracked or the battery eventually dies, I’ll take it in and have it replaced rather than buy a new iDevice.

You could say that my desire to fix rather than replace is part of my heading into retirement, and you’d be right. I won’t be able to afford to just drop wads of cash when the mood strikes. But there is something even more fundamental going on. I feel responsible (I am responsible) for adding to, and to continue to add to, the carbon and plastic and other junk that is slowly choking the life out of all life on Earth. You have to start somewhere to cut that back, and this is one of the many ways I’m trying to make up for the oblivious destruction of the Earth I’ve participated in over my many decades of life.

[1] Except now they call that person a sewest. Whatever.

[2] Why didn’t somebody tell me that moccasins is only spelt with one ‘s’?

changes to the blog

I’m approaching my 65th birthday, and the possibility of either full-on retirement or else a four-day work week (32 hours a week instead of 40) in 2019. If I retire at 65, even though I had to register for Medicare Part A, I won’t get 100% of my Social Security unless I work until I’m 66. At age 65 I get between 93% and 94%. And considering I’ve been paying into the system since I was 16, I think I want it all. 2019 gives me an opportunity to try and ease away instead of going into cold turkey retirement.

As I come up to 65th I’ve been cutting back expenses. One of those expenses has been the WordPress subscription I have for the blog. When I started the Arcane Science Lab, it was free. And that was OK, until I realized that free wasn’t really free. I might not be paying any money, but the blog was being monetized by Automattic, the “management” of WordPress.com, with advertising scattered across my blog. Personally I hate ads, so I decided to sign up for the personal subscription. At $4/month, or $48/year, I felt it was easily affordable. And it was for a while until I grew tired of the quality of the design templates at that level. I wasn’t happy with the way my blog looked after applying and then tweaking the selection. I wanted something that was very minimal. So I went up to the next grade, Premium, which doubled my yearly cost to $96/year. That too was OK for a while, until I finally found a theme being used by another web site that was only available at the Business tier, which was reduced to $200 around June of this year. So I signed up for that and paid the remaining difference I still owed on Premium. I got my theme, tweaked it to my liking, and all was good.

Then I got to thinking about living on a fixed income, and started looking at my yearly charges for various services. The prospect of going on a fixed income that only shows up the first of the month helps you to really focus on what’s actually needed and what’s not. A WordPress $300 business plan is not needed, even if you run a business, unless it’s a fairly major small business, at which point you’d actually hire someone to manage it all for you and not subscribe just to a blog hosting plan. In any event I closed it down on Thanksgiving day. I’ll have it until June of next year, at which point I’ll make the decision whether to go back to a personal plan in order to keep the ads off. As far as the look of the site, I’ll live with what they have to offer.

Which leads me to looking at other expenses that need to be trimmed, yearly and monthly. My biggest monthly expense right now is my iPhone 8 Plus. I traded up from a 7 Plus back in March. I’m on Apple’s trade-up plan, which I’m going to allow to finish itself and not renew. My wife, who still has her 7 Plus and sees no reason to trade up, has finished paying on her plan. That just leaves mine, I’ll probably leave mine alone until it’s done. After all, in spite of what you read, it’s an interest free two year loan on the phone. After that, if I need a new phone for whatever reason, such as Apple’s refusal to update iOS because it’s become “legacy”, then I might think about going down-market for a mid-level smart phone. Over the last 12 months I’ve worked with $100-$200 smart phones that rival what you would have considered upper-tier smart phones from two or three years ago.

The list for these kinds of expenses (“professional” expenses) seem to go on and on. Major trimming has commenced.

Yes, big changes are coming to my life. Very big changes. Better adjust as much as possible before I have no real choice, and he process becomes very painful.