My Brief Superpower, Fiction Fragment

I had a superpower for a while. Or maybe I didn’t. It was hard to tell.

A few years back, I picked up the habit of doing the New York Times crossword puzzle. Me and hundreds of thousands of other people. I started by sailing through Mondays and being utterly stumped by Saturdays. The puzzles get harder through the week, starting on Monday and peaking on Saturday. Sunday is actually a mid-week level of difficulty, just larger.

There was a long time that I would stare at a lot of white space on my grids.

The clues have moved away from names of obscure rivers to perfectly normal words with clever cluing. Most of the time, that is. No amount of cleverness will help you dig up the name of a sports figure or a movie star or the first name of a former U.S. poet laureate, RITA, as in Dove. Either you know it or you don’t. Usually, I didn’t.

The puzzle is well-edited. The more difficult words usually had kinder cross-clues to help. Or some days my brain was on stand-by and I couldn’t get any help from any direction.

Cue more staring at white space.

Gradually, I began to notice the puzzle at large in the world around me. At least the clues, particularly clues I hadn’t gotten yet. I’d be stumped by a short word and then a co-worker would tell me that they bought a new headset from Beats by DRE.

Or, a business news story would refer to the former rivalry between Sony and TOSHIBA.

When I’d get back to the puzzle, I’d be able to fill out the missing bits.

This didn’t work with other crossword puzzles. I tried. Blank spaces on the grid left me hanging in the wind.

Didn’t work with other word games. Ditto.

Sure, I know there are mundane explanations.

Perhaps it was a matter of numbers. The NYT puzzle is hugely popular. A certain percentage of society would be reading the same clues at the same time. The people, places, and things appearing in that day’s puzzle would be in the forefront of the hive mind.

Perhaps it was simple a matter of me noticing. When you live in the middle of a major urban center, thousands of facts pass in front of your eyeballs. I see advertisements in subway stations and and magazine covers on newstands, not to mention the firehose of factoids that is the Internet. Maybe I only noticed the words I needed. If hadn’t been wondering about ‘An Atlanta hoopster’, I would have glossed right past the poster advertising the New York Knicks playing the Atlanta HAWKs.

Perhaps it was confirmation bias. You believe something to be true. Or you want something to be true. So you notice things that prove it to be true. I wanted to be special. So, I noticed things that made me feel singled out by the universe.

If it was a superpower, what was the point? Aside from being flat-out weird.

Either way, it faded over time. As I did more puzzles, I got better at them. I began to develop a databank of repeating puzzle trivia. I recognized that any form of ‘Eli’ meant the puzzlemaker needed the Y from YALE. Eventually, I was able to finish the puzzle each day. I stopped seeing clues everywhere I went.

So, that was my superpower. Or maybe it wasn’t.

Year of the Ox Challenge, Second Walk Report, Yellowleaf Park

Fit To Ride

Walking

 
Awareness of the outside world. “To dispel the myths and raise awareness of heart disease & stroke as the number one killer of women.” American Heart Association: Go Red For Women, today.
~~~

A few laps around a softball field while in the area running errands. The path leading away from the field into the woods exists only on the map.

Year of The Ox, Walk #2 [Intro]
Yellowleaf Park, Wilsonville AL
January 12, 2021
Distance – 1.25 km (.78 miles)
Time – 18:36 min
Current Mileage – 6.55 km (4.07 miles)
To Go – 25.97 km (16.14 miles)
Total Distance – 32.53 km (20.21 miles)
Challenge in miles. Tracker set to kilometers for weekly 5Ks & virtual UK walk. [Digital Fun, LEJOG]

Previous Posts
[Virtual 2021, Digital Fun For Foot And Pedal]
[Ox #1]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine

Year Of The Ox Challenge, Introduction and First Walk Report, Veteran’s Park

Fit To Ride

Walking

 

Awareness of the outside world. “We will also be donating a portion of the proceeds (at least 20% of every registration) to the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research.” Virtual Run: Ox
~~~

Project Description
My latest greenspace adventure is the Virtual Run: Year of The Ox Challenge, performed as a series of 5Ks in a different local park each week. The challenge calls for 20.21 miles in January and February. There is no reporting. The medal has arrived. I could do whatever. I have chosen to adhere to the stated requirements. What’s life without whimsy?

This was simple when I started. Seven walks in 8 weeks. Fortunately – or unfortunately – other 5Ks have caught my fancy since then. To finish this challenge before the end of the month, I have to do three weeks of 6Ks, or pick up an extra 3K one week. We’ll see. Other walk reports waiting on swag to arrive.

Ox Walk #1

Walk
Year of The Ox Challenge, Walk #1
Veterans Park, Valleydale Road, Hoover, AL
January 4, 2021
Distance – 5.3 km (3.29 miles)
Time – 1:22:21
Current Mileage – 5.3 km (3.29 miles)
To Go – 27.22 km (16.92 miles)
Total Distance – 32.53 km (20.21 miles)
Challenge in miles. Tracker set to kilometers for weekly 5Ks & virtual UK walk. [Digital Fun, LEJOG]

Park
Wide, well-packed, well-used trail. Mostly flat, a few short, sharp dips in the wooded section. Loop listed as 5k. Came out as 4K on my tracker. Wandered around to complete the distance and to look for 5k/finish sign. [Fun]

Hammock Garden. Here’s one in VA, complete with hammocks, 10 News: Hammock garden takes root in Danville, by Colter Anstaett, 2019. Who knew?

Previous Post
[Virtual 2021, Digital Fun For Foot And Pedal]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine

Back In The Traces, Milton

Riding Driving Journal

 
Awareness of the outside world. History.Com: The Man Behind Black History Month, by Sarah Pruitt, Updated: Jan 14, 2021.
~~~


 
Milton continues to demonstrate excellent tire-handling skills. When we added weight, he channeled his inner draft horse and dug in like a champ. If I didn’t know the horse, I’d say we were ready to hitch and go. [Check-In]

But I do know the horse. We’ve been here before.

Before his first show, Milton was a star. He hitched. He drove. He had lessons. The three of us went new places without a problem. You might even say, we hitched without a hitch. Then he went to the show & lost his tiny pony mind. [not a post]

Currently, Milton has a champion. His rider thinks that – with Herculean levels of patience – Milton can be reasoned with.

I can be patient. Really, I can. For while. Then, I’m likely to say, ‘Get over your damn self and get on with it.” This attitude worked with Previous Horse, who was opinionated and stubborn. OTOH, this sort of outburst causes Milton regard me as if I have grown an extra head.

But I wander from the point.

Milton is doing outstandingly with the tire work.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine

Mood On Monday, Waiting For My Vaccine

Another one for looking back on. A record of what we thought at the time. [Whither?]

Have you had your Fauci Ouchie? Credit for the term goes to an unnamed six-year old.

Text, “A 6-year old ballet student asked me today if I’m excited about getting my “Fauci Ouchie” soon, and I will now be referring to the covid-19 vaccine as only that, because it’s the cutest thing ever.” @EmmaScott, Jan 21, 2021

 
I’m waiting.

I wouldn’t say that I am waiting patiently. Vaccine tomorrow? Here’s my arm.

I understand. I expect to wait a long – or relatively long – time. I’m at the back of any line.

… for age. To old to worry about returning to college. Too young to tick any of the Phase 1 boxes. CDC: When Vaccine is Limited, Who Should Get Vaccinated First?

… for lack of co-morbidity. Happy about that.

… for job. I am neither critical medical personnel, nor an essential worker. While I may be a joy and a delight to all who know me, my presence off the property is not vital to the functioning of society.

Staying home is not that much different from life in the before times. It would be nice to have a choice.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine

State of the Blog, In Maps

Blogging About Blogging

Images

 
Awareness of the outside world. Speaking of math. Archie’s Math is a traveling math lab in Central Pennsylvania. “65% of students who responded ‘math is ok’ or ‘I don’t like math’ before the event, changed their response to ‘I like math’ after the event.” AM: Resources > Student test results.pdf. Full disclosure, a family member is involved with this. Still sounds like a good program.
~~~
I don’t spend much time pondering my stats. I don’t do anything with my analytics, so I leave them alone to get on with compiling themselves. I look at the hit maps. I wonder about the people in those countries. I wander off. That has been the extent of my involvement.

Then I was read a yearly recap from a blogger who was more in tune with their geography, “Yeah! I finally got a reader from Greenland!” nebusresearch: How 2020 Treated My Mathematics Blog.

So, I decided to take a longer look. Here we are. My blog. In maps.

US in the top spot by almost a factor of 20. Makes sense for a US-based blog. Canada is second; UK third. Both in double digits. Since there are 30/31 posts per month, this could be a handful of readers checking in each day. (Waves hi.) 27 countries for the month.

As above. US in the 5 digits; every place else, 3 digits or below. UK second. Canada, third. 74 countries for the year.

My international gap widens to a factor of 25. Top Ten all time are US, UK, Canada, Australia, France, Mexico, India, Brazil, Austria, Germany. UK to Austria in thousands, rest in hundreds. 155 countries, of which 21 are single hits.

I wonder if this is all English speakers, or if some brave souls are reading through Google translate.

Of course, some percentage of these hits are bots. Even at the end of a two-month blog break back in 2018, I was still getting around 20 hits a day. No reason to think the number of bots trolling the Internet has gone down. [Struggle Bus, Bright-Eyed]

Nor do I have a feeling for how this is affected by Following or by RSS feeds. Do those register here or not? I could by huge in Hungary by email. I doubt it. This is probably representative.

Not sure what this all means. Not going to change what I do. But now that I’ve gotten interested, I’ll probably pull up the page more often.

As for bots and the accuracy of the numbers, I know some of y’all are out there, and that's enough.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott