Archive for August, 2009

Quiet but busy

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

All is quiet on the southern front lately.  There have been a lot of things on my mind, but one of them, unfortunately, hasn’t been writing about it all on here.

I did have a dream last night about bloggers I read, though.  I’m not sure if that’s a sign that I read too many blogs or if I’ve been missing writing on my own.  Or just that I wanted to hang out at a funky restaurant/ice-skating lake with a whole bunch of women and one of their kids.

My subconscious is a strange place.

At least I’m not dreaming about Excel macros anymore.  I’ve been doing so much work on macros at work that I went to sleep and dreamed about working on them some more.  Talk about frustrating.  I couldn’t get them to work even while dreaming!  I found someone willing to help me at work, though, so now I think I’ve reached completion on my many macros.

THIS IS ALL ABOUT MACROS, WHICH IS BORING TO MOST PEOPLE.  IF YOU’RE NOT INTERESTED, SKIP AHEAD UNTIL YOU SEE THE “ALL CLEAR”

It started out simple enough.  I wanted an index in the front of a workbook.  The workbook had worksheets for each project, each needing a specific type of paperwork completed, each worksheet keeping the numbers used to identify those document organized neatly.  But it was turning into an enormous workbook.  So I wanted something that would look at all the worksheet names and make an index in the first page of the book.  I ended up with a macro that puts the tabs in alphanumerical order, makes an index looking at those names, and then creates a hyperlink to those pages so there’s no need to sort through the sheets to find the right one.  It’s the coolest thing ever.  I snagged part of it directly from the internet and had my coworker help me get other parts working, but I think I learned a lot about how macros work and put in a good deal of my own effort.

Of course, it looks like that worksheet is going to be obsolete by the beginning of November.  But until then, it’s fantastic!

And then I started working on macros that I’d developed in another workbook that was giving me troubles.  It was set up so that at the check of a box, the date the box was checked would show up with a comment, that information would be added to another sheet in the workbook, and then the date would show up in another workbook altogether.  It’s a nifty piece of work, but it was clunky.  The date in the other workbook shows up on a grid depending on who checked the box (they have their own tabs in the workbook) and which project it was for.  For each sheet in the book, for each checkbox, I had to identify exactly which cell the date should go into.  It was a total of 8 different cells and I had to set it by hand for each workbook, of which there’s one for each project.

It was driving me crazy.

Now, not only does the date and comment show up next to the checkbox, an email opens up to let people know that the box has been checked, and a note shows up underneath the last line of text in a specific column (no matter if there are spaces between cells with text on the page).  The list of information that was being added to another sheet in the workbook was removed because it wasn’t necessary.

AND the date that shows up on the grid finds its way automatically to the correct spot!!  The only thing I have to do is change the file name for each new project, which I already had to do, and put the project number on the first page of the sheet, which, also, I already had to do.

And, unseen by all my users, the code behind it all is about 75% smaller than it was in the first place.  It’s AWESOME.

Again, I had a lot of help from my coworker, but I did most of this on my own, and some of what I was doing was something he hadn’t seen before or considered doing.  I’m using “Find” instead of “Loop” and he’d never seen that before, apparently.

I am very proud of myself.

So that’s what I’ve been doing for the last several days.  The computer systems were completely off-line Thursday and Friday.  A cooler leaked onto the server and the whole thing went down.  It was oodles of fun, let me tell you.  No clock-in clock, no email, no drives on the network, most intranet functions were down.  I had a few meeting and we sat around chatting and brainstorming, but not able to actually accomplish anything.

So I worked on macros.  I’m such a geek.

ALL CLEAR!

In other news, Justin found out yesterday morning that his family’s dog died Sunday evening from a heart attack.  It was a Bichon Friese named Smidge and he was awesome.  Friendly and smart and loyal.  He looked like a polar bear teddy bear.  He thought Justin was his brother.  They’d had the dog for about 8 years.  We’re all sad about it.

I spent time yesterday looking at adopting a Bichon.  When we do get a dog, that’s the kind we’d like to get because it wouldn’t bother our allergies.  Plus, they’re just fun, adorable little dogs.  It turns out there’s a place that has about 100 rescued Bichons and Bichon-mixes, according to their PetFinder listings.  Unfortunately, they’re in Oklahoma.  And we’re not ready to get a dog just yet.  Even though it would be really nice.

The biopsy on the mole on my arm came back normal.  The cut there is healing slowly.  I finally picked up bandages that fit and stick.  It’s good because the butterfly bandages I was using to keep the small stripe-shaped bandages to stay in place left me with rash.  The bug bite appears to be clearing up with the use of the ointment the dermatologist gave me.  And the jury is still out on the fungal infection.  It seems to be clearing up, but I always think that.  And then it’s not actually gone when I finish the length of the treatment.  Yeah—this is the 3rd or 4th time I’ve tried to get rid of this thing.  I’ve had it for a while.  It’s a good thing it just looks like dry skin.

We rearranged my office over the weekend.  We even got pictures up on the wall!  After a year of living in this place, I finally have pictures in my office.  It’s a good feeling.  I love sitting in there, reading, listening to music.  It’s a very comfortable place.  Now I just have to figure out what to do with all the books still sitting on the floor of Justin’s office instead of in my closet.

And then we’ll figure out how to do Justin’s office and get pictures hung in there, too.

Eventually . . . .

As long as it doesn’t cost us any money because we’re still trying to buy Justin a car.  Yeah, still haven’t finished that one yet.  Does it seem like it’s been a while?  That’s because it has.

And we’re still making sure that we keep enough money in the savings account to pay for tickets for Christmas.  Of course, we could just put them on the credit card, but we finally have everything all on ONE credit card.  You have no idea how great I feel about that one. 

We started out with three maxed-out credit cards.  We finally got one totally paid off, and got the others low enough that I could transfer the balance of the one with higher interest onto the low-interest rate card.  And there was no fee to transfer it over!  That card is now just about maxed again, but we have a singular credit card bill to pay and that is more of a relief than I expected it to be.  And if we can keep up with payments like I’ve been putting into that gaping hole of a money drain, then I expect we’ll have it paid off sometime in the next year.

But getting back to Christmas!  I’ve already been looking at tickets and trying to figure out exactly when I (or we) will fly into town, how long I (we) will stay and who I’d like to see while I’m in town.  I figured out how I’m doing presents.  I’ll buy them here or have them shipped here, wrap them, and then ship them all together in a box to someone up north.  That way, we don’t have to travel with gifts or buy them when we get there, and then wrap them when we get there.  We can take care of all of that while down here, and then just send one heavily insured box up north to wait for us.

Now I just need to know who we need to buy presents for and what they want.

Hint.  Heavy, stinkin’ hint.

Yeah, I know it’s August.  I’m just a little excited!

And rambling, apparently, because I just hit the bottom of page 3 in this Word document.  I did say that there’s been a lot of things on my mind.  I’ll wrap it up here for today, though.  Enough babbling.  There’ll be more time for more thoughts tomorrow.

4

Stepping through my day….

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Inspired by Amy:)

5:25 – Wake up, look at the alarm, and realize that I have 30 minutes more I could be sleeping.

5:55 – Hit the snooze button.

6:00 – Hit the snooze button again.

6:03 – Get out of bed before it goes off again.  Ugh.

6:15 – Get out of the shower and start to get ready.  Change clothes two times.  Go downstairs and make my lunch.  Go back upstairs and change clothes again.

6:45 – Kiss Justin good-bye and head out the door.

7:15 – Park my car.

7:25 – Get to my desk and log into the computer.

7:30 – 8:00 – Make and eat my oatmeal while checking my email and scanning documents into the computer that were left from yesterday.

8:00 – 9:00 – Alternate between trying to figure out how to get my macro to work right and doing other projects people ask me to do.

9:00 – 10:00 – Go to a meeting about the changes coming into the system for how we approve documentation.  It’s a very boring meeting.

10:00 – 10:30 – Go back to trying to figure out my macro.

10:30 – 11:00 – Help a coworker try to embed an Excel table into a Word document.  Fail.

11:00 – Run to the other side of the building to talk with my Lean adviser about my project and other Lean stuff.

11:30 – Eat lunch and read a book at my desk.

12:00 – Call Justin and a few other people.

1:00 – 2:00 – Think about what my Lean adviser said and work on my macro and work on things people give me.

2:00 – Lead a Lean meeting about schedules.  It’s a short one just to let everybody know where I think we’re heading.  One of the people I really need to be there is out today.

2:15 – Walk through the demo cabin of the new project.  It’s beautiful!  Follow a coworker as she takes me through another hanger onto another airplane that they’re finishing up the details on.  I’ve been at the company for 3 years and I finally got to step foot onto one of our airplanes!!

3:00 -5:00 – Work on the Excel table crossover into Word problem.  Get it so it works on my computer, but it doesn’t when anyone else opens it on their own computer.  Work on other things people hand me to do.  Get utterly frustrated at Word.

5:00 – 6:00 – Really buckle down and try to work out this macro thing.  I think I need to set objects and collections and create a loop.  Maybe.  How do I do that?

6:00 – Leave work.

6:45 – Get home, change quickly, and walk out the door to meet Justin walking home from the grocery store.

7:00 – Walk Justin home and go out to finish my walk.  Get home, shower, clean house.

8:30 – Start to make dinner with Justin.

9:00 – Eat dinner and clean the kitchen.  Go back upstairs.  Read comics and blogs and listen to Do You Want to Date My Avatar two more times.

10:30 – Write this.  And go to bed.

1

My elbow is naked

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Well, I’m back from the first dermatologist appointment I’ve had since I had acne so badly that it was difficult to find my face.  You know you’ve got it bad when they give you an ointment and then tell you not to go out in the sun.

Interestingly enough, my skin is now nice enough that women I don’t know on the street stop me to mention it.  Okay, so it’s only happened twice, both on the same day, both by women selling Mary Kay products, but hey!  A girl’s got to appreciate what she can get, especially when she spent several years looking like I did.

Anyway, this appointment was to talk with a dermatologist about a few questions I had about issues going on with my skin.  One, she’s pretty sure is a bug bite that’s just persisted oddly; she gave me some ointment samples to put on it.  The other, she’s pretty sure is a persistent, benign fungal infection; she gave me a prescription for an ointment for that.  And the other was a mole that she sliced clean off my arm and she’s going to send in for tests.

Seriously, she sliced the whole thing off.  It’s the weirdest thing.

I have a lot of moles.  You could make a whole series of constellations out of the spots on my arms.  I’ve had them for as long as I can remember, although now and then I do find ones that I don’t remember having before.  Since I have so many and I’ve had them for so long, I know that I should watch out for certain things—the ABCD of moles.  Asymmetry, Border, Color, and Diameter.  If any of those things change, then I should have it checked out.

So this mole on the crease of my left elbow started to act strangely.  Sometime in the last month or so, it started to change from the brown it had been to a pinkish tone.  It got a little puffy and sensitive, and then it got a pink border around it.  And all those things added up to me calling up a dermatologist and setting up an appointment.  Yesterday, actually.  I called and was told that I could either come right away the next morning or wait until the 18th of September.  That’s right—either within 24 hours or wait a month and a day.  Yeah!  I’ll take tomorrow.

So I went in this morning and showed her the mole on my arm. She checked over the rest of the moles on my arms, legs and back.  I showed her the blue mole on my butt.  Apparently that’s just what they’re called:  Blue moles.  I’m pretty sure the nurse had never seen one.  Hadn’t really planned on dropping my pants and showing off my bottom today, but there ya go.

I showed her the other problems I’m having, and then the nurse suck a tiny needle in my arm, numbed up a spot on my arm about the size of a quarter, and the doctor took a straight razor and shaved off the top of my mole.  I don’t really know what I was expecting when they said they were going to take a biopsy, but that wasn’t it.  I’ve got a band aid on my elbow right now and it’s covering this raw, pink spot with a purple needle spot beside it.  If my elbow could speak, it’d probably be saying something about being naked.

My biggest question is whether the mole is going to come back when the skin heals.  I assume that yes, it will.  Because I’m pretty sure it’s got something to do with more than just the top layer of skin and that the pinkness I’m looking at when I remove the bandage is the inside of the mole.  Because it didn’t bleed like a cut would and it doesn’t look like any other scrape I’ve had, so it’s got to be something different about the skin and that is what will grow back.

It’s just so strange.

They’re going to call me back inside of two weeks or so with the results of the testing.  I’m trying not to be too worried.  It doesn’t seem like anything I should be too worried about.  I was actually more worried about the spot that she says is a bug bite.  So I’m just going to be calm and wait for the phone call.  And put the ointments on those other spots and see if they go away.  And once again be so very thankful that I’ve got medical insurance that covers all these sorts of things.

And that’s the most interesting part of my day so far.  It’s enough excitement for one day.

2
Tags:
Posted in Living! |

The slowest purchase ever

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Want to know what we’re doing so much better this time around than last time? Buying a car.

Justin’s car broke down about a month ago.  It was sometime between July 6th and 10th, but I can’t remember exactly when because I was on “vacation” and not going anywhere so why did I care what day of the week it was?  But we got a mechanic to look at it and he declared it dead and we’ve been working around it ever since.  While I was on furlough, Justin just took my car to work.  And after I needed it back so I could get back to work again, he’s been catching a ride with a coworker or working from home.  Despite all my efforts to reach out to people at my office, I haven’t found anyone willing to help me carpool.  It’s really stupid.

Anyway, we’ve been trying to figure out what we’re going to do about it.  And, because we CAN be taught!, we’re being much smarter about it than we were when my car died last year.  I don’t really want to talk about that experience, so let’s just say we made some not very wise decisions at that time.

So this time we’re doing better.  This time we’re doing research.  This time we’re being more forceful.  This time we’re actually being SMART.

And we’ve so far gone to one dealership twice and another dealership once and we still have NO car.  Because the first time, we wanted to check out what we would get if we didn’t have to worry about money and then look at what that would look like to our finances.  Here’s a hint:  It didn’t look good.  We decided not to do that.  (See?!  Smart!!)

Today, we went to another dealership, a small, used-car lot, one recommended by a friend from church, and we did some recon.  What we learned:  We could buy one of those cars with money we had in our accounts, but we’d prefer to do a little research into the car before driving off with it.  And that the guy we worked with could help us with our problem.

And then we went back to the dealer where we went in the first place, a name-brand dealer, and asked what the best deal they could give us was.  And it was pretty sad.  The guy we spoke with did as best as he could to try to get us into a car, but we were solid on the amount that we were willing to go into debt with and we did not budge from that number.

So we’re back at home, still with no car, but with more and more knowledge.  Justin’s going to look into the type of car we looked at today, but more likely, we’re going to call up the small-dealership guy we spoke with today and work something out.  If it works, I’ll tell you about it later.  Mostly, this is just to tell you what we did NOT do.

We did not go onto the lot and fall in love with a car and buy it at what they offered because it’s beautiful and we MUST HAVE IT.

We did not let ourselves get suckered into a price range where we were not comfortable.

We did not let our niceness turn us into doormats for the nice men we worked with.

We did not walk in without researching what we could afford.

We did not let the salespeople intimidate us.

We did not walk off with a car because we could afford it because we prefer to do research before jumping into the pool.

We did not lie.

We did not let our anxieties about money, debt, and car-less-ness drive us into a decision.

We did not go into the situation without very clearly communicating with each other what our expectations and priorities were.

We did not try to read each others minds but instead asked for a little bit of time alone to talk about what we thought about what was going on.

I guess what it all boils down to so far is a handful of key things:

  • We didn’t buy a car we couldn’t afford just because it was beautiful
  • We didn’t buy a car we could afford just because it was there
  • We didn’t let salespeople influence our decisions
  • We communicated clearly between each other and stuck together as a team

And, yeah, it means that Justin will still have to catch a ride with his coworker on Monday.  But we haven’t dug ourselves further into debt.  We haven’t driven home a car we weren’t totally sure about.  And we’re learning more and more how to communicate with each other about important, difficult things and presenting a unified front.

And all those things are so much better than having another car sitting in front of our house.

3

Technology of the future!

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Wanna know what I wish I had? I wish I had one of those electronic picture frames. But not like they’re sold right now. I want one that’s wirelessly connected to a photo stream. A photo stream that anyone in my network can upload photos to at any time. This way, I could constantly have current photos of my family on my desk. People could upload photos and I’d instantly see them on the wall of my office. It would have to have some sort of interface so I could mark favorites and set rotations. It’s like a Flicker stream FOR MY WALL!! Oh! And it should be able to do short videos, too! Oh! And be cordless so I can just hang it on the wall instead of having to plug it into the wall! Put a battery like my camera in there so I can just charge one battery while the other’s in the device. Perfect!!

Of course, I still haven’t seen my first idea come out yet, so it’s probably going to be a little bit of a wait. My first idea? It was sort of a cross between the Kindle and those electronic picture frames: A handheld electronic photo album. Small enough to be portable, big enough to view pictures easily. Sure, smart phones can carry pictures, but they’re so small. And electronic picture frames are an album of their own, but they have to be plugged into the wall. I want something I could toss into my purse and pull out to show people, without them having to squint.

I’m still waiting for them to get those really cool portable readers out for the common folk, too. I want one of those ones that are thin and flexible like paper with the texture and sheen of paper. It’s just like paper! Except it’s electronic! So magazines that are released through the internet now instead of on paper could be brought to bed like a regular magazine instead of read at the computer. Plus, the power of a whole portable library in the palm of my hand! But so much cooler than the Kindle and it’s current cousins!

And while we’re at it, where’s my flying car, dangit?!

1
Posted in Living! |