Sunday, September 7, 2025

Cautionary Tale

 



(Back in 1936, when SS#s first appeared, people thought it would be a swell idea to tattoo them onto an arm. )





I’ve just spent a phenomenal amount of time on the phone with a rep from CitiBank. That’s okay – it’s a rainy day and the biggest thing on my agenda will be a nap later.

          Last week I’d received a form letter from them regarding my LLBean Mastercard saying they were missing information on the account. This is my back-up credit card, almost never used (I’m finding Bean’s prices to be remarkably high. No, I don’t want to spend $45 for a tee shirt.) except for emergencies. It did come in handy a couple of years ago when the card we actually use was compromised.

          The whole “to avoid disruption to your card services, please log in, etc.” had me a little nervous, so decided to go online and check the account, see if I could pop in whatever information they were looking for.

          Except I couldn’t get into the account. No surprise, since I’ve never needed to before. I called customer service and a nice lady named Cynthia and I wound our way through the labyrinth, and wound our way, and wound our way. But no luck. She’s going to send my problems on to the IT boys and I’ll give it another shot next week.

          We hit so many responses of incorrect information that I even began doubting if I was remembering the last four digits of my SS# correctly. Thankfully, My Guy knows my number as well as I know his, so he verified that no, I hadn’t transposed the numbers. (I think his number is seared into my brain better than my own after his years in the Army; it seemed anything on base required me to reel them off before buying or doing anything.)

          So, as my synapses start slowing down and the arteries turn to concrete, what to do about this vital number? Should I write my SS# down? Where would be safe? I’m reminded of the book Still Alice, a frightening story if ever there was one. She’d thought she’d created a fail-safe way to ensure that she could still access vital information, but then forgot how to work through the steps after all.

Saturday, September 6, 2025

Susans and Tom

 

It seems like every year I’m newly pleased by my garden, as though nothing had ever bloomed there before.

Thursday, September 4, 2025

AI: IB vs AP

 



No, my title isn’t in code. It’s a response to last week’s Boston Globe article by Simon Rabinovitch about the use of artificial intelligence in education.

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Lunch and Nuptials

 

         We had a visit from the grand-twins and their parents yesterday, a long overdue visit despite texts and phone calls in between. 

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Afternoon date


 I’d just about giving up all hope of getting out to see a movie somewhere other than my living room. I thought that with the endless round of cartoons and superheroes that would always be my fate going forward.

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Calling all wanna-be ukelele players

 

          Since I had finished my last batch of library books and was avoiding the one for my book club (like a grumpy 9th grader, I hate being told what to read), off I went to get more reading material.

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Shopping Weirdness

 

Okay, I should stop being dumbfounded by Halloween displays in July, but I recently saw a couple of things in stores that left me scratching my head.

          I was standing in the check-out line at my grocery store when I spotted this: