Can’t Plan On Anything For Sure Except …

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Today is one of those days. The end of another year at an age known as midlife, making a little bit of progress towards a) wrapping up the past year with some clarity over what’s happened, and z) preparing for the upcoming year: 2025.

Towards that end I topped my WANT-to-do list with “plan a special solo train trip to Powell’s City of Books”, but first set to researching and trying out some accounting software, finally deciding (to return to) Quicken Classic: Personal and Business. Knowing it’s far from a perfect solution, but anything is better than nothing. Especially if that “anything” is familiar and has the longest history of use by the most people. But then my payment wouldn’t go through (on three different cards with available $) so I’m going to cobble something together myself, and maybe that’s for the best. That will be imperfect too, but in a more customized (and cheaper/free) way.

I’m also going to try out some spreadsheet templates I saw listed on Shoeboxed – Google Sheets Expense Tracker Template: 5 Free Templates

Time really got away from me. I was supposed to be heating up my main meal when I got distracted for hours researching then trying out the Quicken Solopreneur cloud-based accounting thing, and deciding the classic shit is still better (and then failing to successfully finalize its implementation) that by the time I heat up my canned chili over and over a bunch of times in the microwave until it was all sticky around the edges of the bowl — each time thinking “now I’m ready to eat” — and then did in fact finally eat, a text came through from my sister about her husband (our much-loved brother-in-law) and his cancer (metastasized to his brain, among other places): if his tumor doesn’t respond to the newer more aggressive treatments they’re getting ready to try, “he could pass away within a few weeks to a month”.

They are getting hospice care lined up.

He has defied all of the odds for about a decade, and gone through all of these years of treatments and surgeries and stuff that it has never really felt like time (for me, particularly as non-nuclear family, and with dynamics with my sister demonstrating in multiple painful ways that I could not possibly ever do the right most wanted things for them) to do a lot of heavy grieving or prepping; he has been granted so many amazing reprieves.

But now it is really getting down to the wire. It is clear that there is nothing in 2025 we can plan on without a high likelihood of it being canceled or postponed indefinitely because DEATH. The great cancer wind-down. Which could be relatively peaceful or a bonafide surreal nightmare given the location of his tumor, and how it has recently taken a seemingly pronounced and impactful turn for the worse.


Once upon a time I was called “mature”. Maybe wise or adult-like beyond my years. But once I actually became an adult? NOT MATURE.

In many ways, I actually de-matured and became younger and more irresponsible in my forties. As visions that were more like hopes and wishes than plans did not pan out, and my body aged, and my energy and desire to persist with no promise of rewards waned, things have gotten more real in my own life and work without me finding a way out of the holes I’ve dug for myself and my wife. I have a lot more tools, for sure, but my toolbox is a fucking disorganized hoarder-ass mess and I’m super unclear and lack confidence in what I’m building.

It almost feels like all plans are useless. But of course that’s not true. And the whole thing about being an adult is KNOWING these times are coming and preparing for them. KNOWING everyone dies, and everyone ages (if they are lucky, and don’t die before they get a chance to age, which is something most of us should all be more prepared for: that we have very few positive options for exerting any control over how or when death happens, but we DO have some control over how we age and treat our bodies and approach risks). So the adult thing to do is to make plans anyway as best we can. Make responsible choices and preparations to ease our suffering and fatten our reserves of strength and practical resources so when the things we can’t control but know are going to get us all eventually HIT.


I’m getting tired of writing this now. But I realized today — after the postponement of planning one thing I want to do in 2025 and the researching and failing at the accounting software and the re-re-re-heated chili and the news about my brother-in-law and the crying I did in the late-afternoon December darkness now fully-descended — I realized that again I’d forgotten to plug the Christmas lights back in before this darkness fell.

I remembered how I joked to myself that this would be my sole scheduled responsibility for the season: something I can build my day around. Unplugging the lights when the sun comes up, and plugging them back in well before dusk. So many things I love: being in touch with what is really going on outside all around me (the weather the sun the moon). Ritual. And pretty multi-colored lights! Doing something our neighbors can enjoy and benefit from when I am otherwise an anti-social bitch-ass curmudgeon.

All of that and so simple to plan and succeed at, but I keep failing to do it in a timely manner or even clarify when the sun comes up and goes down, and WRITE DOWN when to do this lovely little thing. Instead I wind up running out there, stabbing at the cold metal outlet in the dark trying to get shit lit up before my wife comes home late after volunteering for overtime AGAIN.

It’s so simple to fix. No, not with a timer (our old one gave up the ghost, and due to my poor financial planning and wishful self-employment getting progressively less rewarding it’s not something we should throw away money on, especially when it’s such a simple and pleasant practice for me to do it manually, and blowing money on the lights themselves and the electricity to power them was unnecessary enough). It’s simple to fix by me 1) looking up sunup and sundown, and 2) writing it down and 3) prioritizing it – DAILY. With a ton of gratitude: a simple plan. A manageable plan. A plan to do something I am capable of and can submit to with pleasure even if it’s raining or cold or somebody might see me crouched down like a little Christmas light troll trying to stab the prongs into the box that a rat sometimes poops on after she’s done playing with this one clear-bodied plastic stick-pen she likes to move around under and next to the front porch.

So I will keep planning. And I will keep trying. One day at a time. One week at a time. Making adjustments after one moon cycle past solstice.

Sunrise is at 07:58 tomorrow. And sunset at 16:19. Something may come up — a death, a power outage, the breakdown of our government or big huge tree falling on me — and take precedence or force a bit of rescheduling. But most days I will be able to do it, and if not, it is not the end of the world. There is going to be about 8 hours of some form of daylight here; we can count on it.

And no matter what, while I am alive the sun is very likely to keep coming up and the earth to keep up the bulk of its motions with exceptionally reliable predictability. I can go ahead and let myself count on these things, and the knowledge that having some plans and being able to count on myself to do these little things and submitting to what IS helps ease suffering, and can lead to immeasurable amounts of happiness.

I can plan a little trip. And I can be just fine if it doesn’t work out. I’ve been told and believe it is true that NOT planning something is pretty much guaranteeing it won’t happen. So I can also plan to work with more focus, and thereby make more money this year, and plan to do some things I am proud of and that are helpful. I can plan to do my best to not add to the suffering.

I can accept that these plans may be foiled. I can accept that I will not achieve a 100% success rate. And I can still do a better job at making the plans anyway. Without giving up. This is called a growth mindset. Mindfully, patiently, lovingly reflecting on what really happens (when and if it does) to bump things off track, and identifying what I can do to steer things back to plan or towards a better alternate route and destination.

It is never too late to plan.

Having to change plans is a natural response to still being alive and having somewhere left in life to go. Even if it is just to turn on a nightlight. To take a whore’s bath. To brush and floss our teeth and to wave at a stranger like we’re not angry that the whole world didn’t exactly go our way today.

12/11 After Midnight

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In order to go to bed with a little less self-loathing:

Accomplishments:

*DOOR DRAFT BLOCKER – I measured two doors, put on clothes, and went downtown to the hardware store where I stared at the available options. Picked out two things, came home and “customized” one for the cabin. Will save money on electricity, make it easier / more comfortable to work, and block out some noise in addition to weather.

*TRIMMED (months-overgrown, gross) PUBES – outside with scissors & “personal groomer”. It’s something, anyway, but I still smell like old man piss.

*DID NOT (actively) ADD TO THE SUFFERING – not anyone else’s, anyway. I feel like my wife is suffering because of me, though, and other people who I’m “neglecting”. Being mired in these thoughts of shame and guilt of course added to my own suffering, but I did not do or say anything hurtful to anybody other than myself today. Ooops though I just remembered I glared at a woman in the parking lot who appeared to think I walking through it should yield to her in her SUV.

*A LOAD OF DISHES – started them, soaked them, washed them, and wiped down / tidied the kitchen counter.

Gratitude:

I’m grateful / (for) …

*hot running water and indoor plumbing

*my new improved cabin / door & warmth & coziness!

*my wife got to work safely and came home safely

*plenty of food to eat right here at home in our fridge, etc. and clean water to drink.

*nobody said or did anything mean to me (to my face, anyway) today

*clarity / hearing back quickly today from a job I applied for. I did not get it but I’m glad to know already and move on to the next … whatever.

*I still have hopes and dreams and things I look forward to doing

The 31st Days of the Months

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The best day of the month May be the 31st day.

Like an extra day.

A little reprieve … a staying of the sentence turning the sweet calendar kitten’s or pinup babe’s face towards the wall or ripping off another significant chunk of weeks completely.

A day when no bills are regularly due, but you might get a check in the mail or some surprise deposit directly from who-knows-where.

Thirty days hath September … April, May, and November. The rest* I can’t remember; I’m not even sure I got that much right. Obviously May can’t be correct. Is it supposed to be March?


I have a vision of the 31st of May. December. January. Whichever ones apply; this must all be clarified. If I’m ever going to arrive at having perfect extra days at the end of however-many months a year. You have to know what you want, and I want a private deathly party at the golden hour that is all of them. What does that look like? How does it taste? And whatever will I wear?

For tomorrow I just don’t know, except it is the first Friday of the next four months that I am scheduled to be able to count on. Or actually it is the last Friday before those four months start, so maybe I should really 31st it up. Especially since the moon will still be in Pisces until well into the evening.


*Leap Year Poem

Thirty days hath September,
April, June and November.
All the rest have thirty-one,
Excepting February alone,
And that has twenty-eight days clear
And twenty-nine in each leap year.

from Mother Goose courtesty of poets.org

I love how it doesn’t spell out the days with thirty-one. Like they’re the most exclusive months by virtue of being unspecified. If you don’t know or aren’t willing to look up the address, then you’re not invited.

There are seven of them, making the 31st extra lucky: January, March, May, July, August, October, December.

I’m glad there are still three more to come this year after tomorrow.

Planning Into the Future With Externally-Imposed Structure

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Finally. It feels like I have the “freedom” to plan into the future. All because I’m able to rely on a set schedule with my wife’s new job.

Today I printed out five lunar months of calendars — full moon to full moon — into the future and started plotting out and planning, filling them in.

Couldn’t we have set our own schedules exactly how we want them with both of us working for ourselves?

Actually …. no. In theory, yes. But really only sort of yes, and only some of the time.

But the bigger issue, still, is that total freedom (in addition to being much more imaginary than all that) is impossible for the vast majority of people to structure and administer reliably.

On top of that: even if you yourself are great at managing yourself, how does that work with your spouse/partner/family or even just roommates? Pets? Neighbors? Are they manageable? Do they WANT to be managed? Is that really a position that’s healthy for you to be in, where you’re setting and enforcing a schedule for your loved one(s)?

Another issue that’s made scheduling both challenging and especially necessary is my neurodivergent brain. At fifty-one, I’m nearing the end, it seems, of kidding myself that I can function normally. I CAN’T. I have tried. For a very long time. Tried so many things.

Now I am at the hopeful beginning of building realistic, powerful, and safe systems to thrive; knowing ahead of time and for-sure when my wife is going to be at work is an enormous blessing that I can see now, now that we’re on the cusp of it, is necessary for me to build healthy structure into my life and work. It is going to be the first time since we’ve been together (twenty-two years) that I can consistently and predictably count on time alone, and know exactly what days and hours I can look forward to being alone (as well as with her). AND know that the schedule will not change for at least four months (barring something quite extreme happening).

I’m grateful and excited that my wife is for-real employed by an outfit that administers all of the benefits in concrete tangible well-documented terms. I wish we didn’t need this, but … we do. I wish I had done better by us and she didn’t have to work at all. I wish we were set for life. But we aren’t. And the reality is that very few people who are creative risk-takers are also great at managing and administering practicalities. So, for now, I am just incredibly relieved someone else is taking care of these things and I am not the boss. Relieved AND GUILTY. But yeah … very relieved.

Here’s the thing: FLEXIBILITY IS OVERRATED. And for some of us, it is downright unsafe-feeling. Distracting, disconcerting, and not designed to play to our strengths. If you’re someone who needs a long runway, advertising yourself as or pretending to be FLEXIBLE is simply not a safe way to fly. You DO NOT want to make believe that you can make all those FLEXIBLE changes and transitions and still function at peak performance to the specs of your own amazing incredible machine: YOU CAN’T. I CAN’T.

What I can do now is acknowledge and accept my limitations while embracing my strengths by structuring and scheduling work and life with greater precision.

Another very recent change facilitating this never-done-before act of planning four+ months (to-the-day, I’m working on) ahead: I took a once-in-a-lifetime trip alone by rail on a very tight budget last month to see the total solar eclipse. It forced me to plan ON PAPER with a ton of specificity that I normally do not do. Partly because I needed to communicate it to my mom for her peace of mind, but as I forced myself to create and print out clear itineraries with different kinds of pertinent information that I realized both how necessary it was for me, and how time-consuming. And how even with the amount of time and thought and care I invested in it, I STILL left many things undone and it was only by luck and the love of my wife that I had enough money to eat every day and other resources I hadn’t done a great job of pinpointing and securing ahead of time.

You would think by now I would be a master at such things, but I habitually do things very last minute and never to the level of coherence or completion I should to be fully prepared, safe and proud. When you’re young, you can get away with that (and it’s even helpful to do a lot of shit half-assed and in blissful ignorance, but I am (we are both) getting too old for that to be comfortable.

It is not healthy or even safe at this stage of life when I need to be able to depend on myself to still be winging it on the daily. Up to now I have not had any dependents (like children) to force me into this space, but I am at the end of my tether not being able to take care of myself and my wife reliably. It feels unstable (it IS unstable) and makes me deeply unhappy, ashamed, and afraid. The cumulative effect of hourly uncertainty over decades is highly stressful, dysfunctional and sad, especially for someone who is super sensitive to the sounds and vibrations of unpredictable moving parts.

ANYWAY. This is a long process-journal logging some progress I’ve made, things I’ve learned, changes we’re experiencing, and current runway I’m builing: on paper, more than a season of days I can rely on being fleshed out to fulfill some goals and set some routines before the leaves that are green now change colors in the fall.

The real freedom for me now is in being able to see the runway ahead, know it is spacious enough for my build and my engines, know my destinations and the amount of time I have to get there, foresee some of the likely bad weather, and plan and prepare all of the things I need to get to where I want to go safely. With excellence and joy.

Twitter ≠ “My Life”

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Beginning to modify this site because a) I want to, and b) what it’s been doing (auto-posting a log of my tweets from the previous day) is no longer possible / “Twitter” has ceased to exist in many ways.

Twitter stopped being what I’d signed up for a long long long time before the new ownership and “X”. It definitely hasn’t been a place I’ve gone focused on doing what my posts have been titled (micro-blogging “My Life Yesterday”) for many years, anyway.

It makes more sense for daily logs and such to be published online the old-fashioned way anyway: on a blog next-to-nobody looks at except for the person doing the blogging.


-Creating and maintaining logs, documentation, reports, lists, journals, etc. are important and helpful to me. I value these practices, and I believe they add value to me: to my work, my efficiency, my focus, confidence, happiness, clarity, creativity, self-esteem and effectiveness.

-Having many blogs / websites allows me to funnel boring and/or repellant content into special interest containers: greater utility for me, less counter-productive content for surfers/readers/fans, and more clarity for all.

-CAPTAIN’S LOG(s). Role playing. Vision of self. Habits and practice.

– Habitually writing, journaling, being organized, noting observations, planning, researching, studying, making flash cards, and documenting journeys –committing to these practices and prioritizing them daily (especially over what “normal” people and the Tyranny of The Social dictate) — is an act of defiance and discipline that builds grit / muscles / puts hair on your chest while naturally building walls and moats separating you from those people who do not have plans. When people know you would rather spend hours every day journaling, reading, learning, writing, researching and charting your course than wasting even a few hours every week getting drunk and socializing superficially, they will notice the the lines of demarcation between you and them; when paired with confidence that you are dedicated to your practices and priorities and enjoy them, most of them will even naturally be repelled by you and give you a wide berth. Just a hypothesis; I’ve not had the required confidence up to now to thoroughly test this. I believe the key to opening the first door to this kind of freedom is to actually DO the things when faced with challenges and undesired invitations/pressure, and to clearly, confidently state these things I already have plans to do / want to do most with relatively flat affect so as not to be confused for part of a conversational volley. TO DO: write script. Practice. Example: I’m catching up on my logs and reading. TO DO: write more scripts anticipating questions and remarks. Example: laugh and don’t say any words in response. Use invitations, questions, reactions as triggers for excusing yourself: “that reminds me of a task / I have a job I still have to go home and finish.”


GOAL: RE-ENTER THE FIVE AM CLUB. STARTING TOMORROW.


I’m grateful / for

  • my wife coming out here excited to insist I come look at the sun setting, burning like lava in the trees from the wildfire smoke
  • our aimless drive and grocery store eggrolls today & unexpectedly coming across THE MUSIC THE DRUMS THE HORNS (and even the dogs and people) in the street
    • my wife agreeing to take unplanned spontaneous time to park and GET OUT and dance and follow this, and enjoying it with me even if at first she didn’t quite want to.
    • the feeling of pure joy and freedom and happiness I had — the un-self-consciousness of being this age and loved (and home from family time where my mom told me to STOP when I clapped in the park to the live music there)
    • the memories of other times we’ve wound up at this fair, joyfully dancing or hula hooping in the street … the reminder of how many of these good memories and years we have had together
    • the clarity / certainty that THIS is living … this is what memento mori prompts me to do … this is my vision of The Perfect Day: drums and singing and dancing and freedom to do them in the street or whenever wherever I want and people of all ages dressed weirdly or basically, cheering and singing together for the unexpected percussion we are designed to respond to, and that a bunch of them can just mill around on the edges and that’s okay too. Just the right number of people and space taken up and it doesn’t matter if you haven’t showered in over a week or if you were a big asshole yesterday. Not having to plan or prepare for it, just jump into the music and drumming RIGHT NOW, instantly part of it … belonging while still being relatively invisible / part of a small, safe, organic just-for-today crowd.