Note: This is another blog based on my weekly emails to my family on the mainland. Since much of my news these days relates to trying to age gracefully, this series might be called The Geezer Gazette.]
3/8/25
Aloha, Fellow Life Travelers!
Two of my newsy notes this week have to do with vision, so I suppoise they qualify as Geezer Gazette items.
First, Karen's visit to her optometrist resulted in a new prescription that will get her to 20/25 in one eye, and 20/30 in the other. This is good news, though before cataract surgery she had even better
eyesight and didn't require glasses except for reading. It is true that she has less trouble with fuzzy lights at night, but she isn't sure that the small improvement is really worth it. At least with her new prescription she will be able to function well, including being my extra pair of eyes. Both of us are cautionary tales regarding cataract surgery, though it is still true that 90% of the time people have improved vision afterward, often experiencing a dramatic improvement. But...Not...Always.
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Choices, Choices |
The second bit of news this week is that my Costco online order for a new t.v. was delivered (shipping took a total of 4 weeks). This 77" bad boy is a full 12" bigger than our old one, a geezer godsend. It arrived late Wednesday afternoon and I spent Thursday reading the instructions and prepping it to hang on the wall. We wrestled it up onto the wall bracket Thursday afternoon. I then spent time tweaking it to get it to talk nice to my audio-visual receiver. My AVR handles all the input from our Roku, our DVR, and the Bluetooth media apps on our tablets and phones. It was working fine for that night's t.v. viewing. Definitely better! By the way, my approach to Smart TVs is considered odd by many people, because the first thing I do when I hook them up is lobotomize them by not letting them connect to the internet. Instead, I set them to accept input only from my AVR. I don't do this because I'm ignorant of the technological power of Smart TVs. Rather it's because I am fully aware of what they can do, and for this reason I regard these devices as potentially posing huge privacy and security risks. The convenience, access, and control they offer are certainly appealing and for many people these features far outweigh the potential downsides of giving a t.v information about your viewing habits, search preferences, biometric patterns, links to other devices and your usage patterns of them (as in, "Siri, turn on the oven at 5 pm, start the dishwasher at 3am, open the garage door in 10 minutes"), etc. It is far easier for me to control and limit the surveillance activities of my AVR, including shutting it off entirely from the internet except for specific functions that I choose. Anyway, I'm very happy with the new tv's display performance. I'm also pleased with myself for the successful installation, given current physical challenges.
The last bit of news this week is about one of those home-ownership headaches. For about a week I've noticed our pool circulation hasn't been quite what it should be. Then one morning early in the week I discovered that the pool pump failed to start at its scheduled time. Without the pump running the system doesn't filter the water nor send it through our solar panels. I did some troubleshooting of my own to rule out something simple, like a tripped circuit breaker or a timer malfunction. Nope. I called my pool guy and asked him to stop by and take a look. His assessment was that it might be a bad capacitor that pump motors like these need to get up to speed when they are first turned on. It took him a couple of days to locate a new one, which was not easy given the age of the motor. This type is being phased out by newer energy-efficient designs, a great idea that is irrelevant in my case because our pv system generates more that enough electricity to run my current pump. Anyway, it didn't help. Still dead. It was looking more and more like I'd have to buy a new motor. However, nobody on the island sells a direct replacement, so I'd have to have one shipped from the mainland, a lengthy and expensive proposition. Of course, I could buy one of the available energy-efficient motors available locally, but this would require re-engineering the whole system. Shees.... My pool guy, to his credit, kept troubleshooting and eventually spotted a problem in the timer connections that are inside the control box. One of the circuits hadn't been properly grounded when the timer was installed. Over time the lack of grounding caused one of the terminals to actually melt, cutting the power to the motor in half! This might account for the slower circulation and eventually the lower power wasn't enough to start the motor at all. These control boxes are common and easy to find locally, so we were able to test this possibility pretty quickly and inexpensively. Voila! As of late yesterday afternoon we're functioning again so that today we should get some heating from the solar panels as well as having the water filtered. Ah, home ownership.
That's the news for this week. Stay warm, stay healthy. Stay centered.