Valentines Day for a Vegetarian

My wonderful wife has been a vegetarian for over 40 years. Like so many I planned a special Valentine’s Day meal.

We went to a BBQ place. She ordered one of their signature platters and loved it.

How so? The place was Homegrown Smoker, a vegan BBQ joint. BBQ purists are rolling their eyes at this oxymoron. The rest of us are just enjoying the fantastic food there. The fu-fish (nori breaded tofu) is better tasting than the fried fish you’ll find in some places. The gritz stix, deep fried cheesy grits, are a solid delight on their own. Homegrown Smoker has a variety of protein sources. Anyone with a bit of open mind can find one to taste.

Asking and Thanking

In some circles the thank you note is a lost bit of culture. When someone gives you a gift you should send a thank you note. Should. The note should just express thanks for the gift. To my mind, including a personal exchange from the receiver to the giver is reasonable. “I hope to see you next month.” “Will you be at the reunion next summer?” Personal communication is the key.

One should not use the thank you note to solicit another gift. Politicians seem incapable of communicating without asking for more. Some charitable organizations seem to also lack the ability to thank without asking for more.

Today’s mail included a note from Oxfam thanking me for a contribution to their Puerto Rico efforts. The envelope included a direct, simple note, a business card, and a four page brochure describing the work I helped fund in the aftermath of hurricane Maria. There was no ask. This is wonderful.

The people at PCUN, Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste, and the Willamette Valley Law Project also have a history of sending thank you notes with no further asks.

For above and beyond thanking from a charitable organization goes to Vitamin Angels. After I did one of those Facebook based fund raisers for my birthday I received immediate thanks. But then at the end of the year I received a personal, handwritten note from my contact in the organization. It was heartfelt and unexpected.

It brightens the day to get a thank you note. It’s time, past time, for me to send some of my own.

Being First

I had an unusual first today. I’m the first person to check The Archer Files out from the Multnomah County Library. Whoo Hooo! I had recommended the book to the library for purchase. When you recommend a purchase you can elect to have a hold placed. As soon as the book arrives you get it.

People like to be first. Internet geek site Slashdot has a long standing cult of people racing to be first to comment on a new story. In many cases being first is an actual achievement. First on the moon, first to accomplish something, first in the family to go to college, first to reach a goal in school or at work. There are lots of firsts out there to accomplish.

Being first is somewhat like being perfect. You can miss out on a lot of good and great things while seeking first place or perfection. A T-Shirt I first saw in the late 1980s read “You can’t be first, but you could be next.” Oddly an image search for this quip shows (at this time) only things that read “you can’t start the next chapter of your life if you keep rereading the last one.”

Time to quit seeking first and move on to the next chapter.

How are your savings?

Pondering American’s net savings, in essence how much wealth households have accumunated, might lead you to this article from TheBalance.com, a finance site with the slogan “make money personal.”US Census Bureau household wealth

This should be an easy example to take your own advice and save. It’s what will make retirement possible. Or if you save enough it will enable an employment optional life.

Your Own Advice

Do you take your own advice?
It can be tough.

Difficult example: exercise every day.
Easy example: replace all your compact fluorescent (those spiral things) light bulbs with LEDs. Recycle (ha!) the CFLs.

I gave the easy advice to a young couple I know. It was accompanied with two boxes of LED bulbs. LEDs are getting very affordable. They’re even showing up at dollar stores. After gifting, one of the bulbs over the kitchen sink burned out. The pair of CFLs were installed in 2014. Both were replaced. Then I noticed a CFL in the attic. This advice is easy to take.