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November on the wane 11/28/2011
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I figure since the last time I posted was in July, I'd post a photo from July. I am not actively seeking indexing work, but if somebody happened by with a fascinating book that needs an excellent, smart and soulful index, I would love to do it. Bioethics or Health Care Reform, or anything related to interests on my twitter description. I am always thinking of relaunching the indexing, but then I think of Ebooks, and realize it is time to move on.

The puppy is 11 months old. She just chewed up an Italian notepad that my mother gave me. My mother is dead, and when I escorted Nell to her crate, I told her this. She also chewed a bottle of stamp pad ink. There is is red on the sheets and quilt and blanket and mattress. It has not been a good day in the pup department. It was an excellent weekend, warm and walks on the beach and in mud puddles and at the puppy park. Maybe it is her way of telling me she needs to be out and running in the woods.

Tomorrow is my poetry workshop. The prompt, and the workshop theme (which meets once a month) is to examine artifacts, objects, things. Joseph Cornell keeps cropping up in my mind --well, and the reality shows on hoarders. Still lives. As someone writing about Cornell the other day said, he borrowed other people's memories. My own are bogging me down. I have many objects infused with meaning and memory, of course, being old and attached to the sentiment the things evoke (See: notebook from dead mother chewed by dog), and when I examine them I drift into memory. I come back to the object and reject it as a still life, a dormant thing. There was just a story of Thomas Beller's on The New Yorker site that I tweeted, written when he was 25. It beautifully renders, he writes beautifully, of a boy home from Vassar for Christmas Vacation; brooding about a girl. It is his widowed mother's apartment. There are photographs and books, his dead father's books. No puppy. No puppy, chewing.

A collection guy called me from a Texas "law firm." He claimed to be a paralegal. He was collecting (a different sort of collecting) a debt for a visit to the Emergency Room in KW. A was dehydrated, and we were scared. Instead of having the doctor come to us, we visited the hospital, because we figured insurance would pay. The bill was for 1,800 dollars, and insurance paid $1,000.00. I paid a hundred dollar copay. The cab there and back was $80.00. She was tested for everything. A pregnancy test. All sorts of tests. She was given fluids and antibiotics, and that was that. Only, this bill. Her father's insurance, he stonewalled, refused involvement. So now, a year and a half later, an ill spoken guy calls and tells me he is a paralegal, only he is not, he is a collections dude. I think $1,1000 is enough for a bag or two of fluids. I offer a hundred bucks. No, $500.00. Nope, sue me. I am a stage IV cancer person. I owe my soul to hospitals and doctors. This came two months after our KW visit in June of 2010, after the dog died while we were in the Miami airport, and the vet called and said ol' Lil's stomach had twisted. No holding off until we returned. Then my mother that August, then my diagnosis in the fall, treatment a year ago. No evidence of disease. Yet, the bills, the hospital bills and medical bills, they continue. Is it illegal to claim you are a paralegal when you are not? I hear collections is big business these days. Pennies on the dollar, and bullying. But it is hard to be intimidated by someone who can't construct a sentence. I think he must have found me when I checked my credit reports, all three agency and a number, thinking I might survive by buying a foreclosed upon property, my rent so high here. Wanting shelter when the dough runs out. Maybe he found me here.

He called my cell phone. He had a NH area code although calling from Texas.
Is this interesting? Nah, but it feels good to write it out.

If I erase this site there will be an orphan site of my indexing business. I think there nothing worse than having abandoned identities all over the internet. Nothing worse than finding a dead site. I did erase the blogger blog written last year for my daughters when I thought I might not be around. Then I printed it in a booklet, and gave it to them. Maybe it is time to write in my blog again. Post treatment, NED, in debt. Alive.

Wikipedia entry on Book Indexing



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    Sarah Lewis

    Indexing books since the days of index cards and shoe boxes. The index cards filed in shoe box.

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