Monday, February 28, 2022
Logo Reboot
Sunday, February 27, 2022
Sneaking Away
I love running live streams. But I can get stuck in them. They are so fun, but it's two in the morning and I need to get to bed. I had to sneak away quietly. So I'm going to write a nice quick blog post and then go to sleep. Tomorrow I need to put together a video on buying rainbow transition filament. I've been putting it off.
The Big Boy Update: My son had a nightmare early in the morning after it was light. He came down, got in the bed, and told me about the apocalypse he had dreamed about. He does the same thing every time: he wants to tell me about the dream and then he says, "I'm going back up to my bed" and then leaves. By then the dream has faded and he feels safe enough to go back to sleep.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter also had a bad dream, but it was well into the morning when she woke up. She dreamed I had broken the glass eyes of the dolls and stuffed animals she had. She didn't know why, but it was scary. There was a reason I had to do it, but she wasn't sure what it was by the time she had gotten to the basement to find me. We talked it through with the dog sitting on her until she was calmed down and no longer scared.
Saturday, February 26, 2022
So Many Platforms
YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels, Instagram IGTV, TikTok Live, YouTube Live, Instagram Live, Twitter, Facebook, Twitch, Patreon, Discord, and more, oh my!
There are so many platforms that are in the realm of social media. We're publishing on many of them, but not all. There are just too many to be able to manage and have time in the day to get any real work done. Perhaps with a team of people or no children, job or life and you could do them all. But I don't want to do them all.
We've avoided Twitter for the most part for most of the time Filament Stories has been active. We knew we needed to post there because odd as it seems, the people and atmospheres of the different platforms does make a difference.
So tonight, we took pictures and uploaded them to Twitter, posting in advance so that while we're on vacation one or two posts will happen each day. Twitter is different in that it's mostly pictures with a line or so of text. It's almost manageable. Twitter is a good place to make connections and is a positive place to communicate for the most part. We just avoided it at first until we got the video part of things under control.
Success is measured one platform at a time, I suppose. Speaking of time, we need more of it. It's two-fifteen in the morning again and I haven't even gotten a print started on livestream. But I don't mind; this evening we got the most heartfelt thanks from a filament company I was actually critical of. They're changing how they deliver their filament based on our videos and were instead of being unhappy with our videos, were incredibly grateful for the feedback and exposure.
It was a surprise and a relief as I didn't like saying things that weren't complimentary, even if they were done in the most positive way I could manage.
The Big Boy Update: My son asked for me to print him a headphone stand. I used a filament that came all the way from Turkey. It's a bright yellow skull and he loves it.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter had a very hard time not telling me what was coming up in the books we'd listen to when she had listened ahead. She just had to give hints. Now though, she knows to not tell me anything and is even getting good at making me wonder which direction the story is going to go with her vague comments. It's nice to see her be able to keep a secret and not let on that she knows a secret in the first place
Friday, February 25, 2022
Golden Shoes
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Talk to Me
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
A Better Day?
Yesterday was not a good day with the children. But sometimes. when we crack down hard on them, they wake up the next day and are in a much better place. They know they can't get away with the attitude and treating each other meanly. And that's what happened today.
The day ended with us needing to tidy up the house for the cleaners who are coming tomorrow. This is not a task the children enjoy doing. But we combined it with our family game night activity of Among Us.
You get handed a card. One of the four is an ace, and if you get it, you're the imposter, "among us". We all set about doing tasks, two per floor, while the imposter tries to catch people alone and tag them. If you're tagged, you fall down dead. When someone finds a dead person they call for a meeting and then we try to vote and pick out the imposter. If we get it right, the imposter loses, if we get it wrong, the imposter wins.
The non-imposters can finish all six tasks each and then they win, or the imposter can kill everyone and win as well. The children absolutely love this game, although it's much more fun with more people.
The advantage to tonight's game was that tasks were cleaning up your things and putting them away. So we got two things done at once: tidying the house and playing a game together.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: For being blind, my daughter does quite well at being the imposter. She really wants to be it, although the first time she was the imposter and lost on the first meeting, she said, "it wasn't as fun as I thought it would be." She's gotten much better at being sneaky.
The Big Boy Update: My son is very good at being the imposter and also of not being it. We've lost to his games far too many times. He's really gotten the knack of the psychological side to the game.
Monday, February 21, 2022
The Hundredth Day Shirt
I had a request to see what my daughter's shirt looked like for the hundredth day of school today.
The Big Boy Update: My son tried in vain to throw a massive tantrum to get out of folding his laundry. He tried so many different psychological tactics. None worked. In the end, he folded his laundry and did so rather quickly.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Good Parent, Bad Parent
Strike!
Friday, February 18, 2022
The Hundredth Day
Thursday, February 17, 2022
No Fear For The Young
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Breaking Down
When we get older, things start to break or not work the way they used to. Our bodies aren't meant to last forever, something that's hard to accept when you're young but becomes hopefully an accepted future as we grow older. It seems of late that so many people I know have someone or mote than one person in their lives who is dealings with the eventualities of living a long life.
None of the stories are happy. I don't like getting the texts or seeing friends only to hear about a lost parent or relative who is in a rapid decline of health. COVID-19 has brought many deaths with it of people across all age ranges, but I'm hearing about more deaths and illnesses unrelated to COVID-19 more than ever now.
It has been a tough few years on everyone.
The Big Boy Update: Did I mention that my son lets me hug him now? Shh, don't tell him I told you. If he knew, he surely would stop letting me.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter was so upset her friend, Aditi's, eyes were hurting her today. She is a fellow VI student at her school and their relationship is sometimes rocky. My daughter is jealous of her vision because Aditi, while blind, can see more than my daughter can. Still, she was so upset about her eye pain today.
The Lack of Music
Monday, February 14, 2022
I Would Never Forget About You
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Could You Meet Me On The Sofa?
Friday, February 11, 2022
Four Ladies At Dinner
Valentines Preparation
Thursday, February 10, 2022
A Whole New World
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
Heads Down, Thumbs Up
Monday, February 7, 2022
1999
Sunday, February 6, 2022
Failure
It Was An Ice Cream Day
Saturday, February 5, 2022
It's That Old Time Again
Friday, February 4, 2022
The Game of Life
Wednesday, February 2, 2022
This Great Idea! (That Isn't)
I've been introduced to someone who has connections with some people that it would be good to get connected with in the blind blind services corporate world. This person is exceedingly nice and was already planning on doing something with this company and it's very generous to be invited to be a part of it.
He's tasked me with doing something though that is not a good idea. He knows 3D printing, and he is knowledgeable about blind people, but not from a direct contact, day-to-day perspective. The idea is a good one, only it's not practical. And I think he'll see that, but I'm going to have to have a conversation with him about it and let him come to that conclusion.
The last time we talked about it on our first introduction call, he mentioned it right at the end (we were meeting for other purposes). He threw out the collaboration and his idea, I said that sounded great, and then we had to go. I didn't. have a chance to think through the idea.
Since then, he's pitched the idea to corporate people, who know all about the visually impaired, but don't know about 3D printing. It sounded good to them. And it is a good idea, it's just not a practical idea.
For instance, let me know what ten flavors of pop corn you think would be most successful at the movie theater. Let me know when we talk again. You can come up with ten flavors of pop corn, but the reality is, people are going to get the traditional flavor and candy far more than they're going to get your bacon and broccoli popcorn, even if they are fantastic. There are just better options.
It will all be fine, but I hate telling someone their great idea is good, but the context it's in isn't. Or maybe I'm wrong. I'm going to ask around and see if there's something I'm missing. 3D printing is great in that you can print all sorts of things. Some of those things are just more practical to get via more traditional methods. Like a 3D printed newspaper: Possible? Yes. Practical? No.
The Big Boy Update: My son wanted to ask if he could get on the computer tonight. I was on a call. I asked him to tell me quickly. He launched into a very long, well, I could tell it was going to be long, I interrupted and said, "are you asking if you can get on the computer?" He said, "you don't understand". I said, "if you want to get on the computer, just ask, I'm on a call". He said with an odd look, "can I get on the computer???" I said yes and he looked confused, like how did he just get away with that?
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: My daughter took a walk with Lisa and Charlotte the dog today. Lisa said she would be glad to spend some time with my daughter and my daughter loved it and loved seeing Charlotte again. Oh, and she got paid for helping out this past weekend with Charlotte. She was not expecting money, and was really excited about that part.
Feed The Woozle
We played the game Feed the Woozle tonight for family game night. It's a game for children from three to six years of age (suggested) but when you have a blind child, sometimes games have a lifespan of much longer.
The game is a lot about manual dexterity as you have to carry chips to the Woozle across the room in a spoon. You have to cross the space doing something silly, like bunny hopping, walking backwards, doing a hula dance, spinning or just going crazy.
My son was interested in playing too, but to him, he wanted to do everything to an extreme. We successfully finished and won the game as a team the first time around with my daughter and me dropping some of the food to the woozle. We decided to increase the difficulty by having to do two and then three moves at once as the game went on.
The second time around we played with everyone having their eyes closed. It wasn't that hard, but it gave us an insight into how my daughter did what she does and how she makes it look easy. Everyone laughed at me because I was so careful I was trying to feed the woozle's head and wouldn't stop to feel with my second hand until I finally got the chips into his mouth.
The way we knew where the woozle was from across the room (something you needed help with if you had your eyes closed and were spinning around or walking backwards) we tapped on the woozle's cardboard head so we could locate via sound.
A lot of laughing was had and we got a chance to spend time together. It didn't matter that the game was for little children at all.
The Big Boy Update: My son came home with sticks he's been working on turning into tools and weapons at school during recess. Weapons at a Montessori school? "Tools, Mom, and we don't use them," I was informed. He spent a lot of the night writing up and then printing out some team names and guidelines for the team members for the rest of their work with these "tools" that he put back in his backpack to take to school in the morning.
The Tiny Girl Chronicles: I got an, "I hate you, Mom" tonight when I took my daughter's Alexa after she was very rude to me because I walked into her room to say goodnight. She was reading and I think she's had a lot of homework lately. Still, she can be polite, or at least apologize when she realized the situation.