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Showing posts from November, 2020

Gyokuro

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 A couple of weeks ago, I ordered some tea from my second favorite tea shop. Yes, I have more than one tea shop that I patronize. So far, I have 3 small business tea shops that I buy from. While the internet claims that my second favorite tea shop still has a brick and mortar store, the company website does not mention anything about having a physical location any more. I'm even more skeptical about there being a physical store any more given that my package shipped from Idaho. Oh well, I still like the tea that they sell - they are the vendors of my beloved Swiss chocolate black tea, and raspberry sencha. They also sell a wonderful blueberry rooibos blend. I've been enjoying those teas since I got my package 2 Fridays ago. I also purchased a new tea to try. A premium Japanese tea: gyokuro. Blue and silver packaging, I feel like I'm finished decorating for Christmas - oh yeah, I never decorate for Christmas, so perfect! Gyokuro is also referred to as "precious dew"

Yixing kitty with butterfly

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 Its been another crappy week. My department has been woefully short staffed, and hospitals are getting full. While more ICU beds were opened up, we could easily use more. More medical floors are changing over to COVID units. I had to get the oil changed in my car this week. As usual, the employees at the desk were not wearing masks, and the waiting area was a few chairs crammed together in a corner. Thankfully it was a warm day, and I ended up sitting on the concrete outside the building waiting for my car. So today's picture is very simple. I have a curious cat and a butterfly. Why not evoke the carefree days of spring and summer when we continue our slide into a winter that seems to be more bleak than most?

Tatting and teacups

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 While I still have several more countries to visit, I'm tired. Like really tired. Not necessarily of drinking tea, or writing about tea. Rather, I work for a hospital, and if you haven't noticed, there's a pandemic on. Thankfully my job doesn't involve patient care, or face to face contact with the public. I drive in to the office every day, and listen to my coworkers fight with each other. Actually now that we have moved to the new office, we're all in separate cubes, and it's harder to fight or hear people fight when they are more spread out with walls of any sort between them. Everyone in my department is wearing PPE that we have either made or boughten ourselves. The single, disposable face shield I was given at the beginning of all this is completely useless, and while they did eventually offer to buy hard shell face shields for employees in my department, the people who did get them discovered they really don't work with our headsets. So, to Amazon to

New Zealand 3

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 Yesterday the US election was called in favor of Joe Biden. I didn't feel like I could believe it. I know that there will be challenges, and more hateful rhetoric surrounding the election. I decided that this is the perfect chance to talk about the government of New Zealand. Since they were a British colony, they have a parliamentary form of government based on the British model. Their parliament members are elected every 3 years. The leader of the majority party is prime minister, and  the parliament is responsible for voting on, and passing decisions made by the cabinet. The British monarch is the formal head of state, and they are represented by an appointee of the monarch.  The thing that really jumped out at me is that New Zealand has one of the oldest social security systems in the world! They started theirs in 1898 starting with pensions for widows and miners. That sounds nice. I keep paying into social security knowing that I will not see any of that money when I am retire

Falling back

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 So we gained an extra hour last night just to throw everyone's sleep schedule off (and to annoy all the people who work night shift). The time shift is especially inconvenient for hospitals to try to document. As far as I can tell, the goal is to have as little as possible happen during the second 2 AM hour. I wonder how death certificates work during that time. You could potentially die (on paper) before you received a procedure. Cath lab procedure started at 02:45, and patient died at 02:15. That would be a reimbursement nightmare (and in all reality, the hospital would probably have to eat the cost). As you may have guessed from my ramblings, I don't have any posts written today, and I don't feel like throwing one together this morning. I took pictures for my next blog post on Wednesday, but I haven't gotten to writing it yet. Somehow between working a mixed-up schedule (today is Sunday 2 of 3 that I will be working in a row), and having a 90 minute commute when it