Lucy the Pup

Still Life with Puppy (Not)

Lucy graduated from puppy kindergarten last Saturday. She’s very good at sitting, laying down, giving a paw (without punching anyone), and, if you have the right treats in your hand (string cheese), she will follow you to hell and back.

She has less than zero recall. Despite being very good at jumping onto the couch and the bed, she refused to step on platforms. She’s almost done teething (thank goodness!), and is getting better at not chomping on hands, but she still has a ways to go on that front. She’s still sometimes doing that puppy thing where she’ll go and spend some quality time outside, with us or on her own, and then she’ll head inside… and poop. And, because she’s a 5-month-old puppy (almost), she’s out of her damn mind… the poor girl doesn’t have two brain cells to rub together.

Does it feel warmer to you? Because we’re heating the outside now!

We’ve been assured that this is perfectly normal pre-adolescent puppy stuff, that it will pass, and that she’s developing as she should be. She’s sleeping through the night (from 11p to 6:30a). Her appetite is settling; she has decided that she doesn’t need a separate lunch, in part, I think, because we do 5 – 10 minutes (closer to five minutes, until she gets bored) of lunchtime training with superfun treats.

Our next training class (puppy kindergarten, part 2!) starts in mid-May, so we’re going to work on some leash training and reinforcing some of the things she’s good at… and I just bought some entry-level training equipment so we can have some fun in the backyard.

We love her… I love her. I have to admit, though, that puppyhood is hard, and there are some really unfun things about it.

All that said, I’m not sure how anyone could resist this sweet, funny, very good girl.

Lu loves her blue dragon stuffie. (It was one of her first toys, and it still has its squeaker!)
Studenting

Spring Break: Grad School Edition

My spring break is supposed to be next week. Originally, in early January, we had planned to go to Costa Rica…

… and then we got a puppy, who needed shots, and socialization, and puppy kindergarten, before we could even think about boarding her. So those plans went by the wayside.

Lucy (now almost 5 months old) is very cute, and smart, and delightful.

Photo of a black dog (with white accents) shaking a "soccer" ball that has fabric tabs sewn into it.
We have a couple of “soccer” balls with tabs sewn into the ball — they’re turning out to be really great toys for us. Lucy enjoys chasing them, carrying them, shaking them.
They’re proving to be good for training “drop it,” in addition to being wildly amusing, and we can (carefully!) kick the ball around outside. Perfect!
(We like Chuckit! ultra balls a lot, too — for all the same reasons —
though they’re not great for playing “soccer.”)

In light of postponed travel plans (which became apparent almost immediately after Lucy arrived), I was going to use the time to catch up on some of the “suggested” reading for my information retrieval class, and watch some video reviews for previous weeks to reinforce some of the more complicated concepts.

And learn some stuff about HTML5 semantic tags. (I was not kidding about learning Javascript, but I’m going through the front end to do it.) Y’all, it looks like we’ve come full circle from the bad old days of HTML3 when we were appropriating table tags to make web pages legible. These newfangled (kidding, they’ve been standard for ~10 years) tags have no bearing on appearance; they exist to delineate different parts of a document outline: header, footer, article, section, aside. (My graphic designer self is champing at the bit to get back to CSS already… I understand and appreciate the utility of semantic tags, but the semantic tags alone… in terms of appearance, which is not the purpose or goal of these tags… it’s like “1994 called, they want their home pages back.”)

Oh, and getting a better handle on Git and GitHub. (Confession: I haven’t used the command line in a L-O-N-G time.)

Anyway. You get the idea. I had plans! My plans had plans!

But no. It looks like, in addition to those things, I’ll be doing a bunch of reading to prepare (with my group) to put together a very small controlled vocabulary… a completely new concept to me/us. Right now it seems extremely complex — a “wicked problem,” if you will, in the sense that it does not have a single solution, because the decisions we make will depend on the needs of a specific user base. (A controlled vocabulary for an information specialist working in web design will be a bit different from a one working as a youth services librarian — there will be some overlap, for sure, but their information needs are likely going to be a bit different.) We’re meeting about it on Friday morning, preparing so we can hit the ground running after “spring break.”

In the meantime, I’ll be getting a haircut on Friday (right after the meeting), doing a Women in Stem open house at the OLC on Saturday morning (might use the time, while chatting with folks, to make some new jesses for the birds), finishing up our last puppy kindergarten class (!) on Saturday afternoon, and hopefully (fingers crossed), attending a webinar on creativity on Friday the 31st.

What’s that saying, life is what happens… ?

mental health

Therapy is Great #406,858

Therapy sucks. A lot of times, it’s less than no fun. But… it has been really good for me.

Starting grad school and having to do group work is bringing up some things from that time I spent more than a decade in a work environment that was abusive.

That was a long time ago, and I’m still trying to process some of it. I still need some help to manage the anxiety triggered by memories of that time.

It didn’t come out of nowhere. I grew up with the explicitly stated expectation that I would defer to the authority of adults general, men in particular. Even if/when they were wrong or had unhealthy/unrealistic expectations. The expectation was absolute.

And then I landed in a work situation with a supervisor who had some unresolved anger issues of their own, that they took out on young women around them. I was not the only (or even the preferred) target, but I ended up in the line of fire with some regularity.

Newsflash: human systems involve chaos. There’s no way around it. You might be the most organized person who ever walked the planet — you cannot plan for every eventuality. At some point, somewhere, someone is going to find a way to introduce the unexpected. It often happens when the stakes are high, it’s painful to resolve, and there might be explanations required after.

Living, for years, with the threat of being screamed at, having your work ethic or competence be questioned behind your back to your colleagues or supervisors, or fired, because you can’t exert absolute control over the chaos… leaves a mark.

Look. I went to art school; I can do critique, even if it’s hard to hear. I appreciate good editing. I understand that my way of doing things is, often, not the best or most efficient way (though I can be slow to accept that in some situations). I also expect that when I make a mistake there will be some accountability.

What I’m talking about is not any of these scenarios.

I’m talking about being yelled at about how incompetent you are, in front of your colleagues, by someone who is not in control of their emotional state, and having no recourse to respond because a) they’re your boss, and b) you don’t have any coping or mitigation skills for that kind of situation.

Back to now: this group project is operationally well defined; there are parts to the project we’re working on as we go, and deadlines we have to meet. My group has been amazing — we all seem to want to make sure that no one has to carry more than their fair share of the burden, so we’ve been working together, adding individual contributions that can be used or not, according to progress of the assignment, and meeting to discuss progress.

One of the challenges is that it involves both technology and concepts that are new to everyone in the group. Add to that the objectives/expectations/rubrics are kind of subjective… because of new technology/concepts and lack of experience, the expectations for the quality of the product should probably be pretty rudimentary… but nobody mentions expectations for use of the technology anywhere, so…?

Combine that set of circumstances with a history of unrealistic expectations and emotional abuse, and the what-ifs in your head crescendo until you (I) find yourself (myself) sitting in 30-degree weather on the back stoop trying to talk yourself (myself) down.

Healthy people seem to be able to right-size what we can accomplish under the circumstances and time constraints. I’ve been an unrelenting hot mess for the last few weeks. I haven’t felt that way in a really long time, and it was kind of frightening.

And that’s why therapy is important for me. I need help contextualizing my past experiences, because I wasn’t able to do it for myself at the time. And I didn’t know how to ask for help at the time — I just assumed that I was really bad at adulting. (Frankly, sometimes I’m surprised I survived that period of my life.)

Have a cute puppy taking a nap; it’s good for the soul.

Studenting · Thoughts about Stuff

The Value of Critique

I took a class this winter, in a subject I have no experience with. It was gloriously fun, but very challenging. It moved very quickly, and there were a lot of deadlines. My goal with this class was to develop a greater understanding and appreciation for the topic.

I produced a lot. I learned a lot. I am not now, and may never become, an expert, but it was a good experience.

I just had a final critique with the instructor.

It was brutal. She was not unkind, but she was not shy about letting me know many of the ways my project was lacking.

She was not wrong. It was a good critique (good critiques require quite a bit of skill). It was illuminating, and I have some better ideas — from an expert! — about how to approach this kind of project going forward.

But here’s the thing: critique can be hard. When you’ve invested a bunch of time and work in something, it’s hard to hear all the ways it doesn’t measure up. It hurts the ego; it can bruise the heart.

But it is important to be able hear it and accept it — or at least to listen to it, and decide what you want to take away from it.

I’m not sure I could have done anything better or different with this project, so even though some of it was difficult to hear, I am a beginner at this — I am not capable of greatness, at least not yet (and there were a few other life circumstances going on in the background, so even if I was capable of more, I might not have been able to bring it to the table) — and my goal for this class was to finish.

So I will let this experience sit for a minute, digest the advice I have been given, maybe do some drawing for fun and find an approach (slower, more methodical, more iterative) to this kind of work that makes more sense to my brain.

And then I will try again.

Studenting

Technology IS FUN

This is my mantra today, as I work on group work (I get why it’s important, and I like all the people in my group, and it’s fun to meet and figure things out, but I still don’t care for group work… IYKYK) with a database platform that does not allow you to build a submission form using currency values… even though you can build a *data table* with fields that use the data type “currency.”

Thanks to date night on the couch with my husband and a couple of laptops (sexy!), I got something to work — for the purpose of demonstration only. I had to find some javascript, and figure out how to plug it in, in order to use it… it feels kludgy, but it provides some validation that wouldn’t exist otherwise.

(Note to self: learn javascript.)

I’m sure there’s a reason for this, but whatever it is is likely over my head and above my pay grade.

It (mostly) feels good to flex my (not all that impressive, but existing) data muscles again, even if it’s for a class about designing information retrieval systems.

Lucy the Pup

Well, that’s a thing.

LuLu the wonder mutt is a mystery no more! We have always known she is at least part Lab; in profile, she looks like a lab… and she likes to spend some time every day playing ball, no matter the weather conditions.

We suspected there might be some border collie, given her white accents. I thought that she might have some terrier going on there because of her appearance head on (also, in this region, it is unusual for a pound puppy of unknown origins to not be at least part pit bull).

We got her Embark DNA test results yesterday…

Yes, lots of retriever (both Labrador and a smidge of Golden). No, no border collie. Yes, some pit bull and Staffordshire terrier.

The little bit of Malamute and Siberian Husky… that was a surprise, although maybe not when you consider she doesn’t mind the cold.

Never would have guessed Boxer, but sure, why not?

Fingers crossed that their estimate for her adult weight (52lbs) ends up being close…

March Mammal Madness

March Mammal Madness

It’s the most wonderful time of the year!

March Mammal Madness 2023 Trailer

March Mammal Madness Player Resources, at ASU Library Guides

Like spring brackets but disappointed by your alma mater’s season? Are you a kid of any age who wonders, who would win if a Bengal Tiger got into a scrape with a Blue Whale? (Even though we all know that these species have no logical or practical reason to interact with one another?)

Try March Mammal Madness! There’s a bracket. There’s science. There’s amazing art! There’s sh%^posting on Twitter, and cute rodent puppet YouTube videos!

The battles are simulated, and hypothetical (no actual carnage occurs anywhere), and evidence-based, AND they’re narrated by scientists. The tournament has even expanded in the last few years to include a few non-mammal combatants.

To my mind, that’s something for everyone.

I love this. I’m terrible at it (and I will never be able to unsee wild card match featuring the praying mantis eating a hummingbird’s brains… ugh), but it’s fun, and interesting, and I learn something new (at least one thing) every year.

This year I’m looking to do a not-very-ambitious 100-day drawing project, and I think March Mammal Madness may feature prominently… though I haven’t decided exactly how… something to consider.

Brackets are available now. Wild card match is March 13th! (Calendar is here: https://libguides.asu.edu/MarchMammalMadness/HowToPlay)

Lucy the Pup

Welcome Lucy!

Sometime in November, puppy Lucy and her littermates were abandoned in a laundry basket in Post Falls, ID. After a stint at the Spokane Humane Society, she came to live with us.

She’s part lab, part border collie, part… ? Totally adorable.

She loves to play catch, except that she carries a ball in her mouth at all times, so when you throw a ball, she runs after it and then waits for you to come pick it up and then throw it again so she can chase it… while carrying her own ball. (She’ll get it.)

She poops at 6:30a… every morning. And then who knows what her poop schedule will be. She gets three meals a day, fed at roughly the same time every day, and poops 4-5 times a day (puppyhood, man) at seemingly random times.

Her teeth are needles. She chews on nouns… all of them. When she runs outside, the first thing she does is pick up an emotional support pinecone (which she brings inside and leaves all over the house).

Her fur is so, so soft. She wants to be near someone at all times.

We’re working on crate training. She’s pretty good at sitting, laying down, and offering a paw. She’s on her vaccine schedule and starts puppy kindergarten on March 4th.

We adore her.