Didnât I miss checking out books? Not particularly. Truth be told, I donât read books.
The libraryâs been my place for TV shows and old movies on DVD. My previous other source â Netflixâs DVDs by mail â has withered during the pandemic. All the good stuff went to streaming.
When I visited the libraryâs website two weeks ago, I discovered that the physical library was still operating, dishing out materials like always. Open seven days a week even.
Should I order something? Maybe a TV show from pre-pandemic days?
Weâd watched all of âThe Good Wife,â a legal drama, on library DVDs. What about the sequel, âThe Good Fightâ?
Whatâs it doing still sitting next to my computer screen, as anachronistic as an ink well?
Darn if I know. This cheap-o Rolodex arrived at least a quarter-century ago, played a vital role in my work life for a period, then slipped into invisible obsolescence.
In recent times Iâve been using it as a pedestal to elevate printed-out emails that deserve immediate attention.
The first card in my Rolodex tray is a note from the reporter who bestowed it on me on her last day in the newsroom.
âThe Register may not think we all are worthy of Rolodexes, but I do. Good luck,â she wrote.
My daughter Jenny and I went forth into Carneros last weekend to spend a couple of hours amid objects that canât help but tickle your brain.
I speak of the outdoor sculptures at the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art â a cluster of whimsy amid a rolling landscape dominated by wine grapes.
Not crazy about âmodernâ sculpture? I understand. The world has enough steel beams welded helter skelter that pass for art.
But still, di Rosa beckoned.
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For one thing, weâve been under a COVID cloud for almost a year now. Recreation options are severely limited. Walking my neighborhood over and over again is nice enough, but not enough.