Health Care Guide for Seniors in Seattle

Below is a guide to health care in Seattle which was presented today by Dr. Lee Burnside. This effort was sponsored by the SRA and the Health Care Committee.

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WACCRA Consumer Guide to CCRCs in WA State

Below is a document put together by WaCCRA which is well worth reading and keeping as a reference guide. Thanks to Donna K at Emerald Heights for heading up the effort to create Washington’s first CCRC guide!

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Don’t wait for the elevators!

Thanks to Ann M for sharing this

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Prosch House

621 9th Avenue, Seattle

Thanks to Dick D for finding this history for us.

621 9th Avenue, Seattle, Courtesy King County Tax Assessor

The continued existence of the house at 621 9th Avenue is surprising, considering its First Hill location. Tall buildings loom near the capacious dwelling, which is set back from 9th Avenue on the steep corner of Cherry Street. The house dates from about 1900, and surely holds many stories. I’ve never been inside, but I imagine that the view of Elliott Bay from the third floor is breathtaking.

This house was built by Thomas and Virginia Prosch, who lost their lives one hundred years ago this coming Monday — March 30, 1915. Thomas and his father Charles were pioneer newspaper publishers who arrived in the future Washington Territory in 1858. Virginia was the daughter of Morton and Julia Ann McCarver, who founded Tacoma. Thomas and Virginia, artist Harriet Foster Beecher, and philanthropist Margaret Lenora Denny (who as a little girl had been one of the Denny Party pioneers) drowned in the Duwamish River when the car in which they were passengers dodged children playing in the road and veered off the Riverton Draw Bridge.

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And your choice is?

New Yorker Cartoons
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707 Terry Twin Towers progress

Here’s the view that you can’t get from a Skyline window. They are still working on six levels of basement parking.

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Shade for the Observation Deck

Only a few more weeks. They installed four anchor bolts last Friday. The sail will cover the chairs along the Rainier Corridor between the Mt.Rainier and Mt.Baker ends.

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800 Columbia drilling pilings on periphery

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Wireless Modems and Internet Connectivity in Voting Systems ?!?


by Kirstin Mueller, Election Security Issue Chair

Ed note: Sue Van L would like you all to see this article from the League of Women Voters – and respond!

Right now, the next set of guidelines for what’s considered a secure voting system in the U.S. are being written by the Election Assistance Commission (EAC).  As currently written, the guidelines don’t prohibit voting machines from connecting to the Internet. Some voting machines are currently being sold in the U.S. with wireless modems, which presents an unacceptable security risk for our nation’s elections.

The EAC will be gathering public comments on the draft voting system guidelines  until May 29th. To speak up to ensure voting machine guidelines specifically prohibit voting systems from connecting to vulnerable Internet or cell networks, please email the EAC at votingsystemguidelines@eac.gov on or before May 29th. Here is sample language to include:

RE: Voluntary Voting System Guidelines 2.0 Principles and Guidelines Comments
 
EAC Commissioners,
 
I strongly support the Voluntary Voting System Guidelines (VVSG) 2.0 draft but
urge the Commission to add the following under Principle 13: DATA PROTECTION: 
 
“The voting system does not use wireless technology or connect to any public telecommunications infrastructure.”
 
Given the fact that our election systems are being targeted via cyberattacks, it is imperative the VVSG prohibit connectivity to the public Internet through wireless modems or other means.
 
Thank you for your consideration.

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Around the campfire

New Yorker Cartoons
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You’re simply not that big a deal: now isn’t that a relief?

Melissa Dahl is editor of New Yorkmagazine’s Science of Us, and the author of Cringeworthy: A Theory of Awkwardness (2018). She lives in New York.

From Aeon: There is a meme that speaks directly to the hearts and minds of the overly self-conscious. Perhaps you’ve seen it; it goes something like this: ‘Brain: “I see you are trying to sleep. May I offer you a selection of your most embarrassing memories from the past 10 years?”’ 

At first, it seems odd to think that this meme is so popular among those of us whom you would call ‘millennials’, who grew up steeped in the self-esteem movement of the 1990s. We were raised, after all, to love ourselves, not to quietly torture ourselves with decade-old memories. We were taught in classroom exercises how special we were, the prevailing pop-psych theory of the day being that high self-esteem would carry us to success.

And yet this turns out to be poor preparation for dealing with the everyday embarrassments of being human. Instead of single-mindedly trying to love yourself, may I suggest a self-directed attitude that has been famously called the opposite of love: indifference.

In the 2000s, as the self-esteem movement was ageing, psychology researchers began publishing a series of papers on something called self-compassion, which Kristin Neff at the University of Texas at Austin in 2003 defined this way:

[B]eing open to and moved by one’s own suffering, experiencing feelings of caring and kindness toward oneself, taking an understanding, nonjudgmental attitude toward one’s inadequacies and failures, and recognising that one’s own experience is part of the common human experience.

Back then, much of this work sought to contrast self-compassion with self-esteem. Consider one study that relates to the aforementioned meme, in which researchers asked college students to recall an embarrassing high-school memory. Some of the students were then given writing prompts meant to bring out their self-compassionate side; they were told to ‘list ways in which other people also experience similar events’, and to express ‘understanding, kindness, and concern to themselves in the same way that they might express concern to a friend’. In contrast, other students were given writing prompts intended to stoke their self-esteem: they were told to ‘write down [their] positive characteristics’ and to describe why an incident wasn’t really their fault – and that, anyhow, the event ‘does not really indicate anything about the kind of person [they] are’.

The point, the researchers go on to argue in that paper, subtitled ‘The Implications of Treating Oneself Kindly’, is that the tenets of self-esteem will tell you to try to convince yourself that the stupid thing you did wasn’t really all that stupid – or if it was, that it was someone else’s fault. Self-esteem tells you to focus on all your wonderful, positive qualities. In contrast, self-compassion says it’s best to acknowledge your own role in an unflattering moment; when the memories come back at night, a self-compassionate person will say to herself: ‘Huh, yeah – that really was pretty embarrassing.’

But she’ll also say: ‘So what?’ Plenty of other people have embarrassed themselves in similar ways. In the end, this study showed that those who’d been prodded toward the direction of self-esteem felt worse about themselves after remembering the high-school embarrassment than those who’d been led toward self-compassion.

Self-esteem has fallen out of favour, and it is starting to seem these days as if self-compassion is taking its place. The headlines that keep popping up are: ‘Why Self-love Is Important And How To Cultivate It’ (Medical News Today, 23 March 2018); ‘8 Powerful Steps To Self-Love’ (Psychology Today, 29 June 2017); ‘The Not-So-Secret Secret To Happiness: Be Kinder To Yourself, Okay?’ (The Cut, 22 April 2016). (Fine: I wrote the last one.) The focus in these pop-psych stories tends to stay squarely on the first part of Neff’s 15-year-old definition: ‘experiencing feelings of caring and kindness toward oneself, taking an understanding, nonjudgmental attitude toward one’s inadequacies and failures’. From reading many of these pieces, self-compassion seems like self-kindness, and nothing more.

But it’s the second part of that definition that has proven the most helpful for me: ‘recognising that one’s own experience is part of the common human experience’. It’s the idea of taking a zoomed-out look at yourself, and realising that you are more similar to others than you are different, even (maybe especially) considering how ridiculous you often are. As Neff herself said in an interview with The Atlantic in 2016: ‘[W]hen we fail, it’s not “poor me,” it’s “well, everyone fails.” Everyone struggles. This is what it means to be human.’

In fact, it’s this part of the definition of self-compassion that makes me question whether it should be called self-compassion at all. Neff’s concept isn’t really about adoring yourself, or not entirely, anyway; this piece of it isn’t actually about you. Rather, it’s about the importance of recalling that you are but one small part of an interconnected whole.

For me, the term ‘self-indifference’ communicates this part of Neff’s message better than her own term does: when it comes to embarrassing moments, it means considering your own highlight reel of flaws, acknowledging that, yes, maybe the moment really was that bad – but then responding with a shrug. It is, to come back to my earlier point, something you could call self-indifference, by which I mean the comfort of realising that you are not all that unique.

Really, though, self-indifference and self-compassion are just new-fangled terms for an ancient concept: humility. We tend to think of humility as if it means putting yourself down, a mischaracterisation that a recent study in the Journal of Applied Psychology seems to buy into in its examination of ‘humble leaders’. Humility in a manager, according to these researchers, is defined as ‘being open to admitting one’s limitations, shortcomings and mistakes’. To be humble, in these researchers’ view, is to focus on your flaws.

But modern scholars who study humility see it differently. Humble people don’t focus on their flaws – not exactly, anyway. It’s more that humble people don’t focus on themselves very much at all. ‘This is not to say that a humble person fails to care about her own welfare or pursue her own interests – it is simply that she sees these as being deeply intertwined with the welfare and interests of others,’ write the authors of a 2017 paper in The Journal of Positive Psychology. You are important, and you are worthy of love, just like we millennials were taught in school – but that’s true only because everyone is important, and everyone is worthy of love. You matter because everyone else matters. It reminds me again of the way in which Neff defines what she would call self-compassion, and I would call self-indifference: ‘recognising that one’s own experience is part of the common human experience’. Maybe the most compassionate attitude you can take toward yourself is to stop obsessing over yourself.

This is the great relief of self-indifference, especially for those of us raised in the self-esteem movement. The truth is that you aren’t that big of a deal. And isn’t that great?

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Buff up your image

New Yorker Cartoons
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Was It an Invisible Attack on U.S. Diplomats, or Something Stranger?

Ed note: The article below from the New York Times raises the possibility, even probability, that those diplomats in Cuba were affected by a “functional” psychogenic type of disorder. It’s a real, treatable and widely misunderstood – a neurologic phenomenon that cannot be easily explained. How can we understand and diagnose this mysterious mind-body phenomenon?

The piercing, high-pitched noises were first heard by a couple of recently arrived United States Embassy officials in Havana in late 2016, soon after Donald Trump was elected president. They heard the noises in their homes, in the city’s leafy western suburbs. If they moved to a different room, or walked outside, the noise stopped. The two officials said they believed that the sound was man-made, a form of harassment. Around the same time, they began to develop a variety of symptoms: headaches, fatigue, dizziness, mental fog, hearing loss, nausea.

On Dec. 30, 2016, the Embassy’s chargé d’affaires, Jeffrey DeLaurentis, and his security chief, Anthony Spotti, were told what the men were experiencing. By then, a third Embassy worker who lived nearby also heard the sounds and began developing symptoms. DeLaurentis eventually sent the three for evaluation by an otolaryngologist at the University of Miami, who told them they had damage to their inner ears’ vestibular organs.

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If anyone can see the morally unthinkable online, what then?

Ed note: Can we ever “unsee” or “unhear” things that we wish we hadn’t seen or heard? This can happen far too easily on the internet where live streaming a terrorist event can happen or when one trips over porn – which consumes 30% of the entire internet use. Are we constructing things such that the innocence of youth is a thing of the past? Just how are our minds being shaped? Is virtue obtainable for the average mortal?

From Aeon: “Imagine you work at a Latex glove factory. One night, you type ‘Latex’ into Google: you’re searching for competitors’ products, but you find other things too. Some of what you find turns you on. But some of it you wish you could unsee: prior to the search, it was morally unthinkable. 

It’s easy to underappreciate the importance of the morally unthinkable. Discussions of ethics tend to focus on matters of conscious choice: which moral rules to follow, or advice on how to approach moral dilemmas. But a hugely significant part of ethics concerns what is unthinkable. You might, for example, be strapped for cash, but robbing the neighbours is unlikely to be an option for you. That’s because, whenever you deliberate, you have already ruled out all kinds of unthinkable possibilities. It isn’t that you consider robbery only to dismiss it: the idea never even crosses your mind.

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11 Things to do in Seattle – from Crosscut

Lynx by Michael Alm

Lynx by Michael Alm. A whole host of Washington state critters are on display now at Ghost Gallery.

Michael Alm: The Mammals of Washington

Did you know 141 mammals make their home in Washington? The little brown myotis bat, the white-tailed jack rabbit, the gray-tailed vole, red fox and black right whale — these and 136 others (including humans) all share quarters within the state boundary. (Well, the oceanic crowd kind of sidles up next to it.) Seattle artist Michael Alm has spent two years painting all 141, “as a reminder of what we need to conserve,” he says. The small, watercolor portraits are realistic captures, with the gentle filter of soft brush strokes. Seen all together, as they are currently displayed at Ghost Gallery in Chophouse Row on Capitol Hill, it feels like a buzzy gathering of neighbors with surprising guests (we have wolverines?) and old friends (marmots!). –B.D.

If you go: Ghost Gallery through June 9. (Free)


Seattle International Film Festival

The 45th annual Seattle International Film Festival is here, so limber up those eyeballs and get ready to sink into independent cinema. As usual, the lineup is both tantalizing (films from 90 countries you might never see elsewhere) and tormenting (because you can’t be sitting in more than one theater at a time). Hometown favorite Lynn Shelton kicks off the festivities at the opening night gala with her new film, Sword of Trust (read our story). The Northwest Connections lineup, featuring films made in or about our region, is especially rich in documentaries this year. Consider: Artifishal, about the dangers of salmon farming; Fight Fam, about a Washington family of MMA fighters; Patrinell: The Total Experience, about Seattle’s legendary gospel choir leader; and Ski Bum: The Warren Miller Story. Whether you pick one film or all 400, SIFF reminds us that seeing a movie the way the director intended — on the big screen, with a roomful of humanity — is really something special. –B.D.

If you go: Seattle International Film Festival, May 16 – June 9, venues and prices vary.


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Not getting enough attention?

New Yorker Cartoons
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A view and noise of the viaduct teardown

This view shows the progress of the viaduct teardown from a friend.s condo at the corner of Western and Madison. What a great improvement in the development of a world class waterfront.

Posted in environment, History, Parks, Transportation | 1 Comment

Why are so many gray whales dying in WA?

Seventeen gray whales have stranded themselves along Washington’s shorelines in 2019, and experts are looking for answers.  by 

From Crosscut: “A stranded female Pacific gray whale washed up at Harborview Park near Everett last week. Officials towed it to decompose not far from a nearby island. (Photo courtesy of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife) 

“Who wouldn’t want a piece of baleen or a giant whale vertebra?” says John Calambokidis, a biologist with Cascadia Research Collective, from a 24-foot inflatable boat.

He’s off the coast of Whidbey Island, where six of his colleagues are conducting a necropsy of a gray whale that stranded itself at Harborview Park in Everett earlier this month. It’s a whale whose current location he doesn’t want to disclose. “We don’t want people to scavenge parts,” he says.  

Calambokidis is part of the Northwest Marine Mammal Stranding Network, a 39-year-old coalition of scientists and volunteer networks coordinated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The Cascadia team often performs necropsies on these animals, while groups like the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife transport them from peopled locations to shorelines where they can decompose naturally.

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‘Hand to Mouth’ by Linda Tirado

Thanks to Mary M for sending this along: So why do poor people seem so self destructive. Well, “Our bodies hurt, our brains hurt, and our souls hurt.” Poor people are exhausted, degraded, angry and depressed most days of their hopeless lives notes reviewer Alexander Gilmore. So just how should we view and try to help the poor. There should be a lively discussion about Hillbilly Elegy next Monday the 20th of May in the Sky Club Lounge.

From the NYT: “The factory manager of the Landmark Plastic Company in Akron, Ohio, once told me that he was so concerned about high turnover among workers that he began holding exit interviews to find out why they were leaving. The answers surprised him. It wasn’t the meager pay, the noise, the mind-numbing assembly lines or the mist of plastic dust in the air. Instead, most employees complained “that they didn’t feel needed, necessary or wanted,” the manager reported, and were treated like “just another body.”

Linda Tirado will not be amazed to read this little anecdote, because the craving for personal dignity is a force that drives her caustic commentary, “Hand to Mouth.” In the low-wage jobs where she has worked, bosses don’t ask subordinates what they think. Humiliation is the rule. “Poor people” are dehumanized by “rich people” wielding contempt and hypocritical moral judgments across a stark divide. The society she portrays is bipolar, with practically nobody between wealth and destitution.

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Classical ballet transforms into a dance of the surreal in this duet from 1968

From Aeon: “In classical ballet, a pas de deux (‘step of two’ in French) is a duet that showcases the skills of masterful dancers. This BAFTA-winning and Academy Award-nominated short from 1968 marries two distinct kinds of virtuosity – the innovative cinematography of the late Scottish-Canadian filmmaker Norman McLaren and the movements of the Canadian dancers Margaret Mercier and Vincent Warren – to dazzling effect. Accompanied by a shimmering arrangement of Romanian folk music, a woman dances alone until she is joined by a man. Impressions of their bodies splinter off or move alongside them before disappearing or resolving into a single form. McLaren created the aesthetic in an age before digital effects by superimposing the high-contrast footage over itself with a slight time disparity, up to 10 times. The result is something akin to a wonderfully surreal dream – and one that you hardly need to be a ballet lover to find utterly entrancing.”

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Mother’s Day – beyond the ideal

FoxTrot by Bill Amend - Mother's Day comic published May 13, 2001 - Andy: You said I'd be having breakfast in bed, not Bedlam! Peter: It's Mother's Day, mom. You should be upstairs relaxing. Jason: Cool! The coffee's on fire! Paige: Which is the eggs and which is the bacon? Roger: Don't worry, dear — I'm supervising.
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Report from the Aging and Disabilities Advisory Council

The state legislative session ended late last month and included several wins for ADS Advisory Council’s priorities.

Legislation – The following bills passed and have been signed or are awaiting signature by the Governor.

  • Long-Term Care Trust Act – The first public long-term care insurance benefit in the nation.  Creates a long-term care benefit for everyone who works/contributes three of six years. Contributions start in 2020.  Per W4A, the Trust Act has the potential to reshape Washington’s LTC system as much as Washington’s adoption of Medicaid waivers in the 1980’s. 
  • SB 5160 will provide Property Tax Relief for Seniors, Veterans, and people with disabilities. The bill will base eligibility for the Property Tax Exemption Program on county median household income, rather than the statewide median.  This will help homeowners living in high cost regions such as King County.
  • The Hearing Aid Consumer Protection Bill (SB 5210) will ensure that consumers get the information they need to make informed decisions about hearing aid technologies. 
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Check out the future of mobility aids!

Thanks to Gordon G for finding this video – pretty cool ways to get around!

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To all mothers – thoughts of your children

God could not be everywhere, and therefore he made mothers. - Rudyard Kipling
It may be possible to gild pure gold, but who can make his mother more beautiful? - Mahatma Gandhi
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The mountain is out!

As seen from Horizon House’s Sky Lounge
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