"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Author: Dad Page 13 of 201

Retirement PhD candidate in Natural Resources at University of Nebraska Lincoln. Married Christian man with two children, homeschool graduates working as (hard) scientists at national labs of renown. Oregonian (family arrived in 1846 along the Applegate Trail). Living and working from home in Washington state. Lived in North Carolina for seven years, Texas several times and South Florida among other places--kids graduated from NCSU, LOVE North Carolina and NCSU, Texas and South Florida). Judo Shodan. Graduate of Oregon State University (B.S. Business Administration, Marketing), Oregon Institute of Technology (A.E. Computer Systems Engineering Technology), University of Texas at El Paso (M.S. Industrial Engineering). Computer Vision Research Consultant. Bilingual English/Spanish.

Best graduation gift

Lorena and I had an outdoor thermometer at our house in Centralia that we loved to check. Youngin’s parents wanted to get me something. Unbeknownst to them, they got us just the perfect gift. Lorena and I are looking for a bracket that will allow us to rotate the thing different directions so we can use in when we are sitting on the porch or in the living room. The best part is that it is a Cornhuskers branded thermometer. I almost laughed when I opened it because it was so perfect.

Thank you Troy

A huge note of thanks to my PhD adviser, Professor Troy Gilmore (top photo), at University of Nebraska–Lincoln and founder of the GaugeCam GRIME Lab where I plan to volunteer now that I have finished my degree. No words are sufficient to express my level of gratitude for his support through so many years of education and research and, even more, for his friendship. His wife, Youngin, made a spectacular Korean dinner for the commencement after-party with committee members, Aaron Mittlestet (bottom photo) and Mary Harner. I am just so grateful for it all.

Graduated

Done. They handed me the actual diploma during the graduation. Troy and Youngin threw us an amazing after party. I will describe it all in a little more detail when I am not writing on my phone.

Last day of school

Today, Lorena and I are meeting Troy and Youngin for lunch in downtown Lincoln. This is probably my last day of school, ever. It has been an incredible amount of work, but every minute was worth it. Part of this had to do with me wanting to get a PhD, but honestly, the best part was the people with whom I worked. My committee consisted of 100% people of good will. My buddy John S. Started in the same program about halfway through my program and it has always been a joy to work with him. I’m going to enjoy continuing to volunteer with Troy, but it kind of won’t be the same. I just wish there was a way to adequately thank everyone involved.

Drive to Lincoln

Lorena and I drove up from Texas to Lincoln Nebraska today for my graduation. It was a really nice drive that we took pretty slow, stopping to eat whenever we wanted. I’m getting a little nostalgic about all of the schooling at this point. This really is the last time I’m going to do something like this. I’m glad I did it, it gave me great joy.

Retirement PhD: Earned doctorate

It is starting to pile higher and deeper now. I am now in the registry of earned doctorates kept by the NSF, NIH, and others. This is certainly not the diploma, but it says that I am officially complete. The actual point at which I “earned” the PhD as far as I can understand was June 8, 2023 when I was still on 67 years old.

Retirement PhD: The gown

Lorena got out my gown to make sure everything was as it should be. We are heading up toward Nebraska tomorrow, first to pick up the Kelly and Christian in Omaha on Thursday afternoon, then over to Lincoln for the night to be ready for the graduation on Friday. We were planning to make the whole drive from Texas to Omaha on Thursday, but decided we wanted to do this at a more reasonable pace so are leaving after the Fort Worth morning rush hour traffic to head out. I have to admit the cape and gown do look very cool. I am really looking forward to not only the graduation, but the festivities, too.

One little downside that showed up last week is that University of Nebraska–Lincoln is no longer going to provide lifetime email addresses for their graduates. That would not be such a big deal, but two of the professors on my committee and I are planning a fairly large research project to continue my work and it would have been nice to be able to do that without changing emails. I know that is a very small pinch point, but I would have enjoyed keeping my old email address. God willing, I will talk more about this new project that just extends my doctoral research. I will be pursuing this as a volunteer as long as I am able and there is fruitful work to do.

Retirement PhD: Prepping for commencement

Lorena pulled out Christian’s PhD cap gown so we can take it along with us to Lincoln for my Graduation. We want to get a picture of he and I when I graduate. He only beat me to a PhD by 44 years based on age and 11 years by absolute date. AND, no question, his PhD is much more impressive than mine and he actually contributed greatly to my research and was a contributing author on both papers we published. He is a great son to me.

Watercolors by Ralph

Our buddy Ralph S. brought a watercolor he had painted with with him when he came to visit at Thanksgiving time. He put it into a nice frame, and presented it to us as a visiting gift. We loved it. It is the top painting in the image at the left. He painted another watercolor while we was here and left that with us, too. We liked it as much as the first one so Lorena found a nice frame and mounted it. We are now trying to decide where to put them in the house. It has dawned on us that we need to get him to do a piece for our Mexico house.

Another small victory

I am now below my pre-Thanksgiving weight. I even ran out of notches on my belt so Lorena picked me up a new one yesterday. One thing I have been doing that I think has helped a lot is walking every day instead of walking just four or five days per week. Previously, I had gotten to the point where I would only lose weight on my fast day, but now it seems like I am losing a little weight every day–maybe 1.5 to 2 pounds per week. It might be that I am just taking back off the stuff I put on over Thanksgiving. Only time will tell. My next big hurdle is the back-to-back celebrations for my Graduation then a week with Christian and Kelly for Christmas. There will be way too man good opportunities to make bad eating choices between now and the end of the year.

Tuna thieves!

This photo is of the same prickly pear cactus as the one from this post yesterday. It was a good thing Lorena stole her two tunas when she did because the next time she went by, all the rest on them were gone!

Bluetooth keyboard

I bought a bluetooth keyboard that pairs with my cellphone to make it easier to write posts. Works great!

Tunas y Matachines

Yesterday turned into a Mexican heritage day for Lorena. When she was shopping, she found a prickly pear cactus outside one stores with bright purple tunas. She harvested a couple of them on the spot and plans to prepare and eat them later this evening. Not sure whether that thievery or not.

Then, on the way home from Granbury, she saw that the matachines were out dancing in the parking lot of the Catholic Church across the street from the home where we have our Sunday morning meeting. She stopped to watch for a bit and talked to some of the people who were performing the traditional dance to/for the Virgin of Guadalupe. In one sense, this is very sad to us for many reasons, but the people were sweet, sincere people who really did not know any better. They very kindly and sincerely invited Lorena into the mass that occurs after the dancing, but thanked them and was grateful they let her use the church restroom, then wondered what the people thought when she entered the church without crossing herself. This all coincided with the Feast of the Immaculate Conception Day, something Lorena’s family calls Concha’s Day–Grandma Conchita’s given name is Concepción Aurora, so this is always a day that they tease her about. We were pretty surprised when we saw this all happening up here in Texas, but when we thought about it, we really should not have been.

Audio books from for cheap

I was starting to despair because I have been enjoying the audio books I got from the Hood County Library Bookstore and it looked like the influx of books on CD that are of interest to me, was not going to keep up with the pace of my listening (no pun intended). I was quite happy when I found there are a good variety of places on the internet to buy used CD audio books cheaply. The first two arrived today–just in time for Lorena’s and my long drive to Nebraska and back for the graduation. I am debating on whether we should listen to something non-fiction or one of the spy/mystery novels I like so much.

Thanksgiving hiccup

The red arrow shows my 5.5 pound backslide during the Thanksgiving holiday. Just today, I made it below my previous low, but it took me two weeks to take off what I put on in about four days. My goal for the upcoming graduation and Christmas celebrations, is to enjoy myself with family and friends while not having such a big hiccup. I am not sure I can do it, but since this semester is almost certainly the last time I am going to be in college as a student, I will give it the old college try!

Planned vs. actual Ph.D. program

I thought the following table was pretty interesting. I created it in November 2020 after I had been in the University of Nebraska–Lincoln Ph.D. program for about a year. I did not have my courses approved by my committee yet, but I was trying to make a guess at how long it would take me to get through, how to get the credits all in and finish in a reasonable time. I was really not trying to go fast, but not slow either. There was a trade-off between the money Troy would have to come up with (shorter is better) and sticking around in the program as long as possible to move Troy’s research program forward. It is kind of amazing how good was my guess. The part that I did not really get so right was the amount of work it would be to write the required articles and the dissertation. Pretty much everything extra got put on hold for four years, including health stuff like eating right and exercise. There was no excuse for that, but I got through the program fine, Gracias a Dios.

Month 3 WEIGHT: 200.3 lbs. BMI: 31.4

CourseCreditsAccumCourse name
MS courses1818Previous classes at UTEP and TAMU
18
Spring 202018
NRES 999321Dissertation research
21
Fall 202021
NRES 999324Dissertation research
NRES 898125Ground water modeling
25
Spring 202125
NRES 999732Dissertation research
NRES 898234Intro to Google Earth Engine
34
Fall 202134
NRES 999640Dissertation research
NRES 898343Applied hydrological modeling and water quality
NRES 855144Seminar
Spring 202244
NRES 999852Dissertation research
NRES 800355GIS
NRES 855156Seminar
Summer 202256
NRES 812359??? Class
NRES 999968
68
Fall 202268
NRES 999876Dissertation research
NRES 818379??? class
NRES 855180Seminar
Spring 202380
NRES 9991090Dissertation research

Is it wrong to retire?

A response to the question Is it Wrong to Retire by William Lane Craig on his website Reasonable Faith really resonated with me. It is something I have been thinking about for quite awhile now. I started a Ph.D. program at University of Nebraska–Lincoln four years ago when I was 63 years old with the idea that I would finish it as a retirement project. That did not happen. I am now 68 years old, still working and will be walking the commencement at UNL next Friday. In addition to that, I have a commitment, God willing, to work until I am at least 70 at my current day job. In my current mindset, the only thing that would prevent me from continuing in that position after 70 is if I am not able. When I do quit that job, I hope I am able to continue helping my professor, Troy as a volunteer as long as I am able.

Christmas tree decorating at Thanksgiving

One of the nicest parts of our Thanksgiving celebration this year was putting up the Christmas tree. Then, several times during the weekend, all the “kids” sat around in the living room and made ornaments to hang on it. It all brought back great memories of my childhood and decorating the tree with Grandpa Milo, Grandma Sarah, and all the siblings. I hope we get to do this again next year with the same crew and maybe some additions.

The calm before the storm

With Thanksgiving and our first Sunday morning of even numbered months worship meeting that we host at our home behind us, we are in a week of calm before we start traveling, entertaining, and celebrating here in Texas for part of Christmas and New Year’s, in Washington, D.C. for part of Christmas, and at University of Nebraska–Lincoln for my graduation. That really good part of all this is that we get to spend most of it with Kelly and Christian. They are flying out to Lincoln for the graduation–Lorena and I will drive up before the graduation to pick them up at the Omaha airport. We have Honest Abe’s and one of the Omaha’s spectacular steak houses on the agenda along with the graduation celebrations. Then we head back to Texas before flying to Washington, D.C. for a few days for Christmas. When we return home, Lorena and I plan to go to Istanbul sometime before the New Year to try out a restaurant Ralph, Lorena, and I stopped at for a drink during Ralph’s visit for Thanksgiving.

Audio CD’s from Ebay

I found an amazing new source for audio CD books. Ebay. I cannot believe I did not think of this before. I am going to start loading up on these things so I have books for my walks. I was going to save the audio books for just my walks, but there are so many available and they are so cheap, Lorena and I are planning to listen to one on our 10+ hour drive to Nebraska and back. These books make my daily walks much more enjoyable.

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