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

Author: Dad Page 18 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.

New treadmill book: Targeted by Stephen Hunter

My new book to read while I am on the treadmill arrived yesterday. I got it online from thriftbooks. I am liking them a lot these days. The prices are good and the books arrive fairly quickly. I think they got their start by buying books that public libraries want to sell and putting them on line. This is a lot lighter reading than the first three treadmill books I bought: two historical Jesus books and a weight lifting book. I have read all but a few books this author has written. This is the latest in the Bob Lee Swagger sniper series. The author is getting older, so I do not expect to many more, if any at all.

Retirement thoughts

I have a verbal commitment with the CEO of my company to, God willing, continue to work for him until I am 70. Of course, lots of things can change, especially with a start-up company (although we seem to be on an upward climb) and even more especially with my health as I approach 70 (although it is quite good right now). Retirement is the furthest thing from my desires at this point. I seemed like I was leading an aimless life after I finished all my Ph.D. work just a couple of weeks ago. Since then, I have tried to identify some projects with longer term goals to do and actually even picked one. I have also purchased a few books, got onto an exercise and diet plan, and continue to work with Lorena’s brother, Lynn, in our real estate development and construction business in Mexico. All that, plus travel to visit the kids on the east coast and Grandma Conchita in Monterrey.

On paper, that seems like a lot of stuff to be doing. In terms of time, it is not an inordinate time sink. It is made a lot easier because I work from home. I get up in the morning at around 6 AM, read my Bible, write in my blog, work until around noon, try to leave the house to eat lunch with Lorena at least a couple of times per week, work until 5 PM or so, have a snack and read a book, eat dinner at around 7 PM, get on the treadmill and listen so podcasts or read for an hour, have a cup of decaf, and then go to bed. I only talk with Lynn about 1½ times per week. We travel and we travel about once per month, so that part does not take up too much time. It seems like I should be able to maintain a schedule like this until well after 70 if my mind and health remain good.

Lynn is working at setting up our house in Mexico so I can work from there, too. We really do hope to be able to live there for 3-4 months per year before too long. Maybe I can make it to 80 before I have to retire.

Writing is hard

I have determined that about two hours is about the limit for my ability to write productively. I can do that a couple of times per day, but I need a decent break between sessions. I do not know how prolific writers do it. Maybe it is something I will learn how to do longer, but I can see this first effort is going to be a grind. It feels great to have written, but the process is pretty brutal. My plan for moving forward is to try to write for an hour or two per day, then spend another hour, later on, going back to rewrite.

I got reviews back from three of the four people I sent my introductory chapters. I was really glad I did that because the introduction is profoundly better for the advice I received. Actually, the concept for the book is morphing into something I think is a lot better, too. More universal than just a book about homeschool.

Reading list

Current book

  • Jesus and the Eyewitnesses: The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony
    • Author: Richard Bauckaum
    • Year: 2006, 2017
    • Edition: 2nd Edition, 2017
    • Started: 09/07/2023

Last book read

  • The Historical Jesus: Ancient Evidence of the Life of Christ
    • Author: Gary Habermas
    • Year: 1996
    • Edition: 8th printing, 2006
    • Started: 09/01/2023
    • Finished: 09/06/2023

Books in waiting

  • The Barbell Perscription: Strength Training for Life After 40
    • Author: Jonathon M. Sullivan and Andy Baker
    • Year: 2016

Book update: Getting feedback on the idea

I have worked pretty hard on my book idea since I decided to pull the trigger and start writing. There is enough prose on paper now where others can get a sense for my writing voice. One of the greatest benefits of my Ph.D. program was the I really do not know if I have the writing skills or that writing voice is suited at all for the kind of book I am proposing to write. I have spent the last forty-five years writing in engineeringese and acquiring bad writing habits even doing that. That understanding was impressed on me when I wrote my dissertation.

The first time I submitted a draft of a technical journal article for review by my doctoral committee, I was pretty offended by the vigor of their corrections. I was wise enough to swallow my pride enough to make all the recommended changes. By about the third round of reviews I was beginning to understand that it was me that had the writing problem and they were absolutely correct in all their corrections. On the other hand, I have been writing in this blog for quite a while. This blog, while not exactly the voice I hope will be in the book, is somewhat closer to the feel I envision. My writing needs to improve in a lot of ways, but I am not without hope that I can produce something that is interesting for a certain set of people to read.

I created a working title and an outline for the book both of which will change as I work. Then I wrote a Preface, Introduction, and a couple of partial chapters in a LaTeX document that allows me to edit easily and committed it to a source control repository (best practices for writing software). I sent the current output to all of my siblings, my Ph.D. adviser, and my cousin, Trisha. I expect there to be others I will have review the book. Trisha is a thoroughly professional, very up-to-date reader of the current pedagogical literature, and experienced elementary school teacher who was a huge help in reviewing my dissertation. All of these people have different worldviews than my own–some more than others. My hope is that they can give me a sense were I really should undertake this enterprise. I told them to be brutally honest and do not consider my feelings. I really only have enough time and energy, God willing, for two more Ph.D. level projects in my life, so I do not want to waste my time on something for which there is little chance for success.

Christian’s miniature fig tree

Christian bought a VERY small little fig tree when he was in his Ph.D. program at Arizona State. When he got a job in at Cambridge, MA, he donated the tree to us. We kept it growing through a move from Washington to Texas. It produced two or three figs each year, but it did not prosper. Lorena pruned one of the two trunks last year and this year it has taken off. It looks like there are four figs growing on it (they are small, but SUPER sweet) and it is about twice as tall as last year. There is another spur growing off the bottom, so Lorena is going to try to prune that and start a second tree in the same pot. We are not sure it is possible, but we are investigating it on the Internet.

Old guy weight-lifting book arrives!

My old guy weight-lifting book arrived today. I ordered it as soon as Christian recommended. As soon as I got the email that said it arrived and was in our (snail) mailbox, I got all excited with the idea of reading it while I am on the treadmill today. After I saw it, I realized is was WAY bigger than a trade paperback and I might not have too much luck holding it while I walk. We will see. I checked to see if they had a section in the book for guys approaching seventy. The DID! Also a section (the last one) for guys in their seventies, so I think I am all set. Now I need to the book, determine what weights and other material I need to start the program, then make the decision about whether we want to buy weights or head down to a local gym.

Exercise approaching 70

Lorena and I bought a treadmill to replace the one our good friends, Bob and Gena, lent us when we lived in Centralia. Lorena has been using it regularly and I have been using it only sporadically for about a year now. Now that I have finished the Ph.D., I no longer have an excuse for being so fat and out of shape. I need to lose fifty pounds (probably more). So, I decided to get on a program again and deal with it. I have always walked pretty fast, between 3.5-4 mph, but I could not do that this time so I am starting to put a program together where I can take it slower and build back up to where I was before. About the maximum rate I can maintain and read a book is about 2.5 miles per hour. I am just going to try to maintain that for a month or so and enjoy the books I have been buying. I am trying to get my speed back up to at least 3.5 mph by the time the weather cools off so I can walk outside. In the meantime, I am going to try to read my book on weightlifting for old guys so I can figure out whether we want to buy some weights or join a gym. We might even see if we can go to a seminar on weightlifting by the company that offers they book–the company is only a couple of hours from where we live.

Semi-decision on what to do next–write a book

After reflecting for not very long on my August 30, 2023 blog post, I have decided to opt for an attempt at authoring a book. I actually found a LaTeX template, made some modifications, made a rough outline, and started writing. One thing that became immediately evident is my lack of formal writing skills. I learned a lot going through the correction process when I prepared technical articles and my dissertation during my Ph.D., but that is a very different kind of writing from what I hope to produce.

The idea for the book is to tell our homeschool story. Whether anyone would be interested in reading the story was the first question that came to mind, but it also dawned on me that writing down what would be interesting to me and worth doing whether anyone else was interested or not. The story could serve as family history if nothing else. There are also some things I do not want the book to be. The worst outcome possible would be to turn it into a self-indulgent hagiography or a homeschool apologetic. The idea would be to tell the story, identifying where we thought we failed and succeeded, describing the questions we asked ourselves that would be common to anyone making decisions about their children’s educations, but also what we chose to do based on our own unique circumstances.

I have completed first drafts of the preface, introduction (chapter one), and the educational setting in our household before any kind of school was on our radar (chapter two). From what I have written so far, I think it is going to take me a year or so to just get a first rough draft complete and, even then, I will have to work at it pretty hard. Part of the reason I am writing about this now is to embarrass myself if I do not keep going and finish the thing. To that end, I plan to post about the book’s progress as I write it. Maybe in the next post, I will put up the (very early) first draft of the Table of Contents. If this does not work out, maybe I will return to the idea of getting a law degree.

Month 0 WEIGHT: 235.1 lbs. BMI: 36.6

Weight lifting for old guys

Christian recommended a book yesterday on weight lifting for older guys. I guess I fit into that category now that I am a lot closer to 70 than to 60. I really hate to buy anything from Amazon so I bought it from The Aasgaard Company. I got to looking around their website and it seems like a very interesting enterprise, especially based on their statement about being classical liberals. I think I bought the book at the right place.

That strength training is important as one gets older has been on my radar since I read some of the comments Kenneth Cooper made about it. This is just a rough paraphrase, but he said something to the effect that quality of life for older people is improved if they are strong enough to walk up stairs and fulfill daily household tasks.

I have spent all my time sitting and typing for the last couple of years. There have been fairly good periods of that time when I walked two to five miles per day, but I have used the excuse that I was working a full time job and studying as a full time student which did not give me much time for exercise. I know that is a really bad excuse, so now is the time to do something about. Walking is the first thing that is going back on my schedule, but Lorena and I also want to lift weights, so Christian’s recommendation was a helpful push toward doing that.

Continuing to read the Bible

My Bible reading velocity has increased since I started keeping track of my reading on February 9, 2006. I initially kept track on this blog, but switched to a private Google Docs spreadsheet after July 2, 2019. I did a search on this and it looks like the only time I wrote another post like this was in 2019. I have read through the King James Version (KJV), New King James Version (NKJV), English Standard Version (ESV), New American Standard Bible (NASB), and New International Version (NIV) Bibles. Lorena and I are currently reading aloud through the Reina-Valera, 1909 (RV) Spanish Version of the New Testament over the Internet with Grandma Conchita in Mexico. I am currently, in a read through the New Living Translation (NLT) version of the New Testament and hope to do a full read through that version when I finish.

When I first started, it was a pretty big effort just to get through a chapter per day. It took me 1,363 days to read through the Bible in my first pass. The last time, I read all the way through the Bible starting in late December of 2022, it took me 120 days. I really feel like I have missed something if I miss a day of reading. I am pretty sure I could count the days I missed on one hand since when I started reading 17 years ago. I am pretty sure I would benefit greatly by slowing down and reading more carefully, but I want to do that as an additional reading as opposed to replacing what I am doing now.

So far, I have been through the whole Bible ten times. I am on my 38th pass through the New Testament if you include the times I read through the whole Bible. This whole effort, if you want to call it that, has been an incredible gift to me.

Treadmill books: Historical Jesus

A couple of books I purchased to read on the treadmill arrived today. I think I will read the one titled “The Historical Jesus, Ancient Evidence for the Life of Christ” by Gary Habermas first. Many believe Habermas is the world’s top resurrection scholar (of course that is a religious discussion) and this book comes highly recommended even though I believe it was written for a popular audience and is not peer reviewed.

“Jesus and the Eyewitnesses, The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony” by Richard Bauckham is written at a more scholarly and comes so highly recommended by scholars I trust that I thought I should take a stab at reading it.

Cool Nebraska wildlife pictures

Troy, my Ph.D. adviser, want out to the field to perform maintenance on our water level calculation research sites at Spring Creek (a small tributary of Bazile Creek). He retrieved images from the site. I am always amazed and never going to tire of seeing the wildlife that photo-bomb the images. We have seen many raccoon and cow images over the years, but also many birds, bison, and deer. I had no idea how extensive wildlife variety and variation in ecology throughout the state when I started the degree at University of Nebraska. We got to hear super interesting lectures on all that from experts in the ecosystem technicalities, but also by policy makers, commercial interests, and recreational users in the graduate seminars. Those graduate seminars should be a topic for another blog post because they were such an integral element of my experience in both my MS at University of Texas at El Paso and my Ph.D. at UNL.

Casa Mexicana 1: Officially on the market

The first house in Mexico is officially on the market. We have a lot of interest to both purchase the house or rent apartments in it (of which there are now six). One party wants to rent the whole thing. We have another house identified just a few blocks away that we would like to purchase and remodel if we can sell the first one in time.

We have learned much about how to go about this. The key to all of it, of course, is sufficient capital to keep the builders working at a reasonable pace, but there are a lot of other things, too. How to buy a house suitable for a project like this requires knowledge of the neighborhood. What seems like a good deal, might not really be that good if there is insufficient parking, drainage problems, recalcitrant neighbors, or some other defect. It is not like buying a house in the US.

We are excited about moving forward to the next project. It all depends on selling the first project first. If things come together and we get the house we want, we will almost certainly just tear the thing down and start from scratch. Location and price are what makes it an attractive property for us, not the current structure. If we do not get that one, there are other options.

PhD Complete (except the ceremony)—what is next?

Dylan Thomas wrote:

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Kelly quoted this famous poem’s first line to me when we talked about what I planned to do next—after the retirement Ph.D. Honestly, I have been at loose ends since I finished. It was such a big, longitudinal project that I had not anticipated what I would do after it finished. It was like when the kids left home to go to college. We were so involved and invested in the mechanics of them doing well, we did not consider what to do when the left. The kids exit to college from home and and the Ph.D. completion. were both very precipitous. One instant there was too much stuff to complete and the next instant there was just nothing.

The other wildcard in our current situation is that I am past retirement age by three years. I work with people of good will and like my work in my day job. The CEO has asked me to stay until I am at least 70 and then work as much as I want after that. I view that as a literal gift from God. I get to work from wherever I want with some old friends (both over 75 years old) in what is normally a 40 hour work week. Truly, this is a luxury for me. But that leaves time on my hands and it is bad for me to be idle. The funny deal is that it is bad for my health to be idle, too. I tend to get more exercise and maintain more discipline in eating when I am busy.

So, the question is, what should I do? I will be done and back in the same boat if I pick something to small. If I pick something too big, I will be dead before I complete it. Realistically, God willing, I think of have maybe ten years to do one to three relatively big (for me) things. My list of potential projects is pretty small so I am reaching out to friends and family to help me identify something that really looks worthwhile. The list so far includes:

  • Earn a Juris Doctor degree
  • Write a book on our father-directed homeschool

That is it. I cannot think of much else. Lorena and I want to travel some, but right now that will be to go down to Mexico to visit Grandma Conchita and to the east coast to visit Kelly and Christian.

I think one thing that might help is to start writing in this blog more. It helps organize my thoughts and might help get me pushed off center to the next big thing.

How many schools?

My buddy Curt sent me an email today poking me a little bit about how many schools I have attended over the years. I told him he should not count the ones that threw me out, but then I got to thinking and thought it would be a nice thing to maybe document that for all of our family. The amazing thing is that Lorena went to more schools than any of us! So here goes–colleges and universities only!

Christian’s schools

  • Wake Technical Community College — Raleigh, NC
  • Johnston Community College — Smithfield, NC
  • Central Carolina Community College — Sanford, NC
  • North Carolina State University — Raleigh, NC (BS, Mathematics)
  • Arizona State University — Tempe, AZ (PhD, Electrical Engineering)

Kelly’s schools

  • Wake Technical Community College — Raleigh, NC (AS, General Studies)
  • Central Carolina Community College — Sanford, NC
  • North Carolina State University — Raleigh, NC (BS, Statistics)
  • University of Washington — Seattle, WA (MS, Marketing Strategy)

Lorena’s schools

  • Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico
  • Palm Beach State College — Lake Worth, FL
  • Portland Community College, Rock Creek, Portland, OR
  • Portland Community College, Sylvania, Portland, OR
  • Linn-Benton Community College, Albany, OR
  • Linn-Benton Community College, Corvallis, OR
  • Wake Technical Community College, Raleigh, NC
  • Johnston Community College, Smithfield, NC
  • Centralia College, Centralia, WA
  • Clackamas Community College, Clackamas, OR (AA, College Transfer)

Ken’s schools

  • Portland Community College, Sylvania, Portland, OR
  • Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR (BS, Business Administration)
  • Oregon Institute of Technology, Klamath Falls, OR (AE, Computer Systems)
  • Portland State University, Portland, OR
  • Universidad de Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
  • University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX (MS, Industrial Engineering)
  • Texas A&M University, College Station, TX
  • University of Nebraska Lincoln, Lincoln, NE (PhD, Natural Resource Sciences)

Retirement PhD: Final grades

Got my final grades today. Kind of sad to be leaving UNL. It was a great run. Still going to participate, but it won’t be the same as just a volunteer.

Retirement PhD: Successful Defense and Next Steps

Dissertation defense video

My dissertation defense on June 8, 2023 was successful. I must say that it was a great way to end sixty or so years of academic effort–a lot of it, not so successful. Lorena and I drove up to Lincoln from Texas, while Christian flew out from Boston to join us. We hung out with very good friends, ate really good food, and just had a stellar time. Today, the revised dissertation was submitted to the publishing service, I signed up for walking in the graduation ceremony (December 15, 2023) and purchased my cap, gown, and hood. Looking forward to the ceremony and celebration! Now all I need to do is figure out what to do next.

Retirement PhD: Dissertation submitted and accepted for defense

Still on track to graduate in December, 2023. After my dissertation was submitted to my committee, two of the members designated as readers recommended a few changes and approved the dissertation as ready for defense. I have submitted the paperwork for department approval, after which I will be able to schedule a room for the event. I have vacation scheduled to travel to Lincoln for the defense, Christian has a ticket to fly out to provide moral support. The plan, God willing, is to drive to Omaha the day before the event to pick up Christian, then defend on June 8. It seems more real now than when I was in the middle of it. Can hardly believe I am this close to the end.

Retirement PhD: Dissertation status

I had all kinds of good plans about how I was going to document this chase to a PhD, but when it came right down to it, I just did not have the energy to write with both a full-time day-job and and a full-time load of research and classes. Actually, all of these kinds of things are choices in the the end–and I chose laziness in self-defense.

Today is a seminal day in my trajectory. My thesis advisor gave me permission to submit the final draft of my dissertation so the “readers,” two members of the committee can read it and decide whether they think it is worthy of defense. He also told me there was literally nothing for me to do until they got back to me. Actually, that is not quite true. I can work on the slide presentation for my defense just in case they approve the dissertation.

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