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A View from Louisiana

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Observations of a South Louisiana native. Archives | Subscribe to Alerts Alerts Subscribe to Alerts | Feeds
   
Sunday, September 28, 2008
11:03:51 PM EDT
Feeling Exhausted

After the storm


Things are somewhat settled down at work after a stressful couple of weeks.  Most of the ongoing computer problems have been resolved, but we still have some residual things to clean up.  The Secretary of the department resigned.  I think she was one of the best and it will be hard to replace her.  The interim Secretary is all business and runs things by press releases.  She came up with the idea to use Florida's Disaster Food Stamp system as a back-up to ours, which she calls "disfunctional".  The Florida system has never been used in a real disaster.  There is no guarantee that it will work.  I've heard you can type in numbers in the name fields and names in the number fields. I think it is a bad decision.  Let's hope we never have to use it.  So far our system has processed almost 600,000 applications.  Someone calculated that if you count regular Food Stamp recipients and Disaster Food Stamp recipients over 30% of the population of Louisiana received help. We're even helping Texan's who wandered over to our state after Ike.  Texas doesn't have a Disaster Food Stamp system.  We are still working extended hours, but our supervisor made us take a day off this weekend.  I worked in the yard, played music at the Bluegrass Jam, took a nap and enjoyed a nice relaxing dinner.   So things are better, but we still have a ways to go.    

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Sunday, September 14, 2008
10:07:51 PM EDT
Feeling Stressed

The War Zone


It's been a long couple of weeks since Gustav hit.  We just got our electricity back yesterday.  I've been working 12 to 15 hours a day at the Department of Social Services.  I thought this would be better than Katrina, but it's just as much work if not more.  Hundreds of thousands of people are applying for emergency food stamps.  Once they fill out the forms the data has to be entered into the computer system.  That means thousands of people are out there hitting the enter button at the same time exposing glitches in the system that causes other problems down the line.  It's like a hose with a bunch of  holes in it.   You patch up one thing and it springs another leak.  Our computer system is bursting at the seams. The governor is leaning on upper management who are leaning on us.  On top of all that work we still have to do some of our other work.  It's stressful on everyone.   I keep thinking we are over the hump, but then something else breaks.   I'm just tired. 

Oh yeah, I almost forgot; it's my birthday today.



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Saturday, August 30, 2008
12:01:04 AM EDT
Hearing Green Day

Katrina's Brother


Well, here we go again.  It won't be exactly the same as three years ago, but I'm really woried about New Orleans and everything south of it.  Who knows where Gustav will hit had how hard.  It's too early to tell, but we all know it will be somewhere in Louisiana.  My office at the Department of Social Services is already in alert mode.  Crews are being dispatched to take care of computer equipment, load people on busses, man shelters and any number of emergency tasks.  For me it's the calm before the storm.  All my work will come after the storm when they start providing emergency food stamps.  I have to admit, we are all more prepared this year and it's all due to what happened when Katrina/Rita hit.  So for now I'll just be waiting it out until I get the call from work.  This afternoon I mowed the lawn.  I have an electric mower so I didn't want to take a chance.  Besides, hurricanes always bring lots of rain. 

M's birthday is on Tuesday, right when the hurricane is supposed to be passing.  A. was joking about how we could have a candle-light dinner. 

All for now.  I'll post more after the storm.  

 



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Monday, August 18, 2008
10:53:19 PM EDT
Feeling Productive

Off for a few days


It's been hard to post anything lately.  With A. starting with school again I have to get to sleep a little bit earlier.  On top of that I've been having DSL/modem/wireless issues.  It all started with the DSL going down one night.  The tech at AT&T was very helpful getting the line back up but we couldn't connect back to the wireless router.  We have an old clunker desktop with Windows 98, so I switched to the laptop to try to fix things.  After a few days of struggle we finally bought a new router which I connected last night.  Happy days again. 

Anyway, I'm taking the week off to do some things around the house.  Today we dug up all the art work we have stored away for one reason or another.  Some items were packed away when a tree limb fell through our back roof and we took everything from that room.  The rest went into storage when we painted our living room and dining room.  So M. and I dug out paintings, drawings, collages and photos that we forgot we had and started putting them up on the walls again.  It was fun discovering things and arranging them in just the right way.  Now we are inspired to clean out the spare bedroom (a.k.a. the junk room).  Get ready, Goodwill, it's purging time.



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Monday, August 11, 2008
11:28:42 PM EDT

Still here


We went to visit Mom and Dad yesterday.  Dad had found an old harmonica of his and started playing again.  I brought my guitar and A. brought his dulcimer and we played a few tunes together.  I think it does Dad good to do something like that.  He kept thinking that he couldn't play something, but would jump right in when we started.  As long as it was a familiar tune he could pick it up pretty good.  Just like riding a bike.  We did especially good on the Hank Williams tunes although I couldn't always remember the words.  Next time we'll be more prepared.

As I mentioned, we bought a dulcimer from e-bay for A. to play at the Bluegrass Jam at the Farmers' Market in downtown Baton Rouge.  I wanted to get something he could pick up pretty easily.  We played Saturday and he did pretty good.



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Saturday, July 19, 2008
10:57:45 PM EDT

A.'s YouTube Movie


Today A. and I worked on a video. He's been making videos using his cell phone and putting them on YouTube.   We did a parody of the  Potter Puppet Pals "Mysterious Ticking Noise".  Instead of Harry Potter characters we used Star Wars characters.  We called it the Star Wars Puppet Pals "Mysterious Clicking Noise".  It took A. and his friend all day to set it up and several takes to get the final cut.  It is a bit crude due to the quality of the phone camera.  Still I think it was really creative.

 



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Tuesday, July 8, 2008
11:08:43 PM EDT

Hogwarts Camp


Yesterday A. started two weeks of Hogwarts camp at the Unitarian Church in Baton Rouge.   Sunday we worked our tales off getting the church ready.  It's like Harry Potter in an alternate universe.  The four houses are Stonedragon, Windrider, Phoenixfire and Windhorse with "common rooms" for each.  The students come to Diagon Alley in the morning and get T-shirts, tote bags, wizard hats and wands. Then they go to various classes (Magical Animals, Charms, Potions, Defense Against the Dark Arts, etc.) and there's a Quittage game at the end of the day.  I helped out for the second year in a row teaching the Charms class as Professor Moss, a wizard from the Cocodrie School of Magical Arts in the swamps of Louisiana.  I spoke a little bit about what charms are and then showed the students how to make these  bracelets out of magical white beads that changed into various colors when exposed to sunlight.  Also, the string and some of the other beads glow in the dark. It was really cool.  Even the big kids were a little impressed.   I taught all of my classes in one day so I wouldn't miss much work.  Next year I'll consider taking off at least one week to spread it out a little.   If I get any pictures I'll post them.

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Tuesday, July 1, 2008
11:33:42 PM EDT
Feeling Grateful
Hearing Bob Dylan - The Times They Are A-Changin'

More on the Alzheimer's Fundraiser


My cousin-in-law Randy wrote about the fundraiser on his blog.  Amazing.

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Monday, June 30, 2008
11:35:48 PM EDT

Newspaper Article


Our family was featured in The Advocate:
Family works to fight disease
Alzheimer’s seems to threaten many Bourgeois siblings
 

          

  • Advocate staff photo PATRICK DENNIS
    Ava Carbo, of St. Amant, views some of the items up for auction Sunday during a Alzheimer’s disease benefit for members of a family in which nine of the 12 children have shown signs of Alzheimer’s disease.
  • By JJARED JANES
  • Advocate staff writer
  • Published: Jun 30, 2008 - UPDATED: 12:05 a.m.
GONZALES — When the younger members of an Ascension Parish family forget where they put their keys or cannot recall the name of an acquaintance, they jokingly blame on it the family genes.

It’s their way to find humor in what, for many of them, is a frightening situation, Larry Schexnaydre said. He and more than 60 other members of his generation in the Bourgeois family suspect that their family’s genes make them susceptible to Alzheimer’s disease.

Schexnaydre’s mother, Barbara Schexnaydre, and eight of her brothers and sisters have been diagnosed with probable Alzheimer’s disease while another sister is showing symptoms of it, Larry Schexnaydre said Sunday before a fundraiser for Alzheimer’s Services of the Capital Area. That means at least 10 of his grandparent’s 12 children could eventually be diagnosed with the disease.

While the disease cannot be definitively diagnosed until after death when the brain can be examined, most of Maurice and Elizabeth Bourgeois’ children still living with probable Alzheimer’s disease show many of the classic symptoms: short-term memory loss, disorientation and language  problems.

Barbara Schexnaydre is in better shape than some of her siblings as she exhibits only short-term memory loss, Larry Schexnaydre said. But even then, he said, the inevitable progression of the disease that has no known cure makes him worry about her future and that of the rest of his family if the disease is found to have genetic ties.

“You do what you can to be able to healthily cope with it,” Schexnaydre said after he joked about being unable to remember when his mother was diagnosed. “But it’s pretty scary for a lot of us.”

To raise money and awareness about the disease, the Bourgeois family organized “A Time to Remember” black-tie dessert social and silent auction Sunday at the Holiday Inn.

In all, the event raised more than $18,000 for Alzheimer’s Services of the Capital Area, which provides education and support services to Alzheimer’s patients and their caregivers.

Nicole Colvin, the event coordinator for the Alzheimer’s Society,  said Bourgeios family members are also shown in a promotional video for the society and together had a team of more than 70 people during the society’s “Walk to Remember” this year.

But the family’s greatest impact could be in its ability to be studied to determine if genetics plays a role and what role genetics plays in Alzheimer’s disease, she said.

In February, a research team from the Mayo Institute in Jacksonville, Fla., traveled to Ascension Parish where its members tested more than 200 members of the Bourgeois family, including the descendants of Maurice and Elizabeth Bourgeois. The results of the genetic testing and answers to a questionnaire are part of a national study examining the link between Alzheimer’s and genetics.

The family’s hope is that by participating in the study and helping to raise funds for Alzheimer’s outreach and research, the disease could be diagnosed earlier and treatment could be developed, said Iva Tullier, one of Schexnaydre’s cousins who helped organize Sunday’s event. For Tullier’s mother, Cecilia — who had to be placed in a nursing home and can no longer remember her children — and for her aunts and uncles, that research will likely come too late to stop the progression of the disease.

But Tullier said she and her cousins want to help future generations.

“If the percentage stays the same, there’s going to be a lot of people in our family with Alzheimer’s,” Tullier said. “We want to do what we can.”

Advocate staff writer John Colvin contributed to this report



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Sunday, June 29, 2008
11:21:55 PM EDT
Feeling Grateful
Hearing Green Day

Alzheimer's Fundraiser


The Alzheimer's fundraiser was a huge success.  It was well attended and the bidding at the silent auction was more than generous. My cousin sent an e-mail saying that they raised roughly $18,000+.  A.'s collage fetched $80; mine $60 (my mother-in-law bought it and was glad to have it).  My brothers,  sister and sister-in-law contributed hand crafted items that contributed even more to the cause: A hand made cypress table ($400), a wood-block print ($400+), a framed 2008 Jazz Fest poster ($300), a watercolor painting, a shadowbox collage ($50) and an artsy box covered with scrap bottle caps and other pieces of colorful tin ($300+). The top item was a hand crafted ice chest made by two of my cousins which sold for $900.  It was a fine piece of outdoor furniture made of old cypress with an Igloo type ice chest inside. It had an actual brass faucet drain and an old coke bottle opener attached to the front. M. volunteered to man one of the bidding tables. The M.C. was funny and kept things rolling.  The entertainment was fantastic and much appreciated. The desserts were all delicious and donated by businesses and family members.  There was a film from Alzheimer's Services featuring my cousin and our aunt that brought tears to many of us because we all can relate to what she is going through.  I think our extended family of cousins will continue to be a major fundraiser in this area for a very long time.



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