In a recent post, Erica answered 5 interview questions from another blogger. She then offered to ask 5 questions of commenters who wanted to be interviewed. If you'd like me to interview you, just say so in the comments. Erica's questions and my answers are below.
1. List the different places you've lived. What is your favorite?
This is a loaded question! Before graduating high school I lived in 6 different towns, although I lived in one of them (Roswell, NM) twice. My Dad was in the oil business, and they tended to transfer employees around almost like the military. Here’s that list: Roswell (where I was born), Kermit TX, Artesia NM, Hobbs NM, Roswell (again), Midland TX, Tucumcari NM.
I went to college at Texas Tech in Lubbock, and then spent 10 years in Las Cruces, NM. From there I moved to San Francisco, Palo Alto, San Jose and Fremont, where I now live.
My favorite? San Francisco, without a doubt. I do love my district of Fremont (Niles) but the reality that I can live in Niles and work in San Francisco makes me feel like the luckiest woman in the world! It’s a 45-minute BART ride to SF, and we do it often.
2. Tell a little more about the "super slow" workouts you and Ken do.
That is not a term I'm familiar with.
Super Slow was invented (and trademarked) about 20 years ago by Ken Hutchins. The basic idea is to use the heaviest weights you can for about 7 or 8 exercises. You lift for 10 seconds, hold for 3 and then lower for 10 seconds. The goal is to fatigue a muscle group completely in less than 3 minutes; if you can do more than 2 ½ minutes the weight is increased. No sets, practically no sweat, and a session takes about 20 minutes, once or twice a week. (As an example of the heaviness of the weights I use: 300+ pounds for the back press, 250 pounds for the leg press. Ken uses 520 pounds for the leg press!)
Ken was referred to our trainer, Gary (who was first and foremost a physical therapist), after orthopedic surgery on his arm to un-fuse the radius and ulna (which grew together while his wrist was immobilized after his stroke – the left wrist was shattered in the motorcycle accident caused by the stroke). As his arm became better, Gary began working with Ken, creating a modified version of Super Slow he called Super Slow Rehab. He helped Ken regain his ability to balance, walk more smoothly, walk faster, re-learn riding a bicycle, drive and perhaps most important, regain his strength.
I watched Ken for almost 2 years, and then realized that I could also use some strength training! I’ve never had the patience for weight reps at the gym; it takes too long, and I never saw any results. It’s the hardest workout I’ve even done, and one I hate to miss! Ken's been training with a Super Slow master for7 years; I've been training for 5.
3. What is your favorite type of fiber to work with? (yeah, that's a
recycled question, but I'm running out of ideas)
Wool of some sort, without a doubt! I’m working with a merino-cashmere blend right now that’s just about the most wonderful thing ever, and alpaca is quite nice. I’ve been knitting with some Brown Sheep Country Classic (which I fear may be long-discontinued) and it’s so soft and squishy I almost moan with pleasure every time I touch it. Merino is very good. Alpaca Silk is wonderful and soft; I'm practically drooling on the sweater I'm knitting!
I understand that Corriedale is wonderful, and I have some in stash, but it hasn’t made it into the rotation yet.
Cotton and silk are at the bottom of my list (well, so is most acrylic, although I use it when it’s the best choice for the item) because they are hard on my hands and don’t have the elasticity of wool. Cotton blended with wool can be lovely to knit.
I find that some of the “popular” yarns leave me somewhat underwhelmed. Noro Kureyon comes in beautiful colors and isn’t too bad to work with, but I can’t wear it next to my skin. Same with most Shetland wools and Reynolds Candide; I love the garments, but need a layer between the wool and me.
4. What is the main responsibility of your current job? Do you write
instruction manuals, or help the users of software products? (Be as
obfuscatory as necessary about the specific location).
Neither. I’m a senior technical project manager at a large public utility. I work with groups or people within various parts of the company who have an idea or need for a specific product, and help to refine the idea and define it into something that is doable. I gather the necessary groups of people together – business analysts, technical analysts, software or hardware engineers, designers, web designers, quality assurance testers, delivery experts and others – and create something.
For example, one of the projects I’m now working on is taking an application one of our groups uses on their desktops and moving it to the Internet and making it interactive with the customers. When it’s complete, customers will be able to register for a program on-line, progress will be tracked on line, and the analysts here will be able to do their work and track the progress real time. My job is to plan this and make sure we meet the plan, the budget and any deadlines.
5. (There HAS to be a cat question...) How many different cats have
you had over your life, and which one was most memorable and why?
I’ve had 8 or 9 dogs (which I actually prefer) in my life. Because I lived in apartments for many years and prefer large dogs, instead I had cats. I’ve had 32 cats and they are (in order): Katze, Muezza, Nefer, Esmerelda, Hammurabi, Sam, Athena, Pandora, Freyja, Myrddin, Hades, Tang, Sweetie, KittyHawk, Maya, Athena, Sylvester, GreyGuy, Critter, Maynard, Murphy, Nipper, TeddiGrrl, Little Lion, Buster, Funny Face, Live Wire, Smokey, Echo, SparkPlug, FullHouse and Clawdette. The oldest cat was Tang (20), followed by Echo (19) and Freyja (17).
They’re all memorable in some way and I can't pick just one.
Sylvia choose Ken to move in with (she was feral) and once she made that commitment, she never went outside again. She had 2 half-grown kittens with her, and soon presented Ken with 6 more – 5 survived. She trained her kittens well, and as new cats were added to our household, she “adopted” them, trained them in the rules of the household, and made them her own. She loved Ken back to health after his stroke, slept with him, and found me on more than one occasion when he’d fallen or needed help. Friends have told us they think Sylvia was part human and part cat.
She hated dogs, loved people and children and was a joy to be around. She was also beautiful. She was a long-haired tuxedo cat who, from the back, seemed to be wearing white pantaloons. Her fur was always pristine and she never, ever had mats. She died suddenly almost 2 years ago while recuperating from dental work at the age of 9.
KittyHawk was given to me by a man I dated briefly. He (KittyHawk, that is) was part Siamese, blue-eyed and compact, and not afraid of anything. (He was given to me because he terrorized the dogs his first person had. Apparently immediately upon joining that household, he beat the German Shepherd and Lab into submission – he was about 3 months old at the time!) He never walked – he pranced. He never met a stranger and he loved to greet everyone who came to the house. He loved unconditionally, both people and other cats. He purred like mad, and was happiest snuggled with us or a cat. He died much too young at 11, of kidney failure.