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Friday, March 17, 2017

If I want to become a Navy Seal what are the steps I need to take to achieve this goal?

Read article : If I want to become a Navy Seal what are the steps I need to take to achieve this goal?

Col John Boyd (USAF-ret) used to ask his guys “do you want to be somebody or do you want to do something?”

By which he means, everyone wants to look cool. They want the title. They want the cool hat or badge. But they don’t necessarily want to do that work or put in that effort.

Everyone would love to be a firefighter. Not everyone wants to run into a burning building.

What makes an operative "special"?

James D. Kiras approaches the question of ‘special operations’ with his definition, “Special operations can inflict disproportionate moral damage, in conjunction with strikes against material resources, by virtue of their ability to accomplish what was previously thought impossible.”

Unfortunately, Kiras’s definition is too generic and leaves open the possibility that air power in many forms represents a “special operations”capability. (Very few people would begrudge the Air Force, in general, the title of "special operations.") It also tends to focus on the relatively narrow “direct action” aspect of special operations vice some of the other significant roles undertaken by SOF.

The most complete definition of “special operations forces” is provided by Dr. Robert G. Spulak who first identifies the three most common frictions of war (intense mental and physical stress, the inability to predict what is going to happen, and the inability to know what is out there) and then provides three attributes required by special operations personnel to overcome those frictions.

Spulak suggests that SOF need to be "elite warriors" who are "flexible" and "creative."

The first means they have the physical and mental endurance to survive the stressors of combat and long term deployment behind enemy lines without support. SOF personnel are in incredible physical shape. They approach every work out with the intent of making themselves better, not just maintaining what they have. They are constantly pushing the limits and they are always in competition. Mentally, they exhibit discipline. The ability to deny themselves simple pleasures or to push on through pain, exhaustion, and even demoralization.

Being flexible requires a wide repertoire of skills which can be adapted to a given situation (demolitions, skydiving, SCUBA diving, languages, etc.) By extension, this implies the ability to learn new skills quickly. How to break down a subject into its component parts, how to study, how to practice effectively. Which skills are not as important as a variety of skills and the ability to pick-up new skills quickly.

With regards to practice, SOF personnel subscribe to the philosophy:

“Amateurs practice until they get it right. Professionals practice until they can’t get it wrong.”

Creativity relates to the operator’s ability to conduct unique missions with no previously established doctrine or tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) and to develop the necessary solutions to the problem at hand. In other words, there is not an "approved solution" to a given tactical situation. (For example, when conducting an assault there is specific doctrine, a requirement for at least a 3:1 force ratio, and TTPs for how to apply covering fires, etc, etc.) Special operators understand how to break a problem down. Look at the root causes, pick apart the vulnerabilities and then to focus their efforts on those solutions with the highest “return on investment.” So critical thinking skills, lateral thinking, and problem solving are essential.

Develop those three attributes and everything else is details.

With that in mind, I would suggest the following with regards to how to prepare…

Discipline. Develop discipline both physically and mentally. If you can do that, you can overcome any of the challenges that are thrown at you.

Every special operator I have ever met has had two stories: 1) about the guy who was in better shape than anybody else in selection and washed out and 2) the guy nobody thought would make it because he was slight, goofy looking, a city kid, whatever but he had the intestinal fortitude to push through all trials.

What's the difference between them? Discipline. One was physically powerful but when everything went to hell, he was unable force himself to go on. He didn't want it bad enough and chances are he had never had to force himself to dig down deep. Everyone has certain things that they are naturally more inclined to because of a combination of genes and environment. Many who are physically strong likely come from a gene pool where that was in abundance and then they were able to apply it an environment that rewarded those traits. Those people are physically strong and will do well in many, many circumstances. But SOF (regardless of the Service or country) is focused on pushing people to their limits. If you are used to things coming easy to you (even if you still have to train, go to practice, etc.), then SOF selection is going to be very difficult for you. If you don't have the right mindset, if you aren't there for the right reasons, you won't push on.You'll quit. And that's the one thing you have to learn not to do.

SOF operators strive to be the best. At everything. Everything is a competition and every challenge is an opportunity not to just overcome it and prove something to yourself but to actually beat everyone else. Be faster, stronger, smarter, funnier, etc. There is no place in the SOF community for someone who is wiling to settle for "good enough" in ANY endeavor.

Bottom line: While in school, you need straight As in every course you take.The only reason you can't get an A in every course you take is because you aren't willing to put in the time to study and prepare for the tests. "Not willing" is the key to failure in selection.

On top of that, you need to ensure that you are maxing out your PT. Know the standards you are going to be held to and MAX them. Again, there is no room for someone who can *pass* the PFT. SOF only wants those who can beat the maximums in every category. And do so AFTER a full workout. Every PFT you take in selection will be after you have already done a full workout by any normal human's standards. You'll do your 1.5 mile run after you've already done a mile of walking lunges. You'll do your push-ups after you've already done log carries. You'll do your crunches after you've already done hundreds of flutter kicks. If you can't max the PFT after all of that, its because you didn't put in the effort for it. And "not putting in the effort" is the key to failure in SOF.

Lastly, take only cold showers. No kidding. Cold showers are the bane of human existence. It is the most uncomfortable you can make yourself on a daily basis and it requires intense discipline to accept that as your day-to-day life. That it will never start with a hot shower. Every morning you can look forward to standing under ice coldwater while you wash-up. And really, you will find that this will be your life in selection, so get started now.

Straight As. Maximum PFT scores. Cold showers. That doesn't leave much time for socializing. It doesn't leave much time for drinking. It doesn't leave much time for sleep. Embrace it and you will succeed. Make excuses and don't waste your time with selection, you'll just leave with an unfulfilled sensation.

Physically, there are no special exercises you need to do but running long distances and swimming long distances will help. Seize every physical challenge you can find by competing in marathons, iron man races, and spartan events. Always find a way to push yourself to your very limits. That's the only way to train for SOF selection.

And then of course, at some point, you need to meet with a Navy recruiter.

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

The Bath Kitchen Pros LLC | Kitchen & Bath in 11246 Timber Tech Ave - Tomball TX - Reviews - Photos

Read article : The Bath Kitchen Pros LLC | Kitchen & Bath in 11246 Timber Tech Ave - Tomball TX - Reviews - Photos

Glenn Morrison

Terrific place to get nice furniture more »

Terrific place to get nice furniture

Herb McNaspy

We could not be more pleased with how our master bath came out. This is a small company that does quality work at what I consider to be a reasonable price. Everything goes together. The colors blend and all of the materials are high quality.
Our installer, L.J., did almost all of it by himself. He is very professional and did an excellent job. My advice is to leave him alone and let him do his job and you will not be disappointed.
We were interested in a quality product where everything was done the right way and I feel that is exactly what we got.
more »

We could not be more pleased with how our master bath came out. This is a small company that does quality work at what I consider to be a reasonable price. Everything goes together. The colors blend and all of the materials are high quality.
Our installer, L.J., did almost all of it by himself. He is very professional and did an excellent job. My advice is to leave him alone and let him do his job and you will not be disappointed.
We were interested in a quality product where everything was done the right way and I feel that is exactly what we got.

Jerry Surber

Wow, Bath Kitchen Pro's do Beautiful shower remodeling. They are professional, timely, and have great quality. That life time, owner-to-owner, warranty they have, adds more value to my house, ifyou ask me, thx! more »

Wow, Bath Kitchen Pro's do Beautiful shower remodeling. They are professional, timely, and have great quality. That life time, owner-to-owner, warranty they have, adds more value to my house, if you ask me, thx!

Faith Builders Inc

I have worked with both Mitch and AJ. These guys are some of the best in the industry. They work hard, communicate well, and have a strong sense of integrity. I have always seen them deal fairly withwhoever they are working with, and that says a lot in this industry. I may not be one of their customers, but I am one of their competitors. I think so highly of them that I took the time to share some of my thoughts about them. more »

I have worked with both Mitch and AJ. These guys are some of the best in the industry. They work hard, communicate well, and have a strong sense of integrity. I have always seen them deal fairly with whoever they are working with, and that says a lot in this industry. I may not be one of their customers, but I am one of their competitors. I think so highly of them that I took the time to share some of my thoughts about them.

Glenn Ozburn

We love our new shower including the awesome look of it, its ease to clean, the functionality it brings, and the promise of a mold-free, healthier solution. The Bath Kitchen Pros did a wonderful jobmeeting our needs and even going above what we expected. Mitch, AJ, Arnold, and Michael were all great to us treating us with respect, committing to doing things right, working with our schedule, offering wonderful design suggestions, and providing great communication. If we decide to do further bathroom remodeling, we would definitely do business with them again. more »

We love our new shower including the awesome look of it, its ease to clean, the functionality it brings, and the promise of a mold-free, healthier solution. The Bath Kitchen Pros did a wonderful job meeting our needs and even going above what we expected. Mitch, AJ, Arnold, and Michael were all great to us treating us with respect, committing to doing things right, working with our schedule, offering wonderful design suggestions, and providing great communication. If we decide to do further bathroom remodeling, we would definitely do business with them again.

Business Response:

Thank you Glen for all of the kind words. Please let us know if we can be of any assistance in the future.

Paul Porterhouse

AJ and his crew did a fabulous job. They were very professional, on schedule and within budget. The workmanship was excellent, down to the finest detail. They will definitely handle my next bath or kitchen project! more »

AJ and his crew did a fabulous job. They were very professional, on schedule and within budget. The workmanship was excellent, down to the finest detail. They will definitely handle my next bath or kitchen project!

Christen Borgan

My husband and I met The Bath Kitchen Pros owners at the Katy Home and Garden show in January 2017. We discussed our master bathroom needs. One of the owners Mitch came to our house and made an excellent presentation, we decided on the spot to commit to the remodeling. The job took 4 1/2 days, and the results were excellent. We would recommend Bath Kitchen Pros. more »

My husband and I met The Bath Kitchen Pros owners at the Katy Home and Garden show in January 2017. We discussed our master bathroom needs. One of the owners Mitch came to our house and made an excellent presentation, we decided on the spot to commit to the remodeling. The job took 4 1/2 days, and the results were excellent. We would recommend Bath Kitchen Pros.

Business Response:

Thank you Christen for the feedback and all of the kind words. It was a pleasure to do business with the two of you. Please let us know if we can be of any assistance in the future.

Anne Park Marshall

Easy to work with, dependable, hard-working, responsible! Very happy with the final product! more »

Easy to work with, dependable, hard-working, responsible! Very happy with the final product!

A Google User

Great customer service, team was courteous, prompt & very professional.
On time, on budget, GO PRO'S!!!
more »

Great customer service, team was courteous, prompt & very professional.
On time, on budget, GO PRO'S!!!

Business Response:

Thank you for all of kind words Gary! You were a pleasure to do business with. Please let us know if we can be of assistance in the future.

Elijah Thomas Jr.

The Bath Kitchen Pros remodeled our master bath, we are 100% satisfied with project and the price from the beginning to the end. The owners, AJ and Mitch are true to their word and committed to customer satisfaction from start to finish. I highly recommend this company and rate them 5 stars. more »

The Bath Kitchen Pros remodeled our master bath, we are 100% satisfied with project and the price from the beginning to the end. The owners, AJ and Mitch are true to their word and committed to customer satisfaction from start to finish. I highly recommend this company and rate them 5 stars.

Business Response:

Thank you so much for the kind words Mr Thomas! We appreciate your business and please let us know if we can be of any assistance in the future.

Gary Wysong

Great customer service, team was courteous, prompt & very professional.
On time, on budget, GO PRO'S!!!
more »

Great customer service, team was courteous, prompt & very professional.
On time, on budget, GO PRO'S!!!

Business Response:

Thank you for all of kind words Gary! You were a pleasure to do business with. Please let us know if we can be of assistance in the future.

Rachel M.

Bath kitchen pros did a great job replacing an old shower. The shower is nicely updated now. The only reason for the 4 star rating is because I had to request them to
come back out to do a more
thorough job of cleaning up when the job was complete. For the cost of updating, I would expect a nice job of cleaning up when finished. Other than that, the workers were very nice and polite. more »

Bath kitchen pros did a great job replacing an old shower. The shower is nicely updated now. The only reason for the 4 star rating is because I had to request them to
come back out to do a more thorough job of cleaning up when the job was complete. For the cost of updating, I would expect a nice job of cleaning up when finished. Other than that, the workers were very nice and polite.

Kindra Krueger

We love our roll in shower that Bath Kitchen Pros made for our disabled daughter! They were professional, polite, and took steps to minimize the dust and noise. Mitch was available for any questions that came up, and the team came up with a great solution to keep our daughter warm while getting a shower, using 2 fixed shower heads and one hand held. We are very happy with the work from Bath Kitchen Pros and are happy to recommend them to friends! more »

We love our roll in shower that Bath Kitchen Pros made for our disabled daughter! They were professional, polite, and took steps to minimize the dust and noise. Mitch was available for any questions that came up, and the team came up with a great solution to keep our daughter warm while getting a shower, using 2 fixed shower heads and one hand held. We are very happy with the work from Bath Kitchen Pros and are happy to recommend them to friends!

Kindra Krueger

We love our roll in shower that Bath Kitchen Pros made for our disabled daughter! They were professional, polite, and took steps to minimize the dust and noise. Mitch was available for any questions that came up, and the team came up with a great solution to keep our daughter warm while getting a shower, using 2 fixed shower heads and one hand held. We are very happy with the work from Bath Kitchen Pros and are happy to recommend them to friends! more »

We love our roll in shower that Bath Kitchen Pros made for our disabled daughter! They were professional, polite, and took steps to minimize the dust and noise. Mitch was available for any questions that came up, and the team came up with a great solution to keep our daughter warm while getting a shower, using 2 fixed shower heads and one hand held. We are very happy with the work from Bath Kitchen Pros and are happy to recommend them to friends!

Sheila R.

The Bath Kitchen Pros worked with me to help create the Master Bath of my dreams. more »

The Bath Kitchen Pros worked with me to help create the Master Bath of my dreams.

Carliss C.

They are an awesome company. more »

They are an awesome company.

Christine Tsai

Just had our bathroom remodeled where we took out the tub and expanded the shower. We love it. Will post a video soon of the finished product. more »

Just had our bathroom remodeled where we took out the tub and expanded the shower. We love it. Will post a video soon of the finished product.

joejurak

First and foremost - our new bathroom is stunning. The results of our full master bathroom remodel far exceeded our expectations. How many people can say that after having a room remodeled? Mitchell and his crew with The Bath Kitchen Pros were nothing short of amazing and nearly one year later we are still overwhelmed with the beauty of our new bathroom. This team worked so carefully with us every step of the way to make every single corner / nook / detail - exactly as we dreamed. They are truly passionate about their work and strive to make their customers happy every step of the way. Mitchell is truly one of the nicest and most professional people we have ever met. The industry should use Mitchell as their mold for how to make a perfect remodeling contractor. He is truly a genuine and great guy and his company stands behind their work. The Bath Kitchen Pros will be our first call for any future project. We cannot thank Mitchell and his crew enough for their talent - commitment - and professionalism every step of the way before , during, and after the project. If you have a chance to work with these guys - do it - they are a rare gem. Sincerely - Joe and Lena more »

First and foremost - our new bathroom is stunning. The results of our full master bathroom remodel far exceeded our expectations. How many people can say that after having a room remodeled? Mitchell and his crew with The Bath Kitchen Pros were nothing short of amazing and nearly one year later we are still overwhelmed with the beauty of our new bathroom. This team worked so carefully with us every step of the way to make every single corner / nook / detail - exactly as we dreamed. They are truly passionate about their work and strive to make their customers happy every step of the way. Mitchell is truly one of the nicest and most professional people we have ever met. The industry should use Mitchell as their mold for how to make a perfect remodeling contractor. He is truly a genuine and great guy and his company stands behind their work. The Bath Kitchen Pros will be our first call for any future project. We cannot thank Mitchell and his crew enough for their talent - commitment - and professionalism every step of the way before , during, and after the project. If you have a chance to work with these guys - do it - they are a rare gem. Sincerely - Joe and Lena

Anonymous

The final product looks great, and the high and low fixed shower head plus a third hand-held shower head works very well for giving our disabled daughter a shower and keeping her warm. more »

The final product looks great, and the high and low fixed shower head plus a third hand-held shower head works very well for giving our disabled daughter a shower and keeping her warm.

Anonymous

None. They met and exceeded my expectations. more »

None. They met and exceeded my expectations.

Claudia H.

Bath Kitchen Pros is reliable and trustworthy. We were able to leave town and give them access to our home to complete the job. more »

Bath Kitchen Pros is reliable and trustworthy. We were able to leave town and give them access to our home to complete the job.

Anonymous

I was most satisfied with the quality and style. more »

I was most satisfied with the quality and style.

Anonymous

I will call you to remodel another bathroom soon! more »

I will call you to remodel another bathroom soon!

Herman W.

From the beginning to the end we knew exactly what was happening what they were doing and when they would be finished and what the next step would be more »

From the beginning to the end we knew exactly what was happening what they were doing and when they would be finished and what the next step would be

Anonymous

We're so happy with the way the shower turned out that we decided to go ahead and let them update the rest of the bathroom more »

We're so happy with the way the shower turned out that we decided to go ahead and let them update the rest of the bathroom

Monday, November 6, 2017

re-bath of amarillo | Kitchen & Bath in 4701 S Western St - Amarillo TX - Reviews - Photos

Read article : re-bath of amarillo | Kitchen & Bath in 4701 S Western St - Amarillo TX - Reviews - Photos

David Bitting

The firm redid our shower and sink. The stone in the shower is beautiful. The job was professionally done. The bathroom was very clean after every day of work. The courtesy of the employees is exceptional. I highly recommend this firm. Our family is very pleased with this job and the high quality of work. I would use this firm again. more »

The firm redid our shower and sink. The stone in the shower is beautiful. The job was professionally done. The bathroom was very clean after every day of work. The courtesy of the employees is exceptional. I highly recommend this firm. Our family is very pleased with this job and the high quality of work. I would use this firm again.

Business Response:

Hello David, We are so grateful for your feedback and 5-star review! Thank you for your kind words - it is truly wonderful to know that our efforts are paying off. We're glad that you like the stone in your shower and that you appreciate our cleanliness! It means so much to our team that you are willing to recommend our company to others! This is the highest compliment you could give our company. We are honored by your choice to do business with us and it was a pleasure to serve you! All the best, The Re-Bath Team

David Bitting

My shower was re done with natural stone. The craftsmanship is excellent. The employees are truly experts. The courtesy of the staff is outstanding. I highly recommend this firm. more »

My shower was re done with natural stone. The craftsmanship is excellent. The employees are truly experts. The courtesy of the staff is outstanding. I highly recommend this firm.

Business Response:

Thank you so much for giving us the opportunity & we are so delighted you are happy with the results!

Shirley Bridges

We love are new shower that Re-bath did for us they are so nice and the works are so hard on what they do. Everyone are friendly and they clean up after then self every day. We can't wait for them to do are front bathroom and more on are master bathroom more »

We love are new shower that Re-bath did for us they are so nice and the works are so hard on what they do. Everyone are friendly and they clean up after then self every day. We can't wait for them to do are front bathroom and more on are master bathroom

Glenda Butts

I am very happy with both bathroom remodels. Everyone at Rebath from start to finish was most helpful, attentive to our needs and professional. Finished projects in a timely manner. Hope to work withRebath again for kitchen remodel. I would highly recommend products and services. more »

I am very happy with both bathroom remodels. Everyone at Rebath from start to finish was most helpful, attentive to our needs and professional. Finished projects in a timely manner. Hope to work with Rebath again for kitchen remodel. I would highly recommend products and services.

Business Response:

Glenda, Thank you so much for your review. We know you have many choices when it comes to remodeling and we are pleased that you trusted ReBath of Amarillo to transform your bathroom. We look forward to helping you with your kitchen remodel!!

Carl Ault

Re-Bath recently completed a remodeling of our bathrooms and kitchen. My wife and I are very pleased with the results and we would recommend Re-Bath to others who are considering having such work done on their home. more »

Re-Bath recently completed a remodeling of our bathrooms and kitchen. My wife and I are very pleased with the results and we would recommend Re-Bath to others who are considering having such work done on their home.

Business Response:

Carl, Thank you for your review. We know you have many choices when it comes to remodeling and we are pleased that you trusted ReBath of Amarillo to transform your bathroom.

April Pollreisz

We love our new shower!!! The staff was friendly and professional through out the whole process. Our new shower is beautiful and easy to maintain. We will defiantly use Re-Bath for future projects. more »

We love our new shower!!! The staff was friendly and professional through out the whole process. Our new shower is beautiful and easy to maintain. We will defiantly use Re-Bath for future projects.

Business Response:

Dear April, What a pleasure to read such a wonderful review on Google! Thank you so much for taking the time to share your experience online; it means a great deal to us. We are so glad to hear that you are enjoying your new shower! We pride ourselves on providing the highest-quality standards in the industry and are grateful for wonderful customers like you. Best wishes! The Re-Bath Team

Jim Crossman

Re-Bath came in and completely transformed our bathroom. From contacting them to completion, our project was simple, work was clean and professional. We are very pleased with the work we had done andwe definitely recommend Re-Bath for any and all work you could want done. We will definitely use them again! more »

Re-Bath came in and completely transformed our bathroom. From contacting them to completion, our project was simple, work was clean and professional. We are very pleased with the work we had done and we definitely recommend Re-Bath for any and all work you could want done. We will definitely use them again!

Business Response:

Thank you for your kind review. We appreciate your business and are pleased that you trusted ReBath of Amarillo to transform your bathroom. Enjoy!

Jeanna Miller

Final product was beautiful! Great work! more »

Final product was beautiful! Great work!

Business Response:

Thank you for your 5-star review. We are so pleased to hear that you are happy with your final product. We know you have choices when it comes to remodeling and we appreciate your business very much!

Barbara S.

Love my bathrooms. They do an excellent job. The crew was friendly, fast, and efficient. And, the mess was cleaned up after each work day. Would highly recommend Re-Bath to all. Thank you for such a wonderful job. more »

Love my bathrooms. They do an excellent job. The crew was friendly, fast, and efficient. And, the mess was cleaned up after each work day. Would highly recommend Re-Bath to all. Thank you for such a wonderful job.

S J.

I love my newly remodeled bathroom. Re-Bath did a floor to ceiling remodel and everything turned out great. The design process was very thorough and the installers were highly skilled. Communication was great and all the employees genuinely cared about our satisfaction. The Jacksons 2-4-2015 more »

I love my newly remodeled bathroom. Re-Bath did a floor to ceiling remodel and everything turned out great. The design process was very thorough and the installers were highly skilled. Communication was great and all the employees genuinely cared about our satisfaction. The Jacksons 2-4-2015

C A Haskell

Very professional and beautiful products. The crews are courteous and careful. Very satisfied. more »

Very professional and beautiful products. The crews are courteous and careful. Very satisfied.

Tammy Benton

Great to work with, good quality of work, bend over backwards to make everything to your pleasing and work very long hours to get the job finished. more »

Great to work with, good quality of work, bend over backwards to make everything to your pleasing and work very long hours to get the job finished.

Betty Schmidt

Our bathroom is much more attractive because of our new Re-Bath tub, surround and fixtures The people were friendly and good in working with us to achieve the look we wanted at the most reasonable price. Installation was quick, done with competency and without making a big mess. We are happy with the service and product. more »

Our bathroom is much more attractive because of our new Re-Bath tub, surround and fixtures The people were friendly and good in working with us to achieve the look we wanted at the most reasonable price. Installation was quick, done with competency and without making a big mess. We are happy with the service and product.

C Newt

From the time they walked into my home, until they were finished, I found them polite and friendly. The two installers never said a foul word, which is rare in today's world. I really appreciated that. They gave me the feeling that should I need to leave the premise, I could and not worry about anything. They kept everything very clean as they worked and cleaned up when they left so that I had nothing to do except enjoy my new bathtub. Very efficient. I am so impressed that I am having them remodel my other bathroom.
A very pleasant experience. I would highly recommend ReBath to everyone who is planning to remodel their home.
more »

From the time they walked into my home, until they were finished, I found them polite and friendly. The two installers never said a foul word, which is rare in today's world. I really appreciated that. They gave me the feeling that should I need to leave the premise, I could and not worry about anything. They kept everything very clean as they worked and cleaned up when they left so that I had nothing to do except enjoy my new bathtub. Very efficient. I am so impressed that I am having them remodel my other bathroom.
A very pleasant experience. I would highly recommend ReBath to everyone who is planning to remodel their home.

Connie Dumcum

The crew from Re-Bath were very polite and professional. They did an excellent job on my bathroom and finished in a timely manner. We love it, and the quality of materials used is exceptional in my opinion. I would highly recommend Re-Bath of Amarillo. more »

The crew from Re-Bath were very polite and professional. They did an excellent job on my bathroom and finished in a timely manner. We love it, and the quality of materials used is exceptional in my opinion. I would highly recommend Re-Bath of Amarillo.

Jeff Spain

Nice very nice indeed!!! more »

Nice very nice indeed!!!

Robert F.

All the employees of Re-Bath of Amarillo were friendly and professional especially Gerald the installer. I love my new shower since I am recently handicapped. more »

All the employees of Re-Bath of Amarillo were friendly and professional especially Gerald the installer. I love my new shower since I am recently handicapped.

Jon Saunders

A shower with glass walls rocks who don't need an update more »

A shower with glass walls rocks who don't need an update

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Monday, March 13, 2017

When mobile becomes permanent: Living in RVs growing in popularity in Wallowa County -

Read article : When mobile becomes permanent: Living in RVs growing in popularity in Wallowa County -
Kathleen Ellyn/Chieftain
Ruth and Terry Mishler and dog “Skeli” outside their RV in Wallowa.

Kathleen Ellyn/Chieftain Ruth and Terry Mishler and dog “Skeli” outside their RV in Wallowa.

Buy this photo
<a href=Courtesy photoLa Grande Rendezvous RV Resort is an example of the sort of RV camp that retired individuals seek as a base camp for their larger RV." />

Courtesy photoLa Grande Rendezvous RV Resort is an example of the sort of RV camp that retired individuals seek as a base camp for their larger RV.

Unquestionable there are homeless individuals and families living in camp trailers, campers and RVs across the nation and in Wallowa County.

RV dealers in Portland have reported increasing number of families coming in search of RVs under $10,000 to use as housing.

Seattle opened two “safe lots” for mobile units with trash pickup and electricity for 100 individuals and families living in RVs and cars.

If living in an RV is considered homelessness, Wallowa County has a homelessness problem. But many individuals living in RVs here are the citizens everyone says are needed to make the economy work –– working individuals who first found employment in the county then moved here. Upon arrival, they discovered that affordable housing was short, and they were forced to remain in their RVs while they saved and searched. Some gave up, quit their jobs and moved out.

“Nurses get up here and have a mid-level income, and it’s not quite enough to support a family and buy a home,” said Brian Walker, co-owner of the 30-space Log House RV Park and Campground on Enterprise’s northern edge. “They are a two-income family, but when they get up here, they can’t find viable employment for their spouse. I’ve had them come here on a contract with the hopes of long-term residency, but there’s no work for the husband. They end up not staying in the area.”

Some hold on through a winter. Walker has 16 full-time residents and 14 spaces allotted for temporary campers. In Wallowa, Wallowa River RV Park on Whiskey Creek Road, offers 22 spaces and allows “five or six” campers to stay through the winter, according to co-owner Debra Riverman. It’s a common practice for similar operations, a way to keep the bills paid during the winter season.

Among those who live longer-term at Wallowa River RV Park camp is a young couple saving to buy or rent a house. Another camp spot is rented by an Enterprise Police Officer looking for the same thing.

Spots at Log Cabin are also occupied by professionals — some of whom gave up the search for a house and purchased an upgraded RV to live in more or less permanently.

“I have people in RVs who are looking for homes to purchase and they can’t find anything that’s remotely reasonable,” Walker said. “That’s one of the issues our renters have. They can’t find anything that’s even available to rent within their finances. I’ve had people ... who couldn’t afford even an apartment. If they’re trying to rent an apartment because they like apartment living, it can be a year before they get into a nicer apartment.”

But there is also a third group of RVers wintering in RV parks with the intent to remain full-time in the county –– retirees with adequate income.

Many of these financially secure individuals live on the road for years, but at some point they discover their energy and physical limitations have made constant setting up and moving out too difficult. They begin looking for a home base.

Based on the successful models of other retirement communities, once a retiree has chose their home base, many are be pleased to look at well-maintained age-restricted RV parks and trailer and modular home communities. They not only welcome, but require, well-written covenants, conditions and restrictions (CCRs). They look for communities with groundskeepers, laundry rooms, “toy” storage, and other amenities.

Often this category of retiree will live in their RV while searching for land — just as the working class folks are doing.

Or they may end up staying in the RV park permanently if they can find a spot. Walker has one such “camper” in his park on a larger lot and is developing a space for one of his professional-worker campers. The people who want the larger spaces want more greenery, perhaps a small flower garden and a larger parking space.

Shane Holly, manager of the 90-unit La Grande Rendezvous RV Resort, said he expects the full-time resident population in RV resorts to boom in the next five years.

“Tiny homes are going to become very popular because people can’t afford to go buy a home or, if they can, don’t want the financial responsibility of upkeep on a larger home,” he said. “They’re going to purchase these tiny homes and set them up in RV parks like this and use them as a home or (if they are retired) a base from which they go out. The snowbirds don’t want to pay for the upkeep on a large home they only live in for four to six months of the year. I think tiny houses are going to be a huge thing in the next five years.”

Already Holly’s park is more than half-full of folks who will stay the winter. He generally fills 70 of the 90 spaces in the summer and has a population of 40 in the winter.

Some are retirees with incomes still looking for the right home base, some residents are on limited incomes or Social Security Disability and the park is what they can afford, and some are working folks looking to purchase a home or find a rental.

“(Working people) are really having a hard time finding places to rent or buy,” Holly said. “It’s a big reason why they are here. Housing prices have gone up — because they can.”

Downsizing to live it up: RV living has many facets

Terry and Ruth Mishler, both 71, spent a lifetime working in jobs they enjoyed in a location they didn’t love.

“We worked in Houston, Texas, to meet our retirement needs,” Terry said.

They were involved in the aircraft industry, Ruth as a ticket-taker for a major airline and Terry as a turbo-prop pilot for Georgia Pacific and Louisiana and an aircraft power plant mechanic with Inspection Authorization credentials.

The couple also ran a contract maintenance business for central American airlines. They had long professional lives, did well financially and were well-traveled.

And like a lot of 21st century retirees they’ve been living “on the road” in various iterations of the RV since retirement.

They camped out of a Model A car, they camped in a big bumper-pull trailer, they purchased a smaller bumper-pull trailer and they finally settled on a 38x8-foot bath-and-a-half, four slide-out, luxury fifth-wheel, which they park at Wallowa River RV in Wallowa.

From there, they and their dog “Skeli” take short trips with a smaller 20-foot trailer behind the truck or on their Harley Davidson motorcycles with sidecars.

“We’re trailer trash,” Terry said, in an ironic play on both out-of-dated views some have of individuals who live in RVs and acknowledgment of the stack of “toys” that the traveling retired trail along with them.

The Mishlers are members of a new and growing group of people — retired folk looking to set up a base-camp in paradise from which to continue traveling until they no longer can.

The stick-built home in the country or subdivision was ideal when their goals were to stay put and build careers and raise a family. Now, downsizing is sensible, but given their health, interests and lengthy list of toys, cocooning is not.

The stories have been told in the New York Times and Forbes among other national media and featured in AARP Magazine. And their numbers will continue to grow as the Baby Boom population reaches retirement age.

Retirees come in many styles, from the folks who purchase 13x30-foot vintage trailers from the ‘50s and ‘60s to those, like the Mishlers, who sink a good portion of their home-sales income into a luxury “movable base camp.”

RV parks also come in many styles from mega-camps with 18-hole golf courses, swimming pools, club houses, fitness centers, banquet rooms, cafes and more to gravel spaces baking in the hot sun.

The Mishlers, for instance, are invested in the Sutherlin, Ore. SKE Timber Valley Park — a luxurious 206-unit 55+ RV Co-op affiliated with the Escapees RV Club. It has very strong CCRs, Terry said, and that was important to them.

They have also stayed at Crown Villa Bend — ‘a very expensive place,” Ruth said. Monthly rent there began at $600 per month in the winter and rose to $1,200 to $1,600 a month in the summer.
They have “toy trailers” and camp trailers in storage in Bend, La Grande and Corvallis. Their travels included not only moving the big trailer to a new spot, but making two and sometimes three other trips ferrying toy trailers and other items to the new home base.

Then, they visited Wallowa County.

“When I drove into Wallowa County, I said, ‘Look at this place! And we never heard of it!’ I thought, ‘this is the land of milk and honey,’” said Terry.

The Mishlers have been shopping for land for a year now. They’ve made several offers on property, but are still looking for the right place.

In the meantime, they have exactly what most people who move to Wallowa County need: An economical way station. At Wallowa River RV, they pay $400 a month for a well-maintained green space for their RV and get their Internet, cable television and garbage service thrown in. The pristine Wallowa River rushes along the edge of the campground under willows; Tick Hill looms above and offers challenging hiking; the RV hosts are available and often outside patrolling the park, planting flowers and maintaining the greenery; and everything the couple needs is walking distance away in the town of Wallowa.

Wallowa County wins as well. The Mishlers contribute to the economy and the culture.

“We eat out a lot,” Terry said. “We buy most of our groceries in the county, our propane, other services and I make sure I fill up at Goebel’s gas station before I head out on a trip. We want to support the local economy.”



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Wednesday, March 14, 2018

It's true, no one can stand coloured bathrooms! Huge national survey unveils the bathroom features we sincerely hate (and those we love...) | Latest press releases | PressGo

Read article : It's true, no one can stand coloured bathrooms! Huge national survey unveils the bathroom features we sincerely hate (and those we love...) | Latest press releases | PressGo

Press Release

Coloured suites, shower curtains, carpet, and gold taps are the bathroom features we just can't stand

www.Plumbworld.co.uk

If you have avocado bath, sink and toilet look away now!

In what's thought to be one of the largest ever national customer surveys on bathroom chic, coloured suites, shower curtains, carpet, and gold taps were singled out as the bathroom features that people love to hate.

Plumbworld.co.uk, one of the UK's largest online bathroom retailers, ran an online survey to understand the parts of the bathroom that drive the UK public to despair and those they can't do without.

 The survey found:

         8/10 people hate coloured bathroom suites         7/10 hate carpet in the bathroom         6/10 hate shower curtains

         6/10 hate gold taps

         8/10 love white suites

         7/10 love tiled bathroom floors

         9/10 prefer blinds to curtains in the bathroom

         7/10 love chrome taps in the bathroom

         9/10 say a shower is very important in a bathroom

"The nation has spoken! And it's said Granny's old bathroom suite, mildew-covered shower curtains, and damp carpet are things it can do without," said James Hickman, managing director of Plumworld.co.uk.

"The kind of bathrooms people favour are chic, contemporary and simple in design. That means chrome instead of gold, light colour schemes and white suites, tiled floors, screens instead of curtains, and absolutely no carpet."

The survey asked "what is your opinion of coloured bathroom suites, like avocado or coral pink", 4,073 people  (80.48% of those surveyed) said they hated them, 811 (16.02%) said they had no strong view, while 177 (3.5%) claimed to love them.

Asked "when the shower is over the bath, what do you think about using a shower curtain to keep the water in the bath?", 3,117 (62.24%) said they hated them, 1,399 (27.94%) felt indifferent, while 492 (9.82%) said them loved them.

When asked "what do you think about carpet in the bathroom?", 3,794 (75.77%) of those surveyed said they hated it, 869 (17.36%) had no strong view, while 344 (6.87%) said it was something they loved.

A further question asked: "what do you think of gold bathroom taps?" to which 3,111 (62.56%) said they hated them, 1,594 (32.05%) said they had no strong view, while for 268 people (5.39%) said gold taps were something they absolutely loved.

In contrast, when asked: "what do you think of chrome bathroom taps?", 3,767 people (74.97%) said they loved them, 1,203 people (23.94%) said they didn't have a strong view, while just 55 people (1.09%) said they hated them.

Simple and sophisticated is the order of the day when it comes to bathroom suites. Asked "what is your opinion of white bathrooms suites?", 4007 people (79.36%) said they loved them. Just 964 (19.09%) didn't have a strong view and 78 (1.54%) said they hated white bathrooms.

As shower curtains didn't go down well with the public, the survey then asked what they thought about screens. It asked: "when the shower is over the bath, what do you think about fixed screens?",
3,301 people (65.35%) said they loved screens, with 1,462 (28.94%) indifferent and 288 (5.70%) against them.

The survey also wanted to explore what people thought was the best way to cover their windows. It asked: "which type of window covering do you prefer in a bathroom?", 4,733 people (94.64%) said blinds with just 268 (5.36%) preferring curtains.

When asked "what do you think about titled flooring in a bathroom?", 3,486 people (69.35%) said they loved it, 1,298 (25.82%) had no string view, while 243 (4.83%) said they hated tiled floors.

Full survey results can be found here:

http://www.plumbworld.co.uk/bathroom-survey-results

Contact Name:
Scott Morris
Role:
E-Commerce Manager
Company:
www.Plumbworld.co.uk
Contact Email:
click to reveal e-mail
Contact Phone:
01386768498
Company Website:
http://www.plumbworld.co.uk

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Transgender Bathroom Debate Turns Personal at a Vermont High School

Read article : Transgender Bathroom Debate Turns Personal at a Vermont High School

But this week, there was a counterprotest by students like Mr. Bischofberger wearing T-shirts showing the male and female figures commonly used to label bathrooms, over the words “Straight Pride.”

Photo
Mariah Lique and Tanner Bischofberger, who are dating, wore “Straight Pride” T-shirts in opposing the new policy at Green Mountain Union High School of allowing transgender students to use the bathroom of their choice.Credit Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Like much of the country, this rural school of 300 students in seventh through 12th grade, where everyone insists there were never any cliques, is divided over the bathroom issue, with the teenagers here carrying out a proxy culture war for their parents and the country. Still struggling to form opinions about what makes a civil society, they openly quote what they have heard their parents say about the merits or demerits of transgender bathrooms.

And the dispute has driven apart young people who grew up together and were once friends.

Some say the new rule opens the door to sexual predators disguised as someone they are not. Others say it just violates tradition. A society has rules for a reason, and this is one of those rules, that’s just the way it is, they say.

But on a more basic level, students at Green Mountain are complaining that a small vocal minority of gay, lesbian and, as far as they know, one — or maybe two — transgender students among them are trampling on the rights of the majority to decide what the rules of conduct should be.

That idea of a minority’s ruling unfairly is what motivated the father of one student to order the “Straight Pride” T-shirts online last week and send them to school with his daughter, who declined to be interviewed.

The T-shirt-wearing students say gay people are being celebrated at the expense of straight people.

Photo
The principal of Green Mountain Union High School, Tom Ferenc, said he was happy for clarity on the policy for transgender students.Credit Hilary Swift for The New York Times

“I just want to be clear: I accept everybody being proud,” said Daniel Baldwin, a 17-year-old junior. Sitting at a table in the school hallway, a copy of “The Catcher in the Rye” open in front of him, he wore a “Straight Pride” shirt pulled over a shirt dedicated to Slayer, a thrash-metal band. “Everybody has the right to be who they are.”

Mr. Baldwin said he thought people should use male or female bathrooms depending on what was written on their birth certificates. But he also said he would defend A J if someone tried to bully him for being transgender, or even for using the boys’ bathroom. “I would step up for A J,” he said. “We’re Americans. We’re supposed to be civil.”

Listening to him, Mr. Jackson said he was dismayed by how they had been torn apart. “Oh, my God, we used to talk for hours about music,” he said.

More broadly, the issue here has pitted resident against resident, often along social and economic lines. This is a place where big-city transplants wearing Birkenstocks and artsy jewelry mingle with working-class people in dirt-encrusted boots who know how to handle a shotgun and proudly inhabit the homes of their ancestors. Despite Vermont’s image as a place of bucolic egalitarianism, home of the avowedly socialist candidate for president, tensions over privilege and tradition simmer just under the surface, and the bathroom wars have brought them to the fore.

“I go in and do my thing and leave, but I have a concern about child molesters and pedophiles,” Joe Kopacz, 48, who runs a rock-crushing operation, said as he stopped into Lisai’s Chester Market.

Society does not change on a dime, especially small-town society, said Deb Brown, a member of the Green Mountain Union High School board, speaking in MacLaomainn’s, a pub and popular gathering spot that she owns with her husband. For people like her daughter, who was on girls’ sports teams with A J when he was Autumn, this is intensely personal, not just philosophical.

“As we move forward as a community, there has to be compassion on both sides,” Ms. Brown said. “He needs to understand that this has been 15 years that students have known him one way. It’s obviously his choice, but maybe he should have respect for his classmates right now.”

Mr. Jackson has gradually been making the transition from a vivacious girl with a big smile and long wavy locks to a husky boy with chopped hair dyed several shades of green, snakebite piercings in his lips and gauges embedded in his earlobes. His chest is visibly bound, and because he has not yet started taking male hormones — he plans to do that, and also to have “top surgery,” he says — his face is smooth and still has feminine contours. He once thought he was lesbian, and is still attracted to girls.

His mother, Tracy, a case manager for children with developmental disabilities, and his father, Scott, a mechanical engineer, came to Vermont from Connecticut to try it out 20 years ago and stayed. They brought up A J and his older brother in a log cabin in the woods, where they raise chickens and ducks, including a duck named Bernie, for you know who.

“A typical American family,” his mother said, smiling.

He was in sixth grade when he realized he was meant to be a boy, he said, and came out to the school last year in ninth grade, sending emails to teachers. When he entered Green Mountain in seventh grade, “I was using the female bathroom because, I really don’t know, I was still kind of back and forth about my identity,” Mr. Jackson said. “This year is the year I started using the men’s bathroom, because I already felt like way more comfortable in who I was.”

There were practical issues. When he had his period, he wondered if he should revert to the girls’ bathroom, because there was no place to throw away his used tampons. But he had started feeling like an intruder in the girls’ bathroom, and the single bathrooms were so far out of the way it was hard to get to class on time.

So he stuck with the boys’ bathroom.

“I use a stall, and I wait till everybody’s gone to get up and leave,” Mr. Jackson said. “The guys, they look at me like I’m some kind of freak, or they’re concerned or scared.”

The only classmate who talks to him when he sees him in the bathroom is his childhood friend Connor Rose, a leader of the school’s gay-straight alliance.

Mr. Jackson feels safe in the boys’ bathroom at school, he said, whereas in public places, like Dunkin’ Donuts, he is afraid to go to the men’s restroom for fear of being attacked by straight men.

He said he understood the concerns of some of his classmates.

“There probably are some transgender people that are bad people, just like there are probably a whole bunch of gay people or straight people that are bad,” he said.

He had been using the boys’ bathrooms for less than a month — trying to go in during lunch or recess when he would not be noticed — when someone complained. No one knows for sure who complained, but a widespread rumor holds that it was a middle schooler.

Hank Mauti, a school board member and retired sawmill worker from Andover, said he wondered why Mr. Jackson would feel compelled to use a boys’ bathroom when there were six single-use gender-neutral bathrooms in the school.

“What about the little boy that reported it?” asked Mr. Mauti’s wife, Wanda, repeating the rumor, in an interview in their home, under a trophy of a moose that Mr. Mauti shot. “As far as I can tell, his discomfort hasn’t been addressed.”

Tom Ferenc, the principal, called Mr. Jackson’s mother the night of the complaint and told her that he was going to ask A J to use the gender-neutral bathroom, she recalled. The next Monday, A J and about 30 supporters walked out of the school in protest. Three days later, the district announced the new policy.

Mr. Ferenc was happy to get some “clarity” about the proper policy, as he put it, and proud of his school. “It reminded me of Rosa Parks, honestly,” he said.

Besides the “Straight Pride” T-shirt counterprotest, the decision has set off a storm of discussion, sometimes nasty on both sides, on Facebook. Also, someone taped a sign to a trash can this week that said, “Reserved for Mariah and Tanner,” referring to Mariah Lique and Mr. Bischofberger, two student leaders of the counterprotest, who are dating.

Ms. Lique said that she and Mr. Bischofberger were just saying what a lot of other students think but are afraid to say because if they did, “you’d get hated.”

“We’re considered more conservative,” she said. “Because we’re outspoken,” Mr. Bischofberger interjected, finishing her sentence.

Two of their favorite teachers are openly gay, they said, and the students misunderstand where they are coming from. “They see us as …” Mr. Bischofberger began, “hating their sexuality,” Ms. Lique finished.

But that is not true, they said. Part of what troubles them is that Mr. Jackson is still anatomically female. “Autumn, A J, whatever you call them, hasn’t had any hormone or sex change yet,” Mr. Bischofberger said. “This opens up opportunities for other kids to do stuff they’re not supposed to.”

While everyone seems to sympathize with the gay students, they seem to have a license to make him feel ostracized and attacked, and it hurts, Mr. Bischofberger said: “They’re calling me a cisgendered, hypocritical homophobe.”

Continue reading the main story

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Stall Size Shower Curtains for a Stately Bathroom

Read article : Stall Size Shower Curtains for a Stately Bathroom
If you have a stall shower, then having a shower curtain is a must for reasons mentioned above. You may not be aware, but apart from vinyl curtains (that are very popular and inexpensive), there are many other varieties to choose from. There are new styles, trends and patterns available that cater to every type of decor.
Types of Shower Curtains
Shower curtains are prominently made of vinyl or plastic. But, apart from these synthetic materials, you will also find curtains made of natural material like cotton, hemp, etc. Let us take a look, in brief, at the types and features of the different shower curtains.
These are the most popular or commonly used shower curtains. They are inexpensive, durable and waterproof or water-repellent. They are also easy-to-use and clean. As they are available in different sizes and colors, you can surely find one that suits the decor and overall look of your bathroom. Vinyl curtains are also found in exciting designs and themes, suitable for adults' as well as kids' bathroom. At the same time, solid color curtains are also very popular.
When it comes to use and applicability, polyester curtains are very much similar to vinyl curtains. 100% polyester is waterproof and easily washable (can be washed in a machine). It does not require any maintenance. On the other hand, you can also consider going for shower curtains made partly of cotton and partly of polyester. These curtains are perfectly suitable for contemporary as well as traditional decor. Vinyl and plastic shower curtains are suited for high-traffic bathrooms.
Cotton Fabric
Now, if you want something more elegant than plastic, then you can opt for cotton shower curtains. They are environment-friendly. They are also available in large number of colors and patterns. On the flip side, cleaning and maintaining these curtains is not as easy as cleaning vinyl or polyester ones. They take a longer time to dry and mildew quickly. However, you can look for cotton curtains that are treated to make them more water-resistant.
Hemp (a thick plant fiber) is yet another variety of natural material used to make shower curtains. One of its many advantages is that it is as mildew-resistant as vinyl; and as environment-friendly as cotton. Hemp naturally has antifungal and antibacterial properties, and hence, does not mildew easily. However, the only side effect of hemp is that it requires longer time to dry. Due to its absorbent properties, it tends to absorb water, and hence, needs extended drying.
The price of a shower curtain depends, exclusively, on the material used. While those made of vinyl and polyester are inexpensive, those made of natural materials like cotton and hemp are pricier. Fabric shower curtains require vinyl liners to protect them from mildew and stains. This may further increase the cost. But, mark it, fabric curtains definitely look more elegant and beautiful than vinyl.

Vinyl shower curtains based on themes are priced slightly higher than others. Due to availability of large number of designs and themes, you will surely find what you are looking for. If not, you can also customize one. Look out for manufacturers that make custom shower curtains, according to your specifications of color, material, design, etc. You can also look for designer label shower curtains.

Shower Curtain Designs
➡ Solid white and beige curtains are the most popular ones they match with most of the bathroom themes. Whereas, the second most common are polka-dotted ones.

➡ You can even opt for other solid colors like blue, green, maroon, black, violet, etc., as they are visually appealing and will also match / contrast your bathroom decor.

➡ If looking for shower curtains for kids' bathroom, then you can find the ones themed on popular cartoon characters, animals, cars, abstract art, etc.

➡ When it comes to themed shower curtains (usually of vinyl or polyester material), you will find that the aquatic theme is quite popular: with designs of droplets, fish, aquatic life, etc.

➡ Lastly, if you are looking for something unique, then try silhouette shower curtains. These are cool, intriguing, and will suit modern bathroom decor.

Shower screens are also, sometimes, used in place of shower curtains. However, they are expensive as compared to shower curtains. Secondly, curtains are more preferred as they are attractive and also easy to maintain and replace. With new styles and trends available, finding the perfect shower curtain to add some style to your shower, has become quite easier.
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Monday, July 17, 2017

You Okay for Time? | Kaori Fujino

Read article : You Okay for Time? | Kaori Fujino
Translated from Japanese by Ginny Tapley Takemori

For my best friend’s wedding present, I sent her a potted sansevieria. I compared product photos and prices online, selected one within my budget, addressed it to her new apartment, and hit send. I thought a leafy plant would be a more thoughtful gift than crockery or towels.

I called her soon after.

‘Did you get it?’

‘Yes, thank you! I love it – hope it’s okay, though.’

I knew what she meant. She was the only one in our class who’d failed to grow a hyacinth bulb in water, and she’d even made a cactus rot. The reason I’d chosen a sansevieria out of all the many leafy plants was, shall we say, out of consideration. The shop blurb said the sansevieria was stronger and easier to look after than any other plant, and on top of that it produced negative ions thereby improving indoor air quality, making it the perfect gift. ‘Stronger and easier to look after than any other plant’: that meant even she’d be able to care for it. She wasn’t a child any more after all, not by a long stretch – and she was married, to boot. There had been times when I thought she’d probably never marry, but she did. In which case she should at least be able to care for one of these.

I didn’t tell her that.

‘It’ll be fine,’ I said simply, full of affection for her. ‘The instruction leaflet was enclosed, right? Make sure you read it.’

‘Oh, hang on a sec. Ryo wants to say thank you too.’

The sound of her breathing receded, and her husband exhaled into my ear.

‘Hey, how are you?’ he said cheerfully. ‘Thanks for the wedding reception.’

He was referring to the fact I gave a speech on behalf of the bride’s friends. I put a lot of effort into it, feeling all warm and fuzzy as I rediscovered so many memories of her. They all sparkled, like a little brook. Everything that happened between us, the things she said, the things I said, were all washed away out of reach, leaving only the freshness of crystal clear water. How was I to convey this modest joy, pleasantly cool yet still warm, to everyone there? In a corner of my mind I knew I was being condescending. And yes, I was disdainful of my friend. But this didn’t diminish my friendly feelings towards her. So I put my whole heart into giving the speech. I talked about how gentle and kind she was, how serious and candid and unaffected. I really like my friend. I always did, and I still do.

My friend’s husband laughed and said he would make sure she didn’t let my gift die. My friend came back on the line.

‘You okay for time?’ That’s what she always said when she wanted a long chat. I was okay for time. I was surprised she was, being newly married, but it was just like her really.

‘It’s fine, no problem. Ryo’s going to have a bath now.’

And so she started talking, just like she always did.

The subject was her husband. She discovered new things about him every day, she said. Occasionally she lowered her voice and spoke about amusing details with great relish: how she couldn’t contend with the grime on his shirt collar just by rubbing it with detergent and washing it; how he coughed up phlegm in the toilet twice a day; the dull, heavy smell of sweat that filled the bedroom after a sound night’s sleep; the appalling potency of his bad breath first thing in the morning. How he folded his pants neatly and put them away. How he was particular about which shampoo and conditioner he used. How he’d been upset that they didn’t sell his preferred products in the local drug store, so he’d ordered them online.

‘Isn’t it weird? It’s only shampoo and rinse – any would do, surely?

‘It’s conditioner,’ I corrected her. ‘Even you always use the one your mom chose, don’t you?’

‘I have to. My hair goes everywhere if I don’t.’

Whenever my friend stayed in hotels, she never touched the shampoo provided but instead lined up her own little refillable bottles on the edge of the bathtub. If I ever suggested she stayed over at my place, she would recoil and excuse herself in a small voice saying she hadn’t brought her shampoo with her.

‘I never knew men were fussy about that sort of thing. I always thought they were okay with using just shampoo and didn’t need rinse.’

‘Conditioner,’ I corrected her again.

‘Oh, right. So what’s the difference between conditioner and the rinse that I use?’

‘Yours is treatment.’

‘Oh, is that what it is?’

My friend’s voice suddenly brightened. ‘Hey, Ryo! Sure, I was just about to hang up.’ The words that came through her cell phone hadn’t been directed at me, but rather arrived as a ripple from her voice echoing throughout a large sealed room empty but for herself. Although her new home was a fifty-six square meter two-bedroom condo.

‘So, come and visit, won’t you?’ she said quickly.

‘Sure, I’ll visit. Sometime soon.’

I know her really very well. After all, she is my best friend. For example, it was obvious to me that she knew very little about her boyfriend when she married him, even after dating for seven years. All she’d known about him apart from his basic personal information was his taste in films, his taste in clothes, his taste in food, his taste in women – and most importantly what he liked about her and how much. She’s lacking in imagination and didn’t need to know any more. I knew, naturally, that there were sides to her boyfriend she didn’t know about, and that she wasn’t even aware she didn’t know about them.

I also knew all about their sex life. They hadn’t had sex at all during the last two years they were dating. They’d done it more frequently at the beginning of their relationship, but it had slowly died out. There were all kinds of reasons: he was busy with his work, or she had her period, or they preferred to go see a movie together rather than spend time cooped up in a bedroom, or there was an art exhibition they wanted to see, or they would go two hours by train to eat cake at a café featured in a magazine, or they’d arranged to go out with me or some other friend. I knew she was a little suspicious about it, and also that she was unhappy about it. But I also knew that she was convinced he wasn’t being unfaithful, that he was devoted only to her, and truly loved only her. And it was true. During those seven years, she had often invited me out to lunch with the two of them, and we’d also gone out together in a big group of friends to karaoke and barbecues. On those occasions I’d been able to casually sound him and his friends out, and I had to conclude that she was right. I was pretty good at that sort of thing – at ferreting out gossip, and seducing spoken-for men. He was clean. That was when I first thought my friend would probably marry him. It’d be more fun if it wasn’t the case, though.

I hoped she wouldn’t let the sansevieria die right away. I hoped there wouldn’t be an awkward situation with her feeling she’d wronged me by letting it dry out or rot.

It was rarely me who called her. It was always she who called.

‘You okay for time?’

‘Sure. How’s the sansevieria?’

‘It’s doing great!’ she said enthusiastically. ‘Even though I’ve only watered it twice since it arrived. I wanted to water it more, the poor thing, but Ryo said the instructions said not to water it too much so I forced myself to be patient. And it seems to like it like that. It’s really tough, isn’t it?’

‘Really? That’s great.’

‘Listen, you know what? Ryo still doesn’t do it.’

‘Doesn’t do what?’

‘Look I told you we hadn’t been doing it. For about two years.’

‘What? You are kidding me, right?’

‘It’s true.’

But I wasn’t as surprised as I’d made out, and she wasn’t all that depressed about it either. She told me about how affectionate her husband was. He wants to hold hands even at home. He’s concerned when my friend has to work overtime and comes home late, and goes to the station to meet her. He won’t eat dinner until she comes home. He wants to eat with her, and will wait for hours. Dinner is almost always ready-made meals or easy-cook packets from the supermarket. My friend always lived at home so she can’t cook very well, and she doesn’t have time to practise. Her husband doesn’t complain at all, and just smiles. He can’t cook either. He lived alone for a long time so you’d have thought he would have learned how to, but my friend overlooks this point. In bed, they talk together. She has a lot to talk about and he hangs on to her every word, so that by the time they’ve finished talking they are both dead tired, and the atmosphere isn’t conducive to sex.

‘He’s a bit like a parent, I guess. No, he’s much more overprotective than a parent,’ she said happily. ‘Just when I thought I’d finally managed to get away from my parents, I go and marry a father figure. How tedious!’

I’d known that if she ever married it would be to a parental substitute.

‘When are you coming over?’ she asked. ‘Come while the sansevieria is still healthy.’

‘Uh-huh.’

‘What about this Saturday?’

‘Sorry, it’s the company trip that day.’

‘Well, what about the following Saturday? Weekday evenings are fine too.’

‘I’ll try to work out my schedule.’

A photo arrived to my cell phone. It was a sansevieria. It filled the screen, with the top cut off and the background barely visible. All I could tell was that the curtains were a similar shade of green as the plant. It hadn’t withered yet. I was just about to email my friend when she called.

‘Did you see it?’ Her voice was louder than usual.

‘I saw it.’

‘It’s grown a lot, hasn’t it?’

‘Has it? I can’t tell.’

‘It has. It’s sending out new shoots from the side, too. Could you tell?’

‘Oh, really? No, I didn’t notice that.’

‘Dad says it’s about time we repotted it.’

‘Dad?’

‘Oh wait, I’ll hand you over.’

‘Yoko-chan, long time no see. Thanks for everything at the wedding reception.’

It was her mother, not her father.

‘Oh, you’re welcome. It really has been a long time, hasn’t it?’

‘You know, your speech was so moving that I cried. And you gave them such a nice present too. Thank you so much.’

‘Oh, not at all.’

‘Please do keep being good friends.

‘I will.’

My friend came back on the line.

‘Sorry, Mom said she really wanted to say hello to you.’

‘Are your Mom and Dad over to visit?’

‘Yes. They were worried that Ryo and I aren’t eating properly, so they made some lunch and brought it over. Enough for four. Mom’s just heating it up and putting it out on the plates now. Sorry she bothered you. Dad and Ryo are watching TV.’

I strained my ears. My friend’s voice was exceptionally clear, and the background was hushed. I couldn’t hear any sound from the TV or microwave, or the clatter of plates.

‘Oh, Dad said to say hello. Ryo too. So, what about it? When are you coming over? Hold on a sec . . . Ryo says he can make Wednesday or Friday this week.’

‘Uh-huh.’

I hung up the phone, got into bed, and thought about my friend’s parents. I know them quite well. They also know me quite well. They probably thought my friend was a virgin until she finally got married. As if.

My friend is an only child, and while her parents are parents, they are also her closest friends. They are really unbelievably close. She tells them everything. She does so because they want to listen.

Her parents could hardly wait for her to come home from school, cram school, work, or a night out, so she could tell them about it. When she was happy they were happier, when she laughed they laughed louder, when she was sad they were sadder, when she was angry they were angrier, they worried endlessly about things before she did, they liked everything about her, and their attitude showed that they accepted everything about her. My friend talked and talked and talked. She talked about absolutely everything. Her parents listened ad infinitum.

They assume her best friend does the same, but they’re wrong. As her best friend I can guarantee that just being best friends doesn’t mean you want to hear about anything and everything. Of course, if she says she wants me to listen, I listen. And I actually have been listening. That’s what being best friends is about. But in fact, pretty much the only thing a best friend wants to hear about is how far her friend went with her boyfriend.

And that is pretty much the only thing that her parents didn’t want to hear about. They hoped she would fall in love like everyone else, and wanted it all to go well. It wasn’t like they made sex a taboo subject – as long as it was about her friends, not her, not their daughter. They didn’t want her to have sex. Not when she was 16, nor 20, nor 23, nor 29, nor even 32. Sex was part and parcel of marriage. They made themselves very clear on this. Whenever the subject came up, it was the only time they stopped being friends and put on utterly implacable, stern parent faces.

My friend had sex on the sly. During the day, expeditiously, quietly, holding her breath. She maintained appearances, not staying out all night, and only going on trips with me or other girlfriends.

‘Tell them you’re staying at mine,’ I told her. ‘Then you can stay over at his.’

It was the same with trips. ‘What’s the problem with telling them you’re going with me, and going with him instead?’ I’d say.

My friend never once used me. Not when we were 16, nor when we were 32. But I don’t think her parents were stupid enough to really believe that she was a virgin right up until she married at 33. Just like my friend wasn’t stupid enough to actually keep her virginity.

My friend always was demure. While I and other girlfriends were giving our youth a mauling, getting battered and toughening ourselves up, my friend simply put her youth on her knee and absently picked at it with her fingernails. She began to feel an anguish that she couldn’t tell her parents about. And so it was my turn. I listened to her anguish. It wasn’t the fact that sex was forbidden that was causing her so much distress, it was that she wanted to abandon herself to her parents in the way she always did, but wasn’t able to.

But I’m not disdainful of my friend because she does whatever her parents tell her to, nor because she hasn’t experienced adventure or recklessness. It’s because she’s empty.

‘I always get the feeling that I’m not a participant in my own life,’ she confessed to me.

And it’s true. A large part of her belongs to her parents, and the rest of her is mine and her boyfriend-of-the moment’s. Now her husband’s.

‘You okay for time?

‘Sure.’ Of course I am.

‘My parents have been coming over three times a week since then. They come when Ryo and I are at work, fill the refrigerator with ready made meals, and go away again.’

‘Really?’

‘Ryo’s happy because it’s tasty, saves us money, and it makes things easy for us.’

‘But you’re not?’

‘Not really . . . after all, we’re supposed to be newly-weds but it doesn’t feel like that. But then, Mom’s cooking is tasty, and it really is a big help, I guess.’

Then she told me they’d finally had sex again last night. She was especially happy because her husband had initiated it, not her. She also talked about having children. Last night they’d used contraception out of habit, but at her age, if they wanted children she’d better hurry up. Before they married, her husband had said he wanted two children. I knew this. He’s one of two brothers. My friend, on the other hand, wouldn’t mind having just one, and they’d argued a little over this. I knew this too. But now her husband had started saying that maybe one child would be enough. He’d love a cute girl who looked just like her. But my friend has also changed her mind, and tells me she wants two. It would be good if both were boys, she said.

‘After all, they’d have more freedom to live their lives the way they want.’

‘Really? Doesn’t it depend on the person?’

‘Oh, someone’s at the door. Wait a bit – I’ll call you back.’

She hung up. Who had come? I didn’t know.

Ten minutes or so later, she called again.

‘It was a delivery.’

‘Really?’

‘What on earth is this?’

I said nothing and waited. Now I could hear the sound of my friend clumsily using a cutter, the sound of her slashing tape, the sound of her ripping the package open even though the tape wasn’t completely cut, the sound of her removing the packaging.

‘What the heck? . . . Soil and a plant pot.’

‘Soil?’

‘It says “Soil for growing sansevieria.” There’s a trowel, too.’

She looked at the invoice. It was in her husband’s name.

‘You okay for time?’

‘Yeah.’

‘It was a present. From Ryo. For our half-anniversary, he said.’

‘What?’

‘Half-anniversary. Our wedding.’

My friend told me the sansevieria I’d given them was growing fast and putting out a lot of new roots, so it was time to separate it out. She and her husband had studied up online about how to separate the roots and repot them, and they’d carried it out in their living room on their day off, and ended up getting soil all over the wood flooring.

‘After all, we didn’t want to take it out onto the balcony and let bugs get into the soil. We thought it would be enough to just spread out newspaper, but we underestimated the amount of soil. It got everywhere when we pulled the plant out of its original pot.’

‘So, did it go well?’

‘Probably. Right now both pots look very much alive. We leave the curtains open for the plants while we’re out at work. We’re a bit worried about sun damage to the flooring, but we feel too sorry for them not getting enough light. Did you know that new sansevieria roots are joined together underground by a fat stem called a rhizome?’

‘Hah.’

‘You’re supposed to snap it off, but I made a mess of it . . . so Ryo cut it.’

‘I see.’

‘And then you’re supposed to leave the break to dry for two or three days before potting it, but we couldn’t wait, so Ryo went and got the hairdryer and gave it a blast with that until it looked like it was dry enough. I was worried it might die after we repotted it.’

‘Really? Was it okay?’

‘Seems so. The both of them are getting bigger by the day. We’ll have to separate them out again before long.’

She said that next time they were going to make one for her parents. And one for me.

‘You can take it home with you when you come over to visit.’

‘Oh, but . . . I don’t need one!’

‘Um, you okay for time?’

‘Yes, sure. No problem.’

She burst into tears, heaving great sobs while I tranquilly listened. She sniffled, then blew her nose, cleared her throat, and cried again. It had been a while, but it wasn’t the first time. Whenever my friend wants to cry, I let her. She’s crying because she hasn’t got anything she needs to talk about. She wants to talk, she wants to unburden herself, but there’s nothing left so all she can do is cry. She did this once to her parents. They panicked. They feared something terrible had happened to her, that maybe someone had bullied her, but she said no, nothing had happened. They thought that was even more serious, that the problem was so big she couldn’t talk about it.

My friend’s parents held her tight, shook her, lost patience with her and scolded her, calmed down and comforted her, doing everything they could to get it out of her. It was such a tremendous onslaught that she couldn’t ignore them. Still crying, she desperately thought about it. She wasn’t allowed to cry for nothing. She had to give them a reason.

She told them she’d had a huge fight with her best friend. Me, that is. ‘Best friend? Which one?’ her baffled parents asked. My friend gave my name. To be honest, until that moment, we hadn’t been best friends. But so what? From the moment she named me as her best friend, that’s what we’ve been.

I don’t ask her why she’s crying. I wait until she finishes, however long it takes. I’m okay for time.

My friend at last calmed down and muttered ‘Sorry’ with an embarrassed laugh.

‘How’s the sansevieria?’ I asked sympathetically.

‘It’s fine. Really fine. It’s growing more and more leaves. We’re really good at separating the roots now. How many pots do you think we have now? Come over soon and see!’

‘Sorry, I’m just so busy.’

By the time I finally managed to visit my friend’s new home, two years had passed since her wedding. While I’d been so busy, she’d had a child. A boy. She sent a photo to my cell phone of the newborn swaddled in white linen and laid down on the flooring with a sansevieria leaf next to him. The leaf, longer than the baby, was like a double-edged sword with a sharp pointed tip.

‘Baby and sansevieria both doing well,’ read the message.

On the appointed day, I left work early and went to a department store where I bought some blue baby rompers and had them wrapped with a blue ribbon. Then I went to the basement food hall and bought five custard puddings.

‘He’s such a boy, even though he’s just a baby. He’s so naughty!’ My friend told me on the phone. She also said, ‘When I told my parents you were coming over, Yoko, they were delighted and started going on about how much they wanted to see you too. Do you mind? Mom said she’d cook us up a feast. Ryo’s all fired up too and said he’ll come home early to help. He’s been learning how to cook from Mom lately. It’s weird. Dad’s the same as ever. The moment he comes over he goes straight to sit in front of the TV.’

I arrived at my friend’s condo and pressed the button on the interphone at the entrance. She answered right away, as though she’d been waiting.

‘Come in!’ she said, and the automatic door opened. ‘Get the elevator to the seventh floor. Turn left out of the elevator, and it’s the door at the far end. And I’m sorry, but we’re all a bit tied up at the moment. The door isn’t locked, so just come on in.’

In the elevator I jiggled my shoulders to straighten my jacket, and adjusted my grip on my handbag and the bags with the gifts I’d brought with me. I followed her instructions and soon stood before the apartment door. One side of the shared corridor was open, and the faint sound of the traffic below reminding me of my childhood. I put my hand on the cream-colored door. As she’d said, it wasn’t locked. I went inside and quietly closed it behind me.

A narrow hallway stretched out before me and opened out into the living room. But I couldn’t understand what I was seeing. Beneath a diffuse, warm-colored light, an expanse of thick, densely-growing blades of tall grass stretched out before me. When I took a closer look, it appeared to be growing out of soil spread directly onto the flooring.

Still, I had to take off my shoes. Hemmed in by a folded-up baby buggy and the walls, along with flat shoes and sandals, men’s leather shoes and sneakers, I remained standing upright and wiggled my ankles to release my heels from my pumps. I felt utterly unnerved, barely managing to put my stockinged feet in a space on the flooring where there was no soil. It was only when I’d accomplished this that I realized that it wasn’t grass at all, but leaves. Leaves of sansevieria.

I had only seen the sansevieria in photos. I held my handbag and the paper shopping bags in my left hand, and with my right hand I touched the leaves. They were hard, fleshy and cold. They were a deep green, with a deeper green, almost black stripes, and yellowish edges. They were smooth with the slight roughness of dust, and didn’t really strike me as something living.

The apartment was hushed. I forced my way through the closely-clustered leaves. I could tell my stockings had ripped underfoot. The only sounds were those I was making: the faint sound of my breathing, the rustling of my paper bags, the murmur of the sansevieria as I cut through it, pushing it away with my hands and forcing it aside with my body, crushing it underfoot.

Photograph © Carl Lewis