Tag Archives: Paul

Getting Ready for Christmas

My daughter Jessica arrived home a few days ago but soon left on a ski trip with her fiance Matt and his family. She comes back this afternoon. While she was briefly home, we went to the Great Dickens Christmas Fair at the Cow Palace. My mother and I also went to the Dickens Fair after Thanksgiving with my brother Pete and his family, so we have had quite the Victorian Christmas so far. (I have seen Gilbert and Sullivan’s Mikado twice this year!) I have also visited family, participated in the annual Sun Labs Christmas Cookie Exchange, and enjoyed the SunCaroler’s Menlo Park campus walking concert, the 1st annual Willow Glen Lions Holiday Party, and other delights of the season.

Dickens Fair

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Marley confronts Scrooge

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Pirate’s Cove

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Dark Garden Tableau

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Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

Pete and family at the Dickens Fair

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Ko-Ko and Katisha, The Mikado

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Ballena Bay Pewter, Dickens Fair

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SunCarolers annual walking concert

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Willow Glen Lions Party

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Sun Labs Cookie Party

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Family visit

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Uncle Wayne’s Workshop

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Paul, Lynda, Daniel (cousins)

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Paul and Jessica

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Paul and Jessica

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Jessica and Matt

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Christmas Prep

My family is mostly enjoying the preparations for Christmas. Today, I mailed the
last of six boxes full of gifts to distant friends and relations. Postage cost about $125- this year, even after using three USPS Flat Rate Boxes. The staff in Sun’s Menlo Park Campus mail room helped me with box sizes until we found the cheapest rates.

We don’t have a Christmas tree yet. We are thinking of buying a live tree and then donating it to Our City Forest for planting in January. We hosted the Silicon Valley Lines Model Railroad Club annual holiday party last week. Tonight, we host the
Spiral holiday dinner party. We will also host Christmas dinner, a party to celebrate my daughter Jessica’s 21st Birthday and Engagement, plus New Year’s Eve. In addition to our own celebrations, my husband John Plocher has been helping Santa Maria Urban Ministry (SMUM) with their holiday events and food distribution. I have been working on the St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance (SAMA) Christmas craft sale of goods from the Holy Land.

Busy times!

Waiting for food at SMUM

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Filling SMUM food boxes

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In the SMUM food line

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Office building window lights

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Neighborhood Deer Lights

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Our house – train lights with the moon

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Christmas night lights

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Same house during day

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Flat daytime Santa

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SAMA mother of pearl

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SAMA sale

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SAMA sale – camels

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SAMA sale

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SVL party train

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Christmas cockatiels

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SMUM Santa

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SMUM Christmas

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Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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After the RIF notice, before you leave

Family Update

In light of Sun’s current circumstances, here is an update of what I think is my most popular blog entry: “After the RIF notice, before you leave” (15 January 2009).

My husband, John Plocher, was laid off from Sun in November 2008 and (despite many interviews) is still looking for work. If anyone is looking to hire a senior software architect with extensive open source experience, please contact John!

This has been a wild year for our family. A few weeks after I wrote my “After the RIF notice..” blog entry, our son Paul ended up in emergency brain surgery. Paul recovered from that but still has constant terrible headaches. After finishing his Junior year at the hospital school, Paul is happy to be back in his regular High School for his Senior year. He plans to go to college next year. Having John off work during this time of medical adventures has been sortof a blessing.

Background

During the last year, we have found a good many things we wished we had thought to do before John was laid off. Additional items on this list were generously suggested to me from people who read my original 15 January blog entry. I eventually realized that official company sources are limited in what they can tell people. So, this unofficial list, while just based on limited observations and experience, turns out to have been of unique value to a variety of people. RIF stands for “Reduction in Force”, also known as a lay off or restructuring.

Here are my opinions of some good actions to consider after the termination notice but before you leave Sun and lose your SunWeb access (and some actions to consider after). Some of these actions may only be appropriate for Sun staff in California since circumstances may differ from state-to-state, and country-to-country. Some actions – like joining LinkedIn – are good ideas whether you are staying or leaving. Usual disclaimers apply. Your mileage may vary. May contain nuts.

First, if you have to leave Sun involuntarily, please accept my appreciation for your work. After  25 years of working here, I know that Sun is a great company. Even if I never knew or worked with you, I thank you for your contribution and I am sorry you have been laid off. Check out “A Tribute to Sun Microsystems” and remember your good times.

What to do immediately

  1. Before your SunWeb access shuts down, print out copies of key records:
    – Current and last year paycheck history
    – Company training history
    – Stock option history and status
    – Health benefit elections
    – Vacation balance
    – Past annual performance review documents
    Many of these records will just go away and be unavailable by any means soon after your last day in the office. You may need your training history for a future certification, and you will certainly need your vacation balance to apply for unemployment. This is your one and only chance to get copies.
  2. Immediately locate all personal internet identities (personal accounts, groups, billing, etc.) that you have communicating with your @sun.com email address, and change them to your personal email address. It is easy to set up a gmail account where you can continue to manage your billpay, website subscriptions and email lists after your Sun account goes away. Moving accounts will take time and those organizations may continue to send updates and confirmations to you @sun.com
    for days or even weeks. Start this move soon!
  3. Your Sun home directory will go away very shortly after your last office day. If you have personal email in your Sun home directory, move it or copy it to a home server or your personal laptop before your Sun home directory disappears. Gmail has a way to upload old messages from other email accounts. Don’t copy anything that belongs to Sun.
  4. If you have not already done so, use your Employee Giving matching grant for the current year. If you do not have a SunWeb account (and you will not), you cannot take advantage of this benefit even if you are laid off long before the end of the calendar year.
  5. Create a blogs.sun.com account or use your existing account to post a brief and professional going away message including at least your LinkedIn reference. Your blogs.sun.com postings stay available after you are gone.
  6. Change your Sun voice mail outgoing message with a new professionally phrased reference to your home phone or other non-Sun phone number.

What to do later

Resources which may help and actions to consider later:

  1. Sun provides some very good benefits to RIFed staff. Use any coaching services offered as part of your package (such as the excellent Right Management service). Let the service review your resume before you send it out. Join their networking groups.
  2. Think through your health, dental, vision, and life insurance choices and application timelines. Read your RIF package carefully. If the staff member who is laid off is the spouse of a continuing Sun staff member, talk with Human Resources (SunDial) soon about when and how you can initiate a “Qualifying Life Event Change” to provide insurance coverage to the RIFed spouse.
  3. File for Unemployment Insurance (UI) immediately. In most states there is at least a one week waiting period and some states may have more. In California, you can apply for Unemployment Insurance from the day of your notification (while you may still have months yet to receive Sun paychecks).
    If you are asked by the California Employment Development Department, do not call money Sun provides you after the 60-day WARN notification period “severance”. It is accurate to call it “payment to forestall legal action”.  More about the 60 days of WARN pay: The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. I am told that while WARN is a type of “in lieu of” pay, WARN should NOT disqualify you from receiving UI benefits. For even more about this, read EDD’s Total and Partial Unemployment TPU 460.37.
    Here is Sun’s address and phone number which you will need for the EDD paperwork – from Sun’s 2008 Annual Report:

    Sun Microsystems, Inc.
    4150 Network Circle Santa Clara, CA 95054
    (650) 960-1300

  4. In the San Francisco Bay Area, there is a networking and lunch group called CSix where job hunters share ideas and leads. Similar formal or informal groups probably exist elsewhere.
  5. Review and update your resume. Create one or more cover letter templates. Review and confirm your references. (You need to know that Sun and other companies have a policy against giving job references.) Brush up on your interview skills.
  6. Buy a current-year copy of the book What Color Is Your Parachute? by Richard Nelson Bolles. This book is available in many languages (French, Korean, Russian, Turkish…). Also check out the resources on Dick Bolles’ web site: JobHuntersBible.Com
  7. Join LinkedIn – a social networking web site for professionals who want to extend their contacts. Follow LinkedIn’s advice to create your complete profile. Be diligent in linking to your former Sun coworkers so that you don’t lose each other once you are no longer @sun.com. Use LinkedIn to recommend people you think highly of and also ask them to recommend you. There are several LinkedIn Sun Alumni groups, including SUNAlumni. Sun Engineering SEED mentoring program alumni can join the SEED LinkedIn group.
  8. Join the Sun Microsystems Alumni Association “The network is the people”
  9. Consider other social networking sites such as Facebook which has several Sun Alumni groups, including: The Sun Microsystems Alumni Group, Sun Alumni on Facebook, and others. Facebook also has a “SEED Engineering Mentoring Program” Fan Page. Plaxo is another good networking, address book site.
  10. Participate in Sun Alumni Blogs
  11. Make your own business cards so that you can easily tell contacts your new email and phone. John and I like the designs at Overnight Prints.
  12. Make doctor, dentist, and other health care appointments soon, so you are seen while you are still insured. Renew prescriptions that are close to refills. The U.S.  COBRA continuation health insurance coverage isn’t always the same as the coverage you had before.
  13. Consider creating a special job seeking email address at yahoo.com or gmail.com. Make it professional, not cute.
  14. A job searching and recruitment web site which some people have recommended is http://www.dice.com/
    – “career website for technology and engineering professionals”
  15. A job searching web site which some people have recommended is http://www.indeed.com/ “to search job sites, newspapers, associations and company career pages”

Keep active and keep networking. Volunteer while looking for work. If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area and need a good cause, you are welcome to join John and me in helping inner city San Jose kids in the computer club at SMUM.

Don’t lose touch with Sun people you care about. As John says, there are only really 100 people in the Silicon Valley, everyone else is just there to create traffic jams.

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Last Back to School Night

My son Paul is a Senior at Paly (Palo Alto High School) this year. I went to our final “Back to School” parents’ night last week. Starting at 6:45 pm on 10 September, I followed Paul’s daily schedule, managed to find all of his classrooms (crisscrossing the big campus as it grew dark), and talked with all of his teachers.

Paul is happy to be taking Geology, Advanced Sculpture, and Algebra-2 all year. He was surprised at how much he is also enjoying his semester-long Living Skills and Economics classes. Next semester, Economics is replaced by Sociology/History, and Living Skills is replaced by World Literature. Paul also has a Study Skills period so that he gets regular support for his learning disabilities. Paul is enjoying being the big guy in most of his classes this year, both as a Senior and because he stands almost six feet tall.

During the last three-plus years, we have found Paly to be either a good college preparatory school or a good school to support teens with physical and learning disabilities. Paly seems to do much less well teaching and supporting average kids. My family’s struggles with Paly have often been because Paul is in two groups which have no provision for overlap: he is intelligent and college-bound, and he has disabilities. Paly has good classes and services for one group or the other. Paly teachers are often excellent but we have also run into some who have minimal abilities (or desire) to support disabled students, despite our Individualized Education Program (IEP).

I observe that Palo Alto Unified School District (PAUSD) teachers and administrators are under growing stress from overcrowded aging facilities plus social problems such as the increasing number of High School suicides in Palo Alto. We will leave Paly in June with mixed feelings.

Paul Dickinson Goodman and Oskie, Lair of the Golden Bear 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson Palo Alto High School sign, Paly
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson Palo Alto High School, Paly, Back to School Night 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Palo Alto High School, Paly, Back to School Night 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson Palo Alto High School, Paly, Back to School Night 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson Palo Alto High School, Paly, Back to School Night 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

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50th Wedding Anniversary at Loon Lake

My husband, John Plocher, and Paul and I traveled to Loon Lake, Wisconsin, last week to celebrate John’s parents’ 50th wedding anniversary. We spent the week on a variety of boats and enjoying family in the 75-year-old cottage. There were 9 grandchildren (ages 17 to 3: Micah, Paul, Nathaniel, Gabriel, Leah, Malachai, Zacharias, Isaiah, and Mashayla) who chased caterpillars and crawdads, went fishing with Grandpa, played cards and boardgames and went swimming as often as possible. We missed my daughter Jessica who has an internship this summer in Washington, D.C. The grownups cooked and cleaned, fixed up the cottage, and drove the boats. John and I paddled the canoe from Loon Lake, through a beaver dam, across Washington Lake, to Shawano Lake and back.

This year on Osprey Island in the middle of Loon Lake were one nesting pair of Loons, two pair of Ospreys, and one pair of Bald Eagles plus a blue heron, mallard ducks, and uncountable songbirds. The loons sang to us all night.

three loons, Loon Lake Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher

Presenting the Silver Tray
Presenting the Fiftieth Anniversary Silver Tray to Naomi Voecks Plocher and Rev. David Plocher, 50th Wedding Anniversary<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
. Proud Mom, 3 Sons
Naomi Voecks Plocher, John Plocher, Marty Plocher, Rev. Jim Plocher<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
50th Anniversary Cake
50th Anniversary Cake<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
. White water lily
White water lily, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Naomi and grandkids in the lake
Naomi Voecks Plocher and grandkids, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
. Loon Lake Sunset
Sunset, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
John playing
John playing, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
. Micah with John’s hat
Micah with John's hat, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Paul tubing behind the speedboat
Paul tubing behind the speedboat, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
. Grandkids in a row
Grandkids in a row, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Bald Eagle with 2 babies in nest
Bald Eagle with 2 babies in nest, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher
. Loon Lake Cottage
Loon Lake Cottage, Loon Lake, Wisconsin<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Paul is a Senior

My 16-year-old son Paul has had a rough year. Our family’s continuing medical adventure began when Paul started having chronic and severe headaches in January. We have spent the last six months with Pediatricians, Neurologists, Neurosurgeons, Pain Specialists, Psychologists and Psychiatrists, Occupational and Physical Therapists, and Nurse practitioners. Recently, Paul has benefited from Chiropractic care in addition to the medicines provided by the Pain Management Clinic at Packard Children’s Hospital.

Yesterday was Paul’s last day at the Packard Hospital School. He is now a Senior in High School and is looking forward to going back to Paly in September. The Hospital School has a good art, theater, and science program for its patient students. Here is Paul with some of his recent art:

Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

punched out sun face masks

punched out sun face masks by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

elements drawing

elements drawing by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

wire and bead fish

wire and bead fish by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Some of Paul’s art from earlier this year:

three ceramic mugs

three ceramic cups by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

ceramic leaf tray

ceramic tray by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

carved head

blue scupture head by Paul Dickinson Goodman<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

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More Good Free Games

My 16-year-old son Paul is researching learning games for me to pass on to Studio 17, the after-school program where I volunteer at Santa Maria Urban Ministry (inner San Jose, CA). These computer games are free and educational (more or less) but are also fun to play. I started publishing this list on April 23, 2009.

The two “Pandemic” games below require a very dark sense of humor since the player takes the part of an evolving deadly virus killing humanity in a world pandemic. However, the game does give the player an unnerving understanding of how diseases move and change.

16 February 2014 – links updated

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