Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 2025

The Mike Pickles Podcast Interview


My most recent podcast interview is live from The Mike Pickles Podcast! We spoke about the writing process, the importance of the first draft, and my second book, UNLAUNDERED SHORTS, available on [Amazon]. 


I made the initial contact with the host by email back in July, pitching myself requesting consideration for a podcast spot. Mike Pickles, the host, emailed and, between our dueling vacations last summer, we amicably arrived at our date. This was recorded via Zoom on August 17, a Saturday morning.


In the days leading up to the podcast, I practiced during my morning walks with Ghost Dog. I imagined myself answering the host's questions and follow up questions. I'm always comfortable answering questions when it's just me and Ghost, and this conversation with Mike went well.


I first came across The Mike Pickles Podcast in 2022. I subscribe to a weekly podcast newsletter and saw the host's smiling face. He looked inviting. After listening to a few episodes I decided back in 2022 that if I could finish writing a book someday, I was going to contact him for a podcast opportunity.


We spoke afterwards, I told him that backstory, how I came across his podcast. Then thanked him for allowing me to close the loop with my own episode. 


Please click [Here] to listen to my episode on The Mike Pickles Podcast.




Saturday, January 11, 2025

The Going North Podcast Interview


I'm pleased and excited to post my latest podcast interview! I had the pleasure of joining The Going North Podcast hosted by Dom Brightmon. This podcast is geared toward discussing the writing process, positivity, and inspiring people to start writing, even if they're not yet authors. "Join the pursuit of immortality and become an author," so says the host.


We spoke about the writing process, inspiration, and my two books, both available on Amazon. MAGGLIO CERVANTES is a novel told by the immortal main character in a 1st-person account as he traverses the centuries, starting in 14th century Europe amidst the plague. UNLAUNDERED SHORTS is a book of short stories, thought provoking and entertaining, even if not intended for the gentle reader.


I submitted an Interview Request form to the popular Going North Podcast. The host sifted though hundreds of interview requests, adjudicating for approval, and I was chosen! Dom and I spoke via Zoom on a Monday evening, November 4.


As preparation, I'd listened to a number of prior Going North Podcast episodes. Then, I practiced answering anticipated questions during my morning walks with Ghost Dog.


Much respect to the host, Dom Brightmon! He has a full time job and still makes time to feed his passion, hosting his podcast. He is tenacious, gracious, and prolific conducting 2-3 podcast interviews weekly! He was well prepared and I enjoyed my time with him. Please click [HERE] to listen.



Monday, January 6, 2025

Klem's Goals For 2025


It's important to have goals. It's also important to put them in writing and make others aware, because it enhances one's accountability and improves the odds of success. So here are my 2025 goals:


  • Read 52 books.
  • Healthy and active: [1] 100 bicycle rides, and [2] 40 pool swims of 1,000+ yards or 30+ minutes of swimming.
  • Complete the first draft of my second novel, Island Of Sanity.
  • Upload online audio files of me reading my two books for free listening; [1] Magglio Cervantes and [2] Unlaundered Shorts.
  • Research feasibility of a BookBub website book promotion for Magglio Cervantes.
  • Monthly day trip to hit an item off my Retirement Fun To-Do list.
  • Travel: [1] domestic 20+ days, not including travel days, [2] international.


There are additional goals, administrative in nature, which I won’t burden you with here. Please drop a few of your own goals in the Comments field, or suggestions for me if I missed anything.


[Comments will be approved and posted within 24 hours.]


Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Tell Me About Your Book Podcast


The latest podcast interview is now live for my novel Magglio Cervantes! The host and I spoke about the writing process, the importance of having purpose, and the novel. Thank you to the gracious Oaky Tyree, host of the Tell Me About Your Book podcast.

[Magglio Cervantes, the Amazon link]


The first contact with the host was last November, I emailed her pitching myself for consideration as a podcast guest. A reply email instructed me to complete and return an interview request form. With those additional details a date was set. The podcast recording took place on April 2 where we spoke via Zoom, the host from her home in Houston, Texas, and the audio was recorded for the podcast.


My preparation in the weeks leading up to our recording date included my morning walks with Ghost Dog, our German Shepherd / Husky. While walking I practiced responses to prospective interview questions pertaining to the writing of Magglio Cervantes. I had listened to many of the Tell Me About Your Book episodes, and that allowed me to become familiar with the format and anticipate a few questions.


Much respect to my pleasant and gracious host. Oaky maintains an impressively busy schedule with a full-time job, then in her personal time, she records weekly podcast interviews and conducts all the editing before posting the episodes online.


Please click [THIS LINK] to listen to the Magglio Cervantes podcast episode.


Sunday, March 31, 2024

Retirement Commences



Escape velocity has been attained. I retired at the end of February and, so far, it's really the cat's pajamas!


At 4:30 on a Thursday afternoon working from home, gainful employment ended quietly and peacefully. Although, after 31 years cracking away as a commercial insurance underwriter, the conclusion was amusingly anticlimactic.


As I closed in on retirement with 20 minutes remaining in my career, before clicking off the laptop, I was getting giddy. After 31 years, only 20 minutes to go, then 19, 18, and so forth . . . I set my permanent retirement out-of-office email reply, signed off my apps, turned off the laptop, bundled the electrical cord, and removed my chair and computer table out of my son's room from whence I'd worked the final two months.


Being a self-proclaimed goofball, I awoke earlier than usual to see what it looked like and felt like. Then Ghost Dog and I went for a longer than usual morning walk. Building out that elusive and fabled retirement routine had begun.


Day one of retirement, being a Friday, was more like the onset of a three-day weekend. Beyond that, though, that next full week and beyond, in my head, was represented largely as a blank space. There were a few lunch playdates on the calendar, but it was as if there was a roadmap in my head, the destinations were there, but everything was dark as if the infrastructure had not yet been built-out. No roads, no streetlights. That would hopefully be mentally built out in the subsequent weeks as my retirement routine became established providing the infrastructure to better envision my future.



A few early observations from Retirement: 


[1] A fun side effect leading up to retirement in the preceding month, I'd enjoyed an enhanced coherence of thought. It's as if my brain was preemptively reallocating brain power away from work, freeing it up to deploy for non-work activity. It's been neat, and surprisingly noticeable, as if a distraction has been removed from my consciousness.


There is a book by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Player Piano, where citizens have an alarm device implanted in their heads. The alarms periodically activate distracting them from deep and thoughtful contemplation. As retirement approached, I enjoyed enhanced clarity as if my distraction device had been deactivated.


[2] Referenced earlier, the mental blank space when thinking of the future. This was similar to what I experienced graduating from college, the summer of 1990. I had graduated and a job had not yet been procured. When I thought of the future at that tender point in my almost-adult life, thinking of those coming weeks and months, I had difficulty envisioning what that would look like. That's me again. As if I'm entering a dark room. I know there are things in there I want, but I haven't yet located the light switch. However, there is no fear about entering that dark room.


[3] I no longer have an adversarial relationship with the clock. By the fourth work day into retirement, the clock had lost its sinister persona. It had been my taskmaster, and I had been totally unaware until that morning's surprise revelation. But no longer would it dictate to me, with roving pin pricks throughout the day, what had to be done or be completed by when. An inconvenient constraint. The clock now merely represents a stationary point on a map.


[4] I've enjoyed a noticeable bump-up in patience! I've considered myself a patient fellow, although there have been triggers, like if there is not enough time to complete the desired array of tasks. Even then, I had developed an awareness of the onset of impatience, and that possibility of such a flareup has lately become more remote.



Life is good. And to be clear, life was good even during work. I was fortunate in my career of gainful employment, that employer, those professional tasks matching well with my abilities, and that coterie of distinguished colleagues with whom I worked. This has been a good run. Now then, just one final professional task remained, set my permanent retirement voicemail message.


"This is Bill with State Farm insurance. I am retired as of March 1, 2024. For assistance please call Underwriting, your assigned Business Lines Consultant or engage the Underwriting Chat feature. Thank you for calling."


With that, I turned off the cell phone and concluded my career.


Saturday, January 20, 2024

Klem's Goals for 2024



[I'm a little late documenting the 2024 goals, but let the record reflect, they've been in force since the year's inception.]


This is a big year for change. It's Year One of retirement commencing 3/1/2024! I do Not want to simply be napping and relaxing all the time. The objective is to stay constructive and productive.



[1] Publish the book of short stories Unlaundered Shorts, expected to be on Amazon by end of May.


[2] Read these books this year. There are some books, I just need a little nudge to make them go, and writing them here makes it so.


Emma - Jane Austen 

One each from the Bronte sisters

Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte

Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte

Brothers Karamazov, Dostoevsky

Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert

Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer


[3] Stay healthy:

Blood test,

Physical exam,

Prostate exam, [I'm sorry you had to read that.]

Read a book on age-appropriate Nutrition,

More oatmeal, fewer pancakes.


[4] Physical goals:

Do more push-ups. [100+ every other day]

Pull ups [every other day]

Swimming [commencing Q2]

Bike riding [commencing Q2]

Cardio [gonna to have to figure this out, maybe a stationary bike, but something more strenuous than walking]


[5] Improve the marketing reach for my novel Magglio Cervantes (available on Amazon).


[6] Scrub old Mac laptop and discard that computer.


[7] Do a 1-handed push-up.


Sunday, December 31, 2023

Things for which I am thankful as 2024 arrives.


Thankful that the family not only survived Covid, we emerged stronger and closer than when we entered it.


Thankful for the restraint to resist donuts. I'm also thankful that this gustatory restraint does Not carry over to chocolate.


Thankful that our local Costco consistently opens their doors 15 minutes earlier than posted, because I can get in, grab my 4-5 things, and get out before the store officially opens. No joke, a 15-minute venture in and out of that maze of temptation.


Thankful that I'm healthy enough to endure all the walking that Ghost Dog and I like to do. Sure, my feet and knees are not pristine, they have their ailments, but I'm healthy enough to remain abundantly ambulatory.


Thankful for blueberry pancakes and hot chocolate. I'm also thankful they're not staples of my diet, as that kind of recurring caloric deluge would put me at risk of leveling up my trousers' waistbands.


Thankful that Steffi and Kelly chose Ghost Dog when we were looking for a doggy, instead of a barky dog. Ghost Dog isn't barky, he's confident without the need to back it up with grand gestures of vocal annoyance.


Thankful for weekend junk TV with Steffi. An opportunity to enjoy the rewards of a few well-earned hours' retreat.


Thankful that after 56 years I've finally started to read nutrition labels on food. I don't always abide by the healthiest decisions, because junk food is just too tasty. But this new awareness has me slanting toward healthier choices.


Thankful that I married well and the kids have a good momma.


Thankful to have parents who have earned the proverbial crowded table. Family talking, laughing, and enjoying each other. Proof of lives well lived.



A peaceful and productive 2024 to you!

-Bill 


Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Klem's Goals for 2023


It's important to have a game plan to keep a guy on course. So, here's my plan for the new year.



[1]  Read Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy. Is a lengthy one at 900+ pages, but writing it down here will tilt the table toward completion. Plus the following two classics. It's easy to drag one's feet and avoid these oldies, but I'll knock them off in 2023.

A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens.

The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy.



[2]  Self-publish Magglio Cervantes a novel. This will entail the figuring out of Kindle's self-publishing feature. So here goes.

E-Book in Q2.

Audio book in Q3.

Physical book in Q4.



[3]  With the goal of staying healthy in these advanced years [heck, I'm 55], here's a medical checklist for the year:

Blood test,

Colonoscopy,

Physical,

Prostate check,

Dermatologist to check for troublesome sun exposure on my balding skull,

And the recently achey back, unless it self-fixes in the near future.



[4] Research non-profits, part-time paying jobs and volunteerism. This will be a retirement prelude. The goal is to stay productive in retirement instead of turning every day into a weekend.



[5]  With an eyeball on retirement, compile list of 30 things where deferral will no longer be a viable option.



[6]  And a fun retirement list, 100 things I'd like to do once I'm there.



[7]  Scrub old Mac laptop and discard.

Friday, December 24, 2021

A Klem Family Christmas Eve, circa 2012


When the kids were young we often took video and audio recordings at Christmas to document the excitement. The attached is from 2012, an annual listen on Christmas Eve at dinner time. [The boy] was 11 years old at the time and [my daughter] was 8. It's ridiculous and silly . . . and this audio file is truly one of my favorite things ranking all the way up there with dogs, pizza pies and pancakes. I look forward to it every year and, for the first time ever, it is shared here for your amusement.


[https://www.spreaker.com/user/15886508/christmas-eve-2012]



Merry Christmas from Team Klem!





Saturday, December 11, 2021

Klem's Goals for 2022

It's important to have a game plan to help a guy stay on course. Well, here's my plan for the new year.



[1] Get a new garage door opener installed. We've been horsing around with our current one, operable periods book-ended steeply with inoperability requiring manual open and close. Enough.


[2] Read War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy [1,225 pages]. This tome has been on my to-do list for too long. I suppose if I write it down I'll finally get it tackled. So, here we go.


While I'm at it, also read Great Expectations by Charles Dickens [568 pages] to put that to rest, too.


[3] Complete the enumeration of my ‘101 Rules to Live By.’ Values and goals I propose for leading a good life.


[4] Get my high-end sports cards professionally graded.


[5] Paint the rear gate.


[6] Have my knees perused by a professional. This is an extension from my 2021 Goals because we zeroed out our Flexible Medical Reimbursement account before I got to this. [Well, at least that's my excuse.] Anyway, these things, both knees, have been the source of mild unpleasantness for two decades. With an eyeball looking toward the future quality of life, this is the year I seek a professional’s assessment. Can they be improved or is this it?


[7] Start Two Guys comic. This will be an online comic with two cartoons posted monthly. The attempted humor will take place here: [https://twoguyscomic.blogspot.com].


[8] Bake a ham.


Saturday, December 26, 2020

Klem’s Goals for 2021

 

As the year of Covid concludes it’s important to keep looking ahead. Here’s my plan for maintaining forward progress into 2021.

 

1)   Change to a tankless water heater.  Our current 30-gallon water heater is 15 years old. We’re on borrowed time, given the typical life span. The plan is change it before it becomes an emergency, like it was last time.

 

2)   Have my kneesperused by a professional. These things, both, have been the source of mild unpleasantness for two decades. With an eyeball looking toward the future quality of life, this is the year I seek a professional’s assessment. Can they be improved or is this it?

 

3)   Finish a draft of Magglio Cervantes, a novel. I’d begun writing it years ago and haven’t touched it in a decade. Would be neat to be able to say that I’ve written a novel. Here we go.

 

4)   Don’t get Covid.

 

5)   Wife Klem and I will update the Trust. Our piglets are not infants any longer. Maybe we give the document a once over.

 

6)   Get poked when the Covid vaccineis made available to me and my family.

 

7)   Learn to play backgammon. All work and no play makes for a boring fellow. Plus I can’t seem to get the hang of Twitch, so I’d better stick with a game that can be played without a screen. Although, who am I kidding, I’ll learn it by means of an App on a screen.

 

8)   Make crepes. I dig pancakes quite considerably. Aren’t crepes just very thin pancakes? I bet I’ll like these things, too. Eat ‘em.

 

-Klem 12/2020