Thanksgiving will always be a day during which I stop at least once to think about Steve, who we lost in 2021. Steve was the first baboon that I met in person; I’ve read all his books; I remember his horror when he realized he had fed me something with chicken stock. I still miss him on the trail. Here is another of his posts, one of my favorites from April of 2021.
A friend and I used to discuss troublesome issues in our lives. We called them our “dragons.” Dragons are problems can only be dispatched with exceptional effort and resolve.

Few problems qualify as dragons, which is good. Most of us handle routine problems with routine efficiency. Alas, some problems are a lot nastier or complicated than others. Some of us have anxieties that prevent us from addressing certain issues forthrightly. Sometimes problems become entangled with side issues. Throw some procrastination into the mix, and what could have been a baby problem might grow up and begin belching enough fire to qualify as a dragon.
Examples? You don’t gain street cred as a dragon killer for beating a head cold, but beating cancer will earn you respect with anyone. Overcoming any addiction would surely count. The friend referenced in my opening paragraph slew a dangerous dragon when she escaped a marriage that was destroying her soul. From what I’ve read, the nastiest dragon Barack Obama faced down in his two terms as president might have been nicotine.
My most recent dragon should have been no big deal. Last September my computer emitted an electronic scream, seized and died. I had expected that. Computers typically remain healthy and functional for five to ten years. My fifteen-year-old computer was clearly living on borrowed time. I had prepared by backing my data files, although I could not back my applications.
I bought a replacement computer loaded with Microsoft’s Office, a choice forced on me because that is the only way I could get Word, the word processing app I’ve used for thirty-four years. Office costs $70. That is probably reasonable, although it irked me to pay for a suite of ten programs just to get the one program I use. But Microsoft enjoys something like a total monopoly on basic Windows business software.
Microsoft inserts a feature in the Office software that causes it to shut down unless users can prove that they have paid for it. To validate my purchase, I peeled back a piece of tape that covered the confirmation code. The tape ripped the cardboard beneath it, destroying the middle six numbers of a code of about twenty numbers. As it was designed to do, my software soon froze rock solid. I could not create new documents nor could I edit the many files already on my hard drive. Every time I turned on my computer, a niggling message from Microsoft reminded me I had not validated the purchase. As if I could forget!
Worse, there was no way I could contact Microsoft. The company recently eliminated its customer service office. Microsoft now directs customers with problems to some internet data banks that supposedly answer all questions. Of course, the data banks say nothing about what to do when the company’s own security tape destroys a validation number. I learned there are many businesses claiming they can help customers struggling with Microsoft apps. Those businesses didn’t want to talk to me until I shared my contact information or subscribed to their services. Then I’d learn again that my particular problem could not be resolved by anyone outside Microsoft. And nobody inside Microsoft would speak to me.
Over a span of seven months I spent many wretched hours dialing numbers and writing email pleas for help. The shop that sold the computer to me clucked sympathetically but told me to take my complaints to Microsoft. Members of a group called “the Microsoft community” kept telling me it would be easy to fix this issue, but none of them could provide a phone number that worked. While I could have purchased the software again for another $70, the rank injustice of that was more than I could bear.
I finally learned about a set of business applications called LibreOffice, the top-rated free alternative to Office. It is open source software, free to everyone. But people who put their faith in free software often get burned, for “free” often just means that the true price is hidden. I worried that this software would not allow me to edit all the documents I’ve created over thirty-four years of writing with Word. And—silly, silly me—I kept hoping I could find one friendly person in Microsoft who would thaw my frozen software. So I dithered for weeks.
Last week I took a deep breath and downloaded LibreOffice. It loaded like a dream. LibreOffice’s word processor, “Writer,” is friendly and intuitive. Ironically, I like it quite a bit better than Word. With it I can edit all my old Word documents, and I used the new software to write this post.
That particular dragon is dead, kaput and forever out of my life. Other dragons await my attention, malodorous tendrils of smoke curling up out their nostrils. I did not triumph over Microsoft, as that smug firm never even knew it had a conflict with me. Still, I celebrate the way this all ended. When we slay a dragon, the most significant accomplishment might be that we, however briefly, have triumphed over our personal limitations.
Any dragons in your past that you wouldn’t mind mentioning?
Last week I bought a new CD player as the old one had bitten the dust. I picked it up from Best Buy and wrangled it into the house and in the process, pinched some kind of nerve in my hip and then give myself a horrible paper cut (although I suppose you should call it a cardboard cut) from the end of the box. More blood than you would expect. Then when I opened the box, the top flap kicked back faster than I thought and smacked me in the nose – just a small scrape. I spent two hours trying to get that hooked up. I looked online for YouTube’s. I read the directions (which were supposedly in English, but I could not understand), I plugged stuff in, unplugged it, plugged it in again and finally just gave up. I was going to try again the next day. At that point YA came home and had it working in less than a minute. So technically, I didn’t slay the dragon; I sent YA in as the dragon slayer for me.
Happy Thanksgiving Baboons. It sounds trivial but I am incredibly grateful for all of you.
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delegating is a lost art. Good Job.
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Thanks, VS, for reviving one of Steve’s posts on this day – I love his writing, and it’s a good way to remember him.
I have current dragons that have to do with an aging brain, and trying to make plans for a possible future if Husband should outlive me. I should set up a trust, and it’s daunting. Open Enrollment this year is a lesser dragon, and we have help with that from our Senior Center.
This too shall pass.
Ditto, Baboons are one of the things I am most thankful for..
Off to try making this turkey-shaped veggie tray:
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=122139971552930465&set=a.122094548246930465
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Cute!!
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It was harder than I thought to put together. I have a photo of the results that would make you laugh, wish I knew how to post it, but if you email me, I can send it to you. 😂
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Glad it gave you a laugh!
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I have plenty of dragons in my past, and I’d like to leave them there. I don’t really have any current dragons, and I’m very grateful.
I recall that old post from Steve. I can almost hear his voice as I read his words.
Happy Thanksgiving, Baboons! I’m very grateful for all of you!
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At my daughter’s, grateful to have her, her husband and her son in my life. Watching many birds that come to their feeders, which are about 8 feet away through patio door. Their two cats checked me out. Found me non threatening and uninteresting.
Steve left me the oldest in the group. 81 is not many days away. As is day surgery. My tree frog—not at dragon stage yet—is all my health problems, which trip all over each other. Fading eyesight and failing hearing for example. Part of my hearing issue is my plugged up tubes. But the treatments are bad for my eyes.
My dearest friend, a former student but only 7 years younger than I, and a wonderful vibrant man, is losing his eyesight and can no longer drive down to see me. The biggest tree frog, getting close to a dragon, is how soon will I will I have to give up driving.
But I am grateful for all of you, that I have had a rich life (not in $) both in giving and receiving that I have been creative enough to feed my own soul, which is all I can ask.
Clyde
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i remember 2000ish i went with the family to disney. we stayed at the boardwalk primarily and i went to a fortune teller who started our session and had a terrible expression on her face and asked what do you do for a living . i told her i sell stuff she said because i see you spending a lot of time with lawyers. i have spent way too much time with lawyers and that is a land of the dragons. when i was an adolescent i thought id like to be a lawyer and save the world from injustice and lawyer based bs but i decided it was a cancer based life and not for me.
i have law suits going on now each two years in the making and it is amazing how you get used to living with that crap on an ongoing basis
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Better Late Than Never, Baboons,
I slayed the turkey today! Well, maybe not, but I did roast it and it was good. We had friends here and had a great time together.
There are so many dragons in life and I have had my share of them. The latest is Lou’s Lewy Body Disease.
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I feel deep compassion for you for your road ahead. So very sorry.
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