I'm now Doctor Robison, with the award of this Doctor of Humane Letters from Worcester State University yesterday. Here is a link to the award and my talk at Worcester's DCU center, formerly the Worcester Centrum
https://t.co/4Gb3tTuIo3
This afternoon it was rainy and 42 degrees. Now it's dark. Temps have dropped to 25, and a hard north wind is gusting 50 mph. Outside, the trees bend and hum a tune you can almost recognise. When the wind shifts, you'd swear you hear voices out there in the dark.
The background noise is like a heavy freight train rolling by, but there are no tracks. Every now and then, a sharp crack. Now, for a moment, all is silent. Soon, it starts again.
On nights like this, some fly with the Wendigo, never to be seen again. Others go back inside and firmly shut the door.
What about you?
It’s a cold grey dawn here in Western Massachusetts. I’m headed to work with the plow on the front of my truck, wondering what the day will bring. Somewhere between two and eight inches of snow is forecast, and we are ready. In another hour, Joe will be out salting the parking lot. Austin and Jack have the larger plows ready on their trucks, and they’ll start clearing as soon as snow starts to accumulate. Jose will be watching over the parking lot, keeping it clear as best we can for plowing.
The ambulance operations in our complex never close. We never know when they will be called out, and we have to make sure they can get out when calls come, no matter what the conditions.
We’re pretty good at handling storms now. Having our own equipment and a good staff makes all the difference. We have three heavy duty pickups with 8 foot plows ready. Two John Deere tractors have snow blowers mounted for sidewalks and snow piles. A larger John Deere is ready with a loader and a bigger blower, but no one expects us to need that. There are salt spreaders and several pallet loads of snow melt in the shed.
Lots of people with equipment like ours hire their crews out to the City, but I don’t want to beat our stuff up plowing roads. It’s enough to clear our three acres of yard, the street around us, the short street we live on and our driveways.
So often, I read about “our great people,” as if people single-handedly handle snowstorms and whatever else life throws at us. They (we) don’t. We would be nowhere without machines. With workers alone, it would take days to clear a six-inch snowfall, and it would be backbreaking work. With the right machines, it’s a few hours work from the comfort of heated cabs.
If your machines are well-maintained, you can drive into a storm like this and be confident your equipment will do its job. Properly maintained gear does not break down or fall apart when things get tough. Before we owned plows and blowers we were at the mercy of hired contractors who generally arrived late and did a less than stellar job. Now, thanks to our equipment, we decide when to work and how to do it.
Machines make the life we take for granted possible.
So as you watch the plows go by, tip your hat to all the workers out there keeping the roads clear and as safe as they can be. But don’t forget that we’d all be home shoveling without modern equipment.
Just so you know, all posts from @johnrobison are my own words, and are posted by me from my devices here in New England, USA where I live, or elsewhere when I am traveling.
@katiewr31413491@PsychToday I agree your son's problems are more than social. While I cannot know what's inside his mind, having read of his expressions of frustration that lead to injury, it's reasonable to characterize that as observed suffering.
I've decided to drop the Twitter Verified status, as I have not found it very useful, and I've not enjoyed engaging here for some time. It's still me, just no blue check mark.
With the elimination of DEI and Special Ed there is an opportunity to make those supports universal. Let me know what you think . . . this is from @PsychToday
https://t.co/Y2f63KHgb4
Autism and hearing loss have disabling effects that often overlap. The threat both pose as we age is considerable—but hearing loss is far more treatable. Here's why that matters, by @johnrobison https://t.co/mj6pXHin79
Check out my latest article: Hearing Loss, Neurodiversity, Isolation and the threat of cognitive decline. Advances in hearing aid technology show how engineering can help. https://t.co/Vm9oEZKSHU via @LinkedIn
Thanks for the coverage @timesunion A Best Bet for sure. Hope to see you all Monday 10/7 at 7 pm Page Hall @ualbany for @johnrobison discussing neurodiversity & his remarkable life on the spectrum @NYSIDSpeaks@keybank cosponsors. https://t.co/Fg2MZcPpJ1 Free & open. Just show up