For someone of the insomniac persuasion, one of the great joys of retirement is the lack of an alarm in the morning. One wakes up when one wakes up, as a general rule making up for any disturbances the previous night. You sleep as much as your body wants you to sleep, not how much your job wants you to sleep. I do, of course, still have to wake up early on debate days, and I've got my phone alarm set for nuclear blast to make up for my diminished hearing abilities, but those days are occasional, and most mornings maybe it's six o'clock, maybe it's eight o'clock, and always it's whenever. Then it's a question of easing out of bed as the spirit moves me.
Eat your heart out.
The first activity of the day is reading first The NY Times and then the local Gannett paper. Having conceded that the grifter in the White House can do way more than I can ever cover in ConstiToonies, I've given up looking for fodder in the corners of his administration, my regular source. (There's not much humor potential in an all-out war on Venezuela, for instance, which seems to be the latest news from the center of the administration debacle.) So I read the interesting stuff in the papers. Today my longest article was the piece on the West End's Paddington. I haven't seen the movies, but I have to admit I will probably try to see the play sooner rather than later, along with granddaughter Rowan. My debate colleague Frank O'Bono gave it high marks (as has every critic under the sun), and it sounds perfectly familial. Maybe this fall. As for the local paper, today as usual it was only the funnies, (or comics, if you prefer), but sometimes there's something interesting in there about road closures or new restaurants or new roads or restaurant closures.
PUZZLING: The second activity of the day is the Times's puzzles. Wordle first (in 2 today, which always seems like a disappointment as it doesn't come close to percolating the little grey cells, although it does earn you a little badge), then Connections (in 6 today, with a lot of staring and seeing nothing), then the Crossword (in about 12 minutes this morning, which is a nicely satisfying time), then the Spelling Bee (always as long as it takes to get to Genius; today was run-of-the-mill with only 1 pangram that I could find). Breakfast usually goes along with the Bee since it has no timer and can be done with one hand on the computer (all of the above is on the Mac, not the phone or iPad) while one shoves egg into the maw with the other.
And then it's off to face the day.

