Showing posts with label Windstream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windstream. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

"Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet."

There are a couple of things in life that can really try your patience. One of them is Windstream, and the other is having your hard drive crash. We were dealing with both of these phenomena this week. Well, Jen was suffering more from the Windstream issue, and it was my computer at work that had hard disk failure. Life gives us plenty of times to react in frustration, and those same experiences afford a chance to develop our patience.

Our Windstream internet has at times been really good. At times it's been really frustrating. Last week sometime it began to struggle quite mightily. It would literally take five minutes to load a basic web page. That tested our patience a bit. We called customer service and were told there was definitely an issue (Thank you for that, Windstream customer service person. I was previously unaware that there was an issue.) and that a service technician would need to visit. That was on Thursday, and a technician was scheduled for a Saturday visit.

The reminder call came on Friday to let me know that a technician would be starting work on Saturday between the hours of 8 AM and 7 PM. The technician was supposed to call before he came to the house. Without calling, he showed up around 3 PM I think. After a little work outside and a little work inside, he was stumped. He called for reinforcements. After another hour or so of work, we were told it was better and that they had one more thing to do and then all would be well. The internet worked pretty well after that, for about 16 hours or so. 

So I called back in on Monday and was told the ticket was still open and the issue would be resolved by 6 PM. That technician told Jen we had a problem with the wiring in the house and would need new wiring. He would have to complete it the next day. So today a different technician called and said he needed to drill a hole in the floor to run a new wire to eliminate the wiring issue as a problem. I said okay! He did that, and once he was finished around lunch time said it was working but that there was still a problem.

He referred it back to the experts who deal with the issues in the lines down the road. Two more technicians visited our home in the afternoon to say they had narrowed it down to an issue with one of the pins at the hub, they thought. So a total of six technicians later, they were still a little stumped. At this hour our internet is working, but I don't know if the full problem has been resolved.

Let me just say this about Windstream. The local people that work for the company are terrific people. In fact, we go to church with two of the technicians that helped us. And we know a couple of other folks who work there, and they are awesome individuals. One in particular is a friend who helps me out a lot and tracks what is going on. So the people are great. The product has been less than great over the years.

On Friday morning I arrived at work to this:


So that was fun! I've tried to keep everything saved on the network drive at work, so I didn't figure it would be a big deal. Of course anything I had saved on the hard drive was gone. I'm thinking many folks would have had a nervous breakdown here. It was okay in my case. But the IT guy (our IT guys are great, by the way) commented how much easier it was for him when I didn't explode in anger. That made me feel good.

People have told me I'm really patient. Sometimes I'm not, but it's usually when I'm not in public. I get frustrated with the kids, and, yes, even with my wife. Jen can tell you. I'm really not as patient as people think. I have outbursts occasionally, and I snap at the kids sometimes for no real reason. I have held screaming babies in the air and yelled in frustration. But the everyday situations, like the ones above, and like when you're in a restaurant and they clearly aren't serving well, are opportunities to show our kids how to be patient. They watch how we treat people. 

Oh, and you fathers out there, they watch how you treat your wife. This is something I have to really think about or I mess up royally. Here's the thing...there are going to be arguments in marriage. It happens, and it will happen occasionally probably forever. We talked the other day on our Facebook Live session how Jen doesn't want me to roll over in arguments because it makes her think I don't care. But, if I do engage in the spirited discussion, that can come across to my boys potentially in a way that appears that I'm not being loving. And if I'm not careful I might be modeling something that seems to make it okay to be disrespectful to your wife. So it's a balance. Not an easy balance like Karate Kid on that pole at the beach. A difficult balance like me trying to do a front flip on a balance beam. That kind.

Keeping a patient mindset helps me to keep my voice low and hopefully my tone appropriate. Jen believes my tone is always perfect, and I appreciate that she recognizes it (No, no she doesn't.). What we need to remember is that in all these situations, if we have kids, they are watching. They are learning. There's a saying that goes, "More is caught than taught." I think that is true in this case. The kids learn more from what we do in front of them than what we tell them to do.

I just asked T.J. and Reilly if they think Jen and I are patient. T.J.'s answer was "Sometimes." Reilly's answer was, "For three days, yes. For two days, no." I don't know what the latter means, but I'm thinking we have room for improvement.


Sunday, February 5, 2017

The world is still turning on its axis

It's almost halftime as I type, and it's been a good Super Bowl for a Falcons fan. As I was watching I thought about how we ditched cable a number of years ago. It happened not long after we bounced those two checks and knew we had to do things differently. For a while, we kept the most basic of basic cable. It was channels 2-14 I think, which at the time was the local channels, PBS (PBS Kids!), Windstream Channel 4, and I think Peachtree channel (there were some Braves games on that channel). But after a while we realized there was no point in even hanging on to that!

Translate that to mean that I got to watch very few sporting events. Also, Jen could no longer watch America's Next Top Model and Project Runway. Those who know me know how much I have enjoyed sports throughout my life. Frankly, I thought it would be pretty tough to endure not getting to sit on the couch and ignore my family and do nothing for 2-3 hours at a time. Turns out it's not so bad!

Granted, things have changed in the home entertainment landscape over the last several years. Things like Netflix and Hulu have turned the television market upside down. So we now watch Netflix or watch some of our favorite shows on our Roku TV with the national channel apps. And a lot of times games like the Super Bowl are streamed online, so we can watch it for free. (Full disclosure here, I borrow someone's cable subscription login so that I can watch games on WatchESPN occasionally. But you can also get Sling TV and some other options for relatively cheap.)

I know a lot of you reading this probably have also ditched cable or satellite. It's not so bad, is it? For you guys (or even gals) who are considering cutting cable or ditching the dish and think you can't live without sports or live television, I promise, your life will not come to an end if you don't get to watch your team at home 12 Saturdays a month. The world will still turn on its axis. Now, if you live in our geographic area, yes, the quality of any broadcast is beholden to Windstream. Even tonight watching the Super Bowl, several times we have been greeted with... 



(It is so ironic that as I went to insert that photo from Google Photos, a message popped on my screen reading, "There is no internet connection." I'm not kidding! You can't make this stuff up! Thanks Obama! We had to unplug and plug back in the modem to get the internet to rejoin us. We're gonna miss the Lady Gaga Pepsi Zero Sugar Halftime Show. Darn.)

So it can be frustrating when all you want to do is watch one video or one stream. Come on! But I suppose one thing it's good for is teaching us patience and remembering what things are not worth getting worked up over.

Here's the problem, and I touched on it in a previous post. We have to be careful that our TV watching has not been replaced by time with our faces in our phones, or tablets, or computers. We need to make sure we replace it with time on things that matter. Right now, Jen is sitting on the couch reading a book, I think that's a baker's dozen for the year. That's a good way to spend time. I'm still working on my progress in this area (I have read one book though). I need to be more "present where my feet are." That's a quote my friend Jacob shared with me. It makes good sense, Yes we are saving money, but I hope we're saving some of our lives too.