archive for July of 2005

general owies

So something—carrying the two reams of tabloid paper back from Staples on Tuesday, carrying two heavier-than-usual bags to and from work on Wednesday, or possibly another kidney infection—has my back killing me today. It hurt last night, but it hurts a lot more today. To the extent that I didn’t go to work.

In the last twenty-four hours (and I don’t need a lecture about this, thanks), I’ve had two prescription ibuprofen, two Percocets, and two Excedrin Migraines. Nothing has put a dent in this pain so far—except yoga, but even that didn’t last very long.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

general ch-ch-ch-changes

It’s soooooo cold in my office and sooooooo hot outside. Both suck.

I want to go to Hawaii very, very badly. Can I? I can? YAY.

I spent the night at Lisa’s last night, because we were watching TV and catching up (we haven’t seen each other in almost two weeks), and before we really knew it it was 1 in the morning. So I got up at 7:30 when she and the girls got up (I usually roll out of bed around 9:45), and I got to work an hour and a half early. No one said anything. So odd.

It was cute being awakened, though. Lisa came into the spare bedroom in a towel, and Josie was with her in her pajamas, and Josie jumped (well, was lifted) up on the bed to wake me up. She had a stuffed Very Hungry Caterpillar with her. Both kids were delighted to see me after such a long time. Their faces just lit up when they saw me. I was so happy.

However, NOW I am not, as it is about four degrees up in this bitch. Why do boys need it so cold?!

travel I have a new theory.

My theory is that the Metro maps on the trains are printed in Braille, overlaid with a special time-release ink that only becomes visible after you see it every day.

This explains why tourists need to touch the maps in order to read them.

This morning, just as the train was pulling into the station where I get off, a girl of about 16, wearing a tiny green T-shirt (about size 2T) saying “Me So Corny,” planted herself an arm’s length from the map, deposited her finger thereon, and blocked all methods of egress from the train.

general Everything’s going just a little bit wrong today

Could not get up. Hair looks icky. Big dark circles under eyes. Dressed too warm. Really late. McDonald’s had stupid outdoor order taker, meaning one less person inside helping, meaning I had to wait ages for my brunch. Two people honked at me while I was pulled over waiting. Two strangers talked to me on the way to the train. Figured out last night I spend $300 a month just to commute, so now every bit hurts. Never gonna be able to pay for everything in Hawaii. At least plane is paid for. On Saturday I went for a drive and ate at Burger King and they didn’t give me my Amazon card.

family Nostalgia

I just went through the second-to-last box (this one is actually a laundry basket) of crap from the living room. I found some wonderful, amazing stuff.

My scanner is at the bottom of a whole ’nother heap of crap that I’ll have to go through soon, so I can’t really document this all, but I’d like to. It’s the thought that counts, right? Right.

I found a yearbook from my father’s dormitory from his sophomore year at Ohio State (1963–64). It was so easy to pick him out of the pictures; even then, he was a head taller than everyone else. I scanned the rest of the names, but the only other one I knew was John Butz, who I recognized at once and who is still one of my dad’s best friends. They were each best man at the other’s wedding, if I recall correctly.

I was deeply into this yearbook (I mean, who makes a yearbook for their dorm? It was surreal). So much of it was cemented in history. It could have been from no other year. The flashback photos were about President Kennedy and the Beatles. There were photos of the nice black ladies who cleaned their rooms (maid service in a dorm, can you imagine?). There were pictures of the dorm’s dozen or so representatives on the Ohio State football team, guys who probably stood a fair chance at the NFL in the ’64–’67 drafts, if things worked that way back then. There were pictures of the dorm’s fifteen or so ROTC cadets, guys who certainly went to Vietnam.

I looked at those guys’ pictures for a long time.

And on the last page, a full-page letter of thanks and a photo and signature from my dad, who had apparently orchestrated the whole idea of a yearbook for the hall. I could just burst. The dorm must still be there, or a new building with the same name must; it was too large, and at too large a school, to really go away (big state schools always have massive all-male dorms, right?). I wonder if they still do this yearbook thing. Which my dad apparently started.

I spent a while reading an issue of Time magazine from 1986, which we saved because it was the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty. I thought I was reading it for the ads. Electric typewriters. Multiple brands of electric typewriters. MCI versus AT&T for business long distance. The Charlie Chaplin campaign for IBM PCs.

An article in the back told the (until recently) eternal story of a Red Sox “hope” year (which 1986 certainly was). There was a photo of Tom Seaver, 41-year-old hall-of-fame pitcher new to Boston, with his tall young protege, a twenty-three-year-old, very promising Roger Clemens.

There were letters in the front about the pro-life/pro-choice debate, letters that could have been written yesterday. There was an article about Chernobyl, a recent event. One about Barber Conable, the president of the World Bank (a name that would have meant nothing to me just a couple of years ago). A long one about South Africa, still under apartheid. It’s shameful how far we’ve come in some ways in nineteen years and how we’ve backpedaled or stalled in others.

On a lighter note, in the basket were at least three photos of the “old man” cactus in my grandmother’s front yard in Sun City, Arizona. One from the late ’70s, when it was about as tall as her shoulder. One from the early ’80s, when it was an inch over her head. And one from 1989, just a year or two before the (extremely valuable) cactus was stolen out of her yard, when it was at least six and a half feet tall. My grandmother’s face and hair and body change in the pictures, too, but the way that cactus grew was a point of such pride with her that she stood straight and tall for every one of them.

It’s impossible to put into words how this stuff always makes me feel. I can’t believe my mother doesn’t understand why I save things.

media I learned a new word.

This is, in all honestly, a pretty rare event, so I thought I’d share.

From this page, on the terrific (so far) Uncommon Folk music blog:

And, when it comes to folk music you listen to Woody Guthrie. As the great working class champion Guthrie said in a lost seventh verse of his now ruthlessly reified song This Land Is Your Land: Nobody living can ever stop me / As I go walking my freedom highway / Nobody living can make me turn back / This land was made for you and me.

Main Entry: re·ify
Function: transitive verb
Inflected Form(s): re·ified; re·ify·ing
Etymology: Latin res thing — more at REAL
: to regard (something abstract) as a material or concrete thing

Nice, word, isn’t it? I thought it was a typo.

Anyway, speaking of music, right now through Indy.tv I’m listening to a really weird performance that started out as a cover of Lou Reed’s beautiful classic “Sweet Jane,” melted into Jane’s Addiction’s “Jane Says” (a natural-enough move), then Tina Turner’s “What’s Love Got To Do With It” (bizarrely, and briefly) before returning to “Sweet Jane.” Sooo strange.

web Kingdom of Loathing merch

Kingdom of Loathing merch:
Cory Doctorow:

The amazing, funny, low-budg indy online game Kingdom of Loathing has opened a web-store with amazing stickers/tees/drinking glasses.

Link

(Thanks, StickyNutz!)

web I think I might have to redesign this whole site

…around the wonderful center panel of this comic strip.

Pbf047Admittens

http://cheston.com/pbf/archive.html

general It MUST look good.

A panhandler outside Wendy’s just told me my hair looks nice.

general I accomplished something AMAZING today.

The people who would be the most impressed will not see this, as they don’t read the blog, but I DON’T CARE.

I CLEANED MY LIVING ROOM.

Since I moved to this apartment—in February 2003—in front of my bookcases has been a … morass … of boxes of books, boxes of craft supplies and half-finished projects, packing peanuts, old papers and magazines, things I tore out of catalogs to put on my collages, and so on. To the extent that there were only about three places big enough to put a foot, and I had to do a precarious overstepping motion every time I wanted to get to the bookcases. Which was pretty much every day.

It was also a battlefield of doom whenever Max was over. Last weekend I think Lin was about set to kill me.

But this, oh, this is what it looks like now.

 23422960 849A74D403

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kostia/23422960/

< nearfar >