archive for August of 2005

general Reasons

I feel lonely, in addition to the aforementioned general numbness (which really hasn’t stopped). I don’t really understand it. I love being alone, and I really like not working, but maybe I’d gotten used to seeing and talking to people every day.

In any case, there should only be one more day of it. I should be back working on Monday.

It doesn’t really explain why I’m not getting any email from my friends, though. Any idea why that is? Did I do something awful again?

I went to Target today (bought my first vacuum cleaner in five years). I was so bizarrely fascinated by all the “Back to College” stuff in the furniture and decor sections (apparently brown is the new black) that I forgot to check the registry and get Timber a baby shower gift. Stupid. So I’ll have to go back tomorrow or over the weekend or sometime next week, before I go to Florida Thursday night. I also have to get my nails done before I go, but that’s not really important.

What should I get her? She’s registered at Babies R Us, too. They seem to be going for a theme evenly split between Pooh and frogs, with an emphasis on green. I think it’s a girl, but Timber would never go for a house full of pink stuff (this is her sofa, after all), so it’s hard to tell from the list. Maybe they don’t even know yet.

I’m leaning toward this. So cute. Although Lisa has one of these, and I know it’s way more practical. Maybe I’ll get both. Real diaper bag and toy diaper bag.

I also have to remember to take them their wedding presents I’ve had in my foyer for eight months.

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

web Book List

One of the things that’s always been a cornerstone of my website (at least until I started doing this) was my book list. I started keeping track of everything I read on July 17, 1996, and for a long time I did really well. Everything was dated and rated and loquaciously commented upon, and I was pretty pleased with it. People read it and enjoyed it, and I made a little money from Amazon commissions.

After I moved up here, things got more complicated, and I skipped a few years (not in a row) and screwed up a few years (starting off strong then failing). It got to be hard to find time to read, let alone time to remember when I read things and how they were. And I read a lot of stuff I’d read before, and a lot of stuff that wasn’t worth keeping track of.

Recently, learning about how a blog works, I came to realize that what my book list really needed was automation. So today I created a new blog and built a new template, and lo and behold:

The 2005-2006 Book List

It’s practically ideal. I can add books without worrying about ftping and editing html and dropping >s and <s (this used to be a big problem back in the day). I finally have a look I like, so I don’t need to dread every July when I’d have to come up with a new layout and new stars (if you look at the previous years, you’ll see). And I can easily (thanks to the built-in Amazon search engine in ecto) add tiny pictures of the book covers, something I’ve wanted to do for years and years.

There are problems, though. For some reason there’s a big gaping space above the title, and I don’t know why. Vertical-align properties don’t work properly in the cells (partly this is because of the divider row with the HR in it, but partly it’s just weirdness). I’ve dealt with most of it, and I have it pretty well in hand, but that big space at the top is giving me headaches. I wish I could get rid of it.

And “save as stationery” in ecto doesn’t seem to work AT ALL.

work Anticlimactic

Perhaps I will feel differently about this when I wake up in the morning and don’t have to go anywhere, but I simply don’t feel it yet.

I don’t have a job. I’m unemployed. I have no money coming in. I don’t know where my next rent payment is coming from.

The base rate I’ll command as a temp, if I can get it full-time, works out to $7,000 a year more than I was making last week (of course, this doesn’t allow for things I don’t have anymore, like vacation, sick time, and health insurance). It’s the uncertainty that I’ll be able to get full-time work that should be scaring me out of my pants.

But it isn’t. I don’t feel anything.

media Mac ads

I’m watching this tape from (I think ) 1998, the one that had the last Seinfeld on it, and I just got an ad for “the new PowerBook G3.”

These ads are jumping out at me bigtime. Is it just because I was never a Mac owner when they were on, or because I never watch commercials anymore, or what? Are there not Mac commercials on TV nowadays? I don’t think there are.

(By the way, “tonight” on ABC: “Ellen” and “Dharma and Greg.”)

media The most I can manage is a stupid meme

Harry Potter Meme of All Memes by Osaku
Name/Username
Age
Gender
House Ravenclaw
Wand Pine, 12“, Unicorn Hair
Best Course Herbology
Worst Course Muggle Studies
Pet Abyssinian cat
Patronus Lion
Quidditch Job Commentator
Wizard Candy Sherbert Balls
Profession After School Cursebreaker
Quiz created with MemeGen!

general I learned some good things yesterday

…from Lisa’s copy of Cook’s Illustrated, a wonderful magazine with no ads.

One: If you spray Pam on the cheese grater before you start, it will work easier and not get its holes all full of cheddar gunk.

Two: If you heat up a bowl in the oven or in hot water before you serve fettucine alfredo in it, the sauce will stay creamy longer.

Three: A sippy cup is an excellent serving tool for vinaigrette.

Also there were pretty drawings of peppers on the back.

travel Obviously people view the same events differently.

I believe I made it clear in my short post the other day that this page is my place to vent, not a censored place to express only what will make other people happy to read it. I’m an editor. Perfecting writing is what I do. Because of that, I go over everything I write several times before I put it where there’s a chance anyone else might see it. This sentence is being typed on my sixth pass through this post. While some people might think this means I still mean everything I said, or even that I still think I was right to write it, that’s not the case. The post I wrote in tears Tuesday night was less edited than, say, this one, but it was still art for me, an effective and cathartic response to a particular moment in time that’s now gone.

Yes, I cry when I get even the slightest bit frustrated or upset. It’s not a big deal. It’s not heart-wrenching, and it’s not painful. It’s just how my face works. But yes, on several occasions last week I was upset. If you knew me better, you could judge it for what it is: an emotional reaction, a reaction that is soon fully under my control and that does not affect the workings of my brain or my ability to understand its ridiculousness.

Yes, I had a panic attack during the luau. I do not handle crowds of strangers well unless I have a clear idea of what I’m supposed to be doing and where I’m supposed to be going. If you knew me better, you’d be aware of that too, and the fact that simply being out of my element, feeling (wrongly, as it turns out) that I was somehow responsible for other people’s successful happiness as well as my own, and surrounded by things I didn’t know how to handle bugged me a little and I needed to go away to deal with it.

Yes, I only twice took the time and trouble to pour the sand out of the damn bottle and dig out the scroll with a long skinny screwdriver (I don’t have any knitting needles) and untie and unroll the invitation to read it, and I remembered it wrong. (Was I supposed to smash the bottle, or bring it with me, or assume anyone else had read and remembered theirs?) The only thing about the invitation that really stuck with me was that it used the same exact font (Wiesbaden Swing) that’s been on kostia.net for years.

I did have fun, not that that seems to matter now. It IS fun to me to sit in the sun and read, to lie lazily in a nice hotel room and listen to the ocean. These are things I cannot do at home, and they are far superior to working. Yes, I was scared to spend a hundred bucks to go scuba diving. While it’s not like everyone else had a great time scuba diving and had no complaints whatsoever, I understand that to some people that situation (having “been there” and “done that” and “given it the old college try”) is preferable to the avoidance of the unpleasant parts. That’s simply not how I think, and I’m okay with that. Yes, I had no interest in surfing, which seemed more likely to cause me injury than fun. Not like everyone came back from that completely unscathed. Same thing.

In social situations I tend to wait for other people to make decisions because I’m afraid of making one that other people won’t like. When someone else in a group I’m in chooses what I wouldn’t have chosen, I find it difficult to speak up. Not being the chooser in the first place is an easy way to avoid that situation. I believe my close friends are aware of this and tend to steer around it without really realizing it. It works out fine. This is the same reason I prefer not to choose a table in a restaurant if I’m not alone, unless I have to.

When I’m driving, I think I expect the other people in the car to navigate if possible. I think this is simply a tiny facet of the environment in which I was raised and the observations I made before I learned to drive. In the car as everywhere else, my parents’ partnership was completely understood and unspoken. I understand that not everyone learned the same way.

I understand that people see the same events in different ways. You know I had some other, stupider shit going through my head last week, and I could kick myself for letting that distract me so much.

To sum up: If you made my vacation different than it could have been, then it’s only fair that I seem to have done the same for you.

You know what the best part of this vacation was for me? Coming home and giving presents to Lisa and David and their kids. That’s my family. Those are the people that matter the most to me for a thousand miles in any direction. They were all so happy to see me and seemed really pleased with what I picked out for them.

That, and the stars, were worth all of this shit. Every bit.

travel General day-by-day updates

On Saturday, I got up around five AM and drove to BWI. I parked at the Pre-Flight place where I always park (where you earn free days by parking there), and was driven to the airport. I checked my bag (“through to Honolulu” are beautiful words), selected an exit-row seat at the terminal, waited in the longest yet fastest-moving security line of my entire life, and went to the gate, where I found and woke up Paul and Julie. The agent made an announcement that there had been children seated in the emergency exit rows, and they needed people who had two seats together elsewhere in the plane to switch. I made Paul and Julie volunteer, which they did with suitable—and (had I known what was to come) surprising—alacrity. So we were all able to sit together on the 3-hour flight to Minneapolis. We got there, we ate lunch, and we anxiously awaited Wayne’s arrival. His flight was delayed twice, but he still made it. There was apparently a long line at either Burger King or Cinnabon, though, so he almost missed our boarding call. He and I were seated together in the back of the plane, but Paul and Julie were seated several rows ahead of us, both in middle seats, several rows apart. Poor things. It was a long flight, during which we read Harry Potter. Wayne reads faster than I do, but I still stand by my belief that my comprehension is better. He also kept interrupting me with his THEORIES. One of them was borne out early, one hundred percent correct. I don’t remember the others. We landed in Honolulu and took a cab to the hotel where Wayne and I were registered, the Continental Surf. We were greeted with $5 for a cab, a box of chocolate-covered macadamia nuts, and the information that we’d been bumped due to a booking error to the Waikiki Beach Resort. We tried calling there and a few other places, only to discover that no one had a room for Paul and Julie. A passing woman told us she’d seen a vacancy sign at the Bamboo nearby, so they went and stayed there. They ended up with a HUGE apartment-type room which must have cost a fortune. Much nicer than the tiny room Wayne and I had. We had dinner at a traditional Hawaiian Denny’s.

On Sunday, the three of them got up at the asscrack of dawn (reverse jetlag, you see) and went walking around Waikiki. Julie and Paul even went in the ocean, I think. I stayed in bed reading, and caught up to where Wayne was in the book. We tried to have breakfast at Denny’s, but the wait was long, and we had a flight to catch, so we got sandwiches and fruit for breakfast in the first of many trips to the ABC Stores. These convenience stores sell everything from liquor to sundresses to towels to flip-flops to souvenir chocolates to t-shirts to memory cards to bulk-quantity keychains. And there’s at least one on every block in Honolulu. You think I’m exaggerating, but I’m not. Every block. We went back to the airport, to the interisland terminal this time, in the first cab that happened to show up, which was a stretch limousine. We flew to Kona, where we got off the plane on the tarmac and claimed our luggage in what was actually a thatched hut. Kona has something like four gates. The agricultural inspection station is bigger than the baggage claim. It’s adorable, as airports go. We picked up the Jeep we’d rented and discovered (not to our surprise, but much to my frustration) that it would take two trips to get all four people and all nine bags to the resort. So we did the bags first, leaving them with the bell staff at the Hapuna Beach Prince. On the drive, we saw the amazing white-rocks-on-black-lava graffiti that seems to cover the Big Island. It was incredible. We went back and got Paul and Julie, and we checked into the beautiful oceanfront room. There was swimming. We drove into Waimea for dinner, where the only restaurant we could find looked like a local dive bar from the outside but turned out to be the second-most-expensive restaurant in town. Ooops. I had an awesome steak. There were leftovers, which were given to me in my first-ever aluminum-foil swan. On the drive back to Hapuna, I was astounded at how many stars there are on the Big Island. It’s indescribable. INDESCRIBABLE. I thought there were a lot of stars when I camped in the Grand Canyon fifteen years ago. That was BUSH LEAGUE. This was one of the most beautiful and moving things I’ve ever seen. This trip cost me thousands of dollars, and it was worth it just to see the stars.

On Monday, we swam. They snorkeled. I finished the lousy fucking book and ate my leftovers. I made an appointment at the spa for the next day to get a manicure and pedicure and eyebrow waxing. In the afternoon, we set out for Hilo and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. It was an hours-long drive, but beautiful. Wayne said repeatedly how it could pass for Montana if you were filming a movie. We stopped at a hardware store and bought flashlights, which we’d been told were a necessity for hiking up the volcano. We did some other hiking down trails and a lava tube at the volcano park. There are pictures. They are numerous. I pissed my friends off by pulling the Jeep off the road several times to take pictures of the sunset. When it got dark, I was again astounded by the stars. We were at a much higher elevation (the resort, obviously, is at about one foot over sea level; the volcano park is at around 2000), and it was VERY windy. We drove up toward where we’d been told the red lava was, and we had to turn around and park the car. Then we had to hike. Eventually, the road ended where the lava had flowed over it and hardened two years ago. There were amusing sights, like speed limit and ‘no parking’ signs buried askew several feet deep in hardened black lava rock. The road then FULLY ended. And we were faced, in pitch blackness, with two flashlights for four people, in shorts, with a string of tiny reflective markers and a mountain covered in what is actually broken glass to hike over. The sign at the ranger station had said it was six miles, four hours, to where you could see red lava. I guess we thought that was metric, because off we set. At the first blinking-light beacon, the yellow reflectors ended. We made it to the second beacon, and I guess we wandered too far toward the ocean, because we came on a rope that told us in no uncertain terms that what we were standing on could “fall into the sea” without warning. Spiffing. We veered more left and kept going. We got much, much closer to lava than you’ve ever been, but eventually we gave up and turned back. It was, as I believe I said here the next day, thrilling and dangerous. We got back to Hapuna around two in the morning.

On Tuesday, I paid an exorbitant amount to have my twenty nails painted “Cajun Shrimp” and my eyebrows made the shape I now believe (now that they’re healed) they were always intended to be. You have read already about the wedding and the eyebrows and the luau and the panic attack. So be it.

On Wednesday, we tearfully checked out of the Hapuna. There were payment issues, but they were resolved. We returned the Jeep (again, making two trips to ferry Paul and Julie and the luggage to Kona). The Jeep was cheaper than I’d been quoted, which was great. We flew back to Honolulu, and we checked in at the Waikiki Beach Marriott. I flipped out when I saw the view from our balcony. We were at the Diamond Head end of the beach, facing the other way (I forget the word. Eka, I think? Ewa? Anyway, you don’t say “east” in Hawaii, you say what the landmark is. Inland is Mauna, for Mountain, and toward the ocean is Mauka [I think], for Sea. It’s cool. We were Diamond Head of most of Waikiki), and we could see everything there was to see. Beautiful. There are pictures. They are numerous. We went out walking, discovered that ABC Stores are more prevalent than … well, something prevalent … Scientologists in Clearwater, and told Julie she had to either buy or at least play a ukulele while we were here. I don’t remember what we did for dinner on Wednesday. I’m sorry.

Edited to add: On Wednesday we ate at a restaurant in a food court that was closing about 15 minutes after we got there. The drink menu had all those tropical things (Blue Hawaii, pina colada, daiquiri, etc.) so I assumed they had a full bar—and a bartender. So I ordered a Skyy vodka tonic with limes, which is what I usually drink. The waiter said they didn’t have Skyy. I asked about Absolut. They didn’t have that either. Instead of trying for Grey Goose or Finlandia, I just said “I’ll have whatever the well vodka is.” He said “Yep, I’ll get you the good vodka.” I thought this was odd—what kind of waiter doesn’t know the term “well”?—but that was just the beginning. I was served a glass of mostly vodka (probably Smirnoff, though I have no idea) with no ice and an opened bottle, with the words “there’s the rest of the tonic water for you.” I asked for ice and limes. They never came. But it’s okay, because I soon noticed it was a bottle of mineral water. So I had a diet Coke, explained that mineral water and tonic water are not the same thing, verified there was not in fact a bartender at this restaurant. Later (and luckily) we found out that the food was pretty darn good. But the service not so much. At least I wasn’t charged for either drink. End of edit.

On Thursday, Wayne and I went to Pearl Harbor while Paul and Julie did beach things. I think I already wrote about Pearl Harbor. Anyway, there are pictures. They are numerous. The four of us had dinner at Chili’s. We got drunk. At some point (not actually at the restaurant), Julie played “Smoke on the Water” on a ukulele. It was awesome.

On Friday, the three of them went scuba diving. I had chickened out. Wayne loved it; Julie and Paul apparently did not. In the afternoon, Wayne wanted to try surfing, so he and I went down to the beach. I sat on a woven grass mat—$1.19 at the ABC Store, you can’t beat it with a stick—and read The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke and people-watched. A surfing instructor named Savage (really) tried to get Wayne to promise to come back and take a lesson Saturday morning, since it was too late (say, 5pm) to really learn that day. Wayne just swam. He was bummed. I did not like the beach in Waikiki as much as at Hapuna. Not even close. I hadn’t been swimming in salt water since Tuesday morning, because my eyes were burning, but I at least walked calf-deep in the Pacific one last time. That evening, Wayne and I ate dinner at Kobe, a Japanese steakhouse. I loved it; he seemed disappointed. But then, he didn’t have the fist-sized, butter-drenched Scallops of Doom that I had. Man, they were good.

On Saturday, they really did go surfing. Wayne came back with blisters and board rash all over his arms and knees. We checked out of the Marriott and stored our bags, then went souvenir shopping. I’m so glad Lisa likes the dress I got her. We reunited with Paul and Julie and the four of us hung out by the pool until it was roughly time to go to the airport. We actually went to the airport much earlier than we needed to, but there wasn’t much else left to do. Julie and Paul were on different flights home than Wayne and me, and theirs was later, so they sat with us until we boarded and said goodbye. It was an overnight flight, and he slept pretty much the whole time. We did watch three or four episodes of the first season of Arrested Development before he gave up. I watched more. I LOVE having three batteries for my computer. Those purchases were LONG overdue. We landed in Minneapolis, and he walked me to the gate for my flight (which was earlier than his) and we said goodbye. I had a window seat in a group of three, and spent the whole flight cursing (a) my stupidity for not peeing at the airport (b) the two people sleeping in the other seats and (c) the seatbelt sign, which was on the whole time. When we landed in Baltimore, I peed (thank you thank you thank you), barely caught the Pre-Flight bus, was driven back to my car, and drove home. I got home around 4pm, went ill-advisedly to sleep, woke up around 1am, tried to make myself tired again, somehow succeeded, and STILL had trouble waking up and going to work at 10.

Then I quit my job. August 12 is my last day.

cat stuff on my cat

20050727-BEANIE.jpg (JPEG Image, 420×339 pixels)

Must visit http://www.stuffonmycat.com

travel blabbermouth

I was upset, I wrote some stuff expressing it, and it helped. I can’t use code names or write it someplace where no one sees it; that doesn’t help. I didn’t intend for everyone to have to stand up and defend themselves and get pissed off at me. I did not have a bad time. I had a good time. Mistakes were made. Big fucking deal. I’d still rather be in Hawaii than at home.

Technorati Tags:

< near