Thursday, July 31, 2008

The list! The list!

I found it in one of the database development books I borrowed from the library eons ago and kept renewing online. If memory serves, while I was unemployed I was reading one of these books, got bored and started the list. Haven't touched the books since but they are due tomorrow so this morning I grabbed them to put in my backpack... and there it was.

It's inspired by this list, but instead of doing a true "bucket list," I decided to do a list of things I want to do before I retire (and if all goes according to plan, I must do one thing per year before retirement, assuming that my retirement happens at age 65 - conservatively or optimistically speaking, depending on your perspective).

So here we go. In no particular order, subject to change at my discretion (as long as anything that's deleted is replaced by something equally or more awesome), and subject to my being able to complete more than one thing per year (which will require adding something else to the list), I bring you my goals for the next 32 years...

1. Learn to surf. March 2010
2. Watch a major surfing competition firsthand. Mavericks would be fun. But I won't be too specific here. (Note: I made this list in the midst of watching several surfing movies.)
3. Go to Antarctica. February/March 2010
4. Rent Pacific Northwest beach front property for a month or longer. Housesitting on Orcas Island counts. February 2016
5. Kayak for a week in Alaska.
6. Visit Krakow. October 2013
7. Buy a house.
8. Swim with great white sharks.
9. Get my scuba diving certification. (Maybe before swimming with great white sharks.)  July 2014
10. Venture into another element and sky dive. August 2009
11. Attend South By Southwest.
12. Drive a stick shift. Er... drive a stick shift well.  August 2013... well enough.
13. Read War & Peace.
14. Sell handmade cards for real, actual money. December 2008
15. Go to a Broadway show in NYC.
16. Visit Macallan World. (Kinda like Disneyworld. But, not at all like Disneyworld.) As of June 2010 Macallan World is closed. Sadness. This item hereby replaced with "Travel around the world for a consecutive year or more." April 2014
17. Learn to fly a plane.
18. Beat my brother at Monopoly. Or any game other than Trivial Pursuit, 90's version, for that matter. January 2011
19. Learn woodworking.
20. Go on an African safari.
21. Learn conversational Spanish.
22. Take an acting or improv class. Spring 2009
23. Read The Fountainhead. November 2008
24. Go back to Ireland.
25. See the pyramids. Not the lame one in Rome, which I've seen... I mean the real pyramids.
26. Hike to the top of Longs Peak.
27. Go to New Zealand. February 2012
28. Hang glide.
29. Drink vodka in Kamchatka.
30. Learn how to swing dance.
31. Get published. In anything, anywhere, by anyone. November 2011
32. Fly a kite. (Really. It looks fun. Never done it successfully.) January 2010

All this is in between saving the world on a daily basis, of course. Which should bring me to age 65, at which point I will make a new list. Since I'm already 6 months late I should probably start reading one of those books and planning 2009. I think 2010 is covered.

So, what's on your "before I retire" list?

Another reason to shun the interweb.

I try not to do too many things at once online. I have this suspicion that somehow Google or Bill Gates knows - and keeps track of - what bills I'm paying, what movies I'm queuing, what fugs I'm gawking at. And if Google knows, surely the government knows. And if Bill Gates knows, I'm screwed. So when paying bills or doing basically anything on the interweb, I make sure I'm logged out of everything else.*

I realize that some companies check you out on MySpace or Facebook during the hiring process. I don't agree with this process (who I am at work has no bearing on who I am at home, now check my references and otherwise mind your own damn business already) but in the interest of not offending my former-high-school-currently-adamant-Christian acquaintances I try to keep my Facebook statuses (stati?) clean.

Once hired, I don't do anything identifying online at work other than check email and Google reader. My personal emails are fairly innocuous and if my current company fires me for catching up on my cheezburgers at lunch, well, then, it probably wasn't going to work out anyway.

Why am I rambling about this? I'll tell you.

I just donated to the "McCain, WTF" campaign because according to the email from Barack Obama in my inbox right now, McCain is "mocking the desire of millions of Americans to step up and take ownership of the political process" and lord knows we can't have that. And also I am going to get really tired of hearing "McCain campaign" on CNN really soon. It RHYMES. That's annoying.

So anything I can do to support the guy I want to win, I'll do.

The site said they are required "by law" to collect employer information on donations over $200. I plan to vote for him but I am growing weary of all the campaign emails flooding my inbox, and also I plan to buy a house someday soon, so my donation was far less than $200. My employer for this purpose was "Ididnot" and my occupation was "donatemorethan$200." Hey Senator Obama, it's called conditionally requiring fields. Look into it.

P.S. And good luck!

________________
* LIKE IT MATTERS. Hi, Congress!

Monday, July 28, 2008

Hey look - a Pacific Northwest tree octopus!

Very interesting article in the NYT yesterday about whether online reading really "counts" as reading. In addition to questioning the truthiness of information on the interweb, it mentions some of the same ADD theories I expressed a few weeks ago, as well as a concept involving interweb proficiency testing alongside print reading comprehension. I never theorized about that. Not sure I agree with it.

Then again, not sure I agree with allowing a high school student who does not plan to move to Quebec or Paris immediately upon graduation, to complete 5.5 years of French instead of the far-more-useful Spanish. (Dumb, dumb, possibly the dumbest choice related to my education that I have ever made.)

Also of interest - the concept of paying kids to learn. CNN has been airing a series of interviews, panel discussions and op-eds of sorts on being black in America. (Opportunistic marketing ploy to gain viewers and/or sway the vote given the current presidential race, or capitalizing on the current presidential race to raise awareness and encourage discussion on a very important topic? Unclear. I put nothing past CNN.)

Anyway, the other day I caught a piece on education where an economist had piloted a controversial program that paid kids to earn good grades. One semester of good grades earned them $250, which some actually said would go in the bank for their college education.

Why is this controversial? I used to get $5 for every A and B in middle and high school. (I seem to recall this being a ploy to get my brother to try to get his grades up. It didn't work out so well. But I got new shoes so I didn't care!)

I don't know. The education system, just like the justice system and the health care system and the welfare system and the [lather rinse repeat] system are fucked. Such is life in a capitalist society. Until morality returns and doing something for the greater good is the core value in this country, these children have lost their village.

Thank God for you young whippersnappers, and the fine folks at MoveOn and Credo and of course the Obama '08 campaign. Barring political emergencies requiring mass protests, I'll send you money, but I've got Dr. Horrible to watch for the nineteen thousandth time.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Slightly late or really early Friday five.

Five excerpts from a recent 50(ish) questions email request from my oldest friend, which do not have to do with what I had for lunch, in numeric order:

2. Diamonds or pearls? Pearls

10. What characteristic do you despise? jealousy

14. Where would you retire to? Ashland, OR is high up on the list, actually...

19. Morning person or a night person? eh... I'm a mid-afternoon person

43. What are you afraid of? tarantulas, guns

There's something I don't know about most of my friends. What are you afraid of? (Not in the death and dying hit by a bus grand scheme of things - I mean the little daily things?)

The medical mystery that is Her Majesty.

First there were the seasonal allergies. What cat gets seasonal allergies, for pete's shakes, you might ask? My cat. Repeatedly. That's what cat.

Next was the FUO, not to be confused with UFOs or FUs. But the truth wasn't out there, and they never did figure out what was going on. No repeat occurrences of that one, thank God.

And now, after a fun bout of projectile-vomiting Friday morning followed by a few days of sporadic eating, general-but-not-overly-worrysome lethargy and rather worrysome trouble jumping up to/down from high places with no other obvious symptoms, the vet thinks it could be either:

- something pancreatic, which the blood test should reveal and which should work itself out sooner or later;

OR (and this one's my favorite of ALL the mystery ailments)

- that she pulled a muscle under her rib during the aforementioned projectile-vomiting session.

I'm totally sure it's the latter. Anything less would not be her style.


Look how innocent she looks after a $200 vet trip and two syringes of pain medicine. Damn cat.

"Hold me close, don't ev-AH let me go-oooo..."

Did anyone else slow dance to Extreme's "More Than Words" in 1991?

Has anyone other than me heard it as recently as this morning on the radio, started to sing along out of nostalgia, realized what it was about and been slightly appalled?

(No? It's just me?)

Forget censoring sex on TV. Let's start with bad pop music and go from there.

"Everything's gonna get lighter, even if it never gets better."

Friday night at the gym I was thinking about how, two years later, this is still true.

You would think that after hundreds of runs and hundreds of miles it would get easier, or at least more tolerable. But no. The first part of the sucking only lasts about 1.5 miles now, and I've significantly increased my mph so that 1.5 miles takes far less time than it did two years ago, so I guess I've got that going for me. But still.

On a related note, I think it's funny that after hundreds of runs and hundreds of miles, I still want to break into the Charlie Brown dance when "Hey Ya" comes on. And then I think about breaking into the Charlie Brown dance and then play the Charlie Brown dance to this song in my head and then I start laughing and then I almost fall off the treadmill. It's a vicious cycle, people.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

"The liver is evil. Must be punished."

Five beers I tasted today at the Oregon Brewer's Festival downtown, in the order I liked them:
I tried to steer clear of Portland brews and Oregon brews in general since I can probably get them almost anytime. But there were too many people, and I love rye bread (which is probably irrelevant), and at the time I don't think I'd ever actually had a rye beer so I hit the Collaborator stand. Turned out to be a good choice and an interesting project (click the link). The Rocket Dog Red Rye IPA was less satisfying.

I wanted to try the Quilter's Irish Death Dark Ale from Iron Horse Brewery (Ellensburg,WA) or the Allagash White Belgian-Style Wheat Beer from Allagash Brewing Co. (Portland,ME) but the line for both was practically out the tent which would've meant a good 30 minute wait. It probably also would've meant a really good beer. Alas. Next year I hope to go with friends, old or new, so that standing in line for 30 minutes amongst 5,000 drunk people won't be absolutely intolerable.

I also deliberately picked one interesting brew I might not otherwise try, hence the Coffee Bender (which was weird, but strangely good, but weird). Yes, it tasted and smelled like coffee. Weird, right?

I was going to head over to the PDX Pop Now music festival afterward, but it was hot, and there was laundry to be done and a sick cat to be kept under observation in case an emergency vet trip was needed. But mostly I found out this morning that I could stream it live instead of actually having to be there. My own beer, my own couch, my own smoke-free air, my own bathroom, no annoying youngster hipsters, same live music which I can turn off whenever I want when bands like this come onto the stage = MAGIC. I {heart} the interweb.

________________
Subject line is from a t-shirt at the festival. Another t-shirt read "Slow and steady wins the race. Except in a real race." Many more I didn't write down. Note to self: find kitschy t-shirt to wear to next year's festival.

One guy actually had a Coors Brewing Co. t-shirt on... I seriously hope he seriously got his ass seriously kicked at some point. Seriously. (I used to live upwind from the CBC - I can say such things.)

"Do as I say and you live."

When we were doing "get to know you" intros at my first big meeting at work a few weeks ago, we were supposed to say something about ourselves that other people might not know. No one knew anything about me so the possibilities were endless. I called upon a few recent hiking experiences (including this one) and decided to say that I liked snakes.

The way people gasped and stared, you would've thought I said I ate fried caterpillars every night, or had a tattoo of Weird Al on my leg, or that I loved Gigli. One girl even looked at me and said "you just gave me goose bumps."

So now, in the interest of more things people don't know about me I'm going to print this baby and hang it on the outside of my cube. It's sure to be a geek magnet, and I can find out who my friends really are.

And then we can go to lunch for some nom nom noming and LOLing.

Belated Friday five.

Five questions I answered this morning on my most recent online dating site adventure, in no particular order...

From the general questions:
"Q: Is there a God?"
A: Yes, and his name is Joss Whedon. (Except that I can't put THAT answer in, I can only choose Yes or No. I chose "No.")

From the signature weapon test:
"Q: Your ideal weapon has a sharp blade, yes?"
"A: Yes, it parts the air with a finely honed edge." (Runner up: "Not unless they make some kind of... sword ... gun." Because that would be funny looking.)

{turns out my ideal signature weapon is a halberd. "Possibly the most versatile polearm ever made, the Halberd is an elegant mix of spear and staff, remaining relatively light while having an effective cutting edge and stabbing point. Your enemies will never get near you; your personal space will be as unreachable as a faraway land." How very goth.}

From the "Which Chess Piece Are You" quiz:
Q: Which would you rather commit:
A: Investing effort in obsolete tradition? ~ OR ~ Trying to change something that can't be improved on? (Good lord, that's a hard one. I still celebrate Christmas, so I guess I'll pick the first one.)

{turns out I'm a "Knight’s City Guard" - in other words, a PAWN. Greeeaaaaat. But it's kinda true: "Pawns are... often forgotten because they are so reliable... loyal and great producers of quality – which end up allowing others to take for granted what the City Guard gives ... can be overworked and suffer from self inflicted headaches... tend to feel a bit harried by supervisory roles... concerned with harmony and traditional behavior... have a few close friends and are extremely loyal... hate confrontation... the diplomat of emotions and needs... society’s most constructive and protective member."}

From the Are You Weird test:
"Q: Do you like cheese?"
A: OK, what kind of question is that, and why does saying "yes oh hell yes yes" make me weird?

{Turns out I am 48% weird. I can live with that.}

From the Dating Persona Test:
"Q: Two people are arrested for stealing. Person A stole to feed his starving family. Person B stole for himself. Should Person A get less jail time?"
A: This one was hard. In the end I chose "no" because of all the inconsistency that's already in the justice system, and to add even more based on circumstantial evidence seemed like a bad idea... with the caveat, "but the money spent on jailing them both would be better spent on our social services system."

{I'm a sonnet, whatever the hell that means.}

And just for fun, the results from the Ultimate Buffy Test: "Damn. Not only have you died twice doing what you do, but no one understands your burden and you find yourself disturbingly attracted to vampires. You are the ultimate repository of what it takes to be the Slayer, and no one can tell you otherwise. If you don't own all seven seasons on DVD {I do}, it's cause they haven't been released in your country yet. I am in total awe of you, and maybe just the tiniest bit creeped out."

And now some of you want to take the Buffy test. I just know it.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Riding on the coattails of the Shoe Fairy interweb viral marketing campaign...

...I bring you dueling banjos, HIMYM stylie, that made this crappy talk show worth watching just for a day.

(I actually saw the original when it aired. On THE MEGAN MULLALY SHOW. Not sure what that says about me.)

Friday five.

Best week ever Friday five, in spite of other events this week, in no particular order:

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

No offense to Estelle Getty's peeps, of course.

So first there was my aunt. Then today I heard some tragic news from a friend and I've been quite shaken all day. (Tip - never open an email with the subject line "bad news" on public transit! Trust me on this one.)

Given my "3's" trend, I really, really hope Estelle Getty is #3.

I think I need to move "meet people" up on my to-do list. In general I'm fine with taking my time getting to know my new town and figuring out what kind of people I'd like to befriend. But I've only really shared these recent events with my new boss, in an attempt to explain my flakiness and/or emotional instability on the days I learned of such events. (She caught me sniffling today at lunch when I was trying to compose any kind of rational thought to my friend in response to the tragedy.) It's times like these I wish I had someone a little bit closer to me, that I could eat ice cream with.

In the meantime, Her Majesty will have to do.

"Try to behave, be happy that they made you a celebrity."

So my favorite Barenaked Lady got arrested for what appears to be snorting coke in his own apartment using a rolled up Canadian dollar (as an extra-special "F-U" to America, I guess), and now my favorite Batman is being charged with assault on his own family members.

My not so favorite Lindsay is gay, Amy Winehouse was surprised to learn she wasn't already dead, Eva Longoria was so desperate for a haircut that she had her husband do it, and Pete Doherty is in the news. AGAIN. (And again, and again.)

Yawn.

What I really want to know: why wasn't I told before now that Bob Geldof's daughter was named Peaches??

On love and berets.

A few favorite quotes from my aforementioned current read:

"People get themselves all steamed up about whether they're in love or not, and can't work it out, and their decisions all go to pot. It's happening every day. They ought to realize that the love part's perfectly easy; the hard part is the working-out, not about love, but about what they're going to do. The difference is that they can get their brains going on that, instead of taking the sound of the word love as a signal for switching them off. They can get somewhere, instead of indulging in a sort of orgy of emotional self-catechising about how you know you're in love, and what love is anyway, and all the rest of it. You don't ask yourself what greengages are, or how you know whether you like them or not, do you?"

And on everyone's favorite head-topper:

"[Bertrand]was wearing a blue beret, which had much the same effect on Dixon as Welch senior's fishing hat. If such headgear was a protection, what was it a protection against? If it wasn't a protection, what was it? What was it for? What was it for?"

My name is Jen(n), and I'm a yuppie.

Yesterday I went to a public meeting about land use planning. It was the first time I'd been to a public meeting that was not about crime. So that was exciting.

As an aside, the meeting was sponsored by a local art school, the same one that sponsored Billy Bragg a few months ago. They currently have an exhibit featuring several architects/designers' views on how the city will look when it is accommodating a million more people than it is now (e.t.a. = soon = YIKES). I learned some interesting things, namely that I really like the approach the mayor-elect has toward city planning. Most of the designers were focused on how to build a neighborhood around a green space, but he suggested the radical idea of talking to neighborhood people and thinking about what those people - and the million new people - will need in 20, 30, 40 years (social services, retirement homes, walkable grocery stores, etc). To be fair I think the assignment for the architects was to build in green space, which is a bit worrysome and which shows you where Portland's mind is today. A million people more is a lot of people... it's time to start thinking outside the box. End of aside.

After the meeting I stopped by Whole Foods. I didn't get charged for my expensive organic spinach, but I didn't complain. I felt a bit out of place amongst the goths and crunchy granolas in my business skirt and button down shirt. Hey, it's laundry week. There's plenty more where that came from.

And then on the way home I read my yuppie book, which I wasn't really enjoying until recently, and halfheartedly listened to two strangers debating the cover article in some yuppie magazine one guy was reading.

To counter all the activities from yesterday, today I will listen to the Dead Milkmen, forget to pay a bill and eat potato chips for lunch. Good times!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

I've got a theory...

I ran across a reference to the world's sexiest Anderson Cooper lookalike (and cat), the other day.

When I had picked myself up off the floor, put my ass back on and stopped laughing, I remembered my theory. I've been watching a lot of AC360 at the gym lately and I'm starting to think that Cooper and Jon Stewart are the same person. This person who dons a different wig and eyebrows, colored contact lenses and a tan (or not, as the case may be).

Think about it. Both are hip and attractive, both are involved in political newscasting, both giggle a lot. I believe both are located in NY.

I didn't see the Daily Show episode where Cooper was allegedly a guest, and now all those videos are suspiciously no longer available... Which just reinforces my own personal theory instead of reinforcing the fact that Comedy Central is owned by Viacom which is a big greedy money grubbing scumsucking corporation. And really, which of the above is more fun to think about?

(They really do look alike. Same smirk, same facial structure. They even have the same head tilt!)

I just had another one of my ba-rilliant ideas.

There ought to be a web site which allows you to type in the speed you run and your average steps or strides/minute (and/or your height), which then spits out a ginormous list of songs that have beats that follow your pace. Even better would be that the web site or product would be compatible with your iTunes, so that it would import or view all your songs and sort them into playlists based on tempo.

For example, the other day I was running at 5.6 mph doing hill work. I learned that "I Predict a Riot" by the Kaiser Chiefs was the exact, perfect song for that particular run. I have learned this particular fact several times now, but having no way to write this down or save it to a list, I tend to forget until it actually comes up again. The fast part of "Last" by Nine Inch Nails is perfect for my quick speed stints at 6.5mph (or is it 6.7 mph... grr, I can't remember... this is why there oughta be...).

This post brought to you by the fact that I run on a treadmill because I can't keep myself on pace if I don't. If there is such a site already, please let me know. (I did a quick search which produced lots of results from people wanting something similar, but no actual site or product that does this.)

If such a thing does not already exist, I smell a business opportunity! Who's in?

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Jen(n) is...

... cutting gym time short in favor of a beer (or three), ice cream and perhaps some real food at some point.

... tired and cranky.

... foregoing her rule of no computer after work.

... thinking about the fine line between a boss who gives great positive feedback and terrible constructive feedback, and a just-plain-bad boss.

... intrigued by the concept of tattoos that are only visible under black lights.

... wondering what infotainment to look forward to after finishing season 4 of the Wire tomorrow night. (Other than season 5, of course, but that won't come until next month.)

... thinking she needs to start remembering that Portland actually has seasons (so it would be wise to enjoy the long hot summer days while they last), and that the farmer's market isn't year-round.

... catching up on quality emails to friends.

... excited about the new Batman movie.

... feeling much better now.

... turning one box off and the other on.

In that order.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Thumbs go borderline.

Last night's ironing movie was 10 Items or Less. I was intrigued by the simple plot and the length of the film (short). I don't know whether to recommend it or not though... The premise that Morgan Freeman was an out-of-work actor got old after a while, but the jokes about the movie he made with Ashley Judd did not. His interactions with Paz Vega were mostly fatherly but bordered on creepy-old-man at times. The highlights were the scenes with Jonah Hill and Freeman, Jim Parsons* and Freeman, and the last five minutes.

So I guess I don't recommend it, but I'm glad I watched it.

And after that lame review, I'm now officially crossing "movie critic" off my list of careers to pursue.

________________
* If you don't watch The Big Bang Theory, you should, just for this guy.

Wednesday three.

Three things I vow to do by September 30, 2008, in no particular order:
  • run a 10K
  • finish all the ideas in the magic book
  • go to the Baghdad Theater and the Laurelhurst Theater
Milestones are good. This will keep me honest and on track, and keeping it as a "list" (see left) rather than a "post" will remind me that I vowed to do these things. That other list will go up as a "list" too... as soon as I find it.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

"Do you need anything dampened? Or made soggy?"

Foregoing the writing this morning because IT'S HERE! Whee.

On a related note, I finally picked up part one of season eight this weekend when I happened upon a comic book store at a street fair. I'm not sure what took me so long. It's quite brilliant.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Overheard on the bus.

A girl on her cell phone: "You know who's pregnant? [pause for the other person to respond] Julie. You know what I said to her? [pause] "I said, you know what I think, [insert blah blah blah about what she thought about Julie's pregnancy]." [pause] You know who just got out of jail? [pause] Jeremy. [pause] You know where I'm having my birthday party? [pause] You know what I'm going to have? [pause] A Long Island iced tea..." Lather, rinse, repeat for about 10 minutes. I'm not sure if I was happy that "OMG!" was not her style, or if I was longing for an "OMG!" now and then. Perhaps her friend on the other end of the line filled that role.

A youngish guy on the same bus asked me if I had a cell phone. I said yes thinking he might need the time, and being so young he might not know that there are these things called watches that also give the time. He asked to borrow it because his phone was dead. I fumbled through some lie about having to pay for minutes because it's an emergency-only phone, while secretly praying no one called me until he and I parted ways, and he politely said "OK, thanks anyway" and went back to watching the street signs for his stop.

At first I felt bad because maybe he really did need my phone. Maybe he was going to call his mom and not his drug lord as I suspected. Maybe I've watched too much Wire and have gotten a bit paranoid. But the hell if I'm lending some stranger my phone. It could end up tapped and I could be trailed by the Portland police or worse, the F.B.I.

Because, you know, all MY calls are to and from drug lords, and I'd hate to give up my newfound comfortable apartment for a jail cell.

But when he got off the bus in front of a motel and walked toward it I felt justified turning him down. The girl also departed, and all was right with my world again. Until I almost got hit by a car and cursed the driver out. That was fun. Bloody Portland drivers.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Friday five of sorts.

I'm still a little off from the recent news about my aunt. It's upsetting for sure, but it's doubly upsetting to know that one day, probably in the next 5-10 years, I'll be the one getting the call my cousin got. And I also can't imagine waking up one day to find that the person you've spent 40+ years of your life with has passed away. I had a hard enough time when Riley died. I can't imagine dealing with a real person situation like that. (Why I'm still single, exhibit #497?)

Anyway. Five things you might not know about Maryland, my home state, in no particular order:
  • It's north of Virginia and next to/north of DC. Not next to North Carolina, not west of Virginia (that would be West Virginia), not underneath Georgia.
  • It shares latitude with Northern California (somewhere around Redding from the looks of the map) whereas Portland shares latitude with Maine. This explains why it's still light at 9:30pm in the summer evenings here versus 8pm in those other spots. It doesn't make it OK that it's still light at 9:30pm here, but that's another story altogether.
  • Baltimore is the most populated city in Maryland but it is not the only city in Maryland. There's the state capitol, Annapolis. Fans of The Wire might have also noticed several other Maryland cities McNulty ticked off along I-95 in season 3 (Laurel was one - I've spent lots of time in Laurel). And there are even more cities than those! Hard to imagine, I know.
  • According to August 2007 census data, Maryland is now the wealthiest state in the United States. (I did not know that!)
  • In 1790 Maryland rounded up all the lawyers in the state and threw them into a fetid swamp near the southern border of the state, now known as Washington, D.C. (I stole that from someone's blog which contains other sentiments I don't agree with - so I won't take credit for it, but I won't give him credit for it either.)
This week's boring Friday five brought to you by... oh, I don't know, the person earlier this week who said "oh, you're from Maryland? you should talk to so-and-so! He's from Baltimore!" but upon further inquiry with so-and-so it turns out he's not from anywhere near Baltimore, and seemed just as dismayed as I was that everyone assumes everyone from Maryland is from Baltimore. And by everyone who's ever asked me why I don't have a southern accent.

Next week's geography lesson: why Portland and Seattle are actually not the same place, despite the fact that they're both in the Pacific Northwest. Brought to you by everyone who's asked me, "so, how's Seattle?"

Thursday, July 10, 2008

So long, and thanks for all the jello marshmallow salad. (Really.)

Foregoing the writing this morning because Mom called this morning to let me know that my aunt (mentioned here) passed away.

Getting older sucks.

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Kindred souls.

Remember this post, from a day ago? I know it's been a while and your brain has filled up with celebrity gossip and LOLcats, but think back...

And now check this out.

Is it me, or is he reading my blog and stealing my ideas? Hey Mark, how 'bout a cut? Hook a sister up!

Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most.

Today's post was going to be about something I'd been working on a few weeks ago while I was lounging on the couch at 2pm on a Tuesday. (Memories, misty water-colored memories...). Anyway I'm still working on it - it's a really cool list that I'll share soon - but right now I can't find it. So instead, I'll share idea #2 from the magic book. "Fess up - what do you fail at?"

I'm sure it will be part one of many posts on the topic.

First and foremost, I am notorious for putting something in a logical place, firmly believing I will know exactly where I put the thing when I look for it in a month because the place I put it was just that logical... and never being able to find it again. Case in point: really cool list. (No, it's not in the magic book. I looked. That might've even been too logical for me.)

I am also really good at not seeing things right in front of my face when I'm looking for them. When I was unpacking and setting up my desk, I ran across a folder of scrap paper that I wedged right between my monitor and speaker, figuring there was no way I would forget where I put that when it was right in front of me every day. No way! What a handy spot- reach up and there's scrap paper. A week later I rummaged through every single remaining box, drawer, file cabinet, etc looking for this folder of scrap paper with no luck. It took me about three days to to realize it was RIGHT IN FRONT OF ME.

Others...

... if I don't get something right away, and/or if I have to work really hard at something to feel like I'm any good at it, I give up. It started with clarinet in 5th grade and continued over the years with guitar, pottery, knitting, painting, calculus, Spanish. The list goes on. Which leads to...

... I don't have a lot of patience. For much of anything, really.

... I think I overuse the comma. I'd like some input on this one. I might be overthinking it. Or I might be overusing the comma.

And this isn't really about failing, but it is concerning. I am turning into my mother. My mother who grew up in the depression and still refuses to waste a speck of food. I haven't gotten to the point where I spent 10 minutes scraping the peanut butter jar down to its bare bones, but I do add a few tablespoons of water to the pasta jar to eke out any remaining sauce, and I have been putting things in ziplocks that probably do not need a second layer of protection against air and other elements, and last year I did reprimand one of my former staff for not closing a bag of crackers securely with the clip I'd provided (she just kinda balled up the top of the bag and left it there - the horror!).

But the day I turn into my father and do something like this...

... just go ahead and shoot me. And then GET OFF MY LAWN!

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

"... it's that willingness to slow down and examine the mysterious bits of fluff in our lives that is the poet's interest."

Since I started working again I haven't been too inspired to write. I also feel like I have no time whatsoever outside of work. It constantly amazes me that a weekend is only two days (and I've only had two four-day work weeks so far... this week is gonna be rough). Seriously, two days? Why haven't we the people revolted against this yet? On top of all that, I find myself multi-tasking to the point where I can't concentrate on any single thing when I am trying to get stuff done outside of work. So I'm trying a few things to help myself slooooooow dowwwwwwwwn.

One, I'm sticking with my routine of getting up at 6am and having a good hour of quiet time with thoughts, coffee and keyboard. The idea was that I might be more inspired to write when I was fresh from sleep, while the birds were singing and no one in my entire neighborhood seemed to be awake. So far I haven't written much - all I've managed to do is catch up on email and word game challenges, but I think the word game addiction early in the morning is helping to jump start my brain for the day's required allotment of thinking. So I've got that going for me.

Two, I'm limiting the time I spent online at night. In fact I'm trying to cut it out altogether, cold turkey. I usually have the TV on in the background simultaneously which doesn't do a thing for my newly realized adult-onset ADD (which is not actually ADD but a product of our "gotta do more be more ALL THE TIME" culture - you have it too, now stop checking your email or Google reader updates while you're reading this). So I've decided to try to focus on one thing at a time in general, starting with this small (but oh-so-ginormous) step. Unless I'm working on that contract project, I'm going to see how long I can stand being offline in the evenings. I suspect I will read a lot more, which is something I've wanted to get back into anyway... Or at the very least I'll get that contract project done faster.

(I considered trying the Morning Pages concept, which some friends have somewhat successfully employed, but 3 pages of longhand first thing in the morning? Please. It would be a miracle if I could actually read what I wrote later the same day.)

Finally, I'm going to get through all the ideas in the magic book by the end of September. I think I've conquered about 7 of the 100 concepts, so that seems reasonable. They're mostly snips which should be easy to write without requiring too much second-guessing and editing, as most of my other posts do these days.

Since I started this daily routine I've also been amazed at how quickly an hour goes by. Time is flying, whether you're having fun or not. See that yellow light ahead? Take the cue...

________________
Subject line brought to you by the poet Billy Collins. Or the poet William Collins. Time's up so I can't figure out which one.

Sunday, July 06, 2008

One small step forward for Viacom...

... one giant step backward for humanity, technology, creativity, investigative infotainment research, privacy, freedom... The list goes on and on.

I can't add anything that the comments don't already express. But I will anyway: WHAT AN UTTER WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY, VIACOM. You think people watch Jon Stewart for the commercials? People Tivo Jon Stewart, you morons. And they wait until a movie comes out on Netflix rather than sitting through nineteen commercials IN A MOVIE THEATER. Whether they watch the Tivo version or the Netflix version or the clip on YouTube makes no difference to your wallet. Just keep putting out that Hannah Montana and High School Musical crap and you'll be fine.

NOW SUCK IT.

Just because you're paranoid don't mean they're not after you.

I can't think of anything more boring than ironing. To that end, I try to keep a random movie in the queue that will automagically appear every few weeks when I know I'll have a good pile of ironing stacked up. Today's ironing movie was Bug.

One pair of ironed pants later, I couldn't remember why I thought this might be an interesting movie. It was awfully slow, and Ashley Judd isn't exactly high up on my "must see" list.

Three pairs of pants later - oh yeah, Harry Connick, Jr. {Heart.}

Five pairs of pants later, it just got strange. I really didn't know whether to laugh or cringe, or both. I thought I remembered it being about a government conspiracy, but then it started to remind me of Eraserhead so out of curiousity I re-read the DVD cover. Oh yeah, it was directed by William Friedkin, who brought you such fine films as The Exorcist and The French Connection. And it won an award at Cannes. And it really was about bugs.

Last pair of pants and oh dear lord REALLY? He went there? And then he took it there? And then... YIKES. I couldn't help but put the iron down and stare. And then it was over so I went to the special features while I finished my shirts, hoping to make some sense of any of what I'd just witnessed - which was brilliantly acted but absolutely insane.

No such luck. Mostly Friedkin just lamented about filmmaking in his day, when they actually used film, and had to block scenes based on when the director would call "cut," not based on how many camera angles they could work at once, and how they had to carry heavy 35mm cameras barefoot for ten miles in three feet of snow (uphill both ways, of course).

But they finally got to interviewing the actors, and the actors talked about the challenges and benefits of working in such a small confined set. I realized that in addition to the brilliant acting, the cinematography of this bizarre little movie was actually quite brilliant as well.

So... Do what you will with this information. But sleep tight tonight - don't let the bed bugs bite. MWAHAHAHAHAHA.

Morgan pulled a Samuel!

I caught a matinée of Office Fight Matrix Space Club today. Except for about 10 minutes near the middle (yawn) and that part with the train (I'm pretty sure that's exactly what they teach you not to do in train conductor school), it was a fun movie. Which is all I think it was supposed to be. Which is why it earned 4 stars from me on Flixter.

However. If this hadn't been directed by the man who brought you Night Watch and Day Watch (SEE THEM) I probably wouldn't have bothered. True, it's based on a comic book series - but the series came out after the aforementioned FTW flicks, and it really is a compilation of all of them. True, it had James McAvoy - but that certainly didn't make me see Atonement. True, it had lots of cool stunts and special effects - but at one point I seriously wondered if I was watching 2 Fast 2 Furious (crafted by the same screenwriters, shockingly) by mistake, and I also noticed a lot of discrepancies and inconsistencies from scene to scene (watch the nose scar - IMDB "goofs" editors? CALL ME!).

So yeah, mindless fun that could've been had elsewhere for free. But ten seconds near the end featuring one line uttered by Morgan Freeman were worth every penny of my $7...

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Jen(n) is not recommending drunk Facebooking.

OK, not really drunk. Just two beers in me and very little food since about 3pm, that's all. (I'm getting close on the database! And it's only day two of a three day weekend! These both called for a celebration of sorts.)

But still. Not recommended. NOT AT ALL.

Also not recommended? Drunk OKCupiding.

Dear lord...

Friday, July 04, 2008

Friday five.

(Today's Friday five is dedicated to the folks at Apple.)

Dear iPod/iTunes developers,
I'd like to request a couple features of you. They seem like no-brainers to me, though I really don't know what it is that you all do, exactly, so bear with me.

1. Please add the ability to listen to radio stations through the iPod, just like one can stream radio stations through iTunes. (OK, that one might be a big request.)

2. You know how iTunes shows how many songs and how many hours/days of music there are on any given playlist? (Like, I have 17 days of music in the main area of iTunes right now, my "roadtrip" playlist has 15 hours of music, etc.?) How about adding that for just the checked songs, so I know how many hours/days of music I've checked to know if I have enough space to auto-sync my iPod? I hate, hate, HATE having to do it manually. And I want the ability to hear all songs through iTunes, but just the ones I've checked on my iPod. And I'm royally lazy about all of this. So just make it simple, k?

3. Make a battery that actually lasts a long time, both in hours of play and in years of life. Please? My fully-charged five-year-old iPod shouldn't die after two hours of continuous play (not even switching around menus or forwarding through all shuffles, which I understand take more power than continuous play).

4. When I do fully charge the thing, remember that I want text in English, that I had the shuffle set to "on" and that I want the time in the title. Must I reset that every single time the battery dies and I recharge? Don't you know how royally lazy I am about all this?

5. These things? They SUCK. (OK... that's not really a request, just an observation.)

All that said, good job on the construction of the thing. I've dropped mine at least 60 times onto the cold hard concrete, and it's still ticking. Perhaps you've already implemented all this stuff in newer versions. I wouldn't know - not only am I lazy, I'm also one of the cheapest iPod fans you will ever meet.

Thanks for your time,
Jen(n)

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Pre-Friday five.

Five new and improved questions I am growing weary of answering, in response to the aforementioned five questions I grew weary of answering before I moved, and their answers, in no particular order:
  • How's the new place? As far as apartments go, it's almost perfect. It's just the right size, just the right price, on a quiet street, and although I'm on the ground floor and people seem to live above me, I never, ever hear them. Or anyone, really. I'm really close to all kinds of public transit and within walking distance of dozens of restaurants, shops, neighborhood parks and movie theaters. (And Peets! Critical.)

  • How's the new job? Eight days into it, everyone is really nice, and the organization is doing good things. My actual job should be easy and interesting, and there's plenty of room to move over or up within the company. That said, there's definitely some crazy hierarchy shit that I'm hoping to either change or ignore (e.g. all communications with X go through Y and Y only, and Y just ends up forwarding requests to us and then funneling it back to X, so it seems pretty stupid). I'm a bit scared of how fast the company is growing and it's been strange being a recent hire, seeing all the emails about new job postings, and hearing all the long-timers sigh and harken back to the good ol' days when they were a small company. (I've been in their position a lot, but never in this one before.) All THAT said, people seem to recognize that chaos is imminent if the proper steps aren't taken, and already I've heard about numerous communication efforts that have been established, so that gives me hope... But it's only been eight days. Ask me again in December.

  • Have you met anyone yet? Other than people at work, not really. Well, kind of. I met a guy through salon.com personals but that didn't go anywhere, and then I got busy with contract work and real work and consciously put off new-friend-seeking until after my contract project is done. (Because seriously, if I don't finish that soon I'm going to kill myself. Or at least fake my own death.) This week I signed up for a hiking listserv, and I got a tip on another singles web site I might look into, but let's be honest here - I'm not going to be social until I get through the last episode of Season 5 of The Wire anyway (circa September), so I'm not too concerned about it. In the meantime I can practice my rusty social skills on folks at work.

  • How's Her Majesty adjusting? Other than needing to be fired by Pavlov, she's just fine. She loves the sound her voice makes against the bare walls and wood floor (especially at 5:30am!). It's been amusing to watch her find new favorite spots to lounge among the same furniture from the old apartment - the chair she used to love hasn't been touched in months. She's gotten used to the constant banging of the recycling/trash bin doors outside the living room windows, which used to make her run screaming from the room, and the recent bout of thunderstorms has only caused mild concern. If only the neighborhood cat would stop popping up in the kitchen window while she's eating...

  • (And the biggie.) So, are you happy? I think so. Everyone else seems to think so - apparently I sound happy, I look happy. I will say that I definitely feel healthier mentally and physically. Leaving the last job certainly helped in that sense, but I think the entirely fresh start has allowed me to let go of parts of me I didn't like so much in my previous life (namely a lot of guilt about leaving the last job along with associated baggage), and restart parts of me I liked a lot (namely the running part of me, but also the "reading for fun" part of me and the "learning is fun" part of me). In some ways I still feel like a tourist and in other ways I feel like I've been here forever... So for now I'm trying to find a balance between the two - remind myself it's only been two months and take some of the pressure off finding my new niche of NW friends, but also remind myself of the wise words of Pooh: "You can't stay in your corner of the Forest waiting for others to come to you. You have to go to them sometimes."
So that's the update for now. I really don't mind answering questions - this was just churning in the back of my mind for a while, and someone (YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE) nudged me into actually writing it all down...

Happy annual Will Smith premiere weekend. Enjoy a hot dog and some smokeless fireworks in his honor!