Entries categorized "Life and the Human Condition"

06 April 2008

Nesting

Not quite the type of nesting my sister is doing for sure, but since being felled by pneumonia I've created a nest for myself on the couch in the living room. Within a 3 foot radius are the following:

  • A tank of oxygen, just in case
  • A box of tissues
  • Every remote control known to man
  • Two empty glasses, each of which once contained ginger ale
  • My digital camera
  • A heating pad that also vibrates
  • A down comforter
  • Three blankets
  • A thermometer
  • The stuffed tiger my sister got me when I was in the ICU
  • One pillow from the bed
  • My DS Lite
  • Get well cards from the Cedrones and the Belangers
  • My discharge info from the hospital
  • Jess's wedding invitation
  • My machine, on which I am spending TOO MUCH TIME booking flights to Pittsburgh, looking at www.nau.com, and reading blogs
  • A copy of The Smithsonian Magazine
  • Thank you notes waiting to be written to all the kind people who sent their best wishes to me over the last two weeks

Why get up? My only wish was that turning on the WII or the PS2 didn't involve getting up and bending over, which makes me very dizzy.

05 April 2008

Perspective

Before this illness rececdes into that murky fog of memory there were a few things I wanted to jot down before I forget them that I also thought you might find amusing or interesting.

During my hospital stay, especially the first three nights, I was incredibly sick. My kidneys had started to shut down, I was very dehydrated and had a very hard time breathing. I also hadn't slept more than three hours in four days. I wish I could say I was exaggerating, but I don't think I am. Every time I would doze off I would wake myself up coughing. Repeat every 30 minutes, and you end up a little delirious. By the time I was in the hospital I was out of my gourd. Mind you I was still quite lucid, but the hallucinations! My god, I had no idea they could be THAT real. In the room there was an observation window which was covered with a curtain with some sort of tapestry pattern on it. I spent hours during the night watching the pattern of the curtain flip in and out, sort of like an advent calendar, watching characters out of Hieronymous Bosch paintings look to me, wave hello, and morph into something else. It was fascinating yet quite disturbing as the characters became more grotesque and more evil as my stay wore on.

The second night I was there I asked for something to help me sleep; between the full re-breather mask and vitals being checked every 2 hours I was hardly sleeping at all. They offered me some Ativan and I took it, and rather than make me more sleepy it made me hallucinate even MORE. The turning point came when I was describing to Steve and the nurse, quite calmly, how in the reflection of the window there was the three of us, the hospital bed, and then two children right behind the nurse. A boy, about age 4, from the early 20th century perhaps, wearing a tweed hat, white shirt, knickers, and his sister, just behind him, both of them talking to each other (although I couldn't hear them) and looking directly at me, smiling and waving. When I looked back to the nurse and to Steve their eyes were are big as saucers. I told them that wasn't the HALF of the stuff I'd been seeing over the last few nights. I'm not sure if they administered something to either make me go to sleep or what, but after that I think I blacked out, and as my hydration returned to normal and my kidneys kicked in, the room wasn't quite as terrifying as it had been those first two nights.

What was absolutely amazing to me was how REAL the hallucinations were, and how LUCID I felt looking at them. I was clearly conscious, I was oriented for almost the entire time (at the end I had trouble telling people where I was or what day it was), and it was just a fact that I was seeing all this STUFF, all these people looking in and out of that window, peeking from behind that curitain, standing off in the corner. It was was, similar to how we assume that London exists even though we might not have been there ourselves.

Reality is so incredibly tenuous, tied so closely to a couple million cells packed into our cranium that only shares the same reality as all the other craniums in the world because biology makes it so. Mess that up and reality becomes a whole different matter. What is real? What we see? What we measure? What we believe? In those 48 hours reality was kids coming to visit, old guys with evil smiles and long fingers passing in and out of that curtain, medieval peasants walking to and fro across the window, and that brother and sister, stopping by to say hi.

03 April 2008

I'm Not Dead Yet...

I had these grandiose ideas of publishing links the week after BAW to highlight your magnificent brain (and okay, nervous system too) and all the amazing things it does.

And then I was going to wrap things up, head on a plane, go to San Francisco, tour the Six Apart offices, meet one of Steve's good friends, meet WhitneyB in the flesh for the first time ever, eat alot of sushi, enjoy some sunshine possibly, and wear some new threads I bought exclusively for the excessively hip SanFran fashioni.st scene.

What did I do instead?

Continue reading "I'm Not Dead Yet..." »

17 March 2008

Which do you choose?

Enjoy this amazing talk from TED from Jill Bolte Taylor, a neuroanatomist who describes her experiences when she suffers a hemmorage and how it changed her.

And quite frankly, it has changed me, and what it means to be treating adults with aphasia.

I missed Brain Awareness Week, having mistakenly thought it was THIS week. But rather than wait another 51 weeks to celebrate it again, I'll push it on into this week and feature a new brainy post each day for your amusement (or consternation :).

Update: Video link fixed.

01 February 2008

Credit Given When Due: Brooklyn

Picture 50R Redone

I am very young, I am not sure if my brother has been born yet, although perhaps he has been. We walk down the mean, gray city street so different from the sidewalk-less rural scene I am used to. My father instills in me a hyper-vigilance in the city that to this day I cannot shake. We walk the block to the only city playground I have ever seen where everything is asphalt and tar and not a lick of green grass is to be seen. He helps me balance on the see-saw, right in the middle and without holding his hand, as a prerequisite to riding the subway.

31 January 2008

An Invite for Dinner

A fun game to play with your well-to-do friends on the third bottle of wine is the "What Famous Person Dead or Alive Would You Invite To Dinner" guessing game, wherein all the participants talk about what erudite dinner guests one would invite to talk to US, er, YOU, the layman. I could never really commit to anyone with any great conviction. There were the usual suspects such as Newton, Hitler, George Washington that would inevitably be brought up. My choices usually included a common medieval woman, Niels Bohr, and Abigail Adams. As for modern famous people... meh. For me they're all too recent to really want me to explore MORE about what things were 'really like' for the most part. It wasn't until tonight that I realized I was overlooking the most brilliant and obvious choice! Jon Stewart. Can you imagine a dinner with all those diners? What would one serve!?

06 January 2008

It's all in the timing

Nothing like getting sick on Friday, being miserable all weekend, to feel better just in time for the work week.

11 September 2007

Crossing Guard at the River Styx

In the New England Journal of Medicine Dr. Dosa recounts the uncanny ability of Oscar the Cat to see the dying from one realm to the next.  It brought some tears to my eyes and wonder to my heart that a cat could so reliably predict death and give the dying a comforting last few moments on earth. Seems rather Ancient Egyptian, doesn't it?  Link: NEJM -- A Day in the Life of Oscar the Cat.

05 September 2007

What do you mean I have to go in AGAIN?

Workinggirl Hi. Yeah. I started the new job. I'm busy right now between that and wrapping up some freelance work. And I have a bazillion photos from 10 days at the Cape and various levels of extended boyfriend family to sort through and post. And I'm trying really hard to with-hold judgment on al ot of things until I have some more time to settle in (if, indeed, I should be judging at all). And the office I work at is in the middle of a huge upheaval, which makes it interesting to try and find my way. Although, that might not be bad.

Updates when I have a little time to breathe.

In the meantime, I'd love to hear your great work stories. Have a horrendous first day at your first job? A funny story about that guy at the water cooler you snogged at the company party? Post them (anonymously, if you must!) in the comments! Let's make each other laugh.

30 August 2007

Picture Perfect Day

A stab at summing it up:
Sleep in, eggs & bacon & coffee & paper, swimming, sailing, swimming, lobster dinner, ice cream, 2 episodes of BSG, cool dry night to sleep.

22 July 2007

Photoshop Of Horrors: Here's Our Winner! 'Redbook' Shatters Our 'Faith' In Well, Not Publishing, But Maybe God - Jezebel

Jezebel continues to uncover the CoverPhoto Lie that is thrust upon the public while we're waiting in line to pay for our Dexatrim: Photoshop Of Horrors: 'Redbook' Shatters Our 'Faith' In Well, Not Publishing, But Maybe God - Jezebel.

10 July 2007

Ratatouille: Mirror of the soul?

The Amateur Gourmet recently posted an essay titled, "Ratatouille" & Jewish Assimilation (an essay, with spoilers). Jason Kottke, possibly influenced by Megnut, had an interesting take on the movie as well. I'm sure there are many others that I haven't come across. While some see the AG's interptretation far fetched and others find it dead on, I'm not terribly concerned with whether he is "right".

Interestingly, I find his take on the movie as further evidence that the story was successfully written. I've been thinking about the story quite a bit lately, how there are many things to see, learn, and hear and that one viewing isn't really enough. He sees it as an allegory for Jewish assimilation, which is to be expected perhaps because being Jewish is at the forefront of his mind. Jason, on the other hand, saw it as a commentary for bloggers and critics, which can be expected as blogging and food criticism is at the forefront of his wife's mind, and so surely has been brought up in their house. And to me, I saw the ending as a brush-off of Collette, a further minimizing of her important leap of faith and prior contributions to both Remy and Linguini's success in favor of a tidy ending for the movie. Why not show Collette as finally in charge of the kitchen, finally getting the respect she deserves? And that's probably because I've been thinking a lot about feminism lately.

The point I'm making is simply that there are many stories to be found in this movie and the fact that people find their own meaning suggests that the story was well written. All the opinions, takes, and lessons people glean from the movie are inevitably drawn from their own personal experiences. What you think about those opinions, however, is another matter entirely.

As an aside, AG asks:

(Is it a coincidence that the scurrying rats in "Ratatouille" look a lot like those in Hitler's propaganda films? And, for that matter, why does Django have a hooked nose?)
I'm guessing that perhaps Hitler's propaganda films looked like rats scurrying, rather than rats scurrying looking like Nazi propaganda. Chicken, egg and all that. Also, the fact that Remy's dad has a big hooked nose doesn't really hit me one way or another because I know lots of people who have big hooked noses who aren't necessarily Jewish, (yours truly included) and because as most people get older their noses get bigger, so to show 'age' between rats, a larger nose and a larger body size would also denote age.

09 July 2007

Reminder

For the love of Pete, go down to the pond and swim as often as possible. When not terribly crowded, it's such a delight.

30 June 2007

Not Sally Homemaker

I have a very limited supply of housekeeping/homemaking in me before I have to do something else, like play video games, or going out, or reading a book. Cooking, surprisingly, does not fall into this category. And I think I've spent nearly a year's worth of homemaking in the last two weeks. It's becomingly increasingly challenging to muster up more of that homemaking drive to get things finished. Urrgh.

11 June 2007

Quick Update

It's been busy around here. Why? I've been:

  • Going to Boston for dim-sum, photos forthcoming.
  • Watching thousands of fireflies over a local field. Spectacular sight!
  • Moving.
  • Trying to track down a professor.
  • Getting started on a paper for journals.
  • Looking for jobs.
  • Going on interviews.
  • Growing some basil
  • Worrying about the baby chipmunk I saw two weeks ago who has been MIA. Thankfully, spotted him today. Yay!
  • Getting my butt whipped in training.
  • Watching Bubba Ho-Tep.

So, you know, I'll be around soon enough.

07 June 2007

New Year's Resolutions

Apparently 2007 is the year of "Really hurt yourself while doing something really stupid". Mind you, I've taken up karate, you know, that system of self-defense that involved eventually learning how to KILL someone and not one injury I have had to date that causes significant pain can be traced to that particular activity. To sum up:

  • February: Falling down flight of wooden stairs in socks, resulting in broken pinky toe.
  • June: Hitting back of right hand on sharp corner of chair, resulting in radiating pain through hand (particularly the middle two fingers), swelling, and general malaise regaring said injury.

We'll see what pretty colors THIS turns. Already typing, turning hand over, and bending hand at wrist is becoming painful. Can't wait to see what happens next!

Apprently, I'm leapfrogging from 30 to 80 this year.

04 June 2007

Danny DeVito Says Yes to Yessica!

You've got a friend like this. The one you talk to twice, maybe three times a year, and every time it's as if no time has passed between college graduation and now. It may technically be 9 months, but really, it's been 9 minutes between the last time you talked to her. What is it about undergraduate education that binds people together? Perhaps the living situation, or the insanity of campus life, or the need for Taco Bell and Dr. Mario that must be satisfied provides that lasting bond that tends to survive life's great accomplishments and travesties. In any case, I'm always thrilled to get a call from Jess and we always have a great conversation catching each other up on our lives (moving, schools, jobs), the lives of others (Gar, Candy, Travis, Mandy, Brian, etc.) and it's almost always around a big event involving either of us or those we know (Travis is moving! Bri got engaged! Gar is going back to MIT!) And often, such announcements are accompanied by a squeal, and I'm not ashamed to confess that when I heard the news, I squeaked like an 8th grader meeting Dawson. Congratulations on getting engaged, Jess!!

09 May 2007

Freakonomics - Baby Boomers - Aging - Middle Age - Economics - New York Times

I wish I was way more alert and awake to take on this article than I am at 9:35pm.  I only just half heartedly read it in a post-training stupor and can't quite muster the energy to detail all the reasons why I think this article is such crap (for example, only enlisting economists to comment on why people cook for themselves...), but perhaps some of you out there would like a shot at it.  Take a gander: Freakonomics: Laid Back Labor- New York Times.

28 April 2007

Disgusted Beyond Belief: My Views on Abortion

A first hand exerpience with an abortion, from the father:   Disgusted Beyond Belief: My Views on Abortion.

21 April 2007

BlogHer takes on the SCOTUS

There is a touching, personal story over at BlogHer regarding The Supreme Court Abortion Decision.  Whatever your position on the matter, you can't deny that Ronni's personal story from the times before legalized abortion is harrowing.

21 March 2007

Happy Birthday Sam

Death from BelowA very happy 0th birthday to little Sam, born this morning just before 1am! Congrats to Tim, Mary, Macy, and yes, even little Grover.

20 February 2007

Happy Birthday Little Brother!


05-22-05_1246
Originally uploaded by absquatulate.

A big fat embarassing Huzzah to my little bro, for turning 25 today!

(I never really was for 'bumsy', by the way. Just so you know. :)

19 February 2007

Head, Shoulders, Knees and TOES

Candy, darling, this post is about feet. Just for you this post is split into a safe, no feet picture intro, and a feet pictured extended remix below. So unless you, gentle reader, don't mind pictures of a foot and a baby toe in dear need of a pedicure and a doctor please click on through.

Continue reading "Head, Shoulders, Knees and TOES" »

25 January 2007

Sometimes You Just Need a Shot to the Head in de_dust

Csdead

So today was my last day at my practicum at the preschool. I am already stressed by school next week and I wasn't feeling well and was in an overall blah mood. Even though it was sunny and even though I got one of the warmest send-offs a student could hope for. But it was a downer to know that this was the end of this placement and that the end of my three year educational trip is just about done. Somehow that whole idea freaked me out; what I've worked so hard for is just within reach and something that seemed like such a pipe dream all of a sudden is HERE, like, HI, I'm you're future moving in, mind if I rifle through the fridge, because you and me? We're in it for the long haul. (provided I pass my boards.)

So with a blue heart I fiddled around online for a bit, feeling all morose that little kids won't be wiping boggers on me and I got a random ping from James T. on chat and it completely brightened my day. Just carousing about Counter Strike (and why I can't play right now [no machine that runs it]), talking about a recent ski trip, and the other randoms of life. It was a nice change. And he's convinced me to get online next week and be target practice for the gang. Thanks James T.! See you next week, Remo.

Luv, Bif

20 December 2006

Truth and Logic: Kindergarten Re-imagined

McSweeny's has a great short essay on a short imagined monologue by Richard Dawkins to a kindergarten class regarding the plausibility of Santa Claus.

19 December 2006

+2 for caffeine

Even though the exam was a throw-up-your-hands affair and I still have one more exam to go, the fact that the lady at the coffee hut gave me a free shot of espresso in my latte this am means that I get +2 to all abilities today (until the effect wears off, upon which I get -2 to all abilities).

08 December 2006

A list of thoughts that have no relationship except that they came from my head

  • After talking with Nerissa I realized that I DO have a hobby: cooking. I just don't do it often enough. Thankfully tonight I have homemade pizza from lunch to enjoy and a pot of carrot-ginger soup on the stove simmering.
  • Dreamweaver isn't half bad.
  • I cannot believe it'll be 2007 in less than a month.
  • AAAAAH I can't take it anymore. Everywhere I looked today I saw Rachel Ray (I won't even give her the Google benefit by linking to her). I went into several stores and the only one I didn't see her mug in was Old Navy (but I bet that's in the works). She has her own line of everything, is endorsing everything (Ritz Crackers? Come on), is talk showing everything, and is irritating everything. Look out Emeril, you've got competition.
  • Boy it sure is cold. [How cold is it?] Well, it's so cold that my cat, after begging to go outside, runs out onto the walk, does a 180, and darts back inside. That is how cold it is.
  • If you are a person who may reasonably expect a Christmas gift or a card from me... Um, don't hold your breath. Sorry. I'm a horrible multitasker when it comes to stuff like Life or School. It's one or the other for me during the semester; I'm can't seem to do both. So apologies in advance for cards arriving on the 28th this year (hey, it's the thought that counts right?)
  • TV is evil.
  • Civilization IV should be evil, but in truth it so so so isn't. Next on my list: how to wage war.
  • Dansko's Pro line is the Dansko shoe I have been looking for. Other models have given me horrible blisters and aren't really THAT comfortable, but the Professional Clogs.... OMG. I love them. I have outrageously flat feet (said the guy at the running shoe store, "Woah") and these provide great support for my feet without making them feel really tired. They are perfect for shopping, chasing preschoolers down the hall, and just about everything short of hiking or jogging.

25 September 2006

Bad Idea/Good Idea

Bad Idea: Drinking a half-caff iced coffee at 4pm after a mind-bending second day as a speech student at a preschool program knowing you'll be wired come 10pm.
Good idea: Drinking a half-caff iced coffee at 4pm before a 2.5 hour long lecture.

Bad Idea: Feeding my adorable cat roasted turkey cold-cuts from my plate.
Good Idea: Unconditional love, even if it's for processed turkey flesh.

Bad Idea: Quitting my insanely well-paying job to go back to school to, ultimately, take a 30% paycut if I work in a school, or make roughly equal in a hospital, only with gobs of debt.
Good Idea: Doing something I really do enjoy (and may even have a shot of making a difference).

Bad Idea: Getting a little too horrified at the backgrounds of some of these kids.
Good Idea: Getting a little too horrified at the backgrounds of some of these kids.

07 September 2006

Responsibility

There has been much discussion in certain circles of the blog world regarding the passing of Steve Irwin. I don't know much about him, his show (excecpt for the omnipresent "CRIKEY!") or the circumstances surrounding his untimely demise and so I'll leave that to 'wiser' people than me. I also do not have any children; the sole being that depends on my for survival is a cat who, if given the chance, would do just fine out in the wild by herself. So I'm certainly in no position of authority on the matter of responsibility for children. However I've thought a lot about this topic over the years as I've seen friends have their own children, as I've embarked on a new career working with mostly children, as I've come to a greater understanding of what my parents did for me and my siblings, and as I've started to confront a tiny bit of my own mortality (30 is right around the corner after all). And the most rational, touching commentary I've seen thus far comes from the very smart, very talented Jon of Blurbomat fame and I find his post the most refreshing and balanced I've seen thus far.

02 June 2006

Um. Hi.

You. Yeah, you, reading this. You and I, you know, we might have known each other at one point. Maybe we grew up together. Maybe we went to school together. Maybe we have a few mutual friends and get together for a weekend on occasion. Or maybe we really don't know each other at all, but rather you see fit to stop by this here website for... well, I don't know why. I haven't been writing much, or talking much, or communicating much at all in the last few months. And for that, I'm sorry.

You see, it's this sado-masochistic program I decided to undertake. It's one where you do alot of work so that... well, so I can take a 30% pay-cut in the end and have an extra two years of education. Hm. Well, anyway, it kept me busy. And that meant I kind of ignored the people I know in real life, like the people who usually matter the most. And it's not right, but it was the best I could do.

So yes, school is (sort of) over for the summer. And I'm peeking my head up over the mounds of paper I have to organize and file, and wondering if anyone wants to get together for a barbeque. :^)

17 May 2006

Hello, my name is X, and I'm an incubator.

010503108congressandwomen_1 MaryAnn has a jaw-dropping post regarding women's reproductive health, or more accurately, some of the current attitudes towards your uterus, or the uterus of someone you love. Go forth and become enraged.

11 May 2006

Dum

Don't get some blood drawn for some routine tests and then immediately pick up your 15 lbs. bookbag with the arm that has a gaping hole in your vein. Ouch.

17 March 2006

Taking a Chance

While the ESPN coverage is a little trite in that Olympics kind of way, the heart of the story is what's important. This is but a small reflection of what I believe is possible for kids like this, of what I hope to accomplish some day for someone who needs a little extra help to realize their own potential. If I can help someone have this kind of moment in their life, whether it's through sports, drama, math, art, or even the simple act of reading a sentence and understanding what it means, then it's all been worth it.

Here's an unadulterated video of the raw footage if ESPN is making you gag.

16 March 2006

Things That I am Over that I Never Even Really Started With In the First Place

  • Songs where the female lead vocal will talk over the music in a serious, monotone way, as if to imply this is Art.
  • Ugg Boots.
  • Hot Topic.
  • People who slide insults into a generally genial conversation and think they can get away with it because if you call them on it the response will be, "Hey, I wasn't serious!".
  • SxSWi and blogerati, I think this is the watershed year.
  • Paperwork.
  • Ben Stiller.
  • Romantic comedies starring Matthew McConaughey.
  • Spitting in public.

15 March 2006

An Open Letter to Those I Love

This is an open letter to you. Yes, you. It's also an open letter to the people who don't read this website, to my mother and father, to my brother and my sister and her husband, to David and his family, to the people in my department, to the squiiishers and the frobnosticators, to the queseras and the andbreathes, to the Rochesteraians and the University of Rochester Chambers and Gale 4s, to the Good Drs. Eirich and the folks from the Shop. This is to all of you, and everyone I know and love:

The crises. We all know about them, even if we don't know all of them. None of them are within any of our control and it's just the way it is, but I beg, nay, PLEAD with you that I've had just about all I can take in a year and implore you to be healthy and safe and for Pete's sake be CAREFUL and be well. I've almost reached my limit and if you could ask your God, my God, or whomever you pray to (or don't pray to) to give us all a little break I'd really appreciate it, and I'm sure you would too.

It's the Ides of March and I don't know any Caesars, so I'm hoping things are getting better from here on out. Thank goodness for spring and new beginnings!

13 March 2006

Jess Y., Crazy Woman of Cincinnati

This right here folks is one of the best friends a girl could hope to have. On nights when you really should be productive she's the one that calls you up to tell you about her recent escapedes, offer a shoulder to cry on, to offer head-bashing duties if needed, and if she's in the same state, take you out for bottles of pinot grigio given to you by the waiter for free because she totally flirts with him and then put you to bed afterwards because you can't find the bed.

Thanks for everything Jess. I hope you're still my friend even after this blog entry.

12 March 2006

Preparedness Does not Mean Duct Tape and Plastic Sheeting

Right now it is almost 8pm on Sunday night. I am now realizing that I should cook something if nothing else so I have lunch tomorrow (which is shaping up to be a horrifically long day, starting by catching the bus at 7:10am.) And as I sit here my stomach is completely twisted thanks to a lunch that was either too large or tainted with the food poisoning, I have a terrific pain in my shoulder and back from sitting the wrong way at my computer, and the thought of food makes me want to vomit.

Guess I'd better get started on some rice and tofu huh? *sigh*

06 March 2006

Hope is the Thing With Feathers

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all,

And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.

I've heard it in the chillest land,
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity,
It asked a crumb of me.
Emily Dickinson.

24 February 2006

Play, fifth grade style.

In the lab we were recording a few 9-10 year olds as maskers in a listening study. We did two at a time and they were all friends so comraderie was in high gear. The two boys were all about WWII, and could easily discuss the invasion of Normandy as well as the difference between the terms "Russian Soldier" and "Red Army Soldier" (great vigor reserved for the latter discussion.) They both claimed to love playing "Call of Duty" that is until the father of one of the boys took it away because he didn't like him playing it. They asked if I knew about it, and said yes but I didn't play it, as I had played "Battlefield 1942" instead. That scored me a modicum of cred as it was an 'old' game.

As the boys were pretending that the anechoic chamber was a bombproof bunker and making machine gun sounds I thought about the implications of their play, wondering if they really knew what it is they were mimicking.

My conclusion was that they have no idea. War to them is an exciting game of danger, intrigue, strategy and history. I saw no malice in either boy, no intent to go out with an uzi and take out a high school or start a gang. Just two boys just starting to get a sense of their own aggressiveness with overactive imaginations. And all those critics who claim that violent videogames will encourage armies of little killers to take over the world faded into the background as these two discussed what to do with a German Prisoner of War, if they ever found one (the consensus would be to talk to him, give him a cup of soup, and lock him up.) If anything, I wouldn't want them to play those video games because they are just real enough to drive home the horror of war; and well, they still have some imagination in them yet; why spoil it?

19 February 2006

Choice.

Is this to say that suffering is indispensable to the discovery of meaning? In no way. I only insist that meaning is available in spite of — nay, even through — suffering, provided ... that the suffering is unavoidable. If it is avoidable, the meaningful thing to do is to remove its cause, for unnecessary suffering is masochistic rather than herioc. If, on the other hand, one cannot change a situation that causes his suffering, he can still choose his attitude.

- Viktor Frankl, Man's Search For Meaning.

18 February 2006

Meaning.

An excerpt:

Logotherapy, keeping in mind the essential transitoriness of human existence, is not pessimistic but rather activisitic. To express this point figuratively we might say: The pessimist resembles a man who observes with fear and sadness that his wall calendar, from which he daily tears a sheet, grows thinner with each passing day. On the other hand, the person who attacks the problems of life actively is like a man who removes each successive leaf from his calendar and files it neatly and carefully away with its predecessors, after first having jotted down a few diary notes on the back. He can reflect with pride and joy on all the richness set down in these notes, on all the life he has already lived to the fullest. What will it matter to him if he notices that he is growing old? Has he any reason to envy the young people whom he sees, or wax nostalgic over his own lost youth? What reasons has he to envy a young person? For the possibilities that a young person has, the future which is in store for him? "No, thank you," he will think. "Instead of possibilities, I have realities in my past, not only the reality of work done and of love loved, but of sufferings bravely suffered. These sufferings are even the things of which I am most proud, though these are things with cannot inspire envy."

-Viktor Frankl, Man's Search For Meaning.

08 February 2006

Matter of Degrees

It is telling when the best thing that I think will happen in the next few days is my trip this morning to the doctor's office. I got two shots. One in each arm.

03 December 2005

Let it Snow...

I just looked up and out the window and there is the most perfect, lazy flurry falling softly onto the pine trees just outside my window. What makes it magical is the wonderful golden winter sunshine and the bright blue sky and the slow classical guitar music I've got piped in via Pandora (right now it's Isole by Marino De Rosas).

I love winter.

17 November 2005

Well Hell...

Hrm. Still there? Still peeking around the corner after all these months, somehow hoping that somehow and someway I'd start updating again? If so, bless your little soul. Things are back, such as they are.

14 June 2005

I'm Melting.

It's too freakin' hot to write. Here, go read this.

28 May 2005

Life, the Universe, and Everything

So having finished my first day of the new part-time gig that the Universe, or Fate, or God (pick whichever one you believe in) had blessed me with just as I was starting to sweat the finances (although I still am, since the pay is lousy) I felt an obligation to post about it here.  I mean, "Full-Time Career Salaried Woman returns to Retail" is kind of a life event, right?  Sort of?

Maybe it isn't, since I can't seem to find a damned thing to say about it.

I showed up at 11, and more or less hung out until about 5.  I tried to learn as much as I could while I was there since the job is in a specialty shop where being a gadget or gear junkie would serve you good, and I rung up the purchases of a bunch of people, and even responded with a smile when some older lady snapped her fingers at me to try on some shoes.  But truth be told the job is really not that interesting.

And because it's not interesting, and despite the fact that I told myself this is exactly the kind of job I thought I wanted because this will be the last time I can do such as financially stupid thing, I'm beginning to realize that, in reality, I'm a fucking snob.  On the one hand I feel like I'm way beyond this.  Way, WAY beyond this.  I've got myself a bachelor's degree.  I've gotten into arguments with superiors and not gotten fired because I know how to have an intelligent argument.  I've been the expert.  I've had budgets and timelines and big ol' projects under my command.  And now... now I guess I just ring up socks and listen to the twenty year old males describe their drinking binges (Jim Beam seems to be the liquor of choice of the kids these days.) 

It could be worse.  I could be working with a bunch of women who would not only do just what I described, but also be bitchy about you behind your back.  I could be doing inventory.  Or, you know, unemployed.  But when I've thought previously that a 90% pay-cut might be fun so that I can 'get out and meet people' or 'learn something about the outdoor business' I'm now starting to think that 90% pay cut might not be worth the pro-deals (but it's close.)

It's early yet.  Perhaps somehow it will be worth it.  It seems to be a cool bunch of folks who work there who like to play hard and work, sort of.  They're friendly and quite knowledgeable about the genre and the job situation could be much more miserable.

I could be slinging burgers at Burger King.

 

24 May 2005

Klassy

Why?

19 May 2005

Good For Her.

Pregnant teen announces own name and walks at high school graduations despite being banned.

The father of the baby, also a senior at the high school, was allowed to participate in graduation ceremonies.

One reason why I am no longer Catholic.

03 May 2005

My Kind of Valentine

"Valentine" by Carol Ann Duffy

Not a red rose or a satin heart.

I give you an onion.
It is a moon wrapped in brown paper.
It promises light
like the careful undressing of love.

Here.
It will blind you with tears
like a lover.
It will make your reflection
a wobbling photo of grief.

I am trying to be truthful.

Not a cute card or a kissogram.

I give you an onion.
Its fierce kiss will stay on your lips,
possessive and faithful
as we are,
for as long as we are.

Take it.
Its platinum loops shrink to a wedding-ring,
if you like.

Lethal.
Its scent will cling to your fingers,
cling to your knife.

(Thanks to Amal.)

21 April 2005

Karma baby

On the bus ride into campus today I bumped into my neighbor. We chatted for a bit about what each of us were planning for the summer (Him: wedding, road trip honeymoon, moving to Illinois for tenured teaching gig. Me: some mindless job) and I told him I just couldn't bring myself to get motivated to look for freelance work. He said yeah, getting some stupid mindless job bagging groceries may not be a bad idea since my next three years or so will be graduate school hell. I replied, "Of course, when I decide to do that I actually GET freelance work from a friend!"

His response struck me. "Yeah, it's funny how the universe has a way of knowing your needs, even if YOU don't, and delivering them to you when you least expect it."

We both chuckled and looked off into the distance, lost in our own thoughts on the matter for a few seconds. A quiet understanding that didn't need details. It was enough to share the sentiment and to understand the other person.

He's quite right.

20 April 2005

Gardener

"Virtue? a fig!  'tis in ourselves that we are this or thus.  Our bodies are our gardens, to the with our wills are gardeners; so that if we will plant nettles or sow lettuce, set hyssop and weed up tine, supply it with one gender of herbs or distract it with many, either to have it sterile with idleness or manur'd with industry - why; the power and corrigible authority of this lies in our wills."

13 April 2005

*sigh* boring life

There are so many moments in life where I wish I had a great story to go along with an otherwise rather mundane event.

Sexed Up Fantasty Story:   I received a dueling sabre to the ear in a fight with another countess for a diamond necklace (because there is a plethora of BOTH in western MA) which necessitated a trip to the medics (but only after I won the duel by not only returning the blow but by also cutting off a lock of her hair) for treatment of the glancing wound and a tetanus shot as a preventative measure.

What Really Happened:  I got a routine tetanus booster when I saw the doctor today for a checkup. 

All this stiffness and achiness and no good story. *sigh*

04 March 2005

Shameless Begging

I happen to know there are a few people who read this site who might, on occasion, have the opportunity to buy me a present.  Should that opportunity arise sometime in the near future (only 295 days until Christmas!) will someone please, please, get me this book?

One of a few surefire ways to get me into your good graces.

31 January 2005

4-eva!

Brunchfriends


These are two of the finest ladies you could ever hope to meet. Thanks for a great weekend gals.

11 January 2005

MineMineMine

010503108congressandwomen

It's enough to make us all — movie stars and non-movie stars, moms and nonmoms, those of us married to Brad Pitt and those of us who are not — sit back with enormous martinis and consider whether the most interesting things about us will ever cease to be our uteruses.  - Rebecca Traister for Salon.com

While the impact of this kind of article is dulled somewhat by glomming onto the hot tabloid story of the minute, I stil can't help but think "No kidding."  Pass me the martini pitcher.

02 January 2005

"Sorry Ma'am..."

I am speechless. A pregnant woman in Washington is denied a divorce because after she separated from her husband WHO WAS IN JAIL FOR BEATING HER and who did not contest the divorce she became pregnant by her boyfriend. Since the pregnancy was not disclosed at the time of the divorce papers being filed, the law states that any child conceived within 300 days of a divorce request is considered the child of the husband.

I'm going to go pull my hair out now.

31 December 2004

2004

2004 was alot of professional ups and downs for me.  From the whole grad school debacle  to deciding to move to a new state and a new town with a month before the semester started, to slogging my way through four courses after six years away from school and having the courage to quit my job because it was just too much with coursework, it was nailbiting to say the least.

 

Good Things tm:

  • Pats winning the SuperBowl
  • Finding a sweet corner of New England to call home, complete with Tomatoey companions.
  • Realizing that Tomatoey companions are way cooler and alot more fun than they let on.
  • Finally living in a QUIET apartment.
  • Finding my calling.
  • Going car-camping for the first time
  • BoSox winning. Even though I can't really call myself a fan, I at least can say that having grown up in NE I feel the collective relief. Congrats guys!
  • Antonio's Pizza.  Heaven help me and my thighs.
  • Realizing that when Pig said that he'd stick by me through thick, thin, rich, poor, good, bad, work, school, that he was telling the truth. Not that I didn't believe him in the first place, but  we've certainly been through most of that crap this year. :^)
  • The slew of engagements this year, from my sis to two squiiishers to other friends back in Rochester, it'll be a party-riffic year next year.

Not-So-Good Things tm:

  • Moving from a town that I had lived in for 10 years to one I've only driven by.
  • Leaving all our friends behind.
  • Leaving my hairdresser behind (ARLIE I MISS YOU!)
  • All of a sudden being a poor college student again after making some serious $$ and getting all the free Nalgene Bottles a girl could want.
  • Realizing that house hunting dreams are put on hold for quite a bit of time here.
  • Moving in the rain.  Sweet Moses on a Pogo Stick did that ever suck ASS.
  • Moving to a non-Wegmans state. No, Whole Foods does not make up for it.

Other Things tm:

  • Coming to terms with having to rely on somebody else for financial support (I'm independent by nature, this is a tough one for me.)
  • Getting to know a new grocery store.  Seriously, do you know what a goddamn pain in the ASS it is to get used to a new grocery store?

So all in all, it feels like a LONG year (personally.) I've got quite a few more gray hairs on my head from some of the stress, but I'm looking forward to 2005 and settling into our new home and some new friends.

30 December 2004

Help

It seems that our government is more concerned about balloons and parades than helping out (NYTimes artilcle, login and all that jazz).  Well, screw that.  Help out and donate to the Red Cross through Amazon.com or if that's not your style, pick the charity of your choice.

Redcross

According to the Red Cross website, already the American people have donated almost half of what our government said they would donate. I am proud of my fellow Americans today and am giving the evil eye to our elected officials.  If ever there was an opportunity to do some good, this would be it.

Update: Heather Champ has an offer you can't refuse. Make a donation of $20 or more, get a free Heather Champ Original Print. Now if that doesn't spur you to make a donation, you must have gotten coal in your stocking for Christmas.

17 December 2004

Late Night

Last night Katie Couric was on The Daily Show to plug her new book, but the topic turned to a new special she did on teens and sex.  She stated that in her interviews with teens she discovered that these teens thought oral sex was not all that intimate.

While I'm sure this will peg me as "old", I just have to throw in my $0.02:

Kids, if you're nose to nuts, it's intimate.

10 December 2004

Thought for the Day

Dear Hairstylists,

If a client enters your salon and does not already have bangs, it would be appreciated if you asked if they would like bangs before cutting their hair.   

Sincerely,
Me

08 December 2004

Random Daisy

Today while walking through town on my way to a drug store to buy a birthday card for my husband's grandmother I passed a college aged boy sitting on the entry steps of the local Catholic Church taking a bunch of daisies and separating them out into individual stems.  I thought to myself that it's so cute that a guy would be arranging flowers for his newfound love interest before he heads over to her place, perhaps for dinner, perhaps to say he's sorry, or perhaps to wish her a happy birthday..

He got up with flowers in hand and we passed just as he made it onto the sidewalk.  He extends his hand and offers me a lone daisy.

It was an incredibly sweet thing to do.  I gave him a big smile and thanked him.  He smiled in return and we went on our way.  I turned to look back at him before I went into the store, only to see a string of daisy-weilding women in his wake.  Every woman on that side of the street had a daisy, and every woman was smiling.

28 October 2004

The Feminine Truth

Somehow, Mimi Smartypants managed to capture the essence of the female relationship with a penis (scroll down to #7 plz.)

I can't *wait* to see what my referral logs are now!

07 September 2004

Movin' Movin' Movin'

A few photos of our move.

They really don't do it justice. I'm still somewhat amazed that in 30 days we managed to pack, find a place to live in a town neither of us were familiar with and was 330 miles away, pack some more, party a lot with friends, move a few of them ourselves, then demand payback from said friends when our moving day came. Moving from a three bedroom to two bedroom apartment really does force one to re-evaluate what one really needs.

That being said, anybody want a comfortable sectional couch?

10 August 2004

Sublet this fantastic Park Ave. area Apartment!

Available September 1: Fantastic townhouse style apartment in Park Avenue Area of Rochester NY (near South Goodman and Harvard.) Here's your chance to live in the hippest part of the city. Great rental opportunity for young professionals or college students:

Amenities include:

  • Two bedrooms and a study
  • Dining room, living room, kitchen, bathroom, and three seasons room.
  • Hard wood floors and lots of the original gum-wood trim
  • Full attic and basement
  • For $100, you can have laundry in the basement! No need to schlep your dirty undies to a laundromat where old creepy men will sniff them. Wash your delicates in the privacy of your own home!
  • Off-Street parking
  • Cat friendly landlord.
  • Walking distance to Park Avenue, the Memorial Art Gallery, Monroe Avenue shops, bus stops, bakeries, coffee shops, banks, video rental stores, package stores, pizza joints, and churches! Save money on gas and walk to nearly everything you could possibly need!
You might expect to pay well over $800 for this place, maybe even $1000? Well you'd be WRONG. Rent is an astounding $650/month plus utilities.

Yes, it would be possible to rent a two bedroom townhouse one block from Park Avenue for $650 a month! Get a roomate and you'll each only pay $325 each! WOW!

To find out more about this fantastic, charming, and lovely apartment email me. Don't delay, this great apartment won't last long!

03 August 2004

Star Bucks

Adam, your story reminds me of a similar tale involving a sweaty sandy red-headed boy fresh off the volleyball court agreeing to meet me at the local coffeeshop so that I could tell him that while I appreciated his late night confession I could not reciprocate at that time, seeings how I had a boyfriend and all.

Two days later, I was miraculously free of any relationships, although I told him it didn't mean anything.

A few days after that I took his face in my hands and kissed him.

Three years later, we were married.

I can't say we share the same fate Adam. Simply that our beginnings seem to have much in common.

Things I have been doing aside from posting here