Archive for December, 2007

Bells whistles and a garden hose

Just spotted on the Fox News front page: Tiger mauls to death.

Let us all log this away, shall we? Fox News assures us that people can be mauled to death. In case you were going to forget.

Returned from Oregon safe and sound — no maulings. Made it through Wyoming’s white out conditions and managed to weave through the t-boned pick-ups and jack knifed semis littering I-80. Last winter really tested my driving ability — I had never had to dodge 8-inch patches of ice on the interstate or head up into the mountains whilst an avalanche killed several people on an adjacent highway. I made jokes about how I needed to go to the council and get my winter driving merit badge, because I’d definitely earned it. This winter is already beginning to look more dangerous than last one, particularly since Anthony and Dani were in an accident on Tuesday.

The good news is that no one was seriously hurt. Dani is a very capable winter driver and managed to save both their lives and most of the car, hitting the median only with the tire/nose of the car. Anthony neglected to inform me until yesterday that they were also carting around a leftover OXYGEN TANK, which would have made any impact on Anthony’s side of the vehicle much more…interesting. This is seriously his third brush with death. For a bookish guy that doesn’t do sports and isn’t all that infuriating, it’s pretty impressive.

NOTABLE MOMENTS ON THE JOURNEY

1. Wyoming was tricky as I mentioned. Both of our somewhat unscheduled motel stays were in the same town somewhere along the interstate. (Unintentionally. On the way back we actually stayed right across the street from the place we’d stayed at before.) Wyoming was often a white-out, had sneaky black ice, and had wind that made me worry for my hastily-replaced-in-’03-driver’s-side-door. It always has wind-noise but was starting to make strange sounds that made me wonder, about to be ripped from the hinges? That would have made the drive lively.

1a. After we passed the Oregon state line we watched the temperature raise and watched the LAKES hidden behind the hills. (Lakes!! say the desert-dwellers. Water sitting all in one place!) After dinner we began passing marque signs saying DANGER EXTREMELY ICY AHEAD, and, CHAINS REQUIRED ON COMMERCIAL VEHICLES.

When you see a marque in Colorado or Wyoming that says ROAD SLICK IN PLACES, that usually means that there are cars littering the ditches along the road and that we are due for approximately eight feet of snow within the hour. So there was a brief moment of panic at the sight of the word EXTREMELY, thinking we were about to die. Sense took over however when I checked the vital stats. Temperature: 45*. Current visibility: crystal. Road appearance: dry. Current speed: 65-ish. Turns: easy and worry-free. Nudge the brakes: perfect. No slipping, no skids. No danger, kids. There was much baffling driving from the locals after this, including a hill in which everyone was stopped. For several minutes.

Oregon Ice

We made lots of jokes about the extremely dangerous Oregonian ice as we weaved between people creeping forward and made it through just fine. It was more than a little exasperating, and if this is the way you treat the winter time, Oregon, it’s time we traded for a few years so you know what winter is.



Winter ‘06, my friend Erika concentrating as a car skids off the road just beyond.

Tables were turned later when it started to rain — people immediately whizzed past as if we were driving backwards. Touche, Oregon. Touche. We have a lot to learn from each other.

2. Eugene, in a nutshell: furniture stores and no discernible city center per se. The most confusing place I have ever been. We kept getting lost. We got lost almost every time we left the motel parking lot. Have you seen Dark City? Where the aliens move everything around every night? That’s what Eugene felt like to me.

Portland in a nutshell: hair salons, bursting at the seems with interesting stuff, and a huge population of youngish bespectacled interesting people. No surprise there.

3. We had a baked omelette in Eugene. I think the process was similar to a dutch baby. It looked horrifying but it was one of the most amazing things I have ever eaten, and I have eaten many things.

4. We drove out to the coast one day, because we are deprived landlocked sods with a burning desire to see the sea. Every few miles after Florence we began seeing billboards for “sea lion caves” which sounded interesting. I’m all for doing lame tourist-type things if they’re cool. Or at the very least, if they’ll get you closer to where we wanted to go anyway, which was the SEA. This particular area we were in had lots of cliffs and made close-range wave oggling difficult.

There were two parking lots next to a tiny gift shop out in the middle of no where essentially and we pulled over, I myself being sort of glad that the lots were empty. The cost? $10 each to go down this walkway and into an elevator that will bring us to a cave. It seemed kind of steep, but the building is right there and Anthony and I keep thinking and what if we see a sea lion? so we bite the bullet. The lady gives us the automatic shpeal about how there are [x] seals in the cave at any one time and how old the cave is — we were pretty skeptical, she said something in the hundreds. Whatever lady.

To the sea lion caves

The walk down to the elevator building. Kind of at a crazy angle because I wanted to get the whole walkway.

After we get to the building we kind of stop and look around for a little while. There was a great spot below us where the waves were crashing against rock.

waiting for the elevator

It was pretty. Then we noticed a dark shape ducking waves and being generally playful, and we realized HOLY SHIT THERE’S A SEA LION!

close up

At this point we were feeling pretty good, thinking okay it was worth ten bucks now that we know we’ve actually seen some sea lions. Okay. Sweet.

Then we went down the elevator. The minute it opens we are bombarded with SOUND. Hoots, grunts, the roaring of the waves and all make the whole place a very noisy area indeed — it was like outtakes of wookie sound recordings, and the sound that the “great beasts” make on Pelanor fields.

As for the actual number and proximity, well.

Inside the caves

sea lions 009

sea lions 014

There was a 5′ x 8′ window type thing, covered in chain link. But that was about it. We could have spit on them.

One last thing before we call it quits. Q: who wins the prize for best animal?
A: The Nautilus!

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Dude

I have a real post brewing, but I just made an important discovery:

Dude

If I am not mistaken, this is the coolest first telling ever. No pun intended.

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Dispatch from the northwest

THE SLAPDASH VACATION UPDATE

Eating: Cheez-its from a little plastic cup.

Feeling: Sleepy. I’ve driven a lot lately and when we haven’t done that we’ve walked and walked and walked. I’ve walked more in the last few days then I have in the last few weeks. (That rather says a lot if you know me, although come to think of it we left Greeley with about a foot of snow on the ground, so perhaps all my leg muscles were beginning to atrophy.)

Also feeling: Happy. I love Portland with a pure, burning devotion, and it was fun to spread the disease to Anthony. Huge specialness aware goes to The Zinester’s Guide to PDX for all their tips for good stuff to do and good places to eat. I feel pretty confident that we could have done well enough on our own (Portland is not exactly a sparse place) but it was nice to have some recommendations.

I am less impressed with Eugene — it is a step up from where we currently live, but then, what isn’t. I have learned this trip that I grow weary of the “college town” and want no part of it. My next residence will be in a place genuinely big or small.

Currently wearing: two shirts and a borrowed sweatshirt. It really isn’t all that cold here, but I think the wetness gave me the chills.

Currently drinking: He’brew, the chosen beer.

Currently thinking: Do people ever stop and think to themselves, I am here? I am in [placename], living? We do this on vacation, definately. I sat at a pizza parlor yesterday thinking, I’ve done this a lot, but I’ve never done it HERE. I watch people and think about what their lives must be like. Our sense of place is certainly heightened when we aren’t where we usually are, and yet when you’re in America — where 90% of your surroundings consist of corporate familiarity — you aren’t necessarily in a new place, just a different one. Portland was a nice break from this, but Eugene is in some ways more of the same. But it is greener, it is raining, and that makes the sameness less….similar.

LINKS FROM LATELY, REAL CONTENT LATER ON

Eyescapes

I did not buy this zine, although I am regretting that now.

I appreciate this, as a large portion of my job is spent deciphering bureaucratic forms. We are not too far away from this sort of thing being a reality you know.

HOW IS BABBY FORMED.

I need to plug Katherine, becuase her shop is full of neat things and because she is really nice. What happens if you shop from a big corporate online conglomerate, and you type in the shipping address wrong this close to Christmas? Do you think they will care? Do you think they will email you and sort it all out? Of course not!

And finally: here is Keith, the incredible glowing fox.

Keith, the incredible glowing fox

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Like a fighter jet made of biceps

GETTING THE DARK STUFF OUT OF THE WAY

This is not really what the season is about, but then I suppose that’s why these don’t surprise me as much as they should have. I know that’s not an appropriate reaction — I never have an appropriate reaction to these sorts of things — but really I think most people do a lot of fantastic pirouettes to appear to react appropriately. We aren’t really taught how to process this sort of thing, and really I think I feel more comfortable with that than I would with the requisite GenEd: Coping With Terrorism 110. To do so would assert the world as a much darker place than I think it really is.

I won’t say much more beyond this: I have a major beef with New Life Church. I have a lesser psychological beef with malls, or at least the idea of malls. Clearly other people do too, and what I want to say to them is: there are more effective ways of dealing with it. No one who controls things, who Matter in terms of pulling the strings and influencing the mass culture, cares in any way about the masses. Opening fire on a crowd does not communicate anything. It merely allows top brass to make sweeping generalizations about Troubled Youth. It does not make them say, “Oh wow this puts things into perspective. We need to stop doing [x] and [y], so that people are happier.” The dead people are very far away from them, and what’s a few dead people caught up in the machinery? I am all for activism, I am all for change and making the world a better place (read: different than it is now, in certain important ways). We need to get people to do so in an effective way, not in a reckless way. Remember: a.) sloppy activism is worse than complacency and, b.) targeting Moms and Dads shopping for their kids does not make sense. These people aren’t the problem; they are simply trapped in the system.

Okay I guess I’ll say one more thing. It did not surprise me that of all three shootings, the armed security guard that killed people was at New Life.

LET’S SWITCH GEARS AND FOCUS ON THE GOOD THINGS

Getting impenetrably bundled for a stroll in great fluffy snow.
We did this to go see The Golden Compass on Friday, because my windshield wipers are shot and really a walk in a winter wonderland is much nicer than a dangerous white-knuckle drive through a winter wonderland, don’t you agree? The snow was ankle deep and it was the good, subzero sort that is not melty – each individual snowflake shape could be seen on sleeves, shoulders and eyelashes. We watched a guy on skis get pulled by a little white Volvo down 22nd street.

Late night visits to diners
There have been many lately, and I don’t think people truly appreciate the euphoria that is 3am pancakes.

A good long stretch at your task chair
(You deserve it. Promise.)

Post-rock.
I am new to the term but not to the genre. Nothing augments the mid-afternoon quilt/book/tea combo like something good and introspective.

Libraries
Not only do they have free (free!) media, sometimes they’ll hang your artwork.

Not needing a man, not needing no lovin’, and getting it anyway.
I have been in sort of Russian Mystic mood lately not just because things looking happier overall, but also things are working and we’re jiving again. Anthony’s Black Pit Of Despair is a little less daunting, pit-like, and bleak, and my Overactive Worriotron is less frantic, insistent and dramatic. We also seem to be back in the compensation-niche – when he has had a drab day that threatens to enhance the hopelessness it turns out I’ve made enchiladas, and when I’m weepy about an impossible term paper he will have profound, beautiful thought and duck out of work to call and tell me about it. [This next bit is more than a little nauseating.] It’s shocking to me how much the love thing increases. I keep thinking I will reach a plateau, and it just gets bigger and bigger. We’ve really grown a lot as a couple here in the last few months, and sitting here on the other side of that is incredible. Just when I think it can’t get any better, it does. Again.

WHAT I HAVE LEARNED IN COLLEGE, THIS MY FOURTH AND FINAL YEAR ONE CAN ONLY HOPE

Do not go to the doctor for a chronic pain, receive muscle relaxants, and then take as prescribed during the busiest week of the school year. That is, do not if you want to have access to your brain and it’s contents. I only took one and I’m still doing idiotic things like putting stamps in the wrong corner of envelopes, or forgetting 2 digits in my ssn, which I’ve had memorized since high school. It’s no good people. Really I should have done the old lightweight trick and cut it in half, but I wasn’t thinking. And then I REALLY wasn’t thinking.

HERE’S A RATHER EXCITING THING THAT MAY ALSO BE CAUSE FOR THE STUPID

I am coming into a bit of windfall here pretty soon. There was a payroll issue that, when fixed, will also arrive with a compensation check. While it’s nothing that you people would be excited about, for me it’s more money then I’ve ever seen all in one place before. And it will be in my bank account. Obviously most of it will be budgeted accordingly, but of course the fact that it comes the DAY before we leave for Eugene makes me pretty happy.

Eugene. Eugene. My first final was yesterday, and my other two aren’t until Friday, so I have this wonderful chunk of week that can be solely focused on getting excited for the trip.

NOTE TO SELF

Get a traveling bus. A neuvo-Volkswagen bus that is a hybrid or battery-op. Do it up like a roulotte.

Have you ever noticed how excited people’s Christmas cards are? How many exclamation points there are???!?!!! David Sedaris noticed, and parodied it well in that book, but I hadn’t realized until this year. I suppose this is the only time all year some people write.

THE PART WITH THE LINKS

Curious George (W.)

The Tamil language is pretty.

Baggubag.

Do you guys know about luxuria? you probably should.

POWERTHIRST.

AND FINALLY, WAYS IN WHICH I HAVE BEEN ADDRESSED IN LETTERS AT WORK

Ms. [lastname]
Dear Sir or Madame
To whom it may concern
Editor
Ladies and Gentlemen
Gentleperson
Sirs

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Russian delivery of dominoes

Yesterday I spent a lot of time looking up kidney inflictions online and trying to decide between kidney stone and UTI. They kept saying UTIs make you want to pee all the time, but then they say you have to drink lots of water and juice, and well duh of course you are going to pee a lot if you are drinking way more liquid than you usually do. Sheesh.

There was nothing wrong with my bladder. Really my kidney just hurt like a motherfuck, to the point where taking off my shoe and leaning in certain ways and walking is nigh-impossible. I had high aspirations for Sunday, but instead it turned out to be sit and watch movies day. I had been craving Garden State lately, and now that I think about it the last time we watched it was when Anthony was sick and immobile on my futon at the previous apartment. Perhaps that movie will become the Sickness Standard. That’s fine. Plotless, pretty, and strangely comforting.

THEN

I went to the doctor this morning, and turns out there is nothing wrong with my kidney, as far as the half-assed examination could tell*, but rather I pulled a muscle all along my spine. Don’t ask me how I pulled a muscle all along my spine, because the only strenuous activity I’ve done lately had nothing to do with my spine or exaggerated twisting. Ahem.

*They definitely had an agenda for me to have a UTI. I answered about 8 questions about urination. No, I do not have discomfort when I urinate. No, I do not have an “abnormal frequency”. I even had to go pee in a cup, which made me a little nervous since I had gone right before the visit and I was not sure I could deliver the goods. Since I had been looking at this stuff online I knew that really I was more of a candidate for a kidney stone (high protein diet, slightly dehydrated) but no one so much as mentioned it, and no one listened to me when I offered it as a suggestion.

I shouldn’t diss them too badly, really I think I was a little flustered about my weight**, and I got to see my favorite person there. She told me I had “really good muscle flexibility” for someone who had a muscle issue where I did. “Flexibility” is not usually a word people use to describe me (I’m rather brittle) so that made me a little smug, like I’d achieved something. She also was nice and called my back thing a “spasm” rather than a “pulled muscle,” and made me feel like I had a real thing. She even prescribed muscle relaxants which I was very reluctant to take, but my abiding memory of last week was my INTENSE SHOULDER PAIN from all the stress and the hunched-shoulder sitting I’d done. So I thought, why not. I feel a little shady though. I will probably only take one and then hide them from myself.

**Sigh. It grieves me to talk about this. Bear with me here. See, I don’t own a scale because really, I don’t care. I’ve never had weight issues, real or imagined. Historically my metabolism is so fast I can barely keep vital mass, much less any extra. I’ve always watched what I eat, but that’s because I have hypoglycemia, so I have to eat very carefully, and frequently, or else I pass out or start to attack people. But there’s that thing that happens to people: metabolism slow-down. And I think mine is happening. Because suddenly, my normal eating habits aren’t working. Suddenly, I can’t seem to get it right. When it’s time to eat (at the multiples of three, yo,) I’m not hungry. Or I’m RAVENOUS. And nothing gets fixed. If my sugar is off I can’t seem to right it, and the slightest thing will get me off balance. Not good. So when I saw my numbers today, really it was more of a verification of what I already know. Okay, eat a little less. Check.

So my little serving size experiment has expanded to real food. I have a few websites bookmarked about how to approximate non-packaged food items, which be fair, includes a fair percentage of my diet. We (we?) have also brought the food pyramid on board, and will structure meals according to both the serving sizes and recommended servings per group. ‘That last bit is kind of fun, because those serving recommendations always seem to be excessive. 6-11 servings of bread/grain/pasta daily? I only have three MEALS in a day! you might shriek. But don’t forget: you’re obeying those serving size rules. It’s a bit like changing bra sizes — I will be simultaneously eating less and more.

ENOUGH ABOUT THE BODY, LET’S FOCUS ON THE MIND

No real pre-finals stress yet. Check back in two days.

Actually, things have been mighty blissful here. Ever since my Dustin Hoffman dream things have been fun and interesting and happy. Dustin Hoffman most be my totem animal.

TOTEM ANIMALS, MY EVER GROWING LIST:

- Wolf
- Tapir
- Bird (like demi-parrot type bird, pet bird. Either that or a finch)
- Crocodile
- Dustin Hoffman

Oh I couldn’t possibly go on. Art show, having coffee with a new friend, thoughts on the Omaha shooting, and an exciting money-related thing. But later kidlets, later.

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