December 2004 Archives

funny phrase

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Saw this phrase on Gizmodo today.

"I've held off from buying a Bluetooth headset for my own because they mostly all look like my ear is crapping a Transformer. "

-- Gizmodo:Peripherals:Headsets

I can't wait to have a place to use that phrase.

The Year in Review

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It's that time of year again. It's time to sum up the last year in some sort of sentimental way.

I would fill out one of those Year-In-Review questionnaires, but somehow answering a survey and posting it on the blog seems like a hollow cop-out to me.

The truth is that last year was filled with a lot of difficulties and triumphs. There were moments sublime and moments that filled me with horror.

The passing year reminded me of seeing a fireworks display. There aren't many surprises found for me in the explosive shells lobbed into the night sky. Yet, each time I see a fireworks display something captures me. Some explosion in the sky burns itself into my retina for seconds and I feel so happy to be alive and to experience the short lived beauty of the fire in the sky. Then the show ends, there is nothing left but smoke and some ashes floating down, and I pick up my blanket and head for the car and a traffic jam.

That is what the end of this year is like. This year was nothing special -- just like the rest, but it was filled with heart stopping beauty -- just like the rest. I'm left feeling so thankful to be alive and to experience all that life has graciously handed to me.

P.S. I decided to strikeout everything that was boring, non-specific, or slightly untrue.

Tim is in love

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There is nothing like being smitten by your daughter.


Elise in her winter hat and coat
resemblance

Christmas Traditions

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Monica wrote beautifully about a Christmas tradition involving a wafer called Oplatek.

Reading this essay really moved me. While I enjoy giving and receiving gifts during Christmas, the most rewarding bit of Christmas for me this year was showing my appreciation to a person who is in some ways at the periphery of my life. I stopped this person and told them how much their simple acts of service and kindness meant to me and wished them a great holiday.

Once the two of us had hugged and gone back to our busy day I realized that having that short interaction was the most important thing I had accomplished that day. I only wish I had a tradition like Monica's to wrap around the event.

I think my family is going to adopt this tradition for next year.

Here are some more references to this tradition.

Meet the Fockers

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I went to the movies today hoping to see "The Life Aquatic", but was told that my theater didn't have the reel due to cold weather. Cold weather, how could cold weather keep a movie from getting from point A to point B? I don't live in the sticks, but I digress. Instead of seeing the long awaited "Life Aquatic" I saw the movie playing next, "Meet the Fockers".

The movie had quite a few funny moments. It was low brow humor to be sure, but it made me laugh out loud several times. I suspect if you liked the first movie, odds are pretty good that you'll like this one. I think I enjoyed the movie a bit more than usual because it was a matinee and because the woman seated next to me, who appeared to be in her sixties, laughed uproariously at even the most shocking bits of humor.

Christmas Day

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It's Christmas Day. After lunch today the presents had all been opened, the children were running around in their holiday vests and the wrapping paper and boxes had finally all been cleaned up. Usually by that time of day we are rushing to someone's house or having guests. Today we are not entertaining anyone nor are we going somewhere to be entertained.

It was really fun to watch the paroxysms of joy of the kids face when they opened their presents today. As an adult, and a cynical adult at that, it's hard to remember what it felt like to open a gift and have those same emotions coursing through my body.

I did really enjoy my presents, although I didn't feel the kind of joy that makes one wiggle and dance. I don't think that relates to the quality of my presents, but rather my inability to realize the joy that exists in my life.

In my mind, I sometimes reflect at the end of a day and realize how everything and everyone in my daily life is a gift to me. For some reason, it's hard to think that way during the day, when everyone and everything is in motion around me. A little gratitude would do wonders for me no doubt, but I don't know if it will put the wiggle and dance back into my life.

So, by the way, since I am bringing up the idea of gratitude, thanks for reading. The fact that people actually keep reading, and occasionally commenting, makes this whole thing worthwhile.

Festivus

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Where can I get Festivus cards?

Is it time for the airing of grievances yet?

Links

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Here is a smattering of interesting things I have read recently All of them are longer pieces which take a little more time to read, but I think are worthwhile.

Apartment Therapy on Books

Man and the Machines

Quitting the Paint Factory

The Abolition of Work

Happy Solstice

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Happy Solstice

It's the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. In Minnesota, where I live, the sun won't rise until 7:49 A.M. and will set at 4:33. Its cloudy today, on top of it being an already short day.

I miss the sun.

I miss the feeling of the sun on my bare skin, the nauseating brilliance of the glare when you've been sailing all day and the cool you feel when the sun goes behind a cloud.

I should celebrate the Solstice, perhaps I already do.

The Flight of the Phoenix

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Friday night I saw "Flight of the Phoenix". I am not referring to the original version from 1965. For some reason I cannot determine, Hollywood remade the movie. For reasons I don't wish to divulge, I then saw the movie. I guess the there are no more good ideas left so we have to simply recycle the old ones. I don't think it was an awful movie, but there really was nothing that makes me say, "you have to go see it" either. It's a movie, it's better than some TV shows, but not all. The seatss in the theater were comfortable and the ambience was suitably dark. Maybe if you see it as a matinee it won't disappoint as much. I do want to see the original version again. I remembered it as being better story wise, but less sophisticated cinematography/special effects wise.

Christmas Story

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My wife was explaining the Christmas story to the children on the way to church this morning.

She was explaining in detail how the story takes place very long ago. Matthew was paying close attention and added "Probably they rode dinosaurs." That amused me to no end. I imagined Mary riding to Bethlehem on a dinosaur, like it was happening in the "Land of the Lost".

kids say the darndest things

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"Elise you should be aware that I'm only four; I'm just a little boy."

--Matthew

Ordinary Wolves

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I've been a little distracted lately and haven't finished a book in a while. I did manage to finish Ordinary Wolves, by Seth Kantner.

I really liked this book's descriptions of being outside. There are very few books for me that capture what it's really like to be outside. That feeling is found throughout this book and it all rings very true. It paints a wonderful picture of what it feels like to be truly connected to the land and it manages to avoid over-romanticizing it.

The book also was a great portrait of what it feels like to be an outsider.

Reading a book like this really makes me want to spend more time in the wilderness and be more connected to the wild.

If you have ever felt at home outside, you might enjoy this book.

Stopping Blogging

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This post about stopping blogging really did amuse me this morning.

"So, if you have a blogger you really care for, the thing to do is to quit encouraging him/her, and make him/her go back to being real. "

-- Curmudgeonly & Skeptical

[Link Courtesy of Dave's Picks]

Crushes

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Not long ago, I was talking to a young co-worker about crushes. Her eyes lit up and there was a certain kind of smile that can only accompany a deep and secret crush on someone. You could tell just by looking at her that she was full of the kind of affection that is untested by exposure to another. The object of her affection, and I have no idea who it is, was unaware at least to her knowledge that she had any designs on him.

Seeing that look in someone's face was like feeling the first warm breeze in spring after a long cold winter. You might not properly understand what I mean if you don't live in a cold climate.

I live in Minnesota. It's very cold here. If you don't live in a cold climate, the idea of a warm spring day following a long, blustery winter may not seem like a big deal. It's a very big deal in Minnesota. For much of fall it's just a little cold. Then out of the blue, a really cold day appears from no where, much like it did this last weekend. The day is so cold and raw that the wind goes through your winter coat and settles into the core of your body. It's so cold and windy that your soul loses its moorings and start flapping behind you in the breeze. Winter has come for good and it is not going anywhere soon.

There is nothing I seem to be able to do to blunt the effects of our cold winters. I wear long underwear. I warm my car up for excessive amounts of time. I keep my house toasty warm. I only go out for short periods, but truly there is nothing you can do to completely escape the cold. Monica recently described the cold as smelling metallic. In Minnesota there are weeks where it begins to smell like metal with dried blood on it. I've gone weeks without seeing the sun. You lose your sense of smell and you don't even know it because it left you so gradually. Your sense of smell never even slammed the door on it's way out.

Winter lasts so long, I stop believing in spring. I stop thinking about it. I don't hope for it. I expect the next ice age.

The without fanfare it begins to slowly thaw. One day, you go outside and realize you don't need a jacket. That day there is a breeze. You smell things you had forgotten about, like lilacs and freshly mown grass. You feel the warm sun on your skin. To say that it feels good is an enormous understatement. I've abstained from food for as long as three days. It felt amazing to eat after that experience. But my fast was self imposed. In Minnesota, the cold is imposed upon you. Short of moving away, you are caught in the vice grips of winter, and you never know exactly when it will end.

This feeling of a rapturous spring can also be reproduced upon arriving at a tropical airport. It's even more intense in that circumstance, as your body doesn't have much time to prepare for the assault on your senses. The smell of the flowers, the feeling of the sun, the cries of the birds all combine into a sensation that feels so good you think you might be delusional.

That's why when people talk about the cold in Minnesota, I always talk about how delicious it is to warm up. There is nothing that comes close to being warm after having been cold for a long time.

Seeing this young friend, with that look on her face reminded me of spring.

I've been married awhile; long enough to have been both warm and cold. Until I saw that look on my young friends face, I had forgotten what crushes and young love can be like when you are young, and the object of your affection doesn't even know, and you are afraid to speak to them, and you know you can't hold yourself back forever.

Spring is a wonderful thing, especially when it follows a long, blustery winter.

Fight Club

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You met me at a very strange time in my life.

Misheard Song Lyrics

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I've always had a dreadful ear for song lyrics. I've no idea what many songs are really supposed to be about. For some reason the song by the Police, "So Lonely" always has sounded like "Sonali" to me. This goes back to seventh grade at least long before I ever met anyone named Sonali.

Thankfully, I'm not the only one who doesn't hear the lyrics quite right. The web site kissthisguy.com collects misheard lyrics. According to this web site other people believed Sting was saying "Salami" or "Sue Lawley." I'm alone no longer.

[Link courtesy of Liz]

Angry Blogging

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I recall my Driver's Education instructor talking about angry driving. He seemed quite adamant that angry driving can lead to missed exits, accidents or at the very least tickets for speeding.

One day, while I was driving during the on-the-road segment of the class, he told a classmate named Shaun and I about a driving dream he had experienced. In his dream, the instructor was being chased in a car by some evil doers. He led them to a place where he knew there was a high cliff and purposely tricked them into driving right over the edge of the cliff. He was quite shook up by his dream. At the moment he realized he had killed his pursuers he also realized that his wife who had died some years previous had been sitting in the passenger seat for the entire duration of his dream. His recounted dream has haunted me to this day.

While I understand his rationale about angry driving I'm not quite as certain about angry blogging? Where does angry blogging lead? Does it lead down the rabbit hole, where no one but the white rabbit is meant to go?

I guess it only matters if the target of one's anger is either a regular reader or at least able to read between the lines.

I've thought about blogging anonymously. It has advantages as discussed by the always eloquent Monica. I would certainly be much more willing to bare certain aspects of my soul if I knew I wouldn't have to explain my posts to anyone or have my next employer looking them up.

In the final analysis, I don't think anonymous blogging would be nearly as much fun or ego building for me. I've always described my blogging as a pathetic "cry for help". I can't be helped if you don't know who I am.

Jennie warmed my heart by both quoting me and riffing on this very topic recently. (It's like Christmas comes early when I see someone quoting me.)

Act of Creation

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Todd wrote a brilliant comment on my post entitled "National Novel Writing Month".

The part that really struck me was this bit.

"I don't pretend I'll be a huge seller but the act of creation is sometimes enough. And the fact that it's "out there" in the world is also at times comforting."

--Todd

I agree with Todd. The "act of creation" is a good enough reason all by itself.

I wrote a lot of blog entries before I ever got one comment or even proof that anyone ever read my posts. I wasn't initially blogging because I had an audience; I just wanted a creative outlet.

Sometimes on my best days, I think of my entire life as performance art an absurd play, or a funny cartoon strip. If I could just remember this on the days when I am tightly wound and stressed about life.

Thanks, Todd.

Be sure and check out Todd's music.

Want Less

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I've always thought that the key to having more in life is wanting less.

I wish I could live it as well as I can say it.

Funny Song Title

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Somehow I got pointed to an Australian band by the name of TISM. I was listening to some clips at the record store tonight. Mostly it wasn't my taste, but some of the song titles amused me. One standout was "Interested in Apathy". I'll have to add that to the section of my resume entitled "Interests."

dreams

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I am mulling over what I heard a writer named Amos Oz talk about in an interview on Fresh Air. He spoke eloquently about growing up in Palestine in the 1940's and 1950's. He talked about the dreams that Jews living in Palestine had for the Jewish state that they longed for. They believed the society they would create would be more just, more compassionate, more democratic, more socialist, more tolerant, more everything beautiful than any other society on earth. He said the worst disappointment was seeing their collective dreams dashed. He suggested that the best thing in life was simply to dream, but to never try and live the dream out. It was a sad thought to me, that the best fantasies and dreams of life can only be ruined by trying to live them out. I have some great dreams. I am compelled to live out some of them at the very least. I would rather be disappointed by the gritty truth of reality than to always wonder.

Ennui

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There are some words I occasionally get dropped from my daily vocabulary by virtue of disuse. It reminds me of the feature in Windows where a menu item which is not frequently used will be hidden from view. If you stop in my office and I'm mumbling something like "I know there is a way to add a table in Word, I've seen it somewhere", you'll know this feature has struck again. BTW, I do know how this behavior can be fixed, so don’t feel a need to send me Windows registry tips.

Some words don't get added to the play list simply because they seem a bit pompous to say out loud. I also run into words which I am comfortable writing but am unsure of the pronunciation for some reason. For instance, consider the word prurient. I have a problem where I know the correct pronunciation, but when I get to the point where I’m actually going to say this word out loud, I panic at the last minute and say "pureyent" instead of "proorient".

Ennui is definitely in this category. It has a pronunciation which seems very different from the spelling and it also seems like a bit of a pompous word to use daily. If I have to explain a word to half the people I talk to it seems a little embarrassing. I don't want to become someone else’s word of the day calendar.

I have been feeling sporadic flashes of ennui lately. I don't think it's caused by depression, but rather by having too much in my life.

Reminds me of an interesting essay, touching on this topic conceptually, posted on kuro5hin.org recently. The article was entitled "Are You A Comfort Addict"?

"As the ancient chinese proverb states:

To be happy for a day, get drunk.

To be happy for a week get a pig (i.e. become wealthy)

To be happy for a year, get married.

But to be happy for life, become a gardener "

-- brain in a jar

Like most of what gets posted to kuro5hin, the article didn't entirely make sense, but it did make some points about how the act of having excess in one's life made it harder to enjoy the pleasures of life completely. The article suggested that if you really want to enjoy a great meal, then gorging yourself before hand was not the effective way to achieve that result.

I think this explains part of why I like camping. There is so little stuff to weigh me down. The pleasures of backpacking when they arrive seem transcendant as they follow closely on the heels of walking with a thirty pound pack on your back.

Hell's Kitchen

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Matthew and I paid a visit to a restaurant, called Hell's Kitchen, which seems to be getting a lot of buzz in the Twin Cities. The astute reader knows I am "soo two months behind", so it's possible that everyone who reads this has already been there.

The restaurant is located in the former home of DuJours, one my all time favorite brunch and breakfast locations. The decor is not radically different although the seating seemed more comfortable.

The menu was huge and really interesting. Matthew and I both ordered off the list of specials for the day. He had some sort of cheesy pancakes, topped with fried apples and tiny bits of slices of bacon. I had something resembling Eggs Benedict, but instead of the ham or Canadian bacon, it had a lovely Beef Wellington and some fois grass. I also had a cup of coffee which distinguished itself by being both very tasty and by the fact that it was served in a mug which could double as a lap pool.

The portions were large even by Midwest standards. I could have easily split something and been perfectly happy. The only thing that prevented me from doing so was that I wanted to try more things on the menu.

I enjoyed my visit and intend to go back. I only wish I had remembered the staff wears pajamas during brunch as I would have worn mine to fit in.

I can't find a website for the restaurant, but I can offer, Here are Scott McGerik's thoughts about Hell's Kitchen.

Good Writing

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This opening paragraph of a posting on Bad Mother really caught me.

"There are not enough drugs in the world to alleviate the horror of being home alone with four children, one of whom is completely enraptured with his father."

-- Ayelet Waldman, Not Enough Drugs

I'm always so relieved to find other people who find child rearing difficult.

[Courtesty of Liz]

Novel Writing Month

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When I first came to Minnesota there was a woman in my apartment building who died of cancer one winter. Her husband threw out her things the next week. He practically filled an entire trash can with her unpublished, feminist sci-fi space operas. I grabbed a few and tried to read them. The manuscripts were neither awful nor wonderful. The rejection letters which were left in the manuscripts were kind and a few were obviously not form letters. My memory of Karen, who withered away from breast cancer, is colored by how her life's creative output ended up in the trash heap. Her work should have been buried with her and accorded a little respect. From my perspective, her manuscripts were as much part of her body as her bones; at least her bones were awarded a measure of dignity even in death.

I mention this as last month was "National Novel Writing Month". I spent my month doing things other than writing, so I have nothing to brag about.

One of my co-workers did finish the requisite 50,000 words in November. I was so impressed when I heard about this. While I have always talked about writing something substantial, I've never yet had the internal motivation sufficient to actually do more than write opening scenes and notes about what to include later.

So what stops me really digging in and writing something longer than an email or blog posting? I'm not sure; perhaps it's the image of Karen's husband unceremoniously throwing the type written manuscripts into the trash without so much as a curse or a prayer.

In all probability it's nothing complex or poetic or heroic that prevents me from writing. I am putting the energy and passion of my life into other more mundane pursuits like finding the perfect cup of coffee. Writing mustn't be that important to me if I'm not willing to give up something else in order to write.

Ephemera

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About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from December 2004 listed from newest to oldest.

November 2004 is the previous archive.

January 2005 is the next archive.

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