Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Another Worthless Blog Post

Have you ever clicked that little "Next Blog" button? You know, the one that sits there at the top of the screen? Well, I have, and I now humbly present the results of my research to you in the form of a pareto chart.



My suspicions have been confirmed. Out of all the types of blogs out there, spamblogs are the most common. And 50% of blogs are what I would deem "boring" (spam + daily logs, unless you know the person, and even then, probably) Another 37% are worthless (politics, photo, fashion, religious), leaving only 13% that might have value to the general public. But, really, I don't think any of those are any good either. I'd put the "good" blogs fraction at somwhere around 0.75% Good thing all y'all blog, or it would be even lower.


It's like my friend Drew says, "Surfing on the Information Superhighway is more like rafting on the Boring River."

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Death and that Fickle Dame, Fame.

So, I'm currently reading a biography of Kurt Cobain. Not for any real reason other than I thought it might be interesting. I'm not far enough in to decide how I feel about it, but for those of you who regularly read biographies (i.e. not me), do they always contain a lot of pop psychology analysis of how someone's childhood wrecked/hindered/ameliorated their adult life? If so, it's kind of annoying. Anyway, in reading this biography I have been formulating a horribly hackneyed and clichéd theory that dying or killing yourself will make you more famouser than other people. The following are a few unresearched and undocumented and sketchy case studies to "prove" my point.

Kurt Cobain Vs. Billy Corgan

VS
















Believe it or not, these two used to be mentioned in the same breath as twin quasars of rock. Then look what happened. Kurt killed himself a few months after performing the best MTV Unplugged set ever (no I will not change my mind about this) and went out in a blaze of glory. Corgan, on the other hand, released a phenomenally popular bloated double album, broke up one of the best guitar bands of the 90's and is now some bald headed weirdo playing meandering electronic music. Recently, Mr. Corgan has even fallen far enough to publically pine for the reuniting of his old band, trying to get back a little of that faded glory. To sum it up: Cobain - Blaze of Glory. Corgan - Faded Glory. ALso, there have been at least 3 movies about the life and death of Kurt Cobain. There have been none about Billy Corgan. Finally, ask any "oh, my life sucks and I can only find my escape from my awful parents in music" fifteen year old who is better, Nirvana or the Smashing Pumpkins. They probably haven't even heard of the Smashing Pumpkins.


Jim Morrison Vs. Roger McGuinn


VS















Was your response the same as mine? Roger McWho?? That's because he's not dead. If you don't know, he was the lead singer of the Byrds. Who were the Byrds, you ask? A band that was also from LA but is not as famous as the Doors because Roger didn't die. Don't think the two bands are comparable? You are way overestimating the popularity the Doors had at the time. Do you know why? Exactly. Because Jim Morrison died at a young age. I wouldn't say he went out in a blaze of glory though, more like a face of hair. Number of movies made about Jim Morrison: at least 1. Movies made about Roger McGuinn: None that I know of.


Janis Joplin Vs. Grace Slick

VS
















Both were standout female singers back in the sixties. Ms. Slick was actually more successful. She was maybe even a better singer, but what's your reaction when you hear her name now? "Oh, you mean that crazy old washed up hippie?" Janis Joplin, however, brings to mind a rock and/or roll life lived on the edge. Who knows though, maybe if Ms. Joplin hadn't have died she would have proceeded to record the worst song ever. Instead, she did die and left the onerous task of recording the worst song ever up to Ms. Slick, who succeeded admirably. Just try to listen to We Built This City. I can't bring myself to.


Jimi Hendrix Vs. Jeff Beck




Again, we have the "Who?" factor, as in "Who in the world is Jeff Beck?" Who cares? I mean sure, he was a good guitarist and all, but, come on, did he die by choking on his own vomit? No he did not. That means he's still around today, just another sad, aging musician who didn't know when to call it quits. And Jimi Hendrix? Who knows what he would have done? By the time he died he was already getting a little weird. Instead, he took the high road and ODed on something. Maybe he would have turned out to be another Brian Wilson. You know, an amazingly talented crazy dude who is looked at with a little respect and a lot of sympathy. Brian, you should have offed yourself. You'd be a GOD now. Like Jimi is.


Eliot "Mama" Cass Vs. Anyone Else In The Mamas And The Papas


VS













Do I even need to say anything about this? She died because of a ham sandwich. A ham sandwich, for crying out loud! I mean, it's not even a cool way to die! But because of it, she's the only one from the Mamas and the Papas anyone remembers. Behold, the power of death.




There are so many more examples, I don't have time to go into all of them. Just consider:
  • Buddy Holly (Revered Early Rock God) Vs. Little Richard (Now Playing County Fairs!)
  • John Bonham/Keith Moon Vs. The Drummer for the Rolling Stones. Seriously, do you even know who that is? Or the Drummer from Cream? Nobody knows that one. Ginger Rogers or something like that?
  • Dimebag Darrell Vs. The Rest of Pantera. Most people don't even know who Pantera are!
  • Bono Vs. Michael Stipe. Actually, neither of these guys are dead. It's just that the world would be better off without them.
  • Danny Gatton Vs. Eric Clapton. Well, Clapton is and will always be more famous, which is a crying shame. Danny Gatton was the best guitarist of his generation and he couldn't even get any publicity by committing suicide. You should have heard him play, with his fingers flying across the frets as if by magic. Life's not fair I guess.
  • Some rap dudes, but I don't know anything about rap, so I will not comment.
All in all, there must just be something about our society that loves the flameout, the tragic figure, the bigger-than-life death. Besides, it's so much easier to idolize someone if they die before they do anything really stupid. That's a lesson for all you wannabe musicians out there. In the immortal words of someone I'm too lazy to look up, "It's better to burn out than to fade away."

P.S. Did you know that Kurt Cobain, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Whatsisface Johnson all died at the age of 27? Weird huh?

Run! It's A Lion!!

I don't know about you, but I find this kind of absurd humor uproarious.


Cartoon courtesy of Drew.

Monday, August 29, 2005

Memory Lane Monday

Okay, I'll jump on the blogwagon...



As the brickwife posted last week, we spent a few weeks in the town of Monclova, Coahuila, Mexico. It was a very interesting, exciting and fun experience and I'll write about a few of the more exciting things we did while there.

For three weeks, we lived in a pretty nice three bedroom house in a decent neighborhood. We still had a wrought iron gate around our house, but so did everyone, so it didn't feel dangerous there. I mean, you don't go walking around alone at night, but you really shouldn't do that a lot anywhere. Around the corner from our house, on Blvd. Harold Pape (long story, but the town was basically founded by an American of that name) was a convenience store that sold 10-cent Coronas, as long as you brought the bottles back for the deposit. We frequented that store often. Another great place right around the corner was the firehouse. Every night, a van would pull up, unload some meat and cooking gear and cook up a whole lotta tacos. Tacos Bomberos, the locals called them. I don't know what the meat was, but let me tell you, those street-side tacos were some of the best tacos I've ever had. All they consisted of was meat, cebolla and cilantro and they were 50 cents each. I loved it.

But I don't have any pictures of all that stuff, so on to what I do have pictures of: Cuatrocienegas. Okay, okay, I know that this is what Maggie posted on last week, but hey, I've got more pictures! Okay, I've got pictures of the other stuff, too, I just haven't scanned them yet, so maybe next week...

So, we left Monclova, Maggie, Hozumi, and I, in the morning. We were driving a Chevy Monza, the equivalent of a Geo Metro. It may be small, but it was a real trooper. More on that later. It was a beautiful drive, as long as you looked at the scenery (rocky mountains, tall bluffs, rolling hills) and not at the abject poverty that lay among the hills. In the several towns we drove through, there were speed bumps on the main road. The whole point of these bumps was to slow you down so that the road-side bread vendors could peddle their wares. It was quite strange. After about one-and-a-half hours, we reached the town of Cuatrocienegas, went to the tourist info office and picked up a map, ate lunch at a restaurant on the town square and headed out to see the pozas (small lakes).

The first stop was Poza Azul. As you can see in the picture, it is an almost shockingly blue little thing. But don't be fooled by it's size. That middle, dark blue patch is about 75 meters deep. Hard to believe, I know. There's also supposed to be some rare, indiginous turtle that lives only near Cuatrocienegas but we couldn't get a good glimpse of one. Actually, there are hundreds of species of plants and animals that ONLY live in this weird ecosystem of natual desert lakes. Maybe the best thing about visiting Poza Azul was that we really got to try out the Monza's offroading capabilities.

There was a giant mud puddle of unknown depth across the road to the pond, so, after asking the girls to get out of the car, I went for it. Honestly, I thought we were going to get stuck, but that little Monza plowed right through it. Sweet.




After doing a little swimming at Poza De La Becerra (the little calf) we headed for the granddaddy of them all: Las Playitas. It was startlingly beautiful. That's Maggie standing in the water, looking out over the lake and the mountains. The only problem with this place is that it's hard to get to. It's about 10 miles of dirt "road" with no signs to get there. I feel kind of lucky that we found it. We even got to see some wild horses on the way in. It was cool. And the Monza handled it admirably. So admirably that I even created an advertisement for Chevy, see?

Friday, August 26, 2005

Five Years and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt?

The day of August 26th, 2000 dawned as a beautiful day in Yakima, WA. The sun was shining, yet it wasn't too hot. And inside Tieton Drive Bible Chapel, things were just starting to get busy. The wedding was at three, but there was still lots to be done leading up to it. I spent the whole morning at the church putting up yellow roses on the end of each pew. And putting up more yellow roses in vases all over the place. And putting up dead guy flowers. [Explanation: One of Maggie's sister's best friend's father was killed in an accident a week before our wedding. His funeral was the day before and there was one nice flower arrangement that matched our wedding colors. So we snatched it. With permission, of course.] I also spent a lot of time cutting the edges of the programs with those stupid frilly scrapbooking scissors.

Once everything was set up, we just did normal wedding stuff. You know, get dressed, take pictures, feel like you're going to puke, etc. To be honest, I don't remember much of the wedding after this point. I do remember that the brickfather, who was officiating, forgot to tell everyone to sit down after the brickbride walked up the aisle. That was funny. I also remember the musical number performed by a trio of girls: two cousins and one sister of Maggie's. According to Maggie's grandmother, that was the only part of the wedding that made her cry. Not because it was so beautiful, but because it was so bad. Claire, the flute player, was not aware that there is a difference between B and Bb. I'll leave the rest to your imagination.

Other things about the wedding I remember:
  • After the ceremony, when the brickbrothers (both groomsmen) came out into the foyer, I noticed that they were just sobbing. Picture that: Two big guys (deuce, deuce and a half) bawling their eyes out.

  • Um, that's it.


  • From here on out, I will recount the rest of the wedding day and the honeymoon in picture-and-caption format! This was before the age of digital cameras, but not before the age of scanners.


    That's us, kissing right after we fed each other a little bit of cake. You know, that big white thing in the picture? I wish I would have scanned a better picture of Maggie in her wedding dress because she was stunningly beautiful (you still are, too), but I didn't. Anyway, the reception was spectacular. We had it at the Doubletree in Yakima, which meant that it was real good since the banquet manager knew that it was for the daughter of her boss's boss. Also, it was not dry, which meant that a lot of people from my family's church had not experienced anything like it before (they're almost all teetotalers). Even my mom danced to Love Shack.




    No, your eyes aren't fooling you, that's Maggie drinking straight out of a bottle of champagne. Cheap champagne. This was on the first day of our honeymoon. I skipped the wedding night for, ahem, obvious reasons. We planned on driving to Seattle that morning (we flew out on Wednesday morning) but instead we went to Maggie's mom's house to open our presents. How often do you get that many presents. Plus it would have been mean to the kids to leave so many unopened presents just sitting around, tempting them. Once they were opened,though, the temptation was gone. Let's be honest here, it was mostly boring stuff, right?





    I'd ask you to guess where we went on our honeymoon, but if you know us and you've read very many of my posts you know the answer: Disneyland. I honestly hardly remember anything about what we did at Disneyland. I know we both bought wicked awesome hats at the Indiana Jones store, and apparently we took a picture with Mickey. Other than that, though, I'm kind of drawing a blank. I know it was fun, though.







    Thanks to the brickfather-in-law, we had free hotel rooms for the entire honeymoon, including at this beautiful hotel, right on the beach in Santa Monica. We did feel a little out of place in a $350+ per night hotel. Especially when we asked at the front desk where the nearest McDonald's was. We were still poor college students, see?










    That's Maggie letting the waves wash over her feet during one of our long walks on the beach at night in Santa Monica. How did I ever get to marry such a gorgeous woman?










    All in all, our honeymoon was one of the best weeks of my life. Except for the part where Maggie got sick. That sucked. But other than that, it was awesome.

    I love you Maggie.

    Random Picture Friday




    It's that time again, folks!



    I think there's more than formula in that bottle, know what I mean?

    Thursday, August 25, 2005

    Telling Stories, Part II

    Today's story takes place back in August of 2001, shortly before our first wedding anniversary. It had been quite a summer. We were living in what most people would call the ghetto of Yakima, down on 7th Street and Nob Hill Blvd. We were living in a dirty old house that had been abandoned since the last tenant died, but that's not our story today. Maybe another time. The brickwife's family had been having a rough summer, too. Lots of strife and confusion and changes. So we decided to take what little money we had left after working at a cherry processing plant all summer and after paying off the moving truck that we wrecked in June and use that money to go to Disneyland with all of the brickwife's brothers and sisters.

    Imagine, if you will, eight people packed into a seven seat minivan (rented for us by the brickfather-in-law). These eight people included: Mary (age 5), George (8), Peter (almost 11), Claire (12), the brickbrother (18), the bricksister-in-law (19), the brickwife (21) and me (21). So basically, we had 1 adult for each kid, and two of the kids had to share a seatbelt.

    Now, imagine that the whole trip is a surprise. The kids only know that we are going to visit their aunt and uncle in San Francisco for a few days. On day one, we make the 14-hour drive down US97 and I-5 to Frisco. Of course, we stop a few times on the way to eat, once in Bend, OR and once at a rest stop in CA. The highlight of the day is that George asked if every little bridge, or even overpass, was the "Golden Bridge." He meant Golden Gate, and he apparently had no idea what it looked like.

    The whole crew (sans me, who was taking the picture) at Golden Gate Park. From the left: George, Zach, Peter, Claire, Leah, Mary, Maggie.


    Days two and three were spent in the company of the wonderful Aunt Mary and Uncle Bob. We touristed around SF, went to Golden Gate Park, went to the Beach, etc. And on day four, we packed the kids up to "head home." So off we went, heading due south towards LA. AND NONE OF THE KIDS NOTICED! We passed a million signs for Los Angeles, which we didn't pass on the way down, but still, not a peep from the back about it. 6 hours later, we tell them that we're staying at a hotel that night, since we don't want to drive all the way back. On the way to the hotel, we pass Six Flags, California, and the older kids look with longing at all the roller coasters as I say "Nope, no time to stop there, sorry kids." And eventually, we reach the Hilton in Costa Mesa, where we will be staying for the next 4 nights, free of charge (set up, once again, by the brickfather-in-law.)

    That evening, we went across the street to McDonald's where each of us were allowed to choose two things off the dollar menu. Remember, we had almost no money. After we ate, we hit the pool for some swimming and horseplay. And finally, it was time to hit the hay. (Ooh, this next part is my favorite part) Before we go to bed, we bring all the kids into one room and tell them that we need to have a talk. They all look nervous. And then I say, "okay, kids, I have something to tell you. I know you weren't expecting to hear this, but.....WE'RE GOING TO DISNEYLAND!" And then chaos ensued. There was bed jumping, tears of joy, shouts, screams of "I don't believe it!" "Three days!!!" and "I love you!!!" Plus we got it all on videotape, though I have no idea where that tape is.

    So the next day, we pile into the van again and head off for Disneyland. The first thing we do when we get there (aside from parking and purchasing tickets) is ride the Haunted Mansion. This ride scared the crap out of me when I was a kid, so of course we thought it would be fun to take the kids. The youngest wouldn't go on it, but George, the eight-year-old, would. Only once we got in there, he covered his face up with a park map for the whole ride. Now, it was hot and George was sweaty, and the ink on the map was apparently not waterproof. All this lead to George coming out of the ride with a detailed map of Disneyland on his face. Priceless.

    Next, we took all the kids on Splash Mountain (maybe the best ride, ever). We got all eight of us in one boat. We got Mary on the ride by telling her it wasn't scary, and boy was she mad afterward. We bought the picture they take as you start the plunge, and I swear, I have never seen a more frightened look on anyone's face than the one Mary wore as we hurtled down the flume.

    After that, things get a little blurry and we often split up, 1 "adult" going with 1 kid. So, to tell you what happened, I need to go all list-style on you again.

  • Mary spent the whole week singing "Dah dah dah dah dah dah dah Hollywood!" or changing the words slightly to match the ride she was on. For example, on Dumbo, she would sing "Up up up up up up up DOWN DOWN DOWN!"


  • The only way I could get George to go on the Matterhorn was by playfully calling it the ItDoesn'tMatterhorn.


  • The oldest of the children, Claire, was absolutely the worst driver on Autopia. Even Mary was better.


  • I learned that the Teacups are not meant for adult consumption.


  • The bricksister-in-law, George and Peter went on Indiana Jones about 6 times in a row by hopping from the exit line into the entrance line when no one was watching.


  • At Disney's California Adventure, everyone went on the Maliboomer. I had to talk George into it, and talk him down in the lead up to the action. He loved it. I hated it.


  • The BSIL videotaped the whole ride on California Screamin'. The best part was that she didn't know about the rocket-style launch at the very beginning, so on the tape, you get a good 5 seconds of sky.


  • We discovered that Soarin' Over California is a great place to cool off.


  • When I went on Space Mountain with George (if you haven't guessed, he and I spent a lot of time together since he is the hardest of the four to deal with and nobody else wanted to do it) he hated it. He asked if it was almost over about 3 seconds after it started.


  • He loved Big Thunder Mountain Raliroad, though.


  • No matter how grown up I am, and how much I have forsaken my geeky past, I still love Star Tours and the Star Trader shop right outside it.


  • So many more things happened, I'll never be able to name them all.


  • So, after three hectic and fun days at Disneyland, we headed home. The first day of driving brought us to Sacramento where we stayed in the Doubletree, free again. This was about 1 day after some Ukrainian immigrant went on a shooting spree and killed a bunch of people in Sacramento. Scary. That night, our last night of the trip, we had a special treat: we ate at Applebee's! We had just enough food budget left over that we could afford it. Sort of. At the end of the trip, our credit card was maxed out and our bank account was almost empty, but it was totally worth it. Besides, financial aid day wasn't too far in the future, so we were okay!


    Man, I really want to go to Disneyland now.


    This post has 33 links.

    WAHKAAAAAA

    I know that this won't mean anything to a lot of you, but I saw this picture and I just had to share it. That guy in the picture? The one laying on the ground? Taped to a chair? Yeah, I know that guy. I went to high school with him. He's a rookie in the NFL now, and it makes me laugh to see this picture. I don't think I'd call him a friend, but definitely an acquaintance, since he dated my sister-in-law for a few years.


    Carolina Panthers' Micah Ross (11) dumps a cooler of ice and water on rookie Efrem Hil, top left, as fellow rookie Taylor Stubblefield, bottom, awaits his turn after the team's final practice of training camp in Spartanburg, S.C.

    Poetry Thursday




    Sleeping In The Forest
    by Mary Oliver

    I thought the earth remembered me,
    she took me back so tenderly,
    arranging her dark skirts, her pockets
    full of lichens and seeds.
    I slept as never before, a stone on the river bed,
    nothing between me and the white fire of the stars
    but my thoughts, and they floated light as moths
    among the branches of the perfect trees.
    All night I heard the small kingdoms
    breathing around me, the insects,
    and the birds who do their work in the darkness.
    All night I rose and fell, as if in water,
    grappling with a luminous doom. By morning
    I had vanished at least a dozen times
    into something better.

    Wednesday, August 24, 2005

    The End of an Era? Or the Start of Something New?

    So, the Brickwife and I are celebrating our fifth wedding anniversary this Friday. I can't believe that it's been five years! I also can't believe that I'm only 25, but I've been married for five years. No way am I letting the brickson get married when he is just 20, but that's a discussion for another time. Anyway, to commemorate this milestone, I'm going to spend the next few days telling stories about stuff that we've done over the last 5 years. When we got married, we had no clue that the next 5 years would turn out how they did. Well, except for the first two. Since we were still in college, those years turned out about like we expected.

    Two quick notes: No, me telling these stories will not preempt the normal Thursday and Friday features. I know how much you all look forward to Bad Poetry and Random Pictures, so I won't rob you of that. Second, did you know that the theme for fifth anniversary presents is "wood?" How stupid is that? "Here, honey, I bought you a cord of cherry wood!" L-A-M-E.

    So, on to the first story (unfortunately, this one takes place about 2 months B.D.C., before digital camera, so there are no pictures.)


    If you're a regular reader of my dear wife's blog, you'll know that we spent a few weeks in Mexico back in the summer and fall of 2002. Six weeks, to be exact; three in Guadalajara and three in Monclova. Our three weeks in Guadalajara started on the eve of our second anniversary, which was celebrated in splendid fashion by going out to some random restaurant and picking up some flowers from a street vendor. Not my finest hour.

    But that failure was more than made up for (I hope) by the trip we took to Puerto Vallarta the next weekend. The HR manager at the plant I was working at had all sorts of connections in the tourist industry. He got us cheap bus tickets and a discounted rate at an all-inclusive resort. And let me tell you, when they say "all-inclusive" they mean "all-inclusive." Drinks, meals, snacks, everything. It was radical, and very far removed from the bus trip. Now don't get me wrong, the bus was about as nice as you can expect a Mexican cross-country bus to be. They served us little sandwiches that tasted like preservatives, the seats reclined almost all the way, and they even showed some movies. We had the privilege of seeing The Matrix, What Planet Are You From, Swordfish, and Fools Rush In, some in English with Spanish subtitles, and others dubbed into Spanish. It's a good way to learn a language.

    The resort was nice, just a few steps from the beach. And since this post is getting long, I'll now recount some of the cool things that happened in list style


  • We went swimming in the Pacific ocean even though the red "Don't Go Swimming!" flag was out

  • We got caught in a vicious, sudden rainstorm

  • I bought some silver and onyx jewelry from a beach vendor

  • We got to see a bunch of sweet looking lizards crawling around the hotel

  • We watched some of the Mexican World Series on Mexican ESPN. I think the Diablos Rojos won.

  • We went to the Hard Rock Cafe. We were, like, the only ones there.

  • We took a taxi into Old Town, walked the almacen and then went to a third-story semi-dive bar that had a Mexican Nirvana cover band playing.

  • We only saw a few guys walking around with machine guns.

  • We did all this in only two days.



  • Someday we might go back there, or we might go somewhere else in Mexico, but for two wonderful days back in 2002, there was nothing better than spending some time drinking free margaritas beside the pool with your best friend in Puerto Vallarta. Also, about two three weeks later, a huge hurricane hit Puerto Vallarta and totally messed it up. Timing is everything.

    Tuesday, August 23, 2005

    List Tuesday




    Top Ten States
    The states appearing in this list are all states that I have personally visited. All but Minnesota gave their consent to be named here. Minnesota doesn't really like me.

    1. Washington

    2. Oregon

    3. California

    4. Virginia

    5. Idaho

    6. Euphoria

    7. Minnesota

    8. Maryland

    9. Arizona

    10. New Mexico




    Top One District

    1. District of Columbia

    Friday, August 19, 2005

    Random Thoughts Friday

    Now, don't get your hopes up. I'm not starting a whole new feature here, I'm just harnessing the power of my rapidly deteriorating brain. I'm coming down with a bad (based on what the Golden Girl has been going through) head cold, which means that my brain is not functioning at its normal high level. Instead, I can't follow one train of thought for more than a few seconds before it derails. Fortunately, this facilitates the creation of a random thought post. So, yipee!

    I think that "blogosphere" is a totally apt word, since it reminds me that the world's collection of blogs makes up a huge, floating cloud of crap.

    I'd rather be at Disneyland.

    The Frosty may be the world's most perfect food.

    I've never been to Spain. I haven't been to Oklahoma either, dammit.

    Some days, I just can't figure out how I'm going to make it through. I just want it all to end.........Ha Ha Ha! I had you going there didn't I? Maybe I'll start a new feature in which I impersonate other types of bloggers. That was my self-absorbed 15 year old boy with a mean father style. I can't wait to try out celebrity photo blogging!

    How come Blogspot's spell checker doesn't recognize "blog" or "blogger" or "blogging?"

    Is it sad that I've spent my whole life living in, if not cities, than at least towns? Should seeing a deer or a rabbit or something really be that exciting?

    Have you ever noticed that anyone that has one of those big trampolines ends up calling it "the tramp?" "Okay kids, let's all go jump on the tramp!"

    The other day, we saw this really weird bug in our house. It had lots of legs, was flat and wide, and was super fast. I think it was just a centipede, but still, it's creepy.

    I know it's stupid, but that Heineken commercial where the delivery guy drops a bunch of beer and then a dude in bed with some chick says "I don't know, I just feel so sad" cracks me up every time.

    I think the phrase "jump the shark" has jumped the shark.

    I have a fake tooth. Once, it fell out of my head and I had to go to work with a missing front tooth. I told everyone that it was knocked out while I stopped a robbery at the 7-11. This was in, like, week two of the first real job I've ever had.

    I thought for a second that I'd be disappointed that the new SAT can have scores as high as 2400. Now no one will be impressed with my score anymore. Then I realized that I took that test 8 years ago, and no one ever really cared about it.

    Sometimes I can't help but feel proud of myself for being smart. Oh, trust me, I am.

    If you think it's a good idea to let your toddler go down an old-school swingset slide while sitting on the trailer of a big toy semi, you're wrong. It's really, really not. If you are kid thinking that it would be fun, you're wrong too.

    I have a crash test dummy bobblehead sitting on my desk at work.

    Remember the Crash Test Dummies? Mmmmm Mmmmm Mmmmm Mmmmmm. Once there was this girl who wouldn't go and change with the girls in the change room. How was that song ever popular?

    Remember the Crash Test Dummy toys? Those things were cool. So were the M.U.S.C.L.E toys.

    I hate it when it rains here in DC. At the tiniest drop of rain, everybody pulls out these giant, canopy-sized umbrellas and pokes me in the eye. I think they're doing it on purpose.

    I used to live in Seattle. If you've never been there, please stop imagining it having rain pouring down all the time. That is so not the case. It's actually just six months of soul crushing drizzle from October to April. In fact, on average, it rains 7 more inches per year in DC than it does in Seattle.

    How cool would it be to have a fake eye you could freak people out with?

    Okay, here's an experiment for you. Put your iPod on shuffle and just listen. This is a good way to remind yourself how awesome a lot of older bands are. Like the Who. John Entwhistle, Keith Moon, and Pete Townshend are the best rhythm section ever.

    Hats off to the new-age hairstyle made of bones. Hats off to the use of hats as megaphones. Speak softly, drive a Sherman Tank. Laugh hard, it's a long ways to the bank.

    I've never, ever tried any drugs. I hope I'm not missing anything really cool.

    No, I'm not counting alcohol as a drug. Or pseudoephedrine. Or Doritos.

    Have you ever seen the movie Straw Dogs? It's really good, but kind of hard to watch. But it has Dustin Hoffman going medieval and some English dudes, so it's cool.

    I wish I could be part of a blogger clique.

    I wish I lived in an Ivory Tower, because I bet it would be worth a lot of money. I mean, it's ivory!

    I think the term "golden parachute" is really stupid. Gold is heavy, so I don't think it would work as a parachute at all. I think the term should be cashmere parachute or something.

    The time is right for dancing in the street.

    All you anti-Wal-Mart protesters out there, don't you think it would be a better protest if you let Wal-Mart build a store and then just boycotted? It would be pretty embarrassing for Wal-Mart to have to close a store because nobody went to it. Oh, wait. That's right. You all are just an extremely vocal minority that try to prevent everyone else from being able to shop there.

    This post has gone on just about long enough.

    I think the saying "(blank) is the new black," is really fun to use with completely inappropriate things. For example "Oak trees are the new black."

    Okay, on that note, this post has definitely gone on long enough.

    Random Picture Friday




    So, here is today's picture. I'm thinking about doing an entire post about crap like this...


    These people are the reason High School Band is stupid.

    Thursday, August 18, 2005

    Passing Around the Collection Plate

    Hey! I just thought of something that I've never complained about OR called stupid since I started writing this blog: collecting things!

    If you collect something, particularly unopened toys, now would be a good time to stop reading. Also, if you think I am cool and have been defending me as such to your friends, this would be an excellent place for you to stop reading.

    Come on people! What a waste of money! Who are you going to impress by having a complete collection of the new Star Wars toys unopened? I used to have some, but I've since opened them all to play with. I mean, for the brickson to play with, yeah, that's it. I used to be a total dork, but I have since seen the light! It is a stupid thing to do. They will never be worth anything. They are not an investment. Stocks are an investment. Real estate is and investment. Mass produced toys in their original packaging are NOT an investment. Especially since there's about a million other people doing the exact same thing. Y'all can just spend the next 40 years ripping each other off, okay?

    This seems like a good place to put in the disclaimer that this post refers to and mocks only those collectors that are over age 18. Collecting things should be a strictly childish pastime.

    Here is my list of things that people collect and brief descriptions of how I feel on the subject:

  • New Action Figure/Collectible Toys: stupid and dorky

  • Old school Action Figures: Just dorky.

  • Shot Glasses: Unless you're an alcoholic, pointless.

  • Decorative Spoons: Why?

  • Baseball Cards: Retro Chic.

  • Card-based Role Playing Game Cards: Monumentally nerdy. That means you Magic: The Gathering.

  • Stamps: meh...

  • Scabs: Really, really gross. *shudder*

  • Midgets: Illegal, probably.

  • Diamonds: Supporter of death and destruction in Africa, you evil, evil person.

  • They Might Be Giants Albums: Totally and completely awesome!


  • There you go. Now how do you collectors feel? You got pwn3d! Maaaaaaan, I hate the internet and it's attendant base "language." Wait, I'm sorry internet, I love you, I really do! Don't go! Please!

    Bad Poetry Thursday



    Today's bad poetry is that time-honored classic, the acrostic.

    Mars

    by Benjamin Meals

    My crazy
    Aunt
    Rooney
    Still lives there.

    Poetry Thursday




    Pigtail

    by Tadeusz Rozewicz

    When all the women in the transport
    had their heads shaved
    four workmen with brooms made of birch twigs
    swept up
    and gathered up the hair

    Behind clean glass
    the stiff hair lies
    of those suffocated in gas chambers
    there are pins and side combs
    in this hair

    The hair is not shot through with light
    is not parted by the breeze
    is not touched by any hand
    or rain or lips

    In huge chests
    clouds of dry hair
    of those suffocated
    and a faded plait
    a pigtail with a ribbon
    pulled at school
    by naughty boys.

    Wednesday, August 17, 2005

    Anglophilia Rides Again

    I'll be upfront about this; I like the English language. It's bizarre, hard to learn (for native speakers of other languages) and it's constantly changing. Now, I'll discuss some of my favorite things about it! Full disclosure: I am an engineer who also loves to read and is married to a mathematician who is also somewhat of a grammar queen. Thus I have come to appreciate how intricate our language is and how many other people (I'm looking at you, engineers) don't really know how to use it properly.

    First, the size of the English language is astounding. Do you have any idea how many words you know? Me neither, but I bet it's a lot! Even people that weren't forced to take vocabulary in high school and will never, ever be able to forget those words know more than 10,000 words (total and completely bogus guess, but I bet the order of magnitude is about right). Those of us that read a lot, and are relatively good writers (do not judge this claim based on your reading of this blog. I think it sucks too.) probably have a vocabulary approaching 100,000 words. That just boggles my mind, literally sometimes as I try to recall a certain word that I know I know. Of course, in most cases, a large portion of those 100,000 words are technical-type words that will never be used in general conversation (i.e porosity, capacitance, enthalpy, etc.), but who cares! It's still a lot of words!

    Second, written English can be hilarious. Most people communicate primarily by speaking and listening, which means homophones are almost impossible to distinguish in terms of spelling. The meaning is, of course, obvious by the context. The comedy comes in when people are forced to write and want to use words they have only heard. This leads to sentences like the following:
    • Shortly after he woke this morning, Trevor decided to dawn his favorite Eagles jersey.
    • The suburbs are full of track housing.
    • While she was totally hammered, Matilda tried to walk threw a plate glass window.
    See how funny those are? No? Well, maybe I'm just a dork. I also find it funny when my fingers are on the wrong keys when I start typing and end up with a bunch of mpmdrmdr words. My favorite pair of homophones, though, are raze and raise; the only two, to my knowledge, that are homophones AND antonyms! Too bad "raze" is hardly ever used. I guess there is also the "sanction" "sanction" pair, but that's different. I even get confused by that one. I mean they're spelled the same but have opposite meanings? WTF?

    Third, it really gets on my nerves when people don't understand the meaning of words but use them anyway. Case number one: irony. Irony is a great concept, both poignant and painful. It can cause minor irritation or devastating disappointment. However, it is an entirely different concept from suckiness. I blame Alanis Morissette for this horrible bastardization of the word. Let's look at her song Ironic and see what we find! All of the following are called "ironic."

    Rain on your wedding day.
    Not ironic, it just sucks.

    10,000 spoons when all you need is a knife.
    Not ironic. What would be ironic is if you had 10,000 knives yesterday, but you needed a spoon.

    A free ride, when you already paid.
    How could it be a free ride if you paid? Not only is this not ironic, it doesn't even make sense!

    A death row pardon, two minutes too late.
    Okay, that is ironic.

    Those are just a few examples from the song, which horribly mixes the ironic with the non-ironic. Here are the complete lyrics for you in case you were living in a cave 10 years ago. Finally, let me point out that there is a difference between sarcastic and ironic. Not everything that is ironic is also sarcastic. All you twenty-somethings that use these synonymously, please, please stop before MY HEAD ASPLODES! They are similar, yes, but the connotations are very different. Sarcastic has more in common with sardonic than it does ironic. Why not use sardonic more? That's a good word!

    As a final note, please feel free to disagree with me completely. That's another beauty of the English language; it is constantly and rapidly changing, so who knows what tomorrow might bring. There are, however, those among us that insist on following "rules" that were originally put in place to differentiate the educated rich from the uneducated poor. When you insist on using these rules, you are helping the MAN! Come one, stick it to the man! Use "poor" grammar! Say "Where are you at?" Say "Who'd have thunk?" On the other hand, don't make yourself look like an idiot at work when you write reports and stuff. "Good" grammar still makes a favorable impression. For list of common "errors" and how to avoid them, check this out!

    I really hope there aren't too many errors in this post. I'll feel really stupid, but please feel free to point them out.

    Tuesday, August 16, 2005

    Forward and Back

    If you are in a good mood today and don't want to be brought down by hateful sentiments and angry screeds, please do not read this post. And especially do not read the poem at the end of this post. Already in a bad mood? Carry on.

    If you have a computer and are connected in some way to the internet (hopefully not dial-up, but if so, sucks to be you) and have email, then you are familiar with the scourge of Forwarded Messages. Yeah, you know what I'm talking about. I can hear you cringing in your seat as you read this and remember all the inane nonsense and FW:FW:FW:FW:RE:FW:FUNNIEST JOKE EVER messages you have pissed away your time reading. Fortunately for me, I get very few of these. I guess most people I communicate with are somewhat considerate. But let's get down to business.

    The bizarre thing about forwarded emails is that, sometime, somewhere, someone actually sat down and wrote that list of 15 Ways that Men and Women are different. Actually, just writing it isn't the problem. The problem occurs when they think that everyone they know (be it in real life or over the internet) NEEDS to read their list because it is just so funny! Who are these people? Why do they do this? Are they just playing a practical joke on all of us? Are they trolling? My guess is no. They actually want to share a neverending stream of hilarity with the world. They have taken it upon themselves to ensure our amusement with doctored photos of trees, or heartstring pulling poems of love and loss. We don't want to hear it! Guess what? We don't care if we'll die a horrible death when we don't forward this chain letter to 10 of our friends. We don't want to hear about things that annoy you, or things that make you happy. Aside: You might think I am being hypocritical in saying this since I am a retarded blogger, but think again Batman! I see the similarities myself, but nobody forced you to come to this far-flung corner of the internet and read my lame posts, so just be quiet, Mr. Self-appointed Irony Finder. This applies to bloggers in general, too, not just me. It's perfectly acceptable to be self-absorbed and annoying on a blog, nobody will hear it. It's like swearing in the woods. So in order to combat this information age plague, from now on, I suggest that any time you receive a forwarded joke or poem or picture or whatever, forward it right back to the person who sent it to you. For effect, it's best to add a little text of your own like "You have got to read this!" or "When I read this I thought of you!" Obviously, there will be people with whom you should not use this approach, like family. That will just cause more problems than it solves, so please use discretion.

    In keeping with this discussion of forwarded messages, I received one yesterday that I think takes the cake when it comes to being stupid, offensive, xenophobic, small-minded, and ridiculous. You may think that's a lot of heavy epithets, but hold off your judgment until you read the whole thing. The message I received is presented below, in its entirety. Well, not its entire entirety. The original also included a lot of smiley faces and other crappy clipart.

    Someday, if my blog is ever listed in google, I want people who search for this poem because they think it is hilarious to be directed to my site.

    Enjoy!

    FW: ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT'S POEM
    This can make you think.




    Illegal
    Immigrants
    Poem


    I cross ocean,
    poor and broke,
    Take bus,
    see employment folk.

    Nice man treat me
    good in there,
    Say I need to
    see welfare.

    Welfare say,
    "You come no more,
    We send cash
    right to your door."

    Welfare checks,
    they make you wealthy,
    Medicaid it keep
    you healthy!

    By and by,
    I got plenty money,
    Thanks to you,
    American dummy.

    Write to friends
    in motherland,
    Tell them 'come
    fast as you can.'

    They come in turbans
    and Ford trucks,
    I buy big house
    with welfare bucks

    They come here,
    we live together,
    More welfare checks,
    it gets better!

    Fourteen families,
    they moving in,
    But neighbor's patience
    wearing thin.

    Finally, white guy
    moves away,
    Now I buy his house,
    and then I say,

    "Find more aliens
    for house to rent."
    And in the yard
    I put a tent.

    Send for family
    they just trash,
    But they, too,
    draw the welfare cash!

    Everything is
    very good,
    And soon we
    own the neighborhood.

    We have hobby
    it's called breeding,
    Welfare pay
    for baby feeding.

    Kids need dentist?
    Wife need pills?
    We get free!
    We got no bills!

    American crazy!
    He pay all year,
    To keep welfare
    running here.

    We think America
    darn good place!
    Too darn good for
    the white man race.

    If they no like us,
    they can scram,
    Got lots of room in
    Pakistan.





    SEND THIS TO
    EVERY AMERICAN
    TAXPAYER YOU KNOW

    List Tuesday



    8 Things You Don't Want to See When You Open the Fridge
    Please note: This refers to refrigerators, not the former football player called "The Fridge." I can't even imagine what you would see if you opened him. Ugh.

    1. An army of ants recreating the battle of Gettysburg.

    2. Tar. Lots and lots of black, sticky tar.

    3. A talking sandwich. That would totally freak me out.

    4. Eleven half-used bottles of ketchup (catsup).

    5. Vomit.

    6. That somebody used the last of the milk.

    7. Pat Sajak.

    8. Leftover beets, because that means that you actually had beets for dinner.

    Monday, August 15, 2005



    Every once in a while, I'll see someone on the Metro who is decked in out in full military resplendncy. I'm not talking a run-of-the-mill desk job uniform, I'm talking about full camouflage, pants tucked into boots, bars on their chests. The full monty. Once, a whole crew of fresh-faced young army men boarded the train at Metro Center. They were all very polite, which was refreshing and forced me to assume that they weren't from around here.

    Whenever this happens, I feel a little intimidated. On my normal commute there are no reminders that I'm doing absolutely nothing to serve my country aside from paying taxes. Oh, and you government workers, you're not either. Well, maybe a few of you are. But in these instances, I'm forced to come to terms with the fact that I am nothing but a working schmuck, out to make a buck. And much bigger bucks (I assume) than these kids that are out firing guns and getting sent willy-nilly to hostile foreign nations. They have guts that I'll never have, and that makes me feel bad. I feel like I should do something. And by something, I don't mean put one of those stupid yellow ribbons on my car. And by something, I don't mean saying that if you don't support the war "You must hate our troops!" But forgive me, I am getting close to violating my NO POLITICS credo.

    So, in closing, I would just like to say to you armed forces guys: Keep up the good work. And I bet chicks really dig a guy in those uniforms.

    Friday, August 12, 2005

    Thursday Night at the 9:30 Club: A Retrospective

    On Thursday, August 11th, 2005, the greatest thing ever happened. Well, maybe not ever, but it was pretty good: the brickwife and I left our baby in the capable hands of others, went out to a club and pretended like we were still cool. Not that we ever were. If I remember right, the bricksister-in-law said we were "dorks" when we were still in college. And it's all downhill from there. On to the review.

    The Club: I don't know which of my readers have been to the 9:30 Club already, but for those of you that haven't, I highly suggest it. It is a great place to see a show. Big, but not too big. Plus, the side balconies are really cool. The bars are easily accessible, though we didn't drink anything last night, and have cups and pitchers of water right out front for anybody to take, which is what we did. The location is just the right amount of sketchy. I would definitely go back at some point in the future.

    The Secret Machines:
    What can I say, these guys blew me away. The first thing you notice about them is the pounding, relentless rhythm section. The drummer rocked out harder than anyone else all night. What was great was that, while rocking hard and banging his head, he still managed to be almost mechanically precise! The beat never wavered, it just came at you in wave after wave of total rockingness! The same cannot be said about the KOL drummer, but we'll get to that later. The second thing you notice is the lighting. I think the lighting crew for the Secret Machines spend as much time as the band members do in preparing the songs. It was almost like a light show. I think this might be a coping mechanism since the band is not very amicable with the audience. Not mean, just a bit detached. But that doesn't matter because they play such awesome music! The third thing I noticed was that they played their biggest "hit" first. Usually bands save the most popular song for last, but last night they definitely saved the best for last: the thunderous nearly-ten-minute First Wave Intact. It was a brilliant closer. A few people in the audience probably thought that the show dragged on in the middle (they were on stage for an hour) but not me. I was into it the whole way, even when the played a molto ritardando cover of Bob Dylan's Girl From the North Country. Plus their cover of Harmonia's De Luxe was exquisite (and in German!)

    The Kings of Leon: These guys (who I've totally been in love with for more than two years (take that you dunderheads that might've wanted to call me a poseur)) were excellent, though as I look back on it, almost a little disappointing after the Secret Machines. But that's because they are a totally different band. It's a little hard to switch from watching a band that's all about drama and crescendo and drive to watching a band that's all about drinking and partying and beating the heck out of their instruments. But that's not fair to KOL. The one complaint I do have is that the drummer was pushing the beat the whole show. Either that or the other three (I'm especially looking at you, bass player) were always behind the beat. Of course the slight off-beatness might stem from the fact that they played each song at least 10% faster than they are on the albums. For those of you that haven't seen the KOL in a proper venue (i.e. not a big stadium), the show is all about energy. Fast, dirty beats and unintelligible lyrics. It's great head-bobbing, or even dancing music, but the crowd last night apparently didn't notice. Since it was a sold-out show, I thought that there would be a lot of hard-core fans there, but I don't think that was the case. Most people just stood there like statues. Maybe that's the cool thing to do nowadays. The most that the crowd got into it was when the KOL totally burned the place down with their penultimate song: Spiral Staircase. It should have blown everyone away, but alas...

    Overall Show Grade: A+

    Various Observations:
    • It's better to have a really drunk guy in front of you than behind you. Getting fallen on is better than getting puked on.
    • There are reports that Barb and Jenna Bush were in the house last night and had an afterparty with KOL.
    • The brickwife is a hottie.
    • The crowd was way, way different than I thought it would be. I expected to be near the upper end of the age distribution, but I think we were right about average.
    • There was a really cool dancing grandpa ( maybe 60?) up on the balcony.
    • If the District smoking ban goes into effect, I won't mind. I had to take two showers to really get that stink off.
    • The frat guys in front of us were funny. They seemed so excited to be there it was almost cute.
    • The 9:30 Club would have been an awesome place to see a band like Nirvana just before they went huge. I bet they would just detonate the club.
    • There was very little pushing and shoving. All in all it was a very polite crowd.
    • A huge thank you to Mr. Fantastic and his wife Nurse Stacy for being willing, at the last minute, to babysit the brickbaby. We are so grateful that you were there to help us out after we blew off our other babysitters. And don't worry. We think you did a great job. The brickbaby is hard to put to sleep, plus he was having way too much fun with you to want to go to sleep. I'm not sure if the Mr. Fantastic moniker is going to stick though, because right after you left last night, he said "Mike?" not "Mr. Fantastic?"

    Random Picture Friday!



    That's right, it's that time again brickfans! So, here is this week's entry...


    Gives new meaning to the phrase "Will play for food." Though I don't know how good of an audience dinner is.

    Thursday, August 11, 2005

    Who Wants to Go?


    So, since the brickwife has come down with some sort of illness, I'm stuck with one extra ticket for the Kings of Leon/Secret Machines/Helio Sequence concert at the 9:30 Club tonight. First band starts at 8:15. Who wants to go?


    UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE

    With the help of Mr. Fantastic I talked the brickwife into going to the show!!! Mr. Fantastic and his wife Stacy stayed at our house to watch the brickbaby. I hope they had a good time and didn't mind that our house was kind of a mess. Anyway, we had fun at the show, but I'll save the details for a full-on review later today!

    A Random Picture to Brighten Your Day

    I know, I know. It's not Random Picture Friday, but there was no way I could rob you of this beauty. Just bathe in its complete and utter awesomeness for a while.


    Poetry Thursday!!!!!!




    The Paper Nautilus
    by Marianne Moore

    For authorities whose hopes
    are shaped by mercenaries?
    Writers entrapped by
    teatime fame and by
    commuters' comforts? Not for these
    the paper nautilus
    constructs her thin glass shell.

    Giving her perishable
    souvenir of hope, a dull
    white outside and smooth-
    edged inner surface
    glossy as the sea, the watchful
    maker of it guards it
    day and night; she scarcely

    eats until the eggs are hatched.
    Buried eight-fold in her eight
    arms, for she is in
    a sense a devil-
    fish, her glass ram'shorn-cradled freight
    is hid but is not crushed;
    as Hercules, bitten

    by a crab loyal to the hydra,
    was hindered to succeed,
    the intensively
    watched eggs coming from
    the shell free it when they are freed,--
    leaving its wasp-nest flaws
    of white on white, and close-

    laid Ionic chiton-folds
    like the lines in the mane of
    a Parthenon horse,
    round which the arms had
    wound themselves as if they knew love
    is the only fortress
    strong enough to trust to.

    Tuesday, August 09, 2005

    List Tuesday (part II)



    10 Things You Should Do Today

    1. Click on the "Song o' the Day" link. You won't regret it today.

    2. Put on some pants, for crying out loud!

    3. Stop leaning on the poles in crowded train cars.

    4. Bake me a pie.

    5. Snape Kills Dumbledore.

    6. Tell your spouse that you love him/her. If you don't have a spouse, tell your pet. If you don't have a pet, tell a stranger. And let me know how that goes, because I've never done it before.

    7. See how many paper clips you can unfold in five minutes.

    8. Watch someone eat a hamburger.

    9. Tape some fake paper horns to your head and run around harassing your coworkers by pretending to be Trodgor the Office Burninator. Also, burn some of their stuff to make it more realistic.

    10. Take candy from a baby. Babies should not be eating candy!

    List Tuesday (part 1)



    10 Activities You Will Never See Listed in a "Fun Things to Do With Toddlers" Book

    1. Have scissor races! Make sure the scissors are open as you run around outside.

    2. Play Garbage-bag Head family. Your toddler will be the baby bag-head, so use a plastic shopping bag so they can still walk around!

    3. Re-enact the biblical story of Joshua! "...Come near, put your feet upon the necks of these kings. And they came near, and put their feet upon the necks of them....And afterward Joshua smote them, and slew them, and hanged them on five trees: and they were hanging upon the trees until the evening."

    4. Play Go down to the corner and give this money to Shawn and bring back some of mommy's "special Candy."

    5. Go downtown, find a homeless bum and beat the crap out of him. And then empty his change cup, because he doens't need it now.

    6. Read illustrated erotic novels together.

    7. Teach your children how to use a bottle of hairspray and a match to make a wicked awesome flamethrower.

    8. Snape Kills Dumbledore.

    9. Teach your toddler to bartend! Tequila shooters are a good place to start.

    10. You never know what kind of cool stuff other people might throw out. Go around the neighborhood checking everybody's trash cans for neat treasures. If you find anything tasty, go ahead and eat it!

    Monday, August 08, 2005

    A Trip to Rock Creek Park and the Pursuant existential Angst

    Amazingly, the brickfamily had lived in Washington DC (and I do mean in for any of you "NoVa and Md. ARE NOT WASHINGTON chuckleheads) for seven entire months before visiting Rock Creek Park, which is only, like, the biggest urban park in the universe.
    I may be wrong about that last claim seeing as I did absolutely no research on the matter whatsoever. But we finally did make the long, 6-minute drive to the park. It's pretty sweet. Like a little forest in the middle of the most powerful city in the universe. (Again, no research). We had a little picnic, went for a walk, and then drove home.

    Good Things That We Saw
    • Three deer just chilling about 30 yards in front of us on the trail
    • Lots and lots of picnic areas accessible by both foot and car
    • An open, expansive respite from the hustle and bustle of everyday Washington

    Bad Things That We Saw
    • A plethora of beer bottles (most Heineken, if that means anything) apparently tossed a few feet from the trail
    • Several trees near the trailhead that were totally covered with carved graffiti
    • A pair of *panties* lying by the side of the trail, if you can believe that

    If you are the type of person that would toss empty beer bottles into the woods or leave a pair of dirty panties by the side of a trail in a National Park, please let me know. I would like to end any and all association with you forthwith. If you are someone that I have never talked to, no I will not be your friend until you stop doing that crap. Idiots.

    Sunday, August 07, 2005

    Church vs. Change

    One of the things that I love about our church is that, from week to week, you never know how different the services might be. For example, we often have discussions during the service so that if anyone has anything to contribute, they're welcome to. Trust me, it's not as weird as it sounds; it's actually quite natural. Other times we may have one of the design team members dress up as a biblical character and act out/tell their story. Okay, so that just happened once, but still.

    Anyhow, today, we took a page from the Quaker worship book. For those of you not familiar with Quaker-style, this means that we sat around waiting for people to say things. Well, it's not exactly like that, I mean, we wait for God to speak to and through us. So we're sitting there and David gets up and sings Amazing Grace (he was also a suprisingly good singer), and then Erin got up and sang a song of her own crafting. A couple other people spoke too. It was pretty cool, really. But here's the problem: someone turned my reverence control knob down to zero. All the time that we were waiting for other people to speak, my mind kept going back to stupid things that I could get up and say. Like this: I go up to the microphone at the front of the room and, in all seriousness, say "It's a long ways to the top if you want to Rock and Roll," and then sit back down. Or maybe standing up at my seat with my eyes closed and speaking in some ridiculous sounding "tongue:" "Grashanick KALMAAR TAG HORFRAGGARANT etc." and then sitting back down. Seriously, what is wrong with me? Everyone else was being all sincere and thoughtful and reverent and it was all I could do not to start laughing in my seat.




    In all honesty, I still think doing something like that would have been utterly hilarious, but these people are my friends. I don't want to offend them.

    Friday, August 05, 2005

    Random Picture Friday



    Ha Ha Ha!!! Here's a stupid new feature that might be continued in the future if I feel like it!


    Here is the story.

    Awhile back I was happily clicking on "Next Blog" up at the top of the page. If you haven't tried this, I highly recommend it, but be warned, you may need to burn your eyes out of your head if you are unlucky, know whut ah mean? But anyway, back to the story. One day, I was serendipitously directed to a site I like to call BlaggBlogg. Actually, that's its real name, so I guess everyone likes to call it that. I find it funny, though the language can get a little off-color for the children out there. I may or may not agree with the stuff he says, but I still enjoy most of it, especially the hippie bashing. Aside to Mr. Blagg, should he ever read this: Don't you think hippie bashing is a little to easy? It's like shooting fish at Safeway. Also, I'm sorry I stole your blog's background. Fortunately, the chances of you ever seeing this are slim to none, so I feel pretty safe. End Aside. Now eventually I got around to reading Mr. Blagg's entire archive in which, while reading through the April 2005 posts, I stumbled across this little beauty: Livejournal pictures (I'd put the link directly to the post, but I don't know how. It's about 2/3 of the way down the April archive). This post contains the link to a great little page that shows you the last 40 pictures uploaded on Livejournal by anyone, anywhere. It is......fun, to say the least. Here ya go. Enjoy. Please note that some people post some really weird (alright, sick) stuff to their Livejournals, so watch out.

    So now, every Friday (or until I get sick of it) I will post a random picture from Livejournal. And here's the kicker: if there comes a time where I choose a random picture and someone who reads my inane blog can actually identify the people in it, I will stop blogging FOREVER. Since I only know 10 people, max, who read this I feel pretty safe. If I accidentally post a picture of a celebrity, that doesn't count. On to today's picture. Oh yes, I will also caption the pictures, though I will try not to say anything mean, because, well, that would be mean.


    WOW! What can I say. Just you and a banjo on stage together? That takes guts.



    Observations from my Livejournal photo viewing.
    1. You would not believe how many of the pictures are Harry Potter related.
    2. You would not believe how many of the pictures come from stupid online quizzes that tell what 80's movie character you are, or what type of fiction you should write or whatever else kind of quiz there is.
    3. Almost all of the girls under, say, 21 in the pictures have their heads tilted slightly one way or the other. I know I'm not the first person to say this, but still, why is that?

    Baseball, Steroids, Anger

    So I was all poised to write a long post about the retardedness that is our national outrage over steroids in baseball and then this jerk goes and does it first (and much better, by the way). Dang you, guy-that-writes-for-an-actual-website-and-not-just-on-his-own-pretentious-"blog."

    But there's still one point that he didn't cover that I would like to discuss.


    Listen closely now, all y'alls.



    BASEBALL IS A GAME!

    That's right. It's not high-level politics. It's not life and death. It's entertainment. Are you going to tell me that you didn't glue yourself to the TV every time McGuire or Sosa were at bat in '98? (This only applies to baseball fans, and if you aren't a baseball fan, I don't care what you have to say anyway. So there.) Are you going to tell me that you would have rather had game 7 of the 2003 ALCS end at 6-4 after a boring final two innings and not see Aaron Boone jack one out to win the game? I even hate the Yankees and I still prefer to see them win in dramatic fashion (I mean, I hate the Red Sox, too, so why do I care who wins?)

    The bottom line is that you pay money to be entertained at the game, and steroid-enhanced players are more fun to watch. Are some of them idiots? Abso-bloomin-lutely. So are some of us. Are some of them total *******? (edited for content since this is a family site) Of course, but we don't have to deal with them on a personal level, so who cares? Let them play the game however it needs to be played to entertain us. That's what matters.

    And to those of you who claim that ballplayers were better and more upstanding than the current crop, you don't know what you're talking about. Ty Cobb? Racist jerk. Mickey Mantle? Drunken idiot who could have been the best EVER but instead never lived up to his potential (and you think watching juiced up players play is a rip off!) Most players before (heck, even for awhile after) Jackie Robinson made his debut? Racist, and thankful they didn't have to compete with the Negro Leaguers. So get off you high-horse and have a $7.50 beer and just enjoy the show.


    P.S. Palmeiro used steroids, I don't care. Palmeiro lied about using steroids to Congress while under oath. What a tool. I say send him to jail (for the lying, not the steroids).


    close:angryrant

    Thursday, August 04, 2005

    Bad Poetry Thursday



    Today's genre is angry-poetry-slam-pseudo-intellectual-yuppie-rambling. As you read it, imagine that you are in a horribly stereotyped, smoky coffee house watching a young white dude trying to act all cool by reciting "improvised" poetry in front of an apathetic audience that all look like clones of the guy at the mic. Also, there are bongo drums playing arhythmically in the background. Random words are to be shouted.


    Morning (Mourning) of My Way
    by Schuyler

    MOVE!
    I SCREAM into the stale air at the
    slow, FAT tourists that will not

    GET OUT OF MY WAY

    I cannot understand THE processes of their
    slow, fat BRAINS as they perch
    So DELICATELY up the moving stairs
    The LEFT SIDE of the moving stairs

    GET OUT OF MY WAY!

    I will not simmer in OBSEQUIOUSNESS
    While OTHERS stomp on my very WILL to live.
    It burns me up INSIDE the hollow shell that used TO be my heart
    Before she crushed it between her LONG, LONG fingers.

    GET OUT OF MY WAY!

    I do not want to get LOST in remonstrances
    Of things about WHICH I do not WISH to think at all.
    WHY, WHY, WHY did she do that and do they do that
    I want to KNOW my brain shrieks as I come dangerously close to tears.

    GET OUT OF MY WAY!

    I holler at ALL of you
    All of you that HOLD me back and HOLD me down
    I AM going somewhere
    I AM going somewhere incredible
    I AM a driver
    I AM a winner
    Things are going to Change, I can feel it.

    GET OUT OF MY WAY!