Saturday, December 31, 2005

Out Like a Lion

Speaking of rain (sorry, you can take the boy off the farm... but he'll still talk weather), all those watches and warnings were on the money. There are downed trees scattered around in surprising places, and the news is filled with the record flooding, high tides, landslides, road closures and power outages. SF got nearly 3 inches of rain, which puts us at nearly 10 for the month. And given that the entire annual average is about 20 inches, well, you can see that December has been rather soggy.

T
ake, for example, this shot of I-80... Here's hoping 2006 is a little lamb in comparison.

Be Forgot

While I had my hopes of early escape, it ultimately came as no surprise that on the last work day of 2005 I was stuck at the office until 6:30pm, when nearly everyone else had abandoned the place by 2. So, I missed out on my traditional New Year ticker-tape parade, walking through the Financial District in a flurry of desk-calendar pages that people throw out the windows to say farewell to the old. Which, technically consists of neither ticker tape nor a parade, so it's more like a lonely litter-filled walk. But still, it's a nice, if not particularly environmentally friendly, tradition. Which I missed. Because instead I trudged home in the damp dark. And what remained of 2005 had already turned to paper pulp on the rain-slick sidewalks.

Friday, December 30, 2005

We're all doomed

Signs that as the year comes to an end, so too might the world:

  • Tropical Storm Zeta formed today in the Atlantic Ocean, becoming the 27th named storm of the hurricane season that officially ended a month ago.
  • A new study has found a 30% reduction in the warm currents that carry water north in the Atlantic and help drive ocean currents worldwide. This validates computer-modeled consequences of global warming which could actually lower temperatures in Europe.
  • 10 inches of snow fell yesterday in Florence Italy with temperatures of -15 degrees Fahrenheit in France.
  • Someone stole the cinnamon roll that looked like Mother Theresa, known as the Nun Bun.
  • No one knows where the lava is coming from that has been erupting from Mt. St. Helens for over a year now.
  • An aquatic park dolphin and a Londoner got married.
  • The National Security Agency's Internet site has been placing files on visitors' computers that can track their Web surfing activity despite strict federal rules banning most of them.
  • Dick Clark is hosting yet another New Year's countdown.
  • China's 3rd reported human fatality from the H5N1 avian flu pushes the known world total to 74 deaths in 141 cases. And how she contracted it is a complete mystery because she had no contact with birds.
  • A movie about gay cowpokes is playing well in Milwaukee and Kansas City.
  • We're currently under a High Wind Warning, a High Surf Advisory, a Coastal Flood Warning, and a Flash Flood Watch. Last week we even had a Severe Thunderstorm Warning due to a rotating cloud consistent with possible tornadic activity.
  • George Bush's approval ratings are improving.
  • Hippos and tortoises living together.

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Green Day

I don't know if it was the alignment of the planets, or some collective unconscious decision, but today was the day to wear the color green. Not everyone did, of course, but a significantly higher percentage than pure chance would suggest. I automatically gravitated towards my light green shirt this morning, and at the office found my boss and five other people wearing the same shade of celadon. It was a enough to make me examine what random strangers were wearing on my walk home, and a surprising number of 'em also displayed celery green. The same was not true of purple, red, pink or orange, so it's not that I was just seeing what I wanted to see.
Isn't that a little weird? I wonder if it's the same basic phenomenon that results in a simultaneous collective pause in everyone's conversations in a crowded room about every 7 minutes (or so the myth goes). In all the noise, every so often there's bound to be a brief alignment and emergent pattern. Now I need to find out if anyone has ever researched the topic...

Monday, December 26, 2005

Things you probably shouldn't do while driving

Operate a camera at 70mph, 250ft above the Bay

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Merry Christmahanusolstikwanzukkah

Since I've not surrounded myself with family or friends this particular holiday season, Christmas nearly sneaked past like any other weekend, albeit a slightly longer and quieter one. Laundry to wash, bills to pay, the dishes my roommates left behind to clean... Heck, I was even considering going out for Chinese food. But when I walked past the laundromat and saw it full of mopey middle-aged men sadly folding their t-shirts, I decided to skip that little Christmas pity party, and go for my traditional holiday hike instead. It's like I have the City and the woods beyond almost entirely to myself. And that, my friends, is rare and eerie and wonderful. May your day be equally full of peace, however you choose to spend it!

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Quiet on the Western Front

There was a welcome break from the rain today, so I watched the sun slip away beyond a perfectly pleasant Christmas Eve from the middle of the Bay. It was an otherwise unremarkable day, really, so I'm not sure why I got a little weepy as the lights of the City and the bridge began to twinkle out of the gloaming. But for the sound of the gulls, I could almost hear the earth turn. It was a nice sunset.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Room with a view

From out my windows.
Told you I'd start with the liberal sprinkling...

Monday, December 19, 2005

So it's come to this

It's probably no surprise to any of you who know me that I have a serious sweet tooth and a tremendous fondness for cookies. (By the by, An Inordinate Fondness for Cheese is the title of another one of my upcoming books. Not the title that was written on the scrap of paper, mind you regular readers. That one has something to do with the "twilight wedge" because I was so smitten with the term when I first heard it used to describe the visible slice of approaching dark in a clear evening sky opposite the setted sun. But I digress...) So my love of the sweets generally manifests as a gnawing urge to snack right about this time every afternoon. Knowing this, I am usually prepared for the cravings by having my drawers stuffed full of goodies. ...My office desk drawers, you pervs.

Alas, I haven't gotten groceries in weeks so all my Milanos, Froot-Loops, dried mango, and the like are gone. Gone! I tried to ignore the intensifying pangs, but I reached the point that snackage was all I could think about. There's a snack machine in the breakroom, but no one has change for a $20, and anyway, CornNuts are one of the most breath-defyingly vile creations ever to try passing as a food substance.

In growing desperation, I searched the entire floor for free holiday spillover expecting someone to have set out the fruitcake they got from Aunt Ethel or the lopsided Christmas cookies that weren't fit for the neighbors.
I checked my drawers again, to make sure nothing magically appeared or had been overlooked (again: my desk drawers. Jeesh). I searched all the unlocked cabinets in the breakroom. I tried to tide myself over with a wholly unsatisfactory tic-tac. I triple-checked my drawers (oy).

And now? I've been reduced to eating dry hot cocoa mix directly out of the packet with a spoon. I ain't proud.

Friday, December 16, 2005

Span

It's funny, I have lived in San Francisco for over 9 years now... dear god - it's been over 9 years!! Ok, that just suckerpunched me. How the hell that much time has passed escapes me. Especially given how transient I still feel here sometimes. Jebus. Nine years! Um, anyway, so I've been here all this time and definitely take certain things for granted, like the liberal attitude or the barking sea lions.

But there are other things that I never tire of or cease to wonder at. Going for an evening stroll along the water's edge in the shadow of the Golden Gate Bridge is one of those things. And as a result, I have an inordinate number of photos of the Bridge at all different times of day and from all different perspectives. Same is true with the view out my apartment windows... although technically that perspective never changes. So I'll share my favorites among these, if I can figure out a way to get them in a different page together. In the meantime, I shall sprinkle them liberally on this here page. Ain't you the luckies.

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Overheard

I'm going to start keeping a log of the snippets of conversation I overhear when walking past people. They're often quite hilarious. Which is what happens without any context whatsoever.

2 guys in business suits at Market and 3rd: "...so I opened the closet door and there he was, in her underwear..."

And elderly woman to an old man at New Montgomery and Post: "...it's so red and swollen, I can't help but touch it..."

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Swiftly Flow the Days

I like my city. I like my camera.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Wallowing in My Own Crapulence

I am in pain this morning. Much as I love it, I cannot drink red wine anymore -- it gives me the biggest headache, and the sinus equivalent of morning Bay Bridge traffic congestion. Of course, the gin, vodka, and beer in addition to the wine probably didn't help matters. Yes friends, it's Holiday Party time again, and the company was paying for the booze. A grand time was had by all, at my shindig before-hand, at the actual function, and afterwards at the bar to which so many of us trooped. Always fun to see everyone decked out in their finery, cutting loose a little. And, unlike some past company parties, everyone, however inebriated, was on good behavior. So no tales for the watercooler Monday. Though a little more food might have been good. Speaking of which, I'm gonna go have some scrambled eggs and take a nap. I'm too old for this.

Thursday, December 08, 2005

Tempting Office Truancy

I often find that I'm dissappointed by overly-hyped movies because they don't meet my heightened expectations, yet the ones that I personally anticipate for whatever reason, I generally enjoy. I think this is because I A) tend to avoid reviews and testimony because I don't want it to taint my enthusiasm, and B) probably twist my perception after the fact to justify my expectations, thereby resolving any cognitive dissonance.

Which leads me to the following two films opening tomorrow that I've been eagerly anticipating since I first heard they were in the
works ages ago:

The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe - I have loved The Chronicles of Narnia ever since I discovered them in 3rd grade, even with the generous sprinkling of Christian mythology. As an adult, I've come to recognize that as a vital part of Lewis's fictional world which helps place the fantastic within a framework of familiarity. So I'm hoping the movie captures the wonder of this magical wardrobe world without beating us about the head (Aslan is Jesus!). Anyway, hooray! Finally a live-action/CGI movie of this without people in ridiculous animal suits!

In stark contrast, the other one features three of my favorite things: Wyoming, Jake Gyllenhaal, and gay cowboys. What more could you ask for? Brokeback Mountain has been billed as a love story above anything (hoping to avoid the mainstream stigma of gay cinema), and if it's anything like Annie Proulx's original short story of the same name, then prepare to have your heart wrenched, no matter who you are -- although we'll just see how it's received in the fly-over states. Also, the screenplay was co-written by Larry McMurtry (Lonesome Dove is still on my ten favorite books list), and directed by Ang Lee (The Ice Storm, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon), so there you go.

The only bummer is that I can't see either of these flicks until the middle of next week at the earliest. So don't tell me if they suck.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Drifting





In a universe made up of one

Monday, December 05, 2005

Take a Left at the Light at the End of the Tunnel

That's the title of my second book. Since I haven't even written my first book, one might say I'm jumping ahead of myself a little, but that's life here between my ears. Deal with it. I have.
Sadly, I've forgotten the fantastically brilliant title I came up with for my first book, though I'm hoping it's scribbled on a scrap of paper that I'll find when cleaning up my desk. Since I have no idea what my first or second books are about yet, let alone begun writing them, I'm pretty sure I have time enough to root out that paper scrap of staggering genius.
My third book, on the other hand, is almost complete... though it'll likely require a rewrite once I come up with a plot and an appropriately incredible title for it.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

UMD: Umbrellas of Mass Destruction

I never used to bother with an umbrella. Certainly they were rarely necessary in Wyoming: most downpours were brief enough that you'd just hole up in your car or wait under the eaves until it had blown over and the sun re-emerged. And even in S.F. during the rainy season it's easy enough to avoid the deluges; the rest of the crap is just drizzly damp that doesn't soak to the skin or blows under the umbrella anyway.

This city, however, is populated with a bunch of pansyasses who open up their umbrellas at the slightest hint of moisture. Since most of these people are shorter than me and unaware of anyone else on the narrow sidewalk, I'm forced to arm myself with an umbrella now, too. It's strictly a defensive maneuver: If I don't shield my personal space, my ears get clipped by the pointy bits of all the other umbrellas and more than once I've nearly gotten an eye poked out. No ordinary collapsable pocket variety will do, either... the umbrella arms race has begun. My walks to and from work have thus become a frightening tactical defense exercise, a great jostling of umbrellas bouncing off each other requiring concentration and precision positioning skill for maximum head and neck protection while adjusting for sudden unpredictable wind shear or downdrafts in the side canyons of the Financial District.

And the whole while, I'm forced to hunker down with my umbrella clamped against my head - otherwise the height difference between me and the average sidewalker leaves my umbrella floating gently above the undulating umbrella sea and I still get nicked in the bean. And then the terrorists win.

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

As if you needed any more reason not to live in Florida...

Farewell to the official 2005 Atlantic hurricane season! And what better way to see it off than with the formation of named storm number 26, Tropical Storm Epsilon. Take a moment to marvel at the facts, friends. Among this year's records:

  • 26 named storms (obliterating the previous record of 21 in 1933)
  • 14 full-blown hurricanes (beating out the 12 set in 1969)
  • 4 major hurricanes hitting the U.S. (previous record: 3 in 2004)
  • 3 category 5 storms: Katrina, Rita & Wilma (previous record: 2 in 1960 & 1961)
  • 7 Tropical Storms before August 1 (previous record: 5 in 1997)
  • 5 named storms in July (previous record: 4)
  • Costliest Hurricane: Katrina ($100 billion+) (previous record Andrew, $26.5 billion - 1992 dollars)
  • Deadliest U.S. Hurricane since 1928: Katrina (at least 1,300)
  • Strongest Hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Basin: Wilma 882 millibars (mb) (previous record: Gilbert at 888 mb)
  • Three of the six strongest hurricanes on record: Wilma 882 mb (1st), Rita 897 mb (4th), Katrina 902 mb (6th)
  • Hurricane Vince ultimately became the first known tropical cyclone to make landfall in Spain.
There are other, mostly arbitrary records that were broken, but I'm done typing. Yes, we're all doomed. But despite all the evidence of it elsewhere, I'm not willing to chalk these doozies up to global warming. And you know, I'm an expert.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Bah!

All the decorations are up this week. The giant tree in Union Square. The six-story wall of neon wreaths at Macy's. On my walk to work I pass this hideous affront to good taste involving fuschia baubles and purple tinsel trees, which sort of typifies Christmas in California in my mind. There's even a sad little tree in the lobby of our building, which smells nice and pinesol fresh now, but is already losing its needles and will be nothing but a tindery fire hazard by Christmas. And holiday music has been prematurely belting out of every store for the last month... if I never hear Mariah Carey screech "All I Want For Christmas" again, it'll be too soon.

For all the years I've lived in California, I still haven't adjusted to the holidays in a temperate clime. It seems fundamentally wrong to have Christmas lights and palm trees simultaneously in my field of vision. I don't miss the snow, necessarily, but I do sort of miss the winter chill. And despite the newspaper's proclamation that the winter was upon us as temperatures "plummeted" into the low 50's, it's just not the same. Okay, okay, my wuss ass did turn on my heat, but give me a break: my building has no insulation, and the wind whistles through the crooked gaps in my window frames (I swear I see more cracks every week... I won't be the least bit surprised when the room off the kitchen shears off completely and, when trying to take out the trash I step out my door into empty space and plunge three stories to my untimely crumpled demise).

I'm also annoyed that I have three holiday parties to attend on the same weekend that my two Must See movies of the year open. Yargh.

I sound like a Scrooge, I know. I'll get over it.

Well it seemed like a good idea...

So that rain yesterday and today? Not so cleansing afterall. Now the storm drains are clogged with leaves and litter, and the sidewalks slick with a film of pulpy paper and wet trash. This town may require a biblical deluge for adequate purification purposes.

Monday, November 28, 2005

Out, Damn'd Spot!


It's raining finally. None of that drizzly crap, but a good drencher. Hallelujah! The City could use a good hosing down.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Gobble gobble

You know what I love most about Thanksgiving? I think it's the two days off work. A four day weekend! Why can't they all be this long and wonderful? Sure, sure, there's all the turkey and starches and friends and pies and family and tryptophan-induced napping, and those are all swell too. But many of my Thanksgivings over the past decade have not included such delights because of distance, expense, or what-have-you (though I have spent many a lovely holiday hiking through redwood groves with a turkey cranberry sandwich). Yet I always get the time off, and nothing beats having two days to lounge around doing jack and still have a full weekend to get all the weekendy tasks accomplished...like my laundry, cleaning the bathroom, sorting the junkmail, reorganizing my closet, watering the plants, dishes, bill paying, shopping... Shit, I have a lot to do still - where did all the time go! With the roommates away, maybe I've reveled too much in my unaccustomed leisure.

Speaking of which, I find I get the urge to bake when the roommates are gone. How weird is that? Ordinarily I hardly ever use the kitchen, yet in the past two days I've baked banana bread, orange-cranberry bread, snickerdoodle cookies, and a poundcake. All from scratch. I'm not really sure what to do with it all, short of dying from butter intake, yet honestly the only reason I stopped there is because I have no mixer and my arm is sore from all the stirring.

Anyway, it's a great holiday. On just this day, all you friendless, you without family, you poverty stricken, or living in the third world, you stuck working retail, you can bite us in our oversized asses. Here's to our glorious national day of guiltless gluttonous overindulgence. I have stuffed my face because I can, dammit, and for that, I'm thankful.

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Great Googly Moogly

This? Is real. From today's SFGate:

World's Ugliest Dog Dies at 14

Tuesday, November 22, 2005
(11-22) 14:54 PST Santa Barbara, Calif. (AP) --


Sam, the tiny dog whose hairless body and crooked teeth earned hi
m a reputation as the World's Ugliest Dog, has died. The pooch died Friday, just short of his 15th birthday, his owner said.

"I don't think there'll ever be another Sam," Susie Lockheed said, adding: "Some people would think that's a good thing."

Lockheed said she initially was terrified of Sam when she agreed to take him in as a rescue dog six years ago on a 48-hour trial basis. Although she fell in love with him, his appearance repulsed her then-boyfriend and prompted the man to break up with her.

Raise Your Bloice

The question has been raised about the purpose of this whole blog thing. And I'm still trying to figure that out, to be honest. I mean, there's not a particular topic about which I'm so passionate as to devote my time or this little corner of the web to it solely (there will be no knitting podcasts, I'm sorry). I suspect that I may find direction as I continue to write, but my main goal is really just to write. I've never been good about keeping a journal, much as I tried, and that may be because a journal's intended audience is only me. Somehow an actual audience, or perceived audience in this case since I don't think many people are reading this (but bless you, everyone, who do), helps motivate. Perhaps because there's no need to face all the deeply personal revelatory topics head-on.

Anyway, so please bear with me while I strive to find my blog voice, or bloice, as my friend Zoe dubbed it, while she sat on the beach staring out across the Pacific towards the setting sun during her all-too-brief visit from New York, surrounded by Beth, Adam and Josh, with whom I'd spent the day and eaten Dim Sum and promised to include in my blog however clumsy my sentence structure.

Monday, November 21, 2005

Spearfish, SD

20 GB's worth is a whole lot of tuneage, especially for someone who's not really into music that much. So I'll admit there's a lot of random crap on my iPod, some of which I don't even think I've heard yet, and some of which I'm not entirely sure how I acquired. I also generally just let my iTunes play songs at random while sitting at my desk at work, which can be equal parts surprising and embarrassing, if, for example, my boss is standing there talking shop and suddenly Donna Summer starts belting out from behind me.

But just now, the strains of Europe's "Carrie" (remember "Final Countdown," eh??) emerged from my computer speakers and, while fighting back the involuntary urge to gag a little, I was simultaneously transported back to the summer of 1987, I think, and a nerd camp I attended in South Dakota with my sister. She was, at the time, rather into the Big Hair Bands, and I was just entering the height of my self-loathing awful awkward want-to-crawl-out-of-my-skin-to-be-anyone-but-me traumatic adolescent geek spurt. Consequently, I remember very little about that experience (though it is where I learned my main stupid human trick, aptly named the "William Tell, You Knock Me Out") except for a girl named Carrie who may or may not have had a camp crush on me while I obviously did not have a crush on her but tried to act like I thought one would if he did. Which seems to have involved playing that ballad at every opportunity. Little did I know then all the repeat bumbling jittery hand-holding nose-bumping evasive-maneuvers horrors that lay ahead.

Anyway, that aural link to the deepest recesses of memory is pretty remarkable. And sitting here shuddering, I think maybe it's no wonder that I never was a fan of glam rock despite my sister's best conversion effort.

Friday, November 18, 2005

Electro-shock Blues

I'm still at the office. Actually doing work. I've hardly futzed around at all today. Did I get to leave at 5pm and join the gang for Friday happy hour? Umm, no. How many hours ago was that? Gee, only six?

This sucks. Remind me why I'm doing this? Oh, right, because I have yet to come up with a better plan. Maybe I should get on that. A social life would be nice. Then again, so is a paycheck and 401k.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

I found Jesus!

Turns out he was under the couch this whole time.













































I'm so going to hell.





But how awesome are these old album covers?
(There's a crapload more here.)

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Neener neener

It's 76 record-breaking degrees in San Francisco at this moment before noon in mid-November, and the sun is blazing from out a cerulean deep marred only by the faint wisps of cirrus swirls. If this is global warming at work, I'm all for it. And for all the rest of yous bundling up against the autumn chill, think fondly on the fact that I'm wearing shorts and left my jacket at home.

I kid with the global warming crack, of course. So before I go catnap in a sunbeam 'neath the magnolia in the park, let us all take a moment to distress over the record loss of Arctic sea ice this season. At this rate, people, there might be no ice left by the time we die of old age. Seriously.

Monday, November 14, 2005

Tippy Hedren

Ew. There was a freshly squashed pigeon in the crosswalk on my walk to work this morning. Now, I'm generally not very fond of pigeons, especially in this town where so many of them are clearly diseased or maimed to the point that they resemble a Jim Henson creation. But I have oh-so-many pigeon stories. I used to enjoy eating outside in the fresh air and California sun, so most of my stories involve ruined lunches... except the time I got beaned in the noggin by a pigeon as I was walking to the bus stop one morning. Actually, now that I think of it, a baby robin flew right into me at that bus stop too. Huh.

Anyhoodle, though most spoiled lunch hours have involved a pigeon crapping on or near me or my food (I'm a birdshit magnet, seriously), I recently learned two things: A] there is a very mean seagull in the park who tried to eat a pigeon, much to that pigeon's dismay (I really wanted to watch the scene play out -- would it swallow the thing whole or would there be gore -- but some hippy animal lover shooed the seagull away and it dropped the freaked-out pigeon before any damage was done); and B] pigeons have the ability to throw up, as one did near my foot. Now, if it's gross enough to make a pigeon vomit, you know it's bad. Of course, that didn't stop other pigeons from coming up and going, "Hey! Free lunch!" which is precisely the point where I packed up and left nature to the birds.

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Eat your heart out, Gary Wright

After turning off Rosie O'Donnell, I looked up to see that I'm on a stage with an audience who's expecting me to perform the dress rehearsal of the big production number. But as the curtains rise, I am now watching the show involving Mickey Rooney in a sequined blue tux popping out of the floor lip-synching to the Gay Hits of Broadway. My attention shifts to the stage itself, which moves like a massive conveyer belt, speeding set pieces off stage. I watch with my mother as the panels of the stage open up to reveal the depths below, and suddenly begin to line up on edge to form a big herring-bone pattern. Turns out that this is all part of a famous but anonymous avant-garde artist's latest piece which also involves shreds of cardboard, a bucket, and some raw poultry to spell out the word "imagination" which my mother is convinced is spelled incorrectly, though I can't tell for sure because of the glazed donut in the way. I nod approvingly.
When I look up, I'm in my friend's bedroom where she's being tied up by an unlikeable coworker who then drives off in her pickup truck across the farmfield outside, waving at me pleasantly over her shoulder. Once she's gone, I bend down to undo the bungee cord strapp
ing my friend to the pipe below the window, which I look out to see a stunt plane flying overhead. In the distance is a giant flock of migrating black-and-white birds, which I first mistake for flying penguins but realize are auks and tufted puffins. My friend starts to freak out as she views them through her binoculars and one veers straight towards us at a high rate of speed. Turns out it's a guy sky diving with batwings, and he crashes headfirst through the bedroom wall and starts to sell us insurance against pipe and plaster damage in case anyone else decides to plow through our walls. I turn away from his presentation and back to my desk where I'm getting instructions on turning high-grade uranium into fissile plutonium from a guy who, after answering my many questions and assuring me I'm not receiving a lethal dose of radioactivity, proceeds to demonstrate proper bare-handed technique to apply pressure to the little grey chunk of powdery metal, making it brittle and silvery. I hand him a towel to wipe the brown-sugary sticky metal from his fingers, get an in-depth lesson in secret government programs to stockpile and purify the necessary uranium, and offer him a cow with his coffee.
Then I wake up.


Sshhhhh, I think my subconscious may be insane.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Gesundheit

I'm not generally one to talk about things that take place in the bathroom, mostly to spare myself (and you too, my dears) from unpleasant mental images involving people we know. But I will allow exceptions since I'm a dumbass. And occasional discussions on office-place restroom etiquette can be the source of much humor... or horror, depending. For example, every office has an unpublished, yet widely circulated, list of "bolters" - those who leave without washing hands. Word gets around. That's the horror. On the humor side, now that I think of it, here's a lovely little test of innate male bathroom etiquette that invariably guys will ace and women will not. Very enlightening.

Anyway, so for the last few weeks, almost every time I'm standing in the office bathroom (do not use your imagination here), thinking it's empty (since there are only two urinals, the only time you're allowed to use it is when it's empty... see the link above), I'll suddenly hear a "wah-chshhh" noise behind me, sounding just like someone stifling a sneeze. Yes, one time I even said "Bless you." It was involuntary. I fled immediately before anyone could recognize my shoes. Still, several times a week could Sneezy Dwarf be lurking in the stall?

Today, I caught the culprit in the act. Meet the Microburst 3000 AutoFresh Metered Air Freshener.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Corinthians 6:19

I was visiting a friend last weekend who recently bought a house in the town of Roseville, just outside of Sacramento. I know. But the house is actually really cute -- although admittedly I'm suffering from both home-ownership and yard envy (my rent alone is like a mortgage, people, and you want grass and trees in the City? Forget it). Now, I've been to the Sacramento area a whopping 4 or 5 times, and mostly stopping at the In-N-Out burger off I-80 coming home from Tahoe. Not counting all we learned as kids from "Eight is Enough", my main impressions of the Sac were: Blech. The whole Generica suburban smoggy nightmare level of hell. The taste of evil? A little chalky.

And now another reason to grit my teeth. A few blocks from her (cute) house was The Lord's Gym. The building is painted with a giant muscular bleeding Jesus doing pushups with a cross on his back. Horrified, I sped to the internet only to learn that these gyms exist all over the freakin' country (though I stood agape before the original!) and their T-shirt happens to be one of the best-selling T-shirts of all time (His Pain, Your Gain). I wonder if they have Steppin' the Stairway to Heaven aerobics classes. I do see they offer boxing, so basically you can beat the shit out of someone in the name of Jesus. Anyway, I guess the fact that this is all new to me just proves what a glorious godless Gomorrah I live in, even if I can't rake any lawn.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

The same thing we do every night


 

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