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PHone lost, phone replaced, phone found and returned, and a warrior's dash... [May. 20th, 2012|09:40 am]

nimitzbrood
[Tags|]
[Current Location |Under the gun...]
[mood |strange]
[music |Not sure...]

09:42 AM 05/20/2012

Well yesterday I lost my phone while riding my bicycle.

Why was i riding? To try and ride to work for my health to see what the ride is like.

Why am I suddenly getting into shape? Because myself and others at my office are going to do the Warrior's Dash in Wisconsin this year. (Google it. I'm too tired to provide a link.)

*Charlie Brown wa-wa voices in the background*

Yes I _am_ insane why do you ask? ^_^

Seriously I need an excuse to get back into shape and the Warrior's Dash is a darn good one because I've wanted to do something like this for years. (Okay maybe you don't have to Google it - it's basically a fairly long and messy obtacle course. Pretty grueling.) There are a number of different classes and one specifically for the 40+ year range so I don't think I'll feel too out of place.

The good thing about this is I posted that I was "IN" for this with my co-workers. That means that my normal crippling fear of embarrassment works for me this time not against me. If I fail to start the event I lose standing with my coworkers and that's not going to happen. No shame in competing and losing but much shame in not competing when you said you would.

Let's cover some things here before I continue:

1) I'm not in as bad a shape as people think I am. I'm not going to die of a heart attack just because I compete in an obstacle course.

2) I'm aware of the risks in shaping up as quickly as I need to (August 18th) before attending this. In fact it's every bit right on the "clean up then die" track record that my family seems to have.

3) If you aren't going to support me in this I don't want to hear it. Period. I can't afford the negativity. As a support person I get enough of that in my life already.

Moving on...

The best cardio solution I've found for myself is to ride my bicycle to work every day or as close to that as possible. That's 40 minutes of cardio a day approximately. Yesterday, before I had to turn back, I rode halfway to my office. Of course at that point I sat on the halfway bench and realized I no longer had my phone. I then walked the bike back down the bike trail to where I knew I last had it. Didn't find it so then I rode the bike home.

Then my wife insisted that we walk back up the trail and look for the phone. So I walked back up the trail to the bench again and back down the trail where my wife picked me up in the minivan.

I was tired after that but not inordinarily so. That means I should easily be able to ride the bike to work in the morning even if I have to stop halfway. The bike path technically opens at sunrise so I'll be just on the edge of that if I leave the house by 6 am. I have a 7 am start time and normally leave in the car at 6:10 and arrive at 6:20 - 6:25 depending on traffic. So I estimate that If I leave by 6 I should be able to get there by 6:45 without a problem. Especially since the bike path is an almost straight shot to my office with no other traffic really. There are 5 intersections along the path. (Three major, two minor) Hopefully at that time in the morning the traffic should be doing the separated waves thing so I'll be able to cross those quickly enough.

It's not going to be easy. It's already hard for me to get back out there. Especially with all the stuff around the house, the fact that we had to shell out for a new phone yesterday so I'm worried about money, and a number of stumbling blocks. But honestly I'm putting all those in my own way and my honor is on the line here. And I've got very little time to get to a certain level of fitness.

So yeah...I know the risks...I know the plan...I just have to execute it.

So no negativity, no "I'm just saying", no "Well I'm just warning you.". NONE OF THAT. I. WILL. DO. THIS.


As to the phone we reported it lost to ATT and the police. Then we went to the ATT store and I got a $0.99 iPhone 3Gs in replacement. Today the finder of the phone called my wife's number and returned the phone to us. So not only do I have a new phone now but I have an 8gb iPod touch once I jailbreak the old phone. So that all worked out. Still can't hotspot with the new 3Gs but I'm going to likely get a work phone to do that with in the future.

On a lighter note...I'm a hypocrite. I once swore that I would never ever buy another Blizzard game because of what they did to the BNETD people. (That one you _CAN_ go and Google because it's too long to explain.) Unfortunately it's been far too long at this point and I so missed bashing monsters on a tiny screen so I allocated money and bought Diablo III.

And it's awesome. :-)

*runs off to bash virtual monsters*

Cross-posted from Dreamwidth ( http://nimitzbrood.dreamwidth.org/257421.html ) but feel free to comment here as well.
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[personal] Teachable moments [May. 20th, 2012|06:58 am]

jaylake
[Tags|, , , , , ]

It's been quite a good conference here professionally speaking, but last night I went to bed early feeling irritated and sour. This morning I woke up feeling depressed and upset.

I walked for an hour along San Antonio's Riverwalk and tried to really get down into why I felt the way I did. Some facile explanations readily presented themselves, but even in the midst of my emotional distress, I recognized those for what they were. I think I eventually reached a better understanding, which in turn made me rather uncomfortable.

The fact that I was rather uncomfortable strikes me as a important, and as a reason to talk about this despite my first impulse to keep the whole business to myself in a fit of passive-aggressive sulking. This is especially true in the light of John Scalzi's recent, excellent post on the Lowest Difficulty Setting.

Last night, well after all our formal events were concluded, about a dozen of us were in the conference suite goofing off, cutting up, and so forth, as one does. Alcohol had been flowing, a little of it into me. For me, this evening space at writing conventions and conferences among like-minded people has always been one of the few places in my life where I can really cut loose and be my unfettered self. Fast talking, flirty, potty mouthed, pun riddled, and rather over the top. Those of you who've known me for a while in real life have probably seen me in this mode.

Most of the time I'm Dad, or an employee, or a professional writer representing myself, my work and my field, or a cancer patient. (A hell of a lot of that last one.) Or I'm just some guy in the grocery store or the post office or whatever, going about his business. All of those are roles, adopted with varying degrees of self-consciousness. But that convention/conference party space is one of those rare places where I have always felt I can just be me.

Except it went wrong for me last night. To be clear right up front, not through anyone else's bad behavior, as no one treated me badly at all, but through my own internal processes.

A joke with religious content was told. Someone was offended and left abruptly. I neither told the joke nor was upset by it, but I certainly made a strong material contribution to the fast-and-loose social environment that made that joke seem reasonable to the teller, and made all of us but one laugh uproariously.

In the wake of that moment, the bunch of us got into a lengthy, serious discussion about our social responsibilities to one another, what I in a moment of flipness called a "white people encounter group." It was rather productive, especially given that a number of us were at least tipsy, and we were all pretty tired. It was also eye-opening for me.

I've been explicitly aware of the concept of privilege, as discussed in progressive social circles, since the late 1980s. The first time I can recall hearing the term with this meaning was listening to an interview on NPR in 1988 or so with Peggy McIntosh discussing her essay on white privilege and male privilege, White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack.

I've been thinking and writing about it both directly and indirectly for the quarter century since then. I've expended a lot effort in my personal life to avoid leveraging that privilege in areas where I do have control. Put very simply, for example, not cutting in front of the deli line because I'm the tall(ish) white guy standing in the crowd and the clerk points to me next.

I'm also co-parenting a child who is a female person of color. One of my primary jobs as her parent is prepare for her life by helping her become a happy, self-confident, intelligent young woman with enough wisdom and resilience to deal with all the stuff she'll have to wade through that has simply never come my way.

As for me, in Scalzi's terms, yeah, I'm playing life on the lowest difficulty setting. I sometimes joke that if I were fifty pounds lighter and $500,000 richer, I would be The Man. Except that's not a joke, it's true. And yes, I can point to a lot of obstacles in my life history from childhood sexual abuse to deep clinical depression in my teens and twenties to cancer in my forties, but all of those were overcome in part through my privilege as a white male, for example, by having the kind of family support and adult employment that gave me full access to high quality healthcare with excellent doctors who treated me with respectful attention. Even with all the crap, I'm still playing on the lowest difficulty setting.

What I realized last night, what depressed and upset me, was that my sense of being free and unfettered, of being able to cut loose and be myself, is itself a distinct form of privilege. Once we got serious, some of the women in the room were willing to speak up and explain that certain jokes which had passed earlier made them uncomfortable, but they didn't want to ruin the mood by saying anything. I myself pointed out that there had been some psuedohomoerotic clowning around by straight guys, including me, which would probably have made any LGBTQ-identified people in the room uncomfortable, though no one had spoken up. I was sharply (and appropriately) corrected when I prefaced one of my comments by saying we now live in a culture where offense is in the eye of the beholder. That is certainly my experience, but I'm speaking and thinking from a position of privilege, almost all of it transparent to me as its beneficiary. As the other person pointed out, women are constantly being told by men what they should or shouldn't be offended by. Probably including me, some of the time.

I feel like I lost something important last night. I feel like I lost a sense of unguarded social freedom. How I lost that sense of unguarded social freedom was by realizing deep in my gut something which I've known intellectually for years. That is, that for most people, that sense of unguarded social freedom never existed in the first place.

That makes me very, very sad.

I hate teachable moments, especially when I'm on the receiving end of them.

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[photos] Your Sunday moment of zen [May. 20th, 2012|06:17 am]

jaylake
[Tags|, ]

Your Sunday moment of zen.

IMG_2811.JPG

Flower. © 2006, 2012, Joseph E. Lake, Jr.

The current photo series is from my 'favorites' file, hence the dates jumping about

Creative Commons License

This work by Joseph E. Lake, Jr. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
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[links] Link salad is thoughtful [May. 20th, 2012|06:15 am]

jaylake
[Tags|, , , , , ]

Sunny Skies over the Pacific Northwest — I think I can see my house from here.

New-found exoplanet is evaporating away

Birther controversy: ‘Obama might not make ballot'In a revival of the controversy surrounding US President Barack Obama’s birth certificate, Arizona’s top election official has said it is “possible” Obama may not make the state’s November ballot due to unanswered questions about his birth place. [info]shsilver points to more on this: Once again, Arizona is the nation's laughingstock.

‘Metrosexual Black Abe Lincoln’ — Charles M. Blow dissects the latest Republican crazy.

?otd: How do you feel about teachable moments?




5/20/2012
Writing time yesterday: 0.0 hours (full day of conferencing and critique)
Body movement: 60 minute walk along San Antonio's Riverwalk
Hours slept: 7.5 (solid)
Weight: n/a
Currently reading: Light Breaker by Mark Teppo

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Things to do in Niagara when you're (not really) dead... [May. 19th, 2012|09:26 pm]

shaddyr
[Tags|]

( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
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(no subject) [May. 19th, 2012|04:38 pm]

hsifyppah
Ah, context, so important.

A few years ago I had a patient stop mid-sentence, grab my face, and say "Do you know how cute you are!" It was very alarming and I stepped back and looked horrified, and they seemed to understand it was inappropriate, and that would have been that, except they bring it up and apologize again every time they come in. AUGH STOP. I would have long ago forgotten entirely, but instead the creepy lives on. o/~ How can I forgive them? / They won't let me forget! o/~ There are some complications involving this person's mental health which mean that straight up saying STOP TALKING ABOUT IT is not actually a great idea. So I just stand four feet back and respond to smalltalk with single words in a flat tone when this person comes in now. Which happened again today, with another two apologies.

Anyway, half an hour after that encounter today, another patient came in and grabbed my face. But this time I laughed and said thank you, because it was a one million year old (approximately) patient who is a favourite of mine, and they were calling on god to bless the noble pharmacist and her son and her mother-in-law.

I was interrupted while writing this to give advice about an over-the-counter product to yet another patient, and this patient reached up to pat me on the head and say "Good old Brooke! She always knows." My head is just irresistible, folks. (This person has a serious intellectual disability and I will quite happily accept a pat on the head from them.)

Judging by the last hour, my head gets cuddled all day long at work. It's funny that that one incident years ago felt so transgressive. I'm not sure someone watching it in a series of head events in my shifts would have picked it out of a line-up. But ick, it sure did.

=====

Yesterday I went bowling! Brenna and I are totally starting a bowling league. She's working on team t-shirts with leprotic lemurs on them. How this squares with our bowling names - WOODSTOK and SNOOPY - is unclear. (8 character limit. We can in fact spell Woodstock, despite the copious drinking that our bowling style demands.) After 3 games, where I think our total combined scores may have cracked 450 (the top score for one person in one game in 5-pin bowling) but then again maybe not, we went to visit mom and dad and their 4 dozen pet oysters, who have mysteriously not been seen since. Last seen being delicious. Shucking knife found at scene. Best Friday afternoon ever.

They have penguins at the aquarium now! They all have cute little bracelets on, probably for identification rather than style, but who knows. They are from South Africa! I did not know Africa had penguins. I mean, they're endangered, so it doesn't have very many, evidently. There is also a new porpoise, Jack, who joins Daisy. Jack is very interested in the human child exhibit next to his tank. Daisy is pretending to be indifferent to humans now, because she's sooooo much cooler than Jack, in fact, Jack who? Oh porpoise drama, you are pretty adorable. Oh man, and the sloths! One was just sitting around looking like a wig as usual, but the other one was SLOWLY HAVING A SNACK! I took a video I was so excited. (Sloths set the bar for excitement pretty low, it's true.)
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Can you hear me now? Can you . . . Hello? Anybody there? [May. 19th, 2012|02:11 pm]

banjoplayinnerd
[Tags|, ]

Lately I think I've mentioned a few times that I have a politician station, one that talks a lot and everybody hears it but it doesn't listen so well. That opinion is being reinforced today.

I am on the 15 meter band, one of the upper bands where long-distance communication is pretty common. The various maps and tools I use indicate that the band is hoppin'. There are people posting reception reports on the reverse beacons for stations in Europe and South America. Some Japanese stations are reporting in.

I'm showing up on the reverse beacons as well. I call CQ and get good signal reports from all over the US, plus occasionally ones from Australia, New Zealand or Japan. These aren't stations that are trying to contact me -- just ones (possibly unattended) who have reported hearing my signal.

The thing is, I'm calling CQ because I can't hear much of anything. There are a few stations listed in my reverse beacon reports that I picked up while I was out buying dishwasher detergent for my wife, and the highest signal strength I reported was a -20 (with -1 being "you sound like you're right next door to me"). The reports go down to -24 and even one at -27, which is right down in the noise that's always present in the radio spectrum. In contrast the reports people are giving me are good and string, with reports from -4 to -6 pretty common and even a -1 once or twice.

I can only conclude that there's something about my situation that is causing me to be as deaf as a sixth-grader on garbage day. One clue might be the signal strength of the background noise. I seem to remember it was at a fairly low level when I had my station in Montana. On the "S" scale we use it was maybe S2 or S3. At the moment my noise level is around S9, which would be a good signal if it were coming from a transmitter instead of . . . everywhere. In Montana I was still in the middle of a moderate-sized city, but those were the days before ubiquitous computers, cell phones, digital this and digital that and every piece of equipment in your house from your cable box to your toaster having a computer chip in it. Did I mention that computer chips are active sources of radio interference? There's a famous article from QST magazine where a guy built a transmitter from a single hex NOR gate integrated circuit and a few spare parts. It was a really weak transmitter, but he hooked it up to an antenna and made a few contacts with it.

I can only hope that the reason I'm getting so much noise is because my antenna is so low to the ground and runs through the house, picking up RF interference from all the computers we have around here. Once I figure out how to get the antenna higher in the air, the noise will die down and I'll be able to hear the weaker stations. I hope. (My favorite antenna in Billings was 30 feet up in the air. I wish I still had it.)

This entry was originally posted at http://banjoplayinnerd.dreamwidth.org/14109.html. Please comment there using OpenID.
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FilKONtario 22 [May. 19th, 2012|09:54 pm]

filkcon_reports

[occams_pyramid]
April 20-22 2012, Missisauga, ON
Guest of Honour: Kathy Mar
Filk Waif: Paul Estin
Interfilk Guests: Steve & Dorotha Biernesser
Convention website: http://www.filkontario.ca/

Reports:

http://janeg.livejournal.com/114035.html
http://filk.livejournal.com/670990.html
http://allisona.livejournal.com/512104.html
http://allisona.livejournal.com/512375.html
http://allisona.livejournal.com/512583.html
http://allisona.livejournal.com/512864.html
http://filk.livejournal.com/672991.html
http://billroper.livejournal.com/1023482.html
http://billroper.livejournal.com/1023787.html
http://gorgeousgary.livejournal.com/165856.html
http://gorgeousgary.livejournal.com/166041.html
http://the-sheryl.livejournal.com/34114.html

Locked posts

http://sexybass.livejournal.com/76668.html
http://sexybass.livejournal.com/77190.html

Photos:

http://flickr.com/photos/phil_mills/sets/72157629520107142/
http://flickr.com/photos/27268420@N04/sets/72157629659073042
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The case for traditional marriage [May. 19th, 2012|12:38 pm]

wolflahti

Let’s dispense once and for all with all this permissive liberal nonsense about non-traditional marriage and get back to the fundamentals as explicitly stated in the Christian Bible, namely:

- Marriage has nothing to do with romantic love and should be arranged.
- Wives must be wholly subordinate to their husbands.
- A bride who cannot prove that she is a virgin is to be stoned to death.
- A widow who has not borne a son must marry her husband’s brother-in-law.
(Genesis)

The more the merrier! Polygamy was good enough for Abijah, Ahab, Ashur, Belshazzar, David, Elkanah, Esau, Gideon, Jacob, Jeholachin, Jehoram, Joash, Lamech, Rehaboam, and Solomon (among others). But multiple wives only; multiple husbands are a no-no!

And if multiple wives aren’t enough for you, there are numerous Biblical patriarchs who kept concubines, including Abraham, Belshazzar, Caleb, Eliphaz, Gideon, Jacob, Manassah, Nahor, and Solomon.

If you’re having trouble finding a wife, just rape a virgin. According to Deuteronomy, she will then be required to marry you. Better yet, go to war; the wife of every man you kill becomes yours (Numbers, Deuteronomy, et alii).

And let’s not forget that everything a woman owns becomes the man’s property when they marry, including the woman (Genesis).

This may sound a little bit like slavery, but, hey, the Bible supports that too! (Unless you’re Egyptian. In that case, you shouldn’t be allowed to have Hebrew slaves.)

Of course, there is the question of why you would ever want to get married in the first place. Many of the Church’s founding fathers were outright gynophobes; Paul and Augustine in particular are renown for their hatred of women. But if you must have sex, do it right--Get married the way they tell you in the Bible.

There’s just nothing like traditional family values!


In case you missed my point: If you’re going to cite the Bible as the justification for your beliefs, you don’t get to pick and choose which parts to honor. After all, it’s all the word of God.
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“Space Doggity” and “The Future Soon” Q&A at Tor.com [May. 19th, 2012|01:20 pm]
scalzifeed

http://whatever.scalzi.com/2012/05/19/space-doggity-and-the-future-soon-qa-at-tor-com/

http://whatever.scalzi.com/?p=18624

I’m off today being presidential (which includes chairing the SFWA business meeting, having a couple of other meetings, and then being part of the Nebula Awards Ceremony), so I won’t be around here much today. While I am out and about, why not check out the “Journey to Planet JoCo” interviews on Tor.com, in which I interview musician Jonathan Coulton about his science fiction-related music? Today’s track is “Space Doggity,” and yesterday’s track, if you missed it, is “The Future Soon.” There’s good stuff at both of those links.

Have fun with your Saturday. I’ll check in with you tomorrow.


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