Category archives for 100 things

Saturday, August 4, 2007

100 things (a twofer and a bonus)

14. I've talked before about being a little OCD about locks. This tidbit is somewhat related to that one. I cannot rest at night unless I've double checked immediately before bed that the front and back doors are closed and locked. It doesn't matter if I checked the doors a half hour earlier, I must check them again immediately before bed. I have a very hard time falling asleep if I do not.

I'm not paranoid about someone breaking in and stealing my stuff or molesting my cats or anything. It's about The Chicken. Every night when I check the locks I always think the same thing: "Remember Danielle Van Dam." Do you remember her? Five years ago she was snatched out of her bed by a neighbor while her parents slept. They forgot to lock the back door. Her body was found in the desert a few weeks later. She was seven.

Anyway, that's what I think. Every night I think of that little girl and I must check the locks before I sleep.

 
15. I hate boats. Hate them. Absolutely despise them. I'm not afraid of boats. I don't have a phobia or anything, or if I do it's a very mild one. I don't get panic attacks when I'm on a boat. I don't get seasick. I just really don't like them, and I'm not completely sure why.

I love water. I really like to swim. But I don't want to be on a boat. I'd rather swim a kilometer or two across a lake than take a boat.

The last time I was on a boat, I was kind of suckered into it. Bunny was in a bridal party and the wedding was on a boat. I kind of had to go. But I certainly wasn't happy about it. The whole time I was wondering if I could slip over the side and swim to shore without anyone noticing.

If I had my way, I'd never be on another boat again. But there are something like thousands of navigable lakes here. I'm pretty sure I'm going to get sucked into one again.

 
Bonus — I'm on vacation! Woo hoo and stuff! We'll be out of town at a family water park for several days and after we return I might take a break from all things blog related for the rest of the week. I may come back with fascinating and exciting posts about our adventures if (a) anything interesting happens, and (b) I'm not too lazy to write about it. See you all again in a few days… or a week… or something like that.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

100 things

13. I don't shave, but neither do I have a beard. In this sense, I narrowly define shaving as using a blade or electric shaver to cut my whiskers down to bare skin. Yeah, I don't do that. At least not very often.

I have very sensitive skin. I can't shave more often than about once every four or five days without my skin getting red and irritated. My skin feels pretty good on the day I shave, but is itchy as all hell for the few days afterward. Shaving just isn't worth the inconvenience and discomfort.

The last time I shaved was Saturday, for the wedding. The time before that was probably at least three or four years ago. I probably won't shave again for another few years. Instead of dragging a blade across my face, once or twice a week I use a beard trimmer with the blade guard removed to keep my whiskers short. This leaves me with growth that varies from "Detective Sonny Crocket" to "Hey, are you trying to grow a beard?"

Saturday, May 12, 2007

100 things

12. Sometimes I mow the lawn. Sometimes Bunny does. Whenever I mow, I always have the same song stuck in my head: Judas Priest's "Breaking The Law." Only my lyrics are different. In my head its "Mowing The Lawn." And it's not Rob Halford singing it… it's Beavis. "Uh-huh, uh-huh… mowing the lawn, mowing the lawn (doot-doo!)"

I don't know if that show ever featured Beavis singing that song, but it seems like something that would fit in well.

So, yeah… I mowed the lawn today.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

100 things

11. I'm really anal about locks. If something has a lock, I want it to be locked. If something has a place to add a lock, I'll get one for it.

The enclosure under our back deck is like something of a tool shed. It's where we keep our lawnmower and many assorted things we don't want to deal with. This shed-like thing has two sliding wood doors. I went out and bought a ginormous, heavy padlock for each door. And they're keyed alike, so woohoo! (You know I'm a lock dork if "keyed alike" is an exciting phrase.)

The planks on the shed walls are rotting away. Locked doors do absolutely no good when a would be lawnmower thief (or would be junk thief, for that matter) need exert only minimal effort to pull away pieces of the wall. In spite of this, I'd still like to have those doors locked. The only reason I don't is that Bunny already looks at me like I'm a hideous freak and I certainly don't need to give her any more reasons for that.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

100 things

(I will finish this list, oh yes. It will be finished.)

10. One of my great pet peeves is people who drive badly, especially those who drive recklessly or flout the law.

This morning at The Chicken's bus stop there was a boner who completely ignored the stopped school bus. The bus was stopped, lights flashing, doors open, spacer arm extended in the front, stop sign extended on the side. This twit thought something like, "Oh, I'll just sneak around the corner here and drive right past this bus."

Um, no. The bus driver looked straight at the driver and pointed with a look on her face that can only be described as "I see you, stupid fucker." The driver then wrote down the boner's license plate number. Local cops will take the bus driver's word for it and they will issue citations over it. Ha ha, dipshit.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

100 things

9. I smoke, right? My preferred cigarette is Marlboro Menthol 72s. These cigarettes are available in two varieties: green stripe and blue stripe. I smoke both, because I can't tell them apart.

I know they're supposed to be different, and I'm sure they actually are, but I have no idea in what way. When they were new to the market each pack came with a mini-pamphlet filled with lovely buzzwords that sounded very appealing but were utterly meaningless. Both varieties were described with words like "smooth," "bold," "flavorful" and "rich," all of which are terms that can also be used to describe a good BBQ sauce. I tried smearing one of the cigarettes on a bacon cheeseburger and found the experience entirely unsatisfying.

In my quest to determine how the green and blue stripe varieties might differ, preferably in terms that actually apply to the inhalation of smoke from a burning concoction of dried plant matter and industrial chemicals, I have had no luck. Marlboro.com redirects to a site where I can sign up for coupons. The Philip Morris website contains a mix of stop smoking links and the standard corporate claptrap — but absolutely no product promotion. I can read about how my chosen cigarette contains a smattering of licorice extract, but I cannot read about why I might want to choose the blue flavor over the green. Even my beloved Wikipedia lacks the information I sought.

I say "sought" because I am no longer seeking. I don't care how they might be different. If I can't tell them apart, what does it really matter anyway? But this does leave me with a minor conundrum. What should I say when I say "Marb Menthol 72s, please" and the clerk asks "blue or green?"

In the past I've answered that I don't care, I can't tell the difference. This is not as easy as you might think. I've received everything from blank stares to outright refusals to make this choice for me. Fortunately I am a creature of habit and the lovely women who usually attends me at the gas station after work on Friday has learned my pattern and cheerily offers, "Some of each, hon?"

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

100 things

8. Ever since we bought a TV/DVD player combo for the bedroom I've developed a list of "lullaby movies," movies that for some reason I find soothing enough to want to fall asleep while (sort of) watching them. Some of them are obvious choices, like March of The Penguins and Lost in Translation (a movie both beautiful and sad but so deliberately slow it can put me to sleep under almost any circumstance.)

Some of my lullaby movies are completely unexpected. Why do I find Lord of War and V For Vendetta calming? You'd think the machine guns and explosions and whatnot would have the opposite effect, but not so.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

I might be a little nuts

Just the other day I was talking about WordPress 2.1 and how excited I was about it. Yeah, I'm not so excited anymore. 2.1 has some nice new features, like new plugin hooks and overhauls to the page and link systems. It also comes along with a handy new feature to export your blog to a WXR-XML file.

The biggest thing I was looking forward to was the fact that 2.1 is essentially a complete rewrite. Nearly all of the code has been rewritten and optimized to be cleaner, faster and more efficient. And it mostly is. Gone are things like the cumbersome, monolithic functions.php. In their place are leaner, more logical files.

The only problem is that 2.1 kind of sucks. Or at least for me, and at least right now. After using development builds of 2.1 on a test blog since July, I was chomping at the bit to get the new version deployed here. So last week I installed WP2.1 beta 2 on this blog. Wow, was that a mistake.

Within a day, I'd found several bugs and plugin incompatibilities. The bugs were mostly pretty minor, but the plugin problems just about killed me. Two plugins I consider absolutely crucial no longer worked worth a damn. Both of these plugins are in active development by very smart people, but 2.1 killed them anyway. Although, to be fair, one of the plugins probably works perfectly and instead the problem was with my own setup. After all, I've been using this blog for a year. That's a lot of plugins running through my database with dirty feet.

But not anymore. If you visited on Friday or part of Saturday, you were probably greeted by a "down for maintenance" message. I was yanking 2.1 out by it's roots so I could go back to a version that did all the things I wanted it to do. Incidentally, reverting like that is not something you're supposed to be able to do. The WordPress team makes upgrades easy as pie, but downgrades? Pfft. Why would you ever want to do that?

I generally agree with the idea of not making any kind of downgrade path. Developers have a general interest in moving their user base forward, not backward. But it sure did make what I wanted to do a big pain in the ass. Sometimes, installing a new version of WP will make changes to the database structure. That's the step that makes downgrades such a pain in the ass. 2.1, with it's radical changes under the hood, is definitely one of those upgrades.

I make database backups regularly (and you do too… right?), so it would have been simple to restore a pre-2.1 backup, delete 2.1 and install an older version. But that wouldn't necessarily fix any database issues that might have been exacerbating the problems I was having with 2.1. I'll probably end up upgrading eventually, so as long as I'm up to elbows now, I might as well clean house on the DB too. So database backups weren't much good to me.

I used the handy new WXR-XML export to download a backup of my blog and then used a plugin to import that XML. But there are a few issues with this. First, the XML export isn't configurable. You get what you get, and what you get kind of sucks. The exporter snags posts, comments and categories. It doesn't export your options, registered users, links, custom plugin tables, etc. That's ten shades of suck.

Second, the XML files are HUGE. When I use Scott Merrill's database backup plugin (the one bundled with WordPress), my download file is about 3MB in size for the entire database. The XML backup, with just three database tables, clocks in at a whopping 13MB. And this is the new feature intended to replace Scott's plugin, which by the way is no longer part of the WP core. WP2.1 does not include wp-db-backup, so if you intend to keep it (and you really should), you'll have to make sure you hang on to your older versions.

Even the parts the XML backup keeps are woefully incomplete. The process of exporting for 2.1 and importing to an older version stripped a lot of things. All of my tags and post layouts were lost. The tags I could do without because one of the troublesome plugins was UTW, but the post layouts? That's a pain.

Sigh. Oh well.

Another pain in the ass is that post and comment ids were lost. I kind of like that the post ids were lost because now my ids are numbered more or less chronologically, rather than the hodge podge I had before. I brought in a lot of archives from previous blogs after this blog was well underway, so I had things like post #548 being ten months older than post #547. And since I use permalinks, this isn't a big deal for me. For the most part, people have no way of knowing which post is #548. However, if I wasn't using permalinks, if I had the default cruft-based structure like /?p=548, all of my links would suddenly point to the wrong posts. This is similar to what happened to my comment ids.

On nearly every theme, including mine, the permalink to any given comment is defined by the comment id. So every link I ever made to a comment needed to be manually repaired. Fortunately, there were only about 40 of them throughout the entire blog. The thing that really kills me about this is that I pointed out this shortcoming to the dev team months ago. I had the misfortune of voicing my concern during the middle of a cat fight and I was essentially ignored.

The export/import process also stripped away all my post slugs. All slugs were automatically regenerated from the post titles. Which, if you're like some, could be a significant problem. I don't tweak post slugs often, but I have retitled posts (like adding "Updated" to signify new content), which breaks the permalinks for those posts.

Anyway, after a lot of grumbling and cursing, I'm back on stable footing again. Through a combination of SQL backups and XML exports, everything is running smoothly and all my data is back in place. Well, most of my data. It'll take ages to tag everything again and replace all my post formatting. But I'd say the effort is worth it if it leaves me with what I really want.
 

100 things about me

7. I'm a little OCD about a few things. My blog is one of them. Those few days I used WP2.1 beta drove me absolutely batty. I felt like my blog was broken, even though it really wasn't. There were some things that didn't work, but possibly I was the only one to notice. All the basic functionality was just fine. Pages loaded without error messages, people could read and comment and the site feed worked fine. That's the essence, the core functionality, of any blog.

But the little things were making me crazy. I knew they were there and I was bitchy and irritable because of it. At least now it's fixed and I'm not freaking out about it anymore.

Another thing I'm a little obsessive about is our DVD library. We've got over 700 DVDs… and they're alphabetized. With each new purchase, I rearrange everything to accommodate the new addition.

So maybe I'm a little crazy. At least now, way down here at the end, you understand the post title.

Wednesday, December 6, 2006

100 things

Over a year ago I started one of those "100 things about me" lists but I never finished it. I made it all the way to #5. Woo! Who's the man? Kneel before Zod.

Lately I've been thinking I should continue this list. If nothing else, it will give me little somethings to toss out on days when I've got blogger's block… like today.

100 things about me

6. I am a DVD snob. I've got a respectable library of VHS tapes, but it just about kills me to watch any of them. A few weeks ago I had an urge to watch The Silence of The Lambs, but rather than walk a few feet to the VHS cabinet, I went to the store to look for a DVD copy.

I couldn't find a store that had it in stock, so I went home and grumbled for a few days before I finally relented and watched the damn tape. VHS is just so 1990.

Saturday, August 6, 2005

Weekend weirdness

Ah, what a weekend. On most of my weekends, either nothing really happens or whatever happens isn't worth mentioning. Not so this weekend.

Saturday afternoon, Girlfriend, The Kid, and I went on a small shopping spree. About an hour's drive south is some pretty nice shopping, with some of the larger chain stores (Best Buy, Barnes and Noble, etc.) that haven't yet worked their way north into my smaller city.

After hitting a few smaller stores, we made our way downtown to the mall. When we arrived, Girlfriend took The Kid and went ahead of me while I hung around by the car to smoke. I was just standing there doing my thing when I heard, "Excuse me, sir?" I turned to see a carload of young women staring at me. "Is this the mall?" a girl in the backseat asked.

You know how your mind can move so much faster than your mouth? How you can think a dozen things in a second? This was one of those moments for me. I thought, They can't be serious. There are huge signs at every entrance. It's impossible to miss that you're "now entering west mall parking." Besides, everyone in this part of the state has been to this mall. It's over 150 kilometers in any direction to find a bigger mall. What's the game here? And why have I been singled out to be a part of it? Is my fly open? Toilet paper clinging to the bottom of my shoe?

All of these thoughts took about two seconds, which was just long enough for her expression to change into one that seemed to say, "Well? You do speak English, right?"

I very hesitantly replied, "Yeaaah, this is the mall."

"Oh, great! Is it still open?"

I was still wondering what the deal was. After all, the parking lot was jammed. I would have thought it was obvious it was nowhere near closing time. "Yeaaah, it's open until 9."

"Thank you!" They pulled into a nearby space and all got out of the car. It was then I noticed that three out of the five women were wearing cheap cowboy hats. Ah, I though. The fair! I'd forgotten all about that. The annual fair in this particular city often books nationwide country bands. They really were out-of-towners. Go figure.

So I finished my cigarette, and into the mall I went. We shopped for a while and eventually The Kid talked us into getting a few pretzels from Auntie Anne's. We got our grub and some slushies and sat on a bench to eat. Auntie Anne's isn't in the food court, but is instead just off the center of the mall. The bench we chose was right at the edge of the children's play area in the direct center, under the skylight.

Girlfriend set her and The Kid's slushies on top of the short wall separating the play area from the rest of the mall. Almost immediately a janitor appears and chastises her for it. The janitor woman tells her that she should set her drinks on the floor so they don't get knocked over. Girlfriend explains that her drinks get knocked over on the floor. Janitor woman retorts that it's easier to clean the tile floor than the carpet of the play area, should a drink get knocked over the wall. Janitor woman suggests we use a table and starts to push her cart away.

Through their brief exchange, I just grit my teeth. What janitor woman said wasn't so bad. The problem is the way she said it. The tone of her voice seemed to say, "Are you stupid? Your drink's going to get knocked over there!"

I resented janitor woman's attitude. So I wasn't about to just put my drink on the floor and leave it at that. Frankly I would have preferred to use a table, but there are only two tables, which are not near each other and each only seats two anyway. You'll recall that we were a party of three.

You've seen Men In Black, right? You know that part near the beginning where Will Smith is taking that test in the egg chairs? Well, I did that table thing. Those tiny little cafe tables have a solid iron base, so they're a lot heavier than they look. And they make a fantastic squeal when you drag them 15 feet.

We now had seating for three and a table for our drinks. I felt pretty satisfied with myself. I did not look over my shoulder to see if rude janitor woman was watching me.

The bench we chose had three jewelry stores nearby. While sitting there munching on my pretzel, I noticed something that I had missed many times before. Girlfriend experiences physical pain if she passes a jewelry store without stopping to make a few engagement ring suggestions, so I've seen a lot of jewelry store employees. Today was the first time I had ever really noticed the two classes of jewelry clerks.

  1. The type of clerk who is, or will be, a jewelry professional. These people are proficient salespeople and are very knowledgeable about gems and precious metals.

  2. The type of clerk for whom the jewelry store is just a job. They might be good, and they might be smart, but it's still just a job.

That much is probably obvious to everyone.

But what I realized while sitting there watching them, is that I could tell the difference just by looking at them. I looked back and forth from Fred Meyers to Zales to Kay and was amazed I'd never noticed it before. The professionals dress nicer and even carry themselves differently. I felt pretty pleased with my newfound knowledge, until I realized that my new knowledge was of no practical use. If buying jewelry, I wouldn't care which type of clerk attended me. Hrmph. At least I felt really smart for a few minutes.

As is the normal routine for The Kid, he waited until I am exactly half-way into whatever I'm doing (in this instance, eating a pretzel) to tell me that he needs to go to the bathroom really really bad, Daddy! And of course, the mall restrooms are 30 kilometers away. So we immediately left our snacks with Girlfriend and started off for the restrooms. All the while I quietly tried to convince The Kid to "pinch it off" in a less literal way than what he was currently doing with his right hand.

We made it in plenty of time and began a more leisurely walk back to Girlfriend. We exited the hallway with the restrooms and I immediately saw a young man comforting a woman who appeared to have no face.

She probably had a face under there somewhere, but I never saw a glimpse of it. She was seated with her elbows on her knees and her face in her hands. Her dark hair had spilled all around her head and completely obscured her face. I'm not sure exactly what she reminded me of most: Cousin It or one of those long-haired Afghan dogs. Before writing this post, I spent a few minutes looking for a suitable photo of a long-haired dog to insert here. I didn't find one I liked, but I did find this:

Chocolate dog sucker?

It's from a site that sells candy molds for home confectionery. Is this a good idea? I can't speak for you, but I've never had any desire to suck on a dog.

The Kid and I returned to the center of the mall. As we sat down to finish our pretzels, Girlfriend said, "Now I have to go to the bathroom. Will you walk down there with me?"

I gave her a withering look while I thought You couldn't go with us before? I'm going to hit you with my half-eaten and rapidly cooling pretzel.

"Shut up! You took off so fast I didn't have a chance to go with you. I can't carry our packages, our drinks, and the pretzels," she said.

"What? I didn't say anything?"

"You were thinking it. So knock it off."

So we walk the 30 kilometers back to the restrooms, at which point she hands me all the packages, drinks, and pretzels that she couldn't carry but I apparently can. While she went off to do her thing, The Kid and I browsed around in Hot Topic. You simply have not lived until you have shopped a trendy apparel store while balancing three drinks in your left hand. I got some fantastic looks from the people working there.

What the hell is wrong with the people who work in Hot Topic, anyway? Hot Topic must employ the most inept workers in the world, because it apparently takes five of them to run a store the size of a closet. And do you think it's required that every employee wear only clothing purchased at their store? They're all walking billboards. And if you've ever been to a Hot Topic, you know this isn't really a good thing. A little goth can be really cool. A lot of goth just makes you look weird. And can we please move past the heavy black eyeliner? Especially on men? Eew.
 

100 things about me

5. I am addicted to books. I've got books crammed everywhere in my house. I read daily, but not fast enough to keep up with what I buy. I even buy books I know I'll never read. But I feel good about myself for having them.