Friday, September 28, 2007
On the other hand

It occurs to me that, should the urge to politiblog come back upon me, it would be simpler to just post my muttering and random abuse on my own blog. It's possible I was carried away by the urge to be of use to Buehler. (Not that I expect my minor contribution would have propelled his project to superstar status or anything, but every little bit helps, right?)

Besides, I'd have to learn about a lot of new stuff. Without censoring content at all, he does actually want people to talk about Denver/Colorado matters at least part of the time. I'm a lot better on the vague (inter)national stuff--the kinds of issues I can bitch about without anyone expecting me to specifically find solutions for them. The thing about working locally is that there's almost always something you could do, if you got off your butt and out from in front of the keyboard.

Other than that, it's loud around here. The thing I notice about being home all day, every day, is that it's not very peaceful. Traffic, sirens, trash trucks, people's car horns beeping as they shut off their alarms. The sound of the building cleaners vacuuming in the hallway or the carpet-cleaning company's bone-rattline machine pumping chemicals to a third-floor apartment.

That moron with the leaf-blower in the parking lot, pretending he's "cleaning" as he waves it aimlessly at the asphalt. (Seriously. There are no leaves, nothing more substantial than a bit of natural dirt, in the middle of the parking lot. Why does he spend 20 minutes blowing the dust around?)

I've finished the first half of Buehler's project and emailed it off to him. The second half is still to be started. It should be about the same amount of work. (Between the two of them? Easiest $500 I ever made.)

Today's job-site report: 1. One possible job. There's also an offer of temporary work, helping move a university library. The ad promises no heavy lifting, just moving books from shelves to boxes. I could do that. (I'm at the point where I don't scorn the offer of temporary work, even for $10/hour. It's not so much that my finances are running out as that I'm seeing a day when they will.) And when interviewers ask, "so, what have you been doing since March," I'd like to be able to say, truthfully, that I've been doing some free-lance stuff, you know? (Yeah, I'm having trouble with my foot still, but this doesn't start for another week. Surely I'll be okay by then?)

The R.C. read an article about job-hunting and career-changing in today's market and it said that people who have jobs hate nothing in the world more than the fact that someone else might be living a life of ease and escaping the 9-5 daily grind. (Also, I feel that being able to say I've been doing free-lance work as I hunt for a permanent position shows that I really am interested in working.)

Last Saturday's excitement (Lunch! Out!), was capped by an even more thrilling adventure. I put a shoe on my healing-but-still-wrecked foot for 45 minutes to go look at a yarn sale. I didn't buy any yarn and my foot did not appreciate the shoe. I've been out a couple of times since then (grocery store, lunch once again) but haven't tried the shoe experiment again. (Also? Now that the foot is healing and less painful, I'm much more aware of the muscles I pulled under my right arm.)

The yarn sale did inspire me to get to work and try finishing some of the projects I have waiting. (Why didn't I think of that a week earlier?) I've almost finished an afghan and two more scarves. You can get a lot done if you don't have other options for how to spend your time. The people who take the stuff to give it away are headed out for their fall trip in a week or two, so I have just a little time to finish up the last of what I want to give them.

That's about it for excitement in my life at the moment. I'm at the point where I don't need to sit with my foot elevated all the time, but not yet healed enough to go out and frolic madly in the last of the summer sunshine. The R.C. has been great--rearranging her own life to be available to help me in whatever way I need. She drives me to the grocery store when I need food (and am too stubborn to just give her a list) and has offered to go get anything else I should require.

But it's boring.



P.S. So what if I had a mad Amazon.com shopping spree late last night? I'm doing a bit of free-lance work, right? Even if I fritter away $30, that still leaves most of the money for bills.

Posted by AnneZook at 08:35 AM | Comments (2)



Tuesday, September 25, 2007
You Decide

So, I've got a free-lance gig, working with Buehler doing some data entry and stuff for his '08 convention-related website.

Also, I'm gonna politiblog for him, at least for a while (not sure how that's gonna work out). So, I need a name to blog under. He's giving me space on his site, so I'm not limited to the original blog. (Not sure if I'm going to want to go back to blogging under my real name anyhow.)

Any suggestions?

Posted by AnneZook at 09:24 AM | Comments (2)



Sunday, September 23, 2007
Because someone asked....

Before and after pictures of the alien spores.

When we began our journey, all seemed well:

spores_pre.jpg

Those are the untouched rocks, in the same metal saucer (I gave in and cleaned it).

The addition of a bit of water (or maybe it was the metal saucer, or the bracing Colorado air, or the slightly more humid atmosphere in the bathroom, we'll never know):

spores.jpg

Notice the growth on the container. Notice the mysterious color change.

Very disturbing, don't you agree?

Posted by AnneZook at 10:30 PM | Comments (3)



Saturday, September 22, 2007
Invasion! (?)

Remember that rock potpourri I discussed in that last, ridiculously long entry?

I'm a bit worried about it. I dropped a few rocks into a metal, saucer-shaped candle holder in my bathroom then, copying the guy at the RenFair, dribbled a bit of water over the rocks.

Checking back on it a day later, I see the water has (naturally) dried up. What I was not expecting is that the little smelly rocks are--blooming.

They look like coral. Or sashimi. (Octopus.)

Or, you know, some kind of alien creature, about to go into hyper-production.

I fear I might have inadvertently loosed some intergalactic plague upon the world.

Said alien growth, we'll call it Ferd, for easy reference, not content with blooming on the rocks, has crawled along the bottom of the saucer and, in places, is now creeping over the edge and beginning to cover the bottom of the dish. I'm a bit torn, trying to decide what to do, you know? Part of me wants to wait and see what happens. The other part of me (the part that watches Alien, even though I know it will scare me pantsless) thinks I should rush out and buy a flame gun or something. Ferd could turn nasty or something. I'd hate to wake up tomorrow with knobby growths and an alien consciousness forcing me to drive to the nearest grocery store and touch all the fresh food or something.

If you read in the headlines next week that Denver has been eaten by some extraterrestrial mold, the world can go to its end knowing that I'm really sorry. 'Satiable curiosity, you know.

I was assuming it was water the RenFair's guys rocks were sitting in. Maybe it was some complex chemical concoction designed to keep the spores dormant? If so, I'm pretty sure that's something I was entitled to be told up front.

Posted by AnneZook at 06:47 PM | Comments (5)



Walking on Sunshine

Marginally decent song with lyrics that describe what I've not been doing for the last week.

"Hey, Anne," you're saying right about now. "We thought you were supposed to be back in town Tuesday evening. This is the first time we're hearing from you. What's up with that?"

Well, it was an--eventful--trip.

Actually, the L-i-K-S called me the night before my flight and said they all had summer colds and if I was worried, maybe I should reschedule my trip. Not normally being vulnerable to these random illnesses that pass through society, I assured her I had no fear of being struck low.

I may have spoken a bit too soon.

No, I didn't catch anyone's cold. I can do better than that when it comes to making a trip eventful.

It started well. I landed in K.C. without the benefit of torrential rainstorms (sometimes I think just booking a trip to KCI is a signal to the weather gods to move in and start strutting their thunder), to be met by the L-i-K-S and Rapunzel.

Pippi was otherwise engaged that night, but the rest of us took off to the theater, where we saw Moonlight and Magnolias. The play was an interesting balance of humor and social messages--three men, two of them Jewish and the objects of discrimination, writing a movie script to make heroes of Civil War-era slave-owning Southerners? And yet, it was funny, since the nominal "script writer" in the group hadn't actually read the book, a fact that forced the three of them to act out scenes from the book as they wrote. A very enjoyable evening and a really charming little theater.

The next day, Rapunzel wanted to go to the local Renaissance Festival. Since it was a nicely cloudy day (no possibility of a return of the near-sunstroke I suffered at the Taste of Colorado Labor Day weekend), it sounded like a good idea and it was.

Naturally, we ate things. I was mocked for ordering a "foot-long sausage on a stick" but I didn't realize it was "foot-long" and thought it was, you know, just the normal "sausage onna stick" that you get at the RenFair. When I was served--well, let's just say it was all incredibly more phallic than I was really prepared to deal with. Also, I got mustard all over myself and then when I opened my bottle of lemonade, I got that all over me and what with one thing and another, we hadn't been there fifteen minutes before I desperately needed a shower.

But whatever. We were having fun. We wandered around and shopped. We (Rapunzel, Pippi, and I) rode an elephant! I've seen the elephant and camel rides at the local RenFair here in Denver, but this was my first time taking the plunge. (Elephants walk funny--all the parts move strangely under you and it turns out that a 30-second ride is enough to make an old person stiffen up and need assistance dismounting.)

We shopped. Rapunzel bought a print. Pippi bought a ring. I bought a strange kind of rock potpourri, warranted to last six months or more in a medium-sized room. Subsequently, the double plastic bag it was in had to be locked in the trunk of the car for the trip home, then triple-bagged in plastic and stuffed in the bottom of my suitcase to control the overwhelming odor for the rest of my trip. (By the time I unpacked, both inner bags were covered in an aromatic oil that somehow worked its way through the packaging. My hands smelled for two days but the rock potpourri ceased to have any aroma 24 hours after I put it out in a dish.) (The plastic bags are still fragrant, though.)

That evening, we ordered pizza for dinner (I can't remember how many years it's been since I ate pizza) and sat around reading and watching DVDs for a while. (I love my family--I love anyone whose idea of "entertaining a guest" means making sure they have an interesting book to read.)

Anyhow, and to get to the disaster portion of the trip, at one point I naturally needed to step outside to smoke a cigarette. Since I was going out anyhow, I offered to walk their dog.

Big mistake. Those who know me know I'm not really a dog person. Those who know me well know that dogs can sense this about me and consequently tend to ignore my firmly stated orders (not to mention begging requests...).

They leash up the dog (Which is, don't mistake me, really a very sweet animal. We met him on my previous trip to K.C, remember? Buster, the dog-inna-box.) and I putter outside. I smoke. I decide that "walking the dog" should be more than just letting it have a pee against the nearest tree. The poor thing is cooped up all day, after all. It should be allowed to romp a bit when it goes out, right?

You see what's coming, right? We're walking along, Buster freezes into place when he fixates on the sight of another dog on the other side of a fence. I turn my head to try a "commanding voice" to make him keep walking. I step forward as I do this.

My foot meets--nothingness.

Yes! There is a curb! I'm halfway to the sidewalk as I realize this. This is my last coherent thought for three or four seconds, a time-frame that seems to last an hour.

The rest is a blur of pain and panic as the hard plastic handle of the leash, after gouging me quite painfully in a sensitive part of my body just to the left of my right armpit, slips out of my hand. My left foot mushrooms into mass of agony.

Buster, a thing I was afraid to tell the L-i-K-S before now, romps off happily, thinking this is some new kind of game. Fortunately, he is a well-trained, sweet-tempered animal. When I gasp out his name, he returns to me, letting me grab the leash again (in, I need hardly add, my bloody hand).

Oh now, oh no, oh no.

I spend some time thinking that, before I decide to stand up and see if my foot will hold me. It does, just barely. Buster, somehow sensing I'm now wounded and vulnerable, pads slowly next to me as I stagger back to the building, up two flights of stairs, and back indoors.

Anyhow, all that melodrama aside, I scraped the back of my right hand, my right elbow, and my right shoulder. I scraped my left palm. There's the aforementioned damage to the (ahem soft tissue on the right side of my chest. And who knows what I did to the foot?

The L-i-K-S and the girls took good care of me for the rest of my trip. They went out the next morning to get me bandages and a cane. (It's a tricky proposition to use a cane when the hand you should hold it in is too damaged to use but using it in the other hand aggravates the muscles under the arm on that side.)

We sat around their house all day. I took Advil and napped. (The L-i-K-S naps, to get rid of the rest of her cold. Rapunzel naps, because she was awakened long before her normal time that morning. Pippi goes to school.) They waited on my hand and foot. Buster, still understanding I was hurt, but not sure what the problem was, persistently tried to lick my foot better. (I am very ticklish on the bottoms of my feet, so we discouraged this.)

The next day, they all returned to their normal pursuits. I spent two hours showering (sort of) and packing. I sat around a lot.

Airport (where a torrential rainstorm moves in just as they're about to load us), the flight (where I was, naturally, in the very back row of the, thankfully small, airplane). wheelchair ride to baggage claim where the R.C. reclaimed responsibility for me.

Then, home.

And that's pretty much it for excitement this week. I've spent the week sitting in a chair with my foot propped up, trying to get it to look less like a turnip (it took the trip badly) and more like a human appendage. With quite a lot of success, I should add. It's definitely foot-like today. Most of the swelling is gone. The bruising (base of all five toes, outside of foot, instep, bottom of foot) is starting to fade from red-and-purple to a healing sort of green.

How was your week?

Posted by AnneZook at 08:47 AM | Comments (2)



Friday, September 14, 2007
Sounds of Silence

Okay, so I'm out of town until Tuesday evening. Take care!

Posted by AnneZook at 09:40 PM | Comments (0)



Job Me!

So, if you go here and click the "Career Matchmaker" link at the left (Username: nycareers Password: landmark), you get to take an inclination/aptitude test that tells you what you're interested in doing for a living.

I think I answered some questions wrong. How else can you explain my results?

So, here's my, personal Top 40 list of things the test thought would suit me, based on my interests:

1. Lobbyist - Seriously. The #1 job for me is lobbyist? Kill me now.
2. Computer Network Specialist - Ummm. It would be interesting to know these things. But I do not.
3. Criminologist - I don't think so.
4. Professor - Okay. Yeah. I can see this.
5. Political Aide - Not even.
6. Communications Specialist - Does having an inclination to tell people to slap themselves and get over it count as a good communications skill? Cause, if not....
7. Public Policy Analyst - Don't we all agree that the country is in enough trouble already without putting me in charge of anything?
8. Activist - I'm pretty sure you have to be 'active' to be an 'activist' and I'm more of a couch-potato.
9. Market Research Analyst - Yeah, I could have done this.
10. Writer - At least it made the top ten!
11. Telephone Operator
12. Print Journalist
13. Translator - What? English to English? (Seriously. I had an aptitude for languages when I was young, but I never did anything with it.)
14. Public Relations Specialist
15. Critic - I could do this.
16. Administrative Assistant - Oh! One I've done. (But does it count, when this is such a generic item?)
17. Anthropologist
18. Corporate / Commercial Lawyer - The only time I ever wanted to study law, it was the history of Constitutional law. I never wanted to be a practicing lawyer.
19. Curator
20. Historian - Hee! If only I'd figured out my love for history earlier in life....
21. Archivist
22. ESL Teacher
23. Foreign Language Instructor - Je me parle français comme une vache espagnol
24. Editor
25. Judge
26. Lawyer
27. Civil Litigator - Spend my life with people who are fighting about stuff? No way.
28. Criminal Lawyer - No. No, no, no, no, no.
29. Computer Trainer
30. Computer Programmer - Not in this lifetime. Hardware, maybe. Software is beyond me. I barely remember the rudiments of my "programming in Basic" course. (I'm so old....)
31. Planner - In general, I plan well. It's follow-through that bores me.
32. Gunsmith - Are you kidding me?
33. Economic Development Officer
34. Dental Lab Tech - Ick
35. Association Manager
36. Legal Secretary
37. GIS Specialist - I don't even know what that is.
38. Health Records Professional
39. Paralegal
40. Corporate Trainer

The important and interesting thing, I think, is that there is not one, single job on this list that comes close to matching up to anything I've actually done in life. (Except the Admin Assistant thing. I've done work like that, even though I've never had that exact title. Back in my day, they called it "secretary" and it's how most women started in the workplace.)

Everyone else's lists (many of my friends have tried this already) seem to suit them--they're all pleased. I'm shocked at how far from anything I should be doing for a living, I've actually done in my life, if you see what I mean.

This is worrying. Not, like, a lot worrying, because the past can't be changed and I don't intend to think about it that much. But, a little worrying.

In other news, I've been emailing with Buehler and he has a piece of contract work I can do for him next week. A little income is a little income, right? Plus which, I like Buehler and look forward to seeing him again.

Posted by AnneZook at 09:40 AM | Comments (2)



Monday, September 10, 2007
Cataloging Stinks

Once upon a time, long, long ago, I had a catalogue of all my books.

It was a pretty cool catalogue, if I do say so myself. Books sorted into genre, publication date noted for older volumes, hardback or paperback, overall condition.

Cross-referencing for when I wanted to see what I had in the way of books in a particular series but was momentarily drawing a blank on the author's name. A list in the back of volumes I was in search off. All in a handy-dandy, purse-sized notebook that I could tote into a bookstore with me.

I put a lot of work into that catalogue.

That was also back in the days of Win 3.1, when password-protecting a file was a pretty cool thing to be able to do. For some unknown reason, I password-protected that file. I discovered this three years ago when I decided that it was 'way past time to update said catalogue.

You know what? A file password protected in the days of 3.1 isn't convertible. Not even if you still know the password.

I fought that battle for a month and then told myself that it was pointless to sweat it since only about 10% of the catalogue would still be accurate. Three months later I was sufficiently convinced to delete the old file, so it would stop taunting me.

For three years I thought about creating a new catalogue. A few days ago, spurred by shame because the R.C. has already almost completed her updated catalogue, I began.

Sixteen (handwritten) pages into it so far and I've only covered three bookshelves. I'm not even writing down all of the book titles. For an author where I know I have everything published to date, I'm just writing "all" and assuming I'll be able to find and cut-and-paste a complete title list from somewhere online.

I'm looking at the remaining four bookshelves, the ten foot shelf in the closet (stacked two deep), and thinking about the umpteen boxes in storage. I'm remembering that once I have this all written out, it's going to need to be transcribed. And you know how I feel about transcribing, right? And I'm thinking--how much does one really need a catalogue, anyhow?

I mean, seriously?

Because this is tedious, painful (whose bright idea was it to store Trudeau's Doonesbury books on the shelf near the floor blocked by the easy chair?), and boring.

Other than that, the R.C. and I have tentatively come to conclusions about what to do with mom's stuff. The Hummels and stained glass are going to a local charity shop that benefits Children's Hospital. (They sell on consignment and keep 30% of the proceeds.) It could take two years to sell it all, but a "fee" of 30% that goes to a charity we both support, as opposed to 50% that goes to an auction company? Works for us. (Let's all keep our fingers crossed that they're interesting in these items and agree to accept them.)

That leaves the Box O'Coins and the Box O'Miscellaneous. I'm taking the box BO'C to Rocky Mountain Coin to see if they know of anyone with any interest in any of them. I'm sorting out a handful of the potentially valuable stuff from the box BO'M to take by the local Antique Mall, to see if anyone there is buying inventory. That should pretty much clear the debris from the living room floor and, we've decided, bring the best results.

After that, we can return (well, the R.C. can "return" and I can begin) to the task of cleaning out the storage unit. (We should have something to show for all of this spare time, right?) Right now, I'm reluctant to haul any boxes over here until we get rid of the six boxes of stuff already in the floor.

I'm taking a quick trip at the end of this week. Out Saturday, back next Tuesday. Visiting the L-i-K-S and the girls. I'd been saying I was going back out there for the last four months and hadn't gotten the trip booked. A few days ago, I finally found a decently priced ticket.

I continue to be astonished by the ways in which unemployment (or, to be more accurate, the lack of a stable income) affects my life. And the ways in which it does not.

I spend most of my free time reading. That hasn't changed. But I take care when I'm too near a bookstore, knowing, as I do, that the special magnetic force such places exert on my brain can be dangerous to my bank balance.

Yesterday the R.C. and I walked over and had Mexican for lunch. Since we have the "frequent diner" card for that restaurant, they knew it was the R.C.'s birthday month and we got a free entrée. We gloated over the clear savings of $8.00. In the past, we would have thought, "a free meal, how cool" and forgotten to redeem it.

Don't run away with the idea that we're flat broke. That's not at all true. It's just that the first time I experienced a lengthy stint of unemployment, I paid no attention to how much money I was spending and wound up broke in three months. (And then I wound up taking contract work from the employer I'd ditched so I could pay a few of my bills.) (The second time I was unemployed, I was eligible for unemployment. That's a beauteous thing. I've never collected unemployment before and boy did it make a difference!)

Anyhow, I'm being careful this time, that's all.

I know I go on and on about this, but it's just so weird to have to think twice before buying something. It's probably good for me, though.

Posted by AnneZook at 11:24 AM | Comments (2)



Thursday, September 6, 2007
Needs

We all have needs. What I need at the moment is a garage sale.

Rather, I need a garage (or at least a lawn), so I can have a garage sale.

I've been tidying again. I have Stuff. Stuff that other people would, I'm sure, love to have. I have unused scrapbooks, unused photo albums, and books (not that many that I'm willing to part with*). I have excitingly shaped wooden gadgets for walls and closets. I have pillows, bedding, picture frames, DVDs, cooking pans, and the myriad of other types of debris consequent of the Consumerism Lifestyle.

How can I have so much Stuff when I cleaned out in April and have been under a shopping moratorium ever since?

I have a friend. This friend has a lawn. This lawn has been offered to me for garage sale purposes. If I were the type to take advantage of a friend's over-generosity, I'd even now be phoning my ad into the newspaper and making up signs and price tags.

I have Mom's Stuff as well, of course. Most of it's not really garage sale fodder, but some of it is. About 20 pieces of stained glass. Some 70s and 80s era, mass-produced jewelry. Old (1900's - 1970's) postcards (not the ones that were written on and posted--those were passed to a family member who might be expected to care), old (Timex) watches, etc., etc., etc.

Actually, it's possible that most of this stuff is garage-saleable. With what I've heard about Hummels being hard to sell these days, the possibility of being able to sell even a dozen or two of them at $30 or $40 doesn't sound that bad. (It's all very well to say that "book" value is $225, but things are only really worth what someone will pay for them.)

The only things I'd reserve (from a garage sale) would be the antique pocket watches, some older jewelry that might be of actual value, the coins (that I'm still wanting to take to an expert for valuing because they're so interesting), and a handful of other oddball items.

The most annoying magazine in the world? The prize goes to National Geographic. I've bought three in the last year. Two still infest my apartment.

There's something just wrong about a magazine too beautiful and interesting to be tossed out, but not re-readable enough to be worth giving shelf space. I mean, it's targeted to the masses, what with the retouched photos and simple descriptive text. And yet, the presentation is just gorgeous. I see why every garage sale in the USofA has a stack of past NG issues for sale.**

Mostly I don't buy magazines because there's not enough real content to be worth the cover price. Any magazine that takes less than an hour to read is a waste of time. Few magazines, other than NG, pass that test. (And most of them I'm not interested in.)

And magazines aren't usually re-readable. I can spend $10 on a paperback book and read it fifteen times. I've run across very few magazines in my life that I cared to look at more than once.

The R.C. had to make a trip to Goodwill this morning. She's done a bit of clearing out of her own. Also, yesterday, I tackled the Cookbook Shelf. It's a mystery to me why two women whose interest in cooking stops at the microwave door (and rare forays into the excitement of tossing four ingredients into a pan on the stovetop) should own 20 cookbooks. (Hey! Those could have gone into a garage sale!) I managed to weed us down to five or six (most of which have "sentimental" value). Astoundingly, that took about four hours.

I've closed up the last three boxes of Stuff to be sent to family members and addressed them. They're waiting to be taken to the post office. I closed up the smaller box of things we're going to put into storage here, because we're not quite sure what else to do with them.

I desperately need a garage sale.


__________________

* Okay. So not true. I have books on my shelves that I've been holding onto tenderly, in memory of the enjoyment I had in reading them Once Upon A Time. It's time to get rid of those.

__________________

** Since I've bought three in the last year, it did occur to me that I could subscribe for a year (for $15) and be 'way ahead of the game for the next 12 months (since the price is $6.95/issue on the newsstand), but then I'd have twelve issues I was reluctant to toss out.

Posted by AnneZook at 12:04 PM | Comments (5)