This blog gets my opposite of goat!




  • Books Read: Notes From a Small Island, Bill Bryson; Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, Tom Robbins
  • iPod Music Additions: Beck's The Information; Janis Joplin's Pearl; Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell; Ben Harper's Diamonds on the Inside
  • iPod Video Additions: The Office (Seasons 1 & 2)
  • Sport Partaken In: Snowboarding in Northern Michigan
  • Food Created: Moroccan Chickpea & Lentil Soup


  • Despite her cold, Michelle's holiday spirit is unflagging and I really wish I could enjoy it with her more. DOWN WITH WORK! I don't really have the gumption to write anything worth reading, but I will say that Cloud Gate in the February twilight is a beautiful sight indeed, and Beefeater Gin makes my former roommates become friendly in the best possible way: with WIGS!



    Adrenaline Drive is GREAT, especially this scene. Rent it!



    Sweet London-based Michelle, my former room-/travel-mate, is coming to the Americas and staying in A-Ville from the 17th - 25th. Egads! Below are two recelntly-uploaded photos (I went though a stack of unlabled discs and found gold, pure gold) from '05 November of her and I in Kyoto, and her in Nara.

    Michelle/Eliz at Kiyomizudera, KyotoMichelle @ Mister Donut, Nara



    Yesterday marked a big day in my life as a commuter. Now not only have I run, biked, CTA'd (bus & train) and driven to and/or from work, I have also METRA'd. The Ravenswood stop on the UP North line is just under 2 miles from the apartment, which makes it completely bikeable in warmer weather, and completely driveable in these here arctic temps. Yesterday morning we left the apt at 7:40, and despite about 10 minutes worth of parking tension, we still managed to catch the slightly-late 7:56, arrive downtown at 8:11, and had we not stopped for oatmeal and egg sandwiches would have been nested in cubicles within 35 minutes of our departure. This feat is simply amazing, considring that lately the CTA has been yielding 60 - 70 minute door-to-door commutes. In contrast, the Metra is cleaner, warmer, timlier, more efficicient, and the station is closer to my office. Riders are older and better dressed; there's no hint of the post-Greek aura that clings to Red Line commuters from Sheridan to Armitage. The only downfall, it seems, is driving to the station. It's possible that I may convert, at least until my Superbowl Office Pool Windfall matures into a NEW BIKE!

    Until then, though, I'll have plenty of time to stare at the laptop screens of my fellow rail commuters and wonder exactly when spreadsheets became the medium of choice for such a large slice of Corporate America. Occupying the fields of vision of, ohhh, probably 90% of my coworkers (me included) at least 85% of the workday, I fear that spreasheets may have surpassed verbal and written communication as our primary source of human interaction. Sometimes when I try to verbalize this idea to my peers, they retreat to their cubicles and send me an email: "I believe you'll find the necessary information appended in column five." Of course, I've sent this email and many of its variants myself, and I appreciate the efficienty of a nicely-crafted Excel workbook or Access table, but that makes the whole sordid scene neither okay, nor any less soul-sucking.



    Odysseus : Sirens, Maoxie : Erhu (二胡; èrhú)


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