Month: November 2006

  • Cold Snap!

    Which has more caffeine: a cup of coffee, a cup of tea, or a glass of Coke?


    This morning when I woke up, the temperature was comfortable, as if it were a Phoenix October.  While I was going to work there was a strong, chilly wind at my back and I knew our winter season had arrived.  Sure enough, on the way home I could feel my fingertips getting numb as I rode against the same wind.  I need to buy new bicycling gloves.  I just don't like buying stuff for myself this time of year because then invariably someone complains that they could have purchased whatever it was as a Christmas gift for me. 


    So, I was riding, my fingertips needing the occasional rewarmth of my breath, and I get hit and run.  No, not a t-bone like you'd think, but a black SUV which slowed down, slammed their passenger-side door into my side and arm, and sped off.  With no light on their plates, I wasn't able to get anything for a report.  So, I'm in pain and noticing the chill in the air when the wind blows a grocery bag into my rear gears stopping me cold.  By the time I could tear out the plastic bag which had wrapped around the gears, my hands were really cold.  Well, then my chain decided to slid into a gap created between my gears and the frame.  I started tugging on it, before I recalled that that was how I ended up needing to call 911 last time.  So I walked over to the bus stop, narrowly missing the bus I needed (despite trying to flag it down and run with my bike).  Standing outside of the bus stop, I got cold.  That wind, blowing on me without the benefit of the sun or the heat generated while riding my bike, made me pull out my emergency jacket from my backpack.  It's been months since I last had to pull it out.  In fact, that was the first time with the new backpack. 


    The bus eventually gets me home and I decide that my hands are too cold to meddle with fixing the bicycle until morning, so I go inside and turn on the radio which warned me to "cover the animals and bring in the plants."  The newsperson thought he was being funny.  But, with a freeze warning being broadcast, that meant it was time to turn on the furnace.  I always forget how to do it every year, despite a handwritten note I leave for myself right on the furnace.  Finally, and hour and a half later I manage to get it on.  I don't want my pipes to freeze again like they did one year I was trying to be cheep. 


    Weird, it won't let me save this entry.  Oh well, after a dozen or so tries I'll just try again in the morning and hope my cat doesn't do anything to this in the night.



    Oops, I took all that time last night to get the furnace lit and I forgot to turn the thermostat to "heat."  Hopefully I didn't do any damage to the house.  It doesn't feel that cold to me, but what do I know?  Baldr seems OK, too, so that's good.  The radio claims that the freeze warning is through 9am, but I need to already be on the road by then.  At least the sun will be out while I fix my bicycle.  Wow, I just yawned and could see my breath.  Pretty cool!  Hmmm...the weathercaster said it'll be colder tomorrow morning and then this front will head east to cool off the rest of the country.  I feel bad for those in colder climates.  At least here in the desert a cold day is below 60 F.  Some places actually go below 50 F for their highs.  Brrrr!


    Thanks to strangehermit for the quiz:





    You scored as Babylon 5 (Babylon 5). The universe is erupting into war and your government picks the wrong side. How much worse could things get? It doesn't matter, because no matter what you have your friends and you'll do the right thing. In the end that will be all that matters. Now if only the Psi Cops would leave you alone.




















































    Babylon 5 (Babylon 5)





    81%

    Millennium Falcon (Star Wars)





    69%

    Enterprise D (Star Trek)





    63%

    Andromeda Ascendant (Andromeda)





    63%

    Deep Space Nine (Star Trek)





    56%

    Nebuchadnezzar (The Matrix)





    56%

    SG-1 (Stargate)





    56%

    Moya (Farscape)





    50%

    Bebop (Cowboy Bebop)





    44%

    Galactica (Battlestar: Galactica)





    44%

    FBI's X-Files Division (The X-Files)





    44%

    Serenity (Firefly)





    44%

    Your Ultimate Sci-Fi Profile II: which sci-fi crew would you best fit in? (pics)
    created with QuizFarm.com

  • Xanga Networks

    In preparation for next week, check out some Advent Customs.


    It's about time.  The way Protected Lists were written it was implied that eventually multiple Protected Lists would be permitted, similar to the Multiply Relationship concept.  However, Xanga decided to create Networks instead.  If any of my various friends are interested in creating a private network, just let me know.  In the meantime I've already joined the Fan Force network.  It'd be cool if Trollhalla had a network, hint, hint.







    Your Blogging Type is Unique and Avant Garde

    You're a bit ... unusual. And so is your blog.
    You're impulsive, and you'll often post the first thing that pops in your head.
    Completely uncensored, you blog tends to shock... even though that's not your intent.
    You tend to change your blog often, experimenting with new designs and content.


    "If an idea's worth having once, it's worth having twice." ~Tom Stoppard

  • Small Minds Think Alike

    Where did fortune cookies come from and are they really Chinese?

    similar_stranger said, "Somehow your quote makes me feel guilty. Oh well, small mind... at least it works--no?"  I certainly never meant anyone to feel guilty.  After all, journals (including weblogs like mine) are naturally about discussing people.  This here 'blog is a discussion of me.  Does that mean we all have small minds?  No, my interpretation of the quote is that people that only discuss people are small minded;  those which discuss people and events are average minded;  and those which discuss people, events, and ideas are capable of being great minded.  It's the natural progression of social development in people, IMO. 

    I've been catching up on my lj blogs, but not my Xanga blogs.  Normally I do the opposite.  I need more time,  It's had to believe that Advent starts next week.  My mother pointed out to me that I hadn't put away my Christmas videos from last year when I pulled them out and placed them atop my television set.  (Why do we call it a set, when it's a single unit anyway?)  There's a lot of things I don't make time for in my life.  I obviously need to reprioritize, something I seem to always be saying but not doing.   

    Speaking of bad priorities, check out the most recent Onna Chance for another great gaming moment.  How could you not laugh? 

    A week ago Sunday our hiking group resumed, doing the short basic trail between 40th Street and Tatum Boulevard and back.  Afterwards we went to 5 & Diner for breakfast, which was fun.  Then I went home for a nap before mass.  Father Joy read the gospel which inspired one of the best sequences in The Last Battle.  His homily focused on the Communion of Saints, a theme throughout all three readings.

    Monday Bill and I went to Chuy's before finally seeing the new Pirates movie at the discount theatre.  Can you believe that it's $3 to see a discount movie now?!  The discount prices keep creeping up and up.  (I must be getting old.)  It was OK, but it was like The Empire Strikes Back or Back to the Future Part II in that it was obviously the dark second act of a three act story.  You knew early on in watching the film that it would end unended.  And amazingly, it did so fairly predictably.  That didn't make it unfun, just not as entertaining as I had hoped.  That may also be part of the long period of anticipation preceding my chance to finally see it. 

    Thursday saw a day off from work, so I went with my mother and grandparents to Thanksgiving Day diner at Cracker Barrel (yes, just like last year).  Afterwards we headed back to their place to celebrate my grandfather's concurrent birthday, where my stepfather joined us.  He received a Marines ball cap from my grandmother, cash from my parents, and The Railroaders (from Bookman's) from me. 

    Friday my mother and I hit the Black Friday sales before I had to go into work.  We hit eight stores in two hours, plus eating breakfast from Jack in the Box while waiting between the stores we had already hit and the stores which hadn't opened yet.  If you plan your sales out right the night before you can usually get everything you need quickly and without a lot of fuss.  Unfortunately, my mom know what I bought them and I know what she bought me, but that's the price we pay for shopping when the best bargains are.  Of course, once I was at work it was relatively dead, as we don't offer any Black Friday sales.  Thus, our holiday customers will hit the time-sensitive sales first and hit us when convenient.  Saturday was kind of slow, too, as usual. 

    Saturday after work I also ran the first installment of Chapter Three in Chaos Out of Order, my continuing Dark Sun campaign set 300 years after the normal timeline.  They get some of the mystery so right, but then they get some of it so wrong.  It's fun watching them slowly solve it, especially when one or the other has the right idea and the others disagree.  I think they've all been right at one time or another while the others disagreed.  As long as they're having fun I'll continue.

    Yesterday I went to BJ's birthday party at Peter Piper Pizza before my mother picked me up to go to mass.  It was fun, and BJ seemed happy with all of his many gifts.  I can't recall them all, so I won't bother trying to list them.  I gave him some Throne War, Netherworld 2, and Two-Fisted Tales boosters, a rule book from 10,000 Bullets, and a box of Deck Protector Sleeves so he finally has enough cards to hopefully build a deck and use the box.  Between the boosters I gave out for demos and those that he purchased at Hexacon, he didn't have enough yet to build anything remotely playable.  I also had a chance to play Lisa in air hockey, which was enjoyable.  The time went too fast.  Despite my mother being antisocial, she did seem to enjoy talking with Kim and Lisa.  Maybe someday she can get the ladies to see what's enjoyable about Doctor Who

    At mass I was supposed to be the first lector, but ended up being the only lector.  Christ the King is a fun mass to attend every year, because before the main procession of the gospel book, altar servers, and priest we have several eucharistic ministers process forward with candles as the music minister announces sacramental and ministerial statistics for the past liturgical year (one stat with each candle that processes forward).  Of all of the parishes I've attended on Christ the King, St. Paul is the only one to do this. 

    Father Gene noted before mass in the sacristy that one of the altar servers was now sporting an ear ring, and seemed surprised that his grade school allowed such a thing.  He didn't make the server take it out, just as he never asks me to hide my long hair.  He did mention once again about his desire to retire in the next year.  I wonder if Father Joy would become pastor or if they'd assign us someone else.  In his homily Father Gene discussed kings and kingship, and how Christ is a holy king rather than a material king.

    Before and after mass I was part of the team maintaining the Christmas Angels on the trees in the vestibule.  My mother volunteered to help, which was nice of her.  The Christmas Angels are clothing items (green angels), clothing sets (blue angels), or something nice--such as a toy for children--(blue angels) for the poor of El Mirage.  When I first was involved in our parish's El Mirage Christmas Angels Project, El Mirage was a poor hispanic community in the rural area outside the metropolitan area.  Now El Mirage is mostly composed of upper middle class anglo families and retirees in various cookie cutter developments.  The poor of the community are now disenfranchised by their own city, which is now considered to be part of the metropolitan area.   The more things change, the more they stay the same.  Or something like that. 

    Hey, I found my missing Feng Shui sourcebooks Back for Seconds, Thorns of the Lotus, and Blood of the Valiant today while looking for something else completely.  They had been filed with my outdated calendar collection.  Yes, I keep everything.  But, I was actually looking for some stuff I knew I had somewhere that I will be getting rid of after years of storing for absolutely no good reason.  Don't ask me why the books were hidden with the calendars.  I have no idea.  And, no, I won't be getting rid of my calendars.  They're a journal of sorts with various events scribbled in them.  Future generations might want that history. 

    Then I submitted some corrections to the RPG Wiki of RPGnet for the Feng Shui entries.  I'll have to scan some covers sometime to complete their Feng Shui data for the Daedalus Entertainment (and Ronin Publishing) era.  Then I'll work on inputting all of the Dark Sun data that they're missing.  Remind me if I forget.  Thanks.

    Well, Heroes:  The Best Show on Television will be on soon, so I'm gonna jet. 

    Thanks to the_chaos_opera for the quiz:

    Horus

    Sparkling personality, intense will, intelligent, understanding, impatient to exert influence.
    Colors: male: red carmine, female: gold
    Compatible Signs:
    Bastet, Geb
    Dates:
    Apr 20 - May 7, Aug 12 - Aug 19
    Role:God of the pharaoh
    Appearance:
    Form of a falcon-headed man, wearing the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt

    Sacred Animal: falcon
    What is Your Egyptian Zodiac Sign?
    Designed by CyberWarlock of Warlock's Quizzles and Quandaries

    "If an idea's worth having once, it's worth having twice." ~Tom Stoppard

  • Monthly Recap

    D&D in Nissan?


    So, I've (obviously) been ultra busy these past few weeks.  I posted a mini-recap as a comment-reply in my last entry.  I just posted some pics from Hexacon XVI on my lj.  I still haven't successfully attended choir practice more than once, so I'm going to just give up on that.  Supernatural Thursdays and Doctor Who Fridays are still a fun chance to hang out with my friends, and we've played a couple more sessions of Chaos Out of Order on Saturdays. 


    Father Milt asked me a couple of Sundays ago whether or not the Psalm we were practicing for mass was the same as the week before, and I couldn't even recall.  Which made me question,  does going to 8am mass even count if I can't even recall it a week later?  I guess the intent was good, but they say the road to hell is paved with such as those.  So what do I do the next week?  Go to 9:30am mass, which I can barely recall a week later.  Perhaps it's just a sign of being too busy, but I suspect it's because I chose to do mass when I have to get up early.  So what do I do to fix the situation, lose more sleep and blog it or quit going to morning masses?  I mean, obviously I can't control when my cousin visits Arizona, but I could choose to leave a convention (such as Hexacon XVI) early instead of allowing myself time for events to go over their timeblocks.  I've done that so I don't have to accidentally show up late for mass or disrupt people by leaving an event running over.  I dunno, it's obviously something that needs rethinking. 


    Mondays I've been still watching Heroes, the best show on television.  Even the other week when I had to work on Monday, Monte was kind enough to let me stop by his place on the way home from work so I wouldn't miss the episode.  He watches it, too, so it wasn't too much of an inposition.  He even cooked up a good chicken-pork mix for our dinner.  Last Monday was also Parish Time before Heroes.  I baked anise cookies (using leaf and acorn cookie cutters) with caramel sprinkles for the occassion.    We discussed Wisdom, Work, and Worship and what elements of Catholicism fall under each category.


    My mother and I went to Chuy's for her birthday last month.  She enjoyed her card (which referenced angel food cake, her preferred birthday cake) and a mini-deck of cards I'd purchased for her during our last visit to Disneyland.  She had recently retired her last well-used mini-deck of cards, so it was perfect timing. 


    My cousin was in town from Wilkes-Barre on business, but my grandparents held a picnic for him with my parents, niece, and I in attendance.  My cousin from Tucson was disappointed that she couldn't make it, but the rest of us had a great time.  We all had to miss his wedding in Syracuse the other year, so we pestered him with various questions which he was gracious enough to answer.


    For Halloween Jay ran the new Expedition to Castle Ravenloft adventure.  Bill made a 9th level elven fighter, Da made a 9th level dwarven cleric of Temmanon, and I made a 9th level monk.  It was quite fun, and it was great to do a Halloween game again. 


    Elections kept me busy, too.  We had a four page ballot, with lots of candidates and propositions.  As soon as Hexacon was over I went into overdrive learning all I could, reading every candidate statement, researching every write-in candidate, reading every proposition, et cetera.  Of course, as happens in a democracy, only some of the people and propositions went my way. 


     






    You are a

    Social Liberal
    (60% permissive)

    and an...

    Economic Liberal
    (11% permissive)

    You are best described as a:


    Socialist




















    Link: The Politics Test on OkCupid Free Online Dating
    Also: The OkCupid Dating Persona Test

     


    "Great minds discuss ideas, Average minds discuss events, Small minds discuss people." ~Unknown