TT

  • Returning to This Project

    The crime that created Superman: Did fatal robbery spawn Man of Steel?

    It’s been a busy August.  My maternal grandmother has died, I’ve attended the first annual Tunnels & Trolls Convention, lectored at my grandmother’s memorial mass, attended her graveside service, flew out to the fourty-first GenCon, and am preparing now to run At-Con Program Operations for CopperCon 28 this upcoming weekend.  My bicycle broke down a few weeks ago, and they‘re still awaiting the part as of yesterday.  My house became a complete mess due to no time for cleaning, and I received a notice about the uncontrolled growth in my yard. 

    So I find myself with some time to post here, for a change.  Yet, strangely I’m not in the mood.  Perhaps it’s due to the fact that I am woefully out of practice.  Thus I am forcing myself to post anyway.  Or perhaps I’m not ready to compose a memorial for my grandmother. 

    I found a stack of Batman Adventures volume two comics which I had never read.  I had had a subscription to Batman:  Gotham Adventures which was canceled and replaced with this second run of Batman Adventures.  I didn’t like the drastic change in tone and theme, so I never read the rest of the series and let the subscription expire.  So I read the first seven issues this month.  It was well paced, well scripted, and brilliant in making drastic changes in character circumstances while maintaining continuity and characterization.  It’s amazing what five years of perspective will do.  Now I regret not having any of the subsequent issues.  The previous series was more a series of one shots, while this newer series had stand alone issues which wove into a single whole.  Each issue laid the groundwork for future issues, without a need to own any other issue than the one in your hands.  Yet the story made you want to own all of the other issues.  Issue one takes the step of introducing the main characters, letting readers see how each of the heroes and villains will be portrayed in this series.  A great place for new readers and old readers alike.  I understand that this first issue was also published with a Free Comic Book Day cover. 

    “Blessed indeed is the man who hears many gentle voices call him, ‘Father!’” ~Lydia M. Child

  • So Are the Days of Our Lives

    The Children of Hurin by J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien, and Alan Lee was brought to my attention by Ealnaatha Vaelmarrri .  I’m rather looking forward to it.  We might already know the story from The Silmarillion, but I’ve never had a problem with novels that reexamine the same story in a different or more expanded way.  Moreta: Dragonlady of Pern and Nerilka’s Story being one kind of example, with The Horse and His Boy, The Silver Chair, and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe being another kind of example. 

    I have weeks to recap, so I’m likely to forget most of it.  Trollgod invited me to stop by the Hallowed Halls of Literature to pick up my Naked Doom Wacky Racers certificate.  It’s rather cool, with an image of Muttley doing his famous laugh.  Of course I left work later than I would have liked, and even passed a car fire on the way to the Halls.  However, the Trollgod was kind enough to guide me through the shelves, and even pointed out one of the newest items in the collection:  the Tarzan / Carson of Venus collected graphic novel.  I just finished it today.  It was rather good.  I don’t know that I would have bought the series or the collected novel, but it was definately worthwhile to read and encourage others to read.  I probably would buy A Tale of Mugambi, a one-shot also included in the collection.  In addition to the Wacky Racers certificate, I received a second copy of The Troll Brothers Gruff:  A Trollish Fable (a favourite that I’ll be sure to share) and a copy of Oath of Swords.  Way cool, it includes a troll-like race called the hradani.  Thank the Trollgod for his abundant generocity!

    Wayne explained to me that he almost called to tell us that he was bringing Eric to MLJ’s memorial dinner, but opted against it for a very specific reason.  Michael was a big proponent of inviting people along, and not worrying about where individuals clashed.  He never wanted to see people left behind just because someone thought they didn’t belong.  So when Eric wanted to go to dinner that night, Wayne just invited him along.  He saw it as beneficial to everyone, Eric could still go out to dinner with Wayne, Wayne wouldn’t have to ride the bus over, and Monte wouldn’t have to give Wayne a ride back.  It’s all very logical.  He’s a lot gutsier than me.  Despite the fact that Michael was like that, I still would have asked permission.  I was just brought up differently than they were.

    Speaking of being brought up differently, Monte had us watch Team America:  World Police.  He always wants to be the one to bring the movies for us to watch, and he rails against us providing movies.  Yet he provides us movies with foul language, nudity, et cetera.  Or he goes to the opposite extreme and provides us with cartoons.  He’s like so many in his generation and younger, bound and determined to make the offensive so commonplace that we’ll become inured to it all.  I have coworkers that purposefully use foul or uncomfortable language around me for the same reasoning. 

    My grandmother has since gone back home.  Her collarbone has a two inch gap, which they say might be fixed with surgery.  She’s not willing to undergo further surgery, as she feels that the mastectomy didn’t stop her development of bone cancer.  My uncle visisted from NY for several days, and helped my grandfather get the house ready for her.  She now has various medications and physical therapies in her home.  She has her better days and her worse days. 

    Last week, Cave Creek Road had restricted traffic from 7pm-5am while filming was going on for the upcoming motion picture ”Kids in America” between 7:30pm-4:30am, plus road set up and take down.  The filming was occurring in the wash between Just Brakes and Rental Services Corporation.  The wash used to be home to a large transient camp.  That camp isn’t there anymore, obviously.  The story must feature a rather busy Labour Day weekend, as they were filming around a stock police car one night as I passed by.  I’ll have to check out the film, despite it not being one I’d normal express any interest in, just to see if I can spot that scene and any others set along my commute. 

    I have a lot more, but I have a lot of other things to do today.  Maybe I’ll post again soon.

    I know a lot of people take a look at my hair, mustache, and beard and assume I must be a hippy.  Hah!  I couldn’t further from one.  And for those that never believe me, take a look at this quiz:

    Not a hippie!
    You are 40% experimental, 22% feral, 45% spiritual, and 30% square!
    Wait a second! You scored 25% or more on non-hippie! That’s not hip, man – you’re an imposter. But that’s okay. We hippies are a pretty layed back bunch. We’ll probably only throw things at you if you’re wearing fur carrying a chainsaw. Maybe not even then, depends on what type of hippie you meet…
    My test tracked 4 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 19% on experimental
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 3% on feral
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 25% on spiritual
    free online datingfree online dating
    You scored higher than 53% on non-hippie
    Link: The what kind of hippie are you Test written by pragmaticdreams on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the The Dating Persona Test

    “The statistics on sanity are that one out of every four Americans is suffering from some form of mental illness. Think of your three best friends. If they’re okay, then it’s you.” ~ Rita Mae Brown

  • Thank God for Heroes

    i_Wan has a cool Heroes/Marvel Comics inspired custom header.
     
    Thursday Wayne and I did some more work on HLA4.  It’ll be earlier this year, and we haven’t heard anything from any of our usual cast.  We thinking about either continuing on through HLA7 or ending with HLA4.  We have an idea for another LARP should we end HLA with HLA4.  It’s still too early in the process to make a decision.
     
    Friday my leg was acting up a bit again.  It caused me some discomfort on the commute to work and while limping around the building at work.   On the way home I stopped in at KFC again and asked for a fish bowl.  I had a different employee this time, and he wasn’t sure how to answer.  So he went into the back and converesed with someone out of view.  When he came back, he asked me to confirm that I wanted to substitute fish for popcorn chicken on a rice bowl.  I confirmed that request, and he confirmed that he could make it happen.  After I paid for it, he had to go tell the food preparer about the substitution, as apparently the computer system for KFC was unable to let him convey that.  But that’s progress.  Hopefully KFC will wise up and let the computer handle such requests next year.
     
    After that, while heading uphill through the mountain preserve, my leg started acting up enough I ended up catching a bus the rest of the way.  On the way home, Liz’s daughter got on the bus.  It turns out that she was kicked out of the house some five months before, and now lives within a mile of me.  She asked me for an update on LepreCon, but as I had just missed her mother’s convention’s meeting I wasn’t of much help. 
     
    Trollgod has started a new game on Trollhalla, Buffalo Castle Tag.  I signed up for the game, then asked Khayd’haik to add some weapons to the Armoury for the game.  He was able to add some, but not others.  I was waiting to see if they’d be added before submitting my character stats and description.  Once I saw that he’d added what he could, I decided I’d make my character once I was home and had access to my T&T7 rules. 
     
    But when I got home from watching Batman & Mr. Freeze:  Subzero with my friends, I got a call from my maternal grandfather.  My grandmother was back in the hospital and he needed me to call my mother.  She’s long distance, and he’s never been willing to learn how to use the calling card.  So, suffice it to say, my character had to wait. 
     
    Sunday, after hiking and having breakfast at Village Inn with our hiking group, my mother picked me up and we visited my grandparents at the hospital.  She’d broken a bone between her ribs and shoulder, and it was likely that it was bone cancer.  Afterwards, my mother joined me for mass.  Father Joy presided, but Msgr. Mike gave the homily as the kick off for the Lenten Mission.  The mission is on the mass, and he promised to explain the forest of the mass, not the trees of the mass (to abuse a common metaphor to summarize his explanation). 
     
    Once I got home, I rushed to make my Buffalo Castle Tag character by deadline.  I posted it, but shortly thereafter Turn One was posted, and I wasn’t included.  Apparently I’d been too late in posting my character statistics.  I was disappointed, but it happens.
     
    Monday morning I got up early so I could attend the Lenten Mission.  Msgr. Mike presided over mass and afterwards gave a 45 minute talk.  He paraleled the Exodus of the Israelites with the Exodus of Jesus.  After that, he explained how the Jewish people relate their lives to the Exodus of the Israelites, while Christians are called to model their lives after the Exodus of Jesus.  The mass is one of the ways we do so, with scriptures, homily, and Eucharist.
     
    After the Lenten Mission I went to work.  After work my mother told me that the cancer doctor had ordered some shots, which my grandmother demanded to have explained to her.  The nurse was unable to explain them fully (as she wasn’t there when the doctor was), and promised to explain them once she had the order in hand.  My grandmother was threatening not to take them if any of them was related to chemo (which she’d already stopped for her breast cancer).
     
    A friend of mine had been out of town for the weekend, and I had wanted to welcome her back to town.  So I called her right after that.  Perhaps I shouldn’t have, as the words that came out of my mouth didn’t seem to match the ones in my head.  I probably should have waited, but sometimes I get so stubborn.  I set my mind towards doing something, and I’ll do it regardless of a change in curcumstances.  Thursday I emailed her an appology and clarification.
     
    Monday evening I stopped by Monte‘s on the way home so I could watch Heroes:  The Best Show on Television.  It continues to get better with each episode.  I was so jazzed by the end of the episode, it was totally what I needed.  Then, Trollgod gave me a call and told me that he’d made a Turn One addendum, and that I could participate in Buffalo Castle Tag.  That, too, made my day.  Two good things (even if they’re just fantasy, they’re good distractions) in the same evening went a long way towards bolstering my spirits.
     
    I got home and submitted my Turn One response, then went to bed.  I slept in, so by the time I got to church I’d already missed part of the Lenten Mission.  So I left, deciding to catch the evening session.  On the way home I dropped off my tunic at the drycleaners and went grocery shopping.  Once home I paid some bills, weeded the yard, and did laundry. 
     
    I wanted to see about visiting my grandmother, but couldn’t get ahold of anyone.  Eventually, my mother was off work and I called her.  She seemed surprised that I hadn’t read her email on the matter.  I’m always telling people to call me and leave a message rather than email.  I get to phone messages the same day, emails within a few weeks.  I tell people this all the time, yet no one listens.  It is very frustrating.  My mother and I just went over this last month.  It turned out that my grandmother was moved to the cancer ward and that she was talking about how we’d all missed her when she’s gone. 
     
    Eventually, it was time to go to the Lenten Mission.  After the Lenten Mission mass, Msgr. Mike refreshed us on what he’d covered the day before, before launching into the main portion of the mission.  The mass begins with asking for forgiveness, continues with blueprints for our lives, and culminates with gathering together as a community at the altar.  The scriptures are our blueprints on how to live life.  We read those blueprints before we come to the altar with our own individual crosses, which we offer up to the Lord.  Jesus was/is offered up on our behalf, just as the Jewish priests offered up holocausts to the Lord.  Msgr. Mike also mentioned that the priesthood is allowed to share in the sacredness of others’ crosses.  I found that very profound.
     
    Wednesday morning I got up early for the Lenten Mission again.  This time, Fr. Gene precided over the mass.  After mass he thanked Msgr. Mike for giving the mission, as he normally sees twelve people left by the third day of the mission.  This time, Father claimed, the assembly grew each day of the mission.  Msgr. Mike then launched into the mission, which he promised would be different than the previous two days.  Jesus emptied Himself of everything (including His divinity) and filled Himself with God’s will.  That was why Satan tempted Him to use His divinity, that was how He was able to experience doubt on the cross, that was how He has left us an example of how to live our lives, and that is how He is able to identify with and share with us in our humanity.  We are called to follow that example, imperfect as we are, to empty ourselves and fill ourselves with the will of God.  Baptism begins that, but being imperfect we need to periodically reempty ourselves and refill ourselves with God’s will, which the mass gives us, especially in the Eucharist. 
     
    After the mission was a social with coffee and doughnuts.  They didn’t have any beverage other than coffee, so I took a cup and regretted it the rest of the day.  Gross.  Gross.  Gross.  I couldn’t get the taste out of my mouth the rest of the day.  I’m done with coffee for the next decade.  At least the maple longjohn was good.  Fr. Gene invited me to join him at “the problem children” table.  One of the ladies at the table will be celebrating her 50th wedding anniversary a week from today, and she was talking about the sausages that were going to be catered at the big party she was planning.  Father was trying to talk her into using sardines instead, but she wasn’t going to hear any of it.  Msrg. Mike was going from table to table, and he commented that “the problem children” hadn’t learned the message of the mission yet.  I’d have to agree.
     
    Eventually, I had to head to work.  After work, I heard from my mother that her mom had been moved out of the hospital and into a neighboring building.  That building allows people to wear street clothing, accept a greater number of visitors, et cetera, and she is being wheeled over to the hospital for various tests and treatments as they come up.  Unfortunately, Medicare will only cover the first 21 days, so if she needs more (like the professionals suspect), she’s hosed.  Tonight they were discussing their options again, and it looks like she’ll go home after 21 days if she’s not discharged earlier.
     
    Thursday I enjoyed sleeping in to my normal weekday time before heading to work.  After work Debbie was kind enough to listen to me discuss my grandmother’s situation.  Right after she had made me feel better about the situation, I got the update call from my mother.  I guess my grandmother had received a couple of radiation treatments that day and afterwards was belligerant, making my mother and grandfather very concerned.
     
    After that, I headed to our TFLAS meeting, where we worked on updating our Cast Database.  We’ve quit using Microsoft Excel and have switched to Google Docs & Spreadsheets, which makes it much easier for Wayne and I to update without worry for duplicate effort. 
     
    This morning it took me two hours to get to work, as my chain kept hoping off of gears.  I had the same trouble getting home, plus I had an injured hand.  While I was at work, one of my grandparents’ friends came in for an Arizona flag.  She was rather worried for my grandmother, and wanted to chat that up a bit before she switched to her purpose for arriving at the store.  After work, I was given the great news that my grandmother was in better spirits.  She was even doing well enough to talk to me. 
     
    And that’s my week in review.
     
    Just in time for SM3:
    You Are Spider-Man
    Quick and agile, you have killer instincts (literally).
    And that kind of makes up for the whole creepy spider thing.
     
    “Challenges are what makes life interesting, overcoming them is what makes life meaningful.” ~ Joshua J. Marine

  • Things Worth Sharing

    The Ship is a cool medival carol about Mary of Nazareth.

    So, where to begin?  While reading my regulars I found a couple of interesting things.  I found a recording of Michael’s voice posted by SerendipityWalker.  It is nothing earth shattering, just an ordinary message on a friend’s voice mail.  But it brought a smile to my face, the ordinariness of it all.  Thanks, SW. 

    I also found that Mongoose Publishing has released a new edition of RuneQuest according to Rrraff on the Trollwalla.  Mongoose has been releasing amazing Conan and Lone Wolf d20 campaign supplements, and I can’t wait to sink my teeth into a revamped RuneQuest.  They’ve made the new edition Open Licence, with Gloranthia (the original RuneQuest setting) and Lankhmar campaigns already supported by them.  I really hope to see other companies take Mongoose up on this, as d20 needs some serious competition.  Thanks for the heads up, Rrraff. 

    RuneQuest was my 3rd RPG. I had first played the D&D Basic Red Box, then SW:  RPG, then RuneQuest 3rd edition.  That was way back in middle school, sometime before I played AD&D 1st and 2nd editions and RuneQuest 5th edition.  To be honest, I think I played RuneQuest even before I read an issue of Groo

    How You Live Your Life
    You tend to deprive yourself of things you crave, for your own good.
    You tend to avoid confrontation and stay away from sticky situations.
    You prefer a variety of friends and tend to change friends quickly.
    You tend to always dream of things within reach – and you usually get them.

  • 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

The Seasons of Mount Chernabog

July 2014
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