Archive for October, 2008

Monday and f-lists


2008
10.27

Well, if the contents of my inbox are any indication the call for f-lists went over very well. Especially for those who are pissed off at me, since I personally made all but four of the f-lists submitted, to which I say “I have broad shoulders, bring it on.”

Anyway, with today being a Monday and all and what with having two exams this week I don’t have a ton of time to post the f-lists right away. Therefore I’ll compile them in a post for Friday, so if there are more of you out there who’d like to give the internet an earful about those things you are sick of and never want to hear about again, leave a comment or e-mail me here.

…and now I’m going to post a bunch of photos from the weekend.Because I’m lazy like that.

A father and son paddle out in the surf at Lovers Point in Pacific Grove, California on October 26th, 2008.

A teenaged surfer hauls out of the water and heads over the rocks to the extreme end of Lovers Point where the larger waves are.

A mother and her son stop to take in the view from the Pacific Coast Highway where it winds through Monterey.

A sign designating the site of the Stanford-run Hopkins Marine Station.

Anchor Rock.

Bubble station at the JDRF walk in Pacific Grove on October 26th, 2008.

The fruit of a banana tree in my backyard.

A sign along the PCH during the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation’s annual fundraising walk.

Come in. Lay on my couch.


2008
10.24

I think I’m really onto something with the whole f-list thing because once I logged off my blog the other night I kept adding to it until my crankiness ran dry and my sunny disposition was restored to it’s rightful place: behind and to the left of my acerbic disposition which is in turn located somewhere in the upper regions of my thoracic cavity behind my sternum.

At first the additions to the f-list were completely logical magnets for the hatred shared by every rational human being: the Lakers, speed bumps, inventors of shows like Sorority Forever because really, how could you watch an episode of Sorority Forever and not want to punch the cast, creators, producers, network execs, advertisers and every sorority girl within a fifty mile radius square in the jaw? Hell, I wanted to stick myself in the eye with a red-hot poker for the sin of having sat through it without throwing my television into the street.

Anyway. So somewhere between adding item #21 (Kobe Bryant) and item #3,284,091 (sorbitol) I realized that I had become significantly more chipper. It would seem that when one burns so far through a list of stuff that one would like to drop-kick off the face of the earth that one is resorting to sugar substitutes and films in Esperanto that one can have feasibly purged oneself of homicidal urges that make one a threat to oneself and others.

Also, it helped that in the course of reading through comments and e-mails I was treated to te f-lists of others and will include them here:

Kaylia’s F-List:

Bosses
Micromanagers
The Stock Market
Radical Rights
Radical Lefts
Makers of the Push Up Bra
Expiration Dates That Lie
Anonymous Comments And Those Who Leave Them
Starbucks
Closed Minded Nutcases
My Pile of Dirty Laundry
My Pile of Clean Laundry
Country Music
American Idol
Political Commercials
Emo Kids
Dress Codes
Bottled Water
Mechanical Pencils
DHL
People Who Refuse to Wait Their Turn
Drivers Who Refuse To Wait Their Turn
Any Driver Who Has Ever Hit A Pedestrian
That ASSHOLE Who Hit Me Last Week

/deep breath/

Josephson’s f-list is, reportedly, me.

He didn’t submit an f-list but I can guarantee that my brother would agree with Josephson.

Malathionman took the f-list in a new direction and included every disease-free female in North America who looks tolerably well without the assistance of a paper bag over her head.

Jay’s f-list is unique in that it brings together ESPN and the Amish:

ESPN
The NFL
Reality TV
The Weatherman on TV
The Amish
TV Political Analysts
TV Sports Analysts
TV Financial Analysts
All TV Analysts of any kind
Kids
Shirtless dudes in Wal-Mart
Political ads (especially local politicians and their pathetic attempt at humor)
People who engage in the Mac v. PC argument
Joe the Plumber

April was too nice to post an f-list although I would be willing to bet she secretly harbors nasty thoughts about styrofoam.

Tracy’s f-list crushed me with her hatred of Prius’s but then she invoked Dr. G and won me over again:

1. The handful of parents at my kids school who have made it so the kids can’t wear their costumes to school on Halloween day or have Christmas parties or pageants – so now we have to have “Winter Party” instead.

2. Prius owners – because unless you crushed your old car you have accomplished nothing. Your old car is still on the road and now you have added another one.

3. Actors/tv shows that use their sitcom/time slot to make their personal political statements. If I wanted to see/hear that I would be watching CNN or Fox. Please give me a warning at the beginning of the show that you are going to throw this in my face so I can go watch something else like Dr. G Medical Examiner.

4. The welfare system

So dear readers I am asking again – for the sake of election year therapeutic purposes – are there any more f-lists out there? I’m collecting assignments in (checks imaginary watch) 48 hours.

…and now I’m off to a weekend at the ocean for a little environmental therapy of my own. Read you in a couple days!

Disregard that last post…


2008
10.22

…I am simply experiencing “Election Year Fatigue”. I am positive that this is the condition responsible for my frayed nerves and inability to watch CNN without shouting unprintable things at the television.

And it only took me one hour, six minutes and a bottle of two buck chuck to diagnose myself.

I would, however, like to leave off with this sentiment, immortalized in a cotton-polyester blend and on sale for the equivalent of my home’s value now that the kids on Wall Street have stopped playing rock, paper, scissors with the assholes in the mortgage industry:

Also, I would like, if I may, add to the f-list:

- everyone who currently works on, is affiliated with or has ever laid eyes on Wall Street

- McCain

- Obama

-  pro-war zealots

- anti-war protestors

- the recession or depression or whatever the cool kids are calling it these days

-  polling organizations

- socialized anything

- CNN

- MSNBC

- Fox News

- Nancy Grace

- AIG

- that creepy dude who does the Price-Waterhouse commercials

- the Nikkei

- global warming

- atheists

- evangelical christians

- the makers of string cheese

-  vegans

- people from Finland

- Brett Favre

What’s on your f-list?

Nerves? Frayed.


2008
10.22

Last night I violated one of my own rules for Polite Discourse When Alcohol Is Not A Factor And Therefore Cannot Be Blamed: I discussed politics with a classmate of mine.

Actually, I did not so much discuss politics as allowed myself to be drawn into a rather pointless and stupid political temper tantrum thrown by a classmate who has made a habit of painting all conservatives with the broad brush of bigotry.

For the sake of disclosure I believe it only fair to assert here that I genuinely like this classmate of mine. He’s a funny, witty and rather charming gentleman with a sparkling personality that I have enjoyed for the last couple of semesters.

It’s just that he’s also completely irrational, politically speaking.

You see, I identify myself as a conservative in the more classic sense that I believe the government that governs best governs least. For example, you want to smoke weed, shoot heroin, snort coke? Knock yourself out. Just don’t ask me to fork over cash to for the government to blow on healthcare or wiretapping. I’ll vote no on Proposition 8 and then turn around and fight efforts to nationalize our banking, healthcare and oil industries. I support Bob Barr, read Ayn Rand and aspire to be the female John Mackey.

So there I was last night, standing around all innocent-like when my classmate threw down the “all conservatives are homophobic bigots” gauntlet.

Consider my eyebrow raised.

Now, as a lifelong resident of California I’ve become accustomed to being compared to Hitler, called names that would make a trucker blush and accusations of being on the wrong side of various and sundry -isms for no more substantial a reason than not being liberal. In other words, living peaceably in California often involves me ignoring the shallow bumper sticker philosophies of certain individuals who believe that only registered Democrats hold a monopoly on virtue and compassion.

In fact, I have become so accustomed to this political environment that I have perfected a rather fun – if expensive – coping mechanism called “Let’s get together and blow $250 in Costco’s liquor aisle!”

Anyway. I don’t know what happened to me last night. Maybe I need to increase my zoloft intake or perhaps this election season has simply gone on too long but yesterday my frayed nerves finally snapped with an audible “ploink!” and instead of doing my usual thing and ignoring the ad hominem attack by my classmate I leapt into the rather large puddle of conversational dung with both feet and engaged him in what had to have been the single dumbest political discussion ever in the history of humankind. In fact, the discussion was so dumb that I was forced to use a run-on sentence right there to convey it’s dumbness.

At any rate, while I stood there arguing into the wind I was reminded of an e-mail sent to me by a fellow Libertarian who had relocated from San Francisco to El Dorado Hills for work. When I asked him how he was liking his new digs away from the knee-jerk histrionics of the bay area he replied, “I feel like I’ve traded one political hell for another. I moved from brainless knee-jerk liberalism to brainless knee-jerk conservatism. Sometimes my inner Howard Roark makes peeps and everyone stares at me like I’ve suggested eating babies for breakfast.”

Some days it just doesn’t pay to be a Libertarian.

No time to update…


2008
10.17

…the last several days were spent at the NFDA convention in Orlando during which caskets, beer, sleep deprivation and soul-killing humidity all played a part and dude, I’m exhausted. I also have a microbiology exam to study for, two kids to beat, a husband who swears that five days without sex is potentially fatal and a half marathon to run in San Francisco on Sunday.

But I will say this; this is what four wannabe morticians in a jacuzzi tub looks like:

Four dorks in a bathtub

Catch y’all next week.

Olga The Not-So-Much-Terrible-As-Tasteless-And-Uncouth


2008
10.09

First of all, a long overdue THANKS goes to Dayngr, who sent the mother of all care packages to my dad and his guys in Afghanistan. Go check her out, she and hers do some good work.

Now for something completely different…

I was at my local grocery store today buying liquor and other assorted implements of impairment to help smooth the flight to Orlando tomorrow. Not so much for my sake, but for the sake of my fellow passengers who would no doubt prefer a passed out sasquatch to one that rocks nervously in her seat while mumbling about defective jackscrews and fuel vapor explosions.

At any rate, I was being checked out when the kid behind the register asks for my ID. So perplexed was I by this request that I stared at him blankly for a few moments before diving for my wallet while muttering something incomprehensible.

“Come again?” The kid asked.

“Uh… nothing. My english is not so good.” I joked before handing over my ID to prove that I am, in fact, 34 over 21.

“Really? I think you speak English pretty good.”

I gave the kid a half smile and narrowed my eyes. He looked back at me with the kind of bright-eyed innocence that told me that 1) he didn’t catch the joke, and 2) he really thought that English was my second language.

Which reminds me of when I was in college and working at the IHOP on Florin Road (and my readers from Sacramento will read “IHOP on Florin Road” and their eyes will cross because nothing good ever happens after midnight. Or on Florin Road.)

Anyway, after I started working at IHOP on Florin Road it was only a matter of days before it became apparent that many of South Sac’s residents had little regard for a white waitress. Or rather, a white waitress who was blonde, blue-eyed and six feet tall. In fact, so deep ran their disregard for me that many customers derived great joy from plying me with their rather colorful collection of racial slights.

Good times!

The matter was not helped by the fact that my primary advocate was a manager who was a warm and wonderful human being and spoke the king’s English but – being fresh out of Pakistan – had not yet mastered the blighted vernacular of his customer base. This led to frustration when I would try to explain to him why, exactly, a customer’s exclamation of “DIE HONKY BITCH DIE! DIE! DIE!” did not sit particularly well with me.

Another employee and I finally took matters into our own hands.

Aaron was a fellow server who, having noticed my difficulties, devised a plan by which I would be more readily accepted by the community: he made me a nametag that said “Olga” and started telling everyone that I was a Russian immigrant.

Though I concluded the plan was completely retarded I went along with it. It would work something like this: if a customer started giving me the third degree Aaron would sidle up to me, eyebrows raised.

“Her English isn’t bad huh?” My co-worker would then take advantage of the baffled silence to explain my status as a Russian refugee.

The “problem” customers totally bought it. In fact, most of them became downright civil with me.

Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah, so I’m leaving for a funeral director’s conference in Orlando tomorrow and the guy at the grocery store now thinks I’m a lush who speaks English as a second language and while I’m gone I really do think you should check out the best political blog entry I’ve ever read, my brother’s squibbles on the occupational risks of being an archaeologist, and my future sister-in-law’s thoughts on, well, everything*.

* Oh yeah. That little tidbit there will most definitely get me a stern talking-to by my brother, probably right around the time I’ve finished the third screwdriver at the airport tomorrow and have been rendered incapable of speech. You’re welcome Matt.

Remember a few weeks back? When I did that triathlon?


2008
10.03

Well, apparently a few of you did and since you were short-sighted enough to indulge my enormous ego kind enough as to e-mail and ask if I survived the experience – and since my fingers have started bleeding from typing define survive – I’ll just throw a post up here with a run-down of Steph’s 1st Olympic-Distance Triathlon.

Well, the morning started off with me having my transition point ganked by Athlete Number 948 who had apparently failed to realize that while number 948 was relatively close to 958 which was my number, they were not in fact one and the same. Luckily for her, Athlete Number 948 reappeared before I had the opportunity to douse her wetsuit in Tabasco or deflate her bicycle tires.

The incident was quickly forgotten however when, just five minutes later – I was at the inflation station letting the air out of the tires on my coach’s bike. To be fair, I hadn’t intended to let the air out of her tires but it sorta happened because, well, I’m retarded and I don’t know any better.

So it was that during the moments when my coach and I were supposed to be down at the beach enjoying a nice pre-race anxiety attack I was still in the transition area pleading with random strangers to please, please, please help me operate this hand-held device, I believe it is called a bicycle pump? Because I haven’t yet mastered the use of simple tools and I need to un-sabotage my coach’s equipment.

Finally we made it down to the beach in time to see this:

This was the wave before ours, which really? Was pretty much identical to what our wave looked like. Also, even though the video shows you the ocean and wetsuits and dozens of pairs of arms and legs flailing about there is no way that a video or photo or even mere words can do justice to the experience of leaping into freezing surf and being subsequently battered within an inch of your life by your fellow race participants.

Of course video, photos and words cannot adequately convey the beauty of kelp forests or the thrill of the open water experience either and that kind of made up for the multiple elbows I took in the nose and having my goggles ripped off in the kelp.

Exiting the water and heading into T1

In other words: the swim was crazy fun. However, I just have to ask: would it have been terribly unfair to shove the photographers off the cliff and into the sea? So far as I can tell there has never been a flattering photo taken of anyone wearing a wetsuit and I, for one, wouldn’t be heartbroken if I could make a beach exit without these people standing around prepared to create images of me looking like a bloated harbor seal.

Anyway, the rest of the race was pretty much a blur; I did intentionally crash on my way into Transition 2 when I failed to unclip from my bike in time. Basically, it came down to crashing or staying on the bike and being disqualified and I chose to eat asphalt. And if that choice makes no sense to you whatsoever then don’t worry – it just means your normal.

T2 @ Pacific Grove Triathlon

This is the entrance into T2 where every bicyclist except for me dismounted in an orderly  – and vertical – position. I only post this photo to show everyone the big DISMOUNT sign that notified people as far away as Japan that THOU SHALT GET OFF THINE BIKE HERE. And? Just in case athletes missed that message the sign was flanked by a bunch of over-caffeinated race officials shouting “DISMOUNT! DISMOUNT! DISMOUNT!”

Such features are very useful for people who, unlike me, have mastered the art of disengaging themselves from the tiny clips that keep their feet attached to their bike.

So after the swim was the bike and after the bike was the run and when my coach caught up to me during the run we looked at each other and simultaneously mouthed the words, “Dude, seriously… next year we sit on the sidelines and drink beer.”