Clearance Level: IndigoFortune Presents Gifts…

...not according to the book. But they're pretty cool, anyway.

Since last week was dedicated to negatives, I decided to switch my focus this week. (I'm also hideously late posting this list, so I'll honestly be surprised if I get many visitors.)

Thursday Thirteen 86::22: Fortune Presents Gifts

  1. I have no allergies to plants, pollen, seeds, or spores. Since today's pollen count is at 8, and expected to hit 11 tomorrow, this makes me very lucky.

    Everyone with pollen allergies can now send nasty thoughts in my general direction.
  2. My back is much better. It's still a little sore; but it's no longer so sore that I have to be very careful when laying down or rolling over.
  3. My last day at my job is next Friday. I notified the agency last Friday, and they immediately thanked me for sticking with the position for as long as I did and set about looking for a new position. I will be away from there before the trainwreck...and thus will not be forced to clean up an entirely predictable and avoidable mess.
  4. I'm continuing to look for contracts on my own, both full-time and freelance. I'm versatile enough that I can apply for jobs in many different industries, and I've got the setup to be able to take offsite contracts and know that I'll be able to deliver precisely what the client needed.
  5. My airconditioner is ready for installation. It was a bit banged up (warehouse damage); but since I bought it so early and since it's essentially last year's model, not only was the price a goodly chunk lower, but I'm not rushing to get it installed before I pass out from the heat. (I'm *really* glad I got it when I did. Who knows how much prices will increase due to higher transport costs?)
  6. I own three cats. Another brand of cat food, Hill's M/D dry food, was found to be tainted and recalled. I haven't ever fed my cats any of the recalled foods; and none of them are showing signs of illness (so if any other foods are also tainted, there's a higher-than-average chance that they didn't receive any of the bad stuff.)
  7. I'm confirmed to work registration day and opening ceremonies again this year for the AIDS Lifecycle. I worked both days last year as well, and actually had a lot of fun. (I'll be sponsoring Juan Carlos Fernandez again this year...he's promised to shave his head if he reaches his donation goal of $10,000 for biking — for the third year in a row — from San Francisco to Los Angeles.)
  8. Yesterday, I booked my plane tickets to Seattle. I'll be headed up in four months to tour some apartment complexes, do some job interviews, and possibly having a miniature vacation with some friends. So both my huge summer trips' air tickets are bought and paid for!! (Now comes the hotel stuff...which will not be cheap, for either trip.)
  9. My three-month supply of my anticonvulsant medication shipped yesterday. This is the first time I've ordered my meds in bulk, and if I'm going off of the insurance in April, I really wanted to get a three-month supply to (hopefully) tide me over until I get another gig where I can purchase group medical insurance. The order was processed and shipped out today. *whew* - made it!! This stuff will be name-brand-only until at least July 2008 - that's when the exclusivity patent expires. It's fairly costly stuff. I'm glad I have the option to purchase in bulk.
  10. I have a weekend staring me in the face. A weekend of relatively springlike weather, too: temperatures will be cooler this weekend as some cooler air comes south, but it won't be as chilly as last week. (One night it got so cold I had my sheet, comforter, heavy blanket, a pair of thick socks, and yoga pants in addition to my normal long-sleeved tunic-thingamajig.) I can get out and walk!
  11. Which reminds me...I need to recharge my MP3 player. For the longest time, I would have looked oddly at anyone who suggested that my life would be incomplete without one of these devices. Okay, I'd still look askance at a person who made that suggestion with any sincerity. But I am glad that I got one this past winter. What started out as a way to keep myself from going nutso at Le Job has been nice and convenient. I don't consider it essential to my survival, but it's a very nice extra. I'm also glad that, despite all the hoopla, I didn't get an iPod. First, they're far more costly. Second, I like having an MP3 player that's the size of a box of matches. It's easy to stow, easy to carry, and it makes people stop and stare and ask questions.
  12. I've got a book on the way! I scanned she's shelf at bookcrossing when she announced that she'd done some more cleaning out, and did anyone see anything they particularly wanted. I did. I've been mildly interested in acquiring this book for some time, but in a fairly casual way. I've never found it in the used bookstores, and I've not wanted to buy a copy new, just because anthology series are always kind of iffy.
  13. I've signed up to win a gig being paid to blog for a year. I've already sold small business articles to magazines, but have never really known how to go about becoming a columnist (which is what a blogger is, essentially) without some kind of background in journalism or English. However, I've been told repeatedly that I'm a good writer - so why not give it a go? (That's one of the more interesting Web 2.0 ways to raise business capital I've seen, though. The company sponsoring this contest gets half of whatever people donate to the “pot”. Ingenious way around the traditional VC pitches...)
Other Participants
  • The Screaming Pages with plans for her first week of unemployment
  • Whiskey Talking with search engine strings that lead people to his site
  • The Story of Me with popular TV shows she's not watching
  • Tennessee Text Wrestling with times when inspiration strikes and she can't (as yet) capture the idea because she's otherwise occupied
  • The Song of my Soul with shows she never thought she'd like
  • Lifecruiser with the crazy hat parade (just as long as none of those hats were processed with mercury...)
  • Joystory with items vying for her attention, just days before the library closure
  • Wylie Kinson builds another dinner party list

Keywords: | Thursday | tech toys | memes | luck | health | books |
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Clearance Level: IndigoThursday Threesome: Looking for some direction

Looking for some better prompts, actually.

Thursday Threesome: ::Looking for some Direction::

  1. Onesome: Looking — all around today: what landmark or scene do you look for each morning on the way to work or school or wherever? Is there something on the way you look forward to seeing? ...or do you have something that lets you know you're close and it's time to shift mental gears?
    There's nothing on the way I look forward to seeing; but when I'm leaving, every corner means another block further away.
  2. Twosome: for — your typical lunchtime what do you see? ...a cafeteria? ...classroom? ...office? ...home? ...the surf in Hawai'i?
    Usually I eat lunch in front of the computer - so whatever I'm doing at the moment, that's what I'm looking at. Except when one of the cats (usually Fog) decides that this human-food stuff must be investigated. Then I'm aiming the Discouragement Bottle and staring down a domestic housecat.
  3. Threesome: some direction — When you go out your front door, which direction are you facing? ...or do you use the front door?
    Out. I am facing out. North-south-east-west don't mean much to me unless you're talking about relative position of cities or larger things.

Keywords: | Thursday | memes |
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Clearance Level: IndigoThursday Thirteen: Writers’ Words

Writer, poet, philosopher, sage...one-liner.

Thursday Thirteen 83:19: Writers' Words

I pulled these from my random quotes file, which I re-found last week. I've got over 300 quotes in there, and I occasionally add one. Quotes that make me think, quotes that make me laugh...those are the keepers.

My quotes come from all over the place; but most of them come from books I've read, or from articles about the authors.

  1. The secret of joy in work is contained in one word: excellence. To know how to do something well is to enjoy it. — Pearl Buck
    I'm happiest when I can do a good job at whatever I'm doing at the moment. When I'm rushed, or when I know that there's a better way to get things done, I'm very short tempered.
    Pearl S. Buck wrote dozens of novels and short stories, many based on her experiences growing up in Asia.
  2. The people I distrust most are those who want to improve our lives but have only one course of action. — Frank Herbert
    Sure, there are problems that only have a single solution. Usually, though, they're rather simple problems. In far too many cases, a person who insists that a problem has only one “real” or “proper” solution either doesn't have all the information or firmly believes that they are superior to anyone else whom the solution would affect.
    Frank Herbert is most well-known for his science fiction. His Dune series was inspired by an article about the slow but unstoppable movement of sand dunes.
  3. Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind. — Rudyard Kipling
    It's true! Sadly enough, they are also among the most powerful weapons used by mankind.
  4. We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make us love one another. — Jonathan Swift
    Why is it that something that should help people to reason, help people to think, help people live and work together, draw strength from one another...is so easily and so often used to divide and belittle?
  5. Truth and illusion are but mirrored refractions. — C J Cherryh
    C J Cherryh is a science fiction / speculative fiction author. She's written several novels as well as short stories. I could make an entire list of quotes from her books.
  6. The fox knows many tricks, the hedgehog only one. One good one. — Archilochus
    Archilochus was a Greek warrior poet and satirist. He is widely credited with creating iambic pentameter.
  7. How you behave toward cats here below determines your status in Heaven. — Robert A. Heinlein
    And here I thought it determined whether or not we got to be a cat in our next life (good = cat, bad = mouse)
  8. Hope is the dream of the waking man. — Aristotle
  9. She has confused all the learned of Islam, everyone who has studied the psalms, every Jewish Rabbi, every Christian Priest. — Mohiuddin ibn El-Arabi, on Truth
    Mohiuddin ibn El-Arabi was a Sufi poet and mystic in the Middle Ages. He lived in Spain.
  10. Interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art. — Susan Sontag
    “I like Byron, I give him a 5, but you can't dance to it.” Just like explaining a joke sucks out all the funny, explaining art takes away some of the awe.
  11. Wise people, even though all laws were abolished, would still lead the same life. — Aristophanes
  12. Loyalty to petrified opinion never yet broke a chain or freed a human soul. — Mark Twain
    Whether our of fear, a wish not to disturb their own comfort, or a combination of reasons, people and societies will cling tenaciously to ideas...even when those ideas either cause harm. We're creatures of habit, though.
    While many of the quotes attributed to Mark Twain probably aren't his, they're good quotes! (Apparently, lots of people started hearing things that just sounded Twain-like, attributed them thusly, and repeated the quite far and wide.)
  13. Come up with a really great quote, and your name will live forever. — Anonymous
    Okay...that's not from a famous writer. It just made me laugh.
Other Participants

Keywords: | writing | Thursday | philosophy | memes |
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Clearance Level: IndigoIteration Two: Out go the Lights

It's a little unnerving, how thin the layer that separates us from the nineteenth century...

Iterations (the portal)Iteration 03/07/2007: Out go the Lights

The show Jericho has covered about three months so far (or maybe slightly less?) The showrunners have said that they intentionally left the radiation, fallout, and immediately attendent consequences (radiation sickness, nuked foodstuffs, and post-apocalyptic zombies) at a distance to concentrate on how people would cope if they suddenly found themselves without electricity, without communications, without quick/easy/plentiful transportation...they're dealing with day to day survival, but amped up considerably. Thus far they've done a fairly good job alluding to some of the less-obvious effects: they've mentioned someone in town making toothpaste, they showed one of the characters restocking the town store with foodstuffs from a train halted five miles out of town, they've had run-ins with mercenary bands...they aren't holding a church social out there. Still, there are plenty of things that haven't been addressed — and hopefully, they won't be. At least not graphically and / or extensively. (This is your brain on far too many distopian futuristic novels.)

  1. It's been more than two months without widespread running water, or even easily treated water. All water for eating and drinking will have to be boiled first...and long showers? Even short ones? Not happening on a daily basis, if you get what I mean. Things will be tolerable until high summer. High summer in Kansas is hot, but it's not always dry. Sadly enough, it's not easy to try and coax the humidity to turn into precipitation. People will just be muggy, hot, lethargic...and fragrant.
  2. Medicines are not easy to come by. The show has addressed this a bit, when Dad Green nearly died from an aggravated flu bug (and a lack of proper antibiotics.) Imagine if you have to have medicines to maintain basic health day to day: insulin for diabetes, anticonvulsants for epileptics, heart medications...those who don't die from the sudden cut-off will have to (re-)learn to live with the effects of their disorders.
  3. A cousin to lack of medicines is lack of medical practitioners. Jericho has one medical doctor and a few nurse practitioners. While others may have drifted into town and set up on the outskirts, there's so much medical knowledge and only so much that one human can know. The best they can hope for is diverse areas of specialization or special interest. But you just know that something's going to happen to someone, and the injury will be more serious because one of the medicos once heard something, or briefly read about something, but can't recall the full technique.)
  4. And more on the medical front: is there a dentist in the town? If anyone gets a cavity, the tooth may have to be pulled...using farrier's tools. And forget novacaine: they'll have to drink as much moonshine as can be gotten into their system. And something serious, like root canals? Yeah. Pain. Lots of it...and more risk of going septic from an infected oral wound. Again with the pain.
  5. We've seen the mercenary companies roving about, pretty much creating their own law. If the mercs come back through Jericho with the intent of taking over the town, they'll now know that the direct approach won't work...so they'll be more creative. And those were mercs who have unit discipline and a leader who appears to think long-term. If winter gets truly hard, and drifters are forced by desperation to try and find shelter more substantial than whatever barn or bridge they've been using, they won't worry about niceties like not raping a woman or not killing a kid...not if they're truly at the end of their rope. (And if survivalist-cells start to take shape, all bets are off. Law will pretty much revert back to 'possession is nine tenths'. One of the secondary characters seems to be adapting to this lifestyle a bit too easily — Dale was fairly quick to liberate that governor for the windmill.)
  6. This was hinted at, last episode: the relative cheapness of human life. Cash is worthless now. That means that even if people could get to their bank accounts, all that pretty colored paper wouldn't do squat for them. What's valuable now is what's intrinisically valuable: land, for growing food. Tools, for creatinn and building. Animal labor...or human labor. Anything that will tote the barge, lift the bale, or gather the food.
  7. This wouldn't necessarily happen for a year or so...but depending on how much radiation makes it into the food-supply chains, and how it affects fertility, women could suddenly become commodities. Or rather, a working uterus will become a commodity. The rest of the woman is just along to provide maintenance and a vessel. (Yes, fertile males could potentially become more valuable...but it's less easy to determine male parentage without a fiercely strong resemblance. Not nearly as many people will see any impregnation as will see a birth. Kind of hard to disguise which woman is in labor.)
  8. Jericho's in farm country, so unless there's a recurrence of the dust bowl, they'll have fewer food problems than a non-nuked major metro area. Once the store shelves are emptied, if people aren't growing their own food, they'll either starve, or have to get food from someone else's farm. Good grief...what's happening in places like Manhattan? Or Oakland? Sure, there's farm country a few hours' drive outside of those areas...but that's how many people trying to get the food from how much arable, actively farmed land? I predict a monstrous, horrific population drop, unless the disparate pseudo-governments can get things moving...and soon.
  9. The EMP fried everything with a circuit board. Unless I'm wrong, that means that even if power were restored tomorrow, many things wouldn't work. Computers. CD players. Newer cars (they actually mentioned that one - yay, verisimilitude.) Phones (regular, not just cell.) Most radios, stereos, TVs...the nascent government will be trying to communicate, but no one will be able to receive the signals unless they've got older, solid-state electronics. (Some of that stuff still does exist...just not much of it. And if it breaks down, not many people will know how to repair it.) The new soi-disant governmemt will be reduced to manual methods of disseminating information until...geez, I don't know when. Until people start producing and distributing solid-state radios and TVs. (I'm going to take a huge guess and say that any standing inventory of contemporary electronics was also frotzed, and will now make excellent — and in some cases very stylish — doorstops.)
  10. Just about everyone will need to learn things such as candle-making, sewing, weaving, woodwork, subsistence farming, basic butchery, minimal animal husbandry, and — truly daunting, for some of us — cooking things from scratch. Without crock pots or bread machines (Don't smirk. I wasn't really a great participant in a swap I signed up for because the theme was 'cooking'...and I don't really cook. Needless to say, I won't be signing up for any more of those unless I can find out the theme in advance.) Sure, there can and will be some trade: if someone's got a good system for banging together soap, and someone else has a farm with lots of cows and pigs (sources of fat - a necessary ingredient for soap), they'll probably barter a bit. Likewise a skilled potter and someone who's sitting on, and willing to process, good quality clay. However, it won't make sense to have one or two people in a town who do nothing but cook for everyone, or repair all the clothing. People are going to have to learn how to do these things for themselves, at least to some extent. (Think: would you want to be living in a town when suddenly, the one person who knows how to make candles...dies or leaves? I didn't think so.)
  11. Ahhhh...coffee. No more coffee, after a while. Not even the crappy instant stuff, unless people are lucky enough to live in an area where coffee will actually grow. You can ferment just about anything to get some form of booze. Teas and coffees...a little more difficult. (Omigod, the withdrawal headaches there will be. In fact, that's probably what will happen in the metro areas: people won't be able to get their caffeine fix, they'll go nutso, and violence shall ensue. If they're even able to walk upright, that is. My own caffeine withdrawal headaches start out mild-ish, then get crippling.)
  12. There are definite signs that the rest of the world is fine, and may be able to help America get back on its feet. However, that will mean other long-term consequences. How will Americans react to suddenly being the nation in need, after decades of perceiving themselves to be the kings of the world? And how many nations will offer aid, but then later send us a bill that keeps the next several generations further in debt than ten Iraqi wars could get us? Say that the US gets help from other first-world nations within the next six months. They have to distribute everything, they have to reactivate the infrastructure, and people will have to replace lost houses and find work (to keep bringing in money to be able to keep replacing whatever else needs replacing...as well as normal day-to-day expenses like food.) What effect will that have on the national psyche? (Aside from the inevitable Hollywood blockbuster movies, fiction and non-fiction, lawsuits and countersuits, themed talk shows, and sudden interest in certain crafts courses.)

Other Participants

Keywords: | Wednesday | memes | disaster |
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Clearance Level: IndigoThursday Threesome: No Bicycles on the Freeway

Scarily enough, some of these signs are actually needed. (I'll bet you feel really safe now, hm?)

Thursday Threesome: ::No Bicycles on the Freeway::

  1. Onesome: No Bicycles — on the Freeway? Ya' think? Do you have a better 'sign of the times' for the gang? I'm thinking along the lines of "Coffee is Hot", if you catch my drift...
    A few of those types of signs could be circumvented by having better technical writers. Plenty, though, are preventative measures...not against stupid human tricks, but against lawsuits. They're like wolfbane, but for settlements.
  2. Twosome: on the — flip side, how about a sign you think needs to be in place? ...maybe something like one that lights up and says, "Get out" after you pull the fire alarm in a building?
    Every time I hear about these kind of signs or lawsuits (like the lawsuit that caused McDonald's to start printing “This coffee is hot” on their coffee cups) I see someone exhibit the boneheaded behavior that makes some of these signs necessary. (Notice that I said “some”. There's no denying that many of these bits of signage are nothing but CYA insurance.)
  3. Threesome: Freeway — friend or foe? Utility or necessary evil? Extra points if you have to use the Pennsylvania Turnpike or happen to live in Los Angeles!
    I think freeways are necessary. People don't have to get permission to move into a city or urban area, so city planning isn't a clean or easy thing. When a population grows, it grows...and when a metro area has a certain draw job- and housing-wise, there's little that will stop the growth. It's aggravating that they're so prevalent...but I'm not too sure what can be done to stop it.

Keywords: | Thursday | memes | legal |
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Clearance Level: IndigoThursday 13: Chaos Theory

The wonderful thing about lists is that, aside from being mildly related sequential items, there's not too much hard-and-fast definition in there.

HEY!! If you got directed here from Thursday 13 on or after March 14, go here instead.

It's my fault. I didn't clear out the form before submitting my comment for the week. Technology made me its cat toy yet again.

Thursday Thirteen 82:18: Chaos Theory

...also known as “a completely random list of thoughts whose primary qualification is that the number of the counting is thirteen.” (Fourteen is Right Out.)

  1. I'd almost swear that today is actually Monday. I've got a nagging headache that just won't go away.
  2. The mountains around the valley all have snow on the tops. It looks lovely...but I'm glad I don't have to drive over them.
  3. Especially since when I stopped to refill my tires' air, I discovered that the rear tire is nearly bald. I sense an expense in my future.
  4. I chose the name Iterations for the meme-portal because that's what these things are: variations on a theme. (That, and creating the header graphics gives me a chance to play with the fractal generator.)
  5. The output of the fractal generator looked a whole lot more interesting once I started zooming in (wa-a-ay in) on the rendered images.
  6. I wish I could sing better. I've toyed with finding a vocal teacher, but I don't know how they'd react if I just told them that I want to be able to sing without worrying if I'm going sharp or flat — purely for my own satisfaction, not because I yearn to try and break into the entertainment biz.
  7. I wish the Lisa Gerrard concert tickets would go on sale, already. I want to know if I'll be able to go to the show close to me, or if I'll be travelling a bit.
  8. One of the venues is in Los Angeles. Others include San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, and Vancouver.
  9. Since attending any of the concerts would mean staying overnight — even the one that's relatively near me — I don't want the expenses to go too high. Any way I can combine trips, run errands, visit friends, or figure out how to write off a portion of the trip as a business expense would be most welcome.
  10. The company who makes the billing software I use is having their annual event again this year. I'm debating on whether or not I should go: now that the new version is actually out and stable, I want to corral one of them and demand some assistance in configuring this. (And their documentation is hideous...so I really need some facetime with a developer.)
  11. It's too bad Lisa Gerrard isn't playing in that city around the time of the conference. :D
  12. I wonder if Jericho will be picked up for a second season, or if they'll stop after one year? The coming weeks apparently see Marines show up, and people start thinking about how things will be as order is restored — so possibly there are plans afoot to wrap this up relatively neatly, in a season or two, before stretching credibility ridiculously. (I'm only guessing. I'm fairly sure that, with some dedicated trawling, I could find out all kinds of information about the show. But in some ways, I'm having fun just watching and waiting for whatever happens.)
  13. I'm torn between watching it this evening, in ten minutes; or waiting until tomorrow night when it will be available through OnDemand (with five minutes of commercials, instead of 15.)

Iterations (the portal)For folks looking for more reasons to write, or more content to read, check out Iterations. This first week will close Sunday (leaving it open extra-long), so stop by and add a link to your list.

Other Participants

Keywords: | travel | Thursday | memes | entertainment |
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