Archive for Problems

T-Mobile G1 Pricing: LIES!

Okay, what’s the deal with T-Mobile’s pricing for the new “Android” phone, the G1? Word is out that it will go for $179. Sweet!, I thought.

I immediately went online to my MyTmobile account to snatch up a pre-order. But what happens when I get to the page where I get to pick which color I want? Both the brown and the black models are NOT $179, but $299! What the HECK???

T-Mobile-G1-pricing.J7ZH5cM6RKQe.jpg

Is the $179 for NEW T-Mobile customers only? I mean, I’ve been a loyal T-Mobile customer for EIGHT years, and THIS is the thanks I get???

BOGUS!!!

New Phone! Blackberry 8320 Curve

Ok, I was terribly bummed yesterday when I discovered my Blackberry Pearl had been crushed to smithereens on the 1-90 access road to Factoria:
img-3009-sm.jpg img-3019-sm.jpg

Yes, terribly bummed.

But I feel better today… ?cuz I got a new Blackberry CURVE!!! Yes, the 8320:
blackberry-curve-8320.jpg

It does WiFi! Voice calls over my freakin? home router! If we paid the $10/mo for it, we cd do the TMobile@Home deal, where all WiFi calls wd not count against our minutes. We may yet do that…

But just browsing the web is much faster when connected to a WiFi network. Nice.

Teaching Online! + GRACIBOOK!!! + Parallels Desktop + Social Networking

Yes, FIVE freaking classes! Three of them are 1-credit-hour PowerPoint: Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced. The other two are BTS 161, the MS Office class. Just had first “Hybrid” class this evening, and it went really well. I think I’m definitely gonna like just one day a week on campus. Keeps us focused.

Had a nice little ice breaker, they paired off and interviewed each other.

Took break, hadda guest speaker, then dove into Blackboard Vista. Good stuff, good questions, mostly having to do with “can I run Office 2007 in XP?”, “can I run XP in Vista?”, “Can I run Vista in Office 2003?” kinda questions… I get that all the time, questions confusing the operating system with applications that run inside the operating system…


OH S***E!!!!!!!! I forgot to journal this, but I HAVE A NEW FREAKIN’ MACBOOK PRO!!!!!! And I am SO freakin’ HAPPY!!!!!! Woo-Hoo!!!!!! Yes, here she is, GraciBook:

GraciBook

Ah, yes, she’s a beauty, all right:

MacBook Pro (late 2006)
Intel Core 2 Duo (dual-core: TWO PROCESSORS!!!)
2.16 GHz
2 GB RAM
667 MHz System Bus speed
120 GB, 5400-rpm SATA HD
6x Dual-Layer Super Drive
built-in iSight camera!
802.11g Airport card
digital+analog combo-jack audio in & out

Purchased used on March 26, 2008, for $1350 (cash!), from Josh Bryant in Kirkland.
2.16 GHz Core 2 Duo
2 GB RAM
Serial #: xxxxxxxxx

Introduced Oct 2006
Discontinued June 2007

And, I’m just havign a TON o’ FUN with her!

zzz

Installing– well, I installed– Parallels Desktop, trial version. But having problems getting it to Authorize. Here’s the error:

The activation key relates to the license, which is not active yet. Please check your local date and time settings.

So, here’s the “date and time” they sent me in the accompanying email:

PRODUCT : Parallels Desktop 3.0 for Mac
ACTIVATION KEY : xxxxxxxxxxxx
START DATE : 2008/04/04
END DATE : 2008/04/19

And it IS already Friday, April 4, at 12:34 AM…

I sent them an email. I really want this to work!!!

Been also really getting into “social networking”: e.g., Facebook, Twitter, chatting. Have really re-connected with Dell and Lawrence, and Denise to an extent. Also several old CC people in FB: Louis Katz, Phil Johnson, Rick Olmos, Tony Yarbray, Amanda (the smart blonde frm Lotus Cup, Imelda Bettinger (the freakin’ Social Networking QUEEN!).

But I really like Facebook. WAY better than Myspace– just cleaner, more professional, unlke Myspace,whic always seems hacked together out of scrapcrap.

And Twitter! HA! Journler was my introduction to Twitter! Yeah, J-Tweets! …which I never cd get to work right…

But Twitter is cool because of a couple things. 1. It’s easy: just single-sentence “micro-blogging,” really, answering the question, “what are you doing now?”

And 2. Everybody’s doing it! Especially freakin’ @imelda! But I got Deana doing it alot, and Terri some. Kinda wish I cd get LG & Dell to do it, but they do update their Facebook statuses pretty regularly.

And Twitters GO/Post to my FB acct; just wish there were now a way to get FB status updates to Twitter…

Can even “Jott” a voicemail message to Twitter! Yeah, Jott is this cool new system for transcribing Voice messages into Text! And it works VERY well! Yeah, you just call up their toll free 866 number, tell them who your message is for (“twitter”), and then leave the “twit.” Thrity seconds later, it’s posted as your latest Twittering! F***ING cool, man!!!

Allergic to Sugar

Found out about a month ago that i?m allergic to sugar!!! Oh My GAWD!!! No freekin? SUGAR???

So, haven?t had ANY sugar– well almost no sugar– in three weeks! And I?m feeling … well, a little better, I guess…

Last.fm: A Case of Identity Theft in My Social-Music Space

I am a *huge* fan of Last.fm. But there is one *glaring* problem with their site: it does not distinguish between two artists of the same name.

Here is a letter I just wrote them, in response to their response to my first complaint about this issue:

I understand that Last.fm has no provision for distinguishing two artists of the same name…

However, I’m sure this problem is driving artists to avoid using Last.fm to promote themselves. I know I *love* everything about Last.fm *except* for this issue. Why can’t you make some provision for identically-named artists to move their sites to a new artist name? I am currently doing this exact thing, except by manually downloading all my music to my local machine, changing all my “artist name” tags in the mp3s to a new artist name, and re-upping them.

It looks like the core problem here is that Last.fm is taking the artist name from the mp3 tag. If you were to have an artist manually type in their name *before* uploading any music, like in a form on their Music Upload page, then you could check that artist name against your listing of already-existing artist names, and ensure that a *unique* artist name is entered. Otherwise, you get “Identity Theft”– you mash all this different music together.

I mean, that’s what happened to me: I was super-thrilled with Last.fm for a couple years, until one day I hit my page to find that an Italian heavy-metal band had “stolen my identity!” Now, I have nothing against Italian heavy metal or ANY music, but I AM rather upset about this seemingly-easily-avoided problem.

What would ANY OTHER online space do to ensure that two people of the same name were kept separate and unique?

Thank you,
K—- R—–

Yugenro“: the artist formerly known as “Yugen

Unplanned 7-Week Sabbatical

Unplanned Seven-Week Sabbatical

 

M and I rent a small 2-bedroom house in Georgetown, one of the cheapest neighborhoods in Seattle-proper (within the actual city limits of Seattle). Georgetown is right in the middle of the industrial district; it consists of one pretty main thoroughfare, with some real big old brick buildings that are falling apart and which are inhabited by only the bravest and roughest artists and musicians. Georgetown also has three streets of houses (the residential part of the neighborhood). Our street is the nicest, particularly our block, but much of the rest of the neighborhood is of dubious habitation. There are lots of halfway houses for sex offenders, for instance, and down at the other end of the streets there are seedy hotels which often have rather uh, rugged people loitRennieg around. Oh, and one of the houses just across the street from us is a drug dealer.

 

So, M and I have been talking about the possibility of getting a roommate. We’re doing okay financially, but would also be okay with a little extra income to help us get me a laptop. 

 

Just in passing one day, we told our next door neighbor, Dale, about it. Dale is also renting. His name is on the lease there, and he’s been living in this house for 13 years. He is a tall, lanky mid-to-late 50s, old, politically conservative gay veteran with a face that is permanently drawn and haggard-looking, like he’s not shaved in a week. Dale had been in a relationship for 10 years with this one guy who he really loved. They lived in the house next door, and kept it all nice and clean. And Dale worked really hard and bought a lot of stuff for his partner. He actually told us he’d spent his life savings him. Then one day, his partner got an inheritance, and moved to Hawaii. Dale went out there a few months afterwards and the guy told him to buzz off. Crushed, Dale slouched back home and pretty much gave up caring about anything.

 

This was three years ago. He moved down into his basement, and started getting roommates. He had a pretty good deal going for a while, with his subleasers paying the whole rent, so he hasn’t had to have a steady job. But, in these past three years, his roommates have been getting worse and worse (not paying rent and bills, causing chaos, bringing in untrained animals, tearing up the house, etc.).

 

So, one day in early November 2007, we drove up to the house and Dale was outside working in his (very beautiful) yard. Dale is really good at plants, and keeps his yard immaculate, especially in Spring and Summer. We talk a bit, and he asks if we’re still looking for a roommate. “Well,” I say, “we’re not LOOKING for a roommate. We don’t even WANT a roommate, but, yeah, it wd be nice to have some extra cash coming in.”

 

“Well, here’s the deal,” he says. “I’m tired of trying to find good roommates and taking care of this old house. I’ve got a buddy who’s gonna get me a job working for Microsoft Food Services, so I’m gonna have a steady income. How about me moving in with you guys and being your roommate? I can pay you 500-600 bucks a month, and I don’t have very much stuff to move, and, after all, we’re just next door to each other, so moving shouldn’t be a problem. What do you say?”

 

“What about your cat and dog?” we ask. “We had to harness the moon to get our landlady to be okay with us taking in a cat. We might be able to hide the fact that we’ve got two cats, but there’s no way we can have a dog.”

 

“Well, my dog is 13 years old and she’s got a huge tumor that I’ve not been able to get taken care of. I’ll see if I can find another home for her. But if not, she’s pretty much on her last leg anyway; I could just put her down if I can’t find another home for her.”

 

M and I tell him we’ll think about it and get back to him… So we talk it over and finally decide, despite some misgivings, that it would, after all, be nice to have some extra cash. So, a couple days later, we tell him okay. We draw up a little rental application form, agree that he’ll pay $500/mo for rent plus $100/mo for utilities, and that this is just a temporary arrangement which we will both review on Feb 1. So, we all plan on him moving in on December 1. Dale tells his roommates they’ve got to leave, and informs his landlord they’re all moving out.

 

Well, the evening after Thanksgiving, we’re eating dinner and Dale knocks at our door, face more drawn and gloomy than usual. “Hey guys. Um, I’ve had a little setback. Turns out my buddy at Microsoft didn’t have as much pull as he thought. But I’ve gotta be outta that house by the first… I got nowhere else to go… ”

 

M, of course not wanting him to have to live on the cold, wet streets of Seattle, says, “Oh, that’s okay. Just go ahead and move in, and we’ll play it by ear. You can just pay us whatever you can afford. I’m sure you’ll be able to get a job soon, and you’ll be back on your feet in no time.”

 

 

So, come December 1st, well, December 2nd, we get him all moved in to our house. It was not a difficult move, but if he’d not lived next door, it would surely have taken a good-sized U-Haul truck to pack up all his stuff. As it was, the entire half of our basement that was empty got filled with his stuff, including three big old rugs, several shelving units, a dozen or more upholstered dining chairs, dozens of cat sculptures, statues, figurines, pillows, etc. (he’s obviously a cat fan), and just boxes and boxes of old, dusty stuff. 

 

Things seem to be okay for a while. Our house is very small, and M and I are want to walk about in the buff, so it’s kinda weird having another person around (meaning that of course we’ve got to stay properly-attired, which kinda cramps my style), but Dale is rather low-maintenance, at least until you initiate some sort of conversation. Then he becomes outrageously profuse and a half-hour later you’re squirming and wishing somebody’d call you so you can politely excuse yourself and duck into your bedroom.

 

But after a week, he had still not found a new home for his dog, and I tell him it’s time to go to the pound. So, Dale not having a car, I tell him we’ll drive them down there. And what a long, sad drive that was. Nobody spoke for the whole 20-minute trip. We pull up there, he lugs the dog in its carrier inside, and M and I roll down the windows and finally take a breath. A half hour later, Dale emerges, and we ask him how he’s doing. “I’m okay, actually. When they saw that she was a pure-bred Basenji, they said they would definitely try real hard to find a new home for her. They said they would call me back before the end of the day.”

 

And they did call him back before the end of the day, and they did find her a place, a real nice retirement-home-sounding place for Basenjis, out in the country with lots of sunshine and fresh air and playmates.

 

And Dale was extremely happy for that. He really loved that dog. It was his main companion for at least these last three years.

 

A couple days later, Dale approached us and asked if he could borrow some money. “Just whatever you have, 40-50 bucks would really help right now.” i pulled out my wallet and gave him the $18 in cash I had there. “That’s all I got.”

 

“Thanks. I’ve got some catRennieg gigs lined up this weekend, I should make like $12/hour. I’ll pay you back then.”

 

“Okay.”

 

Around the 8th or 9th of December, I awoke with a sore throat. “Great,” I thought to myself. That’s always the first indicator of a cold for me. I just had one more week of school, really just a Tuesday afternoon Final in which the students were just to turn in their Final Project, so I wasn’t too concerned about having to miss class. But a couple days later I was unable to get out of bed. I was hurting all over, like a full-body headache. And that was just lying still! If I moved it was even worse!

 

But I’ve been this sick before. It’s only this bad for a day, maybe two, and then I’m up and about at least, if not completely better, but still able to function. Usually.

 

Four days later, I’m still in tremendous pain, still unable to get out of bed, not knowing what day of the week it was, not knowing what time of day it was, barely knowing my own name. M, who had just started her nannying job on November 1 for a nutritionist couple, drove home in the afternoon and dragged me in to see Janice, her nutritionist boss. I always tend to hang out a lot with M and her kids, and I have developed a friendship with Janice’s two year old daughter Sonja.

 

As I lay on the table, Sonja climbed all over me asking, “Keith? Keith?”

 

“Keith is sick, Sonja. He can’t play with you today,” M and Janice told her.

 

And while Sonja watched from the corner, looking sad and confused, Janice diagnosed me. After several rounds of placing tiny vials of minerals and elements on my belly and pushing my raised arm to test my resistance, she says, “You’re reading like you’ve been exposed to mold. Has something changed in your life recently, like at your house?”

 

M and I look at each other. “Uh, yes. We just got a new roommate who moved in a whole bunch of old furniture and rugs and stuff, from his dark and dank basement.”

 

“Oh, well, you’ve got to get rid of that stuff. You are allergic to mold, and it’s destroyed your immune system. You won’t get well until you’ve got the mold out of your body.”

 

M and I look at each other again. “That’s gonna be really hard. Our roommate has nowhere else to go. He’s got a ton of stuff, and even if he could leave tomorrow, where would he put all his stuff?”

 

Luckily, we were coming up on two house-sitting gigs we had arranged. We were house-sitting for a week at my friend Howard’s house out in the Redmond hills, followed by a week house-sitting around the corner at our friends Paul and Beth’ house.

 

While M drove me home, I called Dale.

 

“Dale, my doctor says I’ve been exposed to mold. She says we’ve got to get rid of it or I’ll never get over this infection.”

 

He didn’t fight it. He knew right away I meant that it was stuff that had the mold in it.

 

“Okay, well I’ll go thru all my stuff and give it a good cleaning. I’ll spray all the cloth stuff with Lysol, and the wood with wood cleaner. We’ll get it all cleaned up,” he says.

 

“Okay, that’ll be great. And my doctor is also lending us her air de-ionizer. She says to use it for a few days in each room.”

 

He’s actually very good about it. It seems like he really wants to work this out.

 

In the meantime, our friend Traci agrees to let us spend the two nights until our house-sittings start with her in her one-bedroom apartment in West Seattle. Thank God for Traci, we say. Little do we know how thankful we will be for Traci in the end…

 

Anyway, our two weeks away are good. I recover, and in two or three days, I’m feeling human again. We have a nice Christmas at Paul and Beth’ house, in which we invite over a few friends for dinner.

 

And two or three times a week, I drop by our house to check on our cat (who Dale has agreed to feed and clean up the litter box after) and pick up our mail. And the first time I stop by after our week in Redmond, I walk in to discover a completely different house. It smells like cigarette smoke. The kitchen’s got a bunch of new stuff in it. The living room has been completely rearranged and there’s a huge Persian rug under everything. There are little pieces of furniture everywhere and in every available space there’s either a cat statue or a Christmas decoration. It feels like somebody else’s house altogether. Creeped out, I sneak out of the house, snag the mail out of the mailbox out front, and drive off.

 

And every time I made my way back to the house after that, the house was even more redecorated, more alien.

 

Along in here, M and I decide that we just can’t see ourselves going back to our house while Dale is still there. I definitely don’t want to be sick like that again, and M just doesn’t want to be around a guy who has a black cloud hanging over his head all the time. We decide that the Feb 1 re-evaluation should just become Dale’s move-out date. I call him up.

“Dale, M and I have talked about it, and we’ve decided that we’re going to need you to move out by February 1. This just isn’t working out like we’d hoped it would.”

 

Silence.

 

“It’s nothing personal, man. We just didn’t want a roommate in the first place, and now all this stuff with the mold has happened. I mean, none of us knew I was allergic to mold.”

 

I hear a tiny “yeah” on the other end. He is obviously not happy.

 

“Are you okay?”

 

“Yeah. Yeah, okay.” Click.

 

So again, Traci comes to our rescue. We spend a week with her, and then spend three nights with our friends Rennie and Nellie over in Bellevue. We really wish we could stay longer with them, to take some burden off of Traci, but unfortunately they have to have at least one day to clean up their spare room for their own new roommate who is moving in.

 

And, once again, Traci agrees to let us stay with her until February 1. We love you Traci!

 

So. a couple days after I’d called Dale to tell him he’s got to be out by Feb 1, he calls M’s cell phone. I’m with her, and she doesn’t want to talk to him, so I answer it.

“Hey,” he says. “I’ve been making my calls, and you guys are the last ones. I just wanted to let you know that I’m gonna call it quits. You guys have been really good to me, and I wanna thank you for that. So I just didn’t want you to think it was your fault, if you happen to hear in the next couple of days that I’ve stepped out in front of a bus.”

 

“What?!?” I scream into the phone. “Are you saying that you’re going to commit suicide?”

 

“Well…” he mutters.”If you have to put it that way…”

 

What way???” I scream. “Here you are telling me you’re gonna step in front of a bus.  You’re saying you’re going to kill yourself.”

 

“Well…,” he stammers again. “Yeah, I guess so.”

 

Well, I don’t know what to say. I know that he’s politically conservative, so I’m thinking maybe the religious tack might reach him. “So, what does your God have to say about this?”

 

Pause… Long pause. Looks like he’s not thought about that. “Well, I’m not sure. I think He’ll understand.”

 

“You think He’ll understand? How do you know that?”

 

“Well, it’s just a feeling I have. I guess He’d not be too happy about it, really.”

 

“You guess He’d not be happy about it? Sounds to me like you need to do more soul-searching here.”

 

“Yeah I guess so.”

 

“M’s going to be really upset when she finds out. However she finds out. Whether I tell her or she finds out on the news.”

 

“I know, I know. And I love M. She’s so great. And that’s why I’m calling you guys, to tell you that if you hear that I’ve jumped out in front of a bus, just know that it’s not your fault. You guys have been really good to me.”

 

“Okay, well, it sounds to me like you need to go to your God some more here, see what He has to say about it.”

 

“Well, I’m not gonna do it right now. And I’m open to seeing a counselor.”

 

“Well, I’ll see if M wants to call you here in a little while.”

 

“Oh, yeah, I’d love to talk to her. No offence, man, but she’s just a really good listener, and I can tell she’s very sympathetic. Have her call me, yeah.”

 

Anyway, so after a long, drawn out, dramatic, half-hour conversation, I hang up, confident that he’ll be okay for a little while. I tell M and she says, “that’s exactly why I didn’t want to talk to him! I would totally not know what to say. I would tell him ‘that’s okay, just go ahead and stay in our house for as long as you want.’”

 

So we decide that we should call the Health Department. They say they’ll go out and visit him first thing in the morning, and then call me afterwards.

 

So, next day, they call me back and tell me he was very receptive, happy that somebody came out to see him, and that they made several appointments for him to come in and talk to a counselor, and that they would even help him look for a job and a place to live.

 

Yay! We were happy that we seemed to have done the right thing here.

 

And that’s pretty much it. The rest of our little sabbatical went off pretty well. Dale found a place to live, and got almost all of his stuff moved out by Saturday afternoon, Feb 2. And Saturday night we spent our first night in our own bed for over 7 weeks! We’re still working on clearing the cigarette smell, but we’re feeling at home again. Home sweet home!!!

 

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House fails to override Bush’s veto of CHIPS

Americans are spending billions upon billions of dollars to kill Iraqis and fuck up that whole country. But we can’t spend a goddamn cent more on the health of American children???? What the FUCK???

Of course the prez is all for it. But the newly-elected, Democrat-led House of Representatives can’t do a thing  about it? I know these fuckers aren’t representing me!

The prez and lame-duck Republicans say that this bill would allow too many children to have healthcare!!!

And the worse thing about the whole fiasco? The politicians are more concerned about their “careers” than they are about our children. 

Here’s an excerpt from the New York Times article:

“This isn’t the last fight we’re going to have where Democrats will try to put forth legislation that is populist or will tug at the heart strings,” said Tony Fratto, the deputy White House press secretary. [yeah, we wouldn't anybody's feelings about children to influence their decision to deny them healthcare.]

Mr. Fratto added, “Is it a good day? No. A good day will be the day that we pass legislation that the president can sign. But it is gratifying to know that we’ve got Republicans with sufficient backbone who are willing to stand tall and fight on principle in order to get the policy right.” [yeah, some "principle" or other is much more important than the health of our children.]

But some Republicans, like Representative Thomas M. Davis III of Virginia, who was chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee when Mr. Bush ran for election in 2000, were furious with Mr. Bush for putting them in such a difficult spot on children’s health.

“He’s not going to get his way on this,” said Mr. Davis, who voted to override the veto and predicted that Mr. Bush would ultimately be forced to sign a measure similar to the one he rejected.

“And he’s jeopardizing people’s careers,” added Mr. Davis, who is contemplating a race for the Senate. [yeah, the careers of career-politician is much more important than the health of our children.]

On the House floor, Democrats told Republicans they would pay a political price for their opposition.

Representative Charles B. Rangel, Democrat of New York, who is chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said that “President Bush is going to be there at his ranch in Texas” at the time of the next election.

“He will not be with you at the polls,” Mr. Rangel said. “By that time, the truth will have caught up with the message that the president and you are using to sustain his veto.” [yeah, Rangel, hit 'em where it hurts: their careers! Forget about simply doing the right thing.]

Democrats are seeking ways to revise the bill to answer criticism from Republicans who said it did not focus enough on low-income children. Critics say the bill would allow coverage of children from middle- and upper-income families and of adults and some illegal immigrants. [Oh, come on! When nobody can afford healthcare, how can you argue about how poor you have to be to qualify for any healthcare???]

Mr. Bush has named three senior administration officials to negotiate with Congress. But Democratic leaders would prefer to deal directly with the president.

“We intend to sit down with the president any time he is ready,” Ms. Pelosi said. “We hope that will be soon.” [yeah, you tell 'em, Nancy. After all, it is the "principle" of the thing that matters.]

Chances for a quick compromise with the White House looked slim.

Representative John B. Larson of Connecticut, a member of the House Democratic leadership, said, “We have a president frozen in the ice of his own indifference toward the children of this country.” [Unfortunately, very true, Mr. Larson.]

Ms. Pelosi said she had no interest in an idea promoted by some Republicans in Congress: providing tax credits to middle-income families to help them buy private insurance for their children. [When he can think at all, he can only think in terms of tax cuts.]

Tempers flared when House Democrats compared Mr. Bush’s veto of the child health bill with his support for the war in Iraq.

Representative Pete Stark, the California Democrat who is chairman of the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health, told Republicans: “You don’t have money to fund the war or children. But you’re going to spend it to blow up innocent people if we can get enough kids to grow old enough for you to send to Iraq to get their heads blown off for the president’s amusement.” [right ON, dude!!! Now that's calling it like it is!!!]

Eating is Becoming

An isolated incident. I’m a normal guy. I don’t know what happened. I mean, it could happen to anybody, eh?

I’ve always figured there were too many people on this planet anyway, and that most of them are pretty miserable if they’re not starving to death. But I’m justifying myself in retrospect. Shit. Okay. I’ll just tell the story.

It was a normal day. Or, it started out that way: went to work, got up to the building and parked; all like I do every day. But this one day when I got in the elevator to go up to the office, I broke out into a cold sweat. It started on my forehead and the small of my back. And I thought I was going to pass out right there in front of all those people– and this elevator was packed, like it is every morning. People going to work, you know? But anyway, my arms and legs start sweating and I can’t get enough oxygen, no matter how deliberately I try to breathe. I’m not really freaking because I’m just trying to maintain, you know– I’m just concerned with staying alive I guess, ‘cause I never really thought about any of the other people in the elevator. Except I remember getting really hungry, which is strange now that I think about it because I’d had a good breakfast just a half-hour before… And then after I got out of the elevator and I was okay again, I was still hungry. So I went right to my office and ate the sandwich I’d brought for lunch, but that didn’t help. I couldn’t get enough to eat that whole day at work– that was weird.

But besides that, the rest of the day went fine; at work, I mean. I worked on this proposal that my group is working on for the Population Control Center. Yeah, everything went normal that day, but for some reason I do remember this one memo on our group’s electronic bulletin board. It said, “the future is Soylent Green.” I just laughed at the time; I got the reference, you know? Ugh… People eating people…

Anyway, so it happened in the elevator ride back down at the end of the day. And nothing like this has ever happened before, you know? Except for this one day. The elevator was packed, like it always is at the end of the day– people going home, you know? But this time, just like that morning, I broke out into this cold sweat, and almost instantly I get dizzy and start seeing stars around the periphery of my vision like I’m about to pass out. And I get real hungry again. And this time I do notice the people in the elevator. I remember them seeming so big and imposing. So close. I’d look at the guy next to me and his face was all pitted and scarred and oily and I could see sweat beading up on his upper lip. Oh, and his breath stank like he’d just eaten a piece of rotten meat. Reminded me of when I was a kid, I got locked in the cabinet under the sink where we kept the trash can. I was stuck in there with all that rotting food scrap for I don’t know how long, but ever since then I think I’ve been afraid of both closed-in spaces and leftovers.

And this lady on the other side of me, she was hugely obese and I don’t know what she was doing in there ‘cause she looked like somebody’s worst nightmare of a mother-in-law. God, she was wearing this sleeveless sundress-type wrap of cloth and she was sweating worse than I felt like I was. I remember her pasty skin from about mid-upper arm up to her neck and — oh, God– she had this dark, thick, long body hair. A bunch of it around her neck. It was really extraordinary– and I remember I thought so at the time. I remember I thought, “a lioness!” But she couldn’t have been a lioness– it’s the male lions that have that thick mane around their necks. This was a woman. But god, did she have some sweaty fur!

So all this time I’m getting hungrier and hungrier, and everything looks like a dream. Like slow motion and soft filters and I’m numb except for the feeling of my stomach starting to digest itself. And then I become extremely aware of the smells of these people. There’s the guy’s rotting meat breath. There’s the scent of his sweat and mine and that fat lady’s and everybody else’s all mingling together– and believe me, by now I can tell that everybody in that elevator’s sweating big time.

But the smell of this one woman– she was behind me to my left– God! Sweet! Like an exotic dessert. So I turned around to see her, and, oh, she was simply gorgeous! Auburn hair, green eyes, olive complected, and a beautiful, if nervous, smile. I wanted to eat her so bad. Yeah, really. I mean I literally wanted to eat her right up.But then I noticed this other delicious scent from the front of the elevator, to my left; it was another lady, but she smelled like she’d basted herself in Worcestershire sauce all day. I remember thinking, “she’d make a tasty appetizer!” HA! Yeah, no shit. And so on with all those people.

But what pushed me over the edge was this one lady, Claire. I knew her from my office– she worked in another group, but we’d known each other from just seeing each other around. I’d always been obscurely attracted to her. She’s so somber most the time, you know? But she’s an interesting woman–got a wide range of interests and she’s very personable and interested, too. But what was so strange is that she smelled to me like this dish my aunt Lorraine used to make for family gatherings when I was a kid. Oh, god, this was the best food I ever ate, before or since; and I’d not had a bite of it since I was about 16 I guess– that was when Aunt Lorraine fell into a meat grinder at the meat-packing plant where she worked. But she called this dish– my favorite dish ever– she called it “Claire Lorraine.” I guess it was like Quiche Lorraine, but she had a daughter named Claire and kinda combined the two into the name of this awesome casserole.

So this lady Claire, just as I’d turned to see where this delicious scent was coming from, she turned too, to look at me. And she nodded to me, like she was saying, “I know you’re hungry. Okay. I’m your main course. Bon appetit!” Real somber like she always is!

I couldn’t resist. I was so hungry– famished– and her delicious scent drove me into a feeding frenzy. I devoured Claire in about 3 bites, downed the appetizer lady in about a bite and a half, and the rest I don’t really remember ‘cause there were body parts all over the place and I kinda smorgasborded it, you know. A little bite of this, set it down, a little bite of something else, set it down, etc. And they were all very resigned about it. Like they knew it was coming. They didn’t run or scream or anything.

Even Lisa. She stood back there in her corner watching like it was TV. When I was done, she looked at me and gave a slight giggle– not nervous anymore– and she said, ”Thanks. It was getting a bit crowded.”

And she was right! For the first time I could remember in that damn elevator, I was relaxed! I could feel the oxygen beginning to infuse my veins along with the fuel I’d just devoured. I felt great, like my eyes’d been popped out, washed in a bath of Windex, and popped back in. Everything was crystal clear, colors bright as sunshine… especially Lisa. Her hair took the colors of a bonfire at night, and her green eyes looked like thick jungle.

I sighed and replied, “Yeah, and I’m not hungry anymore.”

The God-Mind Connection

M and I have been reading this really powerful book called “The God-Mind Connection,” by Jean K. Foster. I say “powerful” because it is really making me aware of how to tap into the infinite power of God. Now, that term “God” kinda bugs me, but I am definitely getting over it, simply because I’m realizing that such terminology for the unnameable is simply a convenience, and that I do, in fact, understand what is meant by the term “God,” anyway.

But I have such mixed feelings about the possible job at EB BCo. in Seattle lately, with the sudden death of Aunt Kay and its accompanying complications, plus the fact that M and I have so little money these days, all of which makes it difficult to purchase the airfare to Seattle for said interview… I mean, if this is part of my “growth plan”, then why is it seeming so “hairy,” so borderline possible?

According to Jean K. Foster, I need detailed pictures of my dreams…

I do still dream about owning some land up in the San Juan islands— on Orcas Island, specifically– right on the water, up a gentle slope, with a little babbling brook running thru green, open pastures, surrounded by tall evergreens… Dappled with colorful, fragrant flowers, birds twittering, deer peeking thru the trees occasionally. A main house with a big kitchen and eating/congregating area, several spacious bedrooms, offices, libraries, a big bubbling hot tub…

And out a ways, thru tree-covered paths or down beautiful sunlit trails, are scattered several other, smaller cabins where our friends and family live and help us maintain the place, tilling the garden, tending the animals, installing solar panels, windmills and power plants, constructing buildings off-the-grid…

A place where like-minded people can raise their children and commune with other loving souls…

Yes. Something like that.

And, also in accord with Foster, a temple… A place where one may go to commune with God. A place in which to re-fuel… To re-charge and re-center… To remember and re-remember one’s calling.

But what I really need to work on is inviting God into my heart, or at least inviting the Brotherhood of God (Foster’s “facilitators”) into my heart to that I can follow my “growth plan.”

I thus feel that this move to Seattle is part of that plan. It gets us up there to that area.

I feel, however, that another part of my growth plan is music and community. Drum circles. Communion via the drum vibration… This aspect of my life has just been missing for so long now…


As one of my biggest problems right now is our debt, I just talked to this financial advisor, Zack Niehaus. (Very strange because he just called me, just as I’d typed “But what I really need to work on is…” above!) I’ve had problems trusting financial advisors before, simply because I guess I wasn’t really honest with them. The truth is that we are maxxed out. We have no credit available.

Which, if seen from the proper perspective, means that “it can only get better.” I think if I can stay un-obsessed with my computers— which means my freakin’ iTunes Library, mostly— then I think I can maintain the track of positive productivity. I’m feeling great, too. Had a nice little quickie session with my sweetie just before I came to work, and at one point, I got the picture of our farm/commune up in Orcas, with the glowing addition of a child— our child— running, laughing, playing in the sun. So beautiful it makes me cry…

It really seems that, when I am seeing from my god-mind, all around me are the resources I need to become what I am striving for. Ask the question about my addiction… “is there help for me with my addiction?”

The God-Mind connection, the Brotherhood of God…

There is no growth in my addiction, only stagnation, which, if anything is the Devil, it is stagnation: non-growth, sadness, and the realizing of my own personal Hell. And in my life, actually, nothing is just personal. I am married to the beautiful MAW, so I share everything with her. Including my own “personal” Hell.

I do not want anything but the best—in other words, HEAVEN— for M. And thus, I only want the best for myself…!

Love.

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