Re-Launching “Run, Moon!”

Check it out, y’all! I re-launched my diet and exercise blog, “Run, Moon!”

It’s been dormant for a while. A long while. A long, sad, while. And meanwhile, I’ve gained about 25 pounds and haven’t gone for a run, with the exception of the Shamrock Run 5K this month with Kevin,, in months.

I need to start over, and get back to regular exercise and mindful eating, and how. But to keep all that off my main blog, I will be doing all that on the blog specifically dedicated to it.

But for here, I just have to say that I don’t know why I was so afraid of setting up Virtual Hosts in Apache 1.3. It was a freakin’ snap and I didn’t even have to touch my DNS or router settings. Just added a couple of entries to /etc/httpd/httpd.conf, one for the main domain of lunarobverse.com and one for the new domain of runmoonrun.com. I can now add new domains to my heart’s content, up to the limit of bandwidth provided by Comcast and the disk space on Eggers.

I still have several other domains I’m not currently doing anything with, which are “parked” and pointing elsewhere. As my time and inclination waxes, I’ll start doing stuff with them again.

One of those ideas is re-purposing my liefactory.com domain from its previous purpose (political blogging) to strip club blogging… The domain name kinda works for either one, huh?

And if and when I ever finish my novel, I’ve got a domain already purchased to host it! How rockin’ is that?

In any case, I’m happy that “Run, Moon!” is back up and running.

Pirate’s ears

Long day, long week. I sat on the bus, texting Tracy and surfing on my iPhone.

My peripheral vision picked up a feminine shape holding a midget pink-colored shape and by automatic response I looked up.

Mom was dressed in a warm navy wool coat and jeans, my height or a bit shorter, hair so red it was nearly black and pulled back into a practical short ponytail with a clip.

The pink bundle was a toddler, dark curly hair and dark eyes that appeared to take up a third of her face, the rest puffy cheeks, all wrapped in pink vinyl speckled with cartoon kittens.

Mom set the pink bundle down, and momentarily our eyes met. I smiled, shyly, and looked back at the screen in my hands. I could not tell if mom smiled back, so quickly did I glance away.

The little girl sat quietly, making sounds that may have been words or may have been nonsense, but not making them loudly or constantly. Just occasional cute interjections, punctuated by chubby hand gestures that may have been waving or may have been pointing. The mom just sat there, in front of me, looking around, content. Sometimes as the bus moved and turned, mom put her arm out, resting her hand against the window sill, forming a human safety belt to keep the baby girl in her seat.

I noticed that mom had no wedding ring on her hand.

I should say something, the voice in my head said. I asked what, and the voice said, Anything. Hello. Whatever.

The bus rolled on.

I noticed that mom wore two earrings in her left ear, presumably matching the pair in the right ear, out of my sight. One, a large elliptical silver hoop, the other, a small round black disk. The disk was emblazoned with a skull and crossbones.

Pardon me, the voice suggested, your earrings. The pirate ones. I like them.

I said nothing and continued surfing. I mentioned none of this to Tracy via text. I was afraid she, too, would urge me to take action.

I told my inner voice that it would be weird flirting with a mom. She might feel uncomfortable flirting around her daughter. She might be going home to a boyfriend. Or a girlfriend. This is Portland, after all. Who knows? People on the bus may notice, and laugh.

The bus rolled on.

It’s been too long, I thought. Too much time had passed. The four-second rule for making an initial “hello” had long since passed. The four minute rule of social coaches had passed. Too long. I’ll look awkward, much as I already feel awkward.

In truth, it had probably been only a few minutes. The bus had driven maybe a half-mile, in evening city traffic, but still, not that long. The voice inside my head kept repeating, reworking, restating, some comment on the pirate earrings. Is there a story behind them? Where did you get them? Are you a pirate? Did you steal them from a pirate?

The bus stopped to load and unload passengers, and then, being early, the driver paused. In the interlude, the little girl got a bit restless, and decided to stand, awkwardly, on her tiny chubby legs. Holding on to the back of the seat, she pulled herself up. Bent over, face half-hidden in the pink vinyl hood of her pink vinyl coat, her huge eyes looked my way and, briefly, we made eye contact. Not wanting to encourage her, not wanting to seem weird or odd or creepy, I looked down at my iPhone.

She looked away, turned and looked out the window. She bubbled her babble.

Mom kept quiet herself, just paying enough attention to the young one to make sure she did not fall or lose her balance. Mom hummed encouragement, or soft questioning “hmm?” or just smiled and nodded.

The baby girl looked back at me, and again my automatic response was to look at her.

Framed in pink, topped in dark brown loose curls, dark eyes wide, she smiled at me.

I smiled, softly, showing no teeth.

She giggled.

I smiled a bit wider. I set down my iPhone.

She burbled a single word. “Daddy.”

“Hmmm?” Mom turned in her seat to face the little girl and smiled, then looked at me, then back at the girl. “What’s that?”

The baby girl pushed her fist in my direction and said, more questioning this time, “Daddy?”

I laughed, ruefully. “What, little girl?” I raised my hand, and wiggled my fingers at her.

She babbled something I did not catch.

Mom and I shared a glance. I smiled in a way that I hoped was not intrusive. “She’s very cute,” I said. “How old is she?”

“She’s almost two,” mom said to me, also friendly, smiling, but cautious.

“Very cute,” I mumbled, and lost the energy to continue. I picked up my phone again and pretended to be immersed in operating it.

The bus began moving again and the little girl sat down. Mom congratulated the girl for sitting down without prompting.

The bus rolled on.

Now ask her about her earrings, the voice said. The ice has been broken.

I said nothing more.

Mom and daughter got out several stops later.

The bus rolled on.

Don’t laugh at the warming part

It’s snowing outside.

In Portland, in late March.

Without digging into actual historical archives, this seems unusual to me, a Portland native who has lived here most of my life (brief tenures as a child in parts of Washington state, and a short less-than-a-year in Austin, TX).

I think the planet is broken.

The snow could be a result of natural variation.

Or it could be indicative of increased moisture in the atmosphere, which could be a result of increased evaporation, which would be explained by higher-than-normal temperatures somewhere else on the nearly 317,000,000 square miles of surface on the big blue marble we call home.

But, yeah, on the bus people were dismissing the concept of “global warming” because of the snow, when in fact to my mind (and others who grasp the overall picture and not the sound bite) the snow may be direct evidence of said warming.

The state of affairs that a plan is intended to achieve and that (when achieved) terminates behavior intended to achieve it

I’ve been off-track lately. For at least the last several months. Seeing that the holiday of Discardia is reaching it’s termination (probably – Discardia is a very low-key and ill-defined holiday), I thought it might be time to start putting my affairs back in order.

So many things and projects I want to do and so little time and mental willpower to achieve it. Did you know that there are studies that show we each have only a limited amount of willpower (via 43 Folders)? And when we use it up, it’s gone until we can refuel. That’s why, I think, it’s harder to resist those donuts at the end of the evening, rather than in the morning or during the day. I still have some will-fuel left but it seems to run out around 4:00 PM or 5:00 PM.

OK, this isn’t helping. Time to go work on some of those projects.

Things to look for from me in the future:

  • A survey! Yay! Everyone loves surveys, right?
  • More regular posting.
  • More long-ish posts – at least two a week.
  • More of me in other outlets – that’s the goal, anyway.
  • More posts about my exercise and diet – one of the things I’m missing is the regular boost I get from consistent documentation of my efforts.

I’m sure there’s more but that’s all I can think of at the moment. Plus an annoying co-worker is bugging me right now. Double-ugh.

Time to do the dayjob for a bit.

Plus one

Annnnnnd then another friend request comes in and destroys my adolescent sexual number joke.

It would be rude to ignore #70 just to maintain the joke, right?

Oh well. Was fun while it lasted.

BADAT apology

Also, I would like to publicly apologize to my friend Kevin for my role in derailing the BADAT experiment. It was fun while it lasted but then I got tied up in other things and got sick and I lost my momentum.

So, my sincere apologies and hopefully we can make another crack at blogging at least once a day for a whole month at some future date!

Six days of silence

My apologies. Looks like I haven’t posted anything here in six days. But at least no one put me on blogwatch.

Just a helpful hint: don’t wipe your main computer clean in preparation for it to be sold at the same time you contract a horribly draining head and chest cold. That’ll keep you from blogging, fer sure.

I think I was only awake for about 10 hours between Friday evening and this Monday morning. Yeah. Hard to blog in my sleep.

I’m under the weather

Sorry y’all. I’ve been stoopid sick the past week. Taken more time off from work than I ever have before.

I’ve also yelled at a cop and ran a 5K in a kilt. And been trying to sell my laptop which has made blogging a bit more difficult.

I’ll be better soon. I hope. And then the reindeer games will continue.