Stupid boy project #2

Reading Cary Tennis this morning, I see the following:

“You experience isolation and loneliness. At first, you think the antidote will be a person. So you seek a person. But contact with one person will not solve it. Two isolated people fleeing their isolation is not a cure. Isolation is a problem of pattern and structure, of temporal and spatial arrangements. Isolation occurs because the patterns of your life don’t bring you into contact with enough like-minded individuals on a regular basis in a comfortable, low-intensity setting. That’s what you need. It’s called regular life, or street life, or family. It’s a structure, or pattern.”

I need to do this, too.

Wait. Maybe I already have this?

I have regular places I go, places where I know their names, and they know mine. Outside of work, I am a part of a community of people, my beloved Sellwood.

I know the two Daves at the corner market – one Dave is only ever seen at work behind the counter, or coming from or going to the Black Cat tavern, the other Dave is funny and diabetic, and recoils in horror when I come in late at night to buy donuts.

I know Nicole at the coffee shop is nervous about her upcoming wedding, and Nicole’s mom, Sandra, was upset last week because the new girl she was training decided she didn’t think she could hack it.

I know that the video store was closed for several days without notice a couple of weeks ago, and have been meaning to stop in and ask C.J. what was up.

I know that Stacy left one waitressing job to work at a different bar in a different neighborhood, and yet at the end of a long day she still comes back to her first bar for a beer before going home.

And I know that Brewster still annoys me, daily, by making the same joke at the end of the day about the day being over. Brewster, who was evicted from my building (and I secretly rejoiced) and who then convinced another tenant, Peggy, to let him stay there, somehow, using some level of charm to which I appear immune.

I know more. I could go on.

But why doesn’t this feel like a community to me? Why do I still feel disconnected? They’re all part of the landscape of my life. But few of them feel like friends. I share chit-chat with them. I make small talk. I make note of their daily comings and goings, as I assume they take note of mine. But few of them are people I could share things with, personal things. Could I talk to them of my fear of dreaming of something for years and failing (like Mark in that documentary I saw), or about the non-existence of God, or how sad I was that Smacky ran away.

Or maybe I can, and I just haven’t taken that step.

Maybe I just need to take the next step.

Introducing stupid boy project #2: building a community.

Stay tuned.

I hate rebooting

I had to reboot my web server this weekend because of a required security update.

*sob*

Up ’til yesterday, I had a good streak of uptime going, as you can see from the midnight update that ran the night before:

The current date and time is:
Sun Aug 10 01:01:00 PDT 2008
The currently logged-in users are:
xxxxxx console Feb 2 15:56
xxxxxx ttyp1 Feb 2 15:57
The current uptime is:
1:01 up 189 days, 8:06, 2 users, load averages: 0.06 0.03 0.01
The current disk utilization is:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/disk0s3 80G 30G 50G 38% /

I hate rebooting.

Next time

Next time I ask a girl for her email address, I’ve got to remember to ask for her phone number, too. Also her sexual orientation. That’s important.

Sorry I’ve been so un-blog-y lately. I’ll work on that.

The only kind

There’s only one kind of magic that I believe in, and it’s this:

Take one cord – USB, ethernet, power cable, doesn’t matter. Straighten it out, and lay it on the ground.

Take another cable – same kind, different kind, longer, shorter, doesn’t matter – and straighten it out, and lay it on the ground next to the first cable.

Look away for a moment, and then reach down to pick up the first cable.

…and it will be tangled up with the second cable already. What the!!!

Everything else has a reasonable scientific explanation. Yes, everything.

Also? I hate cables.

Good to know

Y’know the Oregon Lottery self-check machines found in any lottery-equipped store or bar?

When I’ve had a winning ticket, it’s always said:

Congratulations Please See Retailer

…and then I’ve been disappointed to find that I’ve won a whopping four bucks.

I’ve wondered if the machines say anything different if the ticket is a big winner. So I asked one of the Daves at my local market about it last night. He said that if the amount of the winnings is over $600 (the limit that a retailer is required to pay out), it says:

Congratulations Please Report to Salem

or on the retail machines it says:

Congratulations Retailer Call Salem

So… good to know.

Dave had no idea if a ticket that won the top jackpot got a different message or not. He’d never seen anyone win that much.

Imagine checking a ticket late on a Friday night, in some convenience store, and finding out that you were a big winner? You’d have to wait through the whole weekend, knowing only that your little slip of paper was worth more than $600. Unless there’s a 24-hour hotline you can call…

That would be the longest weekend of my life. I’d probably have to spend lots of mental effort not burning through my life’s savings.

Wonder words

These are the some of the things I wonder about:

  • Does saying a girl has a “great rack” automatically imply that she has huge breasts? Can’t a “great rack” just be aesthetically pleasing in shape and proportionate to the rest of her body without being huge?
  • Is rain considered 100% humidity? If so, what would being underwater be?
  • Why is it that you can brush your hair, and you can brush your teeth, but you can’t comb your teeth?

Just wonderin’.