5.25.2005

Cheers and Jeers

Everybody's talking about entertainment so I thought I'd chime in.

For the record, I loved, loved, loved Revenge of the Sith. Also, I agree with pretty much everything she had to say. (That link was stolen from Laura's blog, so go there too.) I saw the flaws, every last one of them. The story left more thirsty after it was over than I was before I saw it. It was like really craving water and getting coffee instead. I think what I loved what that for the first time since that bratty kid walked onscreen, I found Anakin to be a sympathetic character. Many people will disagree with me there, but my heart went out to him, and that's all there is to it.

Cookie talked about her newfound love for House, and can I just chime in that I'm right there with you? I've seen bits of episodes this season, but for the last three weeks, I haven't missed one. The characters are interesting and well-developed, not to mention portrayed by decent actors (even the young ones...GASP!). And Dr. House is so so funny, even though I wouldn't in a million years want him to be my doctor. I also like it because deep down, it amuses me that Chris can't stand it. It really bothers him that the main character is such an incredible ass. He just can't get past it, and he can't understand how I can.

"If I said that to you, you'd slap me."

"Heh. If you said that to me, I'd leave you."

"So why is it funny when he says it?"

"Um. He's on TV."

But the winner for Best New Drama in my book is Medium. Again, I lean toward mature, experienced actors whom I can trust to deliver the lines they're given responsibly. After watching Patricia Arquette and Jake Weber banter about who's taking the kids to school, I find Smallville and One Tree Hill unwatchable.

I guess I don't have any jeers to speak of, at least not out of the shows I watch regularly. But then, if I didn't like them, I guess I wouldn't watch them. Does it count that Law & Order isn't the same without Jerry Orbach? Maybe it counts if I throw in that I don't like the new lady ADA. But I didn't like Elizabeth Rohm at first either (even though she did time on Angel), so I'll give her a shot and try to come to terms with the fact that Angie Harmon is gone and no one will ever take her place.

5.24.2005

Requiem for a Kitten

Sneezy is in a better place. I sometimes wonder if it's better to let nature take its course. He probably wouldn't have lived as long if we hadn't tried to save him, and maybe it would've been easier that way. I know kittens die all the time, but I didn't think Sneezy would. I thought we could fix it. One of these days, I'll learn the valuable lesson that when grief is imminent, it helps to prepare yourself for it.

On a happier note, we have a new neighbor who's super fly. And she's going to adopt a kitten, so it can stay close to home.

Also, Cookie has a blog! Welcome to the fold. The grass really is greener on this side.

5.17.2005

Catching Up

As always.

In tonight's episode:
Why Kids Can Wait
Chris and Liz's Day o' Honda
Gearing Up for the Move
A Question for Jaimie

I. Why Kids Can Wait

Chris and I have slept head-to-head on our L-shaped couch for three out of the last four nights. I've felt compelled to stay near our kittens, because one of them is sick. It's a cute little orange kitty which we temporarily named Sneezy after the tell-tale signs of upper respiratory infection it so cutely exhibited. We have since renamed it Banshee, or Screaming Banshee, or S.B., because it has been wailing for a straight week. I thought it was having a hard time breathing and maybe it was frustrated about all the sneezing and the snot. But then, one day, I realized that the little guy was about half the size of his brothers and sisters (honestly, I think it really happened overnight). So I guess he's been crying because he's been hungry, constantly, for the last week. I didn't suspect that because he wasn't being shunned or anything. He just suddenly lost all natural instinct and could for the life of him not remember where the teet is and what it is for.

I swear, we've spent so much time coaching this kitten to suckle, which he could do just fine before, but he just doesn't get it. Half the time I'll catch him looking for somewhere to feed, facing the wrong way. So the last few days, we've been bottle-feeding him at all hours of the day and night. I'll wake up all bleary-eyed at 5 a.m. and hear him screaming, and I'll get up and grab his bottle out of the fridge. I'll hold it under hot water until it warms to room temperature, and I'll squirt some on my finger to make sure it's not too hot. It's about that time, every day, that it occurs to me I shouldn't have to be doing this yet. I'm intentionally avoiding this very thing. But I guess it's good practice, and hey, no diapers.

II. Chris and Liz's Day o' Honda

Chris and I test-drove Hondas yesterday. We want a hybrid, and all they had in a hybrid was an Accord. But we were really interested in the Civic, so we drove the hybrid Accord and the regular Civic EX, to get a feel for the difference.

Laura, Kristie, you were right.

After riding around in the Accord, the Civic felt like being locked in a closet with airbags. The Accord had XM and separate passenger temperature controls and cool stuff like that. But what difference took the biggest toll on me? The fact that the Accord had one of those awesome retracting change holders in the compartment between the seats, and the Civic didn't. It wouldn't have felt like so much of a compromise for me if not for that.

We told them we couldn't buy the damn thing that day, but they convinced us to see what financing would be like anyway. Sure, satisfy my curiosity. Why not? It took them three hours to let us know we couldn't afford it, at least not with their financing options. And there goes the afternoon we'd set aside to get our personal business done. Live and learn.

III. Gearing Up for the Move

Why is that title a shameless pun? I'll tell you why.

Jaimie's moving into her very own house later this week (w00t!), so Chris and I went over to her place last night where we celebrated by drinking wine and cutting styrofoam into the shape of gears. I cut out the biggest one and I got styro-shrapnel all over me. It was a winter wonderland in Jaimie's kitchen floor (I hope the term "winter wonderland" hasn't been distorted into some disturbing sexual idiom yet, because Laura could already make that last sentence sound trashy).

While we were cutting gears (great, now everything sounds dirty...Laura, somehow this is your fault), Jaimie gave me the honor of previewing her next Weekly, under the condition that I read it aloud. So now Chris and I have read the Weekly. And so has Jose Conseco. But you haven't. Neener.

IV. A Question for Jaimie

You know how there is no #6? Is that a reference to Season 6 of Xena, which the fans wish did not exist? Because I always just thought that was random, but if that's the case, it's really funny.

5.10.2005

Lord's Gym

I just saw this commercial, twenty seconds ago. My first response, my only possible response, was to rush to my computer like it was the first toilet I'd seen for 20 miles on the interstate after a Sonic chili dog.

The commercial announced the grand opening of Lord's Gym, a place where you can go to enrich your body and your spirit at the same time. At first, I just assumed it was somebody's last name or something. That's what I wanted to believe. But the mural of Almighty God on the wall next to the indoor running track with a bubble next to his head saying, "You can run a 10-minute mile, thus sayeth the Lord!" convinced me otherwise. (Okay, I made up the head bubble, but not the mural. And the head bubble would come as no surprise.)

And I was worried about being judged at a normal gym.

I was trying to get Chris's attention to show him God's Chosen Gymnasium when the logo popped up at the tail end of the commercial. You guys, it was a drawing of Jesus, with the cross on his back, and it looked like he was doing a push-up. With the cross on his back. I think...I'm going to be sick. I paused it on that logo and rewound it so Chris could hear the peppy synth music behind it and get the full effect.

"Chris, look at this. It's called Lord's Gym."

"Oh yeah?"

"Yeah, and they're really talking about the Lord."

"Oh, that's just..."

"Yeah, and look at this..."

"Oh Lord."

I honestly tried for a good 10 seconds to think the best of the situation. Maybe their hearts are in the right place. Maybe they're not just trying to shamelessly capitalize on something the majority of the population holds sacred for a buck. Maybe the point of the Jesus logo...wait, I just said "Jesus logo". No. Uh-uh. Not today.

The only thing I can figure is that they're counting on a big audience of people who think of religion and exercise exactly the same way: something they participate in occasionally to make them feel better about themselves without actually having to change.

This is both funny and sad to me, but I think if the two conflicting emotions settled their differences mano y mano, sad would win.

5.09.2005

Feliz Dia de Madre

I've always thought of Mother's Day as a Hallmark holiday, but somehow it has more credibility now that I know they celebrate it in Mexico. Probably other places too, but I know about Mexico. The cool thing is that in Mexico, they always celebrate it on the 10th. There's none of this crap where it just has to be on a Sunday so that mothers everywhere have another excuse to drag their grown children kicking and screaming to the church of their youth. I don't know about anyone else, but the church of my youth gives me hives. Fortunately, I think it may have the same affect on my parents.

5.07.2005

Black cloud

I got some news yesterday that made me very sad and very angry. Why you should care, Internet, I don't know. But there's not much justice in the world and maybe you care to know that.

Sorry guys, I'm Angry Liz for a while. I'll get better. But I know some people who might not, and that's not fair. But then Life's not fair. So eat it, Life. Shove it up your ass and eat it. Maybe we can be friends again next week. I'll let you know.

5.04.2005

Anniversaries and insurance

Laura and Kris have now been married for two years and one day, and it really doesn't seem that long.

Chris cooked us all a dinner last night that wasn't specifically an anniversary dinner, but it fit the occasion. I was skeptical about his garlic herb mashed potatoes but they were really really good. I get to eat them again tonight. Neener.

On a different note, I would like to issue a formal apology to Alfa Insurance, and to Leslie, my oh so nice former agent whom I hope will let me crawl back. When I got married, my premium went way up because of some stupid rule that goes something like this:

A female is considered a youth until she is 25 unless she gets married, at which time she becomes an adult in the eyes of her car insurance provider. A male is considered a youth until he is 25, period, end of story.

So when I got married, Chris was listed on my insurance as a youth, as if he were my son or something. Ew. And Leslie suggested that another insurance company might be able to give me a better rate until he "comes of age".

As a side note, males are also considered minors for the purpose of federal financial aid until they are 23, regardless of how long they have been physically and financially independent. Apparently guys, the people you want money from don't trust you any further than they can throw you.

Anyway, I switched to Chris's insurance provider and, long story short, now they're trying to screw me. I may not be a mathemetician, but I'm pretty sure that $171 + $171 does not equal $230. I hate it when people are stupid or liars or stupid liars. But it's okay, because I'll go back to Leslie and she'll make it all better.

5.03.2005

Pondering Pickle's Prowess

It took me all damn morning last Saturday to pick up where I left off with fleegan. You don't notice when you go every day just how much the little fleegan writes. It got me thinking, if we bound all of Jaimie's online writings -- her weeklies, dribblings, book reviews, short stories, etc. -- into a book, how long would it be? Would it be a quick read, or would it be one of those books you complain about being assigned in literature class because it's so damn long?

In any case, I think it would definitely be one of those books you end up being glad someone made you read. You'd be all, "I didn't get it at first, but after I sorta learned the language and got familiar with the characters, it was like I knew them, y'know? Also I laughed my ass off." It'd be like that.

4.29.2005

The Woodlayson Litter

Ah, at long last, I sit at my comfy chair facing the soft, reassuring glow of the screen. It's been so long. What shall we talk about? I could tell you all about how we moved Zach and Kristie to their new place and how no one let me pick up heavy stuff and how on the ride home I was treated to Hot Now Krispy Kreme doughnuts and oh, so sadly, couldn't eat more than two. I could tell you about the cruise we're going to go on next January to the Bahamas on Royal Caribbean (not that Carnival bullshit) and how there's a skating rink on the boat and how it's all pretty much paid for by someone who's not me because it's a business trip. How cool is that? I could tell you about the insane busy-ness that has been my week but I shudder to think and anyway, that's boring.

But if I could tell you just one thing that happened this week, I would tell you about the new additions to our family.

< Cat Blog >

Nibbler was preggers. Surprise!

Jaimie totally called it a few days ago, but Chris and I were all, "Nah, she's just getting fat because she's being fed regularly now and her metabolism doesn't know what to do with itself. We've seen it before." Which we had. Chris had one cat that looked like a kitten when he first brought it home from the dumpster outside his work. He proceeded to feed Izzy to her heart's content and her wittle body never grew, but her stomach blew up like a balloon. Honestly, she looked like a zeppelin. Many times I contemplated throwing her up in the air to see if she would float down. We figured that Izzy was likely an adult cat when he found her, but malnutrition had stunted her growth.

Anyway, turns out Nibbler was nourished just fine. Where we failed was in teaching her life lessons about living morally. It's always difficult adopting at such a late age, when all the most critical developmental years have passed. It's not her fault she came from a bad home situation.

Right, so she got knocked up. Probably by that womanizing yellow cat. Jerk. We figured this out two days ago. She had five kittens last night. At 2 a.m. Under our bed. I'm sure I'll be posting pictures as soon as Nibbler allows them to emerge from the nest she dug for them out of the underside of our mattress. Why couldn't she have given birth under the house?

It sucks for her, because she normally spends more time outside than inside and now she's pretty much sequestered. The poor thing seems to feel guilty about leaving the litter long enough to eat. I had to put her food where she could reach it by poking her head out.

So yeah, Chris and I are grandparents. He's beaming, of course. He already bought little toys for the babies, and he's petting them frequently so they'll know him by his smell when they open their eyes. It's adorable, in a horrifying way.

< /Cat Blog >

I'm going to spend all day tomorrow catching up on my blog-reading. I miss it so. I wanted to do that tonight but I'm so tired and I had to choose whether to read other people's blogs or update my own. Gotta look out for Number One, yo.

4.22.2005

Kitty Cruelty


Seriously though, I think she likes it. Posted by Hello

4.20.2005

Eureka!

Today, I unlocked the mystery of clipping masks. For those of you who are familiar with Adobe Illustrator, you know that this wondrous function is something a toddler could do. But I didn't know that until today, so I will insist on feeling an enormous sense of accomplishment for figuring it out all by myself. I didn't even have to call Laura.

The trouble with not having a formal education in a field in which you work is that, however competent you are, you are bound to find bizarre gaps in your learning curve. It's irritating, and it makes everything take longer. But oh, the sweet victory of conquering something new. I feel strangely compelled to run through the streets naked.

Memories

Chris had a day off earlier this week, and I guess he got bored, so he drove to Georgia to buy a lotto ticket. I'll let you know if it wins.

He told me it wasn't the scratch-off kind and I said that was too bad, because there's something blissful and innocent about scratching off the silver stuff to see if you won anything. And even if you didn't, you still had a good time.

That reminded me of the long afternoons I used to spend at my grandmother's house when I was small. One of my favorite things to do was find one of her Publisher's Clearninghouse Sweepstakes packages and fill the whole thing out. I don't know if she still gets those, but I know she used to get one at least once a week. And I would fill it out with all her information and put all the stickers where they were supposed to go and my absolute favorite thing to do would be to scratch off the little extra prizes. If you won the sweepstakes, you'd also get whatever you won from the scratch-off contests. I think they were the only reason I filled those out so diligently.

I used to call Mommie Ann (my grandmother) all the time and ask her if she'd heard anything yet, as if they called everyone who sent in their packet to tell them whether or not they won. We always agreed to split the winnings down the middle. I remember Mom trying to explain to me what the odds of winning were, but I would just direct her attention to the sea of papers and forms and coupons laid out before me and explain to her that I hoped everyone else thought exactly the same way she did. Then they wouldn't take the trouble to do all this and I'd have a better shot at winning.

Of course, at the time I didn't understand marketing and target audiences and the fact that many of the old people who got these mailouts were bored to tears and living on social security. Still, I suppose it was sound logic for a 7-year-old.

4.18.2005

Wunderkoffee

I finished my term paper at 3 a.m. this morning. I hadn't actually planned on finishing it last night, but I was getting good sentences and I had to strike while the iron was hot.

Chris made me some awesome coffee to keep me alert while I worked. It did more than that. It was magic coffee. It caused the left and right sides of my brain to connect and fuse and spew concrete economic theory in iambic pentameter. Seriously though, it was really good coffee.

I had been writing and thinking and cursing all. day. long. and I'd finally made it to page 4 (of the requisite 10). That was about 8:30. So I took a break and Chris and I watched I Heart Huckabees on pay-per-view. I had been ready to pass out before it started, but throughout the movie, I sipped on this magic brew Chris made for me. If I'm not mistaken, it was a mixture of freshly ground Columbian Supremo, for body, and Highlander Grogg, for flavor. And there might have been some water in it. I'm not sure.

Anyway, after the movie ended, I surprised myself by going back to the computer to get to work again. 30 minutes later, I surprised myself by having another page written. My favorite page so far, in fact. Three hours later, I astonished myself by having completed my paper, revised my outline, and typed my citations.

I kept waking Chris up in the next room to announce that I'd finished another page. Hee.

So at 3 a.m., approximately three hours after I had finished my coffee, I hopped into bed and stared at the ceiling for another hour, reveling in the inner peace I had achieved and resisting the urge to wake up Chris and ask him to take me to the park so we could ride the spinny thing.

I contemplated skipping my first class this morning, but upon popping out of bed bright-eyed and bushy-tailed and feeling no pain, I decided there was no justification. I also decided that I could still feel the coffee in my veins.

It sort of went away around 11:00 this morning, but I haven't been tired all day. And my eyes open really wide and they don't blink much and I don't tell them what to do anymore. Hm. I wonder if "Columbian Supremo" is slang for something.

4.14.2005

Flexing my bullshit muscle

I'm writing my first term paper in almost two years. The topic? An analysis of the economy of Brazil.

Would you like to take a stab at guessing how many books there are in print in the United States concerning Brazil's economy? Like, two. Now, would you like to guess how many of those are available in the whole of Northeast Alabama? Yeah.

There are plenty of periodicals out there, most of them making fun of Brazil's insanely unbalanced distribution of wealth. But I have to look those up and then get the microfilm or the microfische or God forbid the bound volumes. Then I have to sift through them to find useful information and then I have to wash, rinse, and repeat.

So basically I'm just being a whiny-butt.

But I'm discovering that if you know a little bit about economics, some key terms, the basic problems in the socio-political realm of the country, and a skeletal history, you can pretty much make up the rest and sound surprisingly convincing. Not that I would do that. Then again, we're talking about the person who, her senior year in college, got a perfect score on a five-page book review she wrote after reading the back cover.

But kids, you shouldn't do that, because it takes a lot more effort to be creative than it does to regurgitate what someone else has already written. After all, why practice bullshitting? We all know that's just not a marketable life skill.

I know. I should never be allowed to have children. Or babysit yours. So don't ask. Ever.

4.11.2005

The fertile season

Laura's birthday is today. Happy birthday, Laura! Jaimie got her something orange, I know not what. I have, as yet, not gotten her anything. This is not, as one may suppose, entirely due to the fact that I am a thoughtless whore, true though it may be. It also has to do with a financial brain fart I am suffering the consequences of at the moment. I thought about making her something out of hemp, but I think she's probably too chic-looking for that now.

I don't know how it is elsewhere, but down here it seems that March and April (with spillover from late February and early May) are home to the birthdays of 90% of my friends, relatives, acquaintances, and random passers-by I have met in the span of my life. I realize that I could probably make a decent living as a fortune-teller.

"Let me see your hand, dearie. Mmm, yes, you look like an Aries."

I've never had this phenomenon explained to my satisfaction. Most say that it makes perfect sense, spring being the time for love and all. But if the babies are being born in the springtime, methinks the love-making would had to have gone on in mid-summer.

Jaimie was born in October. She's weird. We don't play with her.

4.09.2005

Sleeping in

I forgot how good it felt to sleep late on a Saturday morning. I'm working late tonight, minding the company booth at yet another trade show I'll probably regret having gotten us into, so I got a decadent 10 hours of sleep.

Chris feels poopy, and he has to work all day long. I think it's going to be one of those 15-hour shifts. I'm still not convinced that's legal.

During the day today, I'm going to go to the grocery store and take advantage of the sale of the century. The sad thing is, I really am excited about it. Not overly excited, unless you're of the opinion that any excitement at all about the selection and purchase of produce is excessive. And I might be inclined to agree.

4.05.2005

Woodlayson's Word of Whenever

syllogism: n. a deductive scheme of a formal argument consisting of a major and a minor premise and a conclusion (as in "every virtue is laudable; kindness is a virtue; therefore kindness is laudable")

The term can also be used more broadly to mean "deductive reasoning" or "a good argument", but to anyone who knows the intent of the word, using it thus may seem like ignorant misuse rather than intentional license.

Here's the thing. This word can backfire on you. It's one of those words that, while sounding real smart-like, can also come off as arrogant and elitist unless used seemlessly and appropriately in conversation. This can make it a difficult word to practice, unless of course you don't care what other people think, which you shouldn't...unless you really are arrogant and elitist, in which case you should listen to some damn criticism once in a while.

Anyway, the fun thing about this word is not so much using it as using it. How many opportunities are you really going to get to say the word "syllogism"? Not nearly as many as you'll get to actually form one as an argument. And that, friends, will make you sound smart without the unwanted side-effects. As a bonus, trying to come up with excuses to form syllogisms will actually get you thinking more analytically, if you cultivate the habit.

4.01.2005

I'm done.

That last post didn't want to post either. Maybe Blogger has some kind of filtering system wherein any post containing the words "hate" and "Blogger" in the same sentence are automagically banned from publishment. I have no reason to believe this one will work either. I'm just talking to myself. I do that a lot.

Side note: My other birthday presents from Chris, the tangible ones, came in the mail yesterday. I have to brag. Two DVDs: Finding Neverland (which I'd never seen before then, but Johnny Depp is always a safe bet...except for that Ninth Gate thing, but it was Polanski...how was he to know?) and Rosencrantz and Gildenstern Are Dead. That, my friends, was the jewel. I kinda feel bad for Finding Neverland, a wonderful movie that was overshadowed by the luminous glory of R&G. Dad will be sooooooo jealous. R&G wasn't even released on DVD until my birthday (which is why I just now got it).

In case any of you out there have not seen that movie, I'm begging you, for you own good, to watch it. See Gary Oldman in The Role He Was Born To Play. See Tim Roth being Tim Roth, only better. See Richard Dreyfuss being strange and funny and pulling it off. Learn how to play Questions. Find out if England really exists. You'll be glad you did.

I hate you, Blogger

See those duplicate posts under there? I can't delete them. There were errors. That's all Blogger has to say about it. There were errors.

I'm getting all hyper-pissed about everything today. And it's only 9:30. I started yelling at the phone because Line 2 was ringing so damn loud while I was trying to make a call on Line 1. And since there's a phone in every room, there's nowhere I can go to escape. Plus, when you're on one line and the other starts ringing, it beeps in to interrupt your conversation for about two seconds, as if its ear-piercing howls are not enough to tell you that SOMEONE ELSE IS ON THE PHONE WHYDON'TYOUCARE?!?!?! And of course, the client I'm speaking to always says something vital in those two seconds and the conversation is derailed while I recover mid-sentence and try to figure out what they said from context clues.

"I'm dying, Liz, but you've been such a good service provider that I wanted to tell you where my hidden fortune is before I go. It's in the *BEEEEEEEEEEEEP*. Pretty good hiding place, huh? And now, I die."

I've been living with these phones since we got them six months or so ago. But today is a day of many straws. So if any of you were thinking about calling me at work, DON'T.

And then that Blogger thing. It was pissing me off last night because it wouldn't let me post that last one. Because, you know, there were errors. So I tried making a new one that said the same thing. Errors. Fine, this can wait 'til tomorrow. Today, I try to post it and lo, it works. Only it posted both of them. Of course. So I go back to my list of posts and tell it to delete one of them.

"There were errors."

So the funny thing is, the post was deleted from my list, but not from the site. And I can't very well try again to delete something that I, in fact, successfully deleted. Sort of.

I'm sure there's a way around this, but right now I just want to be mad at it. And the phone. And the people that didn't want to let me into their lane when mine was running out. And the guy who I can't reach on the phone for the second day in a row.

Really, guys, I'm the Incredible Hulk today. So if you were thinking about pulling any April Foolery, just take that into consideration. That's all I'm sayin'.

Update (10:48 a.m.) - Both the posts I was previously referring to have since disappeared. Yes, both of them. Maybe they'll come back. Blogger, you are dead to me.

Update (10:52 a.m.) - Upon publishing previous update, the referenced post did indeed come back. Only one of them this time. Looking on the bright side, if this is the most important problem I have to solve today, I will consider myself lucky.

3.31.2005

In case you were curious

No, it wasn't a pony.

Chris was right when he said he got me the only thing in the world I really wanted for my birthday. I really want him to live for a pretty long time. Sure, we'll all get tired of the mortal coil, but I like his, um, coil. Anyway, I worry a little because he's been smoking since he was 12 years old and that's just not a good start, y'know? So he resolved that, starting on my birthday, he would pare down his smoking until he was down to less than 8 a day. Why 8? Because that's apparently the magic number as far as life insurance providers are concerned. And they should know. They're the ones losing out if all their clients die at age 45.