September 2004

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I get a wonderful little vacation this week. Well I suppose I shouldn’t say “wonderful”– it is nice though. I have to take 7-10 days off to recover from my surgery on Tuesday. I’ll spare our readers from the gory details, suffice to say, I’ve been in a lot of pain for the past few weeks. It’s only a fifteen minute operation, and I had a similar procedure two years ago, so I’m not really worried about it.

Our bathroom decided to explode last week. First, our toilet was flushing strangely, so I replace the flapper. It got worse. So I replaced the ballcock (the piece that refills the tank). That fixed one problem, but another problem arose in the form of the toilet running constantly. So I replaced the flush valve (the part the flapper sits on), that didn’t work. So replaced all the rubber washers, it helped, but now I had a leak coming out from between the tank and the bowl. So I replaced that rubber washer again. In the process I broke the flush valve and had to go down to Lowe’s yet again to get a new one. Finally it’s working.

However while doing all this I also got the idea in my head to clean the sink drain - we had been having problems with it clogging and no amount of drain-o was working. After undoing all the pipe connections I noticed that, indeed, the pipes were filled with goo. I cleaned these out, and put the pipe connections back on, turn the faucet on - little spouts of water dripping everywhere from the elbow joint. Upon further inspection I noticed that several holes had been repaired in the past and my twisting and turn the pipes must have chipped away the very weak repair job. Lowe’s saw a lot of me that week, not to mention my money.


When I get a little weary of reading internet news sites, I like to catch up on current events by reading blogs written by people in Iraq. It’s nice to have a completely different perspective on things. Here are a few of the ones I I’ve been to lately:

http://healingiraq.blogspot.com/
http://iraqi-dude.blogspot.com/
http://nabilsblog.blogspot.com/
http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/
http://raedinthemiddle.blogspot.com/
http://www.blogjam.com/wires/

If you want to help kids in Iraq by donating $60 a month so they can go to school click here.

Last week was yucky. I was plagued with bad back pain on Monday so I skipped class to go see the physical therapist. I missed an in class assignment which my teacher was kind enough to let me do at home. I finished it in haste on Friday while at work and after recieving her email reply with my score, I learned a very valuable lesson. Just because I’m in graduate school, doesn’t mean I’m beyond proof reading. Strangely enough, when I looked through it again, I still couldn’t see any mistakes so I emailed her back and asked her if she could point them out to me. I’m such a dork. There were plenty of stupid mistakes.
I was sick on Tuesday with a strange stomach thing which I’m still trying to get rid of. The rest of the week continued to feel all topsy turby. I think it had mostly to do with the fact that I felt guilty for missing class and work and for forgetting to attend our monthly morning staff meeting. All of a sudden I feel like a very unreliable person.
In other news, Mike and I have decide to host a Halloween party this year. Halloween is Mike’s favorite time of the year. I never used to like it that much but that has started to change since being with Mike (he showed me how to carve my first pumpkin when we were in college). We’re having Hogwarts Halloween Party at the library. All of the staff members are going to dress up as characters from the Harry Potter books. Mike and I are going to dress up as Mr. and Mrs. Weasley. We already have some of our costume planned and with some additional help from my very crafty mom, I think we’ll be able to pull it off. Our Halloween party is planned for after the library party. I’m actually getting kind of excited.

I’ve been listening a lot to Rachel Yamagata lately. Check her out. She’s very inspiring.

Mike and I had our anniversary last week (Sept. 7). I actually forgot it was our anniversary and Mike actually had to remind me. This is actually very funny because it’s usually Mike who never remembers anything and me that has to remind him.
Last year we were very serious about doing the whole “first year paper anniversary” thing but soon discovered that it was kind of a pain in the butt to come up with a “paper” gift that was appropriate for eachother and that would seem meaningful. So, this year we decided to allocate $50 to eachother and buy whatever it was that we wanted. This may seem like a weak anniversary idea but Mike and I were quite happy with our decision. Mike spent his on horror movies (of course). I splurged on some clothes from an online store called the Bohemian Closet

My brother-in-law Mitch was just here for a few weeks before taking off to fill his head with…whatever Harvard people fill their head with, and during this visit, he took it upon himself to teach me the basics of PHP. PHP is a programming language that, amongst other things, creates dynamic web content. Basically, content the user interacts with, or, forms. Needless to say, lots of frustration, but I learned a ton and I’m having a blast, despite the constant road-blocks I encounter. I have to admit, I don’t usually have a lot of patience with things I don’t understand quickly, but I can look back to my days of learning HTML and Cascading Style Sheets and remember I had just as much trouble with them as I do right now with PHP, and I hurdled most of those road-blocks then, so I know I can do it again.

So there’s this movie that came out a while back in Britain called Shaun of the Dead and it’s just getting over here to the states. It looks really freakin’ funny. It’s tagline is “A Romantic Comedy, With Zombies” It’s been making big waves within the horror community and I can’t wait for it to get here. Take a look at the trailer.

Dear Mr. Lucas,

The very first movie I ever remember watching is “Empire Strikes Back”. As a child I loved the Star Wars Trilogy, and my lifetime total for the number of times I’ve watched all 3 movies is innumerable. The Force was an intangible, well, force that every kid at that age wanted to have. To be able to wield a light-saber, move things with our minds or control the weak-minded are all powers I have dreamed of many times over. You created not just a Trilogy of epic proportions, but implanted a dream inside the mind of every child who saw your movies.

But then you had to throw in midi-chlorians. What are midi-chlorians and where exactly did they come from? I liked Star Wars just fine WITHOUT midi-chlorians, you don’t have to explain the Force to me, I just believe!

Also, let’s look at your track record here. Other than Star Wars and Executive Producing Raider of the Lost Arc, what else have you done? Not a whole lot George, not a whole lot. So how come the new prequels have been underwhelming? Why haven’t I been blown away? Why haven’t I come out of the theatre with an ear to ear grin on my face? You had 20+ years to come up with the whole story and the best you could do was Jar Jar Binks??

I’m disappointed George. Episode 3 is going to have to be REALLY good to make up for all the mistakes you’ve made. Oh and by the way, you can take your Star Wars DVD boxed set and shove it up your inordinately large ass.

Signed,

Former Fan

Congress is so strange. A man gets up to speak and says nothing. Nobody listens - and then everybody disagrees. ~Boris Marshalov

I’m tired of hearing it said that democracy doesn’t work. Of course it doesn’t work. We are supposed to work it. ~Alexander Woollcott

“Do something good for the environment. Plant Bush back in Texas”


Fall classes have started. I’m slowly getting used to the twelve hour day. I’m only taking two classes, both of which are asychronouse (?) using interactive video confrencing with the Norman campus. There will probably be a lot of busy work for both classes but otherwise I don’t think the workload will be that bad, that is as long as I can keep up with it. So far, I’ve already fallen behind on some of the readings.
For the past month, the two mornings I have off in the week have been spent at a physical therapy rehab center. I’ve been having some back and leg pain problems for quite awhile and decided to finally get it seen to. They’ve diagnosed me with something called the SI joint syndrome. My therapy sessions usually consist of a combination of ultra-sound, a funny electrical machine thingy that gives me prickles, stretching, massage and being placed in all kinds of contorted positions. Some days are better than most, although this past week I’ve done remarkably better than I have in a long time. Today the therapist said that if I continue to improve than I can start running again in a few weeks. I’ll be glad when it’s better since the pains have caused a lot of sleepless nights, discomfort and lack of motivation for anything that requires me to move from a sitting position.
It also makes me more cranky. I’ve had even less patience when dealing with rude people at work. In class yesterday we talked a lot about ethics in libraries and how important it is to stand by our philosphy of treating everybody equally, regardless of how rude they are or other quarky personality traites they might have. While I’m sitting in class, listening to this, I nod my head in agreement knowing full well how difficult it can be to do this in practice. For instance, a lady came up to me tonight upset that the copy she recieved from our photocopy machine in the circulation area had leaked ink lines all over the right side of the page. Her words were something like “I just wasted fifteen cents on this and look how terrible it looks. It’s awful.” So, I offered to make her a copy on the reference copier for free and called Matt up at circulation to find out what the story was on their machine. Matt thought that the toner was running out, at least that’s what our circ supervisor had told him. But to save money, I guess, she had decided to wait until the toner ran out completely before she was going to change it. Sort of understanding her perspective, I also realized that it was probably a bad thing to make our patrons pay for a copy that had a bunch of ink marks all over it. This lady apparently listened very intently to my conversation with Matt because when I hung up she proceeded to complain about him and how it should be his job to put up a sign that informs patrons to “beware because this machine is not working at a hundred percent” and how he shouldn’t waste time telling patrons what’s wrong with the machine but instead spend that time trying to fix it because frankly she “could care less”. I agreed with what she was saying. However, I just have a big problem dealing with people who are more interested in the act of complaining then they are in using the process of complaining as a way to help rectify a problem. Even after I repaid her her fifteen cents by making her another copy she was still determined to draw out her complaint, her dramatic “I just wasted fifteen cents on this terrible copy” by placing blame on my friend and very capable co-worker just because he happened to be behind the desk at that moment in time. Unfortunately, this is human emotion. Not many people have the talent to complain constructively without stepping on peoples feelings. The act of complaining usually comes from a situation that has aroused anger and frustration, both of which are emotions that are difficult for most people to control. Part of our job is to try and limit any possible situations that might cause anger and frustration but unfortunately, everyones boiling point is different. What I have noticed, is that the majority of complaints I recieve and most of the frustration our patrons seem to exhibit (at least in this area of the library) originate from some sort of problem with technology, ie. the internet is slow, the internet is frozen, a certain website won’t come up, I don’t understand how to navigate this website, this website won’t take my password, the computer kicked me off before my time was up, I can’t find any books on NAFTA in your library, I don’t understand how to look up a library book on the computer, this photocopy machine took my money, this photocopy machine keeps enlarging the wrong section of my newspaper and I’m wasting my money on its mistakes, this photocopy machine keeps spitting out the wrong paper size, etc. On a daily basis, about 60% of the patrons I encounter are uncomfortable with technology. I have at least one-three people a week who come up to me directly and say “I am computer illiterate. Please help me”. So, where am I going with this? I don’t even know. I guess, sometimes I wish we could just turn off all the computers, pull all the books off the shelf and throw them in a pile in the middle of the floor. It would just feel so liberating to consume information without a purpose and without a medium.

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