Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Lots of Little Things Add Up to Not Much


It's been quite the week so far. Annoying tourist season has started in NYC, making my morning commute noisier than usual as hordes of tourists plus tour guides pack into the subway car I'm in.

Rude, don't watch where you're going season has been underway for a while now, so mix that with hordes of tourists roaming the city streets and I've got plenty to bitch about.

New phone system at work has been an interesting challenge. Our library branch is now a call center! And we've got new phones. The handset is too wide for my hand and I keep dropping it. My ears don't like headsets, so that's not an option. I get earaches. And the buttons on the new phone are different or the same in different places, so it's been almost a game of who will lose the most calls in a day while trying to transfer them. Plus, the phones have displays that show a lot of info that's hard to read. I painted the buttons with different Sharpie colors, so it looks very cool now, if nothing else.

On the entertainment front, summer shows are returning. Burn Notice is back, The Closer returns in July, and a week from Friday, we get Torchwood: Miracle Day on Starz! I'm psyched!

Oh, and the Mets have made baseball fun this week.

Guess that's it. I hear some chocolate calling my name. :)

Feeling: ready for a 3-day weekend!

~~~o0o~~~

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

I'm a Cookie, You're a Cookie




You Have Depth




You are the ultimate escapist. If you can't escape physically, you escape with your thoughts.

You love the idea of travel and faraway lands. If you could, you would travel constantly and see the world.



While you are a bit on the quiet side, you're a great partner. You are supportive, devoted, and loyal.

More than any other type, you honestly still believe in true love. You hold on to your ideals.

Feeling: ambivalent


~~~o0o~~~

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Day for Dads


So, it's Father's Day. I don't usually do special Mother's Day or Father's Day posts, but heck, I've been posting less frequently here lately, and I needed a topic, so, here goes.

My father is a very active octogenarian. I would wish him a Happy Father's Day here, but he would never see it, so there's no point in doing so. He has an old, hand-me-down computer he uses for a database for his collections (stamps and autographs, mostly). I apparently inherited my obsessive collecting from him. He's never been online though, even though I think he'd enjoy emailing and chatting with his fellow collectors around the world, or checking out the space sites, NASA et al.

See, my father's a space buff, and he and my mother (who died back in the early-'80s) appreciated science fiction, so I got my love of space and science fiction from them, especially from my father. We watched space launches as a family. The moon landing in July 1969 became a family event as we watched it on TV. And I'll never forget the night a few years before that when my father announced we were watching a new space show called Star Trek. My younger sister made herself scarce, but watching Star Trek became a weekly activity for me, my father, and my mother.

We went on a lot of family trips. We'd fill our station wagon with us, another family, and suitcases, and hit the road, as far north as Canada (twice! once for Expo '67) and as far south as Virginia. My father could smell out historical markers and covered bridges from miles away, or so it seemed. And we traveled without reservations. Literally. Around 5 pm, my father would announce it was time to look for vacancy signs. My best memories of childhood and adolescence are from those trips. We were regular visitors as a family to museums, too, especially NY's American Museum of Natural History, a place I visited with my family years before it became a stop on school excursions.

My father was far from being a perfect father, but he gave it his best and he helped me make memories to last a lifetime. Every one of those trips has a story in it. And there were other memories that stuck over time. He was fairly self-sufficient, being a decent cook, which was often required. My father refused to cook the fish he caught on his infrequent fishing trips back when he was in his 20s and 30s. And he was a barbecuing fiend. But he also had an annoying tendency to not listen to advice.

One moment shines in my memory. My mother always cautioned that when pouring hot water into a cup or mug, you should place a spoon in the cup first and pour the water onto that so it would absorb most of the heat. My father laughed that off and one day under my mother's watchful eyes, he poured hot water into a mug of instant coffee, lifted the mug, and left the bottom behind. Damn thing melted right off. My mother and I were convulsed in laughter. As long as he wasn't burned -- he wasn't! -- it was a cause for laughter and mockery. My father laughed, too. I think he's been careful when pouring hot water ever since.

See, my parents taught me a lot of valuable lessons and instilled in me the most important values: honesty, integrity, a sense of ethics and fair play, that people should be treated equal. But most important, to me, was the value of a sense of humor, the ability to not take oneself too seriously. To be able to laugh at oneself. That was hard for me, being a shy kid, easily embarrassed. But somehow, that lesson did stick.

Oh, one more thing I learned from my father: sarcasm is a virtue. It's the only language other than standard English that I speak. For what that's worth.

Feeling: half-asleep

~~~o0o~~~

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Hey, Hey, It's the Monkees!

Hey, Hey, They're the Monkees!

Peter Tork, Davy Jones, and Mickey Dolenz are touring as The Monkees (Mike Nesmith declined to participate) and hubby and I saw them uh, I guess it's now technically, last night. Much fun. They were in good voice and had lots of energy, sang most of their hits and some songs that weren't hits but were album cuts, I guess. I've seen both Davy and Mickey in concert individually, but this was the first time seeing Peter and the three together. Great fun!

Feeling: tired


~~~o0o~~~

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Milano Melts





When I saw these Milano Melts Chocolate Dark Classic Creme on the shelf in the supermarket, I had to try them. I'm happy to report that they're yummy, but unfortunately, for them, not good enough to replace regular dark chocolate Milanos, double dark chocolate Milanos, and chocolate chocolate Milanos in my heart. There's a nice mix of crunchy cookie and dark chocolate creme filling, but I prefer my food textures to be a bit closer. The cookie part didn't overwhelm me with chocoliciousness. So, a worthy addition to the Milanos family of treats, but not something I'll go out of my way to get.

Feeling: lazy

~~~o0o~~~

Sunday, June 12, 2011


Wow, time slipped away from me again. So, here's some virtual chocolate for you. Dessert at a graduation party I went to today.

Rainbow cookie, yellow cupcake with chocolate and chocolate sprinkles icing, and a black and white cookie.
Much yummyness.

Feeling: stuffed

~~~o0o~~~

Sunday, June 05, 2011

Bad Allergies


Feh. Good weather can be deadly. Seriously, the weather this week turned gorgeous, with bright sun and lots of dry wind, which whipped up pollens in a frenzy and I think most of them went into my nose and eyes and I spent most of 3 days blowing my nose and looking like I was crying. Humidity has now returned, however, and the wind died down, so I can breathe easier and feel almost human again. This must be the worst allergy season ever.

I have chocolate I need to take pics of, so maybe I'll get that done this week. A yummy task, to be sure!

Feeling: not as lousy as yesterday

~~~o0o~~~