Confessions From a Life on Holiday











{December 31, 2008}   As Bill Nye Says

Did you know that……

The President’s airplane, as we know, is called the Air Force One. Most notably, at least in recent history, it is known for being the place where Vice-President Lyndon Baines Johnson was sworn in as President as his wife “Ladybird” and a distraught, blood-covered Jacqueline Kennedy watched (google the photos, they will leave a lasting impression.)

But! The President also has his own helicopter called the Marine One.

WELL NOW YOU KNOW!!!!!

This leads me to wonder: There are several branches of the armed forces, two of which are the Air Force and the Marine Corps. Does the President have a ship called the Navy One? Or a tank or humvee or something called the Army One? If you happen to know, leave a comment. It’s more fun than looking it up on Wikipedia :-)



{December 29, 2008}   A Memo to DLIS

Dear Library School,

I have a suggestion.  Instead of teaching us useless things like, oh, I don’t know, SEARCHING GOOGLE, why don’t you spend a week teaching us how to apply for civil service and take a civil service exam.  And to get a public librarian’s certificate.  Because I knew how to do Boolean and advanced searching before I got to UB, but all this crazy public librarian paperwork is KILLING me.

Not a lot of love,

Me



{December 20, 2008}   The People in Your Neighborhood

I went to Delta Sonic today to fill up my gas tank for the ride back to Rochester.  After topping off my tank and having already been traumatized by the mall parking lot (all I wanted to do was pay my credit card bill at Express!!) and a snafu with the pharmacy at Wegmans, I decided to hole up inside the Delta Sonic/ Dunkin’ Donuts/Convenience Store for a while and stay warm until my prescription was ready.  While waiting for the bathroom I got talking to a man, and we ended up talking for near 45 minutes.  He reminded me a lot of my dad and my uncle– he was a tradesman, spoke freely, took no crap, and trained dogs on the side, a true animal lover.  After everything else that happened to me today, that was the one bright spot in my day.  He’s been all over with his German Shepards and his business, and he works on cars that have been in collisions, which I find fascinating.  Like I said, he reminded me of my dad and my uncle combined– he liked working with his hands like my dad (a carpenter, printing press operator, and sheet metal worker, plus he always has a project going on) and had no qualms about telling it like it is, no matter how politically incorrect it was to say it (like my uncle, who is a devout dog lover and always says what’s on his mind with no filter.)  In an odd way, it was comforting– it was like being with a family member.  It was the highlight of my day.  A nice break from the insanity of life.  A little piece of home standing there in the gas station waiting area, just waiting for his work minivan to get cleaned up.

I believe in Godwinks.  And I think this was one.  Sometimes you gotta take that chance, because you never what shape the Godwink is going to take.  Mine was an autobody worker who trained German Shepards in his free time.  And he calmed me down at a time when I needed it the most.



{December 18, 2008}   The Power of Goodbye

I don’t do goodbyes very well.  I hate the “I’ll never see you again!  Have a nice life!” kind of goodbyes.  I do not like finality.  I make every effort to avoid it, if humanly possible.  But now it has gotten to the inevitable point where I have been in Buffalo for 5.5 years and Monday I am leaving for good (almost for good- I’ll be back for 3 days in January for doc appts.)  Then I am moving clear across the state to a city where I have the job of my dreams and know no one.

And people wonder why I like television series so much.  They have consistency.  They ARE consistency.  And if there is one thing I like, it is stability and consistency.  All the way.

I don’t do very well when I don’t have it.



{December 3, 2008}   John Williams

John Williams is great.  Don’t get me wrong.  He makes pretty music for movies.  Big movies.  And I love the London Symphony Orchestra, with whom he does much of his work.

But.

He steals EVERYTHING.  More or less everything he writes, the themes and concepts, are stolen from previous classical pieces.  He even steals from himself!!!!  And I’m not even an expert on classical music.  Here are some examples:

The theme from ET- Howard Hanson’s 2nd symphony, opening, movement 3
Star Wars: Opening and Revenge of the Sith- Gustav Holst’s The Planets- Mars
Indiana Jones Theme- The Empire Strikes Back, finale and end credits

Like I said, love him to death (and I have yet to find any sneaky sneaking in my favorite piece, Duel of the Fates,) but MAN this guy does a lot of stealing and tweaking.



et cetera