OS X Mail’s Strange Log Messages

A while back I installed a pretty neat Mail extension called MailTags, which was used to tag mail messages with additional information. Cool concept.

However, at the time the usage I was personally getting out of it didn’t warrant the price for the app, and I uninstalled the application after the trial period was over.

Unfortunately, things didn’t end there, because I kept getting repeated log messages like this when I looked at the console:

1/1/09 2:52:05 PM Mail[362] Cannot restore width of table column with identifier 24

It was really obvious (and annoying), as I use GeekTools to monitor my console on my desktop in order to keep a bird’s eye view on what’s happening in the background.

I found out that I was not the only other user having this problem, and the MailTags site had a solution invoked from the Terminal:

$ defaults delete com.apple.mail TableColumns

I’d done this before, but the problem resurfaced. Not sure why. And, doing it again seems to have fixed the problem, again. My log is back to normal.

Meanwhile, I discovered that that MailTags has a new version out, and perhaps I’ll give them a second chance.

I just tend to get worried when an extension appears to go deep, especially when we know Apple is about to revamp things with the next release of the OS, and cruft somehow got left behind before.

Invisible Drive on OS X

The hard drive icon on my OS X’s Finder was no longer appearing on my desktop; here’s how I fixed it.

I happened to sign on to my desktop Mac and noticed something very strange, the Harddisk icon was no longer on the desktop.

Other clever tricks for looking at the file systems showed the file was most certainly present, although Finder operations were treating the volume as if the hard disk was hidden or invisible. The drive was there when I used terminal and did $ ls -l /Volumes

Finder Preferences showed that icons should be shown, but just the drive icon wasn’t appearing.

Then I found this aritcle, which suggested firing up the Script Editor and running this script:

tell application “System Events”
set visible of disk “NameofDisk” to true
end tell
tell application “Finder” to quit
delay 1
tell application “Finder” to launch

I believe I got myself into trouble by accident when I did the last disk repair using Disk Warrior or Disk Utility. Somehow the operation marked the drive as invisible. Undoing it was as simple as asking the system to make it visible again.

Changes at the Apple Store – For the Better!

Apple has changed the Genius Bar policies and procedures. INCREDIBLE IMPROVEMENTS!

Anyone who’s been to an Apple Store, especially the one in Tysons Corner, VA, knows that Apple is experiencing some serious growth pains. Yes, as predicted, more and more people are starting to adopt Apple hardware and software and the cost/benefit factor becomes more apparent. The hardware is not that much more expensive, and if you take in to account all the stuff you get and all the stuff you don’t need to buy, it’s actually a pretty sweet deal for the total cost of ownership. Vista didn’t win any favors, Windows 7 is invoking similar fear, and Apple’s forth coming Snow Leopard looks like it’s going to be dealing a death blow. Meanwhile the number of ways to run Windows applications on a Mac, even the graphically intensive ones, are climbing — that a Mac won’t run Windows software is just not true.

Where Apple dropped the ball was the in-store support. If you walked into the store, all appointments were filled. Even if you registered in advance, you couldn’t be seen before hand. And turns were taken in the ordered registered — which meant if you had the identical problem as the person at the counter, and someone required 45 minutes of training in front of you, you had to wait. In short, it was awful and you had resort to gaming the system to get seen when scheduled.

As it turned out, my iPhone started wonking out on me when it came to WiFi. My connections would drop, and with the last firmware update, my WiFi connection would drop seconds after being established. Manually cycling WiFi, power cycling, rebooting, and even firmware reloading did not solve the problem. All I could use was Edge, even when someone next to me could see the network access point at full strength on their iPhone.

I loathed the idea of going in to the Apple Store with a real hardware problem, which would require seeing a Genius, especially a shopping day or so before Christmas Eve.

Unbeknownst to me, Apple had made substantial improvements in customer service, the likes of which exceeded all my hopes and expectations. Check this out!

The moment I crossed the store threshold, I was greeted with “Welcome to the Apple Store, is there anything I can help you with?”

“Uh, no, I’m here for a Genius Bar appointment, and I’m an hour ahead of schedule.”

“No problem sir, I’ll register you’re in-store, so head on over to the bar now, and we’ll see if they can take you early.”

Huh? Normally the Genius Bar has a crowd around it with very frustrated people, and four to six gurus working madly. However, as I looked over there were only two, and tons of empty stools, and zero crowd waiting. Meanwhile, the store looked busier than I have ever seen it.

I go over and take a seat. Again, I’m greeted, they ask my name, and they say they see me as appointment number 9. Usually that means that I can expect an hour and a half wait.

However, I’m watching as the two people there are taking cases, and the moment they require some hardware restore or check, they start the automated job and immediately start taking the next person. They’re working concurrently, and they are cranking through the list.

Less than five minutes later, it’s my turn.

“What seems to be the problem?”

As I’m describing it, I notice he’s typing. So I pause and ask what he’s doing.

He tells me, “I’m setting up an order in the computer to replace your phone with a new one. I’m going to flash the firmware, and if that solves it, I’ll press cancel and give you your phone back. If it doesn’t, I’ll hit submit. Either way, you’ll have a working phone in five minutes or less.”

My mouth drops.

“While I do this, do you mind if I take another customer?”

“Uh, no, of course not.” And he calls the next person in line. I’m shocked. I’m impressed. I’m please. And everyone at the Genius Bar starts socializing with one another. It’s turning into a little party.

As he’s talking to the other customer, he’s pulled out a box, moved the SIM card from my phone into the new one, and pushes the new phone and the paper work my direction. I sign it, and he says to me, “You’re all set. And 15 minutes before your appointment was supposed to start.”

That couldn’t be right, I was there an hour early. Looks like they bumped me up in line a few times when “Last call for Mr. Noshow” was hollered out.

I did get to talk with the Genius, and he stated that Apple now allowed them to take people early, as well as work concurrently, and group similar cases together. It was clear that this removed all congestion and put them ahead of the game.

For as I was talking with him, a floor person came over and said “I have a woman on hold, she was wondering if you could do a walk-in.” The Genius spread his arms and said, “absolutely, I have nothing but real-estate” and gestured at the empty bar.

The service was friendly, prompt, and I’d give it six stars on a five star scale.

Walt gives the new Apple policies and procedures at the Genius Bar two thumbs up!

What Animal is the Rezehda?

I like to get my hair cut at the same place by the same Korean barber; it’s enjoyable because he’s learning conversational English, and I find it interesting to get an outsider’s perspective on picking up the language.

He explains, “When on break, I listen to customer.” He points at various barber chairs, “Overhear conversation. Pick up words.”

I nod, “Any other ways? Like the radio?”

“No radio. Also TV. Tried listening to Friends. No understand – use slang.”

Empathetically, I could see how this would be a problem, especially with the double meanings and catch phrases. However, he had an ingenious solution.

“Instead, watch cartoons with son. Words simple. Words slower.”

It made total sense. Shows intended for children took things at a better pace and used a more trivial vocabulary.

“What cartoons do you watch?”

He hung his head in immediate shame. “SpongeBob.”

Quickly recovering, he mentioned that he had some problem pronouncing certain animal names.

“Could you give me an example?”

“Yes! You teach me.” He then took a deep breath: “Re-zeh-da.”

“Come again?”

“RÄ“. ZÄ•h. Dăh.”

“Is that English?”

“Yes. No can pronounce.”

“Can you describe the animal?”

“Uh, it has a head…”

“That’s a good start,” I jest.

“It has craws…” (I assume he meant claws, as he made gestured talons with his hands.)

“Is it a Lion?”

“No.”

“Tiger?”

“No.”

“What’s the first letter? R?”

“No. Reh.”

“L?”

“Yes, yes! Reh.”

What’s the next letter?

“Eh.”

“E?”

“No, eeeeeh.”

“I?” By this time I pulled out my iPhone and was typing the letters out.

“Yes. Next is zeh,” and he drew a big squiggle in the air.

“Z?”

“Yes!”

I’m looking down at the iPhone. ‘L-I-Z.’ “Not an O, it’s a Z?” He affirms.

Oh, I get it — LIZARD. The moment I saw the word, he brightens. I also see what’s going on. He can’t pronounce L, and it’s coming out as R. And he can’t pronounce ‘zard’ as one syllable, so he drifted the soft a into an soft e, and added a third syllable to account for the d on the end.

We try a few times, “Lih-zard” “Re-zeh-da.” “Lih.” “Re.” “L-i-h.” “Reeeeee.”

At this point a young Korean girl, also a barber, comes over with her hand over her mouth giggling. She doesn’t speak much English, but she says Lizard perfectly.

Apparently, she learned how to say it, and “taught” him a new word to torment him all day in order to watch him go through a linguistic nightmare, knowing his determination to get it.

It reminded me of the Prell shampoo reference in Drawn Together, where Ling-Ling describes his new shampoo as his worst lingual enemy, asking how “Plerr” can give his hair such shine and body yet leave his soul with shame and embarrassment.

For the record, I saw no “Plerr” in the barber shop.

Home Improvement Goes Horribly Wrong

Anyone who knows me is aware that power tools and I do not get along. At all.

Perhaps it seems from the time my dad handed me a huge power drill with a circle cutter bit on it with instructions to drill holes in dry wall so he could blow insulation into the wall. “What happens if I hit something, inside the wall, like a wire?” was my first question.

“Then, you simply let go. I can replace the wall, I can’t replace you.” Kind words, but seconds later I was about to learn it was a lie.

The first two holes went just fine, upon the third, I hit a stud, the bit seized up, but the torque on the drill was quite strong an unexpected, wrenching my arm in the opposite direction. So, I let go, and now the drill’s free weight on the bit snapped it, as the circle blade caught the dry wall and tore a huge hole in the wall. He wasn’t pleased.

Or, there was the time I went to vacuum up grout after laying tile. When I was done, I discovered I couldn’t hear — the noise of the shop vac had damaged my ears.

Hand held tools aren’t much better.

Hammers hurt when you miss the nail.

And there was the time I went to help climb a ladder and pry off the shutters with a simple screw driver to bring them down for painting and replace them, only to discover a wasp nest behind them, dropping the shutter, which was made of fragile plastic, shattering it.

Even something as simple as attaching stereo speakers can result in a bloody call to 911.

I’ve been instructed by those closest to me that I’m to always ask for assistance, and my job is to either boil water and tear sheets (though I don’t understand how this helps, but it does keep me busy in the other room away from the project) or go order a pizza.

Given the colorful language and injuries that would often happen from the wood-shop in the basement, even as a child, I knew that despite every safety precaution, tools were cursed. I hated assisting for this reason. Supervision didn’t help. Shop classes in high school only increased the danger. And the expanded vocabulary wasn’t one I was allowed to use anyhow.

Apparently there’s some code of honor, that it’s more important the project survive than the repair person. This difference of opinion is where I and those of the trade-craft part ways.

Do-it-yourself home projects are quite possibly the sole reason I chose software development as a career profession and then pay other people to risk life and limb. I won’t even go into what happens if I attempt to change the oil in my own car.

So you think I would have instantly known better than to freely offer assistance when my friend was trying to install a new oven ventilation fixture. However, this looked pretty safe, hold the unit in place while he manually screws it in. What could go wrong? Indeed.

In all fairness, I did explain my history with tools before we started. So, it turns out he was prepared to deal with my “assistance karma.”

The first step was easy: do nothing and watch. Observing that he was putting wire nuts on exposed wires, I asked the obvious question: “Is the power off?”

The answer was no, as that would impact other places in the house, such as the kids watching television. No problem, I’ve seen it done this way before, and I took a healthy step back anyhow. And, of course, for him, there was no shock or sparks.

Now it was my turn. Lift the unit up, and hold it in place. This, of course, required a gingerly touch as the wires were still hanging out of the wall. So as I slid the unit upwards, and he reached in with his hands and pushed the wires back into the hole.

Except that his hand didn’t fit. So he grabbed a metal screw driver and started jabbing at the wirenut, which promptly fell off.

“Whoa, whoa, whoa, it came undone,” I exclaimed as I was now holding a large metal box inches from a live wire while grounding myself through the gas stove with my groin.

We lowered it, tried a better wire nut, and I lifted it back into place. We used the unit itself to push the wires back, and now I’m holding a metal housing with heavy fan in place with outstretched arms, and it’s getting heavier by the second as muscle fatigue slowly sets in. Meanwhile, he’s got to go look for a longer screwdriver. In the garage.

I’m still good for holding, but not for long, and as he’s getting the first screw aligned, I start to smell gas. Then I hear a clicking sound. Then I hear a whoosh. I look down and I see that not one, but both burners on my side have kicked on, and my shirt, which is hanging over them, has flames shooting out of it.

“Need to stop, I’m on fire.” I say this calmly, trying to suck in my gut, but can’t let go because his head is under this metal box which is going to electrocute us both if I let it slip.

“Just a moment,” he tells me, “almost go it.”

“No, no, no. I’m on fire. Seriously, I’m on fire!”

He looks over sees what’s happened, and it would have been nice if he turned off the stove and then put me out in that order. But the stove gets turned off, and he holds the unit in place, and I go to extinguish my shirt.

Checking for damage, I see none, and it must have been the gas cloud that had ignited that shot flames out of my chest.

“See, you’re not on fire,” he reassures me, but I’m still checking for scorched cloth. I smell it.

Turns out, in order to catch any fallen screws, he put a towel over the burners. We lift it and discover two large round scorched circles. Had that not been there…

And just as I’m thinking that, he pulls it away so it won’t catch fire, should I unknowingly bump the easy-lite controls again.

He got one side in and switched to the other side where I was holding it. It looked like a vertical men-only game of Twister. This time, however, he brushed against the switch, and flames shot out under me again.

“Fire!”

He quickly turned it off, “wow, it’s easy to do that, huh?”

“Yeah. Screw.”

Anyhow, we get the fixture up and stand back to admire our work.

I’m not kidding, but about 30 seconds after that, we hear a large klunk, and the think falls on one side a few inches, wedging it in at an odd angle. The glue which held the screw support had given way.

He looks at me, “lets go watch a movie.” And we give up for the evening.

Of course, the next day I come over to see how the project is going, and this time he’s got bolts coming down from the top shelves. Brilliant. He’s going to lift it and push it into position, so while he’s doing that I get to push the wires back into the wall and then guide the bolts into the screw holes.

Only, I don’t get that far.

Just as I get my hand back there, “Bzzzzzt!” and I feel a familiar electrical shock — kind of like the time I tried adjusting an old fashioned television antenna but had my bare foot touching a heating vent on the floor. Apparently those are grounded, despite looking like they sit in carpet.

I pull my hand back, “I’m pretty sure a wire nut wasn’t fastened very well.”

“You get shocked?”

“That’s how I figured out it wasn’t fastened so quickly.”

So finally tally, to get it hung, I was set on fire twice and shocked once. This could have very well been one of my smoothest projects ever.

I Have an Autograph!

From Dec 20th, 2008 through Jan 3rd, 2009 the artists at ArtKlub have art on display at the Atlanta Bread Company near the Dulles Town Center mall.

This Saturday and Sunday various local artists, including myself, got to hang out, and chat with the public. We were even pleasantly surprised by the visit of Frank Cho.

Art Klub Show

During lunch, a young lady came up to me and asked me for my autograph and pushed a pad and pen in my hands excitedly.

Now although I have drawn comics, I’ve recently taken up more of an interest in photography, which I had on display. And while I have a heavy internet presence and can be found in some technical books, I doubted either of these were contributing factors and that she was just collecting names for the enjoyment of the experience.

So, I whipped up an original cartoon with her in it and signed my name. She was very pleased.

However, I wasn’t able to return to my lunch, because her considerably younger brother came up and mimicked the request. Almost.

“Can you have my autograph?”

I smiled, “Sure you can give me your autograph!” And I pushed a blank napkin at him.

He looked down at it and asked, “What’s an autograph?”

“Do you have a name?”

“Yes.”

“Do you know how to write it?”

He got all excited, “…yes!”

“Then,” I explained, “you have an autograph.”

At that point, he was simply thrilled and went running to his sister and accounted loudly, proudly, and slowly for all to hear: “I have an awe-toe-graph!” and kept writing his name to himself in his pad.

Leaf the Red Ones

After returning home today, I hopped out of the car and saw our next door neighbor’s little girl raking leaves. Although the small child-sized rake still towered over her by a good foot, she was doing her best at the apron of the tree. Nearby was a small colorful pile.

“Make sure you only do the red ones.” I pointed at our tree, which was a solid bright orange. It was also the the only color of leaves scattered over our unraked lawn.

She looked up at her red sugar maple, which was littered in bright red and orange leaves, down at her pile, and pushed the rake away, “Why didn’t someone tell me that? I’ve been working all day!”

I quickly went inside. Mission accomplished.

Paper or what?!?

I was given an odd choice on election day…

So, I go to the polls to vote today, show my id, and the woman wants to know what kind of ballot I want.

“Paper or plastic?”

“Excuse me?”

“I’m sorry. Paper or electronic. I keep doing that.”

“Let’s do paper, it’s better for the environment.”

Garmin WebUpdater

I own a Garmin GPSmap 60CSx in order to geoencode my photography using HoudahGeo.

Garmin now has a means up updating the firmware in their GPSs by using a WebUpdater, of which I use the version for the Mac.

I Got Myself Into Trouble
In retrospect, I got myself into trouble by starting the program, it failed to detect the GPS, to which I turn on the GPS, and plugged it into the USB port. While the WebUpdater saw the device and went to update, it stayed in the “Erasing… Do Not Unplug” state for about two hours before I got brave.

What I Did, And Boy Was I Lucky
I couldn’t cancel. I couldn’t Quit. So I had to Force Quite by using Command-Option-Escape, that at least got WebUpdater to stop. The GPS was still stating “Loader Loading…” when I pulled the USB, and when that didn’t change anything, I turned off the power to it. I wasn’t so sure I was going to see much of anything when I powered it back on.

I got lucky. I turn the power back on and I was still at the old revision. Then plugged in the USB to the computer. Then started WebUpdater, which again noticed the GPS version, downloaded the firmware again, and had no problems installing it. Seems doing things in this order works just fine.

My Plans If I Was Unlucky
Over on Bill Turner’s site, he’s written an article about Fixing a Dead Garmin GPSMap 60CSx. It seems he’s learned holding down the Power Button and the Up Arrow at the same time while starting the WebUpdater software (I think he has three hands to pull this off), he’s able to force the GPS to identify itself to the updater. Problem is, according to his instructions, you have to keep holding down these button chord during the update; some comments on the blog state it isn’t necessary, and there’ve been mixed results as to whether this works universally or not.

I’m not sure I would have had the bravery to just go killing processes plain outright, but since Bill did such a nice job of providing an alternative, I felt it was worth the risk — even if I didn’t have to go that route. Thanks Bill for blogging your GPS recovery notes.

Halloween, I Got The Door

Halloween around our place is a lot of fun, and not just because we like drinking goat’s blood while standing in a pentagram. No, it’s actually because when I was little, I usually got horribly sick and had to stay at home while others got to trick’or’treat. A few times I actually went out sick, so there are some fond memories of having free run of a neighborhood late at night, collecting candy from households.

It didn’t take long, however, to realize that the cost/benefit ratio wasn’t working in my favor. The amount of work it required to collect a plastic pumpkin of glucose was pretty intensive. Visiting a grocery store’s candy aisle with a ten spot would result in more quantity and variety than I could deal with. Somewhere it became much more fun to dress up at home, make a haunted house, build a talking pumpkin, or just scare the kids silly. In later years, with more resources, we’ve had raging fires in the front yard, mist machines, special effects, and other things that draw the kids.

This year, however, was different. No costume. No special effects. No party. Not even a carved pumpkin. Just me and a bucket of candy.

And it was great. This year the name of the game was social engineering; in what ways could I mess with the kids, psychologically, to get them to accept absurd situations. It turns out the answer is… a lot.

Role Reversal


For this one, when I see the kids, I step aside and let them ring the door bell. When I go to answer it, they yell “Trick or Treat!”

I pause, pondering seriously, as if they’re offering me a choice and say, “I’ll have a Treat please!” and hold out my hand.

The look on younger kid’s faces is priceless. Some look to each other for validation. Some tentatively start to reach in their bags. Older kids challenge me on my misunderstanding, to which I offer the bowl of candy behind me as evidence of prior contributions.

Things eventually get sorted out, but they go home with stories of the nice guy who didn’t quite get how this was supposed to work.

What Was I Doing?


While sitting on my stoop, I watched as a two trick’or’treaters were running full pace from door to door, clearly trying to maximize their gains. My goal, as soon as they arrive on my door step, is to see just how long I could keep them there by interaction alone. Could I make them forget they were on a critical mission?

It didn’t take much to hear which households were the best candy givers, why they picked their costumes, what candy they liked, to eventually unrelated to Halloween topics, and ending with this year’s personal favorite, a chronological list of all their grossest personal injuries.

Eventually their parental escort came looking for them, nice for him to take so long to notice, and they actually told him to wait. We talked for another five minutes beyond that.

Clearly they were having far more fun talking than trick’or’treating. Feeling guilty, they each got a massive pile of loot before I sent them on their way. Yeah, that’s me, keeping inspired kids from earning candy.

Let’s Trade


My favorite interaction with kids is something I invented that helps me get rid of candy fast, while at the same time diversifies what I have to offer, and makes the kids feel like they’ve found the best house on the block. It works like this: I tell the kids as they approach “You can have a piece of candy, OR, I’ll make you a deal, trade me a piece of candy you don’t like, and you can take two of any you do.”

Kids jump all over this. They’re quick to dump something, anything, to get the larger take.

What’s cool is that the picky kids all out score, while the greedy kids get stumped and have to go searching for what they don’t like, if there’s anything at all. No one’s been smart enough to put done one, then pick it back up with another — which is perfectly legal.

What’s funnier is that the next group of kids will come by and snag the discards.

Horrible Flavor


Every once in a while, you’ll catch a discussion of kids coming up the walk lamenting what a neighbor is giving away. Coconut, butterscotch, and mints are flavors that should be banned in the eyes of a child, especially on Halloween.

That’s why I offer worse choices, to help them appreciate what they’ve got.

I palm some candy, and as they approach, I say absolutely gleefully, “Would you like Broccoli or Spinach?” This puts on some pressure, as they don’t want to rude, and each child picks the lesser of two evils. Then they feel something drop in their bags.

Older children realize what’s going on, and it’s a game they can join in on. Back at home, no one’s disappointed — the icky candy has turned into something wonderful.

What you’re after here to appreciate is the intonations in their tone of voice; it’s fun to hear a kid try to sound excited about bitter leafy greens. This is not what mom said it would be.

The out here, should there be tears, is “Oh, I’m sorry… I seem to be all out. All I have left is chocolate, you can have that if you want.” They’re usually pretty happy about your misfortune.

The Scariest House on the Block


This one works when there’s a group of kids. They arrive in a group, and I tell them “I’ll give you a piece of candy, but if you all scream on the count of three, I’ll give you each two pieces. If it’s real loud and I can still hear you with my fingers in my ears, then three. Deal?”

Group peer pressure gets acceptance, and I plug my fingers. At that point the loudest screams come out, and I pay out. They leave happy, if not hoarse.

However, the next group of kids are really hesitant about approaching, and hyper paranoia sets in — they’re all expecting something to jump out and scare the willies out of them. And then, …nothing. Which makes departing all the more creepy, because there has to be something lingering. Yes?

Turns out this effect was even more chilling on the neighbors, who want to know what’s going on over next door, not to mention the adults standing at the street who have the (bleep!) startled out of them when all their kids scream in unison for no perceived reason. It also adds a nice mood to the neighborhood and shrills pierce out of the darkness unprompted, apparently these can be heard the next street or two over.

Revenge on the Greedy Kid


Of course, ever so often you’ll get group with a kid who can’t keep their hands out of their candy and arrives with their mouth full. At that point I quickly start throwing out questions!

“Who wants candy, say me!” All but the greedy kids can speak, and I start dropping into their bags.
“Who wants seconds? Say Trick Or Treat!!!” The kids all scream out, and I drop into their bags.
…meanwhile, the kid with the full mouth is chewing like crazy trying to swallow, for they did not get any, because they did not answer.

Often the other kids start to run off, and I get the lone child chewing rapidly on my doorstep, trying to race through. You’d be amazed at the hoops this kid will jump through in order to catch up to what the others got. I sometimes get my best screams this way.

Dinner Time


We ordered Chinese food, so I’ve got a big bowl of noodles in my hands. When I see the kids coming, I turn my back and wait for the doorbell to ring so they “catch me off guard.” At this point, the entire dialog is visual and not a word is spoken.

I turn around, as if they caught me having dinner. Then I look down at their bags, then at my dinner, and then back at them. With all sincerity, I use a fork full to gesture offering them a little bit, with a slight questionable but compliance look as if that’s what they came knocking for. I try to look really concerned about how I’m going to divide all this up fairly and if I’ll still have enough to finish my dinner.

Eventually someone catches sight of the candy bowl off to the side. I look down at it, then at my meal, and a burst of understanding happens in a Oh-You-Want-THAT kind of look, followed by a wash of relief that they actually don’t want my dinner.

I grab the bowl and pass out treats, and at this point they are all in giggles at how I almost really messed things up.

Glass Door


Our storm door is made of glass, and if there are three or more kids on my stoop, then when I go to open it, at least one child gets trapped behind it. So, I pass the bowl in front of the kids at the opening, and then pretend I can’t see the glass and pass it in front of the others. Perhaps my door is too well polished.

By placement of the bowl, and politely offering seconds, I can keep the other kids rooted in their spot, while I keep affirming though the glass with body language that it’s okay, go ahead and take one. But they can’t.

Eventually someone will actually try, but, no, the glass is there. Only after I hear the thump do I catch on that they can’t. Then I look at the blockers in a get-moving-along glance, as if they’re the ones being greedy pushing the others out of the way; I sympathize with those who were trapped.

Amusingly, I’m never blamed for the glass door; after all, I tried. It’s the kids that were blocking their way that get the blame. If there are relations, I usually get an under the breath comment which tells me how they really feel about their siblings and this kind of injustice always happening.

Closing Time


This one works around eight o’clock in order to be plausible. A group of kids arrive, and I pass out candy to all but the last kid, looking at my watch as I skip him starting to put the bowl away.

“Uh, you missed me,” I’ll quickly be corrected.

At that point, with a straight face, I check my watch again, and say, “Sorry, we just closed. Could you come back tomorrow when we open?”

Depending on age, this gets different reactions varying from “How can you close, you’re holding a big bowl of candy?!” to “I don’t think my mom will let me.”

After a little exchange, I bend the rules and give some candy, but I ask them not to tell anyone cause I don’t want to get fired. Of course, he runs off and that’s the first thing he blabs.