I Want Out. Now.

So there I am riding back on the weekend from my neice’s house and I’ve got the window cracked a bit to let the heat out. I’ve got my hand out the window feeling the cool breeze on my hand, when, zing! I feel pelted by something right where the pointer and ring fingers meet the palm. I think I see something fling through the window but it could have been the glare on the glass.

I hate that sensation. I usually get it driving down Rt. 7 heading home — I have my hand out the window and let it glide gently on an air current. This joyful sensation is abruptly ended the moment when the car in front of me flings a small bit of debris into the air. Rocks sting the worse.

Tamara’s driving and looks over at me rubbing my hand. “Are you okay?” I look, it’s a little red, “yeah.”

“What happened?”

“Nothing,” as I continue to rub. That sure was a big rock.

“Seriously, why are you rubbing your hand?”

I’m sitting there now explaining that something smacked me and go off onto a little rant about pesky gravel placement.

Sure enough, I look down and there at my feet is a small pebble. I pick it up, eye it, and throw it back out to the comos from which it came.

Still, my hand is sore and I ponder how fast that thing was moving. There was no car in front of us. Our tires couldn’t have slung it that hard, and it seemed impossible to have shot up from the wheel well besides. And that pebble was way to small.

My mind starts rolling through other logical possibilities. I hit something that was high up. A plant? A bug? Could it have been a bug? I’ve smacked other ones out of the sky before, but not like this. This thing would have to have been a good inch long. That’d suck if it was a bee, I could have gotten stung.

At that moment, I glanced down and crawling up my crotch is a very, very, very pissed off yellow bee. It was doing one of that zig-zag dances on my pants leg, violently stinging at every direction change.

Let’s set the record straight. I’m allergic to bee stings. So this is *not good*.

When I bent over to pick up the pebble, I spread my legs to bend over, and the taughtness on the jeans kept enough space between me and the bee. However, it was working it’s way quickly to my leg.

Panic, and I’d be stung. If I sit still, I’d be stung. If I swatted it, it’d take off and I’d be stung.

“STOP THE CAR.”

Nothing.

There was no good time for discussion. Tamara was willing to pull over the car when we got to a good spot. Screw that.

“STOP THE CAR. I WANT OUT. NOW!!!”

She whipped the car to the shoulder, helping to make a point that she didn’t know what this was about and that she thought it totally unsave, and I opened the door, stepped out, flicked the bee (who was REALLY not happy about all this) to the ground, got back in the car and said “DRIVE”. Why I thought the bee might engage in hot persuit, I dunno.

Apparently Tamara had missed the bee on all accounts. From her perspective I wanted to claw my way out of a moving vehicle and grab myself.

I just couldn’t think of a way to say, “Hi, I don’t want to alarm you, but there’s a pissed off insect trying to kill me over here because I just hit it with a 35 MPH slap. There’s a BIC pen in the side door, you may want to reflect back on that episode of M*A*S*H where they had to jam it into the guy’s neck so he could keep breathing. By the way, do you think we might pull off at the next rest stop and let this poor creature free?”

10,000,000 D.C. When Dinosaurs Ruled The Girl

This weekend my niece, Madison, made an interesting request. She wanted to go see dinosaur bones.

Yes. Three years old. Her desire: dinosaur bones.

So, we drove to Alexandria, picked up James the ultimate tour guide, and headed to the National Museum of National History.

When we got there, Madison studies the exhibits. Looked at the skeletons, and was in awe at their teeth. She saw a T-Rex and was pleased to see while he had big teeth, he didn’t have hands that could grab.

When I asked her which were her favorite dinosaurs, she quickly answered, “the dead ones.”

She explained in a little more detail. Allow me to elaborate in a more adult vocabulary.

Basically the reason we had made this trek was to assure that:
1. The dinosaurs were, in fact, dead.
2. That many of them were in “cages” (which she called the glass show cases).
3. And most importantly, they were behind ropes that said “do not cross.”

With this first hand witnessing of the evidence, she could now sleep well at night, not to be haunted by the monsters she’s seen in her children’s book.

Smart kid.

Next week I intend to go visit the department of taxation…

That’s Just Not Right

Sometimes you learn about something that after you know it, you wish you hadn’t. Today I’ll be using that technique to emotionally scar those of you who feel inclined to lurk on my journal.

When Alan was little, he had one (if not more) hamsters that met with various demises. I remember loving to build little environments for each one to run though and play. They were warm, soft, and cuddly. Or at least that was my impression until one of them took a provoked bite out of Alan’s finger.

That was when my impression changed completely. No longer were these the tiny fur balls being forced into domestication, but rather little ticking time bombs of teeth. Ever since that day, I have never handled a hamster, knowing that at any moment after being lured into a false sense of security he could go straight for my jugular in the blink of an eye.

While still fascinated, from a distance, it’s been quite a while since I’ve seen anyone with a live animal that thrives on lettuce.

That is until James bought a Guinea Pig to the surprise of the rest of the clan. Henry is cute, adorable, has a racing stripe, and, I’m told, is inclined to nip on occasion, re-validating all my childhood irrational fears on heresy alone.

At work James, who I consider to be one of my top talented and educated friends, shared with me a fact that had to be utter bullsh*t.

Guinea Pigs eat their own droppings.

I’ll wait a moment while that last statement sinks in. While I do, contemplate this as well: this is behavior is regular, intentional, and necessary.

Sometimes they eat straight straight from the anus, sometimes they pick dropping up off the floor. Sometimes they steal droppings from other Guinea Pigs as they’re being produced.

Naturally, as a human you want to empathize with the Guinea Pig, and you may imagine what this would be like. You may be reaching for a tube of mental-image Crest right now.

“James, what kind of animal eats it’s own sh*t?”

“Guinea Pigs do. And it’s not sh*t.”

“What is it then?”

“It’s nutritional pellets. The process is called Coprophagy. They can’t digest more complex things, so the first pass through the system is to break it down. The second time they can digest it.”

{weird look from me}

“Seriously, it’s true.”

“James, what hole does it come out of?”

“The anus.”

“See, it’s sh*t.”

This is what physiologists call a classical case of denial. Obviously James had witnessed this feat first hand, researched it to see if his Guinea Pig needed counseling (or his *ss sewn shut), and looked it up.

Intellectually, I knew James would never say such a thing — and therefore, he had to be right about it. So, I went home and contemplated it.

You see, my mind had to formulate some way that an animal would willing eat out of it’s own b*tt like a breakfast buffet and like it.

The solution dawned on me.

“James, about that salad tossing Guinea Pig of yours…”

“Yes? All do it, it’s not just mine.”

“Fine. I’ve come to the conclusion that you say it isn’t sh*t because of what it’s made of. I say it is based on the plumbing that it comes out of.”

At that point, James whips out a book (boy, is he prepared or what!) and has me read the details. It went something like this:

“Coprophagy (eating the soft cecal feces) is vital to the good health of all cavies as it provides them with necessary nutrients. Cavies may eat the soft cecal feces 150 to 200 times in a day, usually directly from the anus. If an animal is obese or pregnant, they maybe expelled and eaten from the floor. Very young cavies may also eat their mother’s soft droppings. Some cavies have been known to snatch cecal feces from other pigs. These feces are supposedly the best ones to feed a sick cavy on antibiotics in order to reinoculate good bacteria into the digestive system. The drier fecal pellets are also used but do not contain as many beneficial bacteria.”

At this point I’m wondering exactly whether this was found in a hole in the corner book store off some dark alley, or whether animal doctors should be finding something more constructive to do with their spare time. I’m also wondering about what author would approach a book publisher and say, “I’ve got a sales pitch for you, let’s do an entire book on animals that enjoy self-indulgent *ss-munching” and the publisher who says, “b*tchin’ idea, get to work.”

Sad at it may seem, it appears the fact is true.

This raised several more questions:

1. If the pellets were coming from the same hole, wouldn’t they be flavored in such a way as not to be palatable?

2. If the Guinea Pig is going right to the tap, how does he know whether feces or pellets are about to come out?

3. And do mistakes happen?

We both contemplated that and shuddered.

Which brings me to my final conclusion, just because something’s normal, doesn’t necessarily make it right.

Many Moods of Mothers

Tonight’s commentary is a cumulation of years of observation that has been hidden in the recess of my mind.

About 3 years ago my niece popped into existence, and admittedly she had some help from her parents originating nine months before that.

I’d like to say that my sister gave up hard drugs, drinking, and smoking but I can’t… primarily because she didn’t engage in those activities in the first place. But good health wasn’t enough, she went in for ultra health. She gave up junk food, sodas, and fast food — all the staples that hold my life together. When pregnant, she even stayed away from prescription and over the counter medication.

The child turned out beautiful, free of defects that plague today’s society. She put the baby on a schedule from the start, and the baby knew from repeated behavior when it would receive food and sleep. The baby was always happy, the parents could sleep, and amazingly it was possible to retain a social life going out for dinner or even a movie — take the kid with you, but do the activity during a well predicted sleep cycle. By age one, my niece was doing sign language before she could physically talk; because she could communicate her needs and wants, she didn’t express the frustrations other kids her age did.

Consequently, I’d like to think my sister knows a thing or two about being a mom, especially after she repeated the same steps with identical outcomes when my nephew came on the scene two years later. It’s a career she’s wanted all her life.

My sister offered me a bit of advice pertaining to my own marriage. Advice I’ll share with you, reader.

“When your wife is pregnant, she will be filled with all kinds of hormones and waves of emotion. Don’t let her watch even the evening news, for if she sees a kid in a third world country starving, she projects the trauma onto her own child. Logic and reason are often fleeting. As such, always let her be right — even if her mind is changing faster than an aggressive driver on the beltway during rush hour traffic.”

I took this advice to heart. It seems compassionate and reasonable. Her body is perturbing her emotional state, go with the flow until the problem subsides on its own.

Cool.

Then I’m sitting at work, and a co-worker who’s eight months pregnant is scheduling a business trip with me. Uh, wait… pregnant… travel… doesn’t seem to affect her at all.

Then I reflect, I’ve been here for three months and she’s been the sweetest and most enjoyable person around. No signs of stress or emotionally instability.

Then I reflect further back, and I can recall pregnancy after pregnancy of co-workers over the 19+ years I’ve been working.

I’m now thinking, “wait a second… if these women can hold together composure in a stressful work environment, why can’t that common courtesy extend on the home front to the spouse?”

So, I approach my sister with the new revelation. She giggles, turns red, looks around, and finally explains that I need to understand that there’s a lot of stress being bottled up at the office and it needs to be released when a woman gets home.

My eyes squint as my brain tries to grapple with that.

“Uh, men have the same stress as women, both being in the same work environment. Exactly how does a woman obtain this get-out-of-jail card free that turns her innocent husband into a lightning rod of emotional venting?”

The response was giggles, not exactly the linear progression of explanation I had come to appreciate from prior conversations. About the best retort is, “work… it’s stressful… we women need to vent.”

Then the light bulb comes on over my head, “wait a second… you weren’t working! Where’s this stress coming from, and should it be dissipating over the whole course of the day.” …I wait for a response.

“Oops.” The snare of logic catches another victim.

So, to all those pregnant women out there… is there any truth to emotional degree experienced? And, if so, why is it women seem to be able to hold it together so well at the work-front, but the stereotypical example of the home front occasionally borders on the need for exorcism?

Batteries make us Fossil Fools: A Comedy of Errors

Batteries make us Fossil Fools: A Comedy of Errors. It started off simply enough…I also come to the realization that I didn’t turn the car off…climb into the trunk…I bought my wife a cell phone….there’s just more laughing…and things quickly degrade….

Anyone who knows my social surfing habits recognizes that when it comes to my LiveJournal, I keep up with it at least three times a year whether I need to or not. As such, I heavily rely on people informally telling me “Hey! Did you see such and such entry?” and a URL before I can drag up the motivation to fire up a browser. Consequently, it takes a pretty hefty event to happen before I’ll feel inspired enough to even post. Today was such a day.

It started off simply enough: work from home reading a small rain forest of documentation, catch up with a buddy for lunch, and drive into the office for more tree slaughterings.

I’ve come to the conclusion that there’s only one company that paints the stripes in parking lots, and that there’s only one guy who does the measuring. Furthermore, I’m convinced that he’s been using the same ruler since 1920, and that by now the ends have worn down substantially. Why? Because the width of parking spaces has been drastically decreasing over the years.

I remember when my mom used to pull into a parking space. She’d pull in, and about five minutes later of 37-point turns, we’d be set. She’d kick the door open, and it’d swing as wide as you please, leaving plenty of space for her, her kids, and a six foot sofa in tow to withdraw from the car unhindered.

Not in today’s world. Parking spaces are so cramped together that dent resistant doors have become a completely new marketing feature of automobiles, though counterintelligence has developed better edges to scrape and gouge the surfaces of nearby vehicles so you can still establish dominance by brute force and unawareness of surroundings.

Having been the victim of dents, scratches, and gouges in the past, I try to take care of vehicles parked next to me. My hope is that the returning occupant will see the lack of damage and reciprocate in kind.

To that end, after pulling into my tiny space at work, I needed to grab something from the trunk real quick. After popping the trunk and disembarking, I shut the door so that it wouldn’t swing into the vehicle next to me.

Naturally, I don’t notice until I’m standing at the rear of my car that I’ve locked my keys inside. Furthermore, as I feel hot exhaust hitting my leg, I also come to the realization that I didn’t turn the car off either.

Meanwhile gas prices are rising to $7 a gallon, and I’m slowly burning up my tank in an effort to damage the environment without the added benefit of mobile transportation.

I do the obvious, I check the locks. All locked. I check the doors anyhow. Locked. I try them again, still locked. If this were a mail slot, I would be the guy who looks down the shoot every letter sent. The windows wouldn’t budge, and no amount of coaxing was helping. Yes, I had to face facts, I was locked out by the sheer power of my own stupidity.

By this time, the sun’s presence is making itself known, and I’m starting to consider how effective a brick might be against shatter resistant glass. Instead, I decided that perhaps I could gain entrance to the vehicle by lowering the back seats from the trunk. For those of you who have Saturns, perhaps you can take comfort and security in knowing this isn’t possible.

Naturally, I had to climb into the trunk to discover this fact, making a spectacle of myself to everyone at the smoking area, the loading dock, and basically anyone with a window office on the back of the building as I almost slam the lid on my head in the process.

“Hey Herb, come on over here… you’ve got to see this! This guy just pulled into the parking, locked his doors, and now I think he’s going to lock himself in his trunk. Funny, I didn’t think David Blaine was white….”

I also tried opening the hood of the car in hopes of being able to shut the car off and disconnect the battery. Naturally, this too was a locking mechanism only available from the inside of the car. Boy, GM thought of everything.

There were other complications as well. Let’s see, first of all there was stuff in my trunk that I needed to hand off to someone at work, it was too bulky to carry around, and if I shut the trunk I wouldn’t be able to get it open again. If I left it, someone would take it. If I closed the trunk and he came out, I couldn’t hand it off. Near the same time, the four glasses of water I had during lunch decided they were nearly done visiting my bladder.

Hot sun. Couldn’t leave. Had to pee.

Solution: Call someone at work and have them come out and watch my stuff.

Number after number after number was greeted by voice mail. Know why? In retrospect, I gather they were all pressed against the plate glass windows seeing if this moron in the parking lot was going to saw himself in half after escaping from his trunk.

The next solution was to call my wife and ask her to bring a spare set of keys to unlock the car. Now, if you’re wondering why I didn’t have a spare set of key, you’d be wrong. I did have a spare key. It’s just that I locked it in the car because I put it on the wrong key chain when I had it duplicated. Dunce.

Naturally, because this was a time of great need, desperation, and perspiration, Murphy’s Law kicked in and there was no answer. But this just wasn’t your every day “not there,” it was a colossal cluster of errors. Now, if I were James Burke, I’d have to blame the following sequence of events on the way batteries store electricity. Follow this tangent if you will…

In order to be able to contact each other in emergencies, I bought my wife a cell phone. And like many people new to cell phones, she didn’t take it with her because she had no intention on placing a call. I raised the point that if she was in an accident, then she’d want to and then where would she be? Stuck, that’s what. Plus, should I want to call her and tell her I’m running late, or even to meet me for a surprise date somewhere, she wouldn’t get the message, and I’d be watching Billy Joel at Wolftrap with someone like Michele, who does carry her phone with her.

So, logic wins, and Tamara carries her cell phone. However, this causes a new problem, it never gets charged. So now she’s carrying a dead cell phone. And again, same argument, a dead cell phone is about as good as no cell phone.

So, logic wins again, and we get a wall charger, a car charger, a solar powered charger, a hydro charger, a hamster wheel charger, you name it… she could charge that phone. And charge it she did.

She charged the phone to the point where it no longer worked. But how is THAT possible?

Back when I worked for GE, I had a friend who had a laptop that died on him. He’d fire it up, and it’d automatically shut off due to no power. No matter how long he tried charging it, it always died. But it worked fine when plugged in. Aggravated with it, he got on the phone with technical support and was put on hold. A customer? In an emergency? Put on hold? No! Really. Go on…

So, being the engineer he was he figures, “I’ll keep turning the unit on when it shuts off, keep track of the count, and use that as a metric to convey to them just how busted this battery is.” And so he does. And he’s on hold for a long time. On… whir, off. On… whir, off. On, whir…off. On, whir, off. On, whirr……………….. and it stayed on.

He hung up the phone and realized the problem, which was new at the time. Batteries have “memory.” It’s like if you fill a glass with hard water to a certain level repeatedly, eventually you get a white crust on the glass at that level. When a full battery is discharging, when it gets to that crusty white watermark, it thinks “Oh, I must be empty” and tells the device to shut off. By turning on and off his laptop, he slowly drained the battery over the hazy mark, past the memory point, and it functioned until depleted.

By completely discharging, and then completely recharging, and then completely discharging, and completely recharging, and so on, the battery life actually gets extended! Plus the process wipes the “memory” from bad charging behaviors.

What Tamara had done by constantly charging her cell phone was to make the battery high-water mark so near the full mark that it was nearly unusable. After explaining the above story, she adopted the new behavior of completely discharging and completely charging. Tamara’s just great at adopting new technological procedures at my whims. Guys, if you’re looking for someone to marry on a long term basis, pick someone like Tamara. She’s got a good geek-factor she keeps hidden from the surface. Her side of the story is simply that she complies to keep me from whining.

Anyhow, battery technology has vastly improved in the last decade. It’s possible to buy batteries that don’t have this memory problem. Sure they’re more expensive, but it’s worth it. Such a battery is in her NEW cell phone. But, and this is my fault for not pointing this out to her, so she’s been adopting the discharge/charge model which before was giving us 7-9 days of battery life on a 3 day battery.

Back to the story.

Tamara’s about to head out to meet up with my parents who are heading to the hospital for a visit with my mom’s doctor. She takes her T-Mobile SideKick and plugs it in to charge because it’s completely dead. And with that, she heads up stairs to take a shower.

Walt calls her cell phone. Ring, ring… voice mail. Leaves a message. Tamara doesn’t hear the phone ring, but Mike does.

Walt calls the land line to get any human. Ring, ring… answering machine. Now I know my house is filled with people, so I leave a message saying I need someone to pick up.

Walt calls the cell phone. Voicemail. Calls the house, no answer. Cell phone. House. Cell phone. House. Cell phone. Cell phone. Cell phone. Why am I paying for all this technology if we’re not using it? Wait, that’s it! Technology shall save me!!!

This is T-Mobile. I leave Tamara an AIM message and an eMail before going back to filling her call log with panic crys from lack of sunscreen and excessive exhaust fumes. For a few moments switching to another medium generated that false sense of doing something constructive. However, if she’s not answering her cell phone, what’s the chance she’ll just decide to check email on a whim?

What I don’t know is that Mike is on the phone with a client, and the phones around him are ringing like crazy. He can’t get to them, but he can relay a message to Tamara. Or so he thinks.

Tamara, steps out of the shower, and zips off to the appointment without checking the answering machine. Personally, I check it once a month, which is why you all have been instructed to use email; no faulting anyone there. She knows the cell phone is “dead” (it’s not, but she thinks it is) and leaves it behind. Mike, looking for papers notices Tamara pulling out of the driveway. She’s snuck past him as not to disturb him.

Meanwhile, my bladder is on fire.

I call AAA, hoping to get anyone. As it’s ringing, I’m wondering whether or not piss will evaporate on a tailpipe in this heat.

“Hi, I locked my keys in my car. And before you ask, it’s running.”

(The operator holds back her laugher, but not well.) “Where are you?”

Oh, let me see… I’m in a parking lot of a new job in a building I don’t know the address of with coworkers I can’t get ahold of to ask. I thumb though some notes and give her a street address. Obviously it isn’t enough.

“What’s the cross street?”

Cross street? There is no cross street. I’m in a 2 mile wide parking lot in the middle of frickin’ nowhere, surrounded by trees. I took an unlabeled access road to get to this facility.

“You don’t know the cross street?”

“No, but if you’d take some notes to pass on to the driver, I can tell you how to get in from the major roads.”

“Why don’t you give me your cell phone number?”

Cell phone number. Great. I just got this cell phone, I haven’t memorized the number, and I’m talking into what feels like a cake of soap. “Hold please.” I’m now wondering if it’s even possible to extract the phone number from my SideKick while on a live phone call. I’m mumbling to myself, trying to navigate menus, and wiping the sweat off the LCD display that was moment’s ago stuck to my face.

Turns out, it is, but I thought the device was muted while I navigated the menus. She heard every mumbled word. When I return to give it to her, there’s just more laughing. And not the “with-me” type.

“Are you parked in front or behind the building?”

Great, my build isn’t a rectangle. It’s like a propeller blade. I have no points of references, and this thing has more sides than I can count. “Go to the front of the building and go counter clockwise, I’m somewhere in the back.”

“Okay, what is the make and model of your car so we can spot you?”

I swear I said this, “Spot me? I’m the only guy out here with the trunk up, wearing a green jacket, sweating profusely. You can’t miss me because I’ll be waving down anything with yellow blinking lights, and if that doesn’t work, look for the guy standing in a pool of his own urine.”

“Make and model, please.”

“Uh, Saturn.”

“What model?”

“I don’t know.”

“You don’t know the model of your car?”

“It’s silver. Does that help?”

“What year?”

“I don’t know. Look, I’m a programmer, I don’t know jack about cars.” Meanwhile I’m circling the car for a model number, a name, a year. Nothing. Boy, those Saturn folks sure can keep you in suspense.

Before I can offer up something like a license plate, she asks, “Did you buy it recently or several years ago?”

I have no idea. Full bladders and excessive sun exposure will do that to a person.

“Look, ” I said, “you get a truck anywhere near here, and I’ll talk him in on the cell phone. If I see a truck, I’ll wave like a wild man. But honestly, I’m look at about 10 thousand cars right now, many that look identical to mine. And before you ask, they aren’t labeled either.”

She thanks me, says a unit is dispatched, and in 45-90 minutes, I’ll be set.

Meanwhile, I’m trying my parents who haven’t heard from Tamara. My thought is, let them meet up with her, and give her the message.

After some time, this does happen, and things quickly degrade into a “if you get here, AAA wastes a trip; if AAA gets here, you have no cell phone for me to send you back (and I didn’t want her circling forever — given I was in the heat, I was not going to pass up the airconditioned building that she couldn’t enter); if she borrowed the cell phone, she’d have to make an extra trip to return it.” Heat delirium prevented me from dawning on the fact I could cancel the AAA call until much later.

Much of the rest of the time was waiting and getting a light suntan.

Eventually, things did work out. Tamara met up with them at the hospital, they lent her my dad’s cell phone, and she got to drive around in the parking lot several times before she called me and I talked her in. Keep in mind, she knew where she was going.

I called back AAA, thanked them for trying, and canceled the dispatch. They were pretty quick with it, suggesting that no assistance had actually been dispatched. Another game AAA plays from time to time. (Always ask your emergency help person when they got the call. You’ll be surprised it usually is about 10-15 minutes from when they show up.)

About 3 hours after this had all started, I’m back in the car.

Anyhow, it was my own fault… perhaps next time I’ll just ding a stranger’s door and save myself the aggravation.

Original post at http://whiskeyrivers.livejournal.com/10445.html

Marn-teenie, on the rocks

This morning as I was leaving to go to work, I heard the sounds of a fiery vortex annihilating the world coming from my living room. It was pretty early for this to be normal, so naturally, I went to investigate and see what all the shouts of terror and desperation were about.

Turns out Marni was sitting in her red full length, non-skid closed feet, zip up from the front, flannel pajamas watching the movie Antz. It was the scene with the magnifying glass.

She was so engrossed in the movie that she didn’t notice me enter the room. I thought I’d keep it that way and leaned over and softly kissed the top of her head and started to leave the room to head to work unnoticed. Or so I thought.

Marni turned, looked up, smiled, and said “Oh, hi!” And as I waved bye-bye she said, “No..! Zudha!” Which, as any Lemony Snicket fan knows, means “Hey, you forgot a to take a drink to work. Let me get one for you.”

Marni slid off the couch and went over to the little refridge and, completely unprompted mind you, grabbed two gold Cokes for me to take. We placed them in a little white plastic bag, and I said thank you, and she nodded her head with great satisfaction, adding confirmation “Zudhas. Yes.”

Thinking my Jedi training was done, I got another “wait!” from her as I was putting on my jacket.

Marni reached down to her own hand, slid off a little shinny plastic ring with a green plastic gem, handed it to me, and said clear as a bell, “pinky.” She then pointed to her pinky, then to me, just in case I didn’t get the message.

She wanted me to put on her green ring and go to work with it.

Marni obtained her Green Lantern status from church. The ring has recently been her most prized possession, and she won’t let her brothers touch it, much less look at it. For her to part with such a treasure… well, I doubt it’s possible to put into words.

I slid the small ring onto the first knuckle of my pinky. Marni smiled, then she got the front door for me and gave me a hug and a kiss, waving goodbye as I left.

I can’t help but think there’s so much to left learn about relationships from actions of a three year old.

Which way is up?

We all seem to seek some kind of moral compass from time to time, one that directs our actions and provides us validation and comfort. However, what I need is a physical compass it seems.

Anyone who knows me recognizes that I have a horrific sense of direction. It’s for this reason I don’t venture into D.C. all that often, I avoid major cities, and I carry a plum bob with me so I can tell which direction is down.

I’ve tried to figure out why I experience this disorientation, and have limited it down to at least three good candidates.

One, my attention usually gets focused on details about what’s happening around me. At any given time I’m fairly good at knowing the relationship of objects near me; how they orient to the global baffles me. I rarely think in terms of a fixed environment.

Two, I over generalize turns in roads; for instance, I know that *I* made left, a right, and another left… however when the road starts doing little bends and subtle curves, I neglect to take them into account.

Three, that gland in your brian that is responsible for maintaining direction hasn’t developed nearly as well, perhaps giving way to other attributes like charm, good looks, and modesty. I’ve heard that people with fantastic senses of direction actually do have some part of their brain a little larger than average. I must make up the compensating half of the population.

I wish I could say for certain that one, or even any combination of those things, accounted for my inability to know which was is North.

It astonishes me that people like Danny point through a thicket of trees and say “it’s this way” and several miles later, there we are.

I view one-way streets as fowl play in cities. As such, when I went to Chicago, I did most of my travel by foot. You’d think that would have helped, but it didn’t.

A friend of mine pointed out “it’s a big grid, you can’t get lost!” (Oh how I proved HIM wrong.) “See,” he says, “this way it’s numbers, and this way it’s letters, and here’s the origin.” “Great,” I’m thinking, “so when I’m standing at M and 27th there’s actually FOUR places with the same name.” To which he tells me just walk one way or the other to see which direction to go. Okay, think about that. Fine, now I know how to get back to the origin, but at that point I have NO point of reference. Like the man who built his home on the north pole and all walls face south. Thanks. I’m just supposed to magically know what quadrant I’m in? “Hmm, am I bleeding and my wallet missing? Guess I can rule out South-East.”

Perhaps I’m just lacking some boy scout trick. I know the sun rises in the east, and sets in the west. A lot of good THAT does for me when I have no idea which direction I need to be going. I don’t seem to need clouds to hamper me. At night time, I look up to find the North star, but aiming for the brightest point of light, I follow the moon like a month drawn to flame. I have no idea where that star is.

Maybe I get lost in too many details. For instance, when I pull out a compass, I get anxious over the little things. “Hey, magnetic north is not true north!” and will this affect me? Or, “magnetic north wanders” and I can’t follow a moving target. And of course, there’s the big worry, “has the Earth’s magnetic poles flipped again and am I now heading south when I should be going north?” The anxiety is too much to bear.

Don’t even get me started on highway signs. I can’t count the number of times when I’m trying to head to some place and the sign simply says “Winchester” … like I’m supposed to know if _my_ destination is before, after, or some turn from this arbitrary place. I want a sign that says, “Yo! Moron! You’re heading North on I-81 at mile marker 320, the next place to pee and ask directions is in 14 miles, look for the big yellow M.”

So, how do you guys do it? Are there little signs by the side of the road I’m missing? Do even numbered roads go one way and odd another? If so, why do maps show squiggly lines? Am I supposed to put a stick in the ground and make a sun dial, and does this work at night with a flash light (my shadow never moves).

Seriously, how do people like Rob, Alan, and Danny just “know” where they are at any given moment and which way is the escape route?

Kisses, No Hugs

I feel it only fair to recount some more post-Christmas experiences.

Personally, I discovered that while it’s better to give than to receive (a lesson sometimes forced on you by circumstance) that it’s even more rewarding to watch a child open Christmas presents.

Mind you, on the Eve of Christmas, my brother and law and I were in the attic above his daughter’s room, stomping on her ceiling, yelling Ho Ho Ho and ringing bells. Meanwhile downstairs Santa was adding to the booty.

Madison, when questioned the next morning, stated she heard nothing which disturbed her from her sugar plumb dreams. It’s statements like this which make me wonder I’m instructed to “pee as silently as possible” in the middle of the night, or why the television’s volume is set to negative four. Anyhow, I’m sure there’s good reason, but on with the story.

Somewhere under the pile of presents the tip of a nine foot Christmas tree was trying to peek out. Madison kept walking past the presents, and it was unclear to us if she knew what to do with them. However, once mom dropped the green flag, she turned into a child sized woodchipper.

Quite the expert at unwrapping, not only was she able to unwrap her presents, but those she delivered to us, and a few that weren’t. Admittedly, none of us seemed to mind.

Slowly, but surely, the west wall of the house became obscured, and in it’s place a toy department looked like it was starting to open. Eventually the sight became so overwhelming that Madison just got a dazed look on her face. Could it be that she was truly probing the depths of infinity by exploring the pile surrounding the tree?

I have to say, I took more joy in watching her go through her stuff than I did with my own gifts. Her face brightened with wonder and amazement at each pulled ribbon or torn box.

Finally, when all was said and done, we went to eat. However, Connie pulled me aside to witness something amazing. There, in the living room, with brand new wonders all solely for her enjoyment and pleasure, Madison sat instead at the candy jar. Not eating the little Hershey kisses, but playing with each foiled kiss as if it were a doll.

Funny how that 5.1 Dolby Stereo and wide screen digital TV was so close in our grasps, if only we all had the sense to buy a $1.79 bag of chocolate instead of huge hunks of plastic labeled Playskool.

The Surprise Gift from the Stork

Every once in a while, the sequence of events turns unexpected and delivers a message from the universe that you weren’t expecting.

Such was this Christmas.

Madison, my three year old niece, approaches me with a small red squishy present. So, like many of the others, I start opening it while in the middle of conversation with those around me.

My conversation stopped as my mouth dropped open.

Inside was a baby outfit.

A blue and white top, with dark blue pants. It was tiny.

Tamara just sat there smiling at me, as if she was clueless.

I turned the package over to see if I had gotten the right gift. Across the bright red package were written the words: “To Walt, Love Red. Part III”

I pulled out the baby clothes and they were so tiny! I said to Connie, who was passing out gifts from under the tree, “I think I was supposed to get parts ‘I’ and ‘II’ first.”

The news hit me like a bomb shell.

Connie started rummaging, and I looked over at Tamara torn between surprise and excitement.

That’s when my mom calls across the room, “what do you got there son?”

I grinned. “Baby clothes!”

Tamara looks at me and the innocent look on her face is still there, only now it’s mixed with confusion.

“Those are Erich’s,” my mom adds. “Why did you open them?”

I looked down at the wrapping paper in my lap. “Well, one, Madison handed it to me. Two, it had my name on it. Tamara?”

Tamara gives me this “don’t look at me” expression, and turns to Paul, my dad.

He takes the wrapping paper and flips it over. “See, it says Erich.”

Apparently, my parents collected the wrapping paper from *last* year’s Christmas, and wrapped gifts with it this year, not checking to see if the paper was already addressed.

Well, I immediately forfeited the gift to baby Erich. However, the emotional aftermath stuck around for a while.

While Tamara and I aren’t expecting kids, I now know the feeling I’ll experience should she ever decide to surprise me in similar manner.

I always liked to know if God has a sense of humor, and this was the best Christmas “gotcha!” I could have ever asked for.