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.

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.”

Chase Me, Pervert

A cute little girl asks me to chase her… so, I do. Next thing I know, she’s running to an adult for protection. D’oh.

So I’m visiting my sister’s church, and after the service I go into the nursery to see if she needs help cleaning up. There’s one little girl left who’s about two years old and cute as a button; she takes an instant liking to me, sharing with me her impression of a lion right after accidentally bouncing a toy off my head.

The adults clean the room and my sister says she knows the parents and scoops the kid in her arms, heading back to the sanctuary to find them. The little girl waves to me playfully as she’s carried out the door to come join them.

When we get to the destination, there’s still a lot of people standing about and having conversations. My sister puts the little girl down who then looks up at me with doe eyes and says “Chase me!”

I tell her I’m tired. But, she insists, “Chase me!”

Fine. I take a false step toward her, and she squeals in delight and goes running down the aisle a few steps before she notices I’m actually not in pursuit.

Stomping her little foot, she declares, “Chase me!”

So, complying, I start to chase her at a slow pace where she’s sure to get away safely. She’s giggling and having the time of her life. She turns the corner, looks over her shoulder, and sees me.

“I’m gonna get you…” and I wiggle my fingers at her. She grins and runs off, with me slowly following.

Then the unexpected happens.

She turns the next corner, goes running up to some set of couples in a post-service conversation, and declares “He’s chasing me! Protect me.” Next thing I know, they’re putting themselves between her and me in a very “I need an adult” kind of manner. I quickly discover that this is one of the pastors’ daughter. While, I, on the other hand, am a stranger that no one at the church recognizes.

Great. Just great.

“She told me to…” I start to explain, and now it’s clear that it’s my veracity that is being tested. The fact that people have cell phones in their hands and 911 on speed dial isn’t helping.

That’s when I see my sister and the pastor who’s the father having a really good laugh at my expense across the room.

Once the group saw that, and joined in, the little girl’s asylum was forfeit; now the chase was real.

My Kid Can Talk

The extent one dad will go through to brag about his kid…

So, I’m leaving Rita’s of Ashburn, and outside there’s a dad holding on to a very young child who’s trying to escape his arms to crawl on the table to go after the colored iceies. He, meanwhile, is boastly bragging to the group of people at the table with him how smart his kid is.

“Well, my kid isn’t even one, and he can talk.”

The other members of his group are rolling their eyes and shaking their heads.

Then, suddenly the dad, barks a command at the kid, jolting everyone – “TALK!!!”

The kid, who’s reaching for a red slush freezes in place, silent, unsure if the appropriate response is to burst into tears at being startled.

Then, as if on delayed command, the kids speaks. One word softly: ‘ow.’

Completely seriously, he exclaims, “There, you see! I told you he was smart.”

As I’m stepping off the curb, I hear someone else at the table say, “Dude, come on. First of all, that’s not even baby talk. Second of all, I saw you pinch him.”

Long Trip To The Playground

Just for fun I’ll give her a word problem that will bug her all week: “So, how many days is 200 hours?”

My visiting niece expresses she wants to go to one of her favorite playgrounds, so we hop in the car and I take a new route so she won’t recognize the place since we’re approaching it differently. I want to see how long it takes before she catches on.

Turns out, I was the one that got the surprise.

I park the car, and we get out and start walking along a black path towards the playground.

“How looooooong to do have to walk?” she asks.

At my height, I can see it. “About a minute.”

“What if it’s two minutes?” she asks.

“What if it’s an hour?” I retort.

“What if it’s two hours?” she counters.

“What if it’s one hundred hours?” I escalate.

“What if it’s two hundred hours?” she throws back.

We’re almost to the playground, so I figure, just for fun I’ll give her a word problem that will bug her all week.

“So, how many days is 200 hours?”

She pauses, looks up at me. “Good question.” She puts her finger on her chin, and immediately answers “Eight days and eight hours?”

I do a double take. “Uh, that sounds about right.”

And at that point she sees the playground, screams “Come on!” and breaks into a full run.

I take a more leisurely pace to cover my thought process. “Let’s see 24 into 20, nope gotta do the whole thing, 24 into 200, wait, 10 is too much, 9? That still feels high. She said 8, let’s go with that, 8 times 24, ok, ok, 8 times 4, that’s 32, okay, carry the 3, 8 times what was it, yes, 2, ok, 14, no 16, dumb Walt, dumb, ok, 16 plus, what was it before, 24, no, 32, wait, carry the 3, 16 plus 3, that’s 19, what was in the last one’s column, 32, ok, 2, alright 192, then I need to what, subtract that from…”

At this point I’m concerned because this little girl just did lightning math in her head without preparation, and I don’t know if she’s going to be able to understand the concept of explaining the thought process that happens in one’s own head. Figuring out how she did this is going to bug me all week.

I was pwned by an 8 year old.

Yes, it’s true. I was pwned by an 8 year old.

I went to visit my niece this weekend; we were out in the court to try her new Estes Hydrogen Fuel Rocket.

This thing is amazing as it is educational. It splits water into hydrogen and oxygen, and then electronically ignites the gases in an enclosed space, sending a rocket soaring into the air 200 feet or more. No special igniters. No solid fuel cells. In other words: safe, reusable, fun.

Well, right in the middle of the launch sequence, she looks at me and asks, “is that your phone ringing?”

I was pretty sure I had my phone on vibrate, but I pulled it out to double check. “Nope…”

Before I could continue, she said, “It must be mine,” and she pulled out a cell phone from her back pocket, nods that it was her, opens it, and excuses herself to take the call, stepping back toward her driveway.

Meanwhile, the rocket was still bubbling and the launch pad was spewing out verbal facts about Hydrogen.

But I wasn’t paying attention. I was trying to figure out if she had her mom’s cell, but she didn’t. It certainly wasn’t a toy. And at that point, I’m pondering between the wisdom of giving a child a cell phone to call home or be reached, versus the certain insanity that would result come billing cycle if a child didn’t understand cell plans.

She comes back, closing the cell phone and putting it in her pocket, “it was my friend; she was letting me know she’s has a sleep over. Where are we at in the launch?”

I had to pause, we weren’t at the launch phase yet, “Uh, maybe another minute.” I was still thrown off guard that she was that entrusted.

Then I got to thinking, why don’t I have her number? Or why doesn’t she have mine, for that matter.

“What’s you number?” I asked.

“Huh?” She shrugged. “I dunno.”

Ah! Perhaps that what the parents did. They got some special plan where she can receive inbound calls or something. Now I was determined to figure out what it was.

“Do you have my number in your phone?”

She thought for a moment. “No, I don’t think so.”

“You want it?”

“Sure!”

I pull out my cell phone, retrieve my number and show it to her.

“I don’t know how to add it to my address book.”

Fine, what I was really after was her number. I’d get her to call me, caller ID would save the number, and I’d save it.

“Can I get you to call me.”

“Ok.”

She looks at my number, types it in, and holds the phone up to her ear.

My phone’s dead and lifeless.

“Ring ring.” She says, waiting.

I’m still waiting for the call to connect.

“Ring ring.” She’s looking impatient.

Still nothing.

Before I can deduce that perhaps she misdialed the number, she starts giggling. “Why aren’t you answering?”

“My phone isn’t ringing.”

“Yes it is, I’m saying ‘Ring ring’.”

Then it hits me, her parents gave her a dead cell phone to play with. And at this point she realizes I thought she was serious the whole time and bursts into laughter at my foolishness.

“I thought you said you had a cell phone!” I exclaimed, trying to dig myself of out the trap with a logical justification.

“I do,” she said, “my parents gave it to me.” And with that, I realized I’d been set up from the beginning.

She hit the fire button, and the rocket shot upwards with a loud bang, startling me. I had been paying more attention to the phones than the rocket. Clever kid.

Never Visit the DMV Again!

I looked down at my license, jumped in the air, and clicked my heels. Why?
I WILL NEVER HAVE TO VISIT THE DMV EVER AGAIN!!!

When it comes to describing the DMV, Dane Cook’s description perhaps does the most justice.

That said, I went in to renew my license today. It was my third try.

The first time I went to the DMV in Sterling, and it had a line of people wrapped around the building, despite the website saying it was a 21 minute wait. So I threw in the towel.

Yesterday, I took off work to go visit, only to discover that they were closed on President’s day. Something about the empty parking lot should have clued me in.

Today, I went to the one in Leesburg, VA, and was quite surprised to find the parking lot was pretty sparse.

It seems the advice of the day is wait until the day after a federal holiday, then go to the DMV. Your co-workers will be putting in face-time immediately after a holiday, and that’s enough to thin things out in the morning.

As I got there, there was a lady in a leopard coat trying to pull her huge SUV out of a parking space, but was having problems turning the steering wheel one handed while she talked on the cell phone. This just cements what’s wrong with drivers these days.

As I entered the building, a kid walked out cursing he hated the place.

But my experience was much different. I have to give the DMV credit where credit is due, and don’t think saying that doesn’t leave a bitter taste in my mouth.

I was second in line at the Information center, and with two windows open was seen immediately. I got my number, and no sooner than it was literally in my hand, several windows down immediately called it. The information person walked me to the correct window.

All I said was “I’m here to renew my license and possibly get a vision test,” and instantly I had a form in front of me, highlighted fields, was handed a pen, and I filled in out in 30 seconds. The vision test was immediate and consisted of reading 12 characters and detecting blinking LEDs. Done. Passed. Finished.

I handed over a crisp $20 bill, got a receipt, and was told I’d have my picture taken in a moment. I barely had time to take my coat off. The picture was digital, and therefore quick. The license was printed and handed to me, and I was out before I knew it.

I then looked down at my license, jumped in the air, and clicked my heels. Why?

I WILL NEVER HAVE TO VISIT THE DMV EVER AGAIN!!!

The renewal date for my license is 2013. And we all know the world ends on Dec 21st, 2012.