Month: November 2002

  • Foxtrot rocks. I laughed my ass off when I saw today’s Ellen Feiss parody.

  • I feel like Forrest Gump. These are my magic running shoes! I thought I’d take it easy today, seeing as how I haven’t been to the gym in nearly a week and I’m still wary about my back and my Achilles tendon. I figured I’d just do a mile or two and see how I felt. Well, I felt great! I breezed through the first mile and just kept going. I ended up shaving another 15 seconds off my 5K time (38:15). What’s more, I cut way down on the walk breaks. (I took short breaks after each of the first two miles, and then two more during the last mile and a bit.) And my back didn’t hurt at all! Usually by the second mile it’s practically spasming (is that a word?), but today I didn’t have to stop to stretch it at all. Hooray for the new shoes!

  • Fun Flash Game O’ The Day: Toboggan Jump 2001. I made it up to the bonus round but I kept setting my team on fire. How well do you do?

  • Hey Hoosiers! Fort Wayne got mentioned on Slashdot! They’re reporting on how DeBrand’s chocolate company is fighting back against an unscrupulous e-commerce patent lawsuit. They even linked to the News-Sentinel‘s story. My sister writes the obituaries for them! I’m two degrees from the Slashdot front page! (Hey, it’s closer than I ever got before.)

  • Happy birthday to my brother Anthony, who turns 20 today! I hope those Boilermakers show you a good time.

  • Does anyone else think Mariah Carey sounds legitimately insane? (Scroll down.) Seriously, who calls people “lambs”? Crazy people, that’s who.

  • The Herald is running a good article about fan fiction. It starts with a sample of Harry-Draco slash, so I expected the tone to be pretty hysterical and anti. Instead the author explains the origins of the whole practice and of slash in particular. (It was all about Kirk and Spock in the beginning, baby.) She does a great job of explaining the various theories about why people write fanfic, even relating it to folk traditions that go back as far as The Iliad. The only complaint I have relates to a few minor misspellings. But come on, anybody who’s done their research on this stuff should know it’s Sunnydale and Dagobah! 🙂

  • I forgot to mention that I finally got my new running shoes yesterday. These are the ones I got. As expected, I didn’t get the cool scientific high-tech fitting they show in the commercials, but my salesperson was reasonably knowledgeable and these seemed like a good choice within my budget. I’m off to the gym to try ’em out!

  • AIDS Memorial QuiltAs part of the ongoing Gay Games activities, the Sydney Convention Centre is displaying the International AIDS Memorial Quilt this week. I went to see it today. Where I come from, quilting commemorates happy events: births, marriages, birthdays. I was curious to see how it could be used to memorialize a death. I’ve never known anyone with AIDS (though one of my best friends in college went through a scare and had to get tested), so I didn’t expect it to have that much impact on me. Within five minutes I was choking back tears though. It’s impossible not to. It’s not that the quilts are sad; in fact, most of them are cheerful celebrations of people’s lives. It’s just the sheer number of them, and knowing that each panel (and there had to have been over 1000 that I saw) was put together by friends, families, and lovers trying to come to grips with a life cut short. As I walked along, I marveled at how many of the tributes were for white thirtysomething men. I’ve heard gay men lament that an entire generation has been lost, but I didn’t really understand what that meant. And yet they didn’t all fit the stereotype – there were women and old people and young people and even little kids. It was just heartbreaking stuff.

    I liked seeing the different ways people chose to commemorate their loved ones. Some just had a name and a date, while others actually attached items that were important to the person (teddy bears, jean jackets, even a CD). The volunteer assured me that I could take pictures, so I snapped a few of some of the panels that stopped me in my tracks. You just wouldn’t believe the creativity and work and love people have poured into this project. (The last one is for an eight-year-old boy named Troy. The pictures around the border were drawn by his second-grade classmates.)

    AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel   AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel   AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel   AIDS Memorial Quilt Panel

  • No Friday Five this week. I glanced at the questions and saw they were all about religion, and as my hangover is still raging from last night, I’m in no shape to discuss weighty theological matters. So to paraphrase Buffy, think of something cool and pretend I said it.