Random thoughts from the fairly ordinary life of a 30-something medical informaticist
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
My 2009 Christmas Card
Well, believe it or not, Christmas time has rolled around again. The older I get the faster each year seems to go. And yet, when I look back at what all has gone on in the last year, it's clear that there was still plenty of time for things to happen. If this is your first time coming to check out one of my Christmas cards, I guess I'll say, by way of explanation, that I try to give a thorough recap of the year that has passed with a few photos and a lot of links to other blog posts and photos for those of you who want to read or see more about a specific thing. If it gets a bit long-winded along the way, I apologize, and won't be offended if you just scroll past the text and look at the photos. :) (Note: clicking on any of the photos will take you to my Flickr.com account, where, with a free membership you can see any of the pictures at full-size.)
One of the things I did plenty of this year was travel. In fact, at one point in the summer, when I did most of my traveling, I felt like had maybe over-vacationed. Maybe I was just compensating for not doing much vacationing in the last few years due to that whole finishing-my-PhD thing that I had going on. In any case, I have so many vacations to talk about this year that I thought I'd intersperse them through the rest of my yearly recap.
But first, I guess I better talk about how I was able to afford my vacations. Last year at this time, I had just accepted a position as a Medical Informaticist with Intermountain Healthcare, here in Salt Lake. I started January 5th, so I'm coming up soon on my year mark. It's been a really enjoyable experience so far. I've been working a lot on setting up a tool to let our doctors fill out death certificates electronically. When I first started it was just at a theoretical stage and now, a year later, we have a lot of progress to show and are hoping to have that up and running for a pilot test early next year. My boss and co-workers have been very enjoyable to work with and that's made the whole experience that much better. Definitely happy with my decision. Most days I work from my shared office in the basement of LDS Hospital. Random fact: the photo at the top of this Christmas card was taken just outside of the hospital near my office.
**************** Vacation Time! ********************
The first real vacation I went on this year wasn't even until the 4th of July weekend (I had to accumulate some time off before I could take some, you know?). My good friend Jon (who you might remember from last year's Spring Break trip to NYC), now goes to school at Univ. of Washington in Seattle, a place I had never been. So for the 4th of July weekend, I took a quick trip up there and enjoyed some of the fun that Seattle has to offer:
The Space Needle
Pike's Market
The Fremont Troll
Fireworks at Gasworks Park over Lake Union
More Seattle photos.
Day 1
Days 2 & 3
************************************
Even though I started working full-time in January, I still had some loose ends to tie up with my degree. In a meeting with my committee, just before the holidays last year, I got some direction as to what writing they would like me to do to get final approval on the text of my dissertation. After taking a few weeks to settle into my new job, I got back to the task of writing in February. In order to avoid some of the distractions of working at home, I found a sufficiently boring spot at the local library where I was able to to buckle down for a few nights a week and was able to get the last bits of writing finished and approved by my committee. Definitely a huge relief to get that taken care of. Then after a few, relatively painless rounds of formatting corrections with the Thesis Editor, I got everything ready and printed in time to officially graduate in Spring of 2009.
My family and a good friend (Eric Harris) joined me at Kingsbury Hall for the School of Medicine's commencement ceremonies. I know some people don't really care for graduation ceremonies, and to be honest, I have to agree that they are rather boring. However, I have always felt that commencement serves as a good moment of closure on a round of schooling. This time around was extra fun because I got to wear some fancy robes that weren't just plain black and got "hooded" as well.
Before
After
More graduation photos
**************** Vacation Time! ********************
After kicking off July with my trip to Seattle, I followed up with a 10 day period later in the month in which I went on 3 separate vacations. I dubbed it my "Week o' Vacationing 2009". The first trip of the week was a weekend jaunt down to St. George in an SUV full of friends for some extra-warm weather and to see "Footloose" at the Tuacahn outdoor theater.
Swimming at Sand Hollow
Visiting the St. George temple
Waiting for the Show at Tuacahn
More St. George photos
Day 1 in St. George
Day 2
Day 3
************************************
Around the same time that I was finishing up my writing I also went to see a doctor about some persistent discomfort I'd been having in my side. In the end that was determined to be some pain originating from the muscles between my ribs, but along the way, I was diagnosed with Type II diabetes. That diagnosis led to my making some changes in my diet (basically reducing the carbohydrates that I eat) and starting to exercise more regularly. As a result, my blood sugar levels are back within the high end of normal. As an added benefit, I've also lost around 40 pounds in the last 9 months. Dealing with diabetes continues to be a constant in my life, but it's not something that I worry about a lot right now and served as a good impetus to make some healthy changes.
**************** Vacation Time! ********************
The 2nd vacation of my Week o' Vacationing was a family vacation in Park City. George and his family came up from Texas and we got to spend a few fun days together with them at a nice condo that my parents rented in Park City near the Olympic Park. We had fun times doing Park City stuff (Olympic Park, Alpine Slide, Outlet Malls, etc) and just being together. Definitely a fun few days. Fun to get to play with the nieces and nephew, too. Ben and I were even in charge of dinner one of the days and I feel like we did a pretty great job of putting together kabobs on the grill. (Kabobs: 2009's food of the year).
Playing with Austin and Elise
Being silly with Lucy
Kabob Night
More Park City photos
Day 1 in Park City
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
************************************
Also at the end of March (March was clearly a crazy month), I moved from the place I'd been living in for the last couple years into a very nice house that a friend of mine from my ward had just purchased. By the end of my time at my previous place, I was getting worn out of being in charge of finding new roommates all the time and dealing with management who didn't really like us living there, so moving into a place where someone else was in charge of everything has been a nice change of pace. People keep telling me that now is a great time to be in the market for a place of my own, and I've started saving money toward that end, but given how nice the place I live in now is, and how much I enjoy my roommates, I really don't feel like I need to be in any big rush. I guess it's potentially something that could happen in the next year. Check back next year, I guess. :)
**************** Vacation Time! ********************
The 3rd and final portion of my Week o' Vacationing was a quick camping trip up to Yellowstone National Park. My first time ever going there, and I have to say I was pleasantly surprised. Not only did we manage to avoid any seriously bad weather (far from typical for my camping experiences), I got to see lots of cool stuff in a short span. Geysers, waterfalls, bison, elk, spectacular canyons... and had a great time with some great friends. Definitely would recommend Yellowstone to others. So many of the sites were very accessible. The roads take you very close to some beautiful sites, and then it's just a short walk from the parking lot to see them. I know some people like the feeling of being alone in nature, or of being some place that very few people have been. I was perfectly fine seeing this stuff with 400 other people, if it meant I only had to do a 10 minute hike. :)
Old Faithful
Part of a big herd of bison that crossed the road in front of us
Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River
More Yellowstone photos
Day 1 in Yellowstone
Day 2
Day 3
************************************
Yet another thing that happened in March was that I started shopping for a new car to replace my (not so) trusty 1996 Nissan Sentra. After doing a fair amount of research, I decided that what I probably wanted to get was a new Nissan Altima. After a variety of test drives and dealership visits, I was finally able to settle on a new 2008 Altima that I drove off the lot with only 180 miles. It's been really nice to have a car that I've haven't had to worry about breaking down and that has all of its parts working. So much so that I've enjoyed putting over 10,000 miles on it in the last 9 months. :) I'm finally driving a car that was built in the decade I'm driving it in, although I guess, depending on how you count the decades that might be coming to end in a few weeks.
**************** Vacation Time! ********************
In the middle of August, I embarked on a week-long adventure: a 5-day cruise to the Bahamas with my roommates and other good friends from my ward. We took a red-eye flight to Miami (that I was able to sleep through better than most) and departed from there for points southeastward. Our stops were Grand Turk (in Turks and Caicos), Half Moon Cay (an amazing private island owned by Carnival cruise lines), and Nassau (capital of the Bahamas). In addition to mostly beautiful weather and spectacularly delicious dinners, some of the highlights included swimming in gorgeous blue water, swimming with and feeding sting rays, a catamaran ride to a reef for snorkeling, and winning a collection of ship-shaped trivia trophies.
Group photo at Half Moon Cay
Sailing on the Catamaran
Some of my trivia winnings
(Many) more photos from our cruise
Day 1 of the cruise
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
Day 5
Day 6 & 7
************************************
In September of this year, I (as usual) had a birthday. I turned 31 this year, and had a fun evening of dinner and bowling with some good friends. It's a little weird to think about being in my 30s, but to be honest I mostly still feel about the same as always. I do feel good about being done with school and having a job that is satisfying and that pays well. I really can't complain about where my life has taken me so far. I feel blessed to have most of my family nearby and to have made so many great friends. When I returned to Salt Lake in 2000 after completing my mission to Argentina, I only really had 1 or 2 friends in Salt Lake. Now, I can honestly count hundreds of people as good friends, and most places I go I run into people I know.
Birthday Bowling at Bonwood
**************** Vacation Time! (Kind of) ********************
In what was my last trip of the year, I went to San Francisco in November to attend the Fall Symposium of the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA). I didn't attend last fall as I was in the midst of wrapping up my dissertation and didn't have any funding for travel, so it was nice to catch up with some good friends who've moved on to other locations, or even friends who are still here in Salt Lake, but that I don't see much these days.
I managed to find a little time to take a cable car down to the wharf one morning, and then went to Wicked one evening. Aside from that it was mostly a business trip.
Looking out the front of the cable car at Alcatraz
Me at Wicked
More photos from San Francisco
More about my trip
************************************
Now, obviously traveling wasn't the only fun I had this year. Some of the other fun things I enjoyed were:
- Being a first-time Utah Football season ticket holder. Not the amazing season we had last year, but still a good one, and very fun. They went undefeated at home, so I can at least say that they won every time I was in attendance.
- Concerts. Two concerts stand out in my memory as having been especially fun: Girl Talk & Lupe Fiasco at the U's Grand Kerfuffle, and They Might Be Giant's Flood Anniversary show.
- Photography. I wouldn't say I do a lot of photography for photography's sake, but I did get out a couple times this year to take pictures of stuff that I thought turned out nicely:
a spot in Murray where a bunch of Snow Shacks were stored for the winter
some shots of fall color that I took in Big Cottonwood Canyon
As I bring this Christmas letter to an end, I just want to comment on how truly blessed I feel. I'd be remiss to not acknowledge the hand of the Lord in my life.
I have so many wonderful people in my life that fill it with joy and fun, that even when I have minor setbacks they aren't even enough to make me feel down about things. To be finished with school (quite possibly forever), and in a job that I enjoy is a big relief and reassurance of the Lord's guidance throughout my life. Being diagnosed with Type II diabetes was a pretty big downer this year, but I'm grateful that I was able to have it diagnosed almost as a fluke, without having to go to the Emergency Room in some kind of diabetic shock or something.
Though I'd prefer to have my own family by now, I'm grateful that I've been able to make so many great friends here in Salt Lake, and hopefully I've been able to make their lives better with my presence, the way that they've done for me. A friend reminded me the other day that if I'd been married years ago, I probably wouldn't know her or most of the people I associate with now. And while I'm sure that I would know other people instead, I feel really good about how things have worked out so far and the opportunities I've had in place of having my own family.
In any case, I've probably already gone on way too long. I'll leave you with a collage of some more fun photos from the year gone by.
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you all!
Monday, December 07, 2009
Old Book, New Book #14: Atlas Shrugged -> The Dark Frigate
It's over! Our long
That said, I wouldn't say this was a "bad" book, or that, for the most part, I didn't enjoy reading it. It just didn't have a lot to make me hurry back and see how things turned out.
In reading Atlas Shrugged, I think what I will take away is a stronger conviction that governmental redistribution of wealth is not good for the country, and a bit of a change in philosophy about the wealthy. This change had already begun when, during President Obama's campaign, he would often ask if anyone in the audience made more than $200,000. Because he was only going to raise taxes on those people. Because that's too much money, I guess. And anyone who makes that much money must be a bad person and deserve to be punished. In reality, probably because there are fewer voters who fall into that group than not. (Kind of like how the AARP is going to bankrupt America's future because young people don't vote). I can understand that people who make more money can afford to pay more taxes, but a flat tax would also provide that. Anyway, the idea that taking money away from people who worked to earn it and giving it to people who didn't seems pretty unfair. I know I'm certainly oversimplifying things a lot, and I can understand there are many shades of gray here that I'm glossing over. Just trying to summarize a bit of the thoughts that I had while reading this book.
I'm not sure I would wholeheartedly recommend this book. Ayn Rand's got to have a shorter book somewhere that does a better of job of describing her philosophy succinctly. Haven't read the Fountainhead. Maybe that one does.
In any case, it feels good to have finished Atlas Shrugged. Maybe I can enjoy some lighter reading for a bit now. The next book I started is "The Dark Frigate", the next of the Newbery Medal winners that I happened to pick up last time I was at the library. Not as famous as the other two that I've recently read. In fact, in trying to find a decent Amazon.com link for it to put in the my sidebar book list (way down at the bottom), I had to look hard for a paperback edition that was still in print. Anyway, I just found it on the shelf at my local library, so if you wanted to read it, I assume it'd be relatively easy to find.
Another old one, written the year after The Voyages of Dr. Dolittle. It appears to be the story of a young man, recently orphaned who gets into some pirating adventures. Had never heard of it prior to looking at the list of award winners. Guess I'll find out why.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Newbery Foray #2: The Voyages of Dr. Dolittle
While I continue to wrestle my way through Atlas Shrugged (under 200 pages to go!), I also managed to sneak in some (much) lighter reading by finishing another Newbery Medal winner: Hugh Lofting's "The Voyages of Dr. Dolittle", which won the big prize way back in 1922. I finished this a couple weeks ago, but am just getting around to writing it up.
By way of a brief review, I have to say that this was definitely a children's book. Not much in the way of any lengthy story lines, aside from the overarching narrative of Tommy Stubbins meeting up with the good doctor, and after some brief training, taking off on a voyage across the sea. Most of the chapters of this book are a mere handful of pages, and often when a new character is mentioned in the way of "It's been so long since we last saw Chee-Chee", it's only a paragraph or two before that character arrives on the scene.
Compared to "Dear Mr. Henshaw", this one was at a much younger reading level. I was also surprised to find out that it was not the first Dr. Dolittle novel. In any case, it was an okay read.
Monday, November 23, 2009
Informatics: The San Francisco Treat
Last week, I had the opportunity to travel to San Francisco for the Fall Symposium of the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA), pretty much the largest conference of the year for academic & research informatics. I didn't go last year because I didn't really have any funding to go, and had just finished defending my dissertation and had been preoccupied with that. One of the nice things about going was catching up with good friends from school who either have moved away for work, or who I just don't see much any more.
The conference itself was enjoyable and informative as well. I feel like I'm starting to know enough that when the presentation is something interesting to me, I can pay attention and understand a lot of what is said. And I also know enough to know when something is being presented that I don't really want/need to pay attention to. Probably not the best attitude, but with 4 solid days of presentations, you have to pick your battles. In the past, I've struggled with staying awake the last couple days, but this year I only remember dozing off once. I'm sure part of that is due to the fact that the conference was on the west coast instead of the east. Getting up at 7 am Pacific Time (8 am Mountain) is much easier than getting up at 7 am Eastern Time (5 am Mountain).
As the conference goes from around 8:30 until 4 or 5 each day, there wasn't a lot of time for sight-seeing, especially since it was already dark outside by the time things were winding up in the late afternoon. I did manage to get out and do a few things. Some highlights:
More photos here.
The conference itself was enjoyable and informative as well. I feel like I'm starting to know enough that when the presentation is something interesting to me, I can pay attention and understand a lot of what is said. And I also know enough to know when something is being presented that I don't really want/need to pay attention to. Probably not the best attitude, but with 4 solid days of presentations, you have to pick your battles. In the past, I've struggled with staying awake the last couple days, but this year I only remember dozing off once. I'm sure part of that is due to the fact that the conference was on the west coast instead of the east. Getting up at 7 am Pacific Time (8 am Mountain) is much easier than getting up at 7 am Eastern Time (5 am Mountain).
As the conference goes from around 8:30 until 4 or 5 each day, there wasn't a lot of time for sight-seeing, especially since it was already dark outside by the time things were winding up in the late afternoon. I did manage to get out and do a few things. Some highlights:
- Saturday night after getting settled in, I ordered take out from the Cheesecake Factory a few blocks away and then brought it back to my hotel room and ate while I watched the Utah-TCU game through the magic of the internet.
- Sunday at lunch time, I made my way over to a farmer's market where I'd heard that I could find some good Argentine empanadas. I got one with chicken and one with jamon y queso (ham & cheese). Good times.
- Tuesday morning, I identified a couple hours of the conference that seemed the most likely to be not that interesting and headed out to do a little touring. I caught a cable car a block from the hotel and went up over the hill and down to the wharf. It was still early (around 9) so most things weren't open, and I just walked around and took some photos.
My ride
Taken at the top of Lombard Street
I really like the way this shot was framed by the front window of the cable car.
Fortuitous shot of a pelican with the Golden Gate bridge in the background.
I enjoyed watching the sea lions at Pier 39 for quite a while. Then I hiked up to Telegraph Hill, where the Coit Tower is located, and where I'd heard there were good views of the city. Then I walked down the hill, past Washington Square, and caught a cable car back over the hill to the hotel.
A sea of sea lions
This sea lion was busily defending her spot on the floating dock.
The Bay Bridge from the bottom of Telegraph Hill
Coit Tower
I like the way the city seems to rise to a (dull) point at the top of this photo
Washington Square was full of Asians (Chinese?) doing various things. Tai Chi, aerobics, martial arts, etc.
This guy seemed to be teaching the world's easiest line dance. To the "Macarena" of all songs. - Tuesday night after the conference was over, I went to see Wicked with my good friend Scott. He, having seen the show several times before, was happy to settle for balcony seats, but given my experience on Broadway seeing Phantom of the Opera from what felt like a football field away from the stage, I opted to spend a little more and get good seats. Which, by the way, it was nice to be able to get tickets at face value just a few days beforehand. Apparently San Francisco is not as obsessed with Wicked as Salt Lake.
Anyway, I ended up on the 3rd row and thoroughly enjoyed the show, which had a cast including Patty Duke and Deedee from the Mickey Mouse Club of my childhood.
Hey! It's me!
View from my seat
More photos here.
Labels:
Adventures of the Big Digital,
informatics,
photos,
travel,
video
Friday, November 13, 2009
So that's what I've been missing out on all these years
As part of normal preventive care for my diabetes, yesterday I left work a little early and headed out to visit an ophthalmologist (eye doctor) for an eye exam. One of the more crappy potential complications of diabetes is something called diabetic retinopathy where damage to tiny blood vessels in the back of your eye can result in you going blind. So yeah, hoping to avoid that. And good news, because my most recent hemoglobin A1c scores came back looking pretty good (5.8, same as 6 months ago).
Anyway, I think it's been since elementary school, or maybe my pre-mission physical, since the last time I had to look into the box and read a line of letters, and even though I don't have any complaints with my vision, I was still a little nervous that they'd tell me I needed glasses or something. Thankfully, I'm happy to report that I'm still sitting at (around) 20/20. I would have to guess that I probably missed one or two letters off that tiny bottom line, but apparently not enough to lower my score below normal.
In addition to reading small letters, I also got to prove that I'm not colorblind by reading the colored number inside the differently colored circle. Then there was a machine that showed me a red balloon first in focus, and then it blurry, which apparently checked something in my eyes somehow. Also, I finally got to do the "Which one is better? Number 3? or Number 4?" test I've always heard about. Most of the time it was clear which was better but there were a couple tricky ones in the mix.
Finally, after all that preliminary stuff, I finally got to the big show where I got to actually meet the ophthalmologist. All the previous stuff was done by an assistant of some sort. He explained that a technician would be in shortly to anesthetize my eyes and check the pressure in them, and then would put stuff in them to dilate them. Then he left and a lady came in and did just that. Then the doctor came back and looked deep into my eyes. Literally. With a magnifying glass and everything. It really didn't take that long and at the end he gave me a clean bill of optic health and told me I was lucky I didn't have to study for a big test that night.
Why did he say that? Because as part of having your eyes dilated, suddenly everything up close is out of focus. I was pre-warned that for several hours afterward I wouldn't be able to read things up close, so I was somewhat prepared for the results, but not for the weirdness of it all. It felt like when you just open your eyes, or come out of a dark room into a bright room and things are kind of blurry for a second until your eyes adjust. Except for four hours. Everything distant looked pretty normal, but then trying to read anything up close, and it was just a blur. Also, I felt like Mr. Anime with the gigantic size of my pupils.
Driving home was no problem, but when I got there, I wondered what I was going to do that didn't require reading anything for the next 4 hours or so. I had some laundry to finish up, so I got the dryer going and then went up to my room to fold stuff that was already done.
While there, I stopped to look at my computer. I could tell from a desktop icon that I had some new emails and was able to open up Gmail and see I had about 7 unread messages, but couldn't actually read anything. I tried leaning way back, or just using one eye, all to no avail. I could see shapes and stuff, but couldn't read any text. This must be what all of you people with glasses feel like all the time. Sorry.
Eventually, I was able to navigate to MTV.com and get an episode of "The Ruins" going (it's a long story full of ingenuity but probably still too boring to tell here), that I could see pretty well from back on my bed where I was folding laundry. I also took Homey (one of our dogs) for a walk, and everything looked so pretty with the impressive prismatic halos around all the car headlights and most of the lights on houses.
After the walk, I remembered that Ctrl+ (Ctrl + +?) makes text in your browser window bigger, so I went back to Gmail and Ctrl+'ed that thing until it was sufficiently ginormous that I could actually read my email. Accessibility options FTW!
By 8:30 or so, things were pretty much back to normal which was nice. But it was definitely an interesting experience to realize how much I take my vision and literacy for granted.
Anyway, I think it's been since elementary school, or maybe my pre-mission physical, since the last time I had to look into the box and read a line of letters, and even though I don't have any complaints with my vision, I was still a little nervous that they'd tell me I needed glasses or something. Thankfully, I'm happy to report that I'm still sitting at (around) 20/20. I would have to guess that I probably missed one or two letters off that tiny bottom line, but apparently not enough to lower my score below normal.
In addition to reading small letters, I also got to prove that I'm not colorblind by reading the colored number inside the differently colored circle. Then there was a machine that showed me a red balloon first in focus, and then it blurry, which apparently checked something in my eyes somehow. Also, I finally got to do the "Which one is better? Number 3? or Number 4?" test I've always heard about. Most of the time it was clear which was better but there were a couple tricky ones in the mix.
Finally, after all that preliminary stuff, I finally got to the big show where I got to actually meet the ophthalmologist. All the previous stuff was done by an assistant of some sort. He explained that a technician would be in shortly to anesthetize my eyes and check the pressure in them, and then would put stuff in them to dilate them. Then he left and a lady came in and did just that. Then the doctor came back and looked deep into my eyes. Literally. With a magnifying glass and everything. It really didn't take that long and at the end he gave me a clean bill of optic health and told me I was lucky I didn't have to study for a big test that night.
Why did he say that? Because as part of having your eyes dilated, suddenly everything up close is out of focus. I was pre-warned that for several hours afterward I wouldn't be able to read things up close, so I was somewhat prepared for the results, but not for the weirdness of it all. It felt like when you just open your eyes, or come out of a dark room into a bright room and things are kind of blurry for a second until your eyes adjust. Except for four hours. Everything distant looked pretty normal, but then trying to read anything up close, and it was just a blur. Also, I felt like Mr. Anime with the gigantic size of my pupils.
Driving home was no problem, but when I got there, I wondered what I was going to do that didn't require reading anything for the next 4 hours or so. I had some laundry to finish up, so I got the dryer going and then went up to my room to fold stuff that was already done.
While there, I stopped to look at my computer. I could tell from a desktop icon that I had some new emails and was able to open up Gmail and see I had about 7 unread messages, but couldn't actually read anything. I tried leaning way back, or just using one eye, all to no avail. I could see shapes and stuff, but couldn't read any text. This must be what all of you people with glasses feel like all the time. Sorry.
Eventually, I was able to navigate to MTV.com and get an episode of "The Ruins" going (it's a long story full of ingenuity but probably still too boring to tell here), that I could see pretty well from back on my bed where I was folding laundry. I also took Homey (one of our dogs) for a walk, and everything looked so pretty with the impressive prismatic halos around all the car headlights and most of the lights on houses.
After the walk, I remembered that Ctrl+ (Ctrl + +?) makes text in your browser window bigger, so I went back to Gmail and Ctrl+'ed that thing until it was sufficiently ginormous that I could actually read my email. Accessibility options FTW!
By 8:30 or so, things were pretty much back to normal which was nice. But it was definitely an interesting experience to realize how much I take my vision and literacy for granted.
Friday, November 06, 2009
No Ifs, Ands, or Mights about it
Just got home from the They Might Be Giants show. And. It. Was. Awesome. Ears still ringing. Voice still hoarse from singing along (and maybe a bit from lingering illness). Despite some difficulties surrounding who'd be using my 2nd ticket resulting from someone's illness, someone's under-21-ness, my own absent-mindedness and in the end going to the show by my lonesomeness. And yet, how can you feel alone when the CD you listened to hundreds of time during a formative time in your adolescence, Flood, gets played in its entirety as part of a 20th anniversary tribute show? With classics like "Bird House in your Soul", "Istanbul", and "Particle Man", and many other less known, but equally beloved, songs, Flood has always been my favorite TMBG album, so to hear them play it all was ridiculously cool. How often is that going to happen?
As Flood only runs about 40 minutes, the Johns managed to throw in a variety of other songs, including some personal favorites like James K. Polk and New York City. They also came out for 2 encores, including a grand finale version of the "Fingertips" medley from the end of Apollo 18. Great show, guys.
A few vids:
Istanbul!
Particle Man!
Labels:
Adventures of the Big Digital,
albums I love,
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photos,
video
Monday, November 02, 2009
Welcome November!
Today's Happy Monday News:
#1: Look at this next few days of weather (via ForecastFox in my browser):
You can't see the actual temperature predictions (Do you really need them?), but mousing over each day reveals a current temp of 49 (at 10:30 am) and predicted highs of 62, 65, and 65. After how cold it got last week, that's a nice prospect. Maybe Homey the Dog will get to go on a few more walks with me before I give it up due to my face freezing.
#2: It's quite possible that this weekend's TMBG show will be a special 20th Anniversary Flood tribute show where they'll play that album (the first CD I ever owned) in its entirety. Information on the venue's website would indicate so. Another website did not confirm this, so I won't get my hopes up all the way, but wouldn't that be an awesome surprise?
#1: Look at this next few days of weather (via ForecastFox in my browser):
You can't see the actual temperature predictions (Do you really need them?), but mousing over each day reveals a current temp of 49 (at 10:30 am) and predicted highs of 62, 65, and 65. After how cold it got last week, that's a nice prospect. Maybe Homey the Dog will get to go on a few more walks with me before I give it up due to my face freezing.
#2: It's quite possible that this weekend's TMBG show will be a special 20th Anniversary Flood tribute show where they'll play that album (the first CD I ever owned) in its entirety. Information on the venue's website would indicate so. Another website did not confirm this, so I won't get my hopes up all the way, but wouldn't that be an awesome surprise?
Monday, October 26, 2009
Random Thoughts on the English Language #20: Pizza Pizzazz!
If "pizza" is pronounced "peet-za" and "mozzarella" as "mot-za-rella", shouldn't the word "pizzazz" be "peet-zazz"? or even "peet-zat-z"?
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
What are we gonna do unless they are?
Just broke down and bought tickets to see They Might Be Giants in a couple weeks. I'm generally too tight-fisted to shell out the big bucks to go to concerts, but as these were only $20 (+ $6 worth of service charges) each, I figured I ought to take the chance to go see the two guys who created the first CD I ever owned.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Fotos of Fall Foliage
So, given that Saturday was a beautiful day, after lazing around the house for most of the morning and early afternoon, including reading a book on the porch with our puppy, I managed to make it up into the mountains to do a little amateur photography. I think some of them turned out pretty well, though I was also slightly more convinced that I'd like to get a monopod. Here's a sample:
More photos here.
More photos here.
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