The intellectual equivalent of a ham sandwich.

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Weekly Wacko (35)

I Am Not a Young Girl

The summer of 2008 I was on a big running kick. I ran a half-marathon.
The San Francisco Marathon was also coming up. I had decided to run the half marathon version. The half-marathon route would take me across the Golden Gate Bridge. Pain with a view, if you will.

A week or two before the SF Marathon I was at home watching a triathlon on TV (I’m the first to admit I need a life). The triathlon had me jazzed up so I went out for a nice run.
An uneven sidewalk (what am I, supposed to ‘watch where I’m going?’) teamed up with my tired legs to wreck my plans.
My right arm flew out instinctively, aha! evolution I’ll undo you yet!, and I did not fall flat on my face. But what if my arm is more of a wuss than my face?

In the fourth grade I had an epiphany – something is wrong with my right shoulder.
When I moved it a certain way something funny would happen. This I was used to. This was normal. This is just what right shoulders do. I’m perfectly normal, right?
What was so momentous about that day was that I realized maybe, just maybe, this is not what a right shoulder should do. This conclusion came at the hands of logic. The body is somewhat symmetrical.
So, then, body, why does one shoulder do something that the other does not?
Ruh roh.

At the next opportunity (probably recess) I consulted my friends.
“Ewwww! Gross! Do it again!”
As a warning message to any potential parents – this really is how fourth grade boys can think.

Here’s  a part I don’t exactly get. It wasn’t until the seventh grade when this story picks up again.
Yes, I knew starting in the fourth grade my shoulder was not normal.
Yes, I was a mama’s boy who talked to my Mom about anything and everything.
I really have no idea why this did not seem to be something worth mentioning to my mom. It’s not that I worried about boring my mom. I would sometimes tell her about my strategy in video games.

When I did show my Mom my shoulder “trick” her response was probably closer to “huh!” than “what was that!” because I didn’t see a doctor specifically for my shoulder.
Instead, the next time I had a physical (yearly for sports), we brought up the topic.
The doctor’s initial reaction was amusement. He told me (and I had not yet seen “Lethal Weapon” so I didn’t really get this) was that I could, “use that for a pretty good party trick!”
Methinks the good doctor had fun in his college days.
The doc then went on to tell me just what was happening with my quirky, fun-loving shoulder.
It was popping in and out of the socket.

Back to the SF Marathon and jogging.
I had hurt my right shoulder and all this came flooding back to me.
Did I pop my shoulder out of it’s socket? It doesn’t feel that way? Or maybe it does? Is this because I never did those exorcises the doctor told me to do?
My self-diagnosis was that my shoulder was 15% out of socket.
I called to see a particular doctor but learned that wouldn’t be possible for several months. Forget that! I changed my request, “just give me whoever … but make it as soon as possible.” I wanted to know when I could run again.
I asked for a physical because with my insurance I got one of those a year for free.

My appointment was with a female pediatrician who was roughly ten years older than me.
My thought? This could (it did) get awkward.
After I was let into the back area, where a nurse weighed me and gave me a lollipop (kidding), I began to realize ‘this isn’t worth it. My shoulder hardly hurts. This isn’t worth it.’
The colorful, eye-catching, friendly wall-paper was having the opposite effect.
I took a seat in the room to wait for the doc.
She comes in and she’s … not attractive (to me at least).
What does this mean! Was I hoping she’d be attractive? Was I hoping she’d be unattractive? Was this going to turn into a porn shoot?
“I see you’re here for a physical.”
Oh God. I try to back-track.
“Well I said physical but really it’s just my shoulder … I’m just curious about my shoulder. I just wanted to see about my shoulder. I said physical because I get one for free … but really it’s my shoulder.”
I was desperate to no longer have this be a physical but instead be just about … my shoulder.
The doc pokes around at my shoulder a bit, she asks some questions, she does the “breathe in … ok … deep breath … ok …”
Then the good doc, the professional, sits down.
She goes on to explain to me about the test for hernias, and the test for testicular cancer.
I didn’t even have these explained the first time I had these tests done – guys know they’re coming. We prefer not to dwell on it.
She’s explaining it to me in detail though. Why she’s going to put her hands in certain areas and what it’s for and how I can check for certain things myself. She tells me what my “testes” should feel like. I wanted to giggle and run away.
Here’s what I’m thinking during all this: what kind of ‘state’ should I be in?
I mean, she’s female. But, I’m not attracted to her. And!, she’s a doctor. But!, you don’t exactly like heading outside unless you’re dressed if you know what I mean. I decide it’s best to go a la David.
Then, she asks me to pull my pants and underwear down to my knees … as she BLUSHES!
Make no mistake my friends, it was a clear blush. It was funny, but also not what I needed.
It’s a bad thing when a doctor blushes before touching you in your la-dee-da spot.

After the hernia test the doctor leaves the room (presumably to laugh). She comes back and tells me some last bits of information and then she gives me a form to get some x-rays on my shoulder.
The x-rays were the icing on the cake.
The machine is moved from waist-level to my shoulder.
Waist-level.
I have yet to see the doctor again. For medical reasons. Za-Zing!!

Weekly Wacko (34)

My Trip to Bahston

Well, I’m returned from my trip to Boston! I got to hang out with Theresa and Katie, and with Theresa’s friend T.

The trip was full of good times, and a fantastic joke that emerged from it.

Unfortunately the trip ended on a low note for me, which I’m only going to share because of something I found funny about it. Monday night I got sick from some food I ate and ended up throwing up quite a bit. When I told the gf-unit about it, one of her first questions was: “have you ever thrown up so hard stuff came out your nose?”

What a gal.

I’m curious at what point she’ll be calling me and casually saying, “so, I read your latest blog post.”

Katie, Theresa and I were walking around Harvard and saw a guy selling a bunch of books on the street. Nerds that we are, we were looking at them.
Then – I found THIS gem.

Katie and I tried to out-nice each other. I said, “this would make a great gag gift for my sister.” (Or myself.) Katie said it would be a great gag gift for X (a family member she thinks resembles Selleck, if I remember correctly). I said take it. She said no you take it. Eventually she won. I won him.
Yikes?

(Yes, I’m reading a Roald Dahl book. The Twits.) Credit goes to Katie for kicking off the Selleck-fest.

Soon, we were out of control! Selleck, the grad.

Selleck, he takes out the trash.

You can’t help but get … caught up … in Selleck.

This one was Katie’s idea and this picture cracks me up.

Theresa and Selleck in some sort of Harvard-version of Romeo & Juliet? I could see it.

The next day we three Selleck-fiends headed to Rockport, then Gloucester. Pronounced “GLOUSTA!” according to the train-employees.

Selleck don’t listen to nobody.

“Bitch, please.” – Tom Selleck

You need accommodations? Selleck can be very accommodating.

Well, that’s all for now. I’ll leave you with one final, happy image. Bedroom eyes.

Weekly Wacko (33)

What’s a Blog?

Well, it’s been a while since I’ve kept up with my blog (and others that are fantastic – like in the links down and to the right … plus countless others I’ve yet to visit).

The past month I’ve been working every Friday night. How awesome is that? Tonight I tried to throw together a video to show my celebration for the lack of work I was doing, but the film editor on this computer really bugs me so I gave up.

The reason I’ve been working so hard is for a work project I’m involved in. It’s great because I’m learning a lot, and I feel like our product is pretty decent. I’m a software engineer and have been working on the database side of it. One positive/negative note is that I am working with guys my age who are much smarter than me. It’s nice because I’m learning, but not nice because I don’t enjoy feeling dumb.

This week (on Tuesday I believe) we had a meeting with our customer to prep for our final demo. There are ten of us on the team, and I’ve met all but three. Two of the three I haven’t met I’ve recently been working with a lot. We’d get home from work, take a few hours to ourselves (for me that meant Netflix and dinner) and then we’d call in to a conference number and work until midnight or 1 am. It was hellish. As far as I can tell, the other two guys are machines.

Anyhow. At the meeting on Tuesday I saw their pictures for their first time. It was very strange. I realized I had painted a picture of who one guy was – G – who I’d worked with quite a bit since the start of the project (he’s the technical lead, so I got a lot of information/wisdom/subtle chastisement from). It turns out these guys look very different from how I pictured. But more surprising than that was realizing how I had, without realizing it or intending to, pictured them.

On Thursday (5/27/2010) we have our final meeting! Yes! A demo with lots of big wigs – yikes. I’m not going to speak during the meeting, which is nice for the sake of my nerves and mental health. But it’s unfortunate because, had I worked harder and done more of what I set out to do, I think I would be speaking.

Two bright notes: tomorrow I’m going on a canoe trip with two co-workers. Next weekend I’m going to Boston with Theresa! It’s Memorial Day weekend, and I won’t have to work all weekend. A trip is nice, but honestly I’m most excited about the idea of returning to a forty hour work week. Back to my blog, and others!

Here are some random things from the past month.

I tried my first cup of coffee. This was not a desire but a necessity. I have never been as hopped up on caffeine as I was this past month. Newsflash: coffee sucks. Blech. My sister recommended I mix the coffee with hot chocolate (we have a machine at my apartment that serves up both) … I did this and it just made me angry at hot chocolate.  My semi-joke, semi-I’m being serious, line to my mom about this was: “I don’t think it’s the coffee waking me up. I think it’s the terrible taste.”

The lead tech guy, G, while coding at night had two go-to phrases which cracked me up. I’m hard on myself, but this guy is very hard on himself. And it surprises me, because he’s way smarter than me.
Line number one, talking to himself: “What is this, amateur hour?”
Line number two, talking to himself*: “Ohhh … oh!, classic, CLASSIC … classic mistake.”
*He’d also say this to others. But he’s a very nice guy, so he’d qualify that statement with, “I’ve done that hundreds of times.”

During one of the late night coding phone meetings, G had been trying to solve something for a while when he piped up,
“Can we talk about how dumb I am?” (Meaning it was probably a ‘classic’ mistake.)
Silence.
“Um … if you want.” (From the program lead.)

I remember when I worked my first fifty hour work-week in California. I felt a sort of nerd-pride. “Yeah, I worked fifty hours this week … no biggie.”

I can say, now, with that same nerd-pride, that I have now worked a seventy plus hour week. It’s pathetic because that statement actually does bring me pride. But much more than bring it brings me sleepiness.

The customer says, “boom, boom, boom.” It’s a sort of yada, yada, yada – but impatient. He’ll click around and do various things on the website we built and say, “boom, boom, boom” while he describes what’s happening.

Netflix is the devil! But I love it so good.

Oh and I’m not rich. All this overtime is unpaid overtime. Neat, huh?