Archive for November, 2007
graphic design tools
0In the world of graphic design, nothing can beat Microsoft Paint. Hah, you say? Really? This is the best tool ever made. Forget Illustrator, Photoshop, and InDesign. MS Paint is IT.
It says so right here.
This made me laugh so hard that I just had to share it. I love how the actors pull it off and have such serious demeanors. Or…maybe they really believe it. Heh heh.
ugh…cute
0I don’t typically go for the kitty is cute kinds of things. Cats are ok. Don’t get me wrong. I’m just not a big cat person and I would choose a dog over a cat anytime (and not a froo-froo dog, either…has to be medium to large-ish).
This, however, is cute. I know. Cute. On a Monday morning. Ugh. But really. It is.
Cute, that is, until the cat goes for the JUGULAR. Sheesh.
found via cute overload
tweet tweet for 2007-11-25
0- had a great day decorating the tree and putting up other decorations with my 5y.o. nephew & 3y.o. niece. tree is bottom-heavy but great. #
- [daily photo] prepare http://tinyurl.com/2b6l5o #
- working on defense presentation #
the raspberry room
0american life in poetry: column 126
by ted kooser, u.s. poet laureate, 2004-2006
The British writer Virginia Woolf wrote about the pleasures of having a room of one’s own. Here the Vermont poet Karin Gottshall shows us her own sort of private place.
The Raspberry Room
It was solid hedge, loops of bramble and thorny
as it had to be with its berries thick as bumblebees.
It drew blood just to get there, but I was queen
of that place, at ten, though the berries shook like fists
in the wind, daring anyone to come in. I was trying
so hard to love this world–real rooms too big and full
of worry to comfortably inhabit–but believing I was born
to live in that cloistered green bower: the raspberry patch
in the back acre of my grandparents’ orchard. I was cross-
stitched and beaded by its fat, dollmaker’s needles. The effort
of sliding under the heavy, spiked tangles that tore
my clothes and smeared me with juice was rewarded
with space, wholly mine, a kind of room out of
the crush of the bushes with a canopy of raspberry
dagger-leaves and a syrup of sun and birdsong.
Hours would pass in the loud buzz of it, blood
made it mine–the adventure of that red sting singing
down my calves, the place the scratches brought me to:
just space enough for a girl to lie down.
American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright (c) 2007 by Karin Gottshall. Reprinted from “Crocus,” by Karin Gottshall, published by Fordham University Press, 2007, with permission of the author and publisher. Introduction copyright (c) 2006 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.
tweet tweet for 2007-11-24
0- @textbench That’s just bad luck. We need the snow so bad but when you’re moving? Argh. #
- @textbench I’ve done those kinds of moves myself. Just be careful not to slip. #
- [daily photo] serious lines http://tinyurl.com/2yn6gl #
colors, fonts, and styles
0
What do colors, fonts, and styles say to us? In politics, as well as on our blogs, in our photography, and in our presentatio at work (or school), these elements matter a great deal. If they matter so much, why do so few of us give them the respect they deserve?
The New York Times has a GREAT editorial about the differences and impacts in fonts, colors, and styles in the U.S. Presidential race.
found via .viz
tweet tweet for 2007-11-23
0- [daily photo] ready http://tinyurl.com/yo6v7x #
being family
0I have a hard time being around strangers or large groups of people. It’s incredibly stressful for me. If I know that is going to
happen, I don’t usually go to a function. I will avoid them, give excuses, not go. This time, though, my brother said he was excited for me to spend Thanksgiving with him at the fire station he was working at. If for nothing else, I had to go because of that.
I got there after a two hour drive and my brother wasn’t there. His engine had just gone out on a call. Ugh. Now I’d have to hang out with people I didn’t know and try to feel comfortable. I’ve had to do that at other stations and it was so uncomfortable.
I shouldn’t have worried this time. These guys were awesome. They welcomed me, started giving me a hard time right away, and made me feel like they had known me forever. They were just like family.
My brother’s engine came back and I was greeted with a big hug by one of the guys who has known my brother since the Academy. I watched football for a bit with them (even though I know next to nothing about football). We talked baseball (talked lots of smack about the Yankees, heehee). We watched videos by Jeff Dunham (I showed one yesterday). One engine got a call and they had to go out. Then the rescue got a call. That left 5 of us in the station to finish up dinner. I offered to help but was told to relax. Ahem. Four guys in the kitchen. And they were hilarious, especially when trying to figure out how to make stuffing.
As the other engine came back, a man wandered into the garage with chest pains. My brother was out there helping him so I wandered out to watch. It was cool to see them in action. They had to call for a rescue since the station rescue truck was out. By the time the rescue got there, another pulled up moments after (so there were two rescues in the garage). They pulled out the bed (which was a cool bed and runs on a DeWalt motor) and loaded the man up and took him away.
Just in time, too. Dinner was ready. The rescue guys pulled in just as the tables were getting set up. Smoked turkey, ham, two different kinds of sweet potatoes (one with brown sugar and pecans on top — omigod were they good!), cranberry sauce (jellied and whole, homemade), mashed potatoes, and more.
Then another call came in just as we were finishing dinner. This time it was my brother’s engine and I got to go along for a ride. It was cool. A kid had been hit with a vacuum by his father (who was on meth) and they needed to bandage him up. The kid was originally from Bosnia (only in the States for 5 years, he was 19) and he was pretty layed-back about the whole incident. The police left the scene to go talk to the father (the kid had walked to a convenience store). We waited around a bit and then the decision was made to take him to the hospital. We all climbed in to the engine and headed for the hospital.
By the time we got back (1 1/2 hours later), we were up for dessert — some desserts were brought in by community members, which is awesome). I had a yummy blueberry pie.
Then I headed home. Two hours later, I pulled into my yard. I had such a good time. I kept telling my brother, on the phone, to thank them again. I wanted them to know how much I appreciated being made to feel like family. They made me belong, even if for only a day.
tweet tweet for 2007-11-22
0- @dcoe yum. :-) #
- [daily photo] abandon http://tinyurl.com/yqscao #
- at phx fire station #35 for thanksgiving #
- @justG I showed him your tweet. :-) He wished you a good thanksgiving. #
a little bit of fun
0I’m worn out from driving down and returning from Phoenix, where I spent Thanksgiving with my brother and the fire station he was working at today.
I’ll be writing a bit more on it tomorrow, when I’m not so tired, but two funny things came out of the day.
Tom, one of my brother’s fellow firefighters, showed me some of the Jeff Dunham videos. A bunch of us sat there laughing so hard. This guy is GOOD.
When we went out on a call, four police officers were there. One turns to me and says, “Ma’am, do you know the one thing the police and firefighters have in common?” I say I don’t. He pauses for a moment. The other police officers and the three firefighters that I’m with all look over at us. He replies, “We all want to be firefighters.” It was so funny because of the way he said it (and there was some good-natured ribbing going on between the PFD and the PPD.
More tomorrow.
