My Surreality Check Bounced

"Why settle for a twig when you can climb the whole tree?"

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Location: Binghamton, NY, United States

Journey is a rogue English major gone guerilla tech. She is currently owned by two cats, several creditors, and a coyote that doesn't exist. See "web page" link for more details about the coyote.

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

In Hell

I just watched The Stepford Wives.

There's a scene where there are SUV's parked all down the street, neatly next to the curb. And they're all grey, luxury SUV's.

I have a new definition of Hell.

(That aside, the movie amused me greatly).

Monday, November 28, 2005

these dreams

Like my dreams aren't bizarre enough to start with, they just get stranger when I have a fever. Lately, I have a hard time falling asleep and a harder time waking up.

I lay down for a few minutes at my parents' house yesterday while my laundry was running and was just out cold. After a couple of hours, completely aware that I was dreaming, I struggled myself out of bed. And stood there, and went, "Well, this is good . . . except I have a funny feeling I didn't get up." And I looked over my shoulder, and sure enough, I was back in bed.

I finally got myself out of that one by treating it like coming out of a particularly deep journey or meditation. Starting by wiggling my fingers and toes, then trying to open my eyes, etc.

And in the wee hours of this morning, I woke up with the clearest memory of having been asleep in my waterbed from high school. The bells I put on the pull chain of my lamp so I could find it in the dark had come off and were pressed into parts of the bed. I heard them ring as they rolled around. And I was being molested by dolls.

Yes, I'm using the word "molested" advisedly, and by dolls, I don't mean blow-up dolls or barbie dolls. We're talking teddy bears and Strawberry Shortcake. Or maybe it was just a cloth doll in a strawberry shortcake nightgown like the one I had when I was an itty bitty. I'm not quite clear on that, since by that point things were so bizarre I knew I was dreaming, and I was just trying to beat the dolls off long enough to wake up.

I suppose the fact that bizarre="must be dreaming" is clue enough of the fever right there. (Yes, I'm getting better. The fever's the necessary last step to burning this crap out of my system). Normally, I can jump out a window while the sea boils below me, be pregnant by a werewolf, or be working as part of the Rebellion (not infrequently on the verge of being caught and getting my ass kicked or killed) without ever having the feeling that it's a dream.

The Supreme Court is crumbling!

Teehee. I can say that and not have it be a political statement or a bad joke.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/11/28/scotus.facade.ap/index.html

Sunday, November 27, 2005

"In your eyes . . . "

I just sent my first "missing you" card. And an e-card at that, being a computer geek and impatient. I feel all sappy now. But maybe a little better.

Destination: Hell in a Handbasket

LiveJournal Username
What is the name of your ship?
What is the class of your ship?
How long is your mission?
What's your favorite series?
First Officerwyldwoods
Chief Security Officerariagreen
Chief Operations Officerjozabad
Chief Engineering Officergabefinder
Chief Medical Officermarinredwolf
Ship's Counselorvulphit
Chief Science Officermarinredwolf
Transporter Chiefkueidan
This Fun Quiz created by Sylvan at BlogQuiz.Net
Taurus Horoscope at DailyHoroscopes.Biz



I have no complaints about my first officer, but I think my security officer might have a little too much fun with the phasers. My ops officer will mostly be happy to have escaped the giraffe. My engineering officer would rather be playing with Photoshop or beating people with sticks. I'm not sure my medical officer knows anything about medicine, but at least he'd be a cool head in a crisis. Which is good, since he seems to be doubling as my science officer and will be horribly overworked. My ship's counselor is still working on his psych degree, so we'd better have some real beer in Ten Forward. I'm I'm a little worried about my transporter chief having templates of other people's body parts.

And kenilyn isn't on here anywhere, so I suppose she's leading the mutiny.

cinema as literature

I just watched the movie Love, Actually. A marvelous, intricate, genuinely fascinating, and well-written movie. Not at all what I was expecting. I highly recommend it.

Unfortunately, I can't describe it to you much further because it's the cinematic version of a literary form called a story cycle. In case you're not familiar with it (likely, unless you're a fellow English major), a story cycle is a series of short stories which are interwoven in some fashion. In this case--in what I consider the best of cases--they come together to tell a larger story, but without ever falling into a single overarcing plot.

So, Love, Actually is stories of love in the lives of over a dozen people. But at the same time, it's the story of something far more basic. I could say, "it's about relationships" or "it's about people," and that would be accurate, but not terribly helpful. So I suppose you'll just have to watch it.

Beats the heck out of moping around the house like I was doing earlier. As usual, I applaud my roommate's choice in cinema.

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Thanksgiving.us

Thanksgiving was great. Pete was down, and my sister and her boyfriend. My dad was just delighted--he had other people to watch football with and generally felt like the testosterone level was more acceptable.

We sang grace--we being the parents, sister, and me. Just because we do, on Thanksgiving. Pete informs me that he and my sister's boyfriend just kind of looked at each other while the rest of us sang. What can I say. One side of the clan is like that.

Christmas lights were hung, the tree was erected, and decoration occurred. At my parents' house. I haven't quite gotten to the lights at my place, yet. Which is a pity, because a front just moved through and tomorrow's likely to be fifteen degrees cooler. Which is still not cold, by any means, but not nearly as pleasant for standing outside and fussing with the lights.

On Friday, Pete and I and the sister (her boyfriend had to work) went out to the Desert Museum. We had a good time tromping around and looking at the animals and exhibits. And, as is par for the course, finished up completely exhausted and marginally dehydrated. So we went out to dinner and then home, and I, at least, had a nap. Naps are a vast, great goodness. I wish more of mine involved sleeping, but I'm still just a little sick and it's doing strange things to my metabolism, including the bits that ought to sleep.

Today, Pete had to go home, on account of too many papers to grade and too much stuff to get done. Sister and I did a little shopping in the afternoon, with an eye to going to the local goth club tonight, but I'm still a little sick and was having a nastily emotional day, and she just got in the mood to put on pj's and not go anywhere, so we've decided to wait until sometime when we and more energy and will both enjoy it, instead of going out to have a good time even if it kills us.

Quote of the Week

"My self-control is legendary. Half history, half myth."

--Marty Bobbick, in The Barsoom Project, by Larry Niven and Steven Barnes

Monday, November 21, 2005

"my perfect size 8"

Not that it hasn't been said before, but . . . sizing on women's clothing is utterly bizarre. Despite having been "professionally fitted" for a bra on Saturday, I ended up taking home bras in two different sizes. I tried on five pairs of size 14 jeans: two too small, one so small my legs didn't even go all the way in, one too big, and one perfect. What's more, I have a size 15 waiting in a drawer at home that won't fit for another 5-10 lbs.

Perhaps I shouldn't complain; I guess I'm bizarre, too. The oft-quoted statistic is that "the average woman weighs 140 lbs. and wears a size 14 dress." How tall is the average woman? I'm in a size 14 at just above 170.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Random Stuff on a Sunday

I'm here. I'm alive, after a fashion. Illness persists, but doesn't seem markedly worse than it did on Friday. Unless you count feeling generally vague and muddle-headed, which I didn't on Friday.

This week's weigh-in: 172 lbs. I went shopping yesterday. I needed some clothes in the next size down to transition with, since I don't want to be anywhere near a mall any time in the next six weeks or so. I love Ross. I fear Ross. Two velvet dresses jumped into my cart while I was there. One marked down to $30, the other to $8.99. If you average it out, it means I paid less than $20 for each, right? The first one was pronounced perfect and the second, exquisite. Now all I need is an excuse to wear them.

I told my mother we have to find a fancy place to get together and have tea all dressed up or something. If she doesn't have a dress, I can loan her one. I think we're the same size, now. But I also think I know where I got my weakness for velvet dresses. ;)

I found out that, while my sister gets her degree in May, she's planning to walk in December. Like, next month. That's not a heck of a lot of notice, but I imagine I won't have any trouble getting the afternoon off so I can go up for the ceremony. Whenever they actually give me the date and time.

Her final semester is her internship. I don't know where she's going, yet, but she has like four offers. That's my sister, all right. People meet her. People love her. It's as simple as that. I imagine the hardest part will be picking between the one that could develop into a job and the one that likely won't, but would land her a heck of a lot of industry contacts.

It's kind of hard to believe she's graduating. It seems like she just started on her B.S. the other day.

I guess this means we're grown-ups now. I hope it's not terminal.

I've decided I want a party for my birthday. I know that most women turn 29 a whole lot of times, but I figure on turning 30 the year after, so I really only get to do 29 once. It seems worth celebrating, I just haven't decided how, yet.

Maybe when 30 rolls around, I'll celebrate by going to Disneyland and riding kiddie rides and eating junk food.

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Quote of the Week

"I’d like to speak to you concerning a small state of war in which we seem to have become engaged."

--Queen Vialle of Amber, in Knight of Shadows, by Roger Zelazny

Friday, November 18, 2005

Sticks & Stones

I had a very poor interaction with the supervisor of one of our remote sites this morning. I was frustrated with the fact that he knows enough about computers to be dangerous and is hard to direct for purposes of troubleshooting. He was defensive, as if every question I asked or advisement I made was intended as an attack. He finally accused me of having an attitude and went off on me for a couple of minutes. I think I managed to defuse the situation with an explanation that these were not attacks, nobody expects him to be a mind-reader, and I'm sick--which is a defense because it's quite possible that things which sound perfectly harmless coming out of my mouth when I'm in my normal, upbeat, tech support persona do not sound harmless when I'm sick and exhausted.

I was in tears by the end. Partly--maybe mostly--out of anger. My reaction to extreme levels of frustration and pissed-off-ed-ness is tears. As if the strength of emotion has to come out somewhere, and chooses my eyes. But also, factored in there somewhere, is the thing I keep coming back to this afternoon: What did I do to upset him? What did I do to trigger this reaction? It's not like he just made up this feeling that I have "an attitude" out of thin air--some perception, correct or otherwise, led him to this conclusion.

Did I do something wrong?
Was I hurtful to or denigrating of him?
Am I a bad person?

None of these are really questions. The answers are "probably not," "I don't think so," and "no, not even if the first two conditions were 100% correct." But I keep coming back to them, because--in my mind, in my social structure, with my ethos and empathy--causing someone emotional distress is one of the most horrific things I could possibly do. Not because it is, but because if I were on the other side, it would be one of the most horrible things someone could do to me.

I was never grounded growing up. I was spanked once, when I was four, for being up on a step stool where i could have broken my neck. I remember being grossly humiliated, not hurt. The worst punishment I ever received--the worst punishment I could receive--was a harsh word. From either parent, but especially from my father (both because we were too similar, personality-wise, and because he seemed to have so many of them . . . because we were too similar, personality-wise). I would rather have been grounded than yelled at, not that either happened terribly often.

Physical abuse from the other kids was easy to ignore. You can wash egg off cheap poly pumps. Pelted by rocks was a bid to get a reaction, so I refused to react. And told my parents, who complained to the school, which resulted in the vice principle sitting across from the bus stop in his car for a week or two. Presto, no more rocks. On the occasion when a group of kids decided they were going to keep us from entering the schoolyard via the chain link gate, I kicked it in in their faces.

There wasn't much of this. I think they picked up on the fact that I was serious. They weren't. But I have too much of the warrior in me. My reaction is to meet violence with violence if I feel genuinely threatened. So I think they learned not to threaten me that way.

Instead, there were sharp words. Insults. Denigrating statements. Quiet things I was meant to overhear, that cut me to the bone. It was . . . the most hurtful thing they could possibly have done. I didn't realize that at the time. But now I look back at it and think about it, and wonder how they could have been so hurtful. The answer, of course, is that it wouldn't have been. Not with any normal kid.

My father had little or no sympathy when I cried about these things. He got the shit kicked out of him more than once at as a kid. I think it's part of the reason he ended up choosing to go to a private school. And nothing else was really real to him.

But me . . . I'm still feeling wounded from this morning. That I upset someone. That someone else holds a low opinion of me. It's like having a splinter under your fingernail: exquisitely painful, and nothing you can do will work it out. You just have to give it time. Worrying at it only makes it worse.

I have higher standards for myself than for anyone else, and a deep-seated fear that I'm not good enough: for my friends, for my workplace, for Pete, for those I "failed" in the last life. Adulthood lets me manage it a little better, and St. John's Wort keeps me from blowing something like this up into a suicidal depression, but the fundamental fears and reactions don't change. And I don't think I really want to meddle with them. I don't know if I'd like the person I'd become if I didn't care what other people thought.

I could say that I'm too fucking empathic. Gods know, that's what I was fuming to myself as I drove home from the off-site this morning. On the other hand . . . I am empathic, in a way that has new age mumbo-jumbo overtones to it. If "sympathetic" means you feel for someone, and "empathetic" means you feel with someone, then I'm going to use "empathic" to mean that I feel as someone.

If you're hurting, I feel every blow on my own psyche. Whether it's the supervisor blowing up at me this morning, or the woman in the bus station in Florida with knuckle-prints beneath her eye where the boyfriend she's leaving punched her, or a friend dealing with depression, or my boss sitting in his office in a Stage 1 mad. Without your saying a word . . . I feel it. When you color the ether with something bad, it makes it hard for me to breathe.

The pen is mightier than the sword, a sharp tongue can cut the keenest blow, and sticks and stones may break my bones--but words can really hurt me.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Waking up is hard to do.

I got home from work yesterday only slightly calmer than I was at 4:30 PM at work. At 4:30 PM, I was to the point of throwing things. (Fortunately, I have a little sponge-brain toy for this purpose. No brains were harmed in the making of this geek). I thought I needed to watch things blowing up, but the only blowing up movies my roommate and I really had between us were Lethal Weapons 2-4, which didn't suit my mood, and the Matrix trilogy. Which had far too many computers in it. So I ended up watching To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar. On the theory that Wesley Snipes in high heels is an entirely different kind of train wreck.

I felt better after that, and got a reasonable amount of sleep last night. And yet here I am, wandering around the office this morning with my eyes half shut and drinking Diet Coke with Lime (which will either wake you up or cause your eyeballs to explode, whichever comes first). I keep thinking that there's nothing wrong with me that a cup of hot cocoa and a breakfast burrito from the Durango Coffee Company wouldn't fix. And of course, those are two things that I just can't have. Even if I were in Durango.

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

I know it's Tuesday. How come it feels like Wednesday already?

"Another day done. Deadlines met. Projects on track. Pigs standing by, ready for take-off."

--source unknown

Flutter-By

There is a bush with small, brightly-colored flowers blooming at the corner of our office building nearest my door. I can't smell the flowers, but they must have really wonderful nectar, because every time I walk around the corner I find myself in the midst of an absolute cloud of butterflies.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Quote of the Week

"You got a job? Where? Doing what?"

"Circle K. Stripping on the coffee bar."



--Elizabeth Gratton; Kendra Tarket

Toys in the Attic

I spent half of Friday and all of Saturday with Pete this weekend. Not only did we see the concert, we also watched movies, nearly fell off his bed (it's a single), rode roller coasters and bumper cars, and generally hung out and had a pleasant time.

The whole "dating" thing has been very strange to me up till now. Not because it's strange, but because friendship is a very deep thing for me and it always takes me a long while to feel I really know a person. Even, as it turns out, one I'm dating. Also . . . as much as I've wanted marriage and children and the rest of my life with someone, the possibility also scared the hell out of me, simply because it's different from anything I've ever known.

When I showed up at Pete's house on Friday, I asked for a glass of water. He opened the fridge door to get the pitcher and a very suspicious smell wafted out. He apologized and mentioned that "clean the fridge" was on his list of things to do before I arrived, and it was the one he hadn't quite gotten to. He had a feeling his roommate had put something in the crisper and forgotten it.

I've had this problem before, and I mentioned always trying to throw things out before they grow legs or achieve sentience. Thinking, as I said it, of a Cowboy Bebop episode in which something gets left in the fridge too long and hilarity ensues.

And Pete said, "Yeah, it's starting to remind me of Toys in the Attic, that Cowboy Bebop episode where food gets left in the fridge and . . . "

Right that minute, I think I stopped being scared. :)

In Concert

Pete and I saw the Eagles in concert this Friday.

Wow.

I like the Eagles, but some of their songs are just a little too country for me. So I wasn't quite sure what to expect. On the other hand . . . you don't miss the Eagles playing live. It's just one of those shows you have to see. (This was reiterated by my boss when he told me that I was not working Friday, even if our shipment did come in that day. Because some shows, you just don't miss, and if I'd worked Friday, I wouldn't feel at all like driving directly to Phoenix for a 7:30 show).

They are phenomenal. They kept hitting chords so perfect I was shivering. (Pete offered me his overshirt. I had to, somewhat embarrassedly, explain that I wasn't cold--I have a sensual reaction to really good music). While I don't hold with the theory that analog music is superior to digital, there is a truth to the fact that when recordings are mixed, tracks are mixed down for purity. And while the result may be very sweet, it just isn't as full and rich as an exquisitely-balanced live performance can be. Not to mention there's something amazing about thousands of people singing along, under the sound from the speakers.

(As the whole arena whispers "1969", a ghost-like echo underneath the vocal in "Hotel California").

I had the realization at more than one point during the concert that "this just might be the best guitar I will ever hear." I have some very favorite guitarists who I love to listen to, but if they're lucky . . . in thirty years, yeah, they may reach this level. Maybe. Joe Walsh in particular just amazed me.

They performed both old tracks and new, and they did a number of songs that the various members had done in their solo careers as well. I noticed that, group or solo, for some reason I am slightly more partial to the songs where Don Henley has the lead. They did a version of Hotel California that incorporated mariachi brass. I had heard this before, on a concert recording my parents had seen on television and saved for me, and not been terribly impressed. But, while my heart will always belong to the acoustic version that begins with a run of almost flamenco guitar, the brass was really amazing in person.

The crowd brought them back out for three encores.

Monday, November 07, 2005

At the mooooovies!

I saw Mirror Mask two weeks ago. If the idea of Neil Gaiman meets Jim Henson Productions makes your eyes go all big and your mouth water, you'll want to see this. (Some people, it just really freaks out). Wonderful, wonderful film. And a little bit of a mindfuck, but I wouldn't have expected anything else.

Last weekend, I saw Serenity. Now I need to find Firefly and watch it. Kendra's seen the first couple episodes. She said that as near as she could tell, it was probably the best-written, most beautifully characterized, best-plotted shows on television. Which is probably why it was canceled. She described it to me as a western in space.

She wasn't kidding about any of that. From the first scene on the ship, I knew I was in the right place. Witty dialogue, tight plot, quirky characters . . . the only thing that bothered me is that it ended. It felt like the pilot for something--you start with a stable situation, and by the end, you want to know what happens next.

And from that same scene, I knew why it hadn't done that well at the box office. I listened to the dialogue and quickly came to the conclusion that it was probably too quick and clever for 90% of movie-goers to follow.

Don't let any of this stop you from seeing it. If you're reading my blog in the first place, you're probably in that segment of the population that will drool over it and beg for more. :)

Holy boxes, Batman!

We're expecting a very large shipment of equipment at work this week. On the order of 60 boxes, to be followed by another 50 within a week after that. I come into worm this morning and my boss tells me, "Yeah, I got an e-mail. They've shipped. Two day shipping." So they'll be here, oh, tomorrow.

He's made a very careful diagram of how the boxes will fit in the small amount of space we have. They'll be packed in so tightly, I'm not sure how we'll get them out again. Needless to say, we spent several hours this morning just clearing the areas he's allotted for this project.

This afternoon, I told him, "You know, when we get all these boxes squeezed in so densely and they spontaneously implode and leave a small singularity in the back of your office . . . I'm fairly sure our business insurance doesn't cover that."

He agreed that this was probably so, and ventured so far as to say that he imagined this would coincide with the fly-by of a ship powered by the infinite improbability drive. At which time, we would be left with a bowl of rather confused petunias.

Of course. The sperm whale having been drawn into the singularity.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Only on the inside . . .

You scored as Labret Piercing. You probably intimidate a whole lot of people without really meaning too. If people could just get past the many tattoos, piercings, and sideburns I'm sure they'd love you. Or still be scared, who knows.

Cartilage Piercing

90%

Labret Piercing

90%

Earlobe Piercing

80%

Dirty Piercings

80%

Tongue Piercing

80%

Belly Button Piercing

70%

Nipples

70%

Nose Piercing

60%

Lip Piercing

50%

What Piercing Are You?
created with QuizFarm.com

you'd think I was bored or something

You scored as A Slave To BDSM. Admit it, you like being tied up and being told you've been very naughty. You like teasing your partner and making them squirm, and not letting them be able to do anything about it. Some people think what you do is sick and disgusting, but you know it's all in good fun.

A Slave To BDSM

83%

Sex God

68%

A Romantic

53%

Virgin

23%

How are you in bed
created with QuizFarm.com

And speaking of pirates . . .

Who says there are no pirates anymore?

The Reluctant Hero

You scored as Captain Jack Sparrow. Roguish,quick-witted, and incredibly lucky, Jack Sparrow is a pirate who sometimes ends up being a hero, against his better judgement. Captain Jack looks out for #1, but he can be counted on (usually) to do the right thing. He has an incredibly persuasive tongue, a mind that borders on genius or insanity, and an incredible talent for getting into trouble and getting out of it. Maybe its brains, maybe its genius, or maybe its just plain luck. Or maybe a mixture of all three.

Captain Jack Sparrow

67%

Batman, the Dark Knight

63%

Neo, the "One"

58%

Lara Croft

50%

James Bond, Agent 007

50%

The Amazing Spider-Man

50%

Maximus

50%

Indiana Jones

46%

William Wallace

42%

The Terminator

42%

El Zorro

17%

Which Action Hero Would You Be? v. 2.0
created with QuizFarm.com


I kind of thought Batman would edge out Jack Sparrow, but I guess I'm not moody enough anymore. This works.

Saturday, November 05, 2005

New Pic for Blog Thumbnail



For no better reason than "because I get bored."

The Exceedingly Purple Witch



Note the broom hiding behind my left shoulder.




Ignatius protecting me from Mark's mockery.

The long-awaited prank pictures.

The prank my boss played on me a couple weeks ago:





Note the careful placement of the scrap 'o jeans. It even has a little fang-mark in it.

This dangerous puppy has since been named Ignatius. He sits on my desk and occasionally protects me from people who are being weird.

The unexpected fall-out of the knee injury

I was twenty when a medical professional and a counselor reluctantly agreed on a loose diagnosis of borderline depression for me. Reluctant, because the counselor thought it was worse and the doctor's ten-question survey didn't seem to satisfy anyone, including the doctor. Loose, because it turns out the way they decide if you really suffer from clinical depression is to put you on meds and see what happens.

No, thank you. That seemed like overkill. On the suggestion of some sources I trust, I skipped the Zoloft and tried some St. John's Wort. That is . . . more than sufficient. I generally only take it if I'm going through a bad patch or if it's winter in a cold climate with little sunlight. And I don't always take a full dose. It can result in my feeling like I'm dealing with the world through a thin layer of gauze.

Most of the time, it's enough to know. To understand that what's going on inside my head and heart is partly chemical. I can understand that I feel awful now, but I'll feel fine tomorrow. Only sometimes, I don't feel fine tomorrow.

Over the past 72 hours, I've realized the depression is rearing its ugly head again, in a way it really hasn't in some time. The impetus for its being out of control is most likely lack of exercise due to the lingering knee injury. Without getting the metabolism going and the seratonin levels up, all kinds of unpleasant reactions can run unchecked through my body. The secondary cause is, of course, stress. And I've been blaming my symptoms on stress, but real honestly, stress isn't enough to cause this on its own. It works in tandem with the lack of exercise.

I'm . . . mostly really annoyed that it took me this long to catch on. I can really only blame the fact that I haven't had a patch like this in some years. There are all kinds of symptoms: fatigue even though I sleep, trouble sleeping, depressed immune system (even more than usual), trouble managing my diet. But the most telling one, the one that should have clued me in sooner than this, is the searching.

I get to this point where I'm searching for something. Sometimes, it manifests as hunger, but that's not really what it is. I'll do things like go through all the kitchen cabinets, restlessly, without finding what I'm looking for. Because what I'm looking for isn't something to eat. It's something to satisfy me. Something to make me happy.

Of course, by the time I clued into this, I'd re-gained five pounds and wandered around work like a zombie far too many times in the last week or two.

The good news is, now that I know what's going on, I know how to treat it. So I'm back on the St. John's Wort for a couple of months. The better news is, As of last week, I've begun walking again. Short walks, at first, and with the knee brace on. But today, I was able to walk in the middle of the day, before the knee begins to ache. And I did my full 1.3 mile loop without a brace. Thank the gods I'm finally healing.

I wrote a poem while I was doped up on too much St. John's Wort, once. I've written many while depressed, though there's one I consider most indicative. In fact, I really only write poetry when I'm depressed or in love, which means that with emotional health, I lose my muse. As trade-offs go, I can live with it. I'd rather write fiction. It's less . . . wrenching.

Perhaps I should post those two.

Quote of the Week

"Bother," said Pooh. "Eeyore, ready two photon torpedoes and lock phasers on the Heffalump. Piglet, meet me in transporter room three."

--source unknown