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May. 12th, 2003

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"what kind of scale compares the weight of two beauties, the gravity of duties, or the ground-speed of joy tell me what king of gauge can quantify elation what kind of equation could I possibly employ" -- School Night Ani Difranco

Had a very full weekend. Friday evening met up with [livejournal.com profile] ludic_eros and friends to see Rosencrantz and Gildenstern are Dead at UW. I loved the movie rendition, but this was the first time I'd seen the original play. Very cool and chock full of great quotes, existentialism, angst, and humor ("We can give you blood, love, and rhetoric... What we can't do is the love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory.") Tara is a lovely girl, although we didn't really have much chance to talk in-depth being a 'group' activity with her friends. Neat people.

Saturday was running a Living Force game and playing Living Kingdoms of Kalamar. One major issue was that when I woke up Saturday morning I discovered I had no hot water. Yipes! The hot-water heater circuit breaker had tripped a day or two previous. So, I did what I do when camping: heated water on the stove, and did the mix-with-cold-water-as-you-go thing. Yeah. It was a pain, but the beat the hell out of a cold shower.

Tried to make Dim Sum with the poly-folk Sunday, but missed them yet again (parking is always a bitch and they must finish up pretty fast). So I ended up at Alkai Cafe for brunch by myself, then sat out on the beach enjoying the sun, the surf, and the wind. Called my folks for Mother's day, watched the locals, and listened to the constant 'tink' sound of some kids using an aluminum bat to hit rocks out into the water. It took like 25,000 years for those rocks to make on the beach, and they are thrown back by some idiot little monkeys. Sigh.

Went to the TERRA Witches' Brew for a cool open discussion, then went with my friend Lori to play in the park for a few hours. Point Defiance Park in Tacoma is lovely, the weather was great, and I forgot how much joy there was in walking barefoot in the park, feeling dirt between your toes, and doing nothing much at all. I used to be really outdoorsy, but years of Texas heat, getting out of doing SCA events, and focus on geekier pursuits got me out of the habit save for camping a few times a year at pagan events. Besides, in Texas you have to deal with Africanized bees, scorpions, fire ants, stickers, mesquite needles, poisonous snakes (cotton mouths, rattlesnakes, copperheads, a few coral snakes), and poison ivy/sumac/oak. I definitely need to enjoy more of the nice weather this summer by exploring the local 'soft nature' (as my brother puts it).

Work is going to be fairly quiet this week with half the company (and most of the bosses) out at the E3 tradeshow this week. Hopefully it will be a productive, if somewhat boring week. My big plans for this coming weekend are seeing The Matrix: Reloaded at the Cinerama Friday and trying to make some of the local Mensa monthly meetings Saturday.
walbourn: (Default)
I've tried so hard my dear to show
that you're my every dream
yet you're afraid each thing I do
is just some evil scheme

a memory from your lonesome past
keeps us so far apart
why can't I free your doubtful mind
and melt your cold cold heart

another love before my time
made your heart sad an' blue
and so my heart is paying now
for things I didn't do

in anger unkind words are said
that make the teardrops start
why can't I free your doubtful mind
and melt your cold cold heart

there was a time when I believed
that you belonged to me
but now I know your heart is shackled
to a memory

the more I learn to care for you
the more we drift apart
why can't I free your doubtful mind
and melt your cold cold heart

Cold Cold Heart Norah Jones
walbourn: (Default)
CHUCK m English
Pronounced: CHUK

Pet form of CHARLES. Two famous bearers of this name were jet pilot Chuck Yeager, the first man to travel faster than the speed of sound, and the musician Chuck Berry, one of the pioneers of rock music.


CHARLES m English, French
Pronounced: CHAR-ulz, SHARL

From the Germanic name Karl, which was derived from a Germanic word which meant "man". The most noteworthy bearer of this name was Charles the Great, commonly known as Charlemagne, a king of the Franks who came to rule over most of Europe. Several Holy Roman Emperors bore this name, as well as kings of England, France, Spain, Portugal, Sweden and Hungary. Other famous bearers include naturalist Charles Darwin who revolutionized biology with his theory of evolution, and novelist Charles Dickens who wrote such works as 'Great Expectations' and 'A Tale of Two Cities'.

-- Behind the Name

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