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Today is Yesterday

November 20, 2007 in Blogs

Taking my mother-in-law shopping was only one of the errands of the evening. On the other hand, it might be classed as the most successful. One place I was supposed to stop didn’t seem to be where the map said, and I never found it; one of the errands I did had me ordering something I will have to cancel tomorrow, because it won’t arrive in time so we’ve already gotten it somewhere else. Thus a fair amount of time was lost.

I perceive that there is still a fair amount ahead of me, so I’d better plough into it.

–M. J. Young

Avatar of Tadeusz

by Tadeusz

A Good Day

November 18, 2007 in Articles

We goofed about for Saturday morning, with the Ladyfaire getting three hours of sleep. And then it was off to the Tiger Cub hike.

The local area is ridges, hollows, and ravines.

So the hike starts with a steep, multiple switchback down several hundred feet. And then across river bottom woodlands which had been the subject of a recent windstorm which blew down branches and small trees.

It was a fine autumn day. The only time I saw an animal was when I was away from the group. Otherwise the woods were empty. (It was a whitetail deer next to the Natchez Trace.) As the Ladyfaire pointed out she had a toddler to protect her from all the scary woodland animals. :)

The Cuteasaurus bravely and boldly did the walk (although he did use me as a tractor pull.) Mr. C had issues about wanting to be carried. I was unsympathetic.

This is part of the Tiger Cub requirements as a Go See It for historical things. We started from Merriweather Lewis’s tomb, and circled back to it. This is also part of some Outdoor Activity badge. We’ve done a campout, and now a hike.

I’m really enjoying taking Mr. C thru the Cub Scout electives. It gets me out of my rut. It helps teach him useful things. Its a way for us to bond. Its like taking short little recesses to do something fun, and then getting a little recognition for it.

We took along on the trip a family mobile we had made. Each member of the family had something to symbolize them. Mine was a dice.

We went to McGee’s, a new local restauraunt, to try them out. Tony’s Awesome Nachos was HOT. A real man’s man dish. Take a half a jar of picanted sauce, and a dozen jalopeno’s…and go on from there. It was visually stunning as well. Quite a treat.

The baked potato the Ladyfaire had with her chicken and green beans was soft all the way through (unlike the last place we ate at), which is nice, but not special….except when you realize that it was about eight inches long, a true monster spud, easily twice the size of what I would consider a large spud. If you get a potato at Wendy’s, well you might be able to fit five of them into this one Spud O’ Doom.

And it was very good.

Mr. C got a bowl of spaghetti, and Cuteasuarus got fries and chicken tenders (which were again mega-outsized). Cute’s child meal would have suited many an adult as a largish meal.

So it was pretty neat. The cooking felt like my own style of cooking–Mad Scientist.

After that, we went to the Glasshouse Arcade, and spent a few bucks. It was neat and clean, and had pool tables, a foosball table, air hockey, and some road race video arcade games along with a few others.

Cuteasuarus played three games of “Let’s Watch teh Car Explode” although the game has another name. He loved it. He’s a car loving young tyke.

We also played air hockey, and played with frequent substitiutions. When it was moi vs. the Ladyfair, she won 3-1. She pointed out that 2 of them were ones I did to myself. True. What I didn’t point out was what Inigo Montoya said to the Man In Black…

NO! Not that phrase…the other one.

“I am not left-handed.”

It was a great day, and deo gratia, if that means ‘glory to God’ would be a good phrase about now.

Preparing to Give Thanks

November 18, 2007 in Blogs

I would not say that I now have everything in the house that I will need for Thanksgiving dinner; however, given that I reached Eatmore a mere hour before closing and they had already stopped giving out tickets for service at the meat department, I am impressed with the fact that I got everything I could get there, including the filet. (I have mentioned here before that I can no longer eat turkey, for many years my favorite meal, but that I am consoled in that whenever we prepare a turkey for a holiday we also prepare a filet mignon for those of us–which means me–who cannot eat turkey, and I graciously share my consolation dish with everyone else.) Yes, the filet is a rather expensive cut of meat, but on the other hand Eatmore sells its meat considerably more cheaply than most other stores, so I’m not unhappy with the expense as part of the holiday feast. Two packed oversized shopping carts later, which entirely filled the trunk and much of the back seat of the Saturn, and I’m not worried about what we’re going to eat for a few weeks.

Baxter got waylaid by life yesterday, and so did not make it to our intended Collision rehearsal; however, Adam and I went over some of the music, and I’m comfortable that he now knows the first song. This is very encouraging, since he started learning the bass guitar earlier this year or late last year, and mostly set it aside for quite a few months, so I was concerned as to how well he was going to do. I’ve tried to arrange things to some degree to favor easier bass parts earlier in the learning process, so he’ll have the opportunity to get better at the instrument while learning the songs, and when we get to the tough ones maybe he’ll be ready for them. I’ve also been writing up the sheets for the songs, and assuming Brittany can handle the vocals I’m ready. I still have not had the opportunity to meet her, and more importantly to hear the lie of her voice, but we’ll get there.

I’ve probably got more to do than I can think, at the moment, but I’m going to start thinking and see how far it gets me.

–M. J. Young

Four to Six to Nine

November 16, 2007 in Blogs

I pushed through the end of my work yesterday, because I knew that I was being called upon to do a longish errand. I underestimated how long. I must express gratitude to my wife, who undertook a number of errands–including getting an oil change on the new car we had promised to get as soon as possible–so that I could focus on my work.

The errand was ostensibly to take a son to visit his girlfriend, who is rather demanding and petulant when he is not there even though he tends to be there more than here and has more things he can only accomplish here than there. However, she indicated that if he did not arrive last night she would not come here for Thanksgiving (I’m assuming that since he did arrive, she will come, and that perhaps her reason was more to do with the fact that she will be catching a ride with his brother, whom she does not really know so well). Thus, after numerous delays on everyone’s part, somewhere around nine last night we pulled out of the driveway. It is two hours up and two hours back, although since I would never push the old cars faster than fifty and the new one seems to be able to handle the posted sixty-five on the major roads I expected to shave a bit off that. We lost that bit going up, though, to pit stops along the way. It was after eleven when we reached College Avenue, and almost eleven thirty when we began the return trek.

I will not blame my wife for the next, because in truth I was thinking of suggesting it; however, she initiated the decision without consulting me. Our eldest and his wife (whom we considered our daughter before she was our daughter-in-law) had just moved into their own apartment. There is a rather complicated background here. He had gotten a job that required him to train in Delaware, and so had moved in with her at her mother’s house; then two unexpected things happened: her mother was killed in a car accident, and his job wound up being in Delaware instead of back here. In order to keep the house, they struck a deal with the mother’s boyfriend, who moved into the house and took over a certain amount of management, including putting his name on the lease. Then the older sister moved in, with her boyfriend and her baby and her expected, and the house became rather crowded; at about the same time, our son got a promotion that moved him to another office, which also is not here but happens to be in this state, so he was commuting over an hour each way. The combination of the extended commute and the crowded home prompted them to reorganize, find a job for her up that way, enlist the assistance of yet another of our sons to move in and help with expenses (something he never did here, but he just turned eighteen), and get an apartment.

They moved yesterday. We had too much else to do to help them, but some of the young men who have stayed with us and/or befriended our sons over the years leant a truck, a driver, and some strong arms and backs.

This long story leads back to our drive home. It happens that when we were less than halfway back, we would be passing within a few miles of this new apartment; it happens that they, like us, keep odd hours, and would probably be awake. We called to suggest that as long as we were up this way anyway, we might stop in around twelve thirty to see the place. Oh, guess what–they haven’t eaten and have no food in the new place. We’ll take them out to eat.

Getting to the apartment was easy enough, even simple; we took the seventy-five cent tour, the dollar tour not being available.* Then we climbed in our car and drove out to the highway to find an all-night diner and get some food. We were only about two or three towns away from the diner where my wife and I had our rehearsal dinner, so we went there.

It was closed.

In fact, everything was closed. We drove around for hours looking for a place that was open. We asked a guy in an all night gas station/convenience store, who sent us to a night club and grill, that was closed. We asked the night manager of a twenty-four hour Walgreens drug store, who sent us to a Denny’s twenty minutes away–which had already locked the doors. I was beginning to feel the absurdity of the situation. We live in the boondocks, miles from any major roads, but I can find half a dozen places to eat at any time of night. They live within five miles of the New Jersey Turnpike, Interstate 295, and three other federal or state highways, one of them a mere block away. You can almost smell Philadelphia from their balcony. We spent at least an hour driving around, and had to fill up the gas tank which might otherwise have gotten us home. Eventually I suggested that I knew of a twenty-four hour diner in the next county, the one my mother-in-law frequents.

It was after four by the time we had finished eating, and it was fifteen minutes in the wrong direction to take them home. I pulled into the driveway after five thirty, and while my wife went to bed so she could work tonight, I stayed up to get the youngest to school and then drive one of our houseguests to the hospital for a seven thirty surgical appointment. He was told that it would take four to six hours, so I kept the phone near the bed while I tried to nap starting at eight, ignoring all the calls which woke me which were not about him but answering one from his doctor around ten thirty telling me that he would be released around one, and another from someone else at the hospital saying it would be between one fifteen and one thirty. I pulled myself back out of bed around twelve thirty, set up the coffee but didn’t have any, and drove out to get him (it’s about twenty minutes to that hospital). Then I drove my wife to work, and finally started my new day around three thirty.

I’ve managed to get supper in the oven, and am planning to get to church tonight, but we’ll see how all that goes.

The truck was not finished today. The mechanic is so overworked, he says he’s hoping he can persuade one of his people to come in on Saturday to get some of the projects completed, so it might be back tomorrow–or not, there’s no knowing.

I did get a slice of about half an hour yesterday evening, while waiting for everyone else to be ready to begin this trip, during which I played through seven of the twelve songs Collision will be doing. I’d like to steal a bit of time tonight to do the other five, but I’d also like to write up the sheets for them and do a million other things, so that’s not likely to happen. Also, in a slice of time that was just the wrong size to really do much of anything useful, I started (and later finished) a draft for what might be a new Faith and Gaming article, about whether it’s inappropriate to care about fictional characters or be upset if they die. I don’t have time to figure out how to upload it, or even to download the new page format (the Christian Gamers Guild got a new webmaster a year ago who has moved and redesigned the site), but maybe I’ll get to it eventually.

Speaking of getting to things, I’d better check on dinner.

–M. J. Young

New Music Plans

November 15, 2007 in Blogs

It was back in August that I mentioned the transition to a new band, Collision. It might be thought that nothing has happened in that vein, since nothing has been mentioned. I would have preferred for more to have happened, but that does not mean nothing has happened. We found a drummer, Kevin, and talked about other personnel. Our vision included adding another male vocalist and a female vocalist, one of whom played the guitar, and we had even identified someone for the female slot, but were having trouble catching up with her.

As it happens, though, as of this afternoon Baxter (our lead guitar player) caught up with Brittany, who would love to play rhythm guitar and sing with us. We were going to get together this afternoon, but something came up on my end and something else on Baxter’s end, so we’ve put it off to Saturday evening, and he will see if Brittany is available for that time slot. This changes things–I had decided to stop trying to create the band I want and instead work with the band I have, and had put a lot of thought into repertoire for a four-piece with one vocal; now I’ll have to rethink things for a five-piece with two vocals, but at least she’s a guitar player, so I don’t have to worry about making sure she has something to sing on every song.

I’d like to say that I accomplished all sorts of things last night, but all I can claim is that I did laundry and slept. I’m plowing through the unfinished work from yesterday along with the fresh work for today (well, I’ve not yet gotten to yesterday’s stuff, which is all forum posts, but I’ve gotten through part of today already). I’ll be moving forward as I can.

See you on the forums.

–M. J. Young

Half a Sick Day

November 14, 2007 in Blogs

I lost the better part of the morning on a venture to a medical lab with a family member who does not drive; it was entirely not his fault that the paperwork was wrong and they would not take the sample for the test. We got that in writing, so that should stimulate someone to get the right paperwork next time.

The better part of the afternoon disappeared into a dental appointment. I was anticipating undergoing root canal; I was hit with two such procedures. I am not certain whether the effects have been more severe on my mouth or my wallet.

When I returned home, several people asked if I was all right. I responded that I thought I was, or at least that I was as all right as one can expect to be after getting root canal. One of my son’s more insightful friends asked if that was actually what happened, or it that was an expression of how I felt. I’m going to have to remember that line; it will fit in a book somewhere, I’m sure.

The upshot of this is that I am sore and exhausted, and thinking that the best plan for me tonight, particularly as I do not have any additional errands, is to go to bed, get some rest, and start fresh tomorrow. I notice that there are more forum posts than I can reasonably address in a brief time, and while I would like to wade into these, it’s not practical tonight.

I do have to do laundry, put away dinner (thanks to a houseguest who cooked for me tonight), and post to the Corinthians list (several have joined in recent weeks), but I think I can put play off to tomorrow in favor of recuperative rest.

–M. J. Young

Later Than I Thought

November 13, 2007 in Blogs

I left late last night, as dinner took longer than I anticipated to prepare and I decided to eat before going to the store with my mother-in-law; I had to call a favor from a friend to pick up my wife at work, as the truck is still not back, but expected to be ready tonight or tomorrow. Meanwhile, my wife has been stacking tasks on my list such that I’m trying to juggle them, and will probably be leaving as soon as I’ve posted this to get some elective surgery done on her new Saturn: there’s a rattle in the rear speakers, and she wants them replaced.

On the positive front, I’ve a new product announcement. This of course means new work for me–but as it turns out, not so much new work as it sounds. Our president has been pushing for an idea along these lines for a while, and we’ve been arguing about how it should be done, but we think we’ve come close enough to a plan that we can say we’re going to do it.

Up to now, we’ve maintained a commitment to doing substantial world books, books containing seven worlds, nine playable scenarios. These are good, and we will continue to produce these. However, the demand for Multiverser worlds outstrips our ability to put these quality volumes on the shelves. We’ve thus decided additionally to publish shorter booklets. These will contain three worlds each; the worlds will be thematically related. The first will probably be three horror worlds, including the Haunted House we have run at conventions, the Slasher Summer Camp that has appeared a couple times, and Poe’s Cask of Amontilado which I ran as one of my first worlds and occasionally since then. We are also looking at a set that will include space worlds such as Starship Destiny, one that will have our Tropical Island and Mountaintop scenarios, and maybe one that will have some worlds Kyler started which are populated by decisively non-human indigs; the worlds which will go with these have been started in one way or another, so we’re confident that we can get them moving.

The advantages of course are that we can get three worlds out a lot faster than seven, particularly since none will be the massive gather worlds that are the pillars of the Books of Worlds, none will have contingent scenarios, and none will be twin scenarios. We also expect these to have a lower price tag than a world book, although pricing has not yet been examined. This should allow us to increase the selection and range of worlds in print more quickly, and so serve our fans better.

Your thoughts and comments are always welcome; at the present time we are not considering including contributions from outside the company, primarily for financial and bookkeeping reasons.

–M. J. Young

Too Late to be Doing This

November 12, 2007 in Blogs

I’ve got a batch of things still on my plate for today, including a trip to take my mother-in-law to the store (she’s probably freaking that she hasn’t yet heard from me). I’ve done a bit of this and that, including re-approve my book About the Fruit for distribution, and again attempt to address problems in the distribution chain of our Multiverser books.

I think that’s most of it, and I’d better get back to making supper before I burn something.

–M. J. Young

Direct to the Game

November 11, 2007 in Blogs

There was a Valdron directors meeting today. A fair amount was accomplished, and some positive decisions were made, but at the moment I’m too tired and busy to try to sort out what should be reported. I’m sure you’ll hear of it as it comes to pass.

Some who came for the meeting spent last night at my house, and so there was a live game. Details will probably hit the forum soon, so I won’t put them here.

–M. J. Young

Nononycon

November 9, 2007 in Blogs

Word reached me today; I am not at this point certain whether I misunderstood what was said before or whether financial circumstances have been reviewed since then, but Anonycon cannot afford to provide me with a place to stay, only free admission. I understand completely and have no bad feelings about this, only regrets–I know no one of whom I am aware in the Stamford, Connecticut area, so I will not be able to attend. I wish them the best. I don’t like to be among those who can’t attend a convention without some arrangements being made to pay for my room, but I lose money when I attempt to cover my own expenses, generally, and this business is tough enough without that kind of cost.

My big accomplishment of yesterday is a substantial improvement in the new Multiverser.org web site. I have probably doubled the number of dead links, thank you, by installing pages to fill all the dead links that already existed which in turn link to other non-existent pages. Still, there is now more information than there was, and I believe that any link on the entry page which you select will take you somewhere.

I also did a smattering of editing on the Romans notes, which I of course do whenever I can anticipate being stuck waiting somewhere. I finally got my mother-in-law to the bank with her social security check, two and a half hours on my part to get there, wait for her, take her to the drive-up window, return her home, and get home myself, primarily because she is uncomfortable if she does not take the check to the bank herself. As Arthur said of knights picking flowers, someone’s got to do it.

The weekend cometh, and I will have a day to attempt to catch up all things at home, but I do not yet know how that will go. Let me not get ahead of myself–I am not yet done with today.

–M. J. Young