The Times, They Are A 'Changing

The Democrats have retaken control of the House of Representatives, for the first time in 12 years. As of right now, the Senate is too close to call, pending recounts, and as a result, Secretary Rumsfeld has resigned as the Secretary of Defense.
I personally see it as a positive change, and I'm interested to see how and where the direction of the country will go, and more interestingly, how the world (Paticularly in Iraq) will react to the change. I didn't hear any discussion of the change in parties during any of my classes, which surprised me a little, although we did talk a little in History in the afternoon, shortly after I started this entry around 1:30.
I am awaiting to see what NU Daily, a blog about Norwich by a Cadet there. It's sometimes an interesting read, other times not as much - I don't tend to agree with a lot of the things written there, but that's just me. Given that Norwich is a fairly conservative closeminded school, I can't imagine that the school as a whole will be thrilled. I am hoping that people will take it in stride and work with it. Hoepfully, Congress and the Executive Branch will work more closely together, although I imagine that we will have some interesting things ahead of us.
In Vermont, Bernie Sanders won over Richard Tarrent, proving that a multiple million dollar character-bashing campaign really doesn't work, and in addition to his history with Fletcher Allen Medical Center, I'm not surprised that Bernie won. It was amusing to see the Daily Show poke fun at Vermont, by saying that we'd made ourselves even more irrelevant with his election (Bernie is an Independant, and Socialist). Peter Welsh won Sander's old seat in the House, which I was pleased to see, and Governor Jim Douglas retained his office for the next two years, something that I'm not overly concerned about. I think that despite his party (R), he's done a fairly good job with things in VT. I just wish that he'd change his mind with some of his environmental policies a little.
As of updating this entry, the Senate is still too close to call, although it's looking like the Democrats might carry that state as well, with the lead going to Jim Webb by about 7,000 votes, according to the New York Times. They did carry Montana, which I was surprised at.

A Real Vermont Writer

I just finished Archer Mayor's newest release, The Second Mouse, which is book #17 in his much loved Joe Gunther series (At least here in Vermont). Every fall, he's got a new book out, the fruits of a year's work of writing and researching, and it's usually a 14 week wait on the library waiting list to get one of his books.

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Gunther is the main character in the Vermont-set mystery series. Over the past seventeen or so years, he's gone through a lot. His girlfriend was brutally raped, he's been shot and stabbed a couple of times, gone all over the place, and remained a good guy, clear morals and all that, and is now the head of the VBI (Vermont Bureau of Investigation), or at least one of the branches of it.
This is also the fifth book that Mayor has written in the third person (To many a loyal reader's apprehension or dismay). Prior to The Sniper's Wife, Joe Gunther was the only character that you could really see, because it was from his perspective. Personally, I think that the approach worked better. All of my favourites, Ragman's Memory, Bellow's Falls (My birthplace, oddly enough), The Skeleton's Knee, Open Season, Tucker Peak, and Occam's Razor are all in the first person. They seem much longer and richer, (not to mention that most of them have the gorgeous woodcut covers), while the newer ones, Sniper's Wife, Gatekeeper,
Surrogate Thief, St. Alban's Fire and now the Second Mouse, feel much more cinematic and faster paced, while the story seems to suffer a little as a result. Not that they're bad reads, they're not. Mayor's maintained a similar complexity of plot and storytelling. It's just in the third person and the story seems to get spread out quite a bit more. The Second Mouse is like this. The first two thirds seemed to be hopelessly scattered, with the VBI squad looking into one mystery, while we watch the three villains (Nancy, Ellis and Mel) go about their own crime spree. It's not until the end, in true Archer Mayor fashion, that everything is wrapped up, and to further the cinematic qualities, in a gunfight and climax that I could very easily see in it's own television series. (You hear that, NBC, ABC, CBS?).
Still, the ending seemed a little disconnected, and I'm thinking of going back to re-reading the older favourites, such as Ragman's Memory, the first one that I ever picked up, to relive the extremely tight plot and lead up. Mayor's strengths are in his extremely complex stories, and his use of Vermont. It was nice to see this story take place almost entirely in Vermont, whereas some of his others have taken Joe and the gang out of state for a lot longer than is usual. (They stay in New England for the entire time this time around.)

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The older books just seem to have more of a Vermont feel to them. This is when Joe, Willy and Sam (the main three characters, there's a couple others) were working for the Brattleboro PD, and much of the crime that they dealt with was more Vermont-centric. The murders were locally motivated, crimes that would take them an hour out of town, three at the most (for the occasional trip over to Burlington). In addition to being a convinent plot point for the characters being able to move around easily, it really gave the books a traditional Vermont feel, where the cops are good, the bad guys clearly at fault and the politicians and newspapers something that could be annoying. However, you can't stop progress, and it seems that the newer Joe Gunther Books are something that's progressing along with Vermont, becoming more modern, slick, sexy and ready to roll.
Mayor's stories take place in Vermont, and they feel like Vermont. One of the biggest thrills is reading about the locations - Bellows Falls, Brattleboro, Montpelier, Burlington, Rutland, and any number of smaller towns that he tends to visit. Bratt. is one of the main places, and every time that I visit, I feel like I'm in the book, it really translates well.
In addition to location, Mayor's earlier works have a very cynical view of the usual small town viewpoint that a lot of people, especially out-of-state visitors have of the place. This isn't too surprising, considering the subject matter of the novels. Yes, we have crime, murders, drug problems, corruption and probably any other crime that is in existance. (This is not to deter anyone from visiting of course, VT's still much safer than anywhere else.) But Mayor does show a different side to what the tourists see - and a lot of it's fairly accurate. Much of his year goes into research, usually on topics that Mayor doesn't know much about, and as a result, some of his books are themed. Fruits of the Poisonous Tree, for example, is about rape. Dark Root : Illegal Immigration. Borderlines : Crazy cults, Occam's Razor : Industrial waste and corruption. Tucker Peak: The Ski Industry, Gatekeeper : The VT Heroin Highway, and so on. Because of this, a number of his books reach a level of critical acclaim here, because he works closely with law enforcement for his research. The Heroin Highway comes very close to where I live, and there's definently some very real parts here.

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I think one of the things that I'm really struggling with is the shift in first to third person narration, because it takes some of the storytelling out of Joe's eyes, and into everyone else's. Along with the switch, there's a subtle difference in the types of stories being told. While the stories told under the told person narration are genuinely Vermont stories, the ones under the third person narrration are typically larger in scale, more important, and to some extent, more relevant to the public's eye. Not to say that a lot of the stories told under the first person narration aren't important, they are, but they're more personal to the character of Joe Gunther. The stories that are coming out now are more personal to Vermont as a whole, with the problems cropping up mainly as the drug problems, It's with this change that we also have the newer, more modern covers, as well as plotlines that as mentioned before, are a little more cinematic in feel.

I really need to reread the series. And you should too.

Notes

Note to self:
With a two piece bike lock, it's best to try and actually keep the two pieces together, not in two places, one said place being hidden away in a place that I forgot, because said lock is useless with just one of said parts.

Note to customers:
Please stop being bitchy. Yes, the price on your receipt that I just printed off for you is accurate, because it's tallied up by a computer and is exactly the same price that I just told you. Now take your merch and stew somewhere.

Note to NBC:
You have better keep Studio 60 on the air or I'll pull a Dane Cook and start punching infants. (Not really, that's just for shock value)

Note to Carbon Leaf and Snow Patrol:
Why is your music so damn discriptive that it hurts?

Under the Milky Way Tonight

I have classes for next semester. And I didn't have to wait for hours in line either, which was a fantastic surprise. I did have to do the usual running around when I couldn't get into a seminar class that I'd hoped to get into, but I got into an equally interesting one.
Next semester, this is what my course load is looking like:

Math: A Liberal Art
History Seminar: History of Norwich University
American Politics
World Lit II

And with that, I'll have the proper number of credits to graduate on time!

My wrist is still sore. I think that I might have sprained it. It's not broken, as that it didn't swell up like it did last time and it doesn't hurt nearly as much as it did when fractured and I have full mobility with it. It's still an annoyance though. (And no, Sarah, the Ninjas need not come and kidnap my bike. It's not out to kill me.)

Not too much else to talk about. A friend gave me some bluegrass covers of Greenday's American Idiot album, which is a very odd combination, but it sounds really good. Galactica's on tonight. Go watch.

Excuse me, where are your live chickens?

Yay for only having one class today. My english professor for Gothic Lit was out of town today, so we got the period off, where I went home, got lunch and took a much needed nap. Got a little work done, caught up on Jericho, did some more work. It's been an uneventful day.
Apple needs to really make some better headphones. I fell off my bike again because of them, when one earpiece fell out of my ear. Fortunently, I found my gloves and had been wearing them, coming away with no injuries, although my wrist was quite a bit sore afterwards.

And, I found the best Star Wars parody to date: Chad Vader:

There's four episodes, all on YouTube. Episode 2, Episode 3 and Episode 4. Absolutely hilarious. I laughed my ass off each episode.

Selling Calenders... Stormtrooper Style

So, because it was Halloween tonight, I hope that people got out and/or did something interesting. I dressed up in armour for work, which was amusing. There was a range of reactions, from Wow, that's really cool, to eh.

Small Children scared: 2
Small dogs scared: 1
Star Trek Magazines Read: .5
Total Calenders sold: 1

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And I'm an idiot. You have to turn the oven on to cook a pizza, not stick it in there for twenty minutes and expect it to cook anyway.

Happy Halloween

There's something about fall in Vermont that just screams everything that Halloween, just little things that have always piqued my interest, more than the sort of gothic look and feel that the holiday sometimes has. It's kinda appropriate that I have gothic lit today.
One of the things is back roads here, especially in the fall. The leaves are gone now, covering the ground, and there are a number of back roads that are lined with the skeletons of trees. At night, it's paticularly creepy looking.
Italianate houses are another one on the list. Italianates are tall, but usually with flat roofs, tall windows, and are usually clapboarded, painted white and multiple stories tall. There's one that I see on the way to work, just off to my right as I get on the highway. It's two stories, looks fairly run down and is in the middle of a field of golden, dead grass that probably comes up to my chest. There's just something about the house that feels like a ghost story waiting to happen. It's right up there with a grave yard.

I'll probably curl up tonight with Edgar Allen Poe or Ray Bradbury after work tonight. From the Dust Returned is one of the books that I've been trying to get to every Halloween, and Poe is just a no brainer.


Work tonight - in Storm Troopre Armour!

Shout Out Loud

Just got back from Amos Lee's concert - He's really a great singer. Completely outstripped his opener - Dayna Kurtz- , was just awful. Not a great voice, her sound was all over the place and her guitar was pretty simplistic, songs lackluster. I was disapointed with her.
But Lee and his band was great. They seemed a little tired and cranky at first - he told a group of girls to cut it out with the flash photos, which was a good thing - but got into a groove right at the beginning. They did some fantastic renditions of Shout Out Loud, Keep It Loose Keep It Tight, Sweet Pea (One that I wasn't very fond of on the album, but live, it was amazing) and Night Train. He's got a great voice, although unlike Carbon Leaf, he didn't talk a whole lot to the crowd. He seemed not really nervous, but not talkative and slightly out of place. On stage while playing, he dominated, completely. The other guys in his band were great as well. Here's the set list. It's not complete, because they played several new songs that I'd not heard, but they were pretty good.

  • Dreamin'
  • Seen it All Before
  • Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight
  • Bottom of the Barrel
  • Supply and Demand
  • Truth?
  • Sweet Pea
  • Lulliby
  • Freedom
  • The Wind
  • Soul Suckers
  • Black River
  • Shout Out Loud
  • Night Train
  • Long Line of Pain
  • Arms of A Woman

So yeah, great evening, had quite a bit of fun, and was amused that there was a band next door called Hellbreath, a heavy metal outfit. Two extremes.

But No One Knows Where Time Goes

I just got out of a meeting with my advisor to decide what classes I'm to take for my last semester here. 4 Classes total. A History Sem, World Lit 2, Math 102 and Political Science. Yay, all said and done, it'll be a good semester. I go down to the computer to fill in details and times and... no political science. Not in the P0 211 range anyway, actually, not in the 200 range. Gar. I need to talk to Prof. Kunaf and see if I can take a 300 instead.
And it's still not even 9:30.
I finally got a helmet for my bike, so I'm back on that until the weather gets really inclimate and/or dangerous. I'm really out of shape again though - Two weeks of being off really took my stanima down, which left me completely out of breathe for my meeting. The muscles in my wrist are regrowing nicely though, there's almost no pain anymore.
Three classes today, Communications (Which I'm beginning to hate with a passion, because my classmates are probably braindead), Economics (which I'm okay with at the moment beginning to hate. A quiz with 40 questions is not a quiz.) and then History (Which I love).
After that, Amos Lee! Need to remember my camera and ticket. Higher Ground has had a lot of good people in this year, and this, along with Carbon Leaf, was a singer whom I'm a huge fan of. Not missing that one. Should be really good.

Yeah, I'm going to be able to concentrate in class today.

Facepalm: Yay for not realizing that I got into school two hours early and getting to class an hour early. Thus, I'm back home actually getting breakfast and my overdue library books.

And, I have Archer Mayor's newest book! The Second Mouse is the title, and the library finally got it in. Can't wait to read it, should be a fast read, hopefully a good one. I really need to go and re-read some of his older (1st Person and better) ones, like the Skeleton's Knee, Ragman's Memory or Tucker Peak. Hm... I'll post up an explaination when I don't have class looming.

Something Really Cool, or, Colour Like No Other

Has anyone ever seen the Sony Bravia commercial with th 250,000 bouncing balls in San Fransisco? Really fun advert, something really different to watch. I saw it a couple times while in the UK, and what caught my eyes and ears recently was the fact that the song Heartbeats, by Jose Gonzalez, is the background song. He's one of my favourite artists, and the song is quite good.

Naturally, this got me thinking about this. What are the logistics and random other headaches that would be brought on by this? That's a lot of bouncing balls. How did they clean up? I found (I'm actually not sure how I came across this) a website that Sony set up for the commercial, with a couple of similar and new ones, with the advert, but also with a couple of short videos on the behind the scenes filming of the commercial.
Granted, keep in mind that this is a 2 + minute advert. On one hand, the fact that they have several 7 minute features devoted to the filming is quite odd, but granted, the advert is pretty different, and as I mentioned, it got me thinking.


The site also included this:

How we did it
In an age when CGI is commonplace, this makes the commercial all the more extraordinary. Every single frame was shot over two days - with the main sequence involving a 23-man camera crew and only one chance to get it right.
An entire block was closed off and special compressed-air cannons shot the balls into the air, while earth moving equipment poured thousands down the street. Not that you'd know it from the finished product, but these balls can do some damage, so all the cars were props and crew members went so far as to having protective shields and crash helmets.
But when you get it right, you get it right. The goal at the beginning was to deliver a "really simple, visual celebration of colour". We think you'll agree the results speak for themselves.

It's a fun commercial, and one that really stands out. Good marketing. Like the song? The site also posted up a clip of it:

Heartbeats.mp3

It's a great song, and worth getting, either through the CD Veneer or via download .

Cancellation Notice

Don't you just love it when one professor lets you out nearly 20 minutes early for one class, just enough time for you to finish up some last remaining questions for homework for the class at 12, only to run up there and find on the chalkboard that that class has been cancelled for the day, meaning that you have a nice, two hour block of time to run home, relax, read and actually prepare for your next class at 2?

What's even better is that I'm not having any of those classes until next Monday.

What About Everything?

My ears are ringing, I'm still shaking from the excitement, and I'm back from the Carbon Leaf concert over at Higher Ground this evening.

Those guys fucking rock.

I've never seen them better, and man, they had a great setlist and amazing energy. Barry was bouncing all over the stage, along with everyone else, and some of those songs were just amazing. I took Keelia (my younger sister) along, and she also had a great time. One of my professors from Norwich was there with his significant other, and Keelia saw a number of people from her school there.

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Set list:

  1. Comfort
  2. What About Everything?
  3. One Prairie Outpost
  4. Under The Wire
  5. Love Loss Hope Repeat
  6. Life Less Ordinary
  7. Texas Stars
  8. Russian Dance (Tchaikovsky) Intro To...
  9. Paloma
  10. Royal One
  11. Bron-Y-Aur Stomp
  12. Block Of Wood
  13. Let Your Troubles Roll By
  14. Learn To Fly
  15. Intro To...
  16. Desperation Song
  17. The War Was In Color
  18. The Boxer


Great, great set list. There were a couple of random songs that I'd hoped would be there, such as This Is My Song or Native America, as well as a couple others from Echo Echo, but this was just awesome. Sigh, I should probably sleep now.

Edit/Addition: Want to hear a similar playlist from the same tour and setlist? Archive.org has a concert from Colorado that's quite good and easy to access, here. They don't seem to have as much energy as the VT group last night - the crowd was great, really enjoyed themselves.
I don't think that I've ever heard them better. The past three times that I'd seen them, they were really good, but this time they were really into it. The opening band, Matt Nathanson was good. They were funny, as most of the opening acts seem to be, and they had some good songs, but Carbon Leaf just blew them out of the water.
Note to self: Don't stand under a speaker. My ears were ringing all last night. I bought a shirt, with some of the LLHR artwork on it, which I really like. I actually remembered my camera last night, a first for me, and all my pictures that I took are here. Unfortunently, they don't seem to be in the proper order.
The opening band, Matt Nathanson was good. They were funny, as most of the opening acts seem to be, and they had some good songs, but Carbon Leaf just blew them out of the water. However, Matt reading a trashy romance novel to a racy bass beat was priceless, as was his quote:

"Oh Vermont, you liberal bastion of the north."

Drew quite a bit of laughter from the crowd. I'll have to look into some of his stuff if I get the chance.


Note to self: Don't stand under a speaker. My ears were ringing all last night. I bought a shirt, with some of the LLHR artwork on it, which I really like. I actually remembered my camera last night, a first for me, and all my pictures that I took are here. Unfortunently, they don't seem to be in the proper order.
They had the best rendition of Bron-Y-Aur Stomp that I've heard yet, as well as great versions of Love Loss Hope Repeat, Comfort, Texas Stars, Desperation Song, the War Was In Color and The Boxer. Great opening songs and they went out with a bang with that one.

Man, what an awesome night. Next week is Amos Lee, whom I'm also excited about.

Breathe in the Night

I'm seeing Carbon Leaf tonight! This will mark the 4th time that I'll be going to one of their shows, and my third at the Higher Ground. I'm excited. They're great in person, and Love Loss Hope Repeat has some really good songs on it. I'm taking Keelia, my sister, along with me, and one of my professors from school is also going. Should be a fun time. I saw them this summer, and they sounded fantastic.

I'm actually going to remember to bring my camera this time, so I'll get some pictures. Hopefully.

I'm also getting my cast off today, officially. It'll be nice to finally not have to worry about it and get my hand back.

EDIT: 1606 : It's off! Finally!

Music Meme

Taken from this blog, from May 3rd, '05. Lots of changes since then:

01) Total volume of music files on my computer? Currently: 3904 Songs, 10.7 Days at 14.80 gigs. And it's still going up. Currently, I have 75 songs that I have not yet listened to. Almost 1.9% of all the music that I have that I really haven't listened to. A lot better than a year ago, where it was almost 24%. More statistics:

Albums: 721
Artists: 724
Genres: [Genre, (Song Count)] 37:
Acoustic (2), Alternative (231), Alternative & Punk (72), Bluegrass (32), Blues (4), Classic Rock (100), Classical (62), Country (10), Electronic (64), Folk (230), Hard Rock (30), Hip-Hop / Rap (3), Holiday (32), Humor (127), Jazz (79), Jazz/R&B (25), Latin (2) Light Rock (90), Lo-Fi/Garage (1), Metal (10), Music Video (3), New Age (37), Other (2), Podcast (3), Pop (52), Punk (1), R&B (2), R&B / Soul (3), Rap (1), Reggae (2), Rock (1331), Rock/Pop (10), Soundtrack (1138), Spoken Word (1), Techno (7), and World (27).

02) Last Album Purchased: Supply and Demand, by Amos Lee. Last couple songs that I've downloaded are from Snow Patrol's Eyes Open Album.

03a) Last Song Played: While writing this, Soul Meets Body, Death Cab for Cutie on their album Plans.

03b) Song playing right now is... This is Us, by Mark Knophfer & Emmylou Harris off the album All the Road Running.

04) Five albums I listen to a lot or that mean a lot to me...This is going to be difficult:
a) Love, Loss, Hope, Repeat. Carbon Leaf's songs are so perfect for my moods and completely relatable. Comfort, Texas Stars, Love Loss Hope Repeat, Learn to Fly and International Airport are my favourites.
b) Garden State Soundtrack, Various. Still a favourite CD of mine. I love all the songs on it, and have really gotten into a lot of the bands/singers.
c) Time Without Consequence, Alexi Murdoch. Great singer, and he's got some really great songs on this album, such as Orange Sky and Song for You.
d) Simple Things, Zero 7. Love every song on here. Great album, really chilled. End Theme, Destiny, In the Waiting Line (Also on the Garden State OST) and I Can See are my favourites.
e) Veneer, Jose Gonzalez. This album is beautiful. Soft, soothing, with a wonderful acoustic sound to it. Heartbeats is the best, but Crosses, Stay in the Shade, and Love Will Tear Us Apart are fantastic.
Runners up: Some Devil (Dave Matthews), A Girl Called Eddy (A Girl Called Eddy), Sunrise over Sea (John Butler Trio), Pink Moon (Nick Drake), Original Soul (Grace Potter & The Nocturnals) Indian Summer and Echo Echo (Carbon Leaf), Haughty Melodic (Mike Doughty), Eye to the Telescope (KT Tunstall), Eyes Open (Snow Patrol), Burning in the Sun (Blue Merle), Amos Lee and Supply and Demand (Amos Lee), Give Up (The Postal Service) and Rush of Blood to the Head (Coldplay.)

5) 5 People to pass the baton to and why: Anyone really. It's always interesting to see what other people like for music.

Words on the Wind...

Okay, I seem to have lost my post for the second time. Sarah - Bill Bryson is amazing! I think that I read about 200 or so pages during work today, because his writing is light and fast, but hilarious. I'm currently reading I'm A Stranger Here Myself, which is a collection of columns that he wrote for a UK newspaper, on his reactions to American culture, after a move back to the states after twenty years in the UK. He's also got a new book out, but I'll finish the ones that I have from the Library first. And you're right, his books probably shouldn't be read in a public place - I laughed so hard at times that I had to put the book down and do something else. The customers must have thought I was crazy.

I don't usually go about talking a whole lot of politics, but there's been some things on campus recently that have left me puzzled at best. A couple weeks ago, a student published a letter to the editor in the Norwich Guidon, the school's newspaper. The letter was highly critical of George W. Bush, for the war in Iraq, the government's response to Hurricane Katrina and other various things that he's generally criticised for. I personally didn't have a problem with it, although a bit overt. I'd go for a more subtle style, not because of the reaction, but just how I tend to approach things. The school's reaction (and I'm talking about the student body, not the school administration) has ranged from sheer outrage to hostile to pissed off. I go to a school known for it's military component, the Corps of Cadets, and as one might imagine, the school is fairly conservative as a result, as compared to UVM or St. Mikes. My classmates have wondered why the letter was published at all or expressed their anger at someone being anti-Bush, and apparently letters have been written into various places questioning the author's patriotism, maturity and intelligence. I'm pretty disappointed. I would have thought that at least some of the student body was mature enough and intelligent enough to have a reasonable response because of the letter. I'm being cautiously neutral on the issue. I have no love for Bush, and disagree with a number of his policies while in office, but I'm not going to engage in an argument that will mainly constitute Bush is good, and if you don't believe that, you're not a patriot.

???

What's puzzling is that. There's a major difference between blindly following a political party - ANY political party - and objectively critizing a political party. Just because we're at war, (sorta, kinda), it doesn't make any given political leader untouchable, nor does it make anyone who disagrees a traitor to the nation. It's a check. Disagreement brings debate, and alternatives. In an optimal system, those alternatives are good for everyone. At least that's how I see things. Okay, so you disagree with one person's opinions. Just as they disagree with yours. It doesn't necessarily make both of your opinions right or wrong. Or even relevant.

The worst thing is, that the questioning about why the letter was published in the first place, and not just thrown out, was asked in my Communications: Laws and Ethics course. Granted, I'm not taking much stock in my fellow classmate's intelligence there.

My Parents

My parents rock. I don't think that I ever say that, or any form of a dignified thank you to them, but I need to more often. And because I know you read this:

Thank you.

Thank you for everything that you've done over the years, putting up with me, my moods, geekiness, problems, being annoying, and everything, and thank you for all those times that you've helped me, pushing me when I needed it, encouraging me to try new things and thank you for being simply wonderful. I should say it more often.

Whoops

I just pulled my cast off. Entirely by mistake, as I was tearing some of the lining out (It's still wet from earlier today) and kinda pulled and twisted to get it comfortable again and off it came. I just sat there for a second staring at my wrist, and was finally able to move my wrist again. It's back on now, and I'll probably start taking it off when I shower, but damn, it feels weird, and it'll take some getting used to.