It’s not substitute for Borders, but at least once a week I find myself heading to McDonald’s with my laptop in an attempt to get a few pages of work done. Sometimes it’s quiet, sometimes it’s busy as hell, but it’s usually a control kind of chaos that usually works for me.
Once in a while the chaos comes in the form of busloads of kids swarming the place—it’s located conveniently off I-80 and this McD’s has no issue with a couple hundred people coming in to use the restroom and to refill water bottles (this happened last week; I was a little amazed but not really surprised)—and the noise levels are just too high to concentrate, but typically I can sit there and write even when the place is crowded.
Usually I eat before I go over there to avoid the fast food temptations, buy a large Diet Coke, and take a table in the back where I’m out of the way, but today I skipped breakfast (unintentionally…time gets away from you when you have to wait an hour after meds before eating anything) and decided a couple of chicken strips would be all right.
Hey, don’t judge me.
Okay, well fine, judge me. It’s still greasy crap and while it tasted fine, I’m paying for it a couple hours later.
Today was one of those The Place Is Packed days. I didn’t have to wait long in line, but there were few tables to choose from and I was just glad I got anything, much less the booth I scored near the restroom. My only other choice was a bigger table near the front, and I wasn’t taking that much space.
A few minutes after I pulled my laptop out and had Max’s manuscript open, a 30-something young woman asked if she could share my table; in just a few minutes the place went to overflowing and the only other apparent open seat was at a table with an elderly gentleman who was trying to hork something out of his sinuses at regular intervals.
Of course I told her of course. She could sit there and eat her lunch while I poked at the keys on the keyboard and munch on a chicken strip. I made sure I had a few napkins between my food and computer, took my sweatshirt off, and was just taking a bite when she noticed my tattoos.
Specifically, my pink ribbon feet.
The usual small talk ensued: what made you want that, why shape the ribbon like feet? I told her about participating in the 3 Day, how after my third I decided I wanted a tattoo, but not the typical pink ribbon, especially since I was not a survivor, I was nothing more than a walker and crew member.
“I’m a survivor.”
Diagnosed at 26, mastectomy, chemo—she underwent the whole works. She also expressed a keen appreciation for those who have no immediate tie to the disease, but still get out there and pound the asphalt step after step, with not much to show for it other than blisters and sore muscles.
The 33% drop in donations to walkers this year, she was aware of. The entire dust-up with Planned Parenthood and the fallout was very familiar to her. The sneers that Komen is a big business without a clear direction to find a cure bothers her as much as does the vitriol on either side of the controversy.
People throw around statistics, she said, as if they matter. People look to the amounts put towards research to find a cure and spit out vindictives about the seemingly small amount, without stepping back to see the bigger picture.
“I am the bigger picture.”
When she was diagnosed, she had no medical insurance. A lump was found during a routine exam—done at Planned Parenthood, because she knew no of other place to obtain basic care—and the wheels were set in motion. She was directed to a place she could get a Komen-funded mammogram, and everything that followed was a blur of this isn’t happening to me layered in fear, agony, vomiting, hair loss, and a very small glimmer of hope.
Komen was with her every step of the way. Uninsured, she was sure she would wind up dying, but the local Komen office found her the care she needed, from the initial terrifying appointments to surgery and chemotherapy. When she couldn’t pay her rent because she couldn’t work, Komen found the money to keep a roof over her head and food on the table.
“Komen kept me alive. That’s the bigger picture. I’m alive.”
On the whole, she said she thinks Komen made a tremendous blunder when they first withdrew the possibility for further funding to Planned Parenthood, and couldn’t win when they reversed the decision. They can’t win because the statistics of where the money people donate goes isn’t painfully obvious to everyone. They can’t win because too many people refuse to look past Planned Parenthood’s statistics and equate any money at all going to them as being available for abortion services, even though that’s far from the truth. They can’t win because people are tired of pinkwashing and are suffering from compassion apathy.
“I wish they’d get over it, because there are things more important than their offended sensibilities.”
And she’s right.
There are things far more important.
Her name is Heather, and she’s alive.
Saturday
Wednesday
Sunday
30 September 2012
Wednesday
Monday
24 September 2012
I went to bed about an hour and a half ago, and--oddly, for me--fell asleep within ten minutes or so. Twenty minutes ago I woke up, ripped out of a bad dream, and I'm pretty sure I won't be going back to sleep for a while.
In this dream, I was sweeping the floor, amused that Buddah was watching me intently. But as I bent over to shove everything onto a dust pan, I realized there was a snake on the floor, fangs bared, and it was coming at me.
Before I could even squeak, Buddah got between the snake and me, he took the bite, and fell over.
Quite dead.
I pummeled the snake with the broom until it was one long string of mush on the cheap laminate, all the while begging Buddah to wake up.
I think that was what woke me up, the pleading over and over for him to wake up.
So, here I sit in the living room, not wanting to go back to bed. Max is curled up on Buddah's tower, and Buddah is in the chair next to me, snoring quite loudly, because he doesn't seem to grasp that if he didn't curl into such a tight ball, breathing would be a whole lot easier.
We always joked that Buddah is Hank reincarnated. Dreams like that...well, Hank would have gotten between a snake and me, too.
Max, not so much.
If they wake up before I go back to bed, they are sooo getting some crunchy treats.
![]() |
| It wasn't nearly this cute... (picture found at reddit) |
Before I could even squeak, Buddah got between the snake and me, he took the bite, and fell over.
Quite dead.
I pummeled the snake with the broom until it was one long string of mush on the cheap laminate, all the while begging Buddah to wake up.
I think that was what woke me up, the pleading over and over for him to wake up.
So, here I sit in the living room, not wanting to go back to bed. Max is curled up on Buddah's tower, and Buddah is in the chair next to me, snoring quite loudly, because he doesn't seem to grasp that if he didn't curl into such a tight ball, breathing would be a whole lot easier.
We always joked that Buddah is Hank reincarnated. Dreams like that...well, Hank would have gotten between a snake and me, too.
Max, not so much.
If they wake up before I go back to bed, they are sooo getting some crunchy treats.
Friday
21 September 2012
I Googled "You're not quite normal" and this is what Image Search coughed up:
Doctor Who, with a cat.
Sweet.
I looked for a "you're not quite normal" image because of the phone call I just got from the Gastroenterologist who performed my colonoscopy the other day. He took several biopsies in there, paying particular attention to a reddish area that he thought might just be a spot where the colitis had not yet quite resolved.
Before he began on Tuesday, he went over why I was there--because there had been an issue and I wasn't only there because I was over 50 and it was time--and he thought, based on the Cat Scan I'd had in July and the symptoms, that I'd had an infection. He mentioned that my regular doc had diagnosed possible diverticulitis, but if I'd had that (badly enough) it would have shown on the scan, so he wasn't expecting to find giant diverticulae.
Ok, fine. He did the scope, took some biopsies, and then he sent the snippets he took out of my colon to the pathologist.
The results are already in.
I have some "mild architectural changes" and a few small diverticulae, but none of that explains the sudden onset colitis of early July. There was no sign of infection, and other than speculating that I may (or may not) have the start of some chronic inflammatory disease, he doesn't know what's going on.
But...he also doesn't think I need to worry about it, unless things get worse.
So of course, I kinda wanna worry about it.
What I'll really do, though, is focus on the fact that not once did he mention the presence of cancerous or even pre-cancerous cells. And embrace the fact that once again, I have been deemed not quite normal.
That figures.
Doctor Who, with a cat.
Sweet.
I looked for a "you're not quite normal" image because of the phone call I just got from the Gastroenterologist who performed my colonoscopy the other day. He took several biopsies in there, paying particular attention to a reddish area that he thought might just be a spot where the colitis had not yet quite resolved.
Before he began on Tuesday, he went over why I was there--because there had been an issue and I wasn't only there because I was over 50 and it was time--and he thought, based on the Cat Scan I'd had in July and the symptoms, that I'd had an infection. He mentioned that my regular doc had diagnosed possible diverticulitis, but if I'd had that (badly enough) it would have shown on the scan, so he wasn't expecting to find giant diverticulae.
Ok, fine. He did the scope, took some biopsies, and then he sent the snippets he took out of my colon to the pathologist.
The results are already in.
I have some "mild architectural changes" and a few small diverticulae, but none of that explains the sudden onset colitis of early July. There was no sign of infection, and other than speculating that I may (or may not) have the start of some chronic inflammatory disease, he doesn't know what's going on.
But...he also doesn't think I need to worry about it, unless things get worse.
So of course, I kinda wanna worry about it.
What I'll really do, though, is focus on the fact that not once did he mention the presence of cancerous or even pre-cancerous cells. And embrace the fact that once again, I have been deemed not quite normal.
That figures.
Wednesday
19 September 2012
...and everything came out all right in the end...
All right, whoever named this stuff was as full of what it’s intended to remove. It should be more aptly named GOLYKFLAMESSHOOTINGOUTYOURASTERISKREPEATEDLY.
Still…other than the fact that the volume required to consume as prep for a colonoscopy is an insane amount, it wasn’t that bad. It tasted like lemon flavored sea water, but I was able to make it a little more palatable by adding lemonade Crystal Lite to it. Not that it tasted like lemonade, but at least I could get it down with a minimum of gagging.
Now, one of the things they tell you about prep day is that you can only have clear liquids. I suggest you shop accordingly. There are lots of fun clear liquids to choose from, just make sure there’s no red dye in them.
Seriously, though…I’d read in more than one place online that one way to make the prep easier was to eat lighly the couple of days before starting. Sunday and Monday the heaviest thing I ate was Frosted Flakes for dinner on Sunday, and Monday I ate toast with peanut butter for breakfast, and after that, just noodle soup.
And it worked, I think. The horrificness I expected from the prep never happened, mostly because there really wasn’t much hanging around in my gut. I stared drinking the GoLytely around 1pm and was done with it a little after 4… And TMI…by 3:30 everything was running clear, and I was done needing to drink any more of it.
But…BUTT…the worst of it really isn’t the prep drink. It’s not the feeling like you’re going to rocket off the toilet and plunge head first into the ceiling. The worst of it is what all that prep drink coming out the other end does to that tender, tender flesh.
Vaseline is your friend. And don’t make my mistake of waiting until you need it. Start gooping that chit on right from the start, put in on thick, and extend it farther on your nether cheeks than you think you’ll need it. Yeah, your undies are going to be less than pretty after, but at least those will wash out.
By 8pm I was down to gurgling, nothing major. I was hungry as hell, but not starving, and kept drinking my clear liquids right up until I went to bed around 11:45.
Since my biggest worry was the prep—I am a delicate flower, after all—I wasn’t worried or nervous about the actual colonoscopy. Someone seeing my bare ass? No big deal. I’m pretty sure mine is neither something special nor something unusual, so there was no squeamishness about that. Someone shoving a giant rubber hose up there? I was promised drugs, and if you give me the right drugs, you can do almost anything to me. I don’t care.
I thought I might be a little nervous during the check-in, but wasn’t. And I expected a little of it while going through my medical history with the nurse—who advised that post-procedure I fart my little heart out, because I was going to be very bloated and full of air and holding it in, not such a good idea—but it never surfaced.
Even after changing clothes, getting the IV in (two points to that nurse, who got it in one stick), all I wanted was to get started, get rolled back to the room for my drugs.
Seriously, that’s all I wanted. Drugs to knock me out. A half hour, drug-induced nap sounded just fine.
That part, I looked forward to. As I was wheeled into the too-cold procedure room (you know it’s too cold when the tech is wrapped up in a blanket she got from the blanket warmer) all I was looking for was the drugs. But before they would give them to me, the doc seemed to think it was a good idea to go over the history of why I was there—he’d actually taken the time to read the report sent by my primary doc—and he wanted to weigh in on what he expected to find (nothing, really) and what he suspected caused the colitis in July (likely infection.) And then he snapped his gloves on, and it was drug time.
Yay! Drugs!
I watched as the nurse added the Demerol and Versed to my IV and waited to drift off to LaLa land…
…and I never did. I was definitely more relaxed and a touch woozy, but I was wide awake for the whole damned thing, from the moment he shoved that giant rubber hose up my asterisk, while he wiggled it around and took biopsy samples and snipped a couple of they-don’t-look-like-anything polyps, until he unceremoniously yanked that sucker out with a too-happy, “All done!”
I’m thinking he enjoyed it a little too much.
Still, even awake—because of the Demerol, I’m sure—it wasn’t remotely awful. A little uncomfortable in spots, but not painful, and definitely nothing worth worrying about.
Honestly, the worst part of the whole thing was the flaming asterisk because I hadn’t pre-emptively used the Vaseline. In 10 years, when I need it again, I’ll remember that part.
Boys and girls, if you’re putting it off because you’re afraid of the prep, or embarrassed about the actual procedure…it honestly is not anything worth getting worked up over. Just eat light a few days beforehand, don’t eat anything the day you start the prep, make sure the GoLytely (or generic thereof) is icy cold (make it the night before a refrigerate), and goop the holy hell out of your asterisk before the intestinal onslaught begins.
It is honestly no big deal.
When they sent me home, about 30 minutes after I was done, it was with another you’ll-fart-a lot-don’t-hold-it-in warning. So I figured I’d be tooting all the way home, something for the Spouse Thingy to enjoy.
But. I was disappointed.
The massive, all-afternoon fart-fest I was promised fizzled with a couple of half hearted toots. That might be the most disappointing thing of all.
![]() |
| Like hell it is |
Still…other than the fact that the volume required to consume as prep for a colonoscopy is an insane amount, it wasn’t that bad. It tasted like lemon flavored sea water, but I was able to make it a little more palatable by adding lemonade Crystal Lite to it. Not that it tasted like lemonade, but at least I could get it down with a minimum of gagging.
![]() |
| Clear liquids are your friend |
Seriously, though…I’d read in more than one place online that one way to make the prep easier was to eat lighly the couple of days before starting. Sunday and Monday the heaviest thing I ate was Frosted Flakes for dinner on Sunday, and Monday I ate toast with peanut butter for breakfast, and after that, just noodle soup.
And it worked, I think. The horrificness I expected from the prep never happened, mostly because there really wasn’t much hanging around in my gut. I stared drinking the GoLytely around 1pm and was done with it a little after 4… And TMI…by 3:30 everything was running clear, and I was done needing to drink any more of it.
But…BUTT…the worst of it really isn’t the prep drink. It’s not the feeling like you’re going to rocket off the toilet and plunge head first into the ceiling. The worst of it is what all that prep drink coming out the other end does to that tender, tender flesh.
![]() |
| Trust me... |
By 8pm I was down to gurgling, nothing major. I was hungry as hell, but not starving, and kept drinking my clear liquids right up until I went to bed around 11:45.
Since my biggest worry was the prep—I am a delicate flower, after all—I wasn’t worried or nervous about the actual colonoscopy. Someone seeing my bare ass? No big deal. I’m pretty sure mine is neither something special nor something unusual, so there was no squeamishness about that. Someone shoving a giant rubber hose up there? I was promised drugs, and if you give me the right drugs, you can do almost anything to me. I don’t care.
I thought I might be a little nervous during the check-in, but wasn’t. And I expected a little of it while going through my medical history with the nurse—who advised that post-procedure I fart my little heart out, because I was going to be very bloated and full of air and holding it in, not such a good idea—but it never surfaced.
Even after changing clothes, getting the IV in (two points to that nurse, who got it in one stick), all I wanted was to get started, get rolled back to the room for my drugs.
Seriously, that’s all I wanted. Drugs to knock me out. A half hour, drug-induced nap sounded just fine.
That part, I looked forward to. As I was wheeled into the too-cold procedure room (you know it’s too cold when the tech is wrapped up in a blanket she got from the blanket warmer) all I was looking for was the drugs. But before they would give them to me, the doc seemed to think it was a good idea to go over the history of why I was there—he’d actually taken the time to read the report sent by my primary doc—and he wanted to weigh in on what he expected to find (nothing, really) and what he suspected caused the colitis in July (likely infection.) And then he snapped his gloves on, and it was drug time.
Yay! Drugs!
I watched as the nurse added the Demerol and Versed to my IV and waited to drift off to LaLa land…
…and I never did. I was definitely more relaxed and a touch woozy, but I was wide awake for the whole damned thing, from the moment he shoved that giant rubber hose up my asterisk, while he wiggled it around and took biopsy samples and snipped a couple of they-don’t-look-like-anything polyps, until he unceremoniously yanked that sucker out with a too-happy, “All done!”
I’m thinking he enjoyed it a little too much.
Still, even awake—because of the Demerol, I’m sure—it wasn’t remotely awful. A little uncomfortable in spots, but not painful, and definitely nothing worth worrying about.
Honestly, the worst part of the whole thing was the flaming asterisk because I hadn’t pre-emptively used the Vaseline. In 10 years, when I need it again, I’ll remember that part.
Boys and girls, if you’re putting it off because you’re afraid of the prep, or embarrassed about the actual procedure…it honestly is not anything worth getting worked up over. Just eat light a few days beforehand, don’t eat anything the day you start the prep, make sure the GoLytely (or generic thereof) is icy cold (make it the night before a refrigerate), and goop the holy hell out of your asterisk before the intestinal onslaught begins.
It is honestly no big deal.
When they sent me home, about 30 minutes after I was done, it was with another you’ll-fart-a lot-don’t-hold-it-in warning. So I figured I’d be tooting all the way home, something for the Spouse Thingy to enjoy.
But. I was disappointed.
The massive, all-afternoon fart-fest I was promised fizzled with a couple of half hearted toots. That might be the most disappointing thing of all.
Sunday
16 September 2012
If you use any of the following, or any of the potential derivatives...
ObamaFart
RomnoBot
ObamBozo
MittenHead
Obuttama
Romnodork
...you need to grow the hell up.
I seriously, seriously do not remember there ever being such an overt level of disrespect toward the President and Presidential candidates before.
Obama is an American. Stop pushing the Birther Agenda.
Romney is not going to rip off the middle class and give it all to the rich. Stop promoting the Reverse Robin Hood Agenda.
Just grow up already. And show some respect. Cripes.
ObamaFart
RomnoBot
ObamBozo
MittenHead
Obuttama
Romnodork
...you need to grow the hell up.
I seriously, seriously do not remember there ever being such an overt level of disrespect toward the President and Presidential candidates before.
Obama is an American. Stop pushing the Birther Agenda.
Romney is not going to rip off the middle class and give it all to the rich. Stop promoting the Reverse Robin Hood Agenda.
Just grow up already. And show some respect. Cripes.
Friday
14 September 2012
How can you still support Komen? After everything that happened, how?
Ok, so not a direct quote. But it’s the sentiment that I and many other people who have crewed and walked in the 3 Day this year have been faced with. I’ve heard it and variations since the whole Planned Parenthood thing exploded, and I’ve seen others online struggling with it. One or two walkers who landed in our sweep van were talking about it.
It doesn’t even matter what side of the issue we’re on: a not so small number of people don’t seem to quite understand how we can still throw our support behind this organization.
I didn’t come to it lightly. I chewed through it here, practically vomiting my thoughts onto virtual paper while I picked through the detritus of what was happening with Komen.
In a nutshell, after the fiasco of saying that Planned Parenthood would no longer be getting funding from Komen, they backed down and reversed the decision, and as part of that revised the policy change that supposedly was at the crux of it all. The person who seemed to be the instigator and for whom the issue of PP getting funding was personal “resigned.” Funding was not only restored, but from what I’ve heard, PP got a little more this year than last.
And more recently, Nancy Brinker resigned as CEO and moved into a different position.
But here’s the thing…no matter what happened, no matter how skewed I think the salaries of those high in the Komen chain are, no matter what I think about the politics and the unpleasantness of it all, that doesn’t change the fact that Komen does a lot of good for a lot of people.
I think the good they do outweighs the bad. The money they spend on research, on direct health care, on support of women and men who are facing breast cancer is far more important than what I think was an egregious error in judgment.
They screwed up. They’ve admitted it. They’ve taken steps to correct it. People have lost jobs over it.
Still…I get where people are coming from. It was huge, so why did I turn around and volunteer to crew this year?
![]() |
| This really was too much fun |
But just as important…while I did not want to walk for Komen this year—I knew I’d never be able to adequately fund raise, for one—I absolutely did want to support the people who looked past everything and did what they had to do in order to walk. I have no issues with those who fully embrace Komen and they do it because their hearts are as big as their ability to face those miles head on and with a smile.
![]() |
| They didn't quit...how could I? |
Truly, I can’t speak for other people, what motivated them to get involved this year in spite of everything that’s happened with Komen. I can only say that for me, the positives of Komen far outweigh the negatives, and I would much rather be engaged in something that saves lives and protects the integrity of people going through treatment than I would in turning my back on them just because I disagreed with that one thing.
Will I walk for them again? I honestly don’t know. If I don’t, it’s not going to be because of the PP debacle, it will be because walking those distances is getting harder and harder. If I do, I’m going to have to straight up admit to donors before the fact that I probably won’t cover all 60 miles. But I have no doubt that I will remain involved somehow. Crew is important; I don’t mind the idea of driving a van or hauling food or cleaning up for and after the walkers.
![]() |
| She certainly still deserves support |
I’m already registered to crew for Komen in San Francisco again next year. It was just too much fun not to.
![]() |
| And how can I miss the Hookers??? |
I can respect it if someone doesn’t want to throw another dime at Komen. I respect it just as much if they do. There’s no right or wrong in how a person feels about this; it just is what it is. It is a conundrum, but no one should feel bad for the side they pick…both sides are defensible, but I find more worth in the side I ended up on.
My opinions and needs < Komen’s actions and needs < people with breast cancer and people who will get breast cancer.
It really is that simple.
Wednesday
12 September 2012
Didn’t you used to be a Republican? How can you turn your back on family values and embrace the things that are polar opposite from your core and your religion?Hmm. Well. Yes, once upon a time I was registered as a Republican; I was also a teenager whose political viewpoint was still far from being fully formed, and it was a time when being a Republican didn’t mean being someone so willing to squash the freedoms of those who might have a life viewpoint different than mine.
![]() |
| Last of the True Republicans? |
![]() |
| A REALLY good Republican |
There seems to be an ignorant—or perhaps arrogant— willingness to forget that many of the founders of this great country were atheists, and those non-believers were more than willing to protect the freedoms of others to embrace belief and live the religions of their own choosing.
But worse, if it can be worse, the Republican Party of today doesn’t appear to be acting in the best interests of the country, but rather in its own interests. Party above all, screw the country. It seems that they will do and say anything to keep President Obama from being re-elected, no matter how many lies that have to be told or truths that have to be skewered to get it done. They’re blocking bills they themselves initially supported, stumping jobs-creation that leads to higher unemployment, and they’re pushing to default on debt, which has led to the downgrading of the U.S. credit rating…and it’s all being done to forward an agenda that is not for the greater good, but for the good of the special few.
Look, you know the lies are over the top when even Fox News feels it has to point out the glaring untruths in Ryan’s convention speech.
![]() |
| Maybe she should run next... |
As for Romney, he seems like a personable guy. I think he’d be a lousy president and he flip flops like a fish out of water, but I’m not a fan of the way the media jumps on stupid things about him. Like his tax returns. So he won’t release them. Big deal. We all know he’s rich as hell, there’s no news to be found there. I don’t think he’s hiding money from the government or covering up unpaid taxes. If anything, he doesn’t want the LDS church to see exactly how much he’s got, because there’s that pesky tithing thing and he just might not have coughed up 10% of every single dime he’s made.
I’m just guessing on that, though. And I doubt it would be intentional, but why stir up the pot when it doesn’t need to be?
He needs to stop the borderline apologies for his wealth and stop trying to make like he and his family really know what it’s like to not have a lot. We all know his life has been more comfortable than most, even in his youth. So what? I don’t begrudge anyone their wealth. Do good things with it, be a good person, that’s all that matters.
Still…I no longer trust what the Republican Party stands for. Because from where I sit, it’s now a party of we’re right, you’re wrong, and if you don’t embrace how far to the right we now lean then you’re going to hell, and like it or not we’re taking this country back to the 50s where our women belong in the kitchen, and all those faggoty people need to go the fuck away.
It’s become—to me—a party of people who claim to be Christian and want to take the U.S. to Christian extremes, yet I see very little true Christian principles in these people. There’s a meanness there that just makes me sad. There’s a level of fear-mongering that leaves me bewildered, and—I hate to say it—a lack of education that scares me. Ignorance embraced—if you honestly believe that our President is a Muslim (not that it should matter, not if one truly believes in freedom of religion) and he was born in Kenya, yeah, you’re not the brightest bulb in the pack—terrifies me.
None of that means I’m a Democrat, either. It only means that in the post-Reagan era, the Republican Party lost my trust, and it would take a hell of a lot to get it back.
Oh, and the core of "my religion?"
Yeah, so not an organized religion kind of person. Been there, done that, hate the hypocrisy, never again.
Tuesday
11 September 2012
All righty. I think the most important thing is that I didn’t
run anyone over with the van. I didn’t plow through a crosswalk filled with
nuns and small children, I didn’t smash into a line of cars at the side of the
street, and I didn’t squish walkers, road safety crew, nor knock the
port-a-potties over at any of the pit stops.
There were a few curb checks, but I blame the big ass van and narrow San Francisco streets for that. And we had a very close call in Berkley while making a right turn and some impatient bubble-brained blonde woman in a blue sedan was too impatient for me to finish making the damned turn before trying to pass…we’re talking a very narrow lane, sidewalk with people on one side and a traffic island on the other, and she decides to pass. I think we missed colliding by less than an inch.
But we didn’t, and all in all, I had an absolute blast driving the sweep van for the 3 Day.
We had less than an auspicious start to our 3 Day adventure; when we checked into the crew hotel Thursday, the clerk at the front desk told us the crew buses would start at 3:45; we took that to mean the first bus would leave then, followed by others, until the last walker bus left at 6:30. After all, that’s how it’s worked in the past. One bus follows another, until all the walkers are boarded.
Um. Yeah.
We got down to the lobby at about 3:50 Friday morning, and the only crew buses—just two of them—had already left. The first walker bus wouldn’t be there until 4:45, long after we were supposed to be at the opening ceremony site.
Oops.
Michelle called our crew captain to let her know; she said it was fine. That was all well and good, but we still had an hour to kill waiting for the next bus. The hotel was passing out breakfast boxes, which only had an apple, a protein bar, and some yogurt in them. Not really enough to pass an entire hour munching on.
We didn’t get to the opening ceremony site until nearly 5:25; since we were one of the first vans out and were starting at Pit Stop 1, we headed out and finished decorating our van there. The nice people of the PS1 Double Dee Diner let us load our cooler with their ice, we availed ourselves of the not-yet-used port-a-potties, and waited for the first walker to get there. Once she was in, we took off, starting our three days of driving around, stalking walkers, making sure they were all right and picking up those who needed a break.
I’m not gonna kid you, Marge; the days were long, starting
before 7 a.m. and ending after 6 p.m. and the longest we were out of the van at
any given time was on day 1 when we took 15 minutes to have lunch and take in
the view of the Golden Gate Bridge from our vantage point at Fort Baker.
We’d have been fools not to. But other than that, we kept
moving all day on all three days; I drove and Michelle navigated—she is truly a
map-reading demon and kept us on route even when the Garmin could not (‘cause
it just did.not.work.) and when the maps didn’t show one way streets or blocked
off streets—and she was the one getting in and out of the van to help walkers
get in and out.
All I had to do was point the van where she told me to, to keep an eye out for objects I should probably not run over, and to look for walkers needing help
.
Michelle also kept an eye out for route safety workers to offer them water, Gatorade, and cookies; on day 2 we were flagged down by one of the guys who wanted to buy one of our bras so he would have some kind of decoration on his motorcycle; she had 140 of the damn things (donated to the cause by the people she works with and her nieces) and by the time we left, he not only had a bra on his bike, but he was wearing a leopard print bra and his teenaged son was wearing a zebra print bra. Later in the day they asked for a couple more, and were seen riding around with them on their helmets.
When we got to camp on the first day, I was worn out. I hadn’t slept much in the hotel Thursday night, and after driving all day, I was down to the last of my energy reserves. We got the van parked and headed for the gear truck where our bags were waiting and where we could pick up our tent, which still needed to be put up. We needed to blow up our mattresses, get food, get shuttle passes in order to get back to the hotel on Sunday because that’s where my car was parked, still needed to shower…
…so you can imagine how grateful we were that waiting for us at the gear truck were a couple of Boy Scouts, who dragged our heavy-assed bags across the camp site for us, and who put up two tents for us.
Yep, we got our own tents. The
down side to that is we were able to get our own because there was enough space
for them, and there was enough space for them because there were 6oo fewer
walkers than last year.
Still. Tiny tents = very happy to get one solo no matter what the reason.
Day 2 started earlier than it needed to when someone slapped
the door to my tent at 5:30 to wake me up…a fellow sweep van person who didn’t
realize I didn’t need to be up quite so early. I grumbled, but I’d been lying
there half-awake anyway, and it gave me enough time to lounge a bit and not
rush to get dressed, get food, and get going.
It was by far the busiest day. We picked up fewer than 20 walkers the first day and fewer than 10 the third (partly because of where we were in the van lineup and partly because by that point on the route no one wanted to get swept to the holding area, not with fewer than 5 miles to go) but on the second day we picked up somewhere around 60.
Coolest thing to happen? We were at the lunch stop to drop a couple of tired walkers off and a woman came up excitedly to tell us we had her tattoo on our van. After a little confusion—because, peeps, it’s my tattoo design we had on the van—we came to find out she had wanted a cool pink ribbon tattoo but not the typical one (kind of like me) and Googled for ideas and found this pink ribbon feet tattoo and took it to an artist to get it inked…the tattoo she’d found was mine.
I may have started a trend!
I’m not sure how many miles we covered over the three days; the walkers did roughly 60, but with all the back and forth we did, I’m guessing it was around 300-350 miles. That third day we started ahead of the walkers, and kept up with the first group until around noon, when we headed for the stretch between the last pit stop and the holding area, and rode that for over 4 hours.
There was one point where if I could have, I would have stopped the van in the middle of the road, gotten out, and beaten the holy hell out of someone; as the walkers were making their way down a very narrow path that had the street (and us) on one side and a hill heading downward on their other side, some dipwad trying to walk against the stream of 3 day people got annoyed and shoulder-checked a walker—if he’d done it any harder she would have gone down the hill—and he was yelling about them walking single file.
Yeah, I yelled back. I couldn’t do anything and couldn’t stop because there were a lot of cars behind us and no way for them to get around, but damn I wanted to.
I think that was the worst of things happening.
Other than that…we had a blast. There were only a couple of grumpy walkers we picked up, and then only because they didn’t quite understand that when they wanted us to get them they were in an area we were not allowed in so we had to meet them at a point about a mile from where they wanted us to be, but everyone else was cheery and happy to take a short ride with us.
They got a Rock the Pink pin and temporary tattoos for getting into the van, and Michelle had a ton of candy and cookies for them, which made for some happy campers.
All in all, tons of fun and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year; registration opens tomorrow, so cross your fingers I get online in time to snag the sweep job. I drove a lot of miles, ate way too many Tootsie Rolls, got to watch nearly a thousand people walk along, had a few chuckles when tourists pointed at the bra-covered van and took pictures, and got a really good look at why people did this walk, even those who were still really ticked off about the Komen/Planned Parenthood fiasco that happened earlier in the year.
It wasn’t about politics. It was about friends and family who have been helped by the Komen Foundation, politics aside, and for survivors it was about living life and not counting every wrong thing Komen does against every right thing it does.
It was about hope. Politics don’t get to take that away from people.
Oh, and next year remind me to use sunscreen. I
had on a sweatshirt, but I pushed it up my arm and I got a nice 4 inch burn
from hell on my left arm.
Totally worth it.
There were a few curb checks, but I blame the big ass van and narrow San Francisco streets for that. And we had a very close call in Berkley while making a right turn and some impatient bubble-brained blonde woman in a blue sedan was too impatient for me to finish making the damned turn before trying to pass…we’re talking a very narrow lane, sidewalk with people on one side and a traffic island on the other, and she decides to pass. I think we missed colliding by less than an inch.
But we didn’t, and all in all, I had an absolute blast driving the sweep van for the 3 Day.
We had less than an auspicious start to our 3 Day adventure; when we checked into the crew hotel Thursday, the clerk at the front desk told us the crew buses would start at 3:45; we took that to mean the first bus would leave then, followed by others, until the last walker bus left at 6:30. After all, that’s how it’s worked in the past. One bus follows another, until all the walkers are boarded.
Um. Yeah.
We got down to the lobby at about 3:50 Friday morning, and the only crew buses—just two of them—had already left. The first walker bus wouldn’t be there until 4:45, long after we were supposed to be at the opening ceremony site.
Oops.
Michelle called our crew captain to let her know; she said it was fine. That was all well and good, but we still had an hour to kill waiting for the next bus. The hotel was passing out breakfast boxes, which only had an apple, a protein bar, and some yogurt in them. Not really enough to pass an entire hour munching on.
We didn’t get to the opening ceremony site until nearly 5:25; since we were one of the first vans out and were starting at Pit Stop 1, we headed out and finished decorating our van there. The nice people of the PS1 Double Dee Diner let us load our cooler with their ice, we availed ourselves of the not-yet-used port-a-potties, and waited for the first walker to get there. Once she was in, we took off, starting our three days of driving around, stalking walkers, making sure they were all right and picking up those who needed a break.
| Left side of the van, Day 1 at Pit Stop 1 |
| This photo taken by walker Cathy Youngling as we drove by on Day 2 |
| Lunch with a view on Day 1 |
All I had to do was point the van where she told me to, to keep an eye out for objects I should probably not run over, and to look for walkers needing help
.
Michelle also kept an eye out for route safety workers to offer them water, Gatorade, and cookies; on day 2 we were flagged down by one of the guys who wanted to buy one of our bras so he would have some kind of decoration on his motorcycle; she had 140 of the damn things (donated to the cause by the people she works with and her nieces) and by the time we left, he not only had a bra on his bike, but he was wearing a leopard print bra and his teenaged son was wearing a zebra print bra. Later in the day they asked for a couple more, and were seen riding around with them on their helmets.
When we got to camp on the first day, I was worn out. I hadn’t slept much in the hotel Thursday night, and after driving all day, I was down to the last of my energy reserves. We got the van parked and headed for the gear truck where our bags were waiting and where we could pick up our tent, which still needed to be put up. We needed to blow up our mattresses, get food, get shuttle passes in order to get back to the hotel on Sunday because that’s where my car was parked, still needed to shower…
…so you can imagine how grateful we were that waiting for us at the gear truck were a couple of Boy Scouts, who dragged our heavy-assed bags across the camp site for us, and who put up two tents for us.
| The view from inside my tent |
Still. Tiny tents = very happy to get one solo no matter what the reason.
| Morning comes too early |
It was by far the busiest day. We picked up fewer than 20 walkers the first day and fewer than 10 the third (partly because of where we were in the van lineup and partly because by that point on the route no one wanted to get swept to the holding area, not with fewer than 5 miles to go) but on the second day we picked up somewhere around 60.
Coolest thing to happen? We were at the lunch stop to drop a couple of tired walkers off and a woman came up excitedly to tell us we had her tattoo on our van. After a little confusion—because, peeps, it’s my tattoo design we had on the van—we came to find out she had wanted a cool pink ribbon tattoo but not the typical one (kind of like me) and Googled for ideas and found this pink ribbon feet tattoo and took it to an artist to get it inked…the tattoo she’d found was mine.
I may have started a trend!
I’m not sure how many miles we covered over the three days; the walkers did roughly 60, but with all the back and forth we did, I’m guessing it was around 300-350 miles. That third day we started ahead of the walkers, and kept up with the first group until around noon, when we headed for the stretch between the last pit stop and the holding area, and rode that for over 4 hours.
There was one point where if I could have, I would have stopped the van in the middle of the road, gotten out, and beaten the holy hell out of someone; as the walkers were making their way down a very narrow path that had the street (and us) on one side and a hill heading downward on their other side, some dipwad trying to walk against the stream of 3 day people got annoyed and shoulder-checked a walker—if he’d done it any harder she would have gone down the hill—and he was yelling about them walking single file.
Yeah, I yelled back. I couldn’t do anything and couldn’t stop because there were a lot of cars behind us and no way for them to get around, but damn I wanted to.
I think that was the worst of things happening.
Other than that…we had a blast. There were only a couple of grumpy walkers we picked up, and then only because they didn’t quite understand that when they wanted us to get them they were in an area we were not allowed in so we had to meet them at a point about a mile from where they wanted us to be, but everyone else was cheery and happy to take a short ride with us.
They got a Rock the Pink pin and temporary tattoos for getting into the van, and Michelle had a ton of candy and cookies for them, which made for some happy campers.
All in all, tons of fun and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year; registration opens tomorrow, so cross your fingers I get online in time to snag the sweep job. I drove a lot of miles, ate way too many Tootsie Rolls, got to watch nearly a thousand people walk along, had a few chuckles when tourists pointed at the bra-covered van and took pictures, and got a really good look at why people did this walk, even those who were still really ticked off about the Komen/Planned Parenthood fiasco that happened earlier in the year.
It wasn’t about politics. It was about friends and family who have been helped by the Komen Foundation, politics aside, and for survivors it was about living life and not counting every wrong thing Komen does against every right thing it does.
It was about hope. Politics don’t get to take that away from people.
| Ow |
Totally worth it.
4 September 2012
Day after tomorrow DKM and I head for the Bay Area for the SF Komen 3 Day for the Cure. Nope, we're not walking; we're going to be in a van, driving back and forth on the route, picking up walkers who need a break.
I'm hoping this year goes better than last year, when I had to leave at the end of day two because I'd gotten sick.
This year, I had the sense to get sick ahead of time. I'm just kind of half holding my breath, hoping that I don't have a flare up between now and Monday morning. Well, I don't want one after that, either, but I don't want to screw it up the 3 Day this time around.
It's not just me that gets hosed if I get sick. It hoses DKM and takes a van out of the lineup, and it's not like there are 25 vans in operation.
I feel decent, though, so it's really just one of those please don't let it happen things. My real concern should be fatigue, because I'm still a litte tired a lot of the time, but it's not like I'm going to be on my feet all the time. I'll be on my asterisk most of the time, a position I am quite comfortable with.
This will be my first time crewing; I'm very excited about it, and quite hopeful that I won't run anyone over.
I can always blame DKM if I do. I'll find a way.
After this weekend is over, I just have to get through the 19th (colonoscopy...fun, fun, fun) and then I'll train to walk those miles I missed in July, when I couldn't do the Avon walk. In either October or November, I'll go back to San Francisco (because WHY NOT?!?!) and spend a couple of days walking. You guys donated so that I could do that in July...so I'll be a little late, but it'll still be fun.
But until then... ROCK THE PICK SWEEP VAN, BABY!
(If you're walking SF...we're gonna have STUFF in the van for you. Cookies and candy and pins and temporary tattoos and the biggy...real Gatorade powder.)
Oh, and I'll be wearing these:
I have no shame.
![]() |
| Last year...I still like this picture... |
This year, I had the sense to get sick ahead of time. I'm just kind of half holding my breath, hoping that I don't have a flare up between now and Monday morning. Well, I don't want one after that, either, but I don't want to screw it up the 3 Day this time around.
It's not just me that gets hosed if I get sick. It hoses DKM and takes a van out of the lineup, and it's not like there are 25 vans in operation.
I feel decent, though, so it's really just one of those please don't let it happen things. My real concern should be fatigue, because I'm still a litte tired a lot of the time, but it's not like I'm going to be on my feet all the time. I'll be on my asterisk most of the time, a position I am quite comfortable with.
This will be my first time crewing; I'm very excited about it, and quite hopeful that I won't run anyone over.
I can always blame DKM if I do. I'll find a way.
After this weekend is over, I just have to get through the 19th (colonoscopy...fun, fun, fun) and then I'll train to walk those miles I missed in July, when I couldn't do the Avon walk. In either October or November, I'll go back to San Francisco (because WHY NOT?!?!) and spend a couple of days walking. You guys donated so that I could do that in July...so I'll be a little late, but it'll still be fun.
But until then... ROCK THE PICK SWEEP VAN, BABY!
(If you're walking SF...we're gonna have STUFF in the van for you. Cookies and candy and pins and temporary tattoos and the biggy...real Gatorade powder.)
Oh, and I'll be wearing these:
I have no shame.
Monday
27 August 2012
At McD’s yesterday:
I’m sitting at a booth near the back; it’s not particularly
busy so I don’t feel weird about being there with just a drink cup; I have my
iPad and wireless keyboard, and am typing pretty hard because obviously
pounding the keys makes the words get onto the iPad faster…or I was just
frustrated because there’s a huge lag between typing and seeing the words on
the screen. While I try to not punch the iPad right in the feels, a woman and
little girl sit at a table across from me.
Little Girl: How come that lady isn’t eating?Mom: Maybe she’s not hungry.LG: Then what’s she doing?Mom: Typing.LG: Why?Mom: I don’t know. Maybe she’s writing email.LG: Well, whoever she’s writing to I think she’s mad at.
After a few more frustrating moments, I decided to stop for
a few minutes, before I chucked my (potentially dying) iPad across McD’s, and
got up to refill my drink and get a hot fudge Sundae. By the time I got through
the line again and was able to sit back down, I really didn’t feel like writing
anymore, so I opened up Flipboard and surfed through things in Google Reader.
LG: Well, that makes sense. Ice cream makes everything better.
Yep…well, unless you’re lactose intolerant.
Yeah, I went straight home after that, just in case…
Sunday
Saturday
18 August 2012
When I went to bed last night, Max was stretched out on the far side of the mattress, but as soon as I climbed in he exhaled sharply, got up, and stomped off.
Clearly, he did not want to share the bed, even though I was no where near him and not disturbing him in the least. I curled up and read for a while, turned off my iPad around 1:30 and went to sleep.
Four thirty in the freaking morning Max jumped up on the bed, meowed right into my ear, sounding almost panicked. Still, I rolled over, assuming he was just being a butthead...but instead of staying there and bugging me--what he usually does--he jumped down and I hear him running.
Ok, fine, this is not normal and on the chance that something was wrong, I got up.
He was hiding in the bathroom, hunched down on the floor close to the vanity, where he could see out the door. This certainly wasn't normal, but my best guess was that Buddah was stalking him and he was just trying to protect himself.
I headed down the hall to the living room, and he scurried behind me. Buddah, however, was stretched out on a chair, sound asleep.
Nothing else was out of order, but just in case, I went from window to window and looked outside, then went to the back door and turned the patio light on to check the back yard.
Nothing.
Max was still acting odd, so I sat down in the living room and waited, on the off chance that he really had seen something or someone out there. I left the lights inside off so that I could easily see outside, and while he sat at the back door staring out, I kept an eye out for movement or shadows, fairly sure I'd see absolutely nothing, and when I was positive, I went back to bed.
Max positioned himself halfway down the hall, and meowed his little head off for a good fifteen minutes.
An hour after he woke me, I drifted off again.
Twenty minutes later, he was in the bedroom doorway, registering a complaint about something or other; I didn't care to get up to see what was bothering his royal highness.
He stomped off, I rolled over.
Fifteen minutes later he was back, on the bed, sitting by my head, determined to tell me a long and complicated story that if I would just listen, he seemed sure I would understand.
He kept at it, off and on until nearly 7:30 this morning, letting me almost fall asleep and then either shouting from the hallway or jumping on the bed to talk to me. I had high hopes that when the Spouse Thingy got home from work and fed him, Max would finally shut up.
And he did.
But...post-breakfast I am Max's bed. He tends to come into the bedroom and crawls on top of me, where he snoozes until I get up. This morning, I must have been a mattress that's a tad too lumpy, because he could not get comfortable. He plastered himself one way, then got up, turned around, laid back down...over and over.
Once or twice I gently pushed him off and told him to sleep on the actual bed and not me, but apparently I was speaking a foreign language and to him it sounded like "Sure, stomp all over me, I don't mind at all."
I think I did sleep for a while with his face resting on my cheek, one paw jammed into my throat, but by 9:30, I gave up. He willingly slid off me when I wanted to get up, he followed me into the bathroom because I am apparently not capable of managing my morning goings-on without him--I might forget what order I need to do things, and trust me, he knows the order of things and directs me to them--and then he followed me into the living room.
Once satisified I was where I usually sit in the morning, he turned around and went back to bed.
My bed.
He's sound asleep and has been for the last three hours, and I am working hard to resist the temptation to go in there and start talking right into his ear, then spend the day waking him repeatedly by bouncing on the bed and breathing right into his face.
Irony, I don't think he gets it.
I also don't really blame him, because I knew when he first woke me up that it was likely a false alarm; he just wanted me up and knows how to accomplish that.
Still.
Tempting. Very tempting.
Clearly, he did not want to share the bed, even though I was no where near him and not disturbing him in the least. I curled up and read for a while, turned off my iPad around 1:30 and went to sleep.
Four thirty in the freaking morning Max jumped up on the bed, meowed right into my ear, sounding almost panicked. Still, I rolled over, assuming he was just being a butthead...but instead of staying there and bugging me--what he usually does--he jumped down and I hear him running.
Ok, fine, this is not normal and on the chance that something was wrong, I got up.
He was hiding in the bathroom, hunched down on the floor close to the vanity, where he could see out the door. This certainly wasn't normal, but my best guess was that Buddah was stalking him and he was just trying to protect himself.
I headed down the hall to the living room, and he scurried behind me. Buddah, however, was stretched out on a chair, sound asleep.
Nothing else was out of order, but just in case, I went from window to window and looked outside, then went to the back door and turned the patio light on to check the back yard.
Nothing.
Max was still acting odd, so I sat down in the living room and waited, on the off chance that he really had seen something or someone out there. I left the lights inside off so that I could easily see outside, and while he sat at the back door staring out, I kept an eye out for movement or shadows, fairly sure I'd see absolutely nothing, and when I was positive, I went back to bed.
Max positioned himself halfway down the hall, and meowed his little head off for a good fifteen minutes.
An hour after he woke me, I drifted off again.
Twenty minutes later, he was in the bedroom doorway, registering a complaint about something or other; I didn't care to get up to see what was bothering his royal highness.
He stomped off, I rolled over.
Fifteen minutes later he was back, on the bed, sitting by my head, determined to tell me a long and complicated story that if I would just listen, he seemed sure I would understand.
He kept at it, off and on until nearly 7:30 this morning, letting me almost fall asleep and then either shouting from the hallway or jumping on the bed to talk to me. I had high hopes that when the Spouse Thingy got home from work and fed him, Max would finally shut up.
And he did.
But...post-breakfast I am Max's bed. He tends to come into the bedroom and crawls on top of me, where he snoozes until I get up. This morning, I must have been a mattress that's a tad too lumpy, because he could not get comfortable. He plastered himself one way, then got up, turned around, laid back down...over and over.
Once or twice I gently pushed him off and told him to sleep on the actual bed and not me, but apparently I was speaking a foreign language and to him it sounded like "Sure, stomp all over me, I don't mind at all."
I think I did sleep for a while with his face resting on my cheek, one paw jammed into my throat, but by 9:30, I gave up. He willingly slid off me when I wanted to get up, he followed me into the bathroom because I am apparently not capable of managing my morning goings-on without him--I might forget what order I need to do things, and trust me, he knows the order of things and directs me to them--and then he followed me into the living room.
Once satisified I was where I usually sit in the morning, he turned around and went back to bed.
My bed.
He's sound asleep and has been for the last three hours, and I am working hard to resist the temptation to go in there and start talking right into his ear, then spend the day waking him repeatedly by bouncing on the bed and breathing right into his face.
Irony, I don't think he gets it.
I also don't really blame him, because I knew when he first woke me up that it was likely a false alarm; he just wanted me up and knows how to accomplish that.
Still.
Tempting. Very tempting.
11 August 2012
I am fairly sure this is exactly why the Spouse Thingy wants one of these RC toys:
Christmas is coming...
Christmas is coming...
Tuesday
7 August 2012
![]() |
| It's a lot like this, but with more cat on the keyboard |
- No matter what Max is trying to tell the world, the Spouse Thingy did not leave. He’s at the AANA conference and will be back tomorrow. Swearsies.
- Last weekend was the Cleveland 3 Day walk…last year they have over a thousand walkers and raised 2.8 million; this year they had 960 walkers and raised 1.6 million.
- Interesting (to me) tidbit about that: they had over a thousand people register, but they’ve removed the delayed self donation option, so a whole bunch of people couldn’t walk.
- I fully intended to work on Max’s next book this weekend, but so far have only really proofread what I’ve already got. I kind of lost the direction I was headed with it…I’m pretty sure where I was going was lost in a Percoset haze while I was sick.
- He is not being helpful about getting me back on track. Half the time I sit here at my desk, and he plops down on the keyboard.
- There’s half a page of mmmmmmmmmmmbbbbbbbbbccccccccccmmmmmmmm embedded in his manuscript now. I’m tempted to leave it because, hey, he wrote it.
- It’s not helping that I have these other story things pinging around in my head. For the last few months I’ve had a young adult story brewing in my brain, and it’s fighting with Max’s story to get out.
- I have also spent way too much time surfing around online, getting new tattoo ideas. There will be ink in my not-too-distant future.
- SOMEONE IN THE UK OWES ME A T-SHIRT
- No, not you. You either.
- My desktop PC system is about to croak, I think. I won’t need to replace it, but all my music is on there and I can’t find the software I need to transfer it all off that computer to another, and not sure I can transfer from a PC to a Mac.
- Yep, my life is First World Problem heavy. Envy me.
Monday
6 August 2012
This is my favorite toy.
Out of all the bikes I've had, it's been my favorite. Hands down. It's zippy, it's comfortable, it's easy to control, and it's pretty.
It's also loud.
Very loud.
When it arrived at the dealer, it was a stock black Triumph Bonneville, and for whatever reason--just because they could, I suspect--the dealership got it a custom paint job (no one else in the world has this paint on their bike!) and they slapped on some highly coveted aftermarket pipes.
These pipes, British Custom Predators, are the pipes a whole bunch of Bonneville owners want. The stock pipes make the bike sound like a sewing machine; the Predators make it sound...louder.
The problem is that I don't like louder. I don't like what it does to my hearing, and I've never bought into the "loud pipes save lives" thing.
They don't. Loud pipes piss off the neighbors, scare car drivers, and damage your hearing, and that's about it.
I surfed around online looking for stock pipes, just trying to get a ballpark idea of how much it was going to cost to buy a set and have them installed. I only found one online store that listed them, and there it was for the wonderful price of $480 per pipe.
Two pipes...that's more than I wanted to spend.
The Spouse Thingy got on the phone to the dealer to get a price from them, but their computer was down and they never got back to him.
So I went to a Triumph specific forum and posted a question there: can anyone give me a ballpark price on a set of stock pipes for the Bonneville?
A couple of the guys there told me to not buy new; that was a waste. People are always taking them off their bikes to put on louder pipes, so I would surely be able to find a set for cheap.
But then one guy posted... he has a set; if I want them, he'll send them to me. There are a couple of blemishes, but mine if I want them.
For the cost of shipping.
That's it.
No, I'm not worried about getting ripped off; he's a long time member of the forum and I doubt he's been hanging around there waiting to pounce on someone. He's also shipping them first, then telling me how much the postage is.
Seriously.
This morning I got email from another Bonneville owner. "I had to replace my stock pipes. It was $820 plus another hundred for install and remapping."
So. Wow.
Talk about generosity.
I will find a way to pay it forward.
Out of all the bikes I've had, it's been my favorite. Hands down. It's zippy, it's comfortable, it's easy to control, and it's pretty.
It's also loud.
Very loud.
When it arrived at the dealer, it was a stock black Triumph Bonneville, and for whatever reason--just because they could, I suspect--the dealership got it a custom paint job (no one else in the world has this paint on their bike!) and they slapped on some highly coveted aftermarket pipes.
These pipes, British Custom Predators, are the pipes a whole bunch of Bonneville owners want. The stock pipes make the bike sound like a sewing machine; the Predators make it sound...louder.
The problem is that I don't like louder. I don't like what it does to my hearing, and I've never bought into the "loud pipes save lives" thing.
They don't. Loud pipes piss off the neighbors, scare car drivers, and damage your hearing, and that's about it.
I surfed around online looking for stock pipes, just trying to get a ballpark idea of how much it was going to cost to buy a set and have them installed. I only found one online store that listed them, and there it was for the wonderful price of $480 per pipe.
Two pipes...that's more than I wanted to spend.
The Spouse Thingy got on the phone to the dealer to get a price from them, but their computer was down and they never got back to him.
So I went to a Triumph specific forum and posted a question there: can anyone give me a ballpark price on a set of stock pipes for the Bonneville?
A couple of the guys there told me to not buy new; that was a waste. People are always taking them off their bikes to put on louder pipes, so I would surely be able to find a set for cheap.
But then one guy posted... he has a set; if I want them, he'll send them to me. There are a couple of blemishes, but mine if I want them.
For the cost of shipping.
That's it.
No, I'm not worried about getting ripped off; he's a long time member of the forum and I doubt he's been hanging around there waiting to pounce on someone. He's also shipping them first, then telling me how much the postage is.
Seriously.
This morning I got email from another Bonneville owner. "I had to replace my stock pipes. It was $820 plus another hundred for install and remapping."
So. Wow.
Talk about generosity.
I will find a way to pay it forward.
Saturday
4 August 2012
| Hangin' in SF with Flat Max back in June |
Many, many months ago, the Spouse
Thingy mentioned that this years' AANA conference would be in San
Francisco, and I squealed and told him he had to go, because then I could
tag along and explore more of the city while he attended sessions or
classes or whatever the hell they call those multi-hour blogs of
lecturing and teaching and sharing.
I had plans, dangit. Shopping.
Wandering around the Museum of Modern Art. Finding a place to sit and
people-watch. Shopping.
Then a month ago I got sick, probably
sicker than I have ever been, and going was seriously in doubt.
But then I started feeling better, and
figured I would be fine by the day we were supposed to leave. Still,
on Monday I told him I wasn't sure, because I was still awfully
tired, so I wasn't counting on going.
I wanted to, for sure.
A couple of days ago I realized I was
actually feeling pretty good. And I started thinking I would probably
be fine as long as I didn't push it too hard. I could go, crash in
the hotel room when needed, and shop and wander and shop when I felt
like it. And even if I didn't go, there's a lot around the house that
needs to be done, because face it, I haven't done anything around
here for a month.
In fact, I felt so good yesterday that
I decided to move a few things around in the bedroom.
I cleared off a TV stand that was used
for everything but a TV, intending to move it to the front room where
it would wait for a week or five to be donated to Goodwill, after
which I would move a bookcase to the spot where it had been. With
everything off and out of the stand, I bent at the knees, leaned over
to get a good grip...and felt something near my hip go pop-pop-pop.
Oh joy.
![]() |
| Almost the right spot... |
Still bent over, there was a nice
ribbon of Ouch running from my backside, over my hip bone, and into
my groin. When I stood up, a nice, thick, jagged knife of Oh Hell No
joined it, which resulted in the Spouse Thingy having to move the
stand and the book case, complete with books, while I shuffled into
the living room and tried to to sit in my recliner.
Motrin, heat, rest...it was pretty
clear pretty fast that I was not going anywhere this weekend.
Dammit.
Nor was I going to get any of that
delayed housework done.
That's much less of a dammit there.
On the bright side, I don't think
anything actually tore, or if it did it's not too bad. I have really
good pain meds on hand for night, and I suspect by Monday or Tuesday
it won't be bad at all.
But yeah...I need a new body because
all this tearing of things and pulling of things and getting sick is
getting really, really old.
Wednesday
1 August 2012
The whole Chik Fil A dustup? It's not
really about free speech, folks.
Truthfully, I have no problem with the
CEO publicly stating he is against same-sex marriage and that he
finds any support of it to be from “a deprived mind.” That's his
belief, so be it. He has every right to say it, every right to
conduct his personal life according to his beliefs. I don't have to
agree with it to respect a person's right to voice an opinion.
My problem? Chik Fil A has donated
upwards of 5 million dollars to thwart same sex marriage, and
actively works against gay rights. That's company money, not money
coming out of the pockets of the Cathy family. If it was their own
money, it's none of my business. But when they actively use corporate
funds to back what is essentially their own religion beliefs, I have
a problem with that.
This isn't even on the same plane as
advertising that is either pro-gay or anti-gay slanted. Chik Fil Ahas donated money to a certified hate group in its efforts; its
management has no issue with firing people whom they deem to be“sinful.” I wonder who gets to hold the moral compass, and how
sinfulness is defined.
Yes, it's a privately held company.
That doesn't change anything.
When the donated money comes right from
the corporate coffers...if I've eaten there, some of that is my
money. And I refuse to have one dime of my money used to deny anyone
basic human rights and dignity.
When the personal religious belief is
corporate policy, it's not free speech; it's propagation of hate. If
they want to donate a billion dollars of their own salaries or
savings, that I can shrug off. But it's the use of company funds that
pushes this from free speech to being completely inappropriate.
I'm not a fan of boycotts; they just
don't work. So many people got all butt-hurt over Oreo's rainbow
cookie in support of gay pride day on June 25th and were practically
frothing at the mouth, swearing they would never eat another Oreo
cookie.
Fine. Don't. I get that.
But I'm not sure how many people
stopped to think about the bigger picture. Oreo is made by Nabisco,
which is owned by Kraft. Give up the Oreos on principal and you'll
have to give up a whole bunch of other things.
If it mattered to me, I would. As far
as I know, Chik Fil A only owns Chik Fil A, and while I won't
actively boycott it...I also doubt I'll make any kind of effort to
eat there again.
(And to be fair...I did not agree at
all with Boston's mayor saying they didn't want Chik Fil A there and would deny a business license. That's crossing the line. They have
every right to exist as a business as long as they follow the laws.)
But no, it's not about free speech.
It's about money. My money. Your money. And I dunno about you, but I
want my money to fund kindness, not hate.
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