Archive for the ‘geekery’ Category

So long and thanks for all the bloggies.

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

This is a hard post to write. Saying that, I guess it’s been driving towards inevitable for a while now, too.

The reality is this: I came onto the Internet in 2001 looking for a community. I have always felt a bit like the odd duck in most rooms, and I was wondering/hoping that there would be other odd ducks out there in the world, who, when teamed with other ducks, would form a happy community of odd ducks, celebrating and marveling at each others quirks.

At the time, the Internet as a community was still very much in it’s early stages, and there was still a great deal of fear that anyone you met virtually stood an equal chance of being a pervert or a liver-stealer as a normal human being.

Times change. The Internet is now a place of commerce, community, research and common usage. In richer countries, like mine, it’s highly unusual for anyone (including our parents’ generation) to be computer-less.

As with anything, the proliferation of voices has had both positive and negative impacts. The positive? It’s been recognized as a marketable, legitimate media and is even changing the face of the odious 24-hour a day disaster broadcasting, which pays no attention to whether or not there is actually a disaster taking place.

The negative? The dilution of community, of course. In the blogosphere, it appears as though there’s so much fear about keeping or owning your own market share, that it becomes impossible for a true community to maintain itself.

Do you know where I find that sense of community? Oddly, the answer is the same as it was in 2001 - I find it on livejournal. Oh, I know - it’s the bastard stepchild of the blogging industry. It started out as a member’s only site, and then became this crazy open source, closed conversation kind of joint that you either belonged to or openly mocked.

Livejournal isn’t set up the same way as other venues. It’s not intended for standalone use. You’re meant to read about people and be read by the same people. In short: it’s designed to be a fully functioning community, where people know about and care for each other. This has certainly been my experience. When life slaps me upside the head, it’s those folks who see all of the angst and support me as I work through it.

And you know what? That’s what I want out of my blogging experience. I want the sense of community. It’s just not the same experience without it.

So I’m going to return to livejournal. Truth is, I never left. However, I was putting my best energies into this place, and it’s time to redirect them to my roots - to the place where I am most comfortable. To where (yes, I’m going to do it) everyone knows my name.

For those of you who’ve read me and supported me here - I can’t thank you enough. I wish that this platform was set up the way livejournal was, so that we could talk back and forth more easily. I suspect I’ve missed out on some fairly awesome friendships here. Still and all, I appreciate your readership, and hope that you find this experience to be what you wanted it to be.

If you want to keep in touch with me, you can still find me on livejournal. I am, as I always was - Wyliekat.

Heck, if you’re disenchanted with what you’re doing now, I’d encourage you to do more than just read me over there - join up yourself!

Ear worms

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

I cannot get rid of two Kasabian ear worms - they’ve burrowed deep into my brain and I can’t shut them off. When I say can’t, I mean I’ve woken up in the middle of the night with one or t’other running around in my head, and these songs have KEPT ME AWAKE. It’s twelve kinds of wrong.

I keep going back and forth between Where has all the love gone and Fast Fuse . . . if you want an ear worm, feel free to take one.

Tender

Monday, December 21st, 2009

I just picked up a ten pound, 21-day aged, hormone-free, fresh from the producer standing prime rib roast.  I rinsed it, patted it dry, swaddled it in three layers of cheese cloth and set it at the bottom of my fridge on a rack. It will sit there until Christmas Day, getting more tasty and beautiful by the moment - or so I’ve been told.

Fear me.

Three little birds.

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

There’s something restorative about singing Bob Marley songs in the shower.

I’m just sayin’.

A word.

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

You thank me all the time.

But now it’s my turn.

‘Cause truly a word of gratitude so due

can’t go unheard.

   - Sarah Harmer, The Ring

I cooked a meal for my family for the first time in weeks. I stood in the heart of my home, mindlessly prepping a routine weekly meal. Spaghetti. A normal meal, a normal Tuesday night. The girls have cordoned themselves off in the front playroom, attending to the bedroom furnishing needs of their new Alcatraz rejects*.

Buddy is mowing the lawn, pushing the silent manual mower with ease born of regular summer practice.

I sing along to the music. I feel as though I’ve waking up from a long sleep. My home, my family, my food, my life. This is my core, where I thrive, where I know love and abundance.  

Not too long ago, I was tired. I felt the weight of all the tasks and the routine. I struggled to do what was needful, and strove to keep the resentment in check.

Now I relish the simple task of mincing garlic, feeling my home humming with vibrance, life and activity. And in it, at this moment, I am content.

 

 

*Rejects owing to cute overload. It says so on their butts.

Phew.

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Well, it’s done. My garden is officially planted (except for the bergamot and the purple pansies, which will be planted at Rosebud and Juniper’s earliest convenience, because heaven forefend that I should plant them myself. I’d have better survival odds if I coated myself with bacon grease and ran starkers through a meeting of recovering pork product addicts.)

In it, we have:

Basil (Marseilles and Genovese)

Rosemary (Tuscan blue and another one that escapes me)

Silver thyme

Bush cucumbers

Beefsteak bush tomatoes

Golden oregano (planted between the tomatoes, to see if that theory of flavour adding in the soil really works)

Yellow potatoes

Lavender (cannot remember what I got this year - two kinds, two plants each)

Lettuce of varying colours and tastes

I always end up with new and interesting things when I go to Sage Garden. I don’t know if all the employees are family members, or if the owner simply requires that all people working for her MUST ADORE HERBS IN ALL CAPACITIES (with an unrivaled passion), but it’s always a nice trip.

Juniper beetled off with one of the staffers almost immediately - all on the quest for the exact right red flowering plant (result: bergamot). I wandered through the small but generously burdened greenhouse, Buddy trailing behind with basket and tolerant smile. Happily, he’s not shy about enjoying plants, so we sampled many leaves on the way through (most notably, something called a toothache plant. Doesn’t exactly thrill the tastebuds, but be damned if it didn’t numb our tongues in a peculiar way. Fun!)

Truth be told, I’ve never grown food before. Herbs have been a particular passion of mine for a number of years, but food? Lawds no. I love the times I can have a wander through my garden, selecting bits and bites of things to add to dinner, but harvesting most or all of my produce for a meal from *my* garden? That sounds like my idea of joy.

I’m especially nervous about the tomatoes because I’ve heard they’re notoriously finicky, and the sproutlings were started by CH. I’d hate to think of all her work in growing these babies because I’m too bloomin’ incompetent to figure out the best way to encourage tomato survival.

Nonetheless. Plants planted, bloodmeal scattered and sun overhead.

Let’s hope I don’t kill everything.

Interview with a parent.

Friday, March 6th, 2009

It’s a meme, I know. But it’s a really damned adorable meme, so I’ve put both Juniper and Rosebud to it. Here are their responses.

JUNIPER - Age 8

1) What is something your stepmum always says to you?
No matter where you go, or what you do, you’re stuck with me, ’cause I love you. (Note to readers: poetry writing is not my strong point. Hey, at least it isn’t a limerick. We’ll save that for later years.)

2) What makes your stepmum happy?
Me and Rosebud.

3) What makes your stepmum sad?
When she fights with Buddy. (Odd. We were both perplexed by this one, because we honestly don’t fight.)

4) How does your stepmum make you laugh?
She tickles me.

5) What was your stepmum like as a child?
I don’t know.

6) How old is your stepmum?
34 (Bah - she knows too much.)

7) How tall is your stepmum?
*looks at me like I’m nuts* I have no idea.

8) What is her favorite thing to do?
Cook.

9) What does your stepmum do when you’re not around?
Watch TV. (Hmm. I checked and I haven’t sprouted, so I don’t think I’m quite this much of a couch potato.)

10) If your stepmum becomes famous, what will it be for?
Singing. (Erp. I should probably stop bellowing music into her ears, she’s clearly going deaf.)

11)What is your stepmum really good at?
Typing.

ROSEBUD - Age 3 (and a half!)

1) What is something mom always says to you?
She takes a shower. (I have no idea what this means. Either I need more hygiene, or she thinks I overbathe.)

2) What makes mom happy?
Me.

3) What makes mom sad?
I’m not here. (Astute.)

4) How does your mom make you laugh?
Funny jokes.

5) What was your mom like as a child?
Rosebud.

6) How old is your mom?
*Holds up three fingers*

7) How tall is your mom?
*Stretches out hands to Cabbage Patch height*

8) What is her favorite thing to do?
Colouring.

9) What does your mom do when you’re not around?
Go to work. (Better than “watches TV”, for my ego at least)

10) If your mom becomes famous, what will it be for?
For Circus. (Indeed. I am the Ringmaster. Mistress. Thing.)

11) What is your mom really good at?
Colouring. (Evidently)

Oh, the lulz.

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Have just realized what the previous title might do to an innocent voyeur doing an innocent search. For all of you looking to espy something interesting, sorry to have disappointed.

Kitchen confessions.

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

If you should ever come to my house for a meal, you will find out some interesting things about me. In the spirit of disclosure that seems to be so pervasively meme-ish lately, I’ll confess five kitchen truths about myself:

1) I spend way too much time, every day, figuring out which knob turns on which element. I have long suspected that I have dyscalculia, but have never been diagnosed. Of course, any expert in the world would only have to watch me stand perplexed in front of my cooktop for several minutes each day to recognize me for what I am.

2) I frequently sit on the floor in the kitchen. I rarely even think about it. It’s just natural for me to slide down against one cupboard or another in the middle of a conversation. I only really notice I’ve done it when a guest gives me a nonplussed look. The fam, on the other hand,  is totally accustomed to it at this point.

3) The audience for my cooking has a huge impact on my enjoyment of the process. I never loved cooking as much as I do now that I’ve got an (apparently starved) Buddy to feed.

4) I injure myself when cooking more often than is really reasonable. I try to assure Buddy that sharper implements would lessen my apparent attempts to self-mutilate, but he’s skeptical. He has a suspicious eye on a few of my kitchen gadgets - the next one that bites me gets chucked - and he means it. Those gadgets and I are currently trying to work out some kind of Implement Protection Program.

5) I miss baking. My current oven runs way too damned hot for me to produce anything non-burnt. However, CH is an excellent baker. Between her wonderful sense of sharesies, and my mother’s commencement to baking for others, we really don’t need me to bake. I think I miss the practice of baking more than I miss the results.

The mathematics of a working mother.

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

For the entirety of last week, due to work restrictions, I don’t think I cooked one real dinner. As Buddy so aptly but it, “sometimes work doesn’t leave enough Wylie left to make dinner.”

So true.

There really is only so much of me to go around. And the mathematics of that are brutal to contemplate.

Let’s say I have a grand total of 168 hours each week to play with. Of those, I spend 40 hours at work and 56 sleeping.

That leaves me with 72 hours. Rosebud is with her father 18 of those hours. Juniper’s schedule with her mother is far more changeable, but let’s go with the notion of 18 hours for her as well.

54 hours left.

Now, it takes me, on average, about an hour a day to make meals. More like 3 on Sunday.

45 hours left.

Laundry, grocery shopping, tidying eat up another 7 hours a week.

38 hours in total that are left to me, where I’m not working, sleeping, cooking or otherwise performing life maintenance.

Of that time, I  devote as much as possible to the girls and spending time with them, encouraging, validating, cheering and snuggling.

Let’s say that takes up another 24 of my hours.

18 hours left. 2.5 hours per day. And this is usually the time left at the end of the long and exhausting day. And it’s our time. Our time as a couple to do our activities, to spend time together, to reconnect and discuss our kids, our house, ourselves.

So. That’s how my life generally runs.
But Wylie, you ask. Where is the time for you?

There’s precious little of it, I’ll admit. And you know? I don’t even really mind that fact. Sure, I’ve been obliged to pare down a lot of the things I used to spend time doing. Some of that is based on sensible application of time, and some if it is because there are some associations I’d like to move on from.

I’ve given up the majority of television - some shows because they weren’t really worth my time, and others because I watched them with ex - as a “thing” we did. Football, as much as I adore it, and my Colts, carries both a heavy time (viewing) commitment, and an unfortunate mental association.

I catch up with friends largely via e-mail and phone, and our plans to go out together are scheduled weeks and months in advance.

What’s left isn’t much, but it’s the very heart of who I am.

Blogging is part of that. I’ve often wondered if there would ever come a time in my life where I simply run out of things to say, or run out of steam to keep up with it.

But I haven’t. No matter how small the time gets for me and my blogging, no matter the fact that I can’t take or make the time to extensively revise and edit what I post. The fifteen minutes I find to pour brain into keyboard are as good as it gets, and it’s enough.

Even though the time I use to write blogs, interact with other bloggers and keep current about the community is invariably begged, borrowed or stolen from something else, I’ve discovered and reaffirmed that blogging is part of me. It’s crucial to my identity.

It’s not just what I write. It’s the people I read, the community I feel a kinship with, and it’s you. You silent readers. It doesn’t even really matter what your reasons are for being here and reading. Without you, I would merely be converting a paper diary with a heart-shaped lock into the electronic version of same. But you’re here. You read. You don’t comment (most of you). But your very presence gives amplification to my voice.

And I thank you for it.

Just as I thank all of the bloggers out there - those I don’t read, those I read but don’t admit to, those who have evolved into celebloggers and are not participants in the community, those I can’t relate to, those who have never been discovered, but are plugging away at their words, finding their voices.

I thank you all for being here, for sharing with me this passion, this interest, this community. I thank you for inspiring me. I thank you for encouraging me to keep going, simply by your presence.