Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Like a Corona ad ... but not

This might seem self-evident but: I miss Hawaii.

I just kind of expected the feeling to fade, as the romantic memories you have of anything (a place, a relationship) do over time. They haven’t.

I came back from Maui feeling like life there was a life I could live. Simple. Expensive but not especially complicated. Slower. I had relished it in for the days we were there and I thought seriously that it was something I could do. Would do, if it didn’t require leaving so many people behind who I don’t want to leave. But I expected the feeling would diminish. I would grow again accustomed to cheap groceries and freeways and high-speed Internet and uncountable channels on the TV.

And I suppose I have welcomed most of that back into my life. But also I haven’t.

I was writing to a friend today about how I’ve lately felt, not sad, but just bland. I’ve been uninspired. I am tempted to blame it on the coming summer, or my wife’s illness, or my inability to use my left arm for pretty much anything. That’s not really it, though. It’s been a month we’ve been back now and I’ve felt this way the entire time. The islands have never been far from my thoughts. The memory of the ocean still seems close. I miss the place in a way I’ve never missed anything, even home.

Could we really move there? I do think we could. Whether we would is an entirely different matter. To be sure it would be hard. But I think we could. Will we? Almost certainly not. We would miss our friends. Sooner or later we will move or our friends will, that’s true. But moving to Hawaii would be almost like abandoning everything – friends and family – and I don’t think either of us is willing. But the pull is strong, the idea still there even weeks later.

I miss the ocean, the sunsets, the permanent warm of the air. I miss the green and the food. I miss the sound of waves. It seems almost ridiculous that I thought coming back to my life of office work and television and e-mail could compare to that sound, that feeling, that world. I’m not mystical. I don’t get caught up in ideas of what natural life is or should be. But living that way feels better, feels more right. I would still check email, still write on a laptop, still watch TV. But I’d spend a lot more time on the beach than I would doing any of those things.

I suppose I should make of it what I can. And so maybe tonight I will take a book and sit in a chair on my patio and feel the Arizona spring air and watch the sun turn the sky orange and pink. I will have to imagine the sound of the surf, though.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Am I really this educated?

On the heels of my earlier post about college, I feel like mentioning how nothing can make you feel worse about your degree than actually being out in the real world.

Maybe it seems sort of ungrateful to say this, but I was never really that proud of my degree. The truth is I didn’t have to work that hard to get it. That’s not a swipe at my school or the classes I took, though certainly there were harder classes and more difficult schools. But it just always seemed inevitable. I never considered not finishing college. So finishing wasn’t that big a deal. Plus, let’s be honest, how many people graduated from college in 2002? I did. And a lot of other people did, too. Unfortunately, Google isn’t helping me out with any specific numbers right now, though. Google does tell me that the 2000 Census found that 24% of the over-25 population claimed to have at least a bachelor’s degree. Which seems like a disturbing low percentage but is still a really hige number of people.

Now, where I work you have to have a bachelor’s degree. They don’t much care what it’s in, but to have a job that’s at all above clerical work you have to have a four-year degree of some kind. Let me tell you: Nothing is more depressing than knowing that. This isn’t a shot at my co-workers in particular. Most of them are genuinely intelligent, and really you need to be able to think to do our job. (Really, it’s all you have to be able to do but that’s another story.) But it’s not just people in subrogation – everyone here has to have a four year-degree. Claims representative, accountants, underwriters, everyone. And yet.

Now, it’s not that I don’t make typos or occasionally misuse grammar. And I don’t expect everyone who works at this company to be an encyclopedia of knowledge about all things in the universe. But you should at least know about things that have to do with your job. For instance, a “tenet” is an opinion (or the former head of the CIA when capitalized). Tenets have nothing to do with insurance. But a “tenant” is a person paying rent to live in someone else’s property. We deal with tenants in insurance all the time. So it’d be nice if you could learn to spell the word. I find examples of ridiculous things like this literally every day. To wit, “plumbers” fix water pipes in homes; “plummer” isn’t a word, except that when capitalized it’s the quarterback for the Broncos. A pipe has never, not ever, “bursted.” Or “splitted.” Or “failured.” And, I promise, no matter how strong the wind blows, trees never get “blowed” over.

Of math and whiskers

So I haven’t written much of anything lately. No blogging, obviously. And not much else, either. A few months ago I excitedly wrote a little note about how I couldn’t stop writing, how I just had stories and ideas and inspiration coming at me from every direction. That was a very stupid thing to do. Clearly, I pissed off someone, somewhere. Sharon Stone, maybe? I don’t know. But someone is pissed.

So I’ve been wanting to write, but can’t find the drive, and I’ve been wanting to blog but just haven’t found the inspiration. I don’t really have the inspiration now, either, but I’m writing this post anyway.

I haven’t shaved in, oh I don’t know, quite a few days now. Which is weird because I don’t really enjoy having a scruffy face. A few times in college and during the winter I let it grow out to the point it was a full beard and that was OK, I guess. But in general I don’t enjoy it and yet I still haven’t mustered the will to actually shave either of the last two mornings. (It’s not that uncommon for me to skip a day or even both days of shaving over the weekend.) Yesterday, since Diana was sick, I basically just stayed in bed with her and then was running late and didn’t have time. Today I went stereotypical and was actually reading the paper, which not only took up the time I should have been shaving, but considering that I live in Phoenix and subscribe to the Republic, was pretty much a colossal waste of time on all counts. Now the whiskers are long enough that it’s going to take a good bit of time when I actually do find the time in my busy schedule. I suppose I could just get up earlier and have more time in the morning, but … no, sorry, even I can’t take that suggestion seriously and I suggested it.

This reminds me a little of freshman year of college. When I registered for my first semester, an 8 am class seemed like a great idea. After all, in high school class started at 7:25 and I had to be up way earlier than that to get ready and walk or drive to school. So I figured a class that started at 8, that was literally across the street from my dorm, would be no problem. I mean, it couldn’t have required more than 150 or 200 steps to get from my bed to a seat in this lecture hall. It should also be noted, however, that I registered just a few weeks after graduating from high school – by the time I was midway through the summer I was starting to suspect the early class was a bad idea. Anyway, I’d be surprised if I went to that class even half the time. I know that sounds bad but not only was I generally sleeping through it, I figured out pretty quickly that I didn’t actually need to go. It was an anthropology class and there wasn’t much going on there I didn’t know already. Moreover, the professor didn’t do much but go over the reading, so I just read and showed up on days when we had tests or papers due and I got an A in that class. Which is sad in many ways, but especially so considering how poorly I did in most of my classes that I attended that semester.

Anyway, I decided I was done with that 8 am shit and only took one other class that started so early the rest of college (it was required). I tried as best I could to not really have anything going on before noon, though usually I had to. Second semester freshman year I took a math class that started at 9. I wasn’t keen on it starting that early, but that was the only time open and I really wanted to get my math requirement out of the way. Now, I’m really pretty good with math, but I’m not one of those to whom math comes naturally. I know someone, somewhere was actually the first person to discover (invent? Whatever) algebra, but that wouldn’t have been me. It’s not intuitive to me. Still, once given a very basic starting level of instruction, I pick it up pretty quickly and do well. This particular math class had a lot to do with statistics, which seemed pretty simple. It only took me one missed class to realize it wasn’t going to be as simple as anthropology, however. So I made it a point to at least be there, even if I was barely coherent. But the professor didn’t help. It was like he knew we were all barely awake and reveled in his ability to put us all back to sleep. Which was fine, except I would tend to look at a question in the homework that asked something about scheduling airplane routes and think, “I don’t know. That’s a good question.”

One day, after most of the class did particularly poorly on a test, the professor showed some liveliness. He always wore a big straw hat to keep the sun off him and oftentimes he would not remember to remove it even while teaching. Well, on this day he was so upset with our collective inability to understand even these simple concepts that he was actually keeping everyone awake. I mean he was really fuming, all pink in the face and steam coming out of his ears. OK, steam wasn’t really coming out of his ears but it would have if he’d been a cartoon. Then he grabbed the brim of his hat, ripped it off and threw it on the floor. He let out a kind of moan. It wasn’t that he was screaming, he just wanted us to care. I thought for a moment he might jump up and down on top of the hate, like a manager arguing with an umpire. And for a moment I felt really bad. I’d actually done fairly well on the test, but I still felt implicated by his frustration because I knew I wasn’t taking the class seriously and that I could barely stay awake. I made up my mind to change my ways. I would get up well before class started. I would shower. I would eat breakfast. I would pay attention!

Then the professor stopped and said he was moving on with the next chapter. And just like that he was insufferably boring again. People around me drifted away, maybe some even fell asleep. And I was flat out pissed. Not at the students, but at the professor. Didn’t he understand that for just a few minutes he’d been somewhat lively and actually had our attention? Didn’t he understand that if he remained lively while actually teaching that those who chose to show up to class might actually stay awake? Then it hit me. He didn’t want us to learn. Maybe as long as people did poorly it confirmed some preconceived notion he had of us as a slacker generation. Maybe it made him feel intelligent. He was trying to keep statistics his own little secret!

And he’d nearly fooled me, the rat. Anyway, the moral of my story here is I really, really need to shave, because my neck itches and it's driving me crazy.

Friday, April 15, 2005

I just got an email from one of the higher-up-type people at work talking about our goals as a company and as a department. It included these following choice turns of phrase: “this is a good map of our strategy for victory,” “continue our quest,” and “keep your teams focused on our mission!” Now, if you’re wondering, I don’t work at the Pentagon. I’m not fighting any way here from my little desk. I’m collecting money back on behalf of an insurance company. On my cheerier days I attempt to convince myself there’s some good in making sure companies don’t turn out crappy products without consequences, but even that’s a stretch. I have a desk job. In insurance.

This particular email I quoted from above didn’t go so far as to actually use the word “war” or any other synonyms. But I’ve heard that word used before by certain superiors of mine, and the email above is certainly reminiscent of that for me.

Does anyone else remember right after 9/11 when there was a lot of talk about a societal shift and the end of irony and a bunch of other stuff that we knew was pretty much BS even then? Well, one thing I really hoped would be true is that we might start using language appropriately again. I hate it when someone describes a football team’s conference before a draft as a “war room” or talks about football with terms that are supposed to relate to the military. Or, for that matter, when my boss tries to equate my desk job with some kind of covert mission.

It’s not so much that I’m offended because I think it does a disservice to every soldier risking their life everyday (though I think it does and I am offended a little bit for that reason). Mostly I’m just offended on behalf of the language. I think words should mean what they mean and while I support the idea that using words in unique ways can be a powerful rhetorical device, this doesn’t apply. For one thing, it’s not unique anymore. The language of war is everywhere and that’s the problem. It’s lost its power now.

With my apologies to the family of the AFL player who was killed last weekend, football is not a war. Coaches are not generals. My job is not a quest or a mission. It’s a job. I have goals. I will work to meet them. Maybe I’ll delay in calling someone back from time to time as a bargaining tactic. That’s fine. But I am not “letting them bleed.”

I’m sure I’m guilty of this, too, in the same way I’m sure I like say “like” more than I wish I did even though I like hate that. Being hypocritical is the cost of being a critic sometimes. Anyway, it annoys me. I understand that languages change and meanings drift and even grammar can be redefined – I’d much rather have a continually evolving English than end up with a council like French has that actually makes rules about what words can be used in print. But admitting that language is somewhat fluid shouldn’t be a license for abuse. Words have to mean what they mean. OK, that's it.

/rant

Old

I'm old.

Forgive me for that, first of all. I know most you who might ever read this are actually older than me, I've always been among the youngest of my friends. But I'm not talking chronologically here. Most 24 year-olds are not old. I am on my way crotchety-old-man-bent-over-his-cane-yelling-through-his-dentures-at-those-darn-kids-to-keep-it-down-so-he-can-sleep-already-damn-it status by the time I'm 26. Or, put another way, I just can't party like a rock star anymore. Well, let's be clear that I never in my life have actually partied like a rock star. But I'm nonethless pretty sure there was a time when I could have.

Last night I went to the U2 show at Glendale Arena, which started at 8, and I was yawning before the band even took the stage. There were moment during the show when I found myself noticing that I was tired, or hungry, or found myself thinking I could use a bottle of water. That is so not rock star. We didn't sit down from the time the lights went down until it was all over and we'd walked back to the car, which speaks highly of the show, but sadly meant my feet were sore and my back ached and I really wished my wife was with me so I could have had someone rub my shoulders. So not rock star. And then I didn't get home until 12:45 and felt like hell then and felt even worse this morning.

It's not just the staying up late because while D sleeps next to me I'll often stay up reading or writing or watching a movie until midnight or later. But it turns out it takes a lot more energy to stand through a concert and sing along than it does to sit in bed. Maybe that seems like an obvious point, but I swear when I was 22 it was easier to be up than it was to be in bed. What the hell happened in two years? Two little years!?!

The upshot is, despite having a good time last night and being excited to go back and see the show again - and even though I have cheap, good tickets for tonight's show - I woke up this morning feeling like, "Nope, not doing that again." If there were actually anyone besides me in the office today I might have tried to sell the tickets. (Maybe it's just as well no one is around because as I am slowly waking up more and more, the more interested I am in using those tickets tonight.)

Oh, and my ears are not ringing exactly, but everything is just slightly on the fuzzy side. And let me tell you, it's quiet enough in this office when more than half the people are out, but it's truly ridiculous when everything I should be able to hear is fuzzy.

Damn kids and this obscene noise they call rock music.

This Speaks For Itself


I would just like to say: God bless the New York Post.

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Candyland Conspiracy Theories

Saturday night I had a small packet of Runts and noticed they had a new flavor -- blue raspberry in the shape of the red cherries.

I like the blue raspberry flavor, don't get me wrong. And I'm definitely thrilled that M&M's has fulfilled my lifelong dream of dark chocolate M&M's. But, as a general rule, is it really necessary to tinker so much with successful candy flavor combinations?

I return to the Runts. Because it's not just that blue raspberry has been added. Apparently, they also added watermelon. Now, I'm not against adding flavors as a principal, though I guess it does sometimes come at the expense of pre-existing flavors. Still, as long as the new flavor is good, I have no complaints. And the watermelon Runt is not bad at all. My complaint is this: Watermelon Runts have displaced the lime flavor.

For a moment, I was actually excited. It seemed that the limes in the box of Runts were now HUGE! But where were these new watermelon ones? I was confused. And then I realized. That's not lime anymore. Lime is gone. I will miss you lime. And I will miss you Runts, for what is the point of ever buying Runts again without the lime flavor?

Not that I was really a big Runts consumer, mind you. But this radical flavor elimination really needs to stop. It's not just ruining the potential for me to buy more Runts, it's frankly raping my childhood memories. Moreover, my children may have to grow up in a world devoid of lime-flavored Runts entirely. So it's time to stop with the craziness. For the love of crunchy, sugary candies and all other things holy it is time to STOP!

Unless you're eliminating the bananas. Those are sick.