Category Archives: Uncategorized

the woods

My legs and arms are torn up from moving around blackberry bushes at the second Alleycat Acres site.

I talk to my father every Sunday. I will see him before the next Sunday, for the first time in over a year.

Tori asked me today what we’ll be doing in Mane. Driving, I told her. And spending a lot of time in the woods. I still wish M was coming. I guess that means I’m tired.

I told a couple people today about going to camp in T5 R7, Maine. One of them wondered if it would be dehumanizing to live in a place that didn’t even have a real name. I don’t think so. The roads are closing in these days.

hindsight

Sometimes the stories I tell the most are the ones I’m still trying to figure something out about. There are holes to be filled that perhaps will find their mates upon being vocalized. I spent a recent evening with a friend at a local bar, hiding outdoors from some kind of event inside. The waitress has decided I’m a regular and offers me a jack + coke with a bowl of veggie chili every time, which I mostly recant to back up that she was comfortable enough with us to ask us to come inside when we wanted to close out because it was to cold outside and that we would because “we loved her.” When we did, she told my friend, “You know what I love about this guy? Every time he comes in here he is with a different girl; he’ll be here with one girl in the morning and one girl in the afternoon.”

I didn’t catch most of the story at the time, my friend had to tell me what she said before I put it together. I wouldn’t have put that together on my own. While she certainly exaggerates, the perspective is there. I’m not that guy, I’m a geeky awkward kid sarcastically wandering around doing things because it’s much more interesting to do than to talk. But there are, apparently, differences between my own identity and how others look at me.

Telling someone that I’m not interested in hooking up with them feels counter to how our culture seems to imply I should be. Of course, that’s a ‘should’ and therefore is a ‘black box’ of implication without grounding, without base. I too often feel that I’m trying to have conversations with people that they’ve never had with anyone before, and it too often leaves me feeling lonely in a way that makes me feel like I don’t fit with anyone.

You can’t articulate how you feel and what you want without getting angry? Wait, how old are you again? Yes, I know it’s hard. Life is hard. Grow up already.

I ran into a friend I hadn’t seen for years, who I met through SWN, recently and had brunch with him. SWN was the first realization for me in Seattle that I was more, and capable of more, than I gave myself credit for. Perhaps it was equal parts coming from the edge of nowhere and coming out of a long-term relationship where my partner didn’t think I was awesome. We talked of wireless, the security scene, the world, traveling, vegetarianism as entitlement.

I have no discomfort with who I am, nor who I’ve become. I feel that I’ve solidly reached a point where I’m wanting to do more and searching for that now. Often I walk, feeling a tinge of age, of wisdom of who I am, and marvel at how far I’ve come. I still blush, it’s not me they’re talking about, is it?

Everyone searching… doing well is not doing good, but running away doesn’t change anything. Oh…

Hobbies

My photos are out of order, because they’re on different computers right now. I’ll get them all up there some time.

Waking up for a 7am phone call from our sales engineer in EMEA mad working from home and then heading over to Colin’s shop work out alright today. I finished welding my first Haulin Colin knockoff trailer today. Colin let me exchange some help with some projects for the use of his design. I’m going to build two, I’m planning on one for regular Alleycat Acres use and one for personal use. I’ll wrap one up before I leave for Maine next week at least. You’ll be able to get a production version of this made by the man himself pretty soon from Dave.

It’s bigger than my initial bicycle canoe trailer prototype, but will be more useful all around. I don’t know about carrying this one with bikes in the canoe for bicycle + canoe camping, but I should be able to rig up an alternative hitch system to use this for that project.

I got a head-tube race removal tool recently. JR asked if I couldn’t just borrow one from Ashok and I told her if I was going to spend my disposable income on anything it might as well be bike tools. In any case, the pile of parts in the garage keeps growing and I’m not doing very well on getting out there to get any of the projects done. While Sunday is once again dedicated to Alleycat Acres, I’ve only committed a couple hours of Saturday to volunteering so far. So maybe I can work the pile down a little then. I should have everything I need to finish the Volpe handlebars (camping/touring), build the xtracycle, and get the brakes back together on the cyclocross bike by the end of the week.

weekends

For as far back as I can remember, my Sundays are either bike rides with friends, or working on the Alleycat farms.

The mayor came out to visit yesterday, which brought unwelcome media in my mind. They weren’t much interested in us and as much as the mayor is a public official I sort of felt like their questioning was invasive and was ruining the day. I thought upon this for a bit, politics, and the reminders of my favorite dilbert comic.

Today I had a choice of doing something important that no one would ever realize, or doing something useless that would look like an accomplishment.

Last night, well, during the period between my naps from exhaustion and the period that is the closet I’ve been coming to sleep for a while, I watch a documentary on Hulu called The American Ruling Class.

Mike Vanzetti: No offense, but do you really think you can change things, much less the world, by walking down a country road singing a song? By singing a song anywhere, at any time, for anybody, for that matter?

Pete Seeger: I s’pose not, but I am going to make darn sure the world isn’t going to change me. It’s like this. Imagine a big sea saw and one end is on the ground, because it has a basket half full of rocks in it. The other end is up in the air, because it has a basket one-quarter full of sand. And some of us got teaspoons and we are trying to fill it. And of course most people are kinda scoffing at us. They say, “Don’t you see it’s leaking just as quick as you are putting it in? People like you been trying for centuries, but it’s never going to change.” And we say, “You might be right, but we think we get more people with teaspoons all the time and one of these days that whole seasaw is going to go zooop, and people will say ‘Gee, how did it happen so suddenly?’ Us and all our little teaspoons, over the centuries.” Who knows?

At some point in time, I decided the best way to change to the world was to touch individual peoples lives. I’ve failed at sharing my excitement and introspection as a result of Kenshin with anyone. Perhaps I’ve been more successful than I let on, but that I hold a subtle grudge against M that blinds me. In any case, I change the world by being who I am.

If there is no last morality here to be offered, it is an individual question. The last thing people always say as they go out is not ‘I wish I had had more money.’ They’re usually wishing something else, about what they did with their lives.

Dad used to comment on what a shame it is that the same lessons have to be learned by every generation. As I learn more lessons that a book can’t teach you, that only life and experience can, I appreciate that it is less about what you’ve done than how you’ve done it. Repeated in the documentary is that doing well is not the same as doing good.

I pride myself in being a hard worker, in caring, and being thoughtful.  Sometimes I look at a group of people and wonder, “what have they done?”, because I feel they are living in a fantasy land. Is this a real place created by entitlement, by not having had to work for what they have? It’s difficult to judge without getting too academic on the subject, which I tend to view with disdain.

I guess, more than anything else, I end up with a way.

intolerable itching

I’m terrible at telling when I’m over-stressed. I’ve started using my emotional vulnerability as an indicator and initiated a multi-faceted plan on Monday to get more sleep. It’s amazing in retrospect to look at all the battles I was fighting without realizing them. From another angle, just as I find peoples actions when they are drunk to be interesting indicators of their personality, it’s interesting to consider what is important to me when I just can’t fight any longer. It is an amazing acknowledgement of my resilience that I’ve been managing so well and so productively despite these stressors for almost a year now.

Word on the street is that the mayor is coming to visit one of my projects tomorrow. Also, Friday I met with some management types in PDX about starting a Seattle edition of the companie’s community involvement committee. These two events mark significant milestones. I’m unconvinced I have the time resources to take all of my plans to their proper fruition, but I’m glad they’re moving along.

I’m convincing myself to spend some money and take some vacation this summer. Some of the prospects are exciting, which is what is important. I need to be excited.

I have long lists of things to do right now, but I’m tired and uncomfortable. If I can’t read I’ll watch a movie or something.

communication

From A’s journal:

good communication are paramount for successful risk-taking. And how it’s so much more beautiful and complex if both people are doing the risk-taking and not just one conforming to the other.

M noted my communication was vague, and I’ve been thinking about what parts of me were intentionally removed, for the good of mankind. J offered some tactics today for finding convergence between thinking I don’t care and feeling like I don’t care.

I just had a funny memory of M commenting on not wanting me to be at work being upset about her and this internal defensive kick reaction that amounted to “you don’t know anything about my day.” Heh. Life’s funny.

weekend

facebook interface to my weekend:

Friday:
Fremont Powerhouse – honkfest volunteer meeting
Freerange cycles – jumpstarting honkfest
The Ballroom – bro-dinner

Saturday:
Georgetown Liquor Company – brunch menu!
Gatzert Elementary – more honk!
Liquor Store – East Union – buy booze for Colin’s bicycle blender
Red Cross
Georgetown Records – back in the neighborhood, somewhere about. – Honk
The Morgue – happy birthday octal!
Shell Georgetown – omw to hazard factory
HazardFactory – honk afterparty! flaming teatherball!

Sunday:
Full Tilt Ice Cream – meet bike sabbath
Bill’s Off Broadway – bike bike bike
Belltown Pizza – Scotts birthday
Bathtub Gin & Co – Scotts navy birthday
Cafe Metropolitan – Scotts final birthday