12/04/2008

Eyeball This

I check my email constantly throughout the day, from the moment I wake up to the last moment before I go to bed. I'm a real email junkie! To be sure, part of this addiction comes from not having much else to do all day long. Part of it also comes from being lonely, as I explained in an earlier post. Maybe I should buy myself a child on the black market or order a bride from Russia.

All my medical insurance lapsed as of this most recent Monday. I won't claim to be the healthiest person, but I have not been to a hospital for myself in well over 20 years. It's just not something that I do. I always 'tough things out'. Except, as a 40th birthday present my body gave me declining eyesight. I have been in the habit of going to see the eye doctor every two years since then. Ironically, I was supposed to go again in September, but as I was feeling financially poor, I delayed the visit. (Even after insurance, my last pair of prescription glasses set me back about $250.) Have any of my faithful readers ever used the cheap eye exam services out there? If so, let me know what you think of them. My current glasses, though two years old, seem to be holding up well, but the prescription probably needs a slight adjustment by now.

Hmmm, I don't seem to have anything fun to write about tonight so I guess I'll close this off.

Love hearing from you!

"I had some eyeglasses. I was walking down the street when suddenly the prescription ran out."— Steven Wright

12/03/2008

Home Again, Home Again

While I was not in any way anxious to leave my parents, it's good to be home again. Well, maybe it's not 'good', but at least I can walk around naked again.

I promised pictures. You'll find them posted to my Flickr account. Since I already wrote snarky comments to go with the pictures there, it's easier to leave them there rather than try to post them here. Please feel free to click around and look at them all. There are other, older, picture streams there as well.

Most of the pictures are self explanatory. I may not have explained in any of my earlier posts that my parents have two dogs, Furby and Simba. My Mom has always had a thing for pomeranians so we always had a least one pom in the house while I grew up, frequently two. Furby, apparently, was quite a handful when they got her— and I personally can vouch for the fact that she is not right in the head, even for a dog— so they got Simba to calm her down and be her friend. The two get along just fine, but there's no calming Furby down when she gets wound up, and to top it off, Simba is full of his own exasperating personality quirks. Like children, they are adorable at times and monsters at other times. Anyway, I included a picture of each as they are decidedly cute dogs.

I also don't recall whether or not I mentioned that one night we went to the pizza parlor and met my Aunt and Uncle and my cousin Sheila and her family. There are pictures of them as well.

Most of the remaining pictures are from the Kennedy Space Center. I was feeling particularly photographic that day. (Although, as you can see in a few pictures, not very photogenic!) One particular joy of our day at the KSC didn't get mentioned directly: The space shuttle was diverted to California because of inclement weather, and it really got inclement all over us. When we left the second stop, the Saturn rocket and Apollo mission exhibit hall, it was pouring outside and the wind was gusting. Waiting for the bus we were standing under high thin awnings whose benefit disappeared the moment the wind changed the angle of the rain to anything other than straight up and down. By the time we finally got on the bus, we were soaked, head to foot, and toured the ISS facility in that condition. Sadly rain and wetness do not capture well on an instant camera. I would have loved to show you.

Today, at home, I took things easy. While I was in Florida my severance check finally arrived. I put that in the bank with a feeling of melancholy. It felt like my 16 years of hard work for the company were summed up in that check. I also lost a bit of my mental safety margin by depositing that check. For the last month I've been living off my undernourished checking account and my final check. There was always the knowledge that my severance check would arrive in the future. Now that it's here and deposited, I feel a bit of a panic about enticing more money to come into my account in the future.

My car has been running hot lately so this afternoon I popped the hood and added coolant to the radiator. I felt good about doing that— until I went out this evening and heard a loud hissing and gurgling coming from under my hood. At the street lights I could also see smoke or vapor coming from the hood. Naturally, I forgot to screw the radiator cap back on after filling up this afternoon so I had to buy a new cap at the auto parts store tonight. I wish I could tell you how many times I have had to buy new oil caps, gas caps, and the like over the years. I seem to have a serious hole in my repair abilities that causes me to forget to replace these things.  *sigh*

I spent the better part of an hour on the phone with my dear friend Lee Ann this evening. Her last day with the company was just this past Monday. I look forward to spending a few days with her in Long Beach after I return from my upcoming trip to Raleigh, North Carolina.

Keep sending those cards and letters!

"Human beings are the only creatures that allow their children to come back home."— Bill Cosby

11/30/2008

Floridaland 3

We actually got off our butts and did something today.

In anticipation of the space shuttle landing today, we drove over to Cape Canaveral and the Kennedy Space Center. The skies were threatening all morning and we knew there was no real chance of the shuttle actually landing in Florida today, but we went anyway. I think we were all desperate to get out of the house. Sure enough, we bought tickets for the tour of the facility and the first thing we heard was that the shuttle would be delayed a day or it would be landing in California.

The tour makes three stops and drives by a few recognizable buildings. Sadly, it does not go anywhere near the launch pads. You do, however, drive by that huge cement slab of a building where the space shuttle is put together before each launch. The stops are at an old gantry site, the Apollo/Saturn museum, and the international space station facility. There are a lot of movies to sit through, and the main complex has some simulator 'rides' as well. The ISS facility is the only place where you see anything current though. The tour there overlooks a large testing and assembly space for components bound for the ISS. All in all, it is a fun way to spend the day, and I highly recommend it.

At the end of the tour, we returned to the main complex just in time for the shuttle landing in California. There are two IMAX theatres running different presentations throughout the day, but for the shuttle landing one of the theatres was showing NASA's broadcast. So, in the end, we did see the landing after a fashion.

Oh, and the Kennedy Space Center is spread throughout a very diverse wildlife refuge. I saw three or four alligators and two armadillos, as well as dozens of turkey vultures.

I'm sure this will be last post from Florida. I leave Tuesday afternoon. I hope to upload a lot of pictures of my trip when I return.

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