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  • Suck or No Suck? (July ’07 Edition)

    SUCK: Summertime without central air. Look, I don’t know how you people in the deep south get by even with central air (and by deep south, I mean pretty much everything south of Providence), but among the many reasons I choose to live in New England is the fact that I’m a cold weather guy. I hate heat, and I hate humidity, and I know that in a temperate climate like North America the two generally go together like peas and carrots unless you live in the desert or the coastal parts of California.

    Living in New England gives me the relative freedom of knowing that I’ll only have to deal with that pleasant “I live in a sauna” sensation maybe 3+ months out of the year, after which the temperature will drop like a rock and I’ll once again be back in my comfort zone. However… central air is not as ubiquitous in New England as it is through many other civilized parts of the country (at least, that’s what I’ve been told) — meaning that for a great many of us, it’s window units or nothing. And, unfortunately for me, I live in a 1920s colonial with antiquated wiring. Which means that 80% of my house in on the same circuit. Which means I can’t run more than 2 window units at once. Which means that in order to, say, enjoy a night’s sleep on a humid July night in a room with a temperature under 80 degrees and less than 70% humidity, I’d have to install a unit in one of our bedroom windows and shut the door. Which means that I wouldn’t be able to hear Butterfly waking up screaming 2-6 times a night, every night. (Actually, this isn’t sounding too bad.) Which means I wouldn’t be able to run in there and put her back to sleep before her howling awakened her roommate Rabbit, which would then create a scenario in which two 2-year old girls would be screaming bloody murder for – conceivably – several hours at a time. Which would probably result in TheHurricane, who sleeps in a neighboring room, being roused from his sleep of the dead. Which would motivate him to kick in our bedroom door, allowing the wet, hot air to come flooding into our sweet lovely cool dry cocoon of sleep and envelop us instead in a blanket of sweaty, screaming children. Which would virtually redefine the word “suck.”

    Hence: we sleep without air conditioning. And while this has been a relatively mild summer thus far, I’ve got to say that sleeping all sweaty on top of my sheets is getting real old, real fast.

    NO SUCK: Flight of the Conchords. Please tell me we’re not alone in loving this show, which presents the adventures of a two-man, digi-folk band from New Zealand as they pursue love and glory on the mean streets of New York City. This is such an absurd, low-key pleasure that I don’t really know how to express my affection for it — but I am beyond grateful to HBO for bringing it to the air.

    SUCK: The scourge of ketchup. On Saturday, we were invited over to the home of one of TheHurricane’s school pals for a playdate/BBQ dinner. Which was lovely insofar as that a) it offered me the chance to eat dinner without actually cooking it myself; and b) it offered us the chance to get a look at one of the giant new colonials that have gone up in our neighborhood over the past few years, and take a peak at how people clearly far more successful than us live. (The answer to part b) they live with granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, blindingly gleaming hardwood floors and… this part hurts… central air.)

    In any case, we came, we saw, we chilled, we drank a few beers, we shared a few laughs, we yelled at our kids a few times, and then… they brought out the meat. It was an awe-inspiring spread, honestly, especially considering that there were only 4 of us (kids don’t count). It was tough to know where to begin, but after surveying the meatscape we plunged in and shared the bounty. After polishing off some steak tips, I decided that it was time to enjoy my first hot dog of the summer. I grabbed a dog, threw it in a bun, squeezed a little ketchup on top, and took a bite. It was delicious. My God, it was delicious. Oh, sweet hot dog. How could I ever have foresaken you? I missed you so. What kind of fool have I been? How have I lived this much time apart from your smokey, flavorful, processed meat goodness? After my eyes stopped rolling back in my head, I took another energetic bite… at which point several hundred cc’s of rich, red, flavorful ketchup burst from the far end of my bun, arced gracefully through the air- catching the light, if only for a second – and then landed with a wet, heavy spooge on my shirt.

    There was a moment of stunned silence, as I looked up and saw three sets of eyes – with expressions ranging from sympathy to outright dismay – fixed on the blob on my abdomen. (Heavy sigh.) I dropped my head to my chest, raised my hand, and accepted my status. “Party geek,” I sadly acknowledged. And it occurred to me that this was a kind of karmic justice, insofar as that about 3 weeks ago we had another of TheHurricane’s playmates/parents over to our home for dinner, and while serving steaks to the parents I managed to drop one of the ribeyes onto the father’s plate… sending a cascade of rich and colorful meat juices all over him. I was extremely horrified, and he was very gracious about the entire thing, but I knew that somehow I was going to pay for that trespass… and pay I did.

    The lesson: I shouldn’t be allowed around people.

    NO SUCK: Next weekend, when I will descend upon DC like a plague of locusts in celebration my semi-annual (in theory; annual in reality) “flee my family” weekend. TheWife and I decided last year that, in order to salvage my sanity, it might be a good idea for me to get away once in a while. Insofar as that her much more frequent and exotic business travel offers her the opportunity to visit places like Portugal, San Francisco, Atlanta, Toronto, etc. – which she sometimes extends into visits with friends and family in the area, and which sometimes involves her being gone over parts or wholes of weekends – while my business travel generally involves daytrips to the garden spots of the northeast, the appropriate way to strike some kind of balance would be to allow me to head off for a weekend or two each year to visit friends in faraway places, eat dinner in restaurants with cloth napkins, and sleep entire nights without interruption.

    In this spirit, I will be in DC next weekend, visiting some of my many friends in the area, goofing around with their children, making fun of one of the many pregnant women in my life (no, not this one), and generally reminding myself of what it feels like to be human. If you’re going to the Nats/Rockies game on Saturday, be sure to look for me. I’ll be the happy-looking guy not wrestling with three small children.Tedybruschi

    SUCK/NO SUCK: I’m not quite sure where to place this one, but this morning I was in Dunkin Donuts with TheHurricane when an Asperger’s kid in his late teens came over and asked if I was Tedy Bruschi. After I stopped choking on my Diet Pepsi (mmm… breakfast), I replied in the negative. Undeterred, he continued with the line of questioning, asking if I was sure (I was), if I was 6’2″, 240 (I was not), if I was related to Tedy Bruschi (I am not) or if I could help him get in contact with Mr. Bruschi (I could not). The conversation went on for about 10 minutes, and while on many levels I was flattered to be confused with Tedy – who is a big, good-looking dude, above and beyond being a phenomenal NFL player and the heart and soul of your New England Patriots – I was also kind of saddened by the realization that I look nothing like him, and that TheWife would probably just laugh at me when I told her this story. (She did. “Bruschi? You? Hahahahahaha!!!” “Thanks. Gotta go now.” Click.)

    (TheHurricane expressed no opinion on the topic, btw.)

  • It’s a little dusty in here

    You’ve probably seen this already, but if not… I mean, if this doesn’t suddenly make your eyes a little more sensitive to all the dust that’s floating ’round your room (and pollen — I’ve definitely got pollen here), then the great, aching, angry, empty black chasm in your chest where your soul should be is even bigger than mine.

    Fenway Park, Boston
    June 30, 2007
    Disability Awareness Day

  • The only thing better than meat is more meat

    As apparently the only joy I draw from life these days comes from grilling flesh, I give you the GQ Steak Marinade, which recently made both Sporty and Jonniker weep great big meaty tears of meatjoy:

    GQ STEAK MARINADE

    INGREDIENTS
    *2+ lbs steak (you know I’m a ribeye whore, so that’s what I went with… choose your own cut carefully)
    * 1/2 Cup bourbon
    * 1/2 Cup soy sauce
    * 2 TB honey
    * 3 (+/-) chopped scallions
    * 3-4 cloves crushed garlic

    DIRECTIONS
    1. You know the drill. Get a 1 gallon plastic ziploc bag. Put the meat inside. Put the marinade ingredients inside. Press out the air, seal the bag, mush everything together. Throw it in a bowl, and toss it in your fridge for 8-24 hours.
    2. Pull out the bowl, allows steaks to warm for 1/2 hour, then throw ’em on the grill. Any leftover marinade can be used for basting while you cook — it gives you a nice glaze.
    3. Open bottle of red wine. Drink wine. Eat steaks. Savor life.

    That’s it. That’s all I’ve got.

  • Tastes… like… chicken…

    What better way to celebrate Independence Day than with the classic American dinner: Tandoori-Style Chicken? It’s absurdly easy, and it fuckin’ rocks the house.

    TANDOORI-STYLE CHICKEN

    Ingredients
    * +/- 1lb boneless chicken breasts

    The Marinade
    * 1 cup plain yogurt (although I used nonfat vanilla, and it was fine)
    * 1 TB grated fresh ginger
    * 2 Tsp minced garlic
    * 2 Tsp paprika
    * 1 Tsp ground cinnamon
    * 1 Tsp ground cumin
    * 1 Tsp ground coriander
    * 1 Tsp kosher/sea salt
    * 1/2 Tsp fresh-ground black pepper
    * 1/4 Tsp ground cloves

    Directions
    1. Whisk all the marinade ingredients together in a bowl.
    2. Throw your chicken breasts in a 1 gallon ziploc bag. Pour in half the marinade. (Save the other half for the next time you make this meal… you’ll do it again inside of a week, honest to God.) Squeeze out the air and seal the bag. Mush the chicken and marinade together, put the bag in a bowl, and throw it all in your fridge.
    3. 8-24 hours later, grill the chicken.

    This goes beautifully with some basmatic rice, a little na’an bread, and some chutney. A nice bottle of something alcoholic is also highly recommended.

    Slainte.

  • Things I might, in retrospect, have phrased differently: Part XVIII

    From an e-mail I sent to a very pregnant (and not even remotely happy about it) girl yesterday:

    “Don’t worry about your internal organs. They’re just going to get eaten when the baby finally chews his way out.”

  • Which also explains why I consider myself the Glendon Rusch of husbands

    Via Karen — possibly the greatest New York Times correction ever:

    The Keeping Score column on Sunday, about new baseball research into hitting and fielding trends that can help assess the impact of pitchers, referred incorrectly to the status of the journeyman Glendon Rusch. He is recovering from a blood-clot scare last season, and is not pitching now; he is not out of the game because he “appears to have run out of employers to disappoint” with his statistically below-average pitching.

  • The Big Two

    Happy Birthday, monkeys.

    Msmiling_2
    Rtoocool_3

  • The fabulous Mid-Hudson Valley says hello

    * Normal daily commuting time each way, including multiple daycare dropoffs/pickups: 45 minutes
    * Total amount of time I spent driving yesterday: 8 hours
    * Number of boats I saw on the Mass Pike whose name made me laugh out loud: 1 (Cirrhosis of the River)
    * Number of live deer that walked in front of me on the Taconic Parkway: 1
    * Number of dead deer (total) I saw during my 8 hours of driving: 4
    * Number of meetings I attended in two different locations on the mighty Hudson: 3
    * Number of times I completely lost my train of thought during these 3 meetings: 4
    * Number of times I was able to recover and complete my sentence coherently: 3
    * Number of states that got in my fucking way when I was finally ready to come home: 1
    * Number of cities in Connecticut where I got stuck in early/prime rush hour traffic yesterday afternoon: 3 (thank you, Danbury, Waterbury and Hartford. You all suck.)
    * Number of times I utilized the word fuck (in all of its glorious permutations) while sitting in traffic in the seventh ring of hell Connecticut: 2,400 (est.)
    * Time I left home yesterday morning: 7:25am
    * Time I arrived home yesterday evening: 7:45pm
    * Measure of my hatred for the state of Connecticut this morning: profound, seething, infinite

  • Singing to me in my sleep

    Question: How much do I suck?

    Answer: That’s right… it’s time for another music meme! Today’s exercise in creative laziness has been sponsored by the letter P, the number 58 and The Velvet Blog. The rulez, per Mr. VB:

    IF YOUR LIFE WAS A MOVIE, WHAT WOULD THE SOUNDTRACK BE?

    Here’s how it works:
    1. Open your library (iTunes, Winamp, Media Player, iPod, etc)
    2. Put it on shuffle
    3. Press play
    4. For every item, type the song that’s playing.
    5. When you go to a new item, press the “next” button
    6. Don’t lie and try to pretend you’re cool…

    OPENING CREDITS
    HammockMiles To Go Before Sleep
    This works perfectly on several different levels. First, you’ve got the fact that it’s a moody, atmospheric instrumental — which is exactly what you’d want for opening credits. Secondly… well, the title alone tells you that my iTunes is eerily attuned to one of the dominating themes of my life.

    WAKING UPCranes
    CranesLiving and Breathing
    If this is my waking up music, I’m afraid to see the rest of the day. I’d quote some lyrics for you, but honestly… I have no idea what Allison Shaw is saying. If you’re not familiar with the Cranes, I’ll just suggest you try to imagine a scenario in which Elizabeth Fraser and Trent Reznor got busy, reproduced, and had a daughter who spent the first six years of her life being terrorized by monsters. If that six-year old then put together a band and released an album, you’d have my waking up music.

    Wonderful. This is starting out on a truly disturbing note.

    FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL
    David Bridie – Salt (I Don’t Want To Go No Further)

    The weather out here is unforgiving
    relentless and determined, heartless and dry
    and it just goes on

    Apparently, my outlook on the premise of education and the world lying beyond is somewhat jaundiced from the beginning. School? Learning? The opportunity for my square peg to be hammered into a round hole for the next 12 years? No, thanks — I don’t want to go no further, indeed.

    FALLING IN LOVE
    Husker DuCrystal

    Images run by, a thousand miles an hour
    but the time seems far away

    The fact that the falling in love song on my soundtrack is, in fact, a song about an airplane crash seems more than a little metaphorically appropriate. If Bob Mould screaming in agony doesn’t say everything I want to say about love, I don’t know what does.

    FIGHT SONG
    Sense FieldWondering Time

    You’re the only one who understands
    the weight of this moment
    the weight of this day
    you’re the only one who understands

    Terrific — apparently, my fight song portrays me as someone with an unhealthy dependency on (and love for) the person who’s beating the crap out of me. That seems psychologically sound.

    BREAKING UPGloria_starthere
    The Gloria RecordThe Immovable Motorist

    And if you don’t feel lonely
    then you can’t feel anything at all

    Eureka – iTunes came through for me bigtime on this one. This entire album, in fact, works beautifully as a soundtrack to the joys of a breakup and the inevitable sense of desperate isolation and hopelessness that usually follows. (At least that was generally my experience. Good times.)

    PROM
    VaportrailDream Yourself Awake

    Relax & be removed
    detach & float away
    see yourself slipping away

    Above and beyond the clever way that it rhymes “away” with “away,” this song seems like a not entirely inappropriate choice to describe a prom experience where alcohol and/or other illicit substances define the evening as much as romance and dancing. Which is interesting and would probably make my movie more dramatic… but the truth is that I was a clean-living youth who did not partake of any of the above until I was well into my college career. But whatever: let’s just presume that the movie of my life is “based on a true story” and move forward from there.

    MENTAL BREAKDOWN
    ChameleonsLufthansa

    I’m in a spin
    I won’t let this darkness in
    Turning around
    Grinning as I leave the ground
    Wanting it all
    I’m tearing right through that wall

    Despite what the lyrics might imply, this is actually a rather gentle song — suggesting a nice, slow, smooth descent into madness. How refreshing for me.

    DRIVING
    Teenage Fanclub I Don’t Want Control of You

    The very heart and soul of you
    Are places I wanna see

    Apparently by the time I’m driving I’ve moved beyond my psychotic meltdown, because this is a nice, happy, janglepop lovesong — not a bad option for a scenic drive through whatever part of my life it is that we are theoretically driving through.

    FLASHBACK
    The StillsLola Stars and Stripes

    Can you take me back to that place where stars glow
    comets swarm like fireflies outside your window

    Damn — my iTunes is getting scary. What a great flashback/nostalgia option, paralleling the sense of hope and wonder that love offers with several quite explicit references to the dark clouds lying ahead…

    GETTING BACK TOGETHERCocteaheadoverheels
    Cocteau TwinsTinderbox (Of A Heart)

    How heavy you are; it’s fading your hatch
    Tinderbox of a heart left a shell is all

    Yeah, I know the lyrics don’t really make sense. Whaddya want? It’s the Cocteau Twins. Anyhow, if this is my getting back together song… I don’t know that getting back together is such a good idea. Hmm.

    WEDDING
    EelsThe Other Shoe

    You’re smelling pretty now
    Such a pretty little lump
    A pretty little lump of flesh
    Who’s lost your way

    Why didn’t we use this as our wedding song? Oh, wait — we’re not insane. In any case, iTunes seems to be suggesting that within the context of my movie… getting married is a slightly worse idea than getting back together. Wonderful. Reminder to self: NEVER let TheWife see this post.

    BIRTH OF A CHILD
    Robbie RobertsonThe Sign of the Rainbow

    I could see forever
    High upon the hill
    I want you to walk with me
    When the rains come again
    And shine this light over you.

    Much better. Every child should be born to a buliding cascade of music like this, with Aaron Neville chiming in every so often with a soft, fluttering “rainbow“… at least, that would have been a significant step up from the beep of O.R. machines, murmuring of surgeons and nurses at work, and the stupid chatter of my own voice as I tried to keep TheWife focused on something other than the c-section she was undergoing at the time (both times).

    FINAL BATTLE
    Buffalo TomPostcard

    Too easily you choose
    My version of the truth
    When all I ask of you
    Is send me a postcard when you get there

    First off… final battle? WTF? I don’t know that I’m comfortable with the direction this movie is taking — especially the leap right from the birth of a child to my final battle with… God knows what. According to this song, it’ll apparently be TheWife. Is it possible that giving her a set of steak knives, several large tarps and a bag of lime for Mother’s Day might ultimately work against me?

    DEATH SCENECavein
    Cave-InYouth Overrided

    I don’t want to fear every dying year
    Don’t you dare tell me
    I cannot be made to believe
    That the rings under my eyes
    Are really blessings in disguise

    Yeah! Kickass! I am SO going to have the best death scene. Writhe in jealousy, bitches!

    END CREDITS
    SwansCelebrity Lifestyle

    She’s got a celebrity lifestyle
    And she’s got a glowing white face
    Yeah she’s got a celebrity lifestyle
    And she ties her naked children up with wires and lace.

    I think this song is about Courtney Love, which makes it a perfectly irrational way to end the great big ugly movie of me. Thanks so much for coming. Please drive safely!

  • Speaking of burnout…

    Today’s valuable lesson:

    The next time you’re making a marinade that involves tobasco sauce, it’s probably a good idea to put your contacts in BEFORE you start, rather than immediately afterwards.