Aug 232002
 

Every morning, I drop The Boy off at his daycare downtown. There are a few spaces in the back for us to park while dropping off, but a lot of the time they’re already full when I arrive. Across the alley from the daycare lot is a pay parking lot. Most mornings, it’s only about 1/4 full and today was no exception. Instead of waiting in the alley, blocking traffic for a new spot, I usually just pull into one of the pay spaces for the 5 minutes that it takes me to get The Boy inside and get back out again. Every once in a while, I get hassled by the Parking Walrus. The Parking Walrus is an overweight older gentlemen with long yellowish-grey hair and a yellowish-grey handlebar moustache in an ill-fitting parking attendant shirt. When I encounter the Parking Walrus, it’s the highlight of my morning. Here’s an example of our exchanges:

PW (holding a clipbord trying to look authoritative): “You know you have to pay to park here.”
Me: “I know, but I’m just dropping my kid off.”
PW: “This is a pay parking lot.”
Me: “The lot isn’t even a quarter full.”
PW: “This is a pay parking lot.”
Me (seeing this isn’t going anywhere): “Thank you.”
I get in my car and the Parking Walrus shuffles back to his truck to await his next victim

It was even more amusing this morning. As I walked out of the daycare, I could see the Parking Walrus holding his clipboard and studying my license plate, immediately my face lit up at the sight of my nemesis. I passed one of the the other dads who was getting into his car. He sarcastically says to me, “Uhoh, you’re going to get written up.” He too has incurred the wrath of the Parking Walrus. I told him not to worry, that I was very familiar with the ways of the Parking Walrus. I would be fine. I’ve taken to parking in his lot as much as I can. The way I figure, we have to give the Parking Walrus something to do each morning or he’d be bored. Who says community service can’t be enjoyable? I’m just doing my part.

 Posted by on August 23, 2002 at 5:58 pm
Aug 122002
 

I went ahead and updated the picture of the week again with a picture from the party that Ted and Jenny had for Jonah’s first birthday. The Boy broke in their swing set.

We took The Boy to see Spy Kids 2 this afternoon. It was fun although the ads on TV ruined most of the moderately clever lines. There were a few other good gags. It’s clear that Robert Rodriguez had a good time making the film. It was also cool to see a lot of the Austin locations. The logo for the amusement park at the beginning of the film looked a lot like Mickey, one of the characters from Los Hooligans, a strip that Rodriguez drew for the Daily Texan. Once again, The Boy enjoyed himself and The Wife and I continued our trend of only seeing kids movies in the theater. I think we’ve decided to give up and just buy the movies that we want to see when they come out on DVD. It’ll actually work out to be cheaper once you factor in what we’d be paying for babysitting, tickets and concessions.

 Posted by on August 12, 2002 at 3:00 am
Aug 092002
 

I’m becoming an expert at changing tires on The Wife’s car. We went to dinner with friends at the start of the July 4th weekend. While we were eating, The Wife mentioned that the rear tire on the driver’s side was looking a little flat. Once we finished dinner and said goodbye to the friends, I went to take a look at her car. Sure enough, it was so flat that I didn’t feel comfortable with her driving it home. I pulled the flat tire off to replace it with the spare and discovered a screw embedded in it. We spent 4th of July morning getting it repaired. Fast forward to last night, barely a month later I might add, once again at dinner, The Wife mentions that the rear tire on the passenger side is looking flat. Once again, the tire is too flat to drive and once again I have to change a tire in the hot summer evening, this time fending off potential West Nile virus carrying mosquitoes. I’ll bet you can’t guess what was in the tire this time. No, not a screw, but a nail. You were close.

There’s a new picture of the week. It’s another one from the trip to the Spam museum, but it’s new to you.

 Posted by on August 9, 2002 at 6:17 am
Aug 052002
 

A co-worker of mine has created a new site called Blogtree.com. His idea is to try chart the history of blogs family-tree style. Apparently, it’s resonated with people as it was picked up by several of the blogging sites including Scripting.com and Blogroots.com. It’s so popular that as of now, it’s still listed as number one in Daypop’s Top 40. Go add yourself if you haven’t already. This site is in there.

The Boy and I had a big father/son day on Saturday since The Wife worked Friday night and had to spend the day sleeping. We went to the park and did some clothes shopping to take advantage of the big sales tax holiday weekend. I also took advantage of a deal that Electronics Boutique was running. It’s over now, but they were accepting any two used DVDs in exchange for a copy of the new Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring DVD that comes out tomorrow. I gave them DVDs that I’ve bought in the past but have since some out with “special editions” that include more goodies. We also went to see Stuart Little 2. It was tolerable for me and The Boy really enjoyed it.

We were at Curra’s Saturday night and happened to run into a couple that used the same midwife that we did for The Boy. They were also in our birthing classes at that time. They had moved away and we hadn’t seen them since before The Boy and their daughter were born. It was cool to run into someone that you knew as a pregnant couple and then see them three years later with a preschooler in tow. Their daughter was noticeably calmer than The Boy during our ten minute conversation. I only hope The La turns out the same.

And finally, I leave you with a searchable archive of the immortal words of recently ousted U.S. House Rep., James Traficant. Enjoy!

 Posted by on August 5, 2002 at 11:11 pm
Aug 022002
 

For those of you that are parents, today’s post will sound familiar or perhaps it will save you from making the same mistake. Those of you that aren’t parents will just have fun laughing at me.

A friend, Karin, wanted to borrow our digital camera on Wednesday. Her son goes to The Boy’s daycare, so I was supposed to bring it with me Wednesday morning. As you may or may not know, I generally get The Boy up in the morning, feed him, dress him, and take him to daycare.

After almost forgetting the camera, I brought it out with me to the garage. The Boy needed help getting buckled into his carseat, so I set the camera on the trunk of the car. As I did this, I briefly thought that it might be a bad idea as I might forget it. I did it anyway.

As I was buckling The Boy into his seat, he asked me if we could listen to “heavy load.” He was referring to the new Red Hot Chili Peppers song, “By the Way,” of which he’s become quite enamored. The line in the song is actually “heavy glow.” I got distracted talking about the song. Then, after strapping him in, I decided to get the paper from the front lawn. I got it, began reading parts as I got into the car, started the song playing and pulled out of the garage.

I was more than halfway to The Boy’s daycare before I realized that I never got the camera off the trunk. After loudly exclaiming “Oh shit” and among the admonishments of The Boy, “You shouldn’t say ‘Oh shit’, daddy,” I headed back home to find out how badly I had managed to destroy the camera. The whole way there I kept repeating things like “that was really, really stupid” or “I can’t believe I did that” and The Boy kept agreeing with me, “Yeah, that was really stupid. You shouldn’t have done that, daddy.” After a few minutes of this, I finally had to tell him that, in this type of situation, you’re supposed to make the person feel better and tell them that everything will be ok. He responded with, “It’ll be ok, daddy,” another step in the socialization of The Boy.

I was hoping that the camera had fallen off earlier in the commute rather than later as the morning traffic gets worse as you travel from our house to The Boy’s daycare downtown. I started driving more slowly as I got closer to our house. Sure enough, I spotted it in the intersection at the end of our street, the first turn that I make after leaving the house.

Thankfully, it didn’t look like anyone else had run over it. The battery cover had popped off and the batteries were scattered all over the intersection. The memory card cover had also popped open and the memory card had shot out of the camera. The lens cap had come off, but the lens appeared to be intact. There was damage to the top of the camera body near the power switch. I collected up all of the pieces and attempted to reassemble the camera.

Everything seemed to go back together ok. The hinge on the battery cover was broken, but it would still close and stay on. I tried pushing the power button and got nothing. It felt like maybe the spring mechanism on the button was broken. Now late for work, I drove The Boy to daycare and tried calling Karin to let her know what had happened.

Luckily, Karin was having her own parent trials that morning and she was still at the daycare. I borrowed a safety pin from her and pried the power button off of the camera. I knew that it would come off as the only other time that the camera been dropped (courtesy of The Boy), the power button had popped off. The area under the power button looks something like this – o -. The two slats on the site are where the button attaches to the camera and the hole in the middle is where a plastic column on the button fits in and actually turns the camera on when pressed down. I stuck the safety pin into the round hole and, presto, the camera turned on. I tried taking a picture and it seemed to work fine, so I gave it to Karin. A co-worker suggested that I send this story to Kodak and they could use it as a testimonial to the ruggedness of their digital cameras and perhaps they’ll be so thrilled that they’ll give me a comparable replacement. Yeah, right.

The safety pin has since been replaced by a paper clip attached to the camera’s wrist strap. I suppose I can live with that until Best Buy has another “18 months, no interest” digital camera sale. I had been contemplating getting a new camera before The La is born as you can now get one twice as powerful as ours for half the price. Perhaps I was subconsciously trying to do the old one in?

 Posted by on August 2, 2002 at 7:20 pm
Aug 012002
 

It’s been a while since I’ve posted so bear with me as this will be a long one. We were in Austin, MN (yes, you read that right) for several days to visit The Wife’s family and witness the wedding of The Wife’s cousin to his sister in-law. Before I say anything about that, I just have to say one totally unrelated thing: people who put auto-looping MIDI music on their web pages should be summarily executed.

I was hoping that the trip to MN would give us a brief respite from the brutal central Texas summer, but alas, it was not to be. The first day there, it was actually hotter in MN than back home in TX and the humidity was definitely worse.

It was nice to see The Wife’s family again, most of whom I have only met one or two times. The last time was at our wedding where I think I spoke a total of 10 words to each person, a curse of most brides and grooms.

So this was my first trip to see The Wife’s family as her husband and it was also my first trip to Minnesota. I think being married gave me a new perspective. Let’s face it, everybody’s family is weird. It’s just that you get used to your own family’s weirdness. When you get married, you’re suddenly a part of this whole other family whose history you’re probably only vaguely familiar with. It makes for some interesting moments, especially during a wedding weekend.

Unfortunately for us, the trip was plagued with various unforeseen problems.

The first was my fault. I decided that it would make great sense to pack my suit and have it dry cleaned in Minnesota. We were arriving Thursday morning and the wedding wasn’t until Saturday evening. I’d have plenty of time to get it cleaned and it would look great, no wrinkles from being crammed into my luggage. However, I miscalculated the availability of dry cleaning in a town of 20,000. Thinking that I’d have plenty of time for next day service, I called one of the two dry cleaners in town on Friday morning to get directions and make sure that I’d be able to get the suit done in time. The first place basically laughed me off the phone. The second was a similar experience. I guess there’s not much call for next day dry cleaning on a Friday in Austin, MN. I had to call a dry cleaner in another town thirty minutes away. They assured me that they could have it done the same day, so armed with a map and my suit, I headed for Albert Lea, MN. I dropped the suit off at 11:30 and the woman there told me that it would be ready by 1:30. Hooray for “one hour martinizing.” I drove back to Austin for lunch, after which we took The Boy to a nearby park to tire him out some. At 2, I decided that we should all go get the suit and then return for a nap. We arrived at the dry cleaner in Albert Lea at 2:30. I was informed by a different woman than the one who took my suit in the morning that she was behind and that it wouldn’t be ready until 4. Great. Now, we had to decide whether we would waste another hour driving back to Austin and then returning later or stay in Albert Lea and kill time until the suit was ready. We decided on the latter. We had passed a mall on the way into downtown, so we headed there in an attempt to amuse The Boy. I loathe malls no matter what size town they’re in and what a godforsaken place this one was.

All of the stores had racks of merchandise sitting in the main traffic area of the mall with no one watching them. I’m not sure if they always do this or if it was because that particular weekend was “crazy days”, which I think is a sales tax holiday. All I could think was “shoplifters paradise”. Apparently, the anti-smoking lobby hasn’t hit rural Minnesota yet, because it seemed like half of the people in the mall were smoking. I spotted more than one kid with a rat-tail haircut and one old guy who looked like Justin Wilson wearing Mork suspenders and sounding like Ned from SouthPark, but I think it was his natural voice. Thankfully, the suit was actually ready at 4 and we were able to get the hell out of there in time for the rehearsal dinner.

The second mishap occurred during the wedding reception which was held right after the ceremony in another part of the church. After eating, The Boy was bouncing off the walls so The Wife took him to one of the VCR-equipped classrooms with a Dragonball Z tape that he had begged to borrow from one of The Wife’s older cousins. We normally don’t let him watch the show because there’s too much fighting in it, but we were making an exception. The Boy’s one-year-old cousin, Maggie, was already in the room being watched by a teenage girl who is a family friend and we had been told that she would be willing to watch some of the other young kids as well. The Wife left him in her care and they were soon joined by another cousin, 7-year-old Ren. For reasons that I won’t get into, Ren has a history of behavior problems and we probably wouldn’t leave The Boy alone with him, but with the teenage girl there watching the other cousin, we figured it would be fine.

About 20 minutes later, The Wife sees the teenage girl out in the crowd with us. Since I had never seen the girl, it didn’t register with me that The Boy was now alone with Ren. I went to take some things out to the car and The Wife started towards the classroom thinking that it would be a good idea to check on them. Not five minutes passed between the girl leaving the boys and The Wife arriving at the classroom. The details are still fuzzy, since no adult was present, but somehow Ren either picked The Boy up and dropped him on his face or somehow pushed him down such that he landed on his face. Either way, I came back from the car to find The Boy screaming in The Wife’s arms with blood coming from both his nose and his mouth. Lucky for Ren, he wasn’t anywhere near me right after I saw this. It’s the first time The Boy’s been that gruesomely injured and it definitely elicited the primal parental protection instincts. My first thought was that I wanted to do to Ren what he did to The Boy. Of course, that’s neither realistic or appropriate (in this situation anyway). We ended up taking him back to the hotel room and putting ice on his lip for the rest of the night, missing the dancing (and drinking) that was to follow the reception.

It turned out, thankfully, that the damage was minimal and The Boy was basically fine the next day. I’m not sure what was said to Ren, but I know what I would’ve liked to say to him.

Finally, our return trip was marred by a 2 hour delay due to weather. We got in after midnight instead of before 10.

It wasn’t all bad. Oddly enough, one of the highlights of the trip for me was the Spam museum. For those of you that aren’t aware, Austin, MN is the home of Hormel and Spam. They recently built the museum and honestly, it’s one of the better interactive type museums that I’ve ever been to. It was quite the pop culture shrine. The current picture of the week was taken at the museum. The computer controls are integrated into the breakfast diner scene, the yolk of the egg is a trackball and the pat of butter on the toast is a button.

 Posted by on August 1, 2002 at 7:35 am