prog: (coffee)
[livejournal.com profile] jadelennox voiced concern about the car accident, so I will make an official statement that I am OK. I'll give you the full skinny now.

Last Sunday afternoon I was driving down Waterville's College Avenue, a four-lane, two-direction street, in the inside lane, and a car in the opposite inside lane suddenly veered into mine. It was far enough away that I had time to react, by changing quickly to the outside lane, but it still scraped my left rear corner as it passed, making a nice crunchy job of the metal there. I immediately pulled over while the other car plowed into a snowbank many dozens of yards behind me. All people involved left our vehicles at about the same time, and after verifying the crunchiness on my end, I started to walk over -- not easy, since it was all hopping over snowbanks with no sidewalks.

At some point, the car I was walking toward just vanished, really and truly. You may know that I tend to zone out when I'm walking around, and it apparently holds true even in unusual situations like this. It seems the other gentlemen (I think they were two men) got back in their car -- none of the details of which I had taken note -- and drove off when I simply wasn't paying attention, probably minding my footing more than my destination. Upon discovering this, I stood there for a little while, and then went back to my car, started it up, and continued as I was.

The only injury to me was a little fleeting sadness, a little lasting cynicism, and whatever I'll end up paying for the repairs. Hmm... guess I'll see to that tomorrow.

Draft

Dec. 24th, 2001 01:53 pm
prog: (Default)
The first draft of The Book is now sitting on this table here in Waterville, having just arrived via FedEx.

Eeeeeeee.

There is still a lot to be done with it, but it feels so... possible, now.

ugh

Dec. 21st, 2001 04:45 pm
prog: (Default)
My insurance company killed my policy due to non-payment. Fortunately, I called within the reinstatement-on-payment grace period, but that's not going to happen before tonight or tomorrow morning, when I am supposed to go up north to my own personal Grey Havens for a few days.

I really don't want to take a bus to Waterville. I'd sooner scrap the whole trip. There is no place in central Maine that is within walking distance of any other place; I would be immobilzed. Ugh.

I wonder what to do. I really want to see my northern friends again.

I feel a little bad that I can't just stay here over the Xmas thing, and be with local friends. This would result in making my family very sad and confused, though, and I do not wish to do that, even though I'm not very close to them.
prog: (Default)
Now that I've returned and taken in movie and a chocolate with the locals, I apologize to my Maine friends. Waterville is actually a pleasant place to hang out -- if you have a place there. Today, I did not. The Arcus offices were empty (except for Adam, workin' hard), and as such all my friends there were elsewise engaged over the holiday. I certainly didn't flip out during my recent two-week stint there while waiting for Chez Chestnut to open up, but this time I was there only because the calendar said I should be, and that, it turned out, wasn't a good enough reason to stay any longer than I had to. Out-flippage followed.

Arrgh

Nov. 23rd, 2001 11:33 am
prog: (Default)
All it takes is one mail from a friend setting up plans for today to make me regret visiting Waterville, even for a day. I hate sending out "Oops, I find myself three hours north of civilization once again, sorry" mail.

This place is death. It was fine for me to come here and dine with parents and play Cribbage with Ricky and see Sue and pat Major yesterday, but I should have left again after dinner. There is nothing for me here, nothing at all. On my drive up, I at least once laughed out loud, spontaneously, just thinking of all the friends I have around Boston. The smallest reminder that I've physically exited this network brings me real pain and throws me into confusion. Why would I do such a thing to myself? Melodramatic and true. I think I will phone people and then drive south forthwith.


Re: mushy I have fallen out of what ever frame of mind I inhabited when writing previous entry. This was assisted by LJers pawing at me in meatspace on Wednesday for more details, yum yum yum. I love them, and yet, those in the room would could see auras could no doubt see the cheezy CG effect of overlapping armor plates dropping clack-clack-clack over my psyche like with the Batmobile.

This is not to say that taking inventory of all the strange goings-on, and how my past fits into them, wouldn't be a good thing. But I really do need to write for myself first, and then we'll see about issuing the press releases and whatnot.

tum te tum

Nov. 8th, 2001 09:55 am
prog: (Default)

I have been in Waterville a week now. Insert pointed drumming of fingers, just once, here. Near as I can tell, there has been no motion on the Cambridgeport front. I have been tentatively sniffing at other opportunities, just in case. Several phone calls to make today. I wonder how much more line I should let out for Chez Charla... while I really want to live there, my confidence will be seriously eroded if I find out today that we're right where we were two weeks ago. The clock is ticking on the prime immediate backup location, just to make things more interesting.

Interesting, yes, ah yes indeedy.

I'm sorry I am so grumpy. Here, look at pictures of a bunny with a succession of leaves on its head.

Other stuff from a letter to a friend:

I have been kept sane during my stay by hanging out all day at the offices of Arcus Digital. They have a wirless network, and I have a laptop. And they have couches and lots of snacks and soda. (And a tip jar.) Mmmm. It's a pretty good environment, but for that it's in the cultural wasteland of central Maine, and that it's all-male. Then again, there are none of the loutish males that appeared increasingly during MINT's decline, so that's nice, but working in a crossgendered environment is still preferable, to me. Then again again, it's not like I'm actually working here. Or even plan on staying too much longer.

I will, however, be doing some work. This evening Andy talked to me about my first piece of contract work Arcus'd like me to do... an easy task, good teeth-cutting, not just with here but with the whole freelance thing. Naturally, Jim & co is all about telecommuting, so I'm very much not tying myself to this geographic spot by accepting the offer (though I do expect to visit semi-oftenly).

At least undef is back in business, more or less... the machine has a fresh new copy of Debian Linux on it, installed under the supervision of Arcus people, who didn't let me set up any security holes this time, and had me install software to help keep the thing hardened. To which I say: good. I'd say that this will absolutely positively be the last Bad Move this box has had to make, but with three such events in 2001 alone, I really wouldn't trust myself with such statements anymore. Then again, the situation is totally different... it used to be an insecure junkpile running either on my apartment floor or in a company machine room, and now it's a very secure box maintained by paid professionals in a dedicated hosting facility. We'll see what happens.

That letter was writ two days ago. Since then, my domain has become fully world-visible once again, though I've yet to properly crawl through the whole site and see what's broken and fix it all, again. It's worth it. I say to the l33t h4><0rs: Come on in. And burn! Yesh.

The cafe upstairs, Jorgenson's, is for sale. Everyone at Arcus will be very very sad if it turns into something other than a cafe, because, mm boy, good coffee right upstairs, available through the afternoon? Friend, that's half the reason I took the job at O'Reilly last year, with the promise that it'd be moving to Davis Square and its three late-nite coffee shops. (Ed note: I took the job, and it didn't move. And then I got laid off anyway.) According to this news story, the owners are selling all their inventory and equipment along with the space, so that's a hopeful sign.

A photographer came in to shoot John and myself playing Lost Cities at lunch yesterday for that story, but they used a photo of a college student instead. Foo! Doesn't two hairy guys taunting each other over a bizarre-looking card game have far more visual appeal than some waifish bookworm? Bah.


The shower in my parents' house is from the seventh and a half floor. I have to kneel in order to wash my face.

Strange fact: three people in the last three days, two of them friends who are not prone to make such random outbursts, have independently exclaimed how very tall I suddenly seem lately. MaryMary and my Mom offer no hypothoses why this is so. Andy thinks that I used to slouch by default, and have stopped. I am totally unaware of any of this.


I've started writing again, pretending that I'm settled. Ellie has been sketching rough drafts of book covers. First there was a neat cover featuring two Arabian birds, kites, which editor Linda thought was wicked cool, except that they seemed to be about to kill each other. After Linda asked if she could tone it down, Ellie made one with some sort of fru-fru bird, which Linda labeled "milquetoast". Sadly, Ellie snuck me the URL to it, and just seeing a possible book cover with my name on it made me fall in love with the thing. Since I just finished Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy, I emailed the URL to a friend: "Want to see my daemon?"

Ellie has since moved away from birds and now favors monkeys. Green monkeys. Monkeys reflect both the subject matter and the projected sales figures, she notes. ???

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