What my day looks like

The Passage of Time

I have people ask me what my day looks like.  Here goes:

Alarm set for 4am.  His the snooze once or so.  Up by 4:20am
Get ready to work out.
Work out 4:45ish to 5:30
Take a shower, shave, etc….
Quiet time/Bible study 6am to 6:30
Watch the news and blog till 7
Lydia and Isaac get up anywhere from 5am to 7am.
Leave home at 7:30
Get to work around 8:15
Start work around 8:30
Work to anywhere from 3:30 to 5 or later.  Normally I probably average 4pm
Eat dinner when I get home (hopefully with the family)
go to bed anywhere from 10-10:30pm.  Unless I fall asleep on the couch

On the weekends, I may get to sleep in till 5, if my body clock will let me.

Image from tonivc via flickr

Isn’t this what the Magna Carta was About?

JEEP DJ-5 Dispatcher

Sure, the title is kind of yellow journalismy.  But, one of the main points about the Magna Carta is that the King wasn’t above the law.  I wouldn’t be surprised if the post office is above state and local laws (just like no one pays state or local sales tax on a military base).  But this is a pretty gutsy move on the part of the post office.

“In providing mail service across the country, the Postal Service attempts to work within local and state laws and regulations, when feasible,” she said in a letter responding to a summons for payment, according to Cleveland.com.

“However, as you are probably aware, the Postal Service enjoys federal immunity from state and local regulation,” Breslin wrote. 

Contacts — Day 3, 4, and 5

eye 172/365

Well, I wore my contacts Sat, Sun, and again today.  Today was the last day of my trial so I had a checkup.  Here’s what I think:

Fit — I thought the lenses fit well.  Sure, I knew there were there because I could feel the edges of them as I moved my eyes; however, when I blinked they stayed in place and I couldn’t feel them when I closed my eyes.

Ease of Insertion — after the troubles on day 2, I didn’t have any repeat problems getting them in.  Although, for full-time wear, I certainly need a concave mirror.

Sight Quality — this is where they didn’t excel.  I couldn’t see as well with my contacts.  My left eye was fairly good but my right eye wasn’t.  I could read fine; however, it felt like things got fuzzier faster than they should have.  I mentioned this to the doctor today and….

She did another mini-exam.  I’m going to get a trial of 2 different kinds of lenses that may correct my astigmatism better.  The lenses have a rotation to them and only come in certain rotations.  My left eye was a good fit (I needed 161 and the lenses came in 160).  In the right eye, I needed something like 50 and could get a 20 or 90.  That explains my fuzzy vision.  

The new lenses should be in on Friday or Monday.  I’ll post a follow-up here.  If we can get the same quality of sight with contacts, who knows….I may be converted  :^)

Image from attila acs via flickr

Ever Take a Taxi?

#1 - Mr. Aiad

Have you ever taken a taxi somewhere?  I have in three different cases:  1) no access to another car and needed to get somewhere farther away than I wanted to walk or 2) I was in a strange city and didn’t have a clue where I was going or 3) I needed to get to/from an airport and public transit wasn’t running.

I only ever took a taxi once in the US…from BWI to my Aunt Grace’s house.  In Cacak, we took taxis around town if the weather was bad or we needed to get from the store with a large shop.  We took a taxi in London once because it was £4 cheaper for the cab than for a single-ride tube pass.  In Belgrade, we took a Mafia taxi ride, went less than a mile, and paid an arm-and-a-leg (and learned how you really get a cab in Belgrade).

Anyway, in the English speaking countries, what this guy points out was true:  the cabbie asked how to get there.  My response….I don’t have a clue.  I expect the cabbie to use his knowledge of the local situation and take the quickest/shortest/most economical route.  Anyway, here’s what he says:

I used to drive a taxi. I made a lot of money doing it. I learned very early on to never drive someone to their destination if it was a route they drove themselves, say to their home from the airport, or from their home to work or vice versa. Everyone prides themselves on driving the shortest route but they rarely do. Often people develop a route that is based on need -say going by the day care, or avoiding an intersection where they once had an accident or to avoid driving by an ex’s house or skirting road construction long since resolved- but as they become habituated to it, they fail to reorganize their strategy when their needs change. When I first started driving a cab, I drove the shortest route -always, I’m ethical- but people would accuse me of taking the long way because it wasn’t the way they drove. So, I learned to go their way ending up with a lot less grief and a lot more money. If you’ve ever wondered why a seeming professional cab driver will ask you how to get to your destination, this is why. Going your way means they’ll make more money and they won’t be accused of ripping you off. Not to say that in the beginning, I wasn’t stupid. I’d try to show the customer the route on a map but they’d usually be offended that I was contradicting them. It was to their house, if I’d never been there, how could I possibly know better than they did? In the end, experts they consider themselves to be, people are a tangle of unexamined emotional impulses and illogical responses. 

Taking a taxi after walking around town (like in Cacak) was an interesting experience.  The first time, I wondered why the guy went the way he did…but then, I started paying attention to signs as I walked.  As a walker, I made turns where cars couldn’t or went the wrong way down one way streets.

Image from jorjev via flickr

Root Beer

Root Beer Float

Right.  Living in the US, I never thought about this much but what do you do when you can’t get things you want/like?  For example, I never would have said I was a root beer “fan” or loved it:  I could take it or leave it.  But when I got a hankern’ for root beer, I could run down to the store, pick some up, and have it.  What happens when you can’t simply run to the store and get it?

This first happened in Serbia.  I went online and found root beer flavoring.  I asked Cyndi’s parents to pick me up a bottle and send it in the next box.  They sent some McCormic Root Beer Flavor.  My first effort was to follow the instructions on the package but use Kisla Water (fizzy water in Serbia).  Well, the Serbian word Kisla means sour and the water has a slight taste to it.  This made the root beer taste funny.

My next effort was to try yeast.  I thought I could use a little bit, get CO2 and not much alcohol.  Well, by the time the pop was fizzy enough, it also had a fair bit of alcohol in it and was undrinkable.  Back to square one.  Eventually, I settled on a set-up of two coke bottles connected with aquarium tubing (I had my sister mail me some, I think).  I mixed the root beer in one and put vinegar and baking soda in the other.  This worked pretty good; however, it took some experimentation to get the amounts right….once I got it wrong and ended up with vinegar in my root beer.  Another time, I popped off the connector hose and made a huge mess.  Oh, by the way, I put the baking soda in a paper towel…that gave me time to get it in, get the lid on and connect the hoses up (I also let it run a bit to get the air out of the system). Here’s a picture showing the setup.

RootBeerInSerbia

The root beer is inverted so the gas flows through it when it enters to maximize the surface area exposed to the gas. You need to eliminate as much air as you can before you start.  Oh, and while the gas is generating, you need to shake the root beer.  The agitation will allow more gas to dissolve…to a point.  And the root beer needs to be cold too.

Here in England, I have a Soda Stream.  Here’s how I do it:  I add about 800ml of water to the bottle and 1/2 cup of sugar.  I shake it up and let it get cold.  I then add 1 tsp flavoring and fizz it in the soda stream.  The result is good stuff and cuts the hankern down right quick.

Image on top from babe_kl via flickr

Contacts — Day 2

舒日

Well, I blogged about me getting contacts.  Included was a 5 pair trial.  We used the first pair that first day, and I have to wear a pair back with me on Monday.  That gives me 3 more pairs to wear until then.  Cyndi and I decided that I’d wear them Fri, Sat, Sun, and Mon.  That means yesterday–Friday–was the first whole day I had worn my contacts.  Here’s some impressions.

I still don’t think I can see as well with contacts as I can glasses.  I’m unsure if this is because my vision with glasses is corrected so well (to 20/10) or it is just a mental thing.

The contacts themselves weren’t hard to get used to.  Yes, I can feel it when the lens bumps against my eyelid when I move my eye, but I can’t feel them when I blink, etc…  This is very much unlike the gas-permeable contacts I had 15 years ago.  With them, it felt like every blink drug them up my eye only to have them fall back down.

Inserting them was a pain.  Probably because I don’t have a good place and the bathroom was hot after my shower.  It took me a good 6 tries to get the first lens in.  If I keep this up, I need to buy one of those parabolic mirrors.  The actual finger in the eye thing was easy…but I taught myself to overcome that last time.

I wore them all day.  And by all day, I mean all day.  From about 6am or so to 10pm or so.  When I took them out and put in my glasses, I had to adjust back to glasses.

While I don’t think I see as well with contacts, I can read with no problems (the text is perfectly clear).  I can also use the computer just fine.

I really like the fact that if I pull something out of the oven or breathe on a cold morning, I don’t have to worry about my glasses fogging up.  That is super convenient.  I imagine I’ll keep it up just to have them for when/if I go skiing, etc…

I don’t think I’ll wear them every day.  I’ve worn glasses since I was in the 3rd grade (about 8 or so).  I just don’t mind it any more.  Heck, I don’t remember ever minding glasses since I’ve been an adult.  Being a kid was a different story, I’m sure.  Heck, the first pair I got were when we were in GTMO and I got 2 pair of BCGs (although they appear to be “in style” today).  I do remember it taking me forever to get used to wearing them then.

I still haven’t figured out what I’m going to do.  My first thought was to buy them outright at £40 for 30 pairs.  And then I was going to just get more when that was gone.  I would also pay for my glasses outright.  But, everyplace here offers a plan where you pay monthly, get lenses, and get discounts on eyewear and follow-up exams.  And since I picked daily wear contacts, I have an option.  I can get 10 pairs per month, delivered, all of my follow-up care included, and 50% off on glasses for £14/month.  I can then pause it (if I’m not wearing 10 pairs per month), increase it, or pause it.  All with no commitments.  Sure, the lenses work out more that way, but 50% off glasses is a super deal.

boxshot-acuvue-1day-astig-image

Oh, the lenses I have Acuvue Moist for Astigmatism lenses.

[Update 2013-02-04 18:46:42] I had day 5 of my trial.  I blogged about days 3, 4, and 5 here.

Image at the top from SimonQ錫濛譙 via flickr

Me…with contacts

Me with contacts

I had needed an eye exam but had been putting it off.  That is until my glasses broke.  Well, when I went, they were running a special…free eye exams.  My insurance will pay for one exam per year so I thought I’d go back for a contact lens exam.  Turns out, that was free too.  Now, a bit of background….

About 20 years ago in Hermann, MO I gave contacts a go.  However, my eyes were bad enough that to get the correction I needed, I had to get gas permeable contacts (as opposed to soft ones).  I never did get used to them moving on my eyes and gave up on them.

Fast forward to yesterday.  I picked up my contacts, they showed me how to insert/remove them, and sent me on the way with 5 trial pairs of daily lenses. 

Initial results:

  1. I can’t see as well as I can with glasses.  Although, my vision is corrected to 20/20 with contacts, it is corrected to something like 20/10 with glasses.
  2. The dr said that would get better as my eyes adjusted to the contacts
  3. I didn’t notice them in my eyes too much.  I expect as I get used to them, that will go away
  4. Because of #1, I doubt I’ll wear them 100% of the time.

[Update 2013-02-02 06:27:28] A write-up is here after me wearing contacts for the second day.

[Update 2013-02-04 18:46:42] I had day 5 of my trial.  I blogged about days 3, 4, and 5 here.

Cornbread

Cornbread

Here’s a question:  do you put sugar in your cornbread?  

For me, there isn’t a stitch of sugar in cornbread.  Add some sugar and you might as well put frosting on it and call it cake.  Jiffy mix is even worse.

Image from davidpbaxter via flickr

1 year ago

One year ago, I was in the states for the funeral of my Grandpa Maxson.  Well, technically, I left the UK on 19 January 2012 and the funeral was on the 23rd.

Here’s all of us at the entrance to the Gros Ventre Wilderness area in Wyoming on our Elk Hunting trip in 2003:

IMG_3350

Here’s a picture from my plane ride to the US and the funeral itself.

IMG_20120119_131626 IMG_20120123_124124