• Let’s have this conversation again. Not.

    Sometimes, my mother and I have the strangest and most irritating conversations known to man. We had one such conversation that left me very much scratching my head in all sorts of confusion during a coffee run that got cut short yesterday morning. Within walking distance of my apartment, there’s a Tim Hortons location. I haven’t been here and organized enough yet to actually figure out how to get there from here without getting myself killed. But, it’s still been on my plans to do so. I brought that up with the mother over coffee at the said Tim Hortons location, initially on our way to maybe accomplish other tasks–although at the moment, it escapes me just what those other tasks might have been.

    The thing to remember about my mother, and sometimes even I forget this, is she’s overly paranoid. She’s not quite at the level where she’ll wrap her house in something with some degree of protective coating or something at the slightest hint of a viral outbreak in town, but she’s reached the level where she gets a little jittery when I contemplate doing something as adventurous as taking the city bus in Ottawa. She gets a little anxious when I consider taking one of my cross-border trips–although she’d never admit it without some arm twisting.

    So, when I mentioned in passing maybe getting around to actually figuring out how to get from A to B, I could tell right off it was defensive mom to the rescue. I thought she’d want to do her usual playing 20 questions about how I planned to do that, who I’d call, and would I be reachable in the process–she’s big on insisting I be available, even when it’s rather inconvenient for me to do so. Instead, and without blinking, she very calmly, and very casually suggested I should first investigate getting a guide dog before doing so. When I asked why she thought so, her answer just about floored me. Apparently, the dog will know if a car’s trying to cross in front of me, or is stopped in my way, and physically prevent me from crossing in that particular area. Because, you know, I wouldn’t be able to tell judging by the sound of the extremely not quiet engine that there was a quickly moving object about to take my face off were I to step into the street right about now.

    Now, I have nothing against people who currently have, or have had, guide dogs. Clearly, it works for you. Or at least, at one time it did. It doesn’t for me. My reasoning is actually quite detailed, and will probably get an entry of its own up here at some point, but suffice it to say I get along far better by way of the cane than I would by way of the guide dog. And, in fact, am probably more likely to actually pay attention to things, simply because I won’t have much of a choice. Really though, I prefer that method of travel and am used to it, it hasn’t broken on me yet, so I don’t particularly feel the need to go messing with it. It’s not like one of my computers, or other pieces of recently tinkered with technology–I don’t particularly favour playing around with it until something goes sideways.

    My mother knows this, and yet still she decided I needed a guide dog before learning a route to a coffee shop in a relatively small town. Ignoring the fact I’ve navigated Canada’s capital by way of the cane for a year and a half and nothing on my person shattered or otherwise stopped functioning. I think I can manage to maneuver my way a block and a half or whatever it is to fill my coffee needs without killing myself.

    Needless to say, she was reminded of why I haven’t bothered and don’t plan to bother with getting a guide dog. And, as conversations like that often do, it kind of ended at about that point. I still don’t think she quite gets it, and she probably won’t. But I don’t generally like to overcomplicate things, really. For the kind of thing I was talking about, just in passing initially, a guide dog would definitely be overcomplicating things. I’ll probably go ahead and arange to figure out where I’m going and how to get where I need to be. She’ll probably have her miniature freakout session. Things will be just as they’ve always been. And I’ll hope to God we don’t have that particular conversation for a while. Once would be enough for me, thanks.

    , , , ,
  • Sabres 3, Maple Leafs 2.

    We’ve managed to put together a nice little losing streak. One we’re working our way through the first period of tonight’s game to try and extend. On the buffalo side of the rink it was ice, but I think on the Toronto side it mysteriously became quicksand. By the time I got bored and fell asleep, it was 2 0 halfway through the second period. It didn’t get a whole lot better–3 0 by end of period. We of course made it interesting in the third, but by then it was pretty well all over but the cheering. Guys, the game started at 7:30, not 9. Try and remember that for next time. Oh, and by the way, tonight’s game started at 7. Please show up to the rink now.

    Last time

    They beat us back in December by the same score. We played just about as well back there, too. Maybe slightly better, but not by much. I’m scratching my head trying to find a game we’ve actually won against them this year. If we have, and I doubt it, it was before the blog existed in its current form. We really should investigate fixing that at some point. Really.

  • Flyers 6, Maple Leafs 2.

    I’ve run out of things to say about our losses. We sucked. We weren’t shut out, but we still sucked. Philadelphia was all over us like nobody’s business. Some of those goals I don’t think we even tried to get in the way of. I never thought I’d say it, but I kind of miss the days of eddy. The good eddy, not the one we got stuck with the last year of his contract. Guys, I know I said we were used to losing. But I also said we’d like to win a few of these. Let’s try that, why don’t we.

  • I always said homework was bad for me.

    For the longest time while I was in school, highschool primarily, I’d always try to find something resembling an excuse to put off, avoid doing, or just plain forget about ever doing anything that vaguely resembled homework. Sure, eventually, most of it would get done anyway–not without the insistance of my parents, of course. But on a personal standpoint, I didn’t see a whole lot of point to it. You spend an hour or so in class beating a topic to death, and just when you think it can’t get any more beaten to death, the teacher throws an asignment at you that takes you an additional couple hours when you get home. And you usually don’t end up learning a whole lot more from the extra work than you did in class–or, at least, I didn’t. Now, rince and repeat the same procedure for every class you have the privelege of attending over the course of a semester. Head, meet pressure cooker. No wonder we threw small parties at the end of June.

    Flash forward to my post-highschool life, and people are starting to clue into that fact. Particularly, the people running Prince of Wales Public School in Barrie Ontario, which conveniently enough is about half an hour from where I was living when I did the highschool thing. Last year, after some arm twisting, they managed to ban the asigning of homework. And, surprise of surprises, they’re noticing grades are actually going up.

    “As a whole we found marks have started to go up, our Education Quality and Accountability Office data has improved since we started,” Jan Olson, the school’s principal said in an interview with CTV’s Canada AM.

    He says there are also fewer behavioural issues as a result of the ban, and academic improvement was observed across the entire spectrum of students: wealthy and poor, special needs and gifted.

    See, mom? I told you homework was bad for me.

    ,
  • Sometimes, freezing your ass off has its benefits.

    Today turned out to be emergency “pick up crap I forgot I didn’t have” day. Convenient enough, seeing as it picked today to be several varieties of cold. Still, the trip wasn’t a total loss. I did manage to survive the insane crowds that apparently decided today was also the day to be crammed into every store from wall Mart to Food Basics, and everywhere in between. Standing in one of those stores–I think it might have been Wall Mart, I accidentally ran across a nifty song by a singer I hadn’t heard about until today. I’m surprised I hadn’t heard of it before, though. The song’s by Chris Daughtry, and is apparently a little over 3 years old. I’ve had the song in my head since I came home, so on random impulse, I yanked the album. If anyone wants it, fire a comment at me–it’s free, or as free as one can get it.

    The song, called “Over You”, is also up on Youtube–although they were nice enough to turn off the embedding options, so you get a clicky clicky instead. Now, I just have two questions, one of which I’ll search out eventually. Which movie’s sound track does this song belong to? And, why did no one inform me of this? I feel cheated now.

  • Reasons not to buy yourself a netbook, number 5489.

    There’s a report out now that’s saying the rate of failure in netbooks within the first year is significantly higher than that of laptops and desktops. Now, not having actually owned a netbook I couldn’t even start to tell you if it’s accurate or not, but having owned 2 laptops and countless desktops, I can say my personal experiences with those are surprisingly positive. They all lasted past their first year, and I only had to replace my first laptop at the 4-year mark, or thereabouts, when it quite literally began to fall apart–it was a Toshiba, what do you expect? Other than that, though, I’ve had none of my machines to this point fail on me. Would that remain the same were I to buy a netbook? I haven’t a clue. But this isn’t exactly prompting me to go and find out.

    SquareTrade, an independent US warranty provider, analyzed the failure rates of more than 30,000 laptops covered by its own warranties. It found that 5.8% of netbooks malfunctioned within the first year, compared to 4.7% for regular laptops and 4.2% for premium laptops costing more than $1,000.

    Sounds like my best bet would just be to buy another laptop. So who wants to go shopping with me?

    ,
  • Maple Leafs 3, Panthers 2.

    Can we just duplicate this game and play that for the rest of the season? Seriously. Where was this team on Sunday? And the goals came from folks you wouldn’t expect them to come from this year on top of that. They play the Flyers tonight… oh, dear god I hope they show up. Been a while since we had a thing that called itself a winning streak.

    Last time

    We pulled this off before, at the end of November. And, I do believe, we were involved in something that called itself a winning streak then. At least, I’ll say we were. We still won’t make the top 10 when everything shuts down for the season, but hey, if last night means the start of something good, it might make things a little more interesting. Like I’d complain about interesting.

  • Flames 3, Maple Leafs 1.

    I think I liked them better when they were losing consistently. Sure, they were sucking. And doing so like nothing else I’ve ever seen. But they were consistent about it. This team’s kind of off somewhere in the land of confusion. One night, they play like the team that was actually put together to manage some kind of a semi-decent season. The next night, they play more like something the Leafs’ last GM would have thrown together. And he’s no longer working, so draw your own conclusions. Well, at least they’re consistent against this team.

    Last time

    We got rocked in November, too. Took it by 3 goals during a game from that period in this season’s short history where they were consistently choking. I’m not a statistician by trade, but I don’t think we’ll be seeing the top 10 this year, folks. Sucks, seeing as our first round pick for next year’s already out the bloody door. Oh well, at least we have Kessel.

  • Me thinks I doth neglect too much.

    So I’ll go ahead and attempt to correct that minor malfunction now. The week’s been largely uneventful. Jessica got to her bus and to rochester in one piece, as usual. I went back to Pembroke, and hung out at my parents’ place for the evening–largely because, quite simply, this apartment would have been way too quiet to come back to after spending 5 or 6 weeks with Jess. I did eventually come back here, of course. And wouldn’t you know, it didn’t take 24 hours before my usual sleep schedule reascerted itself once again. granted, that was helped by the fact I’m not used to being able to spread myself out as much in bed–another side-affect of their being one less person living here. Monday and Tuesday were pretty well written off. I tinkered with the computer a little, and tried to figure out just why it is I’ve been experiencing about the reliability of a third world phone system where my internet connection’s concerned. Come to find out I was just choking it to death–go figure, moron. I finally unpacked and set up the laptop, so now begins the saga of trying to straighten that out. As for right now? On to attempt to determine whether I’ll be waking up or sleeping. There will be hockey posts coming. And a linuxy techy geeky post. Skip at will. You had your warning.

    , ,
  • Hey, global warming? Go to hell.

    We had to make a run into town this morning to get the birth stone ring I got Jess for her birthday resized. And, much like yesterday, we caught a nifty little helping of snow, cold, and all kinds of bad in doing so. It was below freezing all last night. It’s still below freezing now. It’ll probably get colder this afternoon–also known as way too goddamn cold. And folks are still worried about global warming. Tell ya what, I’ll make you a deal. You let it warm to the point that I don’t need 6 layers to step outside, and I’ll think about not laughing my ass off at you for bitching about the supposed threat to the environment we are by just existing. Until I get some of this global warming headed my way, let’s just agree that you’ll stuff it. Deal? Thankya.

    ,

recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives