Plumbing the depths

I spent the afternoon today helping my father at a local Boy Scout “Merit Badge University” in Great Neck. Some Long Island troops had put together the event, where Scouts could go from one class to another and learn about the requirements of different merit badges. My father was teaching the plumbing section of Home Repairs, for which he’s a counselor — and for which his large collection of tools and significant experience make him well qualified. (He’s a chemical engineer, so not a plumber by trade, but he’s definitely my go-to person for any home repair questions that I might ever have.)

I should say that, while I was an Eagle Scout and Scouting was a big part of my life growing up, my father has significantly more years invested in it now than I ever did. He stayed on as Scoutmaster for at least half a decade after I graduated and went away to college, for one thing, and he remains actively involved to some extent with several local troops, including the troop that I was a member of as a boy. My involvement today consisted mostly of helping my father carry in all the plumbing supplies he’d brought along to show the scouts, and at one point going back to the classroom to grab a closet auger the boys wanted him to demonstrate in the bathroom across the hall.

We were in a local Jewish temple, in the religious school on the second floor, and it wasn’t a big group. My father’s “class,” which ran from about 1 to 2:30 PM, was just two boys and one of the boys’ fathers. I sat quietly to one side and thought I’d work on the Sunday crossword puzzle, but I ended up not wanting to be rude or distracting to the others, so I mostly just listened. I had plenty of time to work on the crossword puzzle — not quite finishing it just yet — when we got home.

We got takeout at a nearby Azerbaijan restaurant for dinner, and I spent some more time finishing that Wallace and Gromit computer game — just one more episode to download and go — and trying to get caught up on episodes of Chuck. That’s about the extent to the excitement of this Sunday.

Now I’m getting ready for bed. I might watch one more Chuck episode and then that’s it.

Peascod’al Activity

The “Forgotten English” for today was the phrase “peascod wooing,” which means…well, let me just give you the quote from W.C. Hazlitt’s 1870 book, Faiths and Folklore of the British Isles:

If a young woman, while she is shelling peas, meets with a pod of nine [peas], the first young man who crosses the threshold afterwards is to be her husband. In Scotland it is, or was, a custom to rub with peastraw [fodder made from pea stalks and leaves] a girl to whom her lover has not been true.

If I’d known it was that easy… This afternoon, my mother suggested I join a singles’ bowling league advertised in the events calendar of a local marketplace newspaper. But apparently I just need to start hanging around women who shell a lot of peas, perhaps surreptitiously walking in and out of thresholds as they do so. I’ve actually been to the “rock ‘n’ roll” bowling this group participates in, not as part of any singles group, but just with friends. It was fun, but as a few people pointed out when I mentioned this earlier on Twitter, if I joined the group, I’d almost certainly find it populated by a bunch of guys and maybe one scared, or more likely bored, girl. And I’m not sure paying to hang out with a bunch of dudes who’d rather be meeting women is really what I want to be doing.

It doesn’t help that the advertisement also suggests, for more information, that one visit the group’s Geocities page.

Beyond that, it was just a really nice day here. The weather was more like early summer than spring, so I went for a nice walk around the neighborhood after lunch. Along the way I listened to Ken Plume’s “A Bit a of a Chat with Bill Corbett, of MST3K and Rifftrax fame. It was a decent interview, and I think Corbett offered some decent writing advice.

When I got home, I discovered I had received an early birthday present in the mail. Heather sent me a really great assortment of Canadian literature, a box full of neat looking books I’m eager to dive into. I may take one of them with me on my trip next week to San Jose, since I’m likely to have some down time during the conference — and plenty of it on the plane trips from one coast to the other. (I’m about halfway through Phillip Pullman’s The Subtle Knife, and I don’t expect the remainder to last me through the rest of next week, much less to next Sunday.) Heather also included a Moleskine notebook, for my own writing, which I neglect a whole lot more than I should. She’s a really good writer herself, and inspiring, so I’ll have to make damn sure I make use of the notebook. The whole package was an unexpected delight — you can’t really go wrong sending me a box full of books — and I don’t feel quite so bad about turning thirty-three next week.

Beyond the walk and the weather and the books, I spent some of the day playing episode three of Wallace and Gromit’s Grand Adventures, once I could actually get the installation file to download. And then this evening I watched Paranormal Activity, which I guess was effectively scary to a point, especially on what was clearly such a low budget, but also a little disappointing. And I say that having been a pretty big fan of The Blair Witch Project, to which this movie has inevitably been compared. I think A.O. Scott said it best in his review:

By any serious critical standard, “Paranormal Activity” is not a very good movie. It looks and sounds terrible. Its plot is thin and perforated with illogic. The acting occasionally rises to the level of adequacy. But it does have an ingenious, if not terribly original, formal conceit — that everything on-screen is real-life amateur video — that is executed with enough skill to make you jump and shriek. There is no lingering dread. You are not likely to be troubled by the significance of this ghost story or tantalized by its mysteries. It’s more like a trip to the local haunted house, where even the fake blood and the tape-loop of howling wind you have encountered 100 times before can momentarily freak you out.

It’s effective, and probably was a whole lot more so in the midnight movie screenings the studio promoted it with, but it’s not particularly clever or memorable.

Though there is one moment in the film I really liked. Horror movies of “found footage” like this — like Blair Witch or Cloverfield or Quarantine — often have to make excuses for why a character persists in filming events rather than, you know, running in terror from them. There’s plenty of that here — lots of “put down the camera” and “we need a record of this” talk — but there’s one moment where one character says, “Turn off the camera,” and the other character just does. It’s not an important or eventful moment in the movie, but it’s a nice, realistic little detail that’s often missing from movies of this ilk.

(I think I may have to check out the Rifftrax version all the same, though.)

Anyway, that was my Saturday.

Just your typical, average Friday

Today is Friday, and I don’t have an awful lot to say about it beyond that.

I spent the day for the most part immersed in PowerPoint, which is nobody’s idea of a great time, but at least I’m making progress on pulling these lecture slides together. I got through about seven chapters today, the first half of the book, and hopefully will be able to more or less finish in the two days I’m in the office next week. I head to San Jose on Wednesday for a 5-day conference — and maybe the world’s least exciting destination for my birthday — and there are a few projects I’d like to make somebody else’s problem before I leave.

I’m probably not going to get the latest issue of Kaleidotrope out before I go, however. It’s largely finished, beyond a little last-minute tweaking and the printing, so it will definitely be mailed out in April. But the end-of-March timing just doesn’t work in my favor. It’s a really good issue, so if you haven’t subscribed yet, now would be a great time to do so. Just indicate you want your subscription to start with issue #8. There’s almost certainly going to be three issues total this year, so now’s a good time to get on board!

Other than that, not much to report. It’s just your typical, average Friday.

Random 10 3/19

Last week. This week:

  1. “Pow!” by the Lovin’ Spoonful
    I was standing in the artsy-fartsy uptown restaurant a few frozen dinners ago
  2. “This Ain’t the Summer of Love” by Blue Oyster Cult
    The key will dangle by the inside
  3. “The Scientist” by Aimee Mann (orig. Coldplay), guessed by Betty
    You don’t know how lovely you are
  4. “Party” by El Perro Del Mar
    I just want to be a part of you
  5. “Unforgetful You” by Jars of Clay
    I never minded calling you a king
  6. “Country Roads” by Ryan Bingham
    I’ll never be a king of slaves
  7. “When the Day Met the Night” by Panic at the Disco
    Just hanging around then he fell in love
  8. “Thank You for Sending Me an Angel” by Talking Heads
    You can look, tell me what you see
  9. “Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)” by Melanie
    We all had caught the same disease
  10. “Mornington Crescent” by Belle and Sebastian
    Rain in the southeast, men feeling blue

See if you can guess this week’s lyrics!