Random 10 5/14

Last week. This week:

  1. “Man Out of Time” by Elvis Costello, guessed by Generik
    In a private detective’s overcoat
  2. “I Wanna Be Your Lover” by Yo La Tengo (orig. Bob Dylan)
    And the rainman leaves in the wolfman’s disguise
  3. “Walkin’ the Dog” by Aerosmith (orig. Rufus Thomas), guessed by Clayton
    She broke the needle and she can’t sew
  4. “Sway” by the Puppini Sisters
    Only you have that magic technique
  5. “As Tears Go By” by the Rolling Stones, guessed by Generik
    I sit and watch the children play
  6. “Mothers of the Disappeared” by U2, guessed by Kim
    Through the walls our daughters cry
  7. “Burning Love” by Elvis Presley, guessed by Occupant
    I must be a hundred and nine
  8. “Art of Dying” by George Harrison, guessed by Kim
    Living through a million years of crying
  9. “As Is” by Ani DiFranco
    And when I look up, I just trip over things
  10. “Natural Disasters” by Enon
    They want your heart to ache and take up all your time

As always, guess the lyric and win no prize! And, as always, good luck!

Wednesday

It was unseasonably cold here today. Maybe not as cold as in some parts — my father said yesterday the news was reporting snow in my old central Pennsylvanian stomping grounds — but chilly nevertheless. My mom is still sick, but with the confirmation today that it is pneumonia, we’re hoping that rest and antibiotics will have her feeling better soon.

Meanwhile, my day was about the same as yesterday, except for a “brown bag” lunch we had at work today. We have these on occasion, where they invite a guest speaker and give everyone who attends the talk a free lunch of sandwiches or pizza. Today was the latter, and a talk on book publicity. It turned out to be a fairly interesting topic, with an engaging speaker — neither of which are guaranteed when attending these things. Of course, it was helped along by visual aids that included a clip of one of his authors on The Colbert Report. But hey, that and free pizza ain’t half bad.

In other news, I stayed up much too late last night watching yesterday’s episode of Lost, which a lot of people seem to have really hated. Honestly, I can see where they’re coming from — it focuses on two (relatively) minor characters and offers a lot of non-answers (or simply more questions) as answers for the show’s central mysteries — but the truth is, I really liked it. There are plenty of answers I wish it had given, plenty of mysteries that I wish had been explained. But I keep coming back to something Noel Murray wrote in a comment to his AV Club review:

For me it goes back to the idea that the story keeps repeating. It doesn’t “explain” anything necessarily — if anything, it raises more questions — but in a show where incidents and images and lines recur, the idea that even the central “hero” and “villain” of the piece come from a fractured background just like the 815ers makes the endgame more meaningful. It’s no longer a war between Good God and Bad God. It’s just a continuation of an ancient struggle that makes even the people who claim to be doing the right thing into terrible, terrible people.

Lots of people, including Murray, have been insisting for a long time that the show can’t help but disappoint in its final season, that anyone looking for some perfect closure or understanding of exactly what happened is going to be let down. I think “Across the Sea” may be the first time that’s really sinking in for some folks.

Me, I really enjoyed the episode. I don’t know yet what exactly it means for the last few hours to come, but I’m eager to find out.

Tuesday

So it looks like it’s probably pneumonia, which will hopefully respond to antibiotics and start to pass. I think my mother’s been feeling pretty miserable the past couple of days, certainly since we got home from Maryland on Sunday.

My day, by comparison, was pretty standard. I got the okay for our company’s “summer hours,” whereby I’ll work from 8:30 to 5:15 four days a week in order to leave at one o’clock on Fridays. It doesn’t go into effect until mid-July, but I stayed until 5:15 today to make sure it still left me enough time to make my regular train. And it does, if only just. I probably won’t often get a seat on that train, but that’s okay. Standing is sometimes better for my back, and it does mean I get to read more instead of nodding off in the evening — which I do all too often. I’m still reading The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, which is a weird mix of genres, not all of them super-exciting, but I am enjoying it so far, some three hundred pages in.

Other than that, not much to report.

Tuesday various