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.

April 22

Today was not at all the day I expected it to be when I woke up this morning.

It started out like every other morning this week, except that I somehow managed to get out of bed in time to catch the earlier train into Manhattan. (And I only had to run a little bit to do so.) On the way in to work, I finished reading Janni Lee Simner’s Bones of Faerie, which I started on Monday. I loved the book’s opening chapter — which you can read in full at the Amazon.com preview linked above. It’s dark and sinister and poetic, and in just a few paragraphs it sets up what promises to be a very interesting world. And then the book lurches forward, with too much happening too quickly, not enough happening overall. I liked the characters, but the book never lived up to that first short chapter for me, never took the time to slowly develop its world and history.

When I got to the office, it was time for a change of pace, with an art therapy book currently on my desk in development. Of course, that didn’t last too long, because a little before noon I decided to call my doctor’s office and see if I could schedule an appointment, and they asked if I could come in, in a couple of hours. For the past couple of weeks, my throat has been bothering me; I haven’t felt particularly sick, but it has often hurt to swallow, and there’s been a scratchiness I just couldn’t shake. I thought, if I was lucky, they’d be able to see me sometime tomorrow, but they had at least a couple of slots still available for today. So that’s how I ended up leaving at noon and taking half a day off from work.

I’m pretty much okay, and the doctor’s appointment went by fairly quick. It’s mostly just a lot of post-nasal drip, with possibly the start of a sinus infection, that’s irritating the back of my throat. He prescribed five days of antibiotics, gave me a spray for my nose (complete with a talking brochure), and recommended an over-the-counter allergy med like Claritan or Zyrtec. With luck, I’ll start to feel a whole lot better soon.

Other than that? There was a brief moment on the train ride home when things threatened to get a little weird. An elderly gentlemen sitting a few rows behind me was, from his conversation with the ticket collector, obviously confused about where the train was headed and about the fact that he had to pay for a ticket to get there. He wanted to go to a local hospital, not on this particular line, and apparently had no money. The two of them seemed to reach some kind of understanding, namely that the man needed to transfer in Queens, but he became quite agitated when she came back through at that transfer stop.

“Sir, you need to get off this train,” she said, not at all rudely.

“The only thing I need to do is die!” he shouted.

And then she likely threatened to get the police involved, because the next thing he was shouting was, “Go ahead! Call the cops!” She went off to do just that, and then he wandered off the train, headed who knows where, and we were kept sitting there for another ten or fifteen minutes. Thankfully it never escalated into the sort of fistfight I’ve actually seen on my commute, and hopefully the police were able to help the gentleman get back to wherever he belonged. If I had to guess, from just his appearance and his attitude, he was suffering from some kind of dementia and needed assistance.

I can’t help but be reminded of this story from a recent Radio Lab podcast.

Other than that? That’s pretty much it.

Monday various

Monday various

  • I think John Scalzi has it right about this health care bill that passed in the House yesterday:

    As such there was no real political or moral philosophy to the GOP’s action, it was all short-term tactics, i.e., take an idea a majority of people like (health care reform), lie about its particulars long enough and in a dramatic enough fashion to lower the popularity of the idea, and then bellow in angry tones about how the president and the Democrats are ignoring the will of the people. Then publicly align the party with the loudest and most ignorant segment of your supporters, who are in part loud because you’ve encouraged them to scream, and ignorant because you and your allies in the media have been feeding them bad information. Whip it all up until health care becomes the single most important issue for both political parties — an all-in, must win, absolutely cannot lose issue.

  • Meanwhile, Poppy Z. Brite has some harsh things to say about David Simon’s new HBO show Treme. The title of her post should tell you exactly how she feels about their filming in her hometown of New Orleans. It raises some interesting questions — namely, are some wounds too raw to be fictionalized, much less re-enacted for television in the same place? And what, if anything, is Treme‘s responsibility to the neighborhoods in which it films? Is it meeting that responsibility, just by bringing jobs and revenue to the city? (After all, you can’t please everyone, no more how sensitive your approach.) Can Simon, as an outsider to the city, even hope to do the tragedy that was Katrina justice? Frankly, you couldn’t stop me from watching this show, and I think if it’s handled with even half the depth and honesty as The Wire, it could terrific and emotional television.
  • Paul Di Filippo has the line-up for the ultimate Beatles-reunion band. This is either a terrfic or terrible idea, I’m not sure which.
  • Oh great, a book of inspirational quotes from Sarah Palin. I can’t fucking wait. [via]
  • And finally, I’ve mostly avoided all these Chatroulette videos (and the site itself), but Ben Folds’ live-show use of it was surprisingly awesome [via]:

Tuesday various

  • So Yoko Ono only okayed the Citroën car commercial to keep Lennon in the public conciousness? That’s good, because before this, I’m sure many people were thinking, “John Lennon? Who’s that?”
  • Another from the fine line between irony and hypocrisy department: Sarah Palin Crossed Border for Canadian Health Care. Why does she hate America? [via]
  • Having just recently rented or purchased some DVDs and Blu-Ray discs where this is a particular problem, I can totally get behind John Scalzi on this:

    …if someone were to introduce legislation requiring home entertainment companies to have a “just play the damn movie” button at the start of every DVD, Blu-Ray or any other future movie-playing technology, I would call my Senators and representative every fifteen minutes until they voted “yes” on that bill.

  • Charlie Stross on how books are made. [via]
  • And finally, A Trailer for Every Academy Award Winning Movie Ever [via]