Friday, December 11, 2009

Heart of a Champion (Because of UT)

So this may be one of my least entertaining blogs yet. I think my blogs have become gradually less and less entertaining as time has gone on. Allusions and puns are at an all time low. Hopefully i will get great ideas over break.

Included this time: UT police after Michael Mayo?!?!, comical class happenings, things I don't understand, what it takes to not be racist.

Not included: a really funny story, on par of epic-ness with the bee. My trusty dusty brain was more dusty than trusty.

Things that happened to Me
  • In my science for future educators class (for future educators=95% girls), a guy TA from another section of the class walked in to ours. As he was walking out, our TA said, "Caroline thinks you're cute." Caroline replied with an enthusiastic, "¡BITCH!" I thought this was funny. Also, the rest of the class then started talking about how cute the guy was ("he has really pretty eyes," etc.). For some reason this thoroughly entertained me.
  • Same week, maybe a day earlier, I was in my UGS class, which is a lecture of aout 250 kids. The guy in front of me apparently suddenly found note-taking a mundane chore and decided to do something on the internet. When he opened the window, a "your last session was terminated unexpectedly, would you like to restart it?" popped up. He regrettably optioned yes. Subsequently an internet window of porn popped up on his computer, which he made a hastily scramble to close. He followed this up with a nonchalant look around, acting like nothing happened. But something did happen, kid in front of me in UGS, and the two guys sitting next to me and myself got a kick out it.
  • That week in cell group, we had a prayer meeting where we just prayed the whole time. It was nice and incredibly relaxing to slow down and spend time with my maker (which I don't do a good job of).
  • Later that night, we went to Addison's room in an attempt to study. However, studying was replaced with fun. We just hung out, for a while watching youtube videos (cute kitten and kid singing hey jude). Then Scott, Jeremy, and I (but mostly Scott and I) began looking at laser pointers online. To give customers a sense of how strong they were, there were qualitative levels like: beam visible at night, beam visible during day (what I'd want), able to pop balloons, able to light matches, stings bare skin (!!!!!), eye protection mandatory. Scott opted to get the light matches one, deciding stinging ability was too much power/responsibility. But seriously, there was a video of a laser than burned through a CD case in 10 seconds. Also, further evidence that Jeremy Gatson had no childhood: he never heard of Weird Al.
  • The next day I called my mom while waiting for the bus. I was sitting on a bench next to some bushes, inside which a squirrel and bird were frolicking/gathering nuts/seeds/whatever. I derived much joy from watching them dart in and out of the bush. It was funny because occasionally one would get territorial and try to chase the other one away. It made me smile.
  • While waiting for the bus, I broke the primary rule of homeless handouts: never give money. This is obvious, because if you give them money, they often buy something which you shouldn't endorse them doing (alcohol, cigarettes, drugs). However I'd given away nothing so far this semester and this homeless person was an exception. First of all he wasn't a drag rat (that description is a bit too derogatory, but just to give you an idea. Many drag rats are more panhandlers than what people think as homeless) due to appearance and location. He was so enthusiastic about life, not a cynic on the side of the road looking at the world with hate-filled eyes (which to me seems what many drag rats are like, at least the ones that threw a beer can at me). He asked for a buck fifty. I didn't have a buck fifty and instead gave him $2. He was overcome with joy (warning, stereotypical word approaching), exclaiming in a blaccent, "You jus' made a poor homeless black man's day," (i was still on the phone with my mom) "Tell yo' mama she raised you right!,"You have a Merry Christmas and a happy New year!" and the like. Of course, this all may have been a ruse to get handouts. If so, he played me like a fiddle. I'll let you decide if I was fiddle or friendly.
  • So, my last week of tutoring at Metz was a week ago, Nov. 30-Dec. 1. It was amazing. First of all, you walked in, and Christmas was everywhere. After being in the PISD for 13 years, this was amazingly awesome and gave me a little slice of home. Christmas trees, Santas, Christmas decorations everywhere. If a PISD school did this, a complaint to the district and principal would be filed before classes started and a lawsuit would be filed by lunch. But that's beside the point. We made ornaments with our pictures to exchange with our students and it was adorable. I will miss them very much next semester. :' (
  • It has become an occasional pastime to shine my laser pointer through the window either on passerbys (how do you pluralize that word?) or right in front of them so they can see. I was in Scott's room and did it to two people on the drag. After doing it for a second I forgot about the laser and started talking to Scott. I then found a red dot in my eye. They lasered me back. I found this funny.
  • Also last week, the Popo's were after me. I came back from either Scott or Addison's room after hanging out and found a policeman's business card on my door. I without thinking put it on my desk and went to bed. The ensuing morning I went to go to class and my bike was gone. I gathered my bike must've been impounded. I passed my neighbor Sara while walking out the door and she asked, "Are you okay? The police were looking for you last night." I understood why, but the thought of police looking for Michael Mayo made me bust out laughing (this is funny because I am not the mischievous type to get in trouble, much less trouble with the law). Anyways, they impounded my bike because it was locked to the emergency exit gate, which seems acceptable on their part and inexcusable on my part. Here is my defense: A) All of the spots were taken on the bike rack (This always pisses me off because 80% of the bikes are never used, always in the same spot and 30% are improperly locked, so you could easily steal them. It has always crossed my mind to tip off a hobo/bike thief to this so I could have my much deserved spot, since I one actually use my bike and two know how to lock it up). This leaves me with two choices: lock it to someone's bike that's already locked up (dick move) or lock it to the emergency exit. B) I chose the latter because people have been doing that all year long without penalty. C) My bike was locked in a way so the gate could swing open unimpeded. So there were no practical negative effects. Nonetheless, the one time they decide to impound bikes, mine was there due to no other recourse.
  • Last week some of my friends and I went to a UT basketball game against USC. We won by a lot despite what I thought was a bad first half (like 50% free throw shooting, no exaggeration, terrible defensive rebounding, etc). However, I was amazed by a player we have named Dogus Balbay who had three entire-crowd-stands-up-breathtakingly-awesome plays. Also, Dexter Pittman was having a block party (7). I look forward to attending more of these. On a sour note, at the end of the game, USC was irrevocably losing. We all wanted to see Lil' Romeo play (apparently he is at USC and rides the bench for their basketball team). He did not. Boo on you USC coaches, let him have fun. Malarkey.
  • Almost lastly, it "snowed" here last friday. I hate it when snow is in the forecast in Texas, because 90% of the time it doesn't happen. Attention craving meteorologists want to get more time by advertising snow, because there are few things Texans get more excited about than a glimmer of hope for some snow. It is a novelty. It happens once a year, maybe. It accumulates either not at all, or like an inch only on the grass and cars. Yet people still go inexplicably crazy. This friday, there were light flurries for less than 10 minutes, yet everyone at UT on facebook was like "OMG guys snow!" My philosophy is that if it doesn't accumulate, it doesn't count. Snow in Texas is snow in the loosest sense of the word. Yet people still drool over it every time. Gross.
  • Courtesy of my exceedingly generous friend Joe Shields, I was able to go to the Big 12 Championship game. If you didn't watch it you probably aren't terribly enthusiastic about football, and only the last 8 minutes will be of interest to you. Here is it in a nutshell. Based upon his playcalling and clock management, Mac Brown was driven to try and lose us a trip to the national championship. Colt McCoy's decision making coincided with Mac's desire to lose, but he also seemed to want to gift wrap the Heisman for Toby Gerheart (until I unfortunately saw Ingram had a great game against Florida, which will sadly probably win him the Heisman because Ingram's performance will be freshest and he plays for a better team). Hopefully this scare slapped some sense into them and they got all of their idiocy out in time to prepare for the National Championship game.
  • In Colt's defense on that last play (I still think it was poor), the one thing that struck me about the new Cowboys stadium was the lack of clocks on field level. The lowest play clock I saw was at the bottom of the second level. I couldn't even see a game clock close to field level. I don't know how Tony Romo manages the two minute drill without a clock that's readily visible from the field level.
  • However, this performance did not irk me most the night of the game. What did was the ignorant Nebraska kid (aged apprx. 12 yrs) who consistently demonstrated his dearth of football knowledge surface level fandom. He kept making dumb statements like, "Why are they bothering with the clock? A few seconds isn't going to change anything!" I'm not terribly knowledgeable about football, but please! Furthermore, in the third quarter he told me this game is boring and he's going to play on his iPhone for the rest of the game. This irritated me because A) You are at the game! Enjoy it! Others would kill you without hesitation to get your seat there and B) really? a twelve year old needs an iPhone?
  • And, oh yeah, I got initiated to BYX!!

Now it's time for non-sequitors that crossed my mind.
  • I have previously mentioned "exciting" drivers I have experienced. I think I am an exciting biker. Exciting meaning you drive/bike in a controlled reckless manner. It may not be viewed as safe, but you know what you're doing and don't get in trouble. Anyways, like a good biker, I acknowledge the pedestrian has the right-of-way. Thus, the pedestrian should not have to alter their path for bikers. Therefore whilst biking, if someone is walking perpendicular to my direction, I change my path so I will go behind them, so they can walk on without doing anything. This requires me to change my direction to where they currently are, so by the time I get there, they will be in a different spot. Nonetheless, almost without fail, when pedestrians see me coming from a distance, instead of walking along so they won't get hit, they freeze, which causes confusion and annoys me to no end. I understand their mindset and think it is reasonable, but I just wish they could see mine and be like, oh yeah, I should keep walking
  • It has come to my attention that I think sloth is now either the, or one of the 7 deadly sins i struggle with the most. I never realized it until this year but it is so true: rarely putting forth all my effort in things, doing the least to get by, etc. I habitually half-ass it. I want to change so bad, but just don't have the initiative or drive. Thus sloth repeats itself. I hate this. I'm not trying to complain, just expressing how I feel.
  • I of course want the NBA Finals to be won by the Lakers or Mavericks, but how cool would it be if Lebron and the Cavs win it. They have great team unity, and it is a blast watching the bench react and get super pumped about the plays their team makes. Every posterizing dunk or sick pass/steal evokes a celebration unparalleled in the NBA. I want to see Lebron win one just to see how joyful they are and their reactions.
  • I've decided there are two types of being "cool:" mainstream and indie. Mainstream is the cool that most kids think of in middle/high school. The kids whose coolness is readily apparent. They are just suave. This coolness is greatly rewarded socially in high school. The other kind is indie cool. This cool is not readily displayed. One must interact with an indie cool person for a while to see how awesome they are. There also might be a further underground aspect of cool, which is just almost impossible to find.
  • There are also two types of funny: intentional and unintentional. The intentional funny people are those who you think of as funny. You either have it or you don't. If you are truly intentionally funny you will be funny always. You are funny when you mean to be funny. Unintentional is when people provide funny situations. Common types are those who frequently expose themselves to ridicule through dumb comments, being funny by a peculiar choice of words or acting in a way that is normal to them but outrageous to society.
  • Something I just remembered but am too lazy to include in the previous section. While waiting before our last study hours for BYX, Chase Covington said something stereotypical/mildly racist about black people. He then followed it up with an emphatic, "It's okay! I have three black friends: Jeremy, Xavier and (insert name here). And (insert name here) isn't even in BYX!!!" So apparently as long as you have three friends in the group you are being racist to/stereotyping, it is perfectly okay! This made me laugh a whole lot.
  • Finally, a very grave issue. I have noticed that cute kitten/cat internet videos preposterously outnumber cute puppy/dog internet videos. We know this is an inaccurate representation of reality. Dogs are better than cats in every facet possible; we know this. So why are the cuter species vastly outnumbered virally? My theory: cat lovers are crazy. They treat their cats as if they were a person, despite the cat's overall contempt or at least apathy for its human caretakers (just another reason why dogs are better–they actually love you back). In short these cat people are truly crazy about their cats. Moreover, crazy cat people feel the need to tell anybody and everybody how (not so) great their feline companions are, a very polarizing thing. This of course drives crazy cat people into further human isolation, until the fervent feline fanatics have only their cats to coddle and spend time with. Since they have been totally rejected by society, no one will listen to their pathetic pleas of feline superiority, they resort to the internet. Camera in hand, they spend every waking moment searching, craving for those 30 seconds that will show the world cats can have some redeeming value. Sadly, there are more of these crazy cat people in society then one would think is healthy. Thus the preponderance of these clips that misrepresent the overall value of the feline species. Furthermore the abundance of these clips tragically probably cause future pet owners to choose cats over dogs. These new owners soon see the light after the kitten stage is over and realize they have been jipped. Why doesn't this happen with dog owners? Because dog owners know that their dogs are awesome and let their companion's actions speak for themselves. They (dog owners) are like the people who don't worry about being cool and therefore are, whereas the people (cat owners) who desperately seek approval and coolness at every possible opportunity simply drive their stock of respect and self decency into the ground, until they find that a well to do friend mercy kills their beloved cat and puts it in the freezer. How true are these assertions, might you ask? Very true. Their veracity is undoubted and supported by years rigorous research from psychology departments of Tier 1 universities. I am just trying to empower you with the truth.

Random: One guy's take on Tiger.

Alright. I was pondering, and found a few things I don't understand. Here they are:
  1. WNBA. It doesn't make money. The market for it are as follows: people who work for it, have friends relatives in it, and girls under the age of 15. The people who hate it most are dads of under 15 girls who must tote their girls to the games because that's what they want. My heart goes out to these men in unfortunate circumstance. Main grievances include: shooting from the chest, terribly quality of play when compared to men's, despite being the most talented/athletic people in their sport, only 2 can dunk. Exceptions: Candace Parker. Make no mistake, I support females who like to play basketball, it is a fun sport; just don't do it professionally. I even support women's basketball in the olympics. I think it has a place there. But so does field hockey, and you don't see the a professional women's league for that. One great thing about the WNBA: great place to display funny signs at sporting events.
  2. I have spied many people across campus who while jogging for exercise jog slower than either a regular walk or a power walk. This baffles me. Either take bigger strides or power walk.
  3. Premarital sex. Feel free to disagree with me on this. As follows are reasons why I think it is not the best choice. I have little to no basis for arguments after A. Just what seems logical to me, so feel free laugh at my argument
    A. Religious reasons.
    B. Complicates a relationship in a variety of ways. Need to worry about contraception, STD's etc.
    C. Devalues marriage. In modern society, marriage no longer means "you are the one person I am going to sleep with" (that seems pretty special to me) or "you are the one person i want to spend the rest of my life with" (due to prevalence of US divorces)
    D. Relationship can degenerate to purely sexual bases. You like/love the person because you can have sex with them. Love that the most.
    E. Encourages comparison. When you have multiple partners, you will naturally compare and decide who is/was best. (not speaking from experience, that's just how people work) It isn't healthy for a relationship to be "in love" with someone and think "well this girl was way better. I liked her a lot better this way." This becomes especially unhealthy in marriage.
    F. Sex is incredibly intimate, should not be shared with many people.
  4. Hasty Divorces. From a Christian viewpoint, I view marriage as sacred and believe forgiveness should be the first way to go. Everyone consistently screws up, just usually in minor ways. Few people intentionally want to sabotage their marriage. Anyone given the right circumstance could probably do something that would make someone think divorce. Sure you'll be pissed at them for a while, and that is natural; healing takes time. One time incidences are forgivable. Recurring instances are where you have to draw the line and where differences may become irreconcilable. Furthermore, it seems most divorces arise because people involved either are too lazy to healthily resolve conflicts or to selfish to realize that in marriage lots of times you have to put the needs of someone else above the needs of your partner. Marriage is not a cake walk. Furthermore, I believe marriage is sacred and should be treated as such, not nonchalantly discarded. These reasons are why I want Will and Terri to try and work things out on Glee!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

7 Things

Most readers will probably not get the title, but it's an allusion to the Miley Cyrus song which was featured in my post last time. Anyways, not much has happened in my life these past few weeks, and since I am becoming a crotchety old man, I have found some trifling things to rant about in society. But before I step on my soapbox, two immediately memorable things that have happened lately, some "everytimes," a popular music observation, and the seven things. This is also long and it is recommended to read in multiple sittings. (Ahem, granny and gramps).
  • On Monday morning at 1:30, while I was nearly resting, I came across a happenstance, whose irony left me weeping. Caution: this is going to be an anecdote whose comic value vastly depends on whether you witnessed it (translation: it won't be funny). Any-who, I was at my friend Addison's room with another friend named Kelly. We were going to write our papers together to keep each other focused. Never happen again. I failed to take my strattera that morning, which means my focus is greatly curtailed as the day progresses, and my true attention deficits emerge. Having said that, I had the most trouble focusing ever. I finished a 4-page rough draft in like 2.5 hours. Terrible efficiency. Nevertheless, I was a whopping 16 times more efficient than my two friends. You can figure out how much they got done. Yes, their efforts (or lack thereof) were that futile. My nazi, fun-draining, drill sergeant tactics I've learned from my stern, demanding mother over the years worked to no avail. Anyways, this was not the point. The point is, after this episode, I was walking through the halls of Duren to go down one floor to my dorm to doze. I take the stairs. Always. I open up the door to go enter the stairwell to find my dear friend and BYX brother, Jeremy.
    No it is not that unusual to happen upon people sitting in the stairwell. Students often do it to have phone privacy if their roommate is in their room. The peculiar thing, was that Jeremy lives down the hall from me on the third floor. He often hangs out with lots of his friends on the fifth floor. I however came across him in the fourth floor stairwell.
    This also alone is not entirely peculiar. There could be acceptable explanations. What was amiss was that he was zonked asleep. Passed out (figuratively) against the wall. I don't know if you have ever seen a homeless person resting or either passed out against the side of a public edifice, but this is what Jeremy most closely resembled, containing all of the telltale signs: 1)head slightly tilted back, mouth agape, as if he lost consciousness right before taking another swig of whatever liquid of choice filled the bottle concealed in the brown paper bag. 2) curved lower back with one leg straight and one leg bent at about a 60˚ angle to prevent the rest of his listless body from sliding down the wall. 3) one hand resting on said bent leg with the other on the floor by his side.
    I quickly took this in, caught completely off guard and hesitantly said, "Jeremy?"
    You of course don't know this, (unless if you're Joe Shields), but Jeremy is a very high energy kid, and thus inherently easily excitable. These qualities combine to make Jeremy very easily startled. And he lets you know when he is startled. Once I was waiting outside his room while he was getting changed. As he came out the bathroom, his roommate scared him by donning a crazy, disfigured, morbid halloween mask and jumping at him. Jeremy's reaction would have been audible to at least a person with a mild-moderate hearing impairment. I'm sure people on the above and below floors all briefly paused to contemplate the outburst they just heard, and its possible causes. Anyways, Jeremy was also caught off guard by my presence and did one of these numbers, only slightly more mild.
    Apparently he was taking a break from working on a paper. I told him he should go finish that paper. He did. After going upstairs to talk to people, and staying up the whole night. Oh, Jeremy.
  • In my Educational Psychology class we were discussing how to combat classically conditioned responses, and we had to brainstorm ways to use counterconditioning to combat math anxiety. (If you are bamboozled by my psychological jargon, wikipedia does wonders. Just read the first paragraph, that's usually all laypeople need to know). The solution my group came up with (jokingly, mind you) was as follows. Math anxiety is a higher order conditioning in which failure in the past was repeatedly paired with math, which eventually starts to unconditionally provide an anxiety or fear response in the learner. To countercondition, you pair the conditioned stimulus (math) with something that will counterbalance the conditioned response (in this case anxiety/nervousness). Now, most groups incorporated math games, candy, or stickers into their solutions. We went the extra mile. We decided to procure copious amounts of medicinal marijuana for our elementary aged students, have them get blazed, and then work their math problems worry free. Sounds great, right? It's funny because it's outrageous, and we all want to be teachers.
  • For my bilingual reading tutoring today, my first grader at the end of our time had to make turkey feather saying things for which he is grateful. After explaining to him what "grateful" means, he sat there and thought for a few seconds. He looked at me excited and said, "You!" My heart melted.
  • This past week, on two separate occasions, two random, unrelated songs randomly got stuck in my head. "As Long as Your Mine" from Wicked was the first. This is understandable: Wicked is awesome. What isn't understandable is how Shania Twain's "Rock This Country" got stuck in my head. I honestly haven't heard that song since my dad blared Shania in elementary school. Nonetheless, it made me laugh audibly.
  • Two Tuesdays ago, I was introduced to glee. I have now watched all 10 episodes to date. Me gusta mucho. Even though it is at many times corny/cheesy. Even though at times the vocals are edited (not Lea Michelle/Rachel though, she is a beast). I love most of the musical numbers, the characters of Sue (Jane Lynch) and Principal Figgins (some random Pakistani actor who's had recurring roles on TV shows) are awesome. Plus, Artie, played by Kevin McHale, is a Planoite who graduate from West a few years back.
  • What is a citizen from Plano called?
Everytimes. These are things I have found that elicit a strong emotional response from me every time they happen. Every time. Without fail.
  • Listening to the "Finale" from Les Miserables. (Finale starts at 4:20) I get chills. Every time. Usually when the ensemble starts the "Do You Hear the People Sing," or when Eponine and Fantine do the minor sounding harmony (I am not very musical so this is egregiously wrong terminology).
  • Talking about/watching the Mens swimming 4x100 freestyle comeback win anchored by Jason Lezak in the 2008 Bejing Olympics. (race starts at 0:43, is 3.5 minutes long). I didn't know this gave me chills until we started talking about it in one of my classes. (I am a huge Olympic nut. I love them. I watch everything: I even love curling and team handball, so you know I get passionate about the important sports.) Swimming is so epic because comebacks are gradual. Halfway through the last length, when you see Lezak is gaining, you start going nuts.
  • At any sporting event, when they sing the Star Spangled Banner, and you can hear the entire crowd singing along. Emotional ending. Everyone is momentarily united, even if it is a colts/pats, yankees/red sox, lakers/celtics game. Chills.
  • You've probably seen or heard about the story of Dick Hoyt. If you think you haven't, you have; you just know him by what he did, not by his name. I can't describe it in words. watch this one for the first 2:40 for background. Then this one for race shots/sentimentality. This makes me cry every time. Or at least tear up.
This is just on observation. That led to another observation, whose revelation is not so revelatory, but just common sense. It took me an astounding 18.5 years to realize that lyrically, the song "Cotton-Eye Joe" is painfully repetitive. The song consists of 15 verses. The opening is verse is repeated 12 times, while another verse appears twice. A song that is 3:10 long has two original stanzas. So how was this a hit? Why because it had an easy to do dance to go along with it. You can churn out trash, but as long as it has a dance, it's going to be a hit. Cotton Eyed Joe. Wait, writing one stanza and repeating it an umpteenth number of times is too hard? Simple! Just sing instructions. Wait, you can't sing? It's okay, just say them. Boom. Cha Cha Slide. But it goes on: electric slide. Cupid Shuffle. Wait, you want to popularize a song that is beyond demeaning to women, and have little girls and kids of all ages sing it? It's okay, just make a dance to go with it. In summary: want a pop music hit but are completely devoid of musical and lyrical talent? make a line type dance. 7 Things. This is where I rant. Invective/diatribe for the win (even though these are not harsh enough to be considered that). Some are serious. Some are sarcastic. Some are both. 1. It has come to my attention that Taylor Lautner is the new hottie of choice for teeny boppers across America. I see how he can fit some traits of the ideal man, but come on! It takes more than just what Scott Gorthey calls being "incredibly cut" to be all around aesthetically appealing to the opposite sex. If you don't know that, you haven't learned anything from Disney at all. I will now use my very limited knowledge of Taylor Lautner (which comes from the girl who sits besides me in Educational Psychology and does nothing during class but shop online, play Farmville, and look at pictures of Taylor Lautner) to compare how he scales up to what Disney tells us is the ideal man.
  • Admired by his hometown
  • Possessing a Thick Neck
  • A swell cleft in the chin
  • Characterized as an "intimidating specimen," worthy of 5 "hurrahs" and 12 "hip-hips"
  • Good at fighting and arranging lights
  • Good at Biting in wrestling matches
  • Burly and brawny, having biceps to spare
  • A body whose every last inch is covered with hair
  • Proficiency at expectorating
  • A large diet of eggs
  • Being roughly the size of a barge
  • Particular skill at shooting firearms
  • Boots as a common occurrence in daily wardrobe
  • Profuse amounts of antlers in personal decorating
I don't know much about this wereman, but I am confident he lacks more or less 11 of these critical points. That's a Paltry 3/14. So what is so great about this yuppie besides maybe being "burly, brawny" and "hav[ing] biceps to spare," what does he have going for him? He seems far too much of a pretty boy to expectorate. I can say quite confidently there are probably some newborns with more hair than him. I have never seen him tromp around in boots or shoot a gun. On a musically unrelated note, he wears gratuitous amounts of hair gel/wax whatever it's called these days. Demetri Martin anyone?

  • 2. It has also come to my attention that Facebook fan pages are becoming quite popular. I do not bite my thumb at this concept. This is a very viable means of
  • 2. It has also come to my attention that Facebook fanes are becoming quite popular. I do not bite my thumb at this concept. This is a very viable means to build publicity for companies, celebrities/artists, politicians, nonprofit/charitable causes, and products. However, I have seen many pages whose titles logically should not have a fan following, such as declarative statements, "I hate..." or assertions. These should be group names, not fan pages, which brings me to my next point. I have also noticed that these mindless facebook users with the propensity to incessantly declare their fanship to pages tend to be kids in middle school. These kids should not be on facebook. All of their friends they most likely keep in touch with live within a 20 minute drive. They see each other everyday at school, and likely on the weekends. Stop spending excessive amounts of time on facebook, joining excessive numbers of pages, and clogging up my newsfeed with things I don't care about. Log off facebook until you're 17 and have friends in college before I hide you, or better, unfriend you. Furthermore, it is evident you don't understand the concept of inflation. When you are the fan of over 400 pages, it really devalues how much your support really means. Alex, for instance, is currently the fan of 390 things, since she is an 8th grade girl, this number has probably increased since I typed it. She is a fan of cookie dough in about 15 different ways. Gummy and sour snacks about 10. She is also a fan of Barack Obama once. Wow, I'm glad to see that you care about our president 1/15 as much as cookie dough, and that you are equally passionate about "Oh sorry G2G bye *Appear Offline* ...thank god that's over" (which doesn't even make sense). If I were that celebrity/politician/musical figure, and I could see what else you've put out for, I'd be disgusted. I somehow want to incorporate a witty sentence about easy girls/guys who devalue being intimate with someone by doing it with everything that walks, but that would probably be inappropriate.
  • My third rant is also facebook related. Through my many years of education in secondary and post-secondary institutions, I have found that many people blame their unproductivity (new word) on things like facebook or skype. This annoys me to no end, and I must confess, I often judge these people as being unintelligent (at least with their time) or at the very least unmotivated. Good learners (Self regualted learners) regulate their metacognition, motivation and emotion, and finally their environment to maximize their learning. I am far from being the best at managing my time and doing tasks, but when I sit down to do things, (excuse my french) I get shit done. People who complain about this are basically saying this, "Hey, I 'wanted' to get this homework done, but facebook distracted me! I only needed to have microsoft word open to write this essay, but I can't not automatically log on to facebook the second I touch a computer. I didn't get to finish my work. Darn you facebook. This couldn't have anything to do with my lack of maturity in time management. This isn't my fault."
  • Lil Wayne's voice. Basically it sounds vile. Gross. Disgusting. Perverted. I hear his voice and think he belongs at a classless strip club. People that listen to him probably get photographed while smoking weed in bongs, get DUI's at 19, are jerks of people, but are extremely successful at swimming.
  • FML. 99% of those stories are just people complaining about inconsequential inconveniences and seeking attention. Their life doesn't suck. They probably have people who care about them. They probably are well enough off since they have access to the internet. And they probably don't have cancer or any terrible disease/disability. Learn how to adequately express your frustration without using primitive profanity. MLIA is indescribably better.
  • Facebook games (farmville, etc). Get off facebook. If you have plethoric or unconscionable amounts of time to kill, spend it with a real video game. Or even better, do something productive.
  • I now have to go off on things i haven't prepared to fulfill my titular allusion. Fortunately I thought of one. College Football Rankings, Heisman this year, and the BCS. It's evident that besides the top like 5 teams, no one has any clue who the hell is better than who. I think it's kind of a joke. I think it should be a more breakdown of like elite title contenders, seriously great teams, great teams, good teams, etc, like a tier based ranking. Heisman race: Mark Ingram is great, but if you look at Ingram, you must also seriously consider Toby Gerheart of Stanford. He is a beast. He has 32% of his team's yards, and 23/45 of their touchdowns. Ingram ha 28% of his teams yards and 15/37 of his team's touchdowns. I think Toby Gerheart is better, and am glad he is now getting consideration. Finally, I don't think anyone likes the BCS but Tim Cowlishaw. Literally everyone wants a playoff. People say there isn't enough time and that it wouldn't generate enough money. Well, I say phooey. Take the top 16 ranked teams. Yes there will always be controversy as to the last like 2 or 3 who get in, but they'll probably just get crushed anyways. College football regular season ends in like the first week of December. It would take four weeks to do a 16 team playoff. You could do two before Christmas and two after. College students wouldn't be on campus during this time, so it could be played around the country in regions like March Madness. Companies could sponsor each round, or quarters of the bracket. Schools could get money for getting in, and each successive round win by the company who sponsors that round. We would have a decisive champion. Wait, you say this way only 16 teams get money from corporations? Why not have a second tier tournament, like an NIT of football? Everyone loves march madness. Everyone loves having a winner. Football is more popular than basketball. Wouldn't a two tournament system be huge marketing? Pox on you FBS. We never actually have a "champion" in the truest sense of the word. Only a team that is thought to be the best because they've only played one other elite tier team when it mattered most.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Austin is a Prototypical Halloweentown (serving size 1 section, 3 servings per post)

First Thoughts:
  1. Writing this blog is ten percent luck, twenty percent skill, fifteen percent concentrated power of will, five percent pleasure, fifty percent pain, and one hundred percent reason to remember the name. This is true in many ways, except that last one. scary though. (People over like 25 probably won't get this)
  2. Due to the 15% concentrated power of will (I'm lacking in it) and fifty percent pain (not really that much, but it takes work/time to churn out AD musings with pathetic attempts at humor/allusions), I haven't written in like 2.5 weeks. This might get long (halfhearted allusion).
  3. The time/sheer volume of writing may push this posting into the sugary/fatty "read sparingly" portion of the reading pyramid for proper reading health and prevention of tedium. Thus, this has been broken up into serving sizes conveniently for you. And it won't be in something obscure like ounces, because honestly, who weighs their sweets before they eat them.
  4. Altered Wii health warning:
  • Avoid excessive reading. Parents should monitor their children for appropriate play.
  • Take a break every 10 minutes, even if you don't think you need it. This crap sneaks up on you and wastes gratuitous amounts of time.
  • If your hands, wrists, arms or eyes become tired or sore while playing, or if you feel symptoms such as tingling, numbness, burning or stiffness, stop and rest for several hours before playing again. You think these can't happen from reading, but yes, they can. These off-brand second rate blogs can mess you up. Give you cancer in the state of California.
  • If you continue to have any of the above symptoms or other discomfort during or after play, stop playing and see a doctor. Yeah. it's that bad.
Please excuse the lame attempt at humor you just read. It seemed like a wittier/better idea in my head.


Preview:
-Things that happened to me, including: BYX full retreat, Halloween, this past week
-Observations: pet peeves, night showers, useful but bad inventions
-New segment: random acts of kindness
-Videos
-Songs
-Prayer Requests

Things that happened to me:
  • Three weekends ago was BYX Full Retreat, in which all member of BYX go on a retreat. This involved many traditions and fun things, some of which I can't tell you, most of which I can. First of all, the speaker (a BYX alumni (I never learned the proper uses of alum/alumni/alumnus, so this is probably used wrong) named like Tupair) was good. He talked about ways we hide the Gospel which I remember being very true, but alas, I had no pen and paper and am miserable at remembering things with one go around that were only spoken.
  • We had krusteaz just add water pancakes (which are the best just add water pancakes around). There was a big line for chocolate chip pancakes and no line for normal pancakes. I was an innovator and got normal pancakes and grabbed a handful of chocolate chips and made a chocolate chip taco. We also had oatmeal that breakfast; there were several things wrong with this oatmeal: it was made in a giant, uncleaned pot that had been used for something about three months ago, it smelled awful, it tasted awful, i foolishly had some anyways (that's something wrong with me), no amount of brown sugar or chocolate chips could right any of the aforementioned wrongs.
  • The first night there is an edification circle, in which graduating members sit in the middle of the circle and briefly talk about members that greatly impacted them, while the actives can talk about the guys in the middle who greatly influenced them, "edifying" one another. This lasted 3 hours for 5 graduating guys. I enjoyed it. I may not enjoy it next semester. Last spring semester, albeit poorly ran, it lasted 11 hours.
  • There was much frisbee play and the semiannual pledge/active football game. Despite a neck and neck first half, we lost.
  • Lastly for this weekend...¡¡¡SMASHBALL!!! I don't know why it took 18 years of my life to discover this awesome game. There is an equilateral octagon about, about 12 feet from opposite sides whose walls are wooden and in between three and four feet high. The ball used is a slightly deflated volleyball. Rules: 1) you are trying to hit (but it's really a slap) the ball with your hands with the objective of it hitting another player below his/her knees. if he/she is hit there with the ball, he/she is out. 2) after a player has hit the ball, the said player may not touch the ball again unless if the ball bounces off one of the walls or another player hits it. if a player hits it twice consecutively without it hitting the wall or another player, he/she is out. 3) You may defend yourself with your hands to keep from getting out. 4) Player is out if he/she: is hit below knees by ball (suicides count), hits ball up into air and another player catches it, is the last player to touch ball before it goes out of octagon. Two people can get out on one play. 5) last (wo)man standing wins.
  • In short, this game is addictive and has great qualities: it is fun for everyone, low base level of skill/athleticism/coordination needed, mild competitiion. Honestly, need I say more? Basically, I think this game could be for a youth group what horse pool was to ours, but better, because it has more of a draw to more sporty kids. Basically: TELL PAM (or your youth minister) ABOUT THIS AND HAVE AN ASPIRING EAGLE BUILD IT. HECK, I'LL DO IT (maybe, probably not without a team of friends). YOU WON'T REGRET IT. (¿¿¿can't you see this is good enough to warrant upside down exclamation marks???

Here ends serving size one. Rest your eyes and your wits. Enjoy something.

  • For cell group two weeks ago, we met at the 360 Overlook. It is a beautiful place where you can see Austin's skyline. That place was not extraordinary (it is, but i'd already been there). What was extraordinary was Tanner's driving. Tanner is my big bro. He is many things: awesome, funny, eccentric, awkward, endearing, cute, frequent user of the phrase "hey little guy," all around good guy, etc. Skilled in driving and with directions/location, He is by no means. Not at all. We almost died 5 times going there (this is hyperbole (not by much)) To the point where we were all dying laughing by the end, but not on the inside because knew we could've died. Sam Rhea (another all around cool guy, pledge brother, and Austin local) was giving directions, which Tanner seemed to disregard (along with occasional traffic signs) until the last minute. This caused mass yelling at Tanner, hilarity, and a thrill to be a passenger. Four most thrilling drivers I've rode with (not in any order): Brian Bedford, Brian Mountjoy, Tanner Hodgeson, That lady who drove my dad and I in the jeep from the parking lot to the golf course for the golf tournament in Reno (my brother can better elaborate on this should you have questions).
Halloween
  • I was excited for Halloween for the first time in years for the following reasons: I thought I had a good costume, BYX mixer with Phi Lamb, and BYX Halloween party in the gracious Jordan Ramirez's apartment. Mixer was good. Party was fun. Costume, ehh. Here's why.
  • I thought I had a genius idea to be Waldo, from Where's Waldo fame, for halloween because i strongly resemble him and thought it was awesome. Unfortunately, many other UT students had the same idea. Despite failing to be inconspicuous, I assert I was the best Waldo I saw for look-a-like reasons. Sidenote 1: nothing sucks more than seeing someone unintentionally dressed up exactly like you for a costume event. Sidenote 2: there are worse things;it can happen more than once, say at least 6 times walking around Austin/UT. Sidenote 3: there are many things far worse than these benign predicaments. Sidenote 4: did you see how I planned all these sidenotes (I started numbering at 1, not 2). Sidenote 5: if you ever seek attention from strangers, dress up as waldo on Halloween night in a big city and walk around for a few hours. You could get well over $100 in a few hours if the "If I had a dollar for every time..." aphorism rang true.
  • The party was great for many reasons, one of which was my discovery of the functional purpose of hip hop/rap besides illustrating the beauty in hooking up with some easy chick (normally your bitch/shawty) you met at the club: forming a circle with friends and flailing limbs your limbs vaguely to the beat in ways that accentuate, to be racist, my inner caucasian (this is not true, because there are many caucasians who are brilliant dancers like this, namely Scott Eshbaugh). I am not very good at this, but enjoy it much (witnesses may attest to this). My "friend circle hip-hop/rap dancing" is more like what i described, while that of my more experienced peers was that, but with a more coherent, smooth motion, with motions that often loosely correspond to words in the song.
  • Other lessons learned from the party. I already knew that strobe lights = awesome. I found out that Strobe lights + glow sticks > awesome. Keep it up with balloon = boring. Keep it up with a balloon and strobe light > awesome. Keep it up with balloon, strobe light, and glow sticks = indescribable. Basically strobe lights make everything but my abrupt dance moves cool. Also, even at non-alcoholic parties, drunk people will find them: One shady guy came in with a backpack full of keystone, and tried to hand them out to kids; One scantily clad, inebriated girl came in (keep in mind this is a Christian, dry party (but rockin' nonetheless)) came in and may or may not have been the culprit of a red punch stain now ingrained in Jordan's carpet.
  • Austin is also, like many big cities, a great place for halloween, mainly due to 50K+ college kids, the majority of whom are looking to go crazy, a majority party of these kids walking the street inebriated. Combine this with the ability to observe these drunkards from a distance and you get people watching gold. If you are a pervy old guy who enjoys seeing scantily clad college girls, there's another plus (cringe).
  • Austin is also famously home to 6th street, the street with all the popular clubs/bars. Basically, if you like personal bubble is greater than 6 inches, don't go here. Do if you enjoy seeing crazy costumes and things in general. I didn't go this year, but learned that there is always someone dressed as a giant penis. Other more creative, elaborate costumes abound.
End Halloween. Last week, I was waiting for the bus after tutoring for Metz. I already knew that riding the bus is always fun: crazy people collide, a great chance for a bus with pee in it (two instances), a heated verbal argument (two instances), and opportunities to be grateful and see life from other people's shoes (infinite). I did not discover that waiting for the bus can be interesting too. While waiting for the bus after tutoring in an east Austin neighborhood (east Austin is considered the run down, lower socioeconomic part of Austin), a sketch old car drove up with two young, disheveled people as driver and passenger. They pulled to a stop in front of myself and my friend Hannah Moody on the wrong side of the road and rolled down their window (red flag).
"Do either of you participate in any illegal activities?"
-After glancing at each other with a hidden smile, a calm "No" in unison.
"All right. Well pretend you didn't see us then." (obviously a yes would've yielded a conversation about drugs)
They do a three point turn and drive off. Hannah and I burst out laughing once they are out of sight. This was not as funny in retelling it, but reasons why it was funny/disheartening:
  • Funny: situational humor, that's never happened to me before
  • Funny: Hannah and I are two incredibly innocent, goody-two shoes looking white college kids, we are the last people you would want to help you get the goods
  • Disheartening: This was right outside of a school
End serving two, things that happened to me section, and any chance at getting more than seven hours of sleep tonight.

Observations
  • One of my pet peeves is people who stand in the middle of the escalator, or go two wide in an escalator. Etiquette says the right is for standing and the left is for walking/climbing. Go to any big city subway station and you'll see this. Kids at UT are painfully unaware of this factoid. It irritates me without fail, especially when I am running late for class. In reality, the difference in time between climbing the escalator instead of taking the ride probably won't make or break me being late, but it irks me regardless
  • In speaking with folks back up in Plano, this is happening there too. If you aren't from these parts, basically, it has been raining at least once every ten days (no joke, that's being generous) since mid September. At first it was great: Austin was in a huge drought, and I always liked the rain. However, this rain was different: it's always been simply rain showers, not thunderstorms. If you're from texas, you know this isn't kosher here. Texas is about extremes, and when it rains here, Gaia (captain planet anyone?) normally goes all out: huge drops, epic thunder and lightning, leaving you in awestruck wonder as long as you are inside. This was petty california rain. In short: 1) it sucked, 2) the Mayans might be right about the world ending soon; since when does Texas have simple rainshowers? 3) that statement was a joke, i don't think any civilization thinks the world or themselves is going to last 3000+ years. I think they were like, "well we're pretty much done." 4) My assessment of the rains suckage may have been influenced by my lack of an umbrella.
  • I thought this was funny; it might be considered racist, but, think about this one: The Native Americans were the only ancient civilization that never invented the wheel. Curious...
  • I think that the snooze button is a great invention in theory, but has caused more harm than help. How many times have people kept snoozing right on through an important meeting/appointment/class. Too many times. I see the necessity for it, but it seems like it would be better if alarms just went off across the room and didn't stop until you solved a sudoku or something (they make those). What other inventions (besides controversial things like abortions, weapons, time consuming/impersonal technology) would the world be better without? You snooze you lose.
  • I don't take night showers for a reason: my hair. It does not dry by the time I go to bed. It dries while I am asleep. Bad things happens. My hair becomes mischievous and starts flying high, defying gravity, and you'll never bring it down. Here's an example
Random act of kindness of the period of time in which i posted this: on the bus, a lady left at her stop and left her sweater. A man got off and went and gave it to her. these things make me happy.

Youtube Videos you May or may not have seen (depends largely on your age)
Songs I like right now
  • "Daylight" and "yea yeah" by Matt & Kim
  • Empire State of Mind by Jay-z (featuring Alicia Keys)
  • "All I ever wanted" and "DotA" by Basshunter
  • Everything by Michael BublĂ©
  • "7 things" by Miley cyrus (will be added to my playlist called "ditzy heyyyyyyyy," which consists of surface deep, ditzy songs sung by usually young female artists) LOLLLOL (Plus, catch the last video of miley before Disney starts to blatantly try to capitalize on Miley's increasingly mature sexuality! (you must see the party in the usa video to understand))
  • Basically anything by taylor swift. I have a music crush on her right now. it's cool that she writes her own songs, it is hardly done by mainstream people. Although her songs are all consequently surface deep and about love. they're....so....catchy
  • Fireflies by Owl City. This a lie. I actually hate it. The song makes no sense until you find out their songs are written because the lead singer has insomnia and stays up mashing whatever words together that rhyme. But...it's catchy...save...me....
  • most colbie Calliat, right now "Fallin' for you" love it love it love it.
  • A song that i don't know the words and only pieces of the melody, but don't know what it's called (IT'S DRIVING ME CRAZY). It is an acoustic-y happy, mellow love song with predominately a guitar and a high male voice that makes me think vaguely of the song "Tu Amor" by RBD
to listen to these songs, see the playlist i made to listen to while i work. check out the playlist i made

Spiritual Stuff
  • This past week I was reminded that I too am a child of God, which means God made me, and God looked at all he had made and deemed it good, which means I am good in God's eyes. this humbled me/happied me.
  • I lesser than three the Stone and BYX
  • Pray for Ft. Hood victims, the 100 missionaries the stone is sending out (especially the one who was robbed at knife point in India, did nothing to retaliate, and received a .25" deep gash from his mouth to ear), Zachery Vanderford missions, two friends I have back home who are going through tough times
Thanks for taking the time to read this. If your eyes strike these words, I am honored.

Toodles

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Zom-bee Attack

If you are reading this, you must first have read "When the Bee Stings...," otherwise, this will not make sense, or at the very least bee a spoiler.

I said DON'T read this without reading the last posting. Go back and read "When the Bee Stings...," you cheater.

Important details from my last beescapade:
  • I was playing outside, a bee landed on my pants, stung me when I got up to my room.
  • I decided not to kill the bee and just go to dinner, since it would die without its stinger while I was dining.
  • The bee's body was never found (dun dun DUN!)
How could he not notice these facts?
  • I never found the stinger in me
  • I had two red not very swollen sting marks, instead of one big one.
  • Flying insect was not fuzzy/furry/hairy like a bee.
In short: IT WAS NOT A BEE.

Which means: IT WAS STILL ALIVE...IN MY ROOM. holy expletive, how scary is that?

I was minding my own business, and went up onto lloyd's bed to do leg lifts, since they mess up my sheets and lloyd doesn't have sheets on his mattress because he never sleeps in our room (literally, not once in the past 3 weeks).

Then, it came back, back from its supposed grave: that ominous, malevolent, buzzing.

Heart pounding, I immediately start flailing my arms in the circular pattern and jump down from the lofted bed.
My first fleeting thoughts:
1. I am dealing with an undead bee. What is this?
2. I am only wearing boxers. that means lots of surface area for potential stinging.

With the grace of a gazelle and speed of Dash from the Incredibles, I throw athletic shorts on, not to ameliorate concern #2, but to reduce embarrassment from a potential life saving dash into the hall.

Thinking quick on my feet, I grab two of lloyd's monogrammed bath towels (he has a pile of like 5 dirty ones behind our door), and start whirling them around my head, creating a linen force field against the hate filled flying pest.

Another innovation, I stand in facing my mirror, as to monitor the airspace in front of and behind me. Alas, the wasp was struck! However it was no crushing blow, but a stunning brush. In a frenzy, I seize my enemy's lost of momentum and throw the towels over the fiend and pounce on it, jumping and slapping the mess out of the two towels.

A sudden lull. False sense of security. Thinking my battle won, I lift up the two towels. To my horror, no insect is seen. In a panic, I vigorously shake the two towels. The body flutters down to the cold tile, an apt final grave for this menacing part of God's creation. The insect refuses to accept its fate, flitting slowly upwards, rearing its ugly head and compound eyes.

On my knees, my hand reaches for my nearby slipper. It is a race against time: with every passing second, my stinging prey climbs higher and regains more strength, making the crushing blow harder to land. My hand meets the lifeless leather slipper. The lifeless leather slipper meets the insect. The lifeless insect meets the cold, tile floor.

Mission accomplished. However, from Zombieland, I learned to double tap (shoot the zombie more than once for good measure). Since this is a zom-bee, my shoe claps the exoskeleton and the floor thrice more.

Upon examining it's near two-dimensional carcass, I see my folly: this was no bee, or even zom-bee. This was a yellow jacket-wasp. A flattened version of this lay on my floor.

My Battle won. I know relish the warriors feast: pumpkin bread (thank you Aunt Gay).

Toodles.

Monday, October 19, 2009

When the bee stings...

Warning: this blog is not particularly entertaining I think until the very end, so either read through the (maybe) drudgery until you get to the exciting stuff, or cheat, skip through 3/4 of my stuff and see the juicy end.

Things that happened to me this week
  • On Monday night I went up to Addison's room for a while with Kelly, Will, and Jeremy. We basically watched silly youtube videos for like two hours. One's worth watching if you haven't seen: puppy trying to get up, britney spears dancing kid (surprise at end), and of course, OU in a nutshell.
  • I thoroughly enjoyed my tuesday. thoroughly. Here's how it went: group study session for my UGS consumer finance (this unit) class, surprisingly productive/fun; cell group with some BYX guys, which is where you live life with other people, invest in their lives, accountability, etc. love it; all followed by late night laundry. I had to finish a small piece of math homework and check it with a friend who was doing laundry. This however was not 100% efficient: we sang our hearts out to classic disney songs such as: "I'll make a man out of you," "part of your world," and "I just can't wait to be king," among others. This was humorous because we were singing for like 15 minutes, and then a girl walked by from around the corner. We unknowingly serenaded her and in all likelihood filled her heart with joy.
  • On thursday, riding the bus home from Metz elementary, a man tried to help a sleeping woman out by waking her up to try to keep her from missing her stop. Indeed, she missed it, and then proceeded to take out her frustration on the man who was trying to help her. Humorous verbal sparring ensued. She got out at the next stop, and the man said of the overweight woman, "At least I don't have to wake up ugly every morning."
  • ¡¡OU weekend!! drove home, had f0ur BYX brothers stay at my house for the night. I didn't have a ticket to the game, so I got to spend the afternoon watching it with my family and Kelsey. Really enjoyed getting this opportunity and a little taste of home. Halo might not have, because she had to go in her cage twice as a result of me leaving food out in her reach. We won, ugly, but a win is a win. After the game and my friends got back, we headed over to another guy's house in grapevine. We saw Paranormal Activity, which is supposed to be like a blair witch project mockumentary scary movie. Pretty scary, but mostly self inflicted scaring yourself suspense, not can't sleep at night scary.
Things that crossed my mind this weekend
  • A Sam's Complaint: Sam's is a brilliant bulk store. However it has one shortcoming: those delicious frozen foods they sell (where you just microwave it for an easy meal) are DELICIOUS, but they only are big enough for multiple meals for a smallish child. For boys >13, it is only like two meals. Sam's needs to fix this problem
  • Funny Idea (maybe): I want to get decked out in golf gear: cleats, collared shirt, khakis, bag, glove, caddy....and go play a miniature golf course, filming it with commentary. Surely there would be enough comic gold for a good internet video of at least 60 seconds.
College pro's and cons
  • PROS: unlimited bathroom breaks, comfy chairs for the most part, non-compulsory attendance, use of laptops
  • Cons: no kleenex (extreme con), longer class periods require longer attention span
Spiritual Observation #1: I was listening to the song Amazing Love (You are my King), and realized that sometimes Jesus is the king of my life, but often times, I choose to be the king of my life. This needs to be progressively changed.

Spiritual Observation #2: I've heard the "you know how your earthly father loves you, so how much more must you're perfect heavenly father love you" thing from Jesus before, but have never really thought about just how much that means, because I have a really good earthly father.

Juicy Stuff:
You may or may not know it, but I am terrified of flying, stinging objects (bees, wasps, hornets, from least to greatest fear). This dates back to when I was a tyke, and a nurse was giving me a shot and said, "It'll hurt no more than a bee sting." I had never been stung by a bee, and this shot HURT. Thus, later in life, when confronted with these colorful buzzing insect in the future, I did a little dance and waved my hands around in rough circles while fleeing the scene of the insect. David does roughly the same, anyone who went to New Orleans with us a few years ago can attest to this. (Once while cooking eggs when we were home alone, a wasp got in the house; we got the can of wasp spray and gunned it down from across the kitchen, sacrificing our cooking meal).

Anyways, I managed to go exactly 18.5 years without being stung by any of these. Until today. Due to the beautiful weather outside, two of my friends and I decided to play outside. The frisbee flew into the shrubbery, and we had to go scrounge around for it. I heard buzzing in my ears, and three of my favorite flying buddies were hovering right by me. Greatly motivated to look harder and faster, I found the frisbee and got out of there.

When I was up unlocking my dorm door, I felt a stabbing pain in the side of my ribs. It persisted, so I went to investigate...and before I pulled my shirt up, a yellow and black drone was chillin' on the waistline of my jeans. Party foul. I didn't bother killing it and left it do die while I ate dinner. (I returned armed with a shirt to beat the bee to death should it still be up and kicking. Alas, is has probably died (it's body has not been found)).

In a nut shell
-Bees: not to bad
-Wasps/Hornets: still terified

Closing remarks
-Why is it that if you call something "the shit" it is awesome, but not so with "the crap"
-Just what makes bees' knees cool?
Some entomologist made a scale that rated the pain of insect stings and provided funny definitions (i found this after looking up bees, wasps, and hornets on wikipedia). Here it is.

  • 1.0 Sweat bee: Light, ephemeral, almost fruity. A tiny spark has singed a single hair on your arm.
  • 1.2 Fire ant: Sharp, sudden, mildly alarming. Like walking across a shag carpet & reaching for the light switch.
  • 1.8 Bullhorn acacia ant: A rare, piercing, elevated sort of pain. Someone has fired a staple into your cheek.
  • 2.0 Bald-faced hornet: Rich, hearty, slightly crunchy. Similar to getting your hand mashed in a revolving door.
  • 2.0 Yellowjacket: Hot and smoky, almost irreverent. Imagine W. C. Fields extinguishing a cigar on your tongue.
  • 2.x Honey bee and European hornet: Like a matchhead that flips off and burns on your skin.
  • 3.0 Red harvester ant: Bold and unrelenting. Somebody is using a drill to excavate your ingrown toenail.
  • 3.0 Paper wasp: Caustic & burning. Distinctly bitter aftertaste. Like spilling a beaker of hydrochloric acid on a paper cut.
  • 4.0 Pepsis wasp: Blinding, fierce, shockingly electric. A running hair drier has been dropped into your bubble bath.
  • 4.0+ Bullet ant: Pure, intense, brilliant pain. Like fire-walking over flaming charcoal with a 3-inch rusty nail in your heel
side note: the picture of the bullet ant looks terrifying

Toodles

Monday, October 12, 2009

The Golden Rules/A very good place to start

These are the basic things that my blog will consist of:
  1. A weekly update (probably on Sunday or Monday) of things that I find important/humorous that happened to me in the past week.
  2. A clever title that will be a pathetic attempt at pun or allusion.
  3. Anything that I am perchance thinking of will be included that week, including things I have learned that I find important (from Church and such), or anything that is just on my mind (thus the title).
  4. I will never edit for grammar/spelling my posts, feel free to deal with it, or offer corrections as comments


So that's basically it. Now introductory information

  1. I am Michael Mayo, a freshman at UT Austin, taking 15 hours of classes, majoring in Bilingual Education
  2. I am participating in Bilingual HOSTS at Metz Elementary on Tuesdays and Thursdays. This is a largely program that offers one on one tutoring for students who are reading greatly behind their level. The bilingual just means their first language is Spanish, and they are learning English
  3. I have pledged a Christian fraternity, BYX, Beta Upsilon Chi (Brothers Under Christ) and am attending church at the Austin Stone (a truly brilliant church)
  4. I am playing IM Soccer and Football. My soccer team is 2-0, yet is not good (think bad news bears teams, with a few (in this case 4) skilled players, while the rest are largely inept), while my football team, with my fraternity pledge class, is 0-2 despite having promising skill/potential.
  5. I watch How I Met Your Mother, The Office, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, and maybe 30 Rock. I try to not watch too much tv.
  6. I am a casual sports fan and play fantasy football.
Things that happened this week that I can remember:
  • Last week I was playing catch phrase with some floor friends and this word/hint happened:
    Word: Cervix (a boy had it)
    Hint: "I think it's a body part, but I don't think I have one..."
    He did not get it, but hilarity ensued once it buzzed and we looked at the word
  • I was doing my HOSTS, and my kid was trying to say, "a walrus has teeth," to practice the vocab word walrus. Well, in Spanish, there is no "th" sound, so he had trouble saying it, and when he generated his sentence it was pronounced, "a walrus has teats." Not to be outdone, he still had to write it. In Spanish, the long "e" sound is made by an "i." So the kid wrote, "a walrus has tits." I cracked up on the inside, and politely corrected him.
  • I chaperoned (that sounds weird) a middle school church retreat this weekend, so I got to go back to Plano. I thoroughly enjoyed the time seeing friends, getting a small taste of home, and talking to Austin Ball on the way there and back.
Other stuff:
  • My favorite worship songs right now are "How Great Thou Art" and "The Wonderful Cross"
Two brief rhymes I wrote (I hate seeing people react to things I write slash am very self conscious)
  • First is to tune of Dance anthem of the 80's by Regina Spektor during the part "I am walking/through the city/like a drunk, but not" see here circa 2:00 (the song its self is a happy sounding song about a sad theme)

    Lord I give you/All my worship/but it's not enough
    To rightly capture/all your mercy/and unending love
    'Cause it's your grace/like a river/ that sets us free
    Free from death/from sin's power/In you our vict'ry
  • Then just i don't know the magnitude of your sacrifice/so my attitude of gratitude can never suffice
  • Obviously themes of God being great, my inability to adequately give thanks for that.
Uh, well that's all for now.
Toodles