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April 30, 2005 - Saturday

 Do-Gooder

Karl Elvis and Ray turned me on to the Gematriculator, that site I goofed on yesterday that tells you how evil your site is. You plug in your url and it analyzes the words on the page and applies some arcane algorithm and then it tells you how evil your page is. (I’m actually only 34% evil.) Good clean fun, yes?

Well, I was just poking around over there and found that in addition to having a website’s good/evil analyzed, you can also have it do a block of text. A name, for example.

Well.

I analyzed myself, of course, and was disappointed. I try to be all bad-ass but apparently I’m only 1% evil. I guess my halo just won’t tarnish, no matter how hard I try. Then I did Beth. And that’s when I learned things.

Using her married name (which she’s only just started using at work after nine years of marriage — and that’s an entry for another day), Beth too is only 1% evil/99% good. She’s an angel, just like me. But when I used her maiden name…

Oh. My. God. She was 99% evil! Only 1% good!

Things made so much more sense when I learned that. My wife has partied with David Lee Roth, sat on Jim Morrison’s lap, dated a Pretender. She used to go through men like I used to go through vodka. She used to be a bad girl. Now she quilts, she gardens, she drives a Volvo. Now she’s a good girl. What happened?

I happened. I changed her, saved her from a life of evil, turned her toward The Light. Beth was on the road to ruin until I met her and took her under my tutelage. I married her, and in doing so saved her. I redeemed her.

Now I know what it is that I’ve always felt was missing between us: her gratitude. More than that, her worship. I’ve always felt like I deserved more wifely deference and respect around here and now I have the scientific evidence to back it up. I can’t wait to tell her.

And I hope me being Good also means I’m under the good Lord’s protection. I might need it.


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April 12, 2005 - Tuesday

 Mexiblog

Being a computer/blogging geek, I took my laptop on vacation with me and wrote an extended entry while we were there. Here it be:

Day One – No Gracias

We’re staying at the Pueblo Bonito Mazatlan, a timeshare resort hotel, and check-in here was an exercise in the old Hard Sell. We’re staying as guests of an owner, and at check-in there’s a critical question the desk clerk asks you: “Are you the owner or a guest?” This question is critical because it marks the difference between you getting your room key and “Enjoy your stay” and being free to get started on your vacation versus being steered as part of the check-in process to a “guest services” desk situated in a corner of the lobby where you do not get your room key. We fucked up: we said “guest.”

We speak very little Spanish. I speak just enough to get myself in trouble when I used to go to Tijuana during my drinking days, and while Beth spoke Spanish fluently when she lived in Cadaques, Spain fifteen years ago, Cadaques Spanish isn’t quite the same Spanish they speak in Mexico. They’re different dialects from the same root, so many of the words and phrases mean what you think they mean — and many of them don’t. Everyone we’ve encountered here so far speaks English well, but with varying degrees of accent. The ladies at the Guest Services desk spoke heavily accented English, with the end result of us only understanding about every third word they said.

So. We get the steer over to the Guest Services desk, where a Guest Services lady starts jabbering at us. Fast. In heavily accented English. That we can barely understand. And so we stood there, smiling and nodding, vaguely bewildered, wondering what the hell all the jabbering was about and why she wasn’t giving us our room key, and it slowly dawned on me that this was a sales pitch. She was just too friendly and too smiley and too enthusiastic, and I finally tipped to it when we she asked what room we were in and then exclaimed “Ooooh, you are very lucky, that’s one of the nicest rooms here! You must know someone very important!” She was trying to get us to sign up for a tour and sales presentation at their brand new resort a few miles away but we gave her the “No gracias, no espeakedy Espanol” slip and finally managed to get up to the room.

In truth, maybe the Guest Services lady wasn’t totally snowing us about how nice the room is. It’s one of the smaller ones here, but the view is killer. Our balcony looks right out on the beach and with the door open we went to sleep listening to the surf each night. Not bad, all in all.


Here’s Zoe sulkily pretending to read so I can take her picture to demonstrate the fabulousness of the view.

After checking in and unpacking, we commenced with the Sun Worship. We staked out chairs at the pool and soaked up the rays for awhile, then went for a walk on the beach. Walking along the beach, we quickly learned to employ a Spanish phrase we had to use almost constantly in near self-defense: “No gracias.” In a roughly 50 yard walk up and down the beach, we were approached roughly every 10 yards by locals selling 1) hats, 2) blankets, 3) marionettes, 4) silver jewelry, 5) more silver jewelry, 6) scarves, 7) shirts, and 8) kites. We also learned you had to keep moving, because when we did stop so I could buy Beth and Zoe bracelets, all the other vendors surrounded us like a pack of hyenas and we practically had to fight our way back out.

We closed the day with dinner at the palapa by the pool, and then it was off to bed early for the travel-induced coma.

Plan for tomorrow: surf, sand, siesta.


Day Two – It’s Official

Not a whole lot of surf and sand today after all – instead it was pool and pulmonia with just a soupçon of surf at the end.

First, we slept in late. Really late. Really really late. I just can’t get my internal clock right down here, thanks to two recent time-shifting events. First is Daylight Saving Time. The clocks moved up an hour three nights ago, which just happened to also be a night when I couldn’t sleep. Lately I’ve gotten into the habit of staying up until about 3:00 a.m., but moving the clock Saturday night sort of caught me by surprise when I noticed that it was 4:15 a.m., not the 3:15 a.m. my internal clock was expecting. Then it took me another half hour or so to get around to going to bed, and then I found that I wasn’t really tired anymore and I just laid there staring at the ceiling. So when the sky started getting light around 5:30 I just gave up and got up and I ended up staying up until about midnight the next night. So the clocks changed and I lost a day of sleep and then we left for Mexico.

Then when we flew down here to Mazatlan we crossed into the Mountain time zone and lost another hour and didn’t realize it, so it was another hour later. So with the clock change and then the time change, I was walking around with my internal clock totally fucked up and two hours off. So when my already normally lazy ass decided it was time to wake up at 9:00 this morning, it was really already 11:00 local time. Fortunately, I was on vacation in Mexico at the time, so I just rolled over and went back to sleep until noon. I didn’t really want that buffet breakfast anyway.

When we finally got up, more Sun Worship was on the agenda. Briefly, that entailed precisely positioning a chaise lounge for maximum sun exposure, greasing up with tanning lotion, and then going back to sleep. I like being on vacation.

For our 3pm lunch we decided to take a cab into town and try El Shrimp Bucket, recommended to us by former coworkers of Beth’s as being “the best food in Mazatlan.” Well, I’m here to tell you: not so much. It wasn’t bad, but it certainly wasn’t “the best.” It also wasn’t cheap. I can remember partying in Tijuana and Ensenada in the 80’s and eating like a king for less than $5. Now, here, $5 gets you two Pacifico beers. Mini Pacifico beers.

During the cab ride to the Shrimp Bucket we passed no less than five “Official Senor Frog” stores. This place is lousy with Senor Frog’s, and they’re all the “Official” one. But if they’re all official, which one is really official? It’s all too confusing. No Senor Frogs for me.

Zoe has made a few new friends in our short time here. One of them is a little girl from Salt Lake City, and we had her up to our room for a few hours tonight. We let them call room service to place our dinner order. Zoe is an old hand at calling Room Service and did it with even more gusto than usual as she peppered her conversation with the bits of Spanish she’s learned so far: lots of “gracias” and “si” and “de nada” – and who cares if the usages aren’t quite right.

Lesson del dia: Don’t remove your contact lenses with fingers that not long before were holding jalapeno peppers. Ow.


Thoughts at 4:00 a.m.:

Woke up and raced to the toilet. Ahh, here it comes, the local version of Montezuma’s revenge. Oh well. As I finish up by downing a dose of Immodium AD it occurs to me that I may be defeating the purpose by washing it down with tap water.


Day Three – Leap of Faith

Perfect vacation-type day today: lots of nothing. Lounging by the pool, escaping from the skin scorching noon sun to lounge in the room for a bit, then back to lounging by the pool in the afternoon. Vacation math: “lounging” is a variable in every equation.

I’m making fine progress on my vacation reading list: 102 Minutes and Million Dollar Baby down, working on Sahara now, with Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy queued up behind it. That’s all I brought with me. I may need more books before we leave.

Tonight we took a leap of faith in our fellow man: we let Zoe go to dinner with her new friend’s family. They were going out to dinner in town somewhere but hadn’t decided where, and they would be back by 10:00. That’s all we knew. I wasn’t entirely comfortable with it but decided to let Zoe go anyway, figuring that A) I want her to have fun, B) I want her to feel independent, and most importantly, C) I figured that as a fellow parent of a 9-year old girl, the friend’s mother wouldn’t do anything we wouldn’t do.

But when they hadn’t returned by 10:30, Beth and I were both getting worried and realizing that we knew nothing about these people – not even their last name. All we knew were the mom and daughter’s names, their room number, that they’re from “near Salt Lake City” and that the daughter plays softball. And that was it. And now our daughter was gone in a foreign country with them and we didn’t even know which direction they had gone.

Tensions started running a bit high.

They finally got back at 11:00: the kids were having fun dancing, so they ended up staying later than planned. Oops. We were relieved — and also resolved not to let her run free with strangers in foreign lands again.

No vacation is complete without adrenaline, right? Well… Maybe wrong.


Day… Four? Five? I’m losing track, we’re on Mexico time. – Activity Girl strikes back

We went out on an excursion, an “all-inclusive” trip to Deer Island. We saw no deer, but then we weren’t looking at the land anyway. We boarded a motorized sailboat that took us south past our hotel, circled “Bird Island” and “Seal Rock” and then anchored for the day at Deer Island.

Bird Island is just that – an island, with birds. It’s really just a rocky outcropping maybe 100 yards around about a mile offshore that is covered with two things: birds and their shit. The whole thing is white like Christmas morning with bird shit. It was remarkable, really. And I was happy that we kept our distance.

Seal Rock was also aptly described: it’s a rock with seals. Here’s Zoe with Seal Rock in the background. Yes, the whole thing is that big.

At Deer Island we played in the water and had lunch. Zoe and I did some snorkeling and kayaking…

…and then we braved the banana boat ride.

Beth was not Activity Girl… [Ahem, note from wife: I kayaked with you and did not read but instead chatted with fellow tour guests. Further, I was the one who took pictures of you and Zoe doing stuff. Duhhhhhh. Though I did consume several Pacifico’s.] [Editor’s Note: Yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever. My blog, my reality. Read ‘em and weep.] …on this particular excursion, being content with simply drinking the “all-included” Pacifico beers and reading a trashy novel under the umbrellas provided. But we did manage to lure her out to the shore for a picture with Zoe.

And then… Well, then we kept being on vacation and right now I’m tired of writing about it because, hey, I’m on vacation. To make it short and sweet, the rest of the day went like this: sail back to the hotel, lay in the sun, then lay in the sun some more.


Day… Five, maybe? – Vacation is like Camp

Today was all about arts and crafts. There’s a pottery cart here at the resort, staffed by my man Silvano. You grab a pre-made clay something-or-other – an iguana, maybe, or perhaps a toucan – and pull up a chair and you paint your pottery something-or-other. It is the biggest time-sucker I’ve ever experienced (after the Internets, that is). You can (and will) spend simply hours working on your project.

Zoe did a toucan, while I worked on a lizard. I worked harder on this thing than I’ve probably ever worked on anything in my life. I painted. I repainted. I repainted some more. I painted this stupid lizard probably every color Silvano provided because I kept not being happy with my color combinations. By the time I was finally satisfied, both Beth and Zoe were making “obsessive compulsive” cracks and everyone else at the table with us thought I was insane. But the proof is, as they say, in the pudding. The next day, after Silvano had glazed and fired my little lizard, everyone was “oooohing” and “ahhhhing” over it and using it as a model for their own as they copied me. I’m sure people mocked Picasso too.

And this shit is addictive, too. The next day we were out there again, painting our little hearts out. I did a sea turtle that was getting rave reviews as I worked on it. Personally, I thought the shell pattern and color scheme I went with was a little too Rastafarian for the rest of the turtle, but I’m just the artist. We artistes, we’re always our own worst critics.

Later that night as we browsed through the local shops we saw basket after basket of already-painted toucans and lizards and whatnot identical to what we were painting with Silvano, all going for something like 37 pesos apiece. My man Silvanao has quite racket going on at poolside there – we paid him 50 pesos for each piece for the privilege of painting them ourselves. Talk about stupid gringos…


$50 worth of $20 pottery

Observation du jour: There’s nothing like getting a deep tan to highlight for you just how gray your chest hair is getting.


Day Who Knows – Money, money, money

I’m having a hard time getting my head around the currency here. It’s not as hard as I’m making it, I just know it, but I still find myself confused. I think what’s killing me is the way I keep unconsciously comparing it to US currency. Maybe it’s just me, but I just naturally assume that the Mexican peso is the equivalent unit of measurement to the US dollar; that’s what makes sense to me. I know that the peso isn’t equal cash-wise to the dollar, but it seems to me that as a basic unit of measurement it should be about the same.

It’s not.

The key to Mexican currency, the key which keeps eluding my brain, even though I know it intellectually, is this: The peso is roughly the same as a US dime as a unit of measurement. All discussion of value, all denominations of money go from there. So if you ask someone in the US “How much is that carton of milk?” they’d answer “It’s a dollar.” But here in Mexico, they’d answer “It’s ten dimes.”

I just can’t get my head around that. All prices, all currency, is figured in terms of dimes. Whafuck? Prices in the supermarket: dimes. The various coins and bills of Mexican currency: dimes. It makes my head hurt.

I got money out of an ATM machine the other night and ended up with a giant stack of 200 peso bills. (The stack was “giant” because the ATM, being in Mexico, gave its instructions in Spanish, and I somehow withdrew $400 when I was only going for $40. But pay attention, that’s not imporant right now.) I keep thinking they’re two hundred dollar bills because they say “200” on them. But they’re the equivalent of twenties – they’re 200 dimes, not dollars.

Consequently, prices are crazy down here. I saw a billboard advertising a condo for something like 147 million pesos. Gulp. But, hey, the picture looked nice.


Day No Freakin’ Idea, Just Have Another Drink – To Market, to market

Off to the open air mercado this morning, where you can get everything from produce to tourist crap to eggs to meat. It was a far cry from the antiseptic supermarkets we have back home, but I liked the atmosphere and third-world feel of it. On the other hand, after watching a guy in one of the fish stalls climbing with filthy boots onto the counter he was using to filet the fish he was selling, I saw the advantage to antiseptic shopping environments after all.

On the way back to the hotel we stopped for lunch at my kind of place. Beth has more refined sensibilities than I and prefers restaurants with the finer things, like clean floors and recognizable food and a clientele that doesn’t scare you. Me, I like dives, and the taco stand we ate at – Taco Luna — was a dive. It was open air, the menu was painted on the wall, the cook was smoking a cigarette and stacking tortillas at a back table, and the senora running the place was pouring tequila shots for two twenty-something American guys in matching cowboy hats as we sat down. It was perfect.

Lunch was… Well, about what you’d expect. Zoe had quesadilla she didn’t finish, Beth took the safest route she could find and had a ham and cheese sandwich that she didn’t finish, and I had marlin and carne asada tacos and went back for seconds. The condiments on the table were three varieties of hot sauce served in plastic picnic bowls with plastic spoons. The yellow sauce had a hair in it, so of course that was the good one. It was so hot that I figure it burned off whatever bacteria might have been on the hair, and it boiled all my tastebuds off my tongue. So basically, I thought lunch was pretty damned good. An hour later, back at the hotel, when my stomach was churning, I knew it had been good. Ahhh…

We finished off the day with more of the usual vacation routine: fun in the sun. Beth and I read our books at the pool for awhile, and then Zoe and I rented a jetski and raced around in the ocean for half an hour. Then back in the pool and back in the sun and that’s how we finished out the day.

Plan for tomorrow: fly home. We’re a little sad that our vacation is almost over, but we’re also ready to be home. Zoe misses her cats so much she had a crying fit over it, and I’m itching to get back to my motorcycle. Besides, we have much planning to do – we have to figure out how we can live here in Mexico full-time. And I have to figure out how to talk Beth into it.


The Last Day – Homeward Bound

Air travel is air travel, regardless of the country you’re in, going to, or leaving. The airports are crowded with clots of confused-looking people, there are lines everywhere just for the sake of having lines, and there is always just a single metal detector for everyone to pass through. And of course someone always beeps when they go through and holds up the rest of the line. Today that person was me.

After I set off the big metal detector the security guard scanned me with a hand-held scanner, sweeping it up and down each leg, across my torso, and up and around each arm. The scanner beeped three times: once at each ankle, and again at my left hip. It occurred to me that these were the places I would carry a pistol in a concealed holster and that I was about to get intimately acquainted with the inside of a Mexican prison. Then the guard said one thing, and one thing only: “Okay, you can go.”

Ah, Mexico…

I’m on the flight from La Paz to LAX as I write this, sitting in seat 19C on Aero California flight #146. On the ceiling in the aisle two rows ahead of me there is a yellow button. It’s the only ceiling button I can see anywhere on the plane — yellow or otherwise — and I’ve never seen a button like this on any other plane I’ve been on. There is no sign to indicate what this button does. It’s just there. And I’m experiencing an incredible urge to get up and go push it. Will I? And will it do something horrible? I don’t know. I guess we’ll have to wait and see. If this makes it onto the internet and you’re reading it now, I guess it’s safe to assume that either I didn’t push it, or it didn’t do something horrible if I did.

[Later: It didn’t do anything horrible. In fact, it didn’t do anything at all. It didn’t even move when I pushed it — it was just a yellow button-shaped thing sticking out of the ceiling. And I’m such a pussy that I didn’t push it until after we had landed. I am ashamed.]

And what is it with people in the middle seat – like the woman sitting next to me now — who wait until you put your tray table down, get a glass of pineapple juice, open a bag of pretzels, set up your laptop computer and start typing before they decide they have to get up and go to the bathroom RIGHT NOW? It’s a two-hour flight, bitch, just fucking hold your water already. And next time try using any one of the 37 bathrooms you passed on your way to the plane with your little pea-sized bladder. And maybe don’t drink three glasses of water if you’re in the middle seat and have to pee every 30 seconds.

Right there, that’s reason #345,993 why I hate people.

Sigh… I’m already slipping out of vacation mode. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.


We’ll always have Mazatlan…


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December 11, 2004 - Saturday

 Chapeau d’âne

Inspired by comments posted to the superfantastic GraceDavis‘ entry about some recent hatemail she received, Beth has started calling me “asshat” at the slightest provocation:

“Your move, asshat.”
“Pass the salt, asshat.”
“See you later, asshat.”
“I love you, asshat.”

Sigh… I sure hope she stops soon.


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November 16, 2004 - Tuesday

 HBD2B

A few famous people have birthdays today. Unfortunately, they forgot my lovely wife Beth. Fuckers. Go wish her a happy birthday to make up for their thoughtlessness.

Happy Birthday, honey!

pottyhat.jpg


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October 9, 2004 - Saturday

 Boobies!

Beth is doing the Blogger Boobie-thon again this year, so of course I had to help her. It’s hard being married sometimes, what with all the chores and favors and honey-do’s; sometimes it seems like it’s just one thing after another. And then sometimes it’s hard because you’re getting to take semi-nudie pix of your wife and help “compose” the picture, which is something completely different.

So, yeah, she’s semi-baring her boobies for free now and totally baring them later to people who donate more than $100. I’ll get to take that picture too. It’s hard, doing those kinds of chores.

Anyway, because I’m all about being supportive and have no shame and am nothing if not a joiner, I figured I’d contribute a picture to the Boobie-thon too. (Yes, they accept mens’ pictures — they even request them, so it’s not just me and my ego working here.) Unlike Beth, though, I’m not going to be coy about it. I’ll go ahead and show you the picture I sent the Boobie-thon. Enjoy:

Now go, donate, kick down a few bucks to fight breast cancer. If your eyes have stopped bleeding, that is.


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August 27, 2004 - Friday

 The Days Are Just Packed

I’ve been trying for two days now to write this and I just can’t seem to get it down right. I keep rambling on and on and going into more detail than you’d be interested in or than I’m comfortable in sharing, and then I start over and try writing it from a different tack and the same thing happens. So let’s just throw it out here, down and dirty, and let the words fall where they may.

After my parents divorced something like 25 years ago, my dad remarried and had two children, and then he raised those kids himself when that marriage also ended in divorce. So in addition to the two brothers and a sister I grew up with, who all live in Southern California, I also have two half-sisters who live in Colorado and are now in college and who occasionally read these pages (hi, C & C). Due to distance and festering resentments left over from my parents’ divorce and my father’s estrangement from “my” family in California, these two girls and my dad have essentially been a separate family from us in California. There’s “us” and there’s “them” but there’s not been a whole lot of “we,” especially where the girls are concerned.

This weekend I’m going to spend some time with all of them. Tomorrow, I’m driving down to my dad’s place in southwestern Colorado, near Durango, to hang out with him and spend the night. Sunday I’ll drive back north and meet up with C and C where they live in Ft. Collins and hang out with them. I’ve felt badly about the distance between “us” and “them” but have been … stuck over how to resolve it. I don’t expect seeing them this weekend to fix it, but maybe it’ll open some doors.

Then, on top of that emotional rollercoaster I’ll be riding, I’m also going to stop by where I used to live with my dad in the mountains outside of Loveland, CO. About a month after I moved to Los Angeles back in 1976, the worst flood in Colorado’s history tore through there and wiped out our house and my dad’s restaurant next door and killed everyone inside, including my dad’s best friend and his wife and their son, who was my best friend there. If I hadn’t moved to LA when I did, my dad and I would have been there that night. So I’m going to stop by to pay my respects. And to remember.

Stay tuned for more details…


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August 19, 2004 - Thursday

 Please Hold

As I’ve said earlier, Beth loves to talk on the phone, and she calls me about 37 times a day so she can do it. Me, I love getting off the phone, so I guess I should look at it as her giving me 37 opportunities a day to do something I love, too. (Thanks, honey!)

But with all these phone calls I don’t really want to be on, I really need some way to entertain myself. (And, no, talking on the phone is not entertainment. At least not to me.) So I’ve come up with my own fun:

Beth and I will be talking about … well, most of the time nothing, and I’ll suddenly say “Hang on a second” as though something just distracted me. Beth, being ever-polite and a master of telephone etiquette, will agreeably hang on … and on … and on … and on. While I just sit there giggling silently until she figures out that I’m just fucking with her.

That’s some funny shit, boy. It almost makes answering the phone worthwhile.


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August 17, 2004 - Tuesday

 Earth, Wind & Fire … and Chicago?

On tap for tonight is a concert at the Greek Theater: Chicago with Earth, Wind & Fire.

I’m not sure how I feel about that. On the one hand, it’s Chicago and Earth, Wind & Fire, two of the greatest hitmakers in 80’s Top 40 … but on the other hand, it’s Chicago and Earth, Wind & Fire. Fortunately, Peter Cetera and Lionel Ritchie are sitting this one out … or unfortunately, depending on your perspective.

On top of that, we’re going with some of Beth’s co-workers, who also used to be my co-workers, and one of them is my former manager whom I absolutely could not stand working with and have managed to go 10 years without having any kind of contact with her despite the fact that Beth works with her daily. So I’m really looking forward to that. But on the other hand we’re getting the tickets for free. (I think. We’d better be. Mental note: check on that, use as possible excuse for bailing if not true.)

And on top of that, we’re meeting them for dinner before the show.

This is gonna be great. One way or another. It’ll be either a great time or a great story. Great.


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July 26, 2004 - Monday

 Here’s A Quarter…

I feel badly for Beth sometimes. She loooves to talk on the phone. Loves, loves, loves it. Me, I hate it. The only thing worse than having the phone ring is being on it already when another call beeps through on call-waiting. So I feel badly for her because our telephone conversations are, well, nothing to call home about.

Here’s a transcript of one of our recent calls from my end:

Ring!

Hello? Hey.

Yeah.

Okay.

Okay.

Okay

No.

Okay.

Okay.

Yeah, I know.

Okay.

Okay.

Ha ha ha.

Okay.

Okay.

All right, bye. Love y–

Okay.

Okay.

Okay.

Okay, I’ll talk to y–

Okay.

Okay.

Okay.

Okay.

All right, by–

Okay.

Okay.

Bye.

Hang up.

I honestly wonder sometimes why she married me … and why she keeps calling.


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July 5, 2004 - Monday

 Go Forth And July

Damn, but I’m organized. Or… maybe not. As I was poised to begin writing this entry, thinking that I would start with “…and of course we saw fireworks,” I had a vague memory that maybe I had planned for this year last year. So I searched my own stupid blog for the word “fireworks” and found this. Reading the last line there, you’ll see that I know myself very, very well. Ha.

Anyway… So I obviously didn’t let last year’s fireworks advice get in my way this year. This time around we again viewed the Radford Studio show but from a different location — we went with Zoe’s friend Katie’s family and set up camp at the east end of Moorpark Park, which was the perfect spot. Great view, nice setting, not too crowded, etc. And if you’re a lazy bastard like me and let Beth and Zoe go in the car to stake out a spot ahead of you and then you show up an hour later on the motorcycle and park where ever you want because traffic and parking isn’t a hassle on a motorcycle, then it makes it that much better. For you, at least.

So as a note for myself next year: do it that way again. If, you know, you read this. Beforehand.

We also went to a barbeque at the home of the owner of my local dive ship. There were a lot of people there, many I knew from diving already. And they had scuba gear there too, so the instructors and divemasters in attendance were giving sample dives to everyone who wanted them. Zoe and Beth wanted them.

Zoe kept coming back for more — she suited up and bubbled her way around the pool four times and would have kept going if they hadn’t almost literally peeled the tank off her. Beth went around twice too and pronounced it “fun.” I think pretty soon now we’ll be a scuba diving family … which will not be cheap.

I need to find some more frugal hobbies.


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