Friday, November 21, 2008

Gives new meaning to "Green Living"

Your eyes do not deceive you. That is, indeed, an Astroturf-covered stretch limousine.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

My very thoughtful blogging personality

A little blog analysis from Typealyzer:

The analysis indicates that the author of http://www.katesink.com/blog is of the type:

ISTP - The Mechanics

The independent and problem-solving type. They are especially attuned to the demands of the moment are masters of responding to challenges that arise spontaneously. They generally prefer to think things out for themselves and often avoid inter-personal conflicts.

The Mechanics enjoy working together with other independent and highly skilled people and often like seek fun and action both in their work and personal life. They enjoy adventure and risk such as in driving race cars or working as policemen and firefighters.

Analysis

This show what parts of the brain that were dominant during writing.
Thanks to Doc for the link. He and I appear to both be "Mechanic" ISTP bloggers.

As you can see, I'm off the chart when it comes to thinking. :D

Actually, I don't buy too much into this. I'm an INFJ through and through and this shows I'm not very feeling at all! Whatever! Just because I've been whiny in my last five posts, or whatever, doesn't make me an unfeeling jerky-jerk! ... Nor do I ever care to drive a race car.

I have taken the liberty of running a few of you through the Typealyzer. Found three other ISTPs ("Mechanics"), an ESTP ("Doer"), five ESFPs ("Performers") and an ISTJ ("Duty Fulfiller"). Then I gave up because I was sick of looking. Figure it out for yourself.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

On writing (and a hundred bucks)

Today's entry in the list of things I miss since we've moved: my job. I adored my job -- the editing, the research, the playing with numbers and turning them into pretty graphs. It was left-brained and right-brained, and that made me very, very happy.

I miss it, and I'm not just saying that because I haven't found a job here yet. Living on one income has been rough, though not so bad that I've given up hope of finding something in research or editing or writing or all three. I'm just not quite ready to settle for a retail job when I'm sure something perfect is going to grab me soon -- hopefully by the beginning of the year.

I'm not going to lie: Having some time off work has been a nice break. But something's missing, and I think it's the itty-bitty creative spark that I don't bring out of the closet very often. I haven't had occasion -- or supplies -- to make much jewelry since I left Memphis. I never write poetry anymore. I don't even get to take pictures for Mr. E, who fell off the face of the Earth before I left Memphis. I still want some resolution there! (As an aside, I also never got my five pineapples, which was one of my original stipulations in the Mr. E deal.)

A friend of mine told me she thinks there's a book in me somewhere. Though she speaks with some authority on the subject, I'm having trouble believing her. But I do want to write again. I'm starting to flesh out ideas for something fantastic, and, in the meantime, plan to wake up my creative side by writing an entry for an upcoming fiction contest.

This might be of interest to other local writers out there, so listen up.

Piccolo Spoleto, which is part of the ginormous Spoleto arts festival in Charleston every May and June, is holding its ninth annual Piccolo Fiction Open. Entries have a 1,300-word limit and must be postmarked by Jan. 9.

The topic? "One Hundred Dollars." Intriguing, no? It might be just the thing to get my brain in gear.

... And I'm serious about those pineapples, E. Don't let me down.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Speaking of cable ...

Saw this on the Fail Blog:



I can't complain about my DirecTV cable being cut, considering the damage could've been much worse.

Wow.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

The cut cable

I mentioned in a Tweet the other day that our DirecTV cable was cut. I delayed blogging about it because I was hoping to get a good picture of the cable when Paul got home from Vermont. But, alas, we turned the cable over to the apartment manager before I had a chance to take a better pic than the one I snapped with my cameraphone.

The still-short-but-not-as-short-as-Twitter version is this: Our DirecTV went out mid-afternoon on Saturday, our fourth outage since mid-September. I called our DTV provider and they scheduled me for a Tuesday service appointment. Fabulous. Four days with no TV, and three of those days with no Paul to keep me amused. That's where Get Smart came in. So far, I've watched 60 of the 138 episodes. I'm so hooked. I could totally be on Jeopardy! if they limited their topics to Get Smart, They Might Be Giants, tea, and the chemistry of drinking water (hey, I did read Paul's dissertation). I might be able to pull off answering clues about old NES games, too, but that's iffy.

I got a call Monday from one of our DTV provider's techs. "Hey, it's Chad." Chad was the tech that came after our third outage. "Look, I'm on my way to your apartment now. I'll be there in 15 minutes."

Normally this would've been fantastic news, but I'd stayed up practically all night watching Season 1, slept in late, and still looked like hell. "You're coming today?" I said, groaning. He laughed and said, "What, did you think I was coming tomorrow?" Gaaaah. "Well, yeah, I actually did," I told him. Then I convinced him to make me the second stop of the afternoon so I could shower and change clothes.

He and his trainee showed up a little while later, checked our receiver and poked around some outside. Then he walked in and handed me a thingamajig with a cut wire on the end. I know he told me what it was, but I was too busy fuming to pay attention. He said sometimes the cable TV guys cut it in hopes of frustrating people until they go back to cable. But if the cable guy cut the wire, that would have meant he was digging in our box at 4 p.m. Saturday afternoon. That seemed unlikely to me.

At this point I'll mention how much I hate Charleston Comcast. I have a number of reasons, with the top two being that the channel selection is crummy and the staff members we've dealt with have been fairly incompetent. Case in point: We turned in our cable box mid-September after our DTV was activated. With that, Paul and I washed our hands of Comcast ... but Comcast didn't. In fact, they never shut off our cable and billed us for October and November. Paul called them last week to hash out why the cable hadn't been shut off. He was told they would have to come to our apartment to physically turn off the service.

That conversation popped into my mind yesterday. I put two and two together, called Comcast and told them I needed to check whether they'd finished the deactivation. The customer service rep pulled up my account and said the deactivation listed two dates: Nov. 4 and Nov. 8.

Nov. 4 was when Paul called to complain. Nov. 8 was the day they came here to turn off the service. And that was Saturday, the same day our DTV went out.

I've talked to the apartment manager twice -- via e-mail and in person -- about the whole situation, and I've been careful not to condemn the cable guy outright. Maybe it wasn't intentional, you know? But would it have been so hard to stop by and let us know he'd screwed up? Or even stop by to let us know he'd turned off our Comcast service?

The whole thing gives me a headache. But I'm grateful and thankful it's over now. (Link goes to funny pic on Doc's blog.)

Okay, time to quit yappin'. The Cit's homecoming bonfire is tonight. The women's club is having a potluck in conjunction with that, so I've got to run to the grocery store and buy stuff to bake into a beautiful, tasty creation.

... But one more Get Smart episode first. Priorities, you know.


Click here for more info on Kate.


"If you aren't in over your head, how do you know how tall you are?" - T.S. Eliot




    Gives new meaning to "Green Living"
    My very thoughtful blogging personality
    On writing (and a hundred bucks)
    Speaking of cable ...
    The cut cable
    Darn kids, get off my lawn!
    Morning already?
    Well, it's not like we had better plans ...
    Freedom isn't free, but lots of other stuff is
    Calm down