Saturday, February 21, 2004

There Are A Few Things

At Christmas, I noticed for all the nice things I got, there were a few things -- just little things -- that weren't even necessarily gifts, that I bought to use wrapping gifts and writing out tags, like this new Scotch tape dispenser that I really loved that were just wonderful to have around my house. Also some new gel pens I got that I'm particularly fond of.

Is it odd to be so ga-ga over a few small items that are designed in a simple and beautiful way and just make my day? In some ways I'm more fond of them than any of the other "big" gifts I got this year.

Here's the tape dispenser. It looks like a lovely one-horse open ice sleigh, dashing through the snow.

Here's the pen I love. It's called the Uni-ball Signo Gelstick. I only have the black ones. I like their funky torpedo shape.

Saturday Morning Cartoons

Great rainy grey morning to jump on the couch, open your cereal box, munch on Capt Crunch and watch cartoons.

Friday, February 20, 2004

Plaid Shirt Conference

Yes, I do own some flannel plaid shirts and I always try to wear them when I have the lucky chance to catch up with Dan Bricklin -- as this is his signature look.

We had a great lunch yesterday and did the usual brain dump, word tumble, "hey, did you hear about ..." intense conversation that bloggers seem bound to have when they get the rare chance to hook up in person. Thanks Dan for taking the time.

About Oddblog -- I Mean, Audblog

I was telling a friend about Audblog this morning. I always think of "Oddblog" when I hear the name which makes me think, of course, of Oddjob. And I'll tell you, I think Audblog is even cooler than Oddjob. Do check them out!

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Mix Of Clouds And Sun And Snow And Freezing Rain And ...

Heading out to ... goodness knows what weather ... looks like a good weekend for movies. I feel like making Potato Soup, just need a good recipe.

Always Blame Sally Hoot

If I get in trouble for doing something, I always blame my alter ego, Sally Hoot, who is a completely out-of-control wild woman. I would never have as much fun as she has. Or at least, if I did have THAT MUCH FUN, I don't figure I'd live to tell the tale.

"Me? Do that? ... Oh, no, never ... that was Sally Hoot, I'm sure she did it."

Go Back To Bed

This is the problem with going to bed early -- you're wide awake way too early. I'm downing a glass of warm milk with cinnamon on top, then diving back under the covers for that LUXURY SLEEP from 5:00am to 7:00am when the dreams are wild and romping and the sleep is exquisite and fatty.

Gigantic Gobs of Spam

I am getting gigantic gobs of spam lately. I don't know why it's suddenly so enlarged, this big gob of spam. Speaking of enlarged, they seem to have finally given up on my penis -- thank you -- but now are urging me to refinance a home I don't own, in a town in California I don't live in anymore.

Bonnie Lass

Who doesn't love Bonnie Raitt?

Sittin' in front of your house,
Like rain in early dawn
Workin' on a love letter
Got my radio on.

Got my eye on your window pane
And i smoked a lot of cigarettes.
Mercy, mercy but love is strange
And you haven't even kissed me yet.

Look comes to push,
Push comes to shove,
Shove comes to touch,
Touch will come to love.

Workin' on a love letter,
Listenin' to a love song,
I'm writing you a love letter, love letter,
Got my radio on...radio, radio

Hope you get the message baby.
I know that you're gonna let me in.
It's real in your neighborhood
And this is more than i'm gonna bend.

Look comes to push,
Push comes to shove,
Shove comes to touch,
Touch will come to love.

Why don't sit waitin'
Why don't behavin'
Love's waiting in the car,
In the car and rain now.

Workin' on a love letter,
Listenin' to a love song,
I'm writing you a love letter, love letter,
Got my radio on...radio, radio

Look comes to push,
Push comes to shove,
Shove comes to touch,
Touch will come to love.

(3 times with adlibs)
Workin' on a love letter,
Listenin' to a love song,
I'm writing you a love letter, love letter,
Got my radio on...radio, radio

Indulge Me

Sometimes this blog feels like a shop window where I arrange pretty stuff -- put a pink felt hat with a big plume on a wooden mannequin head, right up front next to the glass -- or other stuff for all to see. Or set out something lovely and lush -- a little diarama of Hawaiian hula girls dancing under breezy palm trees, fronds flopping -- for others to notice as they pass by on the busy thoroughfare outside.

And other times I want to say -- SHOP CLOSED -- and I pull down the blinds and go off for the day on some private adventure -- maybe to the Zoo, maybe strolling on a faraway beach in a dreamy way, maybe off to track down a long lost button to put on an unusual and impatient coat, maybe to see a not very popular, but very interesting French film at the artsy theatre around the corner with a girlfriend who I talk into ditching work. We eat red licorice.

And lately, I've felt like that, and even more private and quiet, pulling down all the blinds and cleaning out the back storeroom, doing inventory, sweeping, restocking the shelves, so I ask if you would please indulge me as I put my shop in order. I expect a GRAND RE-OPENING any minute, as spring is finally beginning in these parts. I feel a wonderful rumble of spring flowers poking their heads out of their beds in the windowbox, just watch.

Thursday, February 19, 2004

I'm Shooting Across The Sky

Yahoo's new search engine makes me # 2 and puts Edmund Halley the astonomer ahead of me at #1 -- which I've said is much more appropriate than the way Google puts me first and the star man second.

They have really wonderful sexy pictures of me too.

We Meant 26 New Jobs, Not 2.6

White House reading, writing and 'rithmetic initiative in full force. No child, including George, to be left behind.

Wednesday, February 18, 2004

The Pentagon's New Map

New book coming out soon by Thomas P. M. Barnett (U.S. Naval War College) which is really interesting. Thanks to Critt Jarvis for telling me about it. Check out these links. There was a piece in Esquire Magazine last March by Barnett which "laid out a revolutionary new U.S. defense strategy for the post-9/11 world," as the publisher of the book, Putnam describes it.

Dean Ends Presidential Bid

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Mark Twain Move Over -- Read Barlow

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It's Not Garbage Day

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Pink Dear Dear Diary

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Taking Out The Garbage

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My Kyboard

Is totally screwed up and if life without the J and C keys weren't bad enough, now th ky .... I MEAN THE 'E' KEY rquirs th forc of a sldghammr to mak it work -- so I'll b doing a bunch of audio blogging today.

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

Red Red Wine

Drank some wine the other night. Just thought I'd mention it.

Adam in Iraq

Adam Curry is blogging from Iraq as you all must know, but I wanted to say how great his stuff is and how it just gets better every day. Don't miss it.

Weinberger on Politics As Unusual

And as I was saying below, David talks about "Ralph and Howie" over at his column Loose Democracy at Corante.

Politics As Usual

There isn't any more politics as usual. I was chatting with friends yesterday about all the weird and wild transformations going on in the political arena these days and we were left with the feeling that ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN and even the thing you least expect can happen.

Extraordinary Kindness

It's nice to be turned on by people who make a conscious choice to show not only their sexy and romantic side, but also their extraordinary kindness. Rare enough in this world.

Hit The Mats

Getting back into working out now that my surgery is over and I can really exercise. The eye doctor doesn't go into any bloody details, thank goodness, but after eye surgery they don't want you jumping around or throwing your head down and over suddenly, putting pressure on your healing eyeball. So all the aerobic stuff and much of the yoga -- think downward dog -- is probably not good. I didn't want to risk it, but I hate my flabby old February butt. Time to get ready for the beach! Worked out hard this morning from 5:30 - 6:30.

Working At Blogging, Blogging At Work

I'm heading up to the North Shore for lunch with Ray Ozzie from Groove today. Maybe I will get a cheese sandwich for lunch after all. I want to hear what he has to say about blogging at work, as he still seems to be the one CEO who condones the practice. A lot has happened with blogging since both of us worked on the piece in Harvard Business Review about an employee who blogs last fall. I wonder if he feels the same way -- or if I do for that matter. I'm not working at the same place anymore, but I didn't leave because of any blogging issues. I'll report back on all cheese sandwiches consummed.

Cheese Sandwich

I love what Mena Trott said at Demo as reported by Doc. "People do want to hear you had a cheese sandwich for lunch." I think she's right, but goodness knows I'm biased.

Not only that, but Ben and Mena won a FAST COMPANY FAST 50 award! Congratulations!

Monday, February 16, 2004

New Day

I am awash in feeling blessed this morning. For one thing, my eye is NOT awash, which is to say, yesterday was the last day of eye drops I had to take every day for the last month since my cataract surgery. In the week immediately following the operation, you do drops more than six times a day. I had three little bottles. I had to stop whatever I was doing, lie down, do one drop in my eye --- wait 3 minutes -- do the next drop -- wait 3 minutes -- do the next drop -- wait 3 minutes. Doesn't sound like a big deal, but it reminded me of breastfeeding schedules, which when you read them BEFORE you have a baby sound reasonable, but once you have your baby, you suddenly realize, "Oh, I get it, I'm going to spend every minute of every day breastfeeding this baby!"

So after a week of three drops six times a day, you go to a week of four times a day and then a week later you go to two times a day. This was a very weird transition -- unexpectedly difficult -- by the time you've done this intense two weeks of drops almost at every meal time, to cut back to twice a day makes you feel very confused, sad, a little thrown off, you MISS your drops -- it's so odd. So week three is twice a day -- you realize you're healing, you're getting back to normal -- and even this makes me feel different -- maybe it was kindof special to be the "patient" and get special attention from family and friends, or at least some sympathy -- but now you're on the road to normal. You should be thrilled, but just as the new mom starts weaning her baby eventually, you lose a special status in the world.

And after twice a week, you go to that most strange last week of once a day eye drops. You've been carrying around three little bottles everywhere for a month and now the three little companions are about to desert you -- for your excellent eye sight -- as they should and as you should be more than happy to welcome, but life is a funny moody roller coaster, isn't it and even blessings can be mixed.

And you might have noticed how little I have written about my new eye. And there's a very big reason. Just as my first eye's improvement was so dramatic and I was gushing daily about it, this second eye's improvement as been ALSO extraordinary. But it has taken me down a path much more difficult to walk. My eyesight is so good now, I am seeing things that I just don't want to see. I am seeing very line, wrinkle, blotchy mark, scar of every face I encounter -- especially mine -- and that is sobering I must say. Sometimes it's not beautiful.

When I got eye number one fixed I went from terrible sight to a front row seat at a deliciously beautiful and colorful circus. I was seeing Cirque de Soleil from the best seats in the house. When I got eye number two fixed, I found myself backstage in their makeup trailer, seeing every imperfection of their faces before they applied their makeup, every slight unraveling or tear of their pretty costumes, every old clown trying to look young, every terrified grimace (usually hidden) when an acrobat makes a landing the audience never sweats but the team knows is viciously difficult and could result in harm. I am WAY up close.

It's not easy to get used to, but finally, I admit, it is a blessing in disguise. It lets me see a real world; a real world of work and worry, of disappointments and tears, but also of real love and real hope and real people. I guess that's the best word to use -- real -- my new eye says, "get real" and real isn't so easy every day -- but what it might lack in shimmering fantasy and trompe l'oeil artistry, it more than makes up for in truth.

I live in a world of bumps and scratches and arrive newly born, nearly age 50, with my old face in the mirror, wonderfully blessed to see the world as it is, and tell the tale.

Sunday, February 15, 2004

Tuning In Late

I saw a concert on TV of this great woman singer, but they didn't put her name on the screen or even have a commercial break mentioning who the artist was. It was driving me crazy trying to figure it out. I didn't know who she was but I did know I loved her music. I remembered one song and scribbled down the words because I liked them so much.

"But this just the beginning
We're already wet, and we're gonna go swimming

Why can't I breathe whenever I think about you
Why can't I speak whenever I talk about you
It's inevitable, it's a fact that we're gonna get down to it
So tell me
Why can't I breathe whenever I think about you
"


Of course, it was Liz Phair -- someone I keep hearing is so great and I guess not only did I tune in late to the concert on TV, but tuned in late to how terrific she is.