The Rank-Link Imbalance March 20, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Appreciate the Prose.Tags: David Brooks, Eliot Spitzer
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Appreciate the Prose:
The Rank-Link Imbalance by David Brooks. I read this last Friday. Brooks deconstructs Eliot Spitzer-types so delicately, yet with such force. The power hungry megalomaniac crusader destined to take a tumble from glory. He does it without mentioning a single name or uttering a direct insult. I don’t know how he does it, but he does it so well.
Sitting in Your Own Shit March 17, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Uncategorized.Tags: Automatic Toilet Flush, Baseball, Battleshits, Bowel Movement, D.C., Handicap Bathroom, Larry Craig, Poo
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On my way home from the barber shop I passed a bunch of black kids on a patch of grass right by Washington Hospital playing baseball. They all had gloves and looked like they new the basics of throwing and fielding a baseball. Black kids in the city playing baseball. Fewer and fewer black kids are playing baseball these days. Maybe this was just an anomaly and black kids, for the most part, still aren’t playing baseball. But it made me smile.
In the bathroom at my office, there are three stalls. When my bowels feel the need to move, I have a preferred stall. There are 14 floors in my firm’s building. All but three floors have the same floorplan. So it’s safe to say, on all those floors, my stall preference is the same. I like to use the handicap stall on the left. I have a few reason for this.
First, I prefer the space the handicap stall has to offer. In any bathroom you go into, the handicap stall just seems so much more spacious compared to the regular stalls. It’s like getting a hotel suite instead of just a regular room. It allows you to spread out a little more while being able to avoid an accidental Larry Craig incident.
Second, there seems to be an unwritten rule that the stall on the right is reserved for partners. I have generally only seen partners come in and out of the first stall. Never the middle (well, also no one wants to sit in the middle stall if they don’t have to. In the off chance that all three stalls are occupied at once, no one wants to be caught in between a game of battleshits) or left stall.
One time, shortly after I started at the firm, my beloved handicap stall was clogged. As shown above, the logical next choice was the stall on the right. While I was doing my business, someone walked into the bathroom, but didn’t go to one of the urinals or one of the other stalls. I thought it was a bit odd. As I flushed and emerged from the stall, one of the partners was standing in front of the sinks reading a brief. As I walked out of the bathroom, he walked into the stall I had just used, seat still warm (a warm seat is the worst feeling ever) like there was nothing awkward about this situation. I have yet to set foot inside that stall since.
Third, my firm recently installed automatic flushing mechanisms onto all of the stalls and toilets in the firm in an effort to go green. You know, the ones with the motion sensors. The sensor in the handicap stall is positioned just right. It only flushes when you stand up. The sensors in the regular stalls are either too sensitive or positioned in the wrong place. This results in unnecessary flushes. One time, the middle stall flushed five times between the time that I sat down and stood up. Its incredibly irritating because water splashes up and instead of the usual once over my butt cheeks before I stand up, this requires a twice over just to make sure I got all the water. No one likes to get back to their desk and sit down on damp boxers. Also, I’m pretty certain the five automatic flushes wastes more water than the one manual flush. So really, I’m doing the environment a favor.
While I’m on the topic of poo, there’s one thing I don’t get. What is with the marathon dumps people like to take? One of my roommates who is of Italian and Jewish descent has been known to take 30 minutes. I believe it should take no longer than ten minutes. If it takes longer than that, there are three plausible scenarios that I can think of, and they all disgust me:
1. The second you feel like you might need to go, you run to the bathroom. What ends up happening is you sit there and read a Maxim for about ten minutes until your bowels are really ready to move. What a waste of time, not to mention your ass cheeks are pressed firmly against one of the dirtiest places in the house/office/wherever for ten minutes longer than is necessary. There’s just no need for that.
2. You get to the bathroom just as you are ready to go. The actual process of poo coming out of your anus happens in the allotted ten minute time period. You decide you want to finish the article you just started so you stay for an additional 10-20 minutes. I understand wanting to finish the article. But, you do realize you are sitting in your own shit. Guys are too lazy to stop reading, wipe and then pick up the magazine again. So in between the time you finish pooping and you finish your article, the remnants around your sphincter have had a chance to dry and harden a bit. No matter how much you wipe, this will probably result in a few dingleberries. That’s just filthy. You wouldn’t grab a magazine, run outside and look for the nearest pile of dog shit, drop trou and sit and read for 20 minutes would you? That’s basically what you’re doing by not wiping right away. You disgust me the most.
3. If it really takes you 30 minutes to push a log or two out, you’re well on your way to giving yourself hemorrhoids. Stop straining so much. You need to rethink your diet and see a doctor.
Running Around in Circles March 9, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Appreciate the Prose.Tags: Family, Growing Up, Home, Life, Mistakes, Running in Circles
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I’m halfway through my life and I’m never quite sure if I’m doing anything right until I’m completely done doing it wrong.
-Danny Concannon from The West Wing
Okay, I’m only about a third of the way through my life and I’m pretty sure it isn’t everything that I’m doing wrong. Just a lot of them. I wish there was a guidebook that told you what you’re supposed to do in any situation. But this is real life, and I guess it’s part of growing up. I’m just afraid one day I’m going to wake up and be 50 still wondering if I’m doing this right.
I turned 23 about a month ago. Ever since I’ve been walking around in a bit of a daze wondering what the hell I’m doing. It isn’t that I feel lost. It’s that I’m walking around in circles and every time I make another round I notice another new thing that I don’t like. That new thing makes me force myself out of the circle. But, somehow, I always end up back on the beaten path. I don’t know. Maybe we are just the way we are. There are the little things that we can change, but the major things, that’s just who we are. Part of our personality. What makes us the individuals that we are.
One of my good friends was back home this weekend, so I was back to see him. I ended up staying at my parents’ house for the night and spent most of the next day back home running errands I had planned to do in D.C. They’re only about a half hour drive away and its a nice change of pace. I find it’s a good place to go when I’m in one of my moods. I don’t always come back with the answers I’m looking for. But for a short time, I’m able to put down whatever weight I have on my back and let things be.
Both pairs of my dress shoes needed a shine, so I brought them back with me to use my dad’s kit (yes, I shine my own shoes, it’s what sophisticated gentlemen do). Like a responsible adult, I put newspaper down on the floor so the polish wouldn’t get all over the kitchen floor. My dad walked by, and being my dad, told me to make sure not to let the polish fall off the newspaper when I was finished. I gave him my usual quizzical “what do you think I am?” look to which he responded with an anecdote from when I was about 5 years old. I was eating a cookie or something and like a proper 5 year old was dropping crumbs all over my shirt. My dad and I had the following exchange:
Dad: Be careful when you get up. You have crumbs all over your shirt.
Me: Don’t worry, they’ll just all fall to the ground when I get up.
He didn’t say what happened after I made that comment. But I’m willing to bet that I got up, dusted my shirt off and went to go find a toy.
Like I said, I can just go home and let things be.
————-
Appreciate the Prose:
Angels Unawares, I found this through another blog, The Last Spartan, that I read regularly. Listen to what the old lady has to say.
Appreciate the Prose March 6, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Appreciate the Prose.Tags: Anais Nin, Appreciate the Prose, David Brooks, Journalism, National Review, Rupert Pole, Velvet in Dupont, William F. Buckley
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In the last post I alluded to my new dream job, an op-ed columnist. Screw law school and a cushy job at a huge firm. Who wants to do that anyway? On second thought, maybe not an op-ed columnist. You’re basically stuck writing about political issues. At least that’s all you find in The New York Times or The Washington Post op-ed sections. Instead, I think the perfect job would be as one of those writers that gets the back page column at a big magazine. Like Rick Reilly’s old column for Sports Illustrated. Only I would want to write on whatever topic I felt like that week, not just sports. I guess those people are called “lifestyle writers.” I think the back page in a magazine like New York or Vanity Fair sounds about right. Then I could also write a blog on their website and then freelance pieces for other big mags like The Atlantic or National Review. That would be an amazing job. Write about whatever you want and get paid for it.
Two reasons for the career path change. First, it comes out of the passing of William F. Buckley, editor and owner of National Review. He was a titan. He is the reason the conservative movement has dominated the American political landscape for the last 40 years or so. Well, dominated it until George W. Bush came through and destroyed it. He moved political discourse with his writing like no one has or ever will again. Not only were his ideas incredibly well-thought out, there was a lyricism to his writing that is so often neglected in the cut and dry world of political writing. Though I disagreed with most of his ideology, reading his essays make me almost want to embrace his beliefs.
After reading the many pieces on Buckley since his passing by great writers from all parts of the political spectrum, I think I started to fully grasp the importance of this man. The power his words held was absolutely awesome. Think Barack Obama’s “Yes We Can Speech” after the New Hampshire Primary or Reagan’s “A Time For Choosing” at the 1964 Republican National Convention. Buckley would give you that feeling, only he’d do it without tone or cadence, just words. That’s a quality that I lack and envy. If I had even a tenth of his ability, I’d be on the back page of Vanity Fair. He is undeniably one of the biggest inspirations to two generations of columnists and reporters.
Second, my friend Tina and I have been sending pieces back and forth to read with the express purpose of marveling at the lyricism that prose can elicit. It’s a powerful thing. If you had that ability wouldn’t you want to write for a living? There’s also the added perk that you work whenever you want. The rest of your time is spent reading, sleeping, skiing, traveling. Whatever you want. I really don’t think it gets much better than that.
Now, if someone could give me some talent, I can be right on my way.
——————-
At work, if I don’t have anything to do, I sit on the Internet and read. I read news. I read blogs. I read columns. I read stuff that people send me. As I mentioned already, Tina and I have been sending pieces back and forth. At one point she sent me the obituary for Anais Nin’s lover. I got halfway through and griped something about her being a huge slut for having two husbands. At the same time. Unaware of each other. She shot back “APPRECIATE THE PROSE!” to me. So I shut up and finished the piece. I appreciated the prose. It’s something we preface pieces with now if we think they are especially notable. In that vein, I’m starting a new thing here. If I happen to read something I really like, I’m gonna share it so you, too, can appreciate the prose. So here are a few pieces to get this going.
Appreciate the prose:
Obituary for Rupert Pole, writer Anais Nin’s lover.
Rembering the Mentor, a piece on William F. Buckley by David Brooks.
I Just Wanted You To Comfort Me, When I Called You Late Last Night You See…, a post from local D.C. blogger Velvet in Dupont. If you’ve ever been in a relationship, you know exactly what she’s talking about.
Ch-Ch-Changes March 5, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Uncategorized.Tags: Bad Style, Changes, Dream Job, Google Ninjas, Holding Pattern
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For my three loyal readers (hi mom), you’ll notice that I changed the layout of my site. I figured it was time for a chance. The colors aren’t exactly my favorite, but I don’t feel like shelling out however much I have to to get full autonomy over my site. So, I use the themes they provide me. I might keep the theme, I might change it back in a week. Nobody knows. I’m unpredictable like that.
Also, I’m thinking about changing the image of the kid with the lighter and hairspray. I don’t remember exactly where I got it from it was a gallery of photos called “Pesty Kids” consisting of kids doing strange things. I can’t find it on Google. Maybe one of you Google Ninjas can find them for me. I’m thinking I can find another header image from there. A bag of potato chips of my choice to the person who finds this site for me.
Also, I’ve decided my new dream job is to be an op-ed columnist. Although, I’m pretty sure I don’t quite have the talent for it. But, more on this in another post.
Also (three alsos in a row, terrible style, oh well), my friend Tina made the blunt observation that my whole life is just one big holding pattern at the moment. Not just my employment. She’s probably right. Too bad this won’t show up in any blog post, ever. Sorry kids.
NAFTA Is Not the Devil March 1, 2008
Posted by wes285 in Uncategorized.Tags: NAFTA, Robert Reich
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I am a pretty bad Democrat. I am a Democrat for sure, but there are quite a few issues where I fall on the “conservative” side of the spectrum. I don’t like affirmative action. I am reluctantly pro-choice. While I see the necessity for labor unions, I think many wield too much power. I could go on. There’s a bit of a laundry list. My roommate Meagan swears I am a closet Republican. I almost went to work for one (a very moderate Republican, but a Republican no less) before deciding to campaign for a Democrat.
There’s been quite a stir about NAFTA in recent weeks and it came up in the last Democratic primary debate. I am decidedly a fan of it. We really didn’t lose that many jobs to Mexico. They got shipped to China and India. And the bottom line is, it lowers prices. Between paying my own rent for the first time and bills and car insurance, lower prices are pretty important to me. Yes, I know its more complex than that.
Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich (under the Clinton I actually like) pretty much hit it on the head with this short blog post
It’s a shame the Democratic candidates for president feel they have to make trade – specifically NAFTA – the enemy of blue-collar workers and the putative cause of their difficulties. NAFTA is not to blame. Consider the numbers. When NAFTA took effect, Ohio had 990,000 manufacturing jobs. Two years later, in 1996, it had 1,300,000 manufacturing jobs. The number stayed above a million for the rest of the 1990s. Today, though, there are about 775,000 manufacturing jobs in Ohio. What happened? The economy expanded briskly through the 1990s. Then it crashed in late 2000, and the manufacturing jobs lost in that last recession never came back. They didn’t come back for two reasons: In some cases, employers automated the jobs out of existence, using robots and computers. In other cases, employers shipped the jobs abroad, mostly to China – not to Mexico.
You should read the rest of it, its only four paragraphs long.