Blogging since 1998. By David Wertheimer

Category: Personal (Page 19 of 25)

Boring!

One of the more challenging aspects of keeping a blog is keeping it fresh and interesting. A general more-is-more property applies: the more frequently one posts, the easier it is to find subjects worth writing about, primarily because the point of reference is more immediate.

Right now I could very easily post about the dog-sitting I’m doing this weekend, or the NHL playoffs, which I’m following more alertly this season than I have in years. But as they haven’t previously been covered in this space, so tidbits like “the dogs are passed out now, Rudy pressed against my leg, Charley across the bed as always, but a little jealous nonetheless” will have no frame of reference. Ever notice how you have less to say to your best friend that you haven’t spoken to in a year than you do your neighbor that you see every morning? That’s the topicality problem facing the Ideapad of late.

My aim, as noted here a good five years ago, is simple: keep writing. But my once-every-two-weeks items have a necessarily different angle than the typical 10-times-a-day personal blog seen online. We’ll see if I can’t work on this site’s focus in the coming months.

Reflection

Five years ago today on the Ideapad: “It is enough for you to know that I am dizzily happy these days.”

Today? More on the side of contented than vertiginous, to be accurate, but no less happy. Owning a dog will do that to you.

I am also drawn to post right above that one: “One cannot understate the elation of shopping for pants after a successful diet and discovering that all the pants at one’s usual size are, suddenly, too big in the waist.” Apparently the first week of May 2001 was a good time to be me. (Note to self: keep dieting!)

Moxie

Me, October 2000: “But man, the bread is good.”

Me, March 2002: “They bought two petit baguettes and a pair of croissants and a pain au chocolat. … They ate their breakfast in relative quiet, drinking the bottled water instead of the champagne, enjoying their last few hours in the Parisian spring air..”

Me, February 2005: “Voila!—your baguette is piping hot and quite wonderful.”

I am back in Paris, and you, dear reader, have no idea how fucking hard it is to observe Passover right now.

Transitory

If you’re looking for me, I’m in New York for a few hours today (and yesterday), mid-step between vacation (out of the continental U.S.) and travel for business (also outside the States), in what seems like perpetual motion. Three trips to three different locations for three-fourths of a four-week span is more tiring than expected. Still fun, though.

So much time and so little to do…. Strike that, reverse it.

In short

Because it’s been awhile:

~ How are you? Me, I’m ready to diet and exercise more regularly. I hope to go to yoga (yoga! for the second time!) tonight.

~ Somehow I made it through the past two weeks without posting about the weather. The latter half of January was way too warm for my tastes. What will July bring?

~ Remind me to tell you sometime about my jinxed Hawaii vacation.

~ One of the few consistent joys in life is owning a dog. (You know, this guy.)

~ Go Steelers!

The year in cities

Jumping on the meme, here’s my 2005 list (one or more nights in each location, * indicates multiple nonconsecutive visits):

New York, NY

Paris, France

Livingston, NJ *

New City, NY *

Palm Beach, FL

Schroon Lake, NY

Rockport, MA

Cape May, NJ

London, England

Rome, Italy

Florence, Italy

Lancaster, PA

Longboat Key, FL

Palm Beach Gardens, FL

Pretty thin year for me, in the scheme of things (hey, I did this in 2004 too).

This year promises to be more exciting: already on my agenda are Honolulu, Maui, and Lanai, Hawaii; Santa Barbara, CA; Rio Grande, Puerto Rico; and Edgartown, MA, plus several repeats from 2005.

On work environments

Some of us make our careers in traditional ways. I, for example, work on the Internet, and am at a desk or in a conference room much of the day.

My wife, on the other hand, does stuff like this:

Elephant

Food poisoning

Ever have food poisoning? Let me tell you about food poisoning.

Food poisoning is having what you think is a good meal and going to sleep as though your life will be normal the next day, even though you are about to forget the definition of the word “comfortable” for the next two days. Then it’s waking up and thinking something is wonky in your stomach, and maybe dinner didn’t sit right, but you didn’t eat the four-cheese appetizer, so what’s the big deal?

Next comes a few hours of internal wooOOooOOooOOoo, as though your stomach is working hard to keep things running properly, coupled with weird waves of “man I just don’t feel good” that don’t quite match a stomachache but they’re coming on stronger and stronger and ew is that nausea? because nausea is just the last thing you want to deal with and maybe if you had some flat Coke you could calm down a bit, or maybe a nap is a good idea.

Ah, and then you’ll get the idea that you should power through your queasiness and just eat something, because maybe you just need a fresh base in your system. This is usually the fatal error. It doesn’t take long before your insides figure it out: “that’s it, we need a full evacuation, stat.”

A few minutes later you find yourself crouched in front of a porcelain bowl, food coming out of the wrong end of your body, ignoring the normal exit routes and infiltrating your nostrils, with none of the “thank goodness that’s over I feel better now” that often accompanies such a session, and that’s when the realization sets in: this is food poisoning.

From there it mercilessly goes downhill. You spend the next 24 hours drifting in and out of sleep, lying virtually immobile in your bed because shifting sides only encourages the sickness to emerge. Every hour or two you return to your knees, your body forcing you to push all remnants of external substance out of your system, your body straining and convulsing relentlessly, your face dripping with sweat, your body teaching you where the phrase “violently ill” originated.

Every episode, every moment is painful: not just the vomiting but the coughs and and the tiredness and the muscle strains in your neck and your chest that will linger for days. Your head hurts, your mouth goes dry, your nose bleeds. You get hot, you get chills, you perspire continuously. You burst capillaries around your temples, or maybe on your eyelids or, if you’re really hard-core, directly in your eyeballs, causing weird red welts in your eyes or even filling the whites of your eyes with blood that lingers for weeks after the sick leaves your body.

And then there’s the comedown, once you’ve gone nine or 12 hours without retching and 30 or more hours without food, when you force yourself to eat that first saltine and a few sips of flat cola, which aren’t the least bit appetizing and serve only to strike fear deep within you, that maybe you’re still under the poison spell and are tempting your stomach to strike back; and those blissful moments a few hours later when you finally, finally rediscover hunger.

This, dear reader, is food poisoning. I should know: I’ve endured it twice, most recently this week, conveniently timed to obliterate the bulk of a vacation in Florida.

EMPLOYEES MUST WASH HANDS: if only.

Horn toot

Not only is the design and programming on this site ancient, the whole concept is, too: Tuesday marks the Ideapad’s seventh birthday. Been a bit quiet in the main column of late, but the linklog on the right is busy as usual.

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