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Archive for October, 2006

Not Everyone Needs to be Thankful

Posted by danleone on October 31st, 2006

Anyone who knows me, knows all too well that I begin most conversations with “I used to be an EMT and…” Then I try to relate it to whatever conversation we are having. It doesn’t matter if we are talking about scone recipes, I have a way of tying it into being an EMT.

 This is very much in line with my life’s philosophy of “The older I get, the better I used to be.”  For those that know me, the conversation usually ends there as most of them have already left the table: “Oh no, here he goes again remembering the good ol’ days.” But occaisionally, read that as twice, I get someone who truly gives a crap about my tales of guts and glory. They even go so far as to ask me the usual array of questions; “What was the grossest thing you ever saw?” being the number one item on my EMTFAQ.

I have no problems bringing up tales of body parts and putrefaction; gunshots and stabbings;  man’s capacity for violence. But the reality is that when I reflect in my own head about  some of my calls, it is not blood and guts that stick out in my mind. It is never funny tales of people needing medical attention while having sex. It is never lurid stories of naked coeds at BU drunk for the first time, passed out in their bathtubs (actually….).

What I think about the most; the story that has stayed in my brain, my heart and deep in my gut was a call I got on Thanksgiving day. We got the call as a man with chest pain. We were basic EMTs so I knew we simply had to do the usual treatment of “O2 and screw.” When we arrived on scene, we could smell the Thanksgiving feast from outside. The kitchen looked like every kitchen in your mind’s eye.  It was a kitchen that had good memories absorbed into the walls. This was a kitchen where love permeated the curtains as much as the smell of dinner.

But we weren’t here to look at drapes. At the kitchen table, there was a man, a giant of a man. In front of him was a plate, maybe a platter of food with all the Thanksgiving fixings partially eaten. The man clearly wasn’t thinking about the cranberry sauce. He was clutching his chest, his skin was pale and he was sweating. He was not happy.

This was exactly like the fifty other calls we got that week for fat guys with chest pain. But this one was different. This man was surrounded by the typical screaming wife. His beautiful daughter was obviously distraught but she kept going back to the stove to make sure nothing was burning. They obviously loved and cared for this man. His son was also in the room. This boy was about sixteen years old and he clearly had his father’s big-bone genes. He was wearing a baseball cap and looked like every other athletic kid.

This boy just sat there staring into his father’s eyes. His mouth was open and he said little. I bet he still held the fork in his hand. It was at this point that I felt something unique. Instead of the adrenaline rush following trauma or the feeling of nausea just thinking about how badly people can smell, I felt pure empathy for this boy. Here he was, simply stunned that his dad was in pain. This was the man who was supposed to be immortal. I imagined that they were on the front lawn earlier that morning throwing a football. I imagined they had a heart-to-heart and discussed  the boy’s plan for college and career choice. I imagined this boy looked up to his father and absorbed his politics and outlook. This was the man he dreamed he would grow up to be. Now the boy was faced with his father’s mortality for the first time. Now, it was his father that needed help. His father was not superman and he was not invincible. Now, his father was fragile and vulnerable. He will probably live with the usual dire wanring from the doctor to lose weight and exercise and hopefully he heeds those warnings. But to this boy, everything has changed. He will probably have to help his dad to the bathroom following cardiac surgery. He will need to walk with him to get exercise and pretend nothing is wrong as they talk about the Patriots. On Sundays, instead of the buffalo wings and chile, I see them eating come crudite and the dad abstaining from the dip while the son shovels it into his mouth. Everything is different now and no one knows it yet.

This is not a very coherent story, i realize, but it was in my head so here it is.

Thanks for listening.

She Really Said It

Posted by danleone on October 30th, 2006

With Halloween being right around the corner, our lunch group was discussing our favorite candy. Someone mentioned that they like Mounds and Almond Joys. Looking over at one of our friends and noticed she was deep in thought. Then out of her mouth came the most wonderful thing I ever heard:

“Oh yeah, I like those too but I can never remember which one has the nuts.”

Ummmmm……maybe the one with the word ALMOND in it!

Story: Could It Be Her?

Posted by danleone on October 29th, 2006

The long staight red hair looked and felt like a dagger being withdrawn from his chest. He has only seen hair this red and this straight in one other place; his dreams. This was beyond a “thing” he had for red hair. This was the very reason for having this “thing” in the first place. Amidst the stacks of books at the Barnes and Noble there she was; sitting with her legs crossed exactly as she used to cross them; at her ankles. Her posture was ballet-dancer upright and her neck was still as long and pale and utterly visible as he remembered it. She carried a handbag that revealed money was not an object because it was covered in someone else’s monogram. She was one of those women that knew what “season” she was and everything she wore reflected that. Her earthy browns and oranges could only look good on her transparent skin and flaming hair. She was reading a magazine that revealed nothing about her intellect. People magazines were neatly placed in the wicker basket next to her couch. She would always be a star-struck child that was as much interested in the latest Hollywood scandal as she was in Mozart. The Marriage of Figaro was her favorite….her favorite anything, and it became his too soon after they met. Whatever was in her head, he wanted to know it too. He read librettos and tried to quote Shakespeare with the same ease as she. He read non-fiction and eventually could spew off the latin names of birds by merely listening to their calls as they walked through the woods together. All this was done for the woman sitting not twenty feet from him. A woman that he hadn’t seen in fifteen years. All this for the woman that loved someone else.

But fifteen years can and should change a face. The woman he was watching looked exactly like she did when they broke up in anger so long ago. It was if this was the day after their explosive ending. He remembered the intensity, the screaming, the tears as he was being told in a million different ways that it was over. When she turned to leave, he knew that she didn’t mean it. She really loved him but it was clear that she was not going to get out of her situation for at least one of those million reasons. He couldn’t let that happen, but had no choice now. She drove away.

With S.W.A.T-like precision, he weaved around the stacks to get a better view. His heart beating into his throat as he wondered if there were cameras watching his actions. He noticed that she never looked up despite having tried a few times to cough out her name, “Jean!” while pretending to pull a book off the top shelf. She never blinked. But she didn’t look up because her name wasn’t Kris or that she didn’t hear him. No, Jean was always the ice princess. As cool as a frozen cucumber. For those very select few that were allowed into her ice castle, she was a normal human being with glimpses of a giddy child. For the rest of the world, she was the very definition of cold.

He played out the entire meeting in his head. He noticed that she still had her wedding ring on so either she was still married to him or she married someone else soon after their breakup. Whatever the case, this guy might still be in the store. He looked around at the magazine racks and noticed a few potential husbands. Possibly that guy trying to hide tha fact, not very well I might add, that he is reading a Playboy magazine. He tucks it facing the wrong way into the wrong section of the racks and turns around. He is pretty enough to be her husband and he definitely looks like she purchases his clothes.

Then, without notice, she stood up, tossing the magazine to the bench and began walking. Perhaps she did see her lurker and she was planning on getting away from her husband to meet in some obscure corner of the store. He was already beginning to think that the science fiction section was a good place to talk without being interruped. If even for a few seconds.

He raced around trying not to lose her. She walked, pretend browsing style, making eye-contact with only book bindings. He was in the very next row and tried to follow her sound as it moved down the aisle. He rounded the corner and misjudged her proximity because she was rounding the corner at the same time. This was not the way he had dreamt about meeting her. They stood only a couple of feet apart from each other for only a few seconds but it seemed like an hour. Awkwardly, he said, “Jean?” She stared some more and then said, “No.” “Oh, um, sorry,” he said as she walked past him and out of the store…alone.

I hate the word “rural”

Posted by danleone on October 27th, 2006

No matter how much I try, my mouth does not wrap around this word. I also can’t say “mirror” or “surely;” forget about it. My head would pop if I was forced to say, “Surely, the rural worcestershire sauce mirrors the urban sauce.”

Free Your Mind With FreeMind!

Posted by danleone on October 24th, 2006

…and to keep playing with the word, Freemind is FREE!!! (If anyone knows me, they know I am not generous with my multiple exclamation points.
FreeMind is a mind-mapping software that I recently discovered. Within minutes, I was able to navigate without needing the mouse (which I think makes all the difference in the world). I was able to successfully use the tool for two very different projects I am working on; one is a semi-technical process I am doing at work and the other is a brainstorming session I applied to a book that I am writing.

I think I learned of mind-mapping (I assume it was called Brainstorming at the time) years ago. I remember enjoying the process of problem-solving without needing to stop to self-edit or spend too much time thinking about things. I essentially, allowed my brain to free up while my hands merely followed along for the ride. It was liberating though I don’t think I had any epiphanies.

I wasn’t thinking about much except for trying to find out more excuses not to write. The running gag in the house is that I am always “begining to get ready to start doing something.” In the old office analogy, I was very good at rearranging pencils. Since, I cannot rearrange my keyboard without making me even more confused, I have replaced the rearranging with surfing the internet on a quest to find “The Perfect Novel Writing Tool.” Amidst downloading everything from YWriter to NewNovelist to signing up for online word processors, like Writely, I would do anything to not write out of fear.

Well the fear of writing has been replaced by the fear of not writing and so it was time to get serious. Just as I was about to turn away from my distractions, I was distracted by this article. My life will never be the same again.

Installation was a breeze and I followed a couple of links to remind myself what mind mapping was. Once that was done, I quickly glanced at the Help documents and was on my way. I have never used other mind-mapping sowftware but really felt that I was on to something with FreeMind. I began with my novel. I have been struggling with figuring out which direction things should go. When you begin with FreeMind, the first thing you realize is that the “nodes know.” The nodes are what it is all about. The nodes are the groups, branches or forks that make up your mind-map. You create them by hitting Insert or Enter depending on where you are on the tree.

Within minutes, I was creating a functional, practical and very beautiful mind-map. I got used to the keyboard shortcuts very quickly. The reality is that if you are going to be brainstorming, you need to have a way to get stuff onto “paper” as quickly as possible. Your brain is moving so fast that if you had to stop and click, all the juicy bits of consciousness slips into nothingness.

The problem was that I really do not feel that I was brainstorming. I found myself spending a lot of time wondering how to place all the pieces together and I never got used to formatting the text or colors without using the mouse. This made me spend too much time in a state of “not-brainstorming” combined with stewing over whether a node edge should be cyan or deep green.

What I ended up with was a beautiful mind-map of my novel. In the center was the title “The Son of His Father” and the major nodes were plot, new directions, voice and tools. The plot section is generally a description of where I want this book to go. New Directions was a free-for-all, true brainstorming session of different ideas from a simple story of unrequited love to a Cold War Era Russian invasion…anything goes. Voice was simply a debate I was having over what voice to use in the novel and tools was filled with all those various time-wasters I have been downloading lately.

I understand FreeMind can export into XML for display on the web. Way cool, but I have not tried it…yet.

So, in conclusion, I am not sure of the psychology of mind-mapping; clearly it is designed for people who need this style of problem solving. Others may find it pointless. As for this minute, I am my allegiance is to FreeMind as it was my first.

Now to find more free writer’s tools…oh wait, I am supposed to be writing!

My kids need to get out of the city more often…

Posted by danleone on October 22nd, 2006

While going on a long drive in the “country” (read that as the rich, homogenous, white, SUV-infested country), my 5 year old son saw a group of horses and shouted “Look at the elephants!”

Remind me to stare at this on Decemeber 31st

Posted by danleone on October 21st, 2006

I have just spent 10 minutes watching this What do I call this?

NaNoWriMo?

Posted by danleone on October 21st, 2006

For anyone that has thought about writing a novel (who hasn’t?), but has been too scared to actually sit down and do it, beginning November 1 and running through midnight November 30, writers from all over the world will be participating in an event where the sole goal is to write 50,000 words or 175 pages. According to their website, National Novel Writing Month (aka NaNoWriMo) states:

National Novel Writing Month is a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing. Participants begin writing November 1. The goal is to write a 175-page (50,000-word) novel by midnight, November 30.

Valuing enthusiasm and perseverance over painstaking craft, NaNoWriMo is a novel-writing program for everyone who has thought fleetingly about writing a novel but has been scared away by the time and effort involved.

Because of the limited writing window, the ONLY thing that matters in NaNoWriMo is output. It’s all about quantity, not quality. The kamikaze approach forces you to lower your expectations, take risks, and write on the fly.

Make no mistake: You will be writing a lot of crap. And that’s a good thing. By forcing yourself to write so intensely, you are giving yourself permission to make mistakes. To forgo the endless tweaking and editing and just create. To build without tearing down.

Well, I have spent the last year writing 110 pages, so I am easily going to find a million excuses not to accomplish this. But it appeals to me because at this very moment, the reason that I am not able to proceed is that I really am not sure how the next few scenes are supposed to go. I can think beyond that for a little while but I quickly l get lost again. I truly have no idea how to proceed. I also have been tempted to go back rewrite everything I have done in a different voice. With the NaNoWriMo event, I have permission to keep from making the big commitment to my “real” novel and allow myself the creative outlet to try new things.

Does anyone have any personal experience doing this?

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Call Me a Coffee Snob

Posted by danleone on October 20th, 2006

As a wise man once said:

A morning without coffee is like sleep.

I admit that I am a coffee snob. I don’t have two pennies to rub together but I subscribe to a monthly delivery of Gevalia Cofee. Not only is this a great way to get a free coffee maker out of the deal, but it truly is superior coffee. At precisely 5 AM, my coffee maker comes to life just before I do and grinds and then brews my coffee. My taste buds are so refined that I can distinguish between the pure joy of my morning brew and the utter swill in my cafeteria at work.

On that rant, I wanted to “espress” two of my biggest pet peeves regarding coffee:

  1. The heavenly infusion of fine ground coffee and hot water under pressure is called “ESPRESSO”, it is not “expresso.” Someone working in a coffee shop actually corrected me and said that is how it is pronounced in English. WHAT!?
  2. When I am paying nearly two dollars at Starbucks for two ounces of liquid, please do not automatically assume that I wanted it “to go” and put it in a 12 ounce paper cup! You might as well spit in a glass and give it to me. At the two local Starbucks, I have walked in and clearly and cheerfully asked for a “for-here doppio” (double-shot of espresso in a porcelain demitasse) and they proceed to brew it into the paper cup. Can you stop and listen to me? This is not a 20 ounce chug of coffee that I am going to stroke all day and reheat in a microwave everytime the temperature drops below a certain temperature (insert wretching sounds here). This is something that I want to drink while walking out the door. By the time I get to the front of the store, I want to drop off the demitasse in that black tub where patrons put their used glassware (don’t get me started on the need to bus our own table). It is very simple since THAT IS WHAT THE WORD ESPRESSO MEANS - FAST!

I understand that in the grand scheme of things, when the universe begins to collapse on itself, my little rant about coffee will not mean that much but neither will reading about it in my blog.

Thanks for listening.

Pet Peeve 369

Posted by danleone on October 19th, 2006

Those annoying business cliches that people use when they have no idea what they are talking about! I went to a sales meeting in May and from a single presentation, here is what I heard:

“moving the needle”
“move this product through the gates”
“we have sharpened our pencils”
“we have to execute on all levels”
“we have pockets of success”
“we will use this as kind of an eye chart” - I don’t even know what that means!
“demographic or age buckets”
“forward thinking”
“penetrate the distribution and maximize the market”
“sell at the margin-enhanced price”
“the big uptick will be in….”
“everyone needs to be fully sampled”
“this is just a snapshot”
“look at the competive landscape”
“look at the metrics and incentivize…”
“sell the hot bag” - ????!!!!!
“gaining traction”
“going forward”
“as per…”

and my all-time stomach turning, “peeling the onion”

This is from one person during one presentation! Once he started speaking, I completely disregarded the purpose of the presentation and began copying everything down. My hands hurt.

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What Holds Me Back From Writing?

Posted by danleone on October 15th, 2006

What holds me back from writing is the knowledge, stuck firmly in my head, that I could never be the best at it. No matter how much I like to write, no matter how intense the story burns itself into my mind’s eye, I am still never going to be the best writer. I have never read another author and said to myself “I could have done this. I could write better than this.” I wouldn’t be so arrogant. Instead, I am left with severe self doubt and that perhaps I am a pretender or even a fraud. Not only to those around me, but a fraud especially to myself. Sincere question: If you cannot be a Hemingway, Joyce, Fitzgerald or a Shakespeare then why write at all? I sincerely have no expectations that I could ever be as good. I am just trying to face all my obstacles with courage and stop finding excuses.

I now realize that this has held me back from many of my pursuits. For example, I love the game of chess. I taught my nine year old how to play when he was three and he handily destroys me. I want to play online with adults and I stop myself because I know that I could never be the best at it. I would be embarassed if my opponet “found out” that I wasn’t that good. This is due in part because I would not even want to devote the insane amount of time needed to study chess enought to be mediocre player and I could never aspire to the level of the child “prodigies” (in quotes because I am not even sure there is such a thing).

But how absurd are the last two paragraphs? Am I seriously thinking that I need to be a Hemingway or a Waitzkin in order to find pleasure in these endeavors? Of course not but this is in fact what holds me back from so many things in life. From writing to chess to video games to playing an instrument to science to marathon running to cooking to whatever, I have, probably unconsciously, told myself that since I cannot be the best I should perhaps I should just not even start.

This is not to say I am a perfectionist. Far from it. I know perfectly well how much of a waste of time most struggles for perfection can be. Nor do I really believe that people cannot find enjoyment in these things without being on a quest for perfection. Clearly there can be one “best” at anything. I am simply realizing for the first time in my life that perhaps I have been holding myself back.

Thanks to BoTR (Both of My Readers) for listening!

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Deciding Which Tool to Use for Posting

Posted by danleone on October 14th, 2006

So I have my blog up and running again. No big deal as the only person that missed it was me and both of my readers (from now on referred to as BoMR). There are a million hurdles (read that as excuses) to keeping my blog current with interesting content. The biggest hurdle is that I may not have anything interesting to say. Assuming that BoMR really do care what I write, then the other hurdle is finding the opportunity to write. My job is to try to make that as easy as possible. I knew that I did not like WordPress’ post editor (no good reason, just another excuse) and so I was looking for another method to get my posts…um, posted. I have at least two and possibly more laptops that I use on a daily basis and I need to be as spontaneous as possible with the postings so I knew I did not want to download a client to these laptops. I wanted something to be online but allow me the freedom to act at a moment’s notice.

I knew people were successfully using an application called BlogJet so what I did is what I usuall do when I know that a product isn’t free or isn’t precisely what I am looking for; I do a Google search, in quotes, like this: “Better than BlogJet.” I do this with whatever I am searching for. I found GIMP by searching for “Better than PhotoShop” and am still looking at the eight bajillion results from searching for “Better than Dreamweaver”

Using this sophisticated method of finding free, or open source software, I stumbled upon Performancing for Firefox. I am typing this post in it right now. As I seem to have every Firefox extension invented and not yet invented, I knew this was my tool. It was a trvial matter to get this installed on the various laptops I use.

Having eliminated any possibility of finding excuses not to write, I am poised, fingertips hovering over the keyboard to wtrite my twice a year post.

For BoMR, the posts will go something like this: Bush Sucks or There is no God. Then someone will comment with an even pithier reply, “You Suck” or “You don’t believe in god because you have not opened your heart to him.”

Don’t you just love the blogosphere?!

OK, now how do I post this? Oh yes, I see the “Publish to Cafe Leone” button. Here it goes…..

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The Brain is an Amazing Thing

Posted by danleone on October 12th, 2006

I cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mind. Aoccdrnig to a rseearch taem at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn’t mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sltil raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.
Such a cdonition is arppoiaprtely cllaed Typoglycemia.

How Not to Make Sense….

Posted by danleone on October 10th, 2006

I just received an email from our IT department that listed a bunch of benefits to some network changes that were being done over the weekend. Here is one of the bullet points:

Business Continuity Enablement

WTF!? Is “enablement” even a word? Perhaps he could have just said, “Non-disturbative Transactionalness”

Instead of Writing…

Posted by danleone on October 9th, 2006

At this moment, the house is relatively quiet; the baby goats are in front of the television (yes, I am as surprised as you are that they are not arguing about what to watch), the coffee has been brewed and I am in front of the computer. It is a cool day in Boston; that time of the year when you wonder whether to turn on the heat at night but by noon it feels like I should be on the beach smelling like coconut suntan lotion.

So, of course, I must be writing this post with the laptop literally on my lap, cozied on the couch, sipping on coffee and letting my fingers spew forth words of greatness to my novel-in-progress. Well, you would think so but you would be wrong. I have been trying to write a story for the last year and I should be taking advantage of any free time to continue writing but it seems I can come up with a million excuses, reasons and downright sel-deceptions not to write.

The magic of Firefox brower is that I can do tabbed browsing. I have exactly 15 tabs open right now, including the online word processing tool that I use for my novel. Here is what I have been looking doing instead of writing:

  1. Google search for “troubleshooting your wireless network”
  2. Gmail
  3. WordPress, obviously as I need to type this post somewhere.
  4. blinklist.com - there is nothing like “social bookmarking” to validate my bookmark choices.
  5. dreamhost.com - trying to point cafeleone.com and danleone.com at cafeleone.net
  6. Google Calendar - I would die without this open 24/7
  7. RuneScape - After watching the recent South Park episode, I have been intrigued by mmorpg’s so I was just poking around.
  8. The Mathematics Portal on Wikipedia.org
  9. Ebay search for “slide rules.” - not sure why, but I really want to own one of these. (Yes, I used to use one a million years ago)
  10. Google search for “homemade hot sause” - I have about 12 habanero peppers literally burning a hole in my refrigerator and I thought it would be neat to make my own sauce.
  11. The Heroes TV show’s website. I am not sure why, but so far I love this show!
  12. Google search for “Order Approval Workflow” - for work
  13. alternet.org - for all my bleeding heart news.
  14. New York Times archived crossword puzzle - I LOVE CROSSWORD PUZZLES!
  15. Google search for “Slow cooker recipes” - just purchased one of those dang things in the hopes that my life will be made so much easier despite having to plug in yet another device into the two outlets in the kitchen.

In addition to these windows, I have iTunes open and creating yet another playlist “Dan’s music to listen to while writing.”

So guess what I am not doing? Just add another day to my non-writing of my novel.

What does everyone else do to stay focused?

Another Quote of the Day

Posted by danleone on October 6th, 2006

Overheard at the microwave at work:

“I had to throw away my leftover eggroll because it was a fried shrimp.”