Friday


28
Sep 12

Oh, lovely, sweet Friday

Today I purchased the 2013 sticker for my car tag. Take that, Mayans.

My DMV experience lasted 33 minutes, which was the longest I’ve ever waited in my two years visiting this particular office. But it is the end of the month.

Usually the post office here takes longer than the DMV. I’m pretty sure I’ve tapped my toe in our post office for longer than 33 minutes.

This was nowhere near my longest DMV experience. I seem to mention the DMV every year. Once, in Bessemer, I read the better part of a book while in line. I seem to recall I took a two-hour lunch break to mutter at the DMV in Homewood one year. The other times I’ve bothered to quantify it have all been four, six, 20 minutes or noted as “painless.” I checked.

I’ve had a big week, coupled with a long few days, where I did too many things and now my shoulder is informing me I regret those decisions. Can’t wait to tell the ortho about it next week.

Suffice it to say, because I’m tired of even writing about it: I’ve figured out it takes precious little to aggravate my collarbone, the muscles in my one shoulder and, when that really gets going, across my back into the other shoulder and up into my neck. Maybe I should do less.

Maybe I should do like these guys:

hammocks

This is studying on the Samford quad. Hammocks are a big part of the culture here. I’m surprised the administration allows it to continue, but I’m proud they do. I’m also surprised the hammock scenes don’t make their way into more of the promotional literature they send out.

I should write a memo about that …

Nah. I’m taking the rest of the evening off from writing.

Tomorrow: the return of an old friend!


21
Sep 12

College town atmosphere

Last week we saw a tiger. Some weeks we go see the raptors fly. There’s not much to beat a college town during the fall, and precious few are as great as Auburn. The town is full of great atmosphere, and the night before a game you can feel the buzz work its way under your skin. Every small town has their wonderful and unique personalities. We get that plus lots of visitors and lots of athletics. The fall is a special time.

These are the football gameday buttons from last week:

spirit

This week’s say Sad Hatter, in honor of LSU’s Les Miles, who has been dubbed a mad hatter. See? Wordplay.

There’s also the joke about LSU fans and corn dogs. Four years ago I saw this as we walked into the stadium:

corn dog

Tonight, though, while dining out with a friend who’s returned to town for the weekend we saw this creation from Dr. Magical Balloons at Niffer’s:

spirit

Jeremy wrote about this tonight. Already it is the third return on Google when searching “Balloon guy Auburn, AL.”

A few more examples of his work can be found here and here and here. Someday I’ll shoot a video interview with him. “Recreate your most unusual request. Fastest trick in your bag. Can we play stump the balloonist?”

What would stump a balloon bender?


14
Sep 12

What did you do today?

This evening I met a caterpillar:

caterpillar

He was exploring the bricks on the side of a building:

caterpillar

I managed to get four quick shots to make his acquaintance. And then he fell off the wall. Kids looked for him, but he’d gone into hiding before they could seek him out.

We also met a tiger:

Ceylon

I took a picture of our friends Kim and Murph:

tigerpic

Ceylon and Fatima live at the Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo. They visited Auburn tonight as part of a fund raiser. You stand in line for a few hours, make a small donation and you get to pet the tiger cubs and take a picture or two.

They had a dark setup, and they wouldn’t let you pop a flash. These are the pictures their photographer shot:

tigerpic

tigerpic

Turns out they raised $7,100 for the zoo.

We spent the evening hanging out with friends, and then had pizza just before Mellow Mushroom closed. It was a great evening. There was a caterpillar after all.

How was your day?


7
Sep 12

News with which to start the weekend

It was a steaming hot summer afternoon, I remember because I was on my bike. The Yankee was following me as I pumped over a slight hill, at the height of my meager powers. She was saving herself for a race two days later.

We got out to our turnaround spot, near a restaurant we visit once or twice a year, on the spot where German POWs were held during World War II. I was drenched, but loving every minute of the exertion, loving that it didn’t feel so much like work. It felt so good to feel good.

She decided she’d had enough — there was that race, where she would finish third after all — and asked me to come back and pick her up. I sprinted out ahead of her to grab the car and save her legs and keep her out of the heat.

She stopped at a country store that has a porch swing. A kindly gentleman bought her a drink for no other reason than he was a kindly gentleman and there are a lot of them here. She waited for me and, while sitting in the shade, she learned a trial that we were planning on using as the operational basis of a piece of research was being delayed.

So for the rest of the week we brainstormed about a new idea. Surely there must be something. After a few days, I think on another ride, we seized on another idea. A few days later we put this new plan into action.

We spent a few evenings immersed in the idea and then about two weeks writing it for a journal submission. The reviewers sent it back with suggestions. We spent another few days improving it, and ultimately edited the piece down to 10,000 words.

This evening we learned that paper has been accepted for publication. I was cutting up a cantaloupe at the time.

We’re pretty happy about that, as you might expect. The journal article I mean. I’m sure we’ll get to the fruit eventually.

The Yankee did a great job on the paper. I wrote a few sections of it. She reworked some things and I edited it a couple of times. We make a good team.

We’re celebrating tonight with cupcakes.


31
Aug 12

Where I gingerly complain

My physical therapist spent his entire time driving his elbows and forearms into my shoulders. It felt like he was just grinding my bones away.

His job is to assist in regaining a range of motion — which is doing very well, thank you — and minimize the impact of scar tissue. Instead he just performed top rope elbow drops on my shoulders.

It helped, a little, I suppose. By the end of the day I could feel it in my hands and in my head. Ice wasn’t doing anything, so I switched to heat. Then I tried the foam roller — great for legs after a long ride or a hard workout. I just wedged that between my shoulder blades and hoped for the best.

So, now, ready for bed, I feel better than I have all day, which has been less than desirable.

Sorry to complain, but muscles that aren’t spasming are sore because of the strain. That’s just wrong.

Football season is upon us and I’m posting photographs we found last week while sifting through archives in Auburn University’s collection in honor of this most festive time of the year. This one is Dean James Foy and an unnamed young lady hanging out with, I’m guessing, either War Eagle III (1960-1964) or War Eagle IV (1964-1980).

Foy

I mentioned Dean Foy, who died just two years ago, in a roundtable piece for TWER the other day. It has been broken up into segments here and here and here. I find it hysterical, though, that the Dean would get no closer to the eagle.

But then I remember what the raptor experts always say. “He’s thinking ‘If I were bigger, I would eat you.'” Good advice to remember.