Sunday, December 30, 2007

BMFRTE Day 2: Auburn, Maine

Sat 8/18, noon, Auburn, Maine

We get up, and work on rustling up some grub. Naturally, this occurs at our Mecca of eating establishments: Denny's. Years ago I achieved a personal goal of seeing all 50 states, leaving me to move on to my next goal: eating at a Denny's in all 50 states. Eating at this one in Maine means I'm certainly more than half way there. Sure, it's not the noblest of goals, but it's going to be easier to achieve than becoming Pope.


Ed has to start getting ready for the wedding late this afternoon. Apparently a space has opened up at the reception, so the bride offers to Ed that he can bring me. As attractive an option as being Ed's date is, I find that I have little desire to go to a wedding where I know a grand total of one person. A part of me wants to go just on the principle that weddings = a place to dance, and turning down an opportunity to dance is a grave matter indeed, but the rest of me would rather spend the afternoon and evening doing something a lot more fun: repacking the car and trailer.

In our haste to get everything out of the apartment and into the trailer, we really did not do a great job of loading, and I ended up having to leave a bunch of stuff behind. In Keiko's office. Plus, our travel bags are wedged in in exceedingly difficult places to get out of, so extracting stuff this morning when we checked in was a nightmare. But I like the challenge of making amounts of stuff that seem impossible to fit somewhere actually do so (JOC calls me 'a savant' when it comes to that), so I tell Ed that that's my plan for the evening.

Ed, projecting Swarthy Latin Machismo.
His buddy, a nice guy whose name I don't remember, projecting Painfully Goofy White Dude.










So, as he heads off to the wedding, I head to the parking lot, where I proceed to unload everything from the trailer and the car, and organize it into piles based on relative size, weight, and probability of needing access before reaching our final destination. Then, I systematically repack everything, which results in the trailer being much better loaded, with better weight distribution, and a lot more space in the car. It only takes me about 6 hours to pull that off.

After it's all done, I shower and head for the nearest pub, to get some food. Ed texts me much earlier than I thought, so I invite him out, but it turns out that he's contacted me so early because he is suffering. This from Ed [my commentary in brackets]:

"It was a gorgeous day for a wedding... I talked with Lenny, the groom, for a while, and then got to see Jen's [the bride's] parents. Of course, I had to apologize profusely for missing lobsters the night before. [First two casualties of the BMFRTE- our leaving more than a day late caused us to miss Acadia National Park, and caused Ed to miss the rehearsal dinner, and fresh Maine lobsters.] Then back onto the trolley- and now the crazy old ladies have a few drinks in them- for more good times. I have a great conversation with the crazy old ladies... Our table is probably the only one with an average age of around 30. [~30 yr old bride + ~60 yr old groom = geriatric wedding fun. Too bad I decided to skip it.]

After some dancing and some cake, the wedding is over and we take off back to the hotel. My stomach is killing me by this time, and I don't know if it's the food, the pants that barely fit me, or the Alleve I took earlier for my shoulder (oh yeah, my left shoulder has been in excruciating pain since before we left NYC, and it's getting worse). Either way, by the time I get back to the hotel I'm doubled over in pain by these stomach cramps. So no going out for me."

So when I finally get back to our room, Ed is curled up in his bed (looking a bit worse for the wear) watching Sportscenter. [Watching Sportscenter is for Ed a lot like breathing, both in (a) how critical it is to his ability to actually survive a given day, and (b) how much time he spends doing it.] As a benefit of my perestroika of the car, I was able to extract my Mac, so I set to work burning the rest of the road trip CDs. Although I had roughly designed them, I didn't get a chance to review them or burn them past the first couple before we left NYC. That project was yet another casualty of my moving debacle.

Sunday 8/19, 2 a.m.:

To bed... CDs are burned for the next several days, and we have a big day tomorrow- the first baseball game of the trip, in Fenway!

Sunday, December 23, 2007

BMFRTE Day 1: The Revenge of MK

Sat 8/18, 12:00 a.m: Upper East Side

Ed and I drive off from 86th and 2nd ave, finally on our way. Our first stop on the way to California: Maine. As we drive off, Ed turns to me and says: "MK gave me this CD tonight, and said it was really important that we listen to it first, no matter what."

Now, part of what makes this the _Best_ Mutherfucking Road Trip Ever is that I've designed a mix for each day of the trip, in each case partly inspired by our expected location/agenda that particular day. Already, since we're leaving 2 calendar days late, we're behind by 2 mixes, but that's no problem, since there's going to be a lot of driving. So, it appears MK has given us a surprise mix. Fine, let's hear it. Below is the playlist for MK's mix:

8/18/07 Guest Mix- "Gaywads Take America" by MK

1) The Ballad of A & E - written, produced, and sung by MK
2) Falling Slowly – Glen Hansard
3) I Believe in a Thing Called love - Darkness
4) Teenage Suicide – Chris Rock
5) Crazy – Gnarls Barkley
6) Jesus Was Way Cool – King Missile
7) All Out of Love – Air Supply
8) Bitches Ain’t Shit – Ben Folds
9) Nappy Heads Remix – The Fugees
10) King of Spain – Moxy Fruvous
11) Africa
– Toto
12) King of the Road – Roger Miller

8/18, 12:02 a.m.: The FDR northbound

Ed and I are in comedic shock at the evil genius of track 1: The Ballad of A & E, which you will notice was written, produced, and sung by MK himself, using the Garage Band software on his Mac. Out of respect for the evil genius of this track, I will reproduce the lyrics here:

The Ballad of A & E

Eduardo's at the mirror
Got his hands upon his hips,
Got his money in his pocket
Got his chapstick on his lips
He's living in the city
But his parents come from Cuba
Packs his duffel full of condoms
And a bottle of lube-uh

Augustine's getting ready
Feels his penis getting hard-o
He's thinkin' 'bout the sexy time
He'll share with Eduardo
Some nights they'll make sweet lovin'
Some nights they won't budge
They've packed a lot of boxes
Now they'll pack a lot of fudge.

Their lovin' spans the universe
From Dallas to the Duomo
You can look forever
And not find two bigger homos
If they both ruled England
They'd both be the Queen
This is the ballad of Eduardo and Augustine.

Chorus:

Oh they both like balls and balls
Yes they both really like
balls, balls, balls, balls,
They, really like balls,
They really like
Balls, balls, balls, balls, balls
They're homosexuals...

They like balls
They like balls
Feed me your balls
[Hey Gus, do you like balls? I do!]

I like balls,
Give me your balls,
Mmm, I like balls,
Balls Balls Balls Balls Balls Balls Balls!

They're both pretty smart,
Each of them's a thinker.
They like when you stick your wang
Right in their sphincters.
They've done some stuff to little boys
You'd classify as heinous.
Ed made a 14 year old
Drink soup out of his anus.
All across the nation
Two bigger queers you've never seen
This is the ballad of Eduardo and Augustine.

[They're so gay, they're so gay,
They're so gay, they're so gay,
They're really gay, they're really gay,
They're really gay, they're pretty gay,

They like balls...]

I am reminded of something Laszlo said to me, early on in what is now 17.5 years of friendship: "With friends like enemies, who needs you?" Damn that MK! Thank God I have that surprise waiting for _him_ tomorrow. Curse his evil genius...

8/18, 12:08 a.m.: FDR northbound

We have made our first wrong turn of the trip, as I foolishly head west toward the George Washington bridge and California, when we are obviously heading north toward the Triborough bridge and Maine. This is actually a good sign, right? We're just getting this out of our system early...

8/18 12:10 a.m.: Harlem

I took the first exit I could off the FDR, which at this point is now called the Harlem River Drive, because it borders the Harlem river. Which borders Harlem. We are pulled over on a random side street in Harlem, looking at a map. In the middle of the night. An Indian boy, and a Cuban, with a truck and trailer visibly full of stuff. What could possibly go wrong?

Flashback: August, 1998

In the third of our cross-country road trips together, Laszlo is driving with me from Santa Monica, CA to New Haven, CT. I will be joining him at the Yale School of Management, where he will be one year ahead of me in the program. I have crammed everything I own into a large trailer and my Hyundai Elantra [my car's name: Julio. He's a low-rider, and when I have a baseball cap on and haven't shaved, I look like a cholo driving it].

Now, an Elantra is approved only for towing the smallest possible trailer, since it's a small car, but I knew I needed a trailer two sizes up from that, so I just went ahead and ordered that size. And filled it completely. And then filled up the entire inside of the Elantra with all my books. When I was done, the back end of the car and the front end of the trailer visibly sagged, barely avoiding scraping the ground. But HA! I got it all in there. No reason why this arrangement can't survive 4,000 miles of road trip.

One interesting piece of trivia from the road trip is that of the 4,000 miles we traveled, approximately 3,500 of those miles were in the rain. Including our entire trip through Death Valley, which gets like negative 2 inches of rain a year. Fortunately, there was a break in the rain just past El Paso, causing us to pull over and get some gas. While pumping the gas, I went around back to inspect the trailer, and noticed that it must have settled a little bit more once Laszlo and I added our weight to the car, because now the chains that help anchor the trailer to the car were _actually_ dragging on the ground, and in fact, by this point were worn almost completely through.

We figured it'd be a good idea to do something to keep the chains from dragging any more, but we had no rope or anything to tie the chains up with. But, since it seemed like these chains were pretty important, Laszlo and I decided to put our considerable intellects together to come up with a solution. In short order, we arrived at: go inside the gas station, buy enough sticky buns, chips, and juice to get a couple of grocery bags, and then use the plastic bags to tie the chains up. So, the remaining 3,000 miles of the trip we drove with 2,500 pounds of stuff held onto the car by grocery bags.

Although there were adventures on that trip as well, the part that really relates here is that, at about 2 a.m. one night, we came across the George Washington bridge and discovered that all traffic was being diverted off of it and into Harlem because they were doing construction. And somehow, I assume because of Laszlo's navigating (I was driving and therefore he had navigating responsibilities), we lost the thread of the surface street detour and then spent the next hour roaming around Harlem, with a car and trailer visibly full of stuff.

If you haven't read The Unbearable Lightness of Being, by Milan Kundera, I strongly recommend it. Laszlo brought it to my attention many years ago. In it there is an exchange between two friends, whose names I no longer remember:

Friend 1: Do you ever get the feeling that life is a series of endlessly repeating cycles?

Friend 2: Einmal ist keinmal. [Literally, one time is no time. i.e., if it happened once, it's as if it never happened at all]

Friend 1: Muss es sein? [Must it be so?]

Friend 2: Ja, es muss sein. [Yes, it must be so.]

8/18, 1215 a.m., Harlem:

Ed is poring over the map, and while he's at it I'm trying to figure out how to close the wayback well enough to make the damn indicator light go off. People are walking by, visibly appraising us, since it's clear we're not from these parts. I get back in the car, and we decide to go "that way".

8/18, 1225 a.m., Harlem River Drive, eastbound:

We are back on the freeway! Soon NYC will finally release me from its clutches. We are listening to "King of Spain", which, after The Ballad of A&E, is my favorite track on MK's mix. Finally, we get over the Triborough bridge and start heading toward New England.

8/18, 2 a.m., somewhere in Connecticut:

I am falling asleep. Ed takes over.

8/18, 330 a.m., exit ramp off I-95 somewhere in Massachusetts:

Ed is falling asleep. I take over. But not before dancing a little jig to get the blood flowing and wake myself up. Ed, being obnoxious, takes a picture of this, which I include here:
















I pop in the mix for 8/18: "Music for a Wedding Day"

1) True Love is the Greatest Thing in the World - The Princess Bride
2) Comes Love - Ella Fitzgerald
3) Come Away With Me - Norah Jones
4) Weekend in New England - Barry Manilow
5) Sunday Kind of Love - Etta James
6) Sunshine of Your Love - Eric Clapton
7) Passionate Kisses - Mary Chapin Carpenter
8) White Wedding - Billy Idol
9) I Knew the Bride (When She Used to Rock N Roll) - Nick Lowe
10) "This is true love" - The Princess Bride
11) If - Bread
12) Can't Help Falling - Corey Hart
13) Testimony - Willis
14) What Do You Love More Than Love - Dar Williams
15) Only the Ones We Love - Tanita Tikaram
16) Five Room Love Story - Cowboy Junkies
17) To Make You Feel My Love - Billy Joel
18) Always a Woman - Billy Joel
19) Stickshifts & Safetybelts - Cake
20) I Only Want to Be With You - Vonda Shephard
21) Storybook Love - Mark Knopfler
22) "Then love, true love, will follow you forever" - The Princess Bride

8/18, 525 a.m., somewhere in Maine:

This from Ed's journal...

"I try to nap until about 525, when I open my eyes to find we're in Maine, about 20 min. from our destination. I tell Gus to wake me up when we get there, but he replies with 'Dude, I need you to stay up with me right now- I'm dying.' So I do, but the only problem is that I'm dying too. So the last 20 minutes are rough as we are both struggling not to pass out. But we make it to Auburn, Maine (barely) at 6.a.m. I check us into the hotel- for the night that just ended."

8/18, 605 a.m., Auburn, Maine:

Gus: zzz
Ed: ZZZZ ZZZZ ZZZZ

(It's going to be a long trip if he always snores like this...)

Thursday, December 20, 2007

BMFRTE: Prologue, Part 4

Thu 8/16 10am, BMFRTE T minus 12.5 hours and counting...

After an early morning lesson, I call UHaul to verify that the trailer they told me would be available this afternoon in White Plains will actually be there. I don't want to drive all the way there and find no trailer. After a lengthy period of time on hold, I finally get through to someone, who informs me that no such trailer exists in White Plains, and seems to be a bit confused as to why I might think there would be one there (because you guys TOLD me there'd be one there just 3 days ago!), but she assures me that there is definitely a trailer in Tea Neck, NJ, that I can definitely have.

Tomorrow.

Wait, tomorrow?? We're supposed to leave TONIGHT!!! After much back and forth, it seems there is no trailer for me unless I want to drive a very long way indeed, and so I decide to accept the trailer in Tea Neck. Not that I've ever heard of Tea Neck, but apparently it's right on the other side of the river. And anyway, I have already internally conceded that I'm in no way packed enough to leave tonight anyhow.

I call Ed and let him know we're not leaving until tomorrow early afternoon. The place in Tea Neck is a gas station, Larry's Sunoco, and when I call there they say that although the gas station part opens quite early, the guy at the UHaul desk doesn't get in until 9. Awesome. I get to drive over to Jersey in rush hour traffic. At least it's a reverse commute...

1030 p.m., BMFRTE zero hour

After spending the rest of the afternoon packing, and then tutoring my last lesson in NYC at 8pm, I head back to the apartment for more packing. I mark the passage of 1030 p.m. by noting that I have officially cleared out 1 of the 4 rooms in my apartment.

3 a.m., BMFRTE T plus 4.5 hours and counting...

I'm exhausted, and looking at a couple hours sleep max, then back up to pack more and then head to Jersey. Again, Keiko has been a saint about helping. I'd be twice as far behind without her help.

8.a.m, BMFRTE T plus 9.5 hours and counting...

I head for Jersey. Keiko is off to work. Tea Neck is some little Jersey town along a little river, tucked in between a couple of freeways. I get lost briefly, and end up having to call Keiko to Google map me and get me back on track. But I do eventually get to Larry's Sunoco,where I am told the UHaul guy will be in at 9. So I wait.

At 9, Filipe the Uhaul guy shows up. We get to the business of setting up the contract, and I ask if I can extend my reservation past 10 days, since according to the BMFRTE Grand Plan, I will need the trailer 20 days. He says the system won't allow him to enter a number bigger than 12, so I'll have to call from the road once I'm a few days into the trip and extend it over the phone.

Fine. So I pay for the 12 days he can give me. I also pay for a hitch ball, so we can attach the trailer. Then Filipe asks me if I have the connector that allows the brake lights and turn signals for the car to route to the trailer. I say no, the folks on the phone assured me that you guys would have all the relevant equipment.

Well, it turns out that Larry is out of brake light connectors. But, Tony's Shell station, down on the river road, probably has them. Filipe calls over there, and they say sure. So Filipe explains to me how to get down to Tony's Shell station. It's not so close. And it's 930 already. So I jump into my car and start heading over to Joe's. As I'm pulling out of the Sunoco, Filipe comes out shouting something about River Road and River Street. But I'm in the midst of an intense recalculation of just how late this is all going to make me getting out of NYC, so Filipe's words take up a place in the mental queue, waiting for processing time.

Once I'm headed down the main road, I finish my calculation: we're not getting out of here until late afternoon. At that point, Filipe's words come crashing into the main part of my consciousness- either he said, "Don't take River Road, take River Street," or he said, "Don't take River Street, take River Road." If it's the former, then that flatly contradicts what he said to me inside the Sunoco, and I figure, if he had been contradicting himself my agile mind would surely have noticed/flagged that in some way. And, I'm well down the street now so no way am I turning around to go back and ask him that. After driving a while, I come upon River Road. I turn right, as instructed, and start looking for Tony's Shell station.

10 minutes later, it becomes clear that I am heading into a residential area that will probably stay residential until I hit Canada. I suppose there was never really any doubt it was going to play out this way.

I turn around, and backtrack to the main road, keep going down it, and in short order come across River Street. I turn right, and after another 10 minutes, I find Tony's Shell station.

When I arrive, I see a couple UHaul trucks parked in the back, and I see a guy, who projects like you would expect Tony to project, having a spirited discussion with a young woman. There is no one manning the counter inside, and only one other person who appears to be working, who is pumping gas. After all, it's Jersey, and you're not allowed to pump your own gas, because if you were, it wouldn't fit in with New Jersey's long-term goal of being the Least User-Friendly State in the Union. You can pick up on this in the state motto: "New Jersey- You Don't Like Us, And We Don't Give A Shit."

So I not-so-patiently wait for (Tony?) and this woman to finish their rather heated discussion. Since I'm close enough to overhear, I quickly pick up the gist of the discussion- the young woman has returned a UHaul truck, but in doing so, locked the keys inside the truck. Tony is saying that that means he is going to have to either call a locksmith or break a window to get in, and she's going to have to pay for that. She is indignant- why does he not have an extra set of keys?? He is trying, not very successfully, to calmly explain that there are 33,000 UHaul trucks in the system, and exactly what would make her think he has a spare for every one of them?

After listening to this for a while, with no resolution, I notice an older woman has appeared behind the counter inside. I go inside, and soon enough discover that this is Tony's wife. She listens to me explain what part I need, and says she'll go get her son, who should be able to help me. After about another 10 minutes, a greasy guy comes in, listens to me explain (again) what I need, and then disappears. After yet another ten minutes, he rematerializes, holding a part in his hand, which he appears to have taken off another vehicle. Whatever. I'll take anything as long as it works. I fork over some cash,, jump in the car, and head back to Larry's.

1030 a.m., BMFRTE T plus 12 hours and counting...

At Larry's, Filipe and I together get the trailer hitched to the car, and set up the wiring. We appear to be good to go. I get back on the road, and thankfully don't get lost on the way back. Traffic, while heavy, is not too bad either. At 1130, I am parked in front of my office, which is the first thing I am going to load. Sadly, I never actually got around to packing _anything_ in there, so Keiko comes over on her lunch break and together we get the whole office packed and loaded by 130pm. At that point, Keiko has to go back to work, and I'm looking at having to get everything I own, a sizeable chunk of which is still not packed, down 22 floors and loaded into the car and trailer.

Ed has taken the opportunity that my lateness has provided to squeeze in more tutoring, so I call him to let to tell him not to hurry- now we're not leaving until around dinnertime. I head over to the apartment to begin loading there. At the office, I'd been extraordinarily lucky to find a parking spot on the street right in front that was big enough for my SUV+UHaul trailer combo. No such luck at home. So, I did as any New Yorker does- I double-parked and put on the hazards. Since I had pulled around to the back entrance, on 87th st., I figured I had some time before anyone affiliated with NYC traffic noticed.

On the way home, Tom calls to say he's done tutoring and is willing to come over and help me load the trailer. I have always liked Tom, but his personal stock with me is rising stratospherically now. So not long after I get home, where I frantically continue to pack stuff, I get a knock at the door. I open the door, and there's Tom. And look! He seems to have brought 2 friends, whom I've never met. And look! They seem to have brought a luggage cart full of stuff. Wait... why would they _bring_ stuff?

We quickly establish that these are not, in fact, friends of Tom's. What they are, in fact, are the new guy who's moving into the apartment, and his buddy, who is helping him move in. Apparently, even though I warned my landlord that it might take me until Friday to finish moving out, and I paid him through Friday, he told this guy he could move in Friday morning.

Aside: And now, a word about finding a place to live in Manhattan...

As a veteran of finding a place to live in the city, I have noticed the following: apartments in Manhattan generally come in two basic categories. First, there are apartments which are (relatively) affordable, and basically totally unlivable. For instance, the cot in a hallway that I could rent, which came with bathroom/kitchen sharing privileges, for $800/month. I actually gave that one serious consideration, because it was the first situation that didn't fall into category 2, which is, (relatively) livable, and (completely) unaffordable. After you've seen 20 places, all of which are one or the other, you start becoming a dangerous combination of depressed/desperate.

But there is a third way, for a lucky few. New York City has a number of rent-controlled apartments. The people who have these generally hang on to them, often for life. For instance, on the floor of my building there were several people who had lived there since the 60's. Those people had apartments which were a little dumpy, since they hadn't been renovated in 40 years, but they were spacious, but with rent control the rent on them roughly 20% of the actual market value. Consequently, they were basically stuck living there forever, unless they moved away from NYC completely. More than one of them, as I got to know them, eventually said, "I hate this building, and my apartment, but I can't ever leave here because I know I'll never find a place for even twice what I'm paying here." It took living in New York City to make me finally decide what I think about rent control: a well-intentioned idea in theory, but the hidden costs of price controls render it a bad idea in practice.

In my case, I found a guy who had moved into a penthouse 1-bedroom in 1978, and then had gotten married in the early 90's and moved to Jersey so he and his family could live in a house like normal people. But, since he had a fantastic rent on that apartment, he didn't want to give it up. So, he spent the next 10+ years variously operating the apartment as a vacation rental, and occasionally subletting it if he found a guy who would tolerate his terms.

His terms, which I easily agreed to, were: I pay $1450 per month, and never interact with the building management in any way, and allow him to stay over and sleep on the sofa one night a month, and in return I get a penthouse 1-bedroom, with a (for NYC) ton of space, right across the street from work. Done and done. Of course, the reason I couldn't interact with building management in any way was that this was an illegal sublet- you're not allowed to do that with rent controlled apartments, and certainly not for more than the original lease. He was paying $1311 per month.

For me, that was an easy deal to accept. I had a bigger apartment than pretty much anyone I knew, certainly in Manhattan, who was paying less than $3000 per month. It was a doorman building, which was awesome. And right across the street from work. When he would stay over, I would either stay over at Nacole's, or, once we broke up, crash at the office on my sleeping mat, which I kept there for those 14 hour days where I would have a 25 minute break in between lessons and wanted to take a nap.

This is the kind of shit that people put up with in order to survive in Manhattan. There are so many stories so much worse. Anyway, back to the main story:

One other thing I agreed to upfront was 2 months notice for when I was going to move out. However, I gave him 3 months notice- on May 15th I told him I'd be moving out August 16th. Consequently, at the beginning of August, when my landlord called me and said, "Here's how we'll do August: you'll pay for the month in full, and if I find anyone to move in for any part of August, I'll split it with you," my reaction was: "Huh?"

My position was: since I gave you 3 months notice, we'll pro-rate August, (a) because that would be like every other renting situation I've ever heard of, and (b) because why would I pay you for a service (housing) you're not actually rendering? My landlord was quite offended. His response was: "If you get a hotel room for the night, and check out early in the morning, you don't go to the hotel manager and ask for your room rate to be pro-rated 'cause you're leaving early."

Wow.

Upon telling this to my friend and office-mate, J-Rob, he responded with: "Nice. Obviously he must have done really well on the Analogies section of the SAT."

So, after much back and forth, we agreed that I would pay him for 17 days in August, because although I was determined to leave on the 16th, I warned my landlord that if anything slipped in the schedule, it might take an extra day to get out of there. Which, as it happened, it did. My landlord, determined I guess to get at least one day of double rent out of this deal, told his new guy, Matt, that he could move in the morning of the 17th. So here we all are, 2pm on 8/17, BMFRTE T plus 15.5 hours and counting, and literally _not_one_thing_ has been moved out of the apartment and into the trailer, and this guy is here with all his worldly possessions, justifiably upset because he thought there'd be an empty apartment for him to move into, and which he had paid rent for.

Although I totally understand why he's upset, he is actually quite hostile for quite a while, and seems to be impervious to the fact that the best thing he can do right now is put his stuff in the corner, allow us to work so we can get out of here as quickly as possible, which by the way we'd ALL like to do, and go call my landlord and take it up with him. But eventually, in his slow, hostile way, he does come to grips and stops harassing me so I can work.

For the next hour, Tom and I commandeer the luggage cart and start taking down anything that can go now and putting it into the trailer. About an hour later, as we're dealing with a giant pile of boxes, in the middle of the street where I'm double-parked, the next logical thing happens: a freak summer thunderstorm comes in out of nowhere and begins pouring rain down in biblical proportions. This is awesome, because now everything is going to be soaked before being packed into a trailer that is going to be hot every day for the next 3 weeks. And it makes working that much more pleasant and efficient. For another couple of hours we work, and I am pretty much ready to promise Tom my first-born daughter, when the _next_ logical thing happens, which is, the traffic police finally discover me and threaten to tow my truck. So I have to pull around the front of the building and park down by the corner. Now we have to walk twice as far to get anything to the truck, and we can't use the luggage cart anymore because you're not allowed to be moving in and out of the front of the building.

So, the last 6 hours or so of this story of moving goes like this: additional people- Keiko, MK, and Ed, show up and all of them get conscripted into carrying things down to the truck, while I frantically pack the rest of the stuff. As we get near the end, it becomes clear that not quite everything is going to fit, and so we end up having to take a bunch of stuff over to Keiko's office, where it is going to live in a corner until I can get it or have it shipped.

On the way, we stop at my old office to leave something behind, something for my old office-mates to remember me by. I've been planning this for nearly 2 months. A couple of years ago we all had to have our pictures taken for the website at work. It was professionally done- they took about 25 pictures of each of us, and we got to pick which one went up on the site.

The day I went in to look at the pictures, I discovered that MK's pics were on the same disk as mine, so when our head of HR stepped out of her office for a few minutes, leaving me to look at my pics, I quickly looked at his. In his group was one beautiful pic, clearly taken before MK was ready, and in that moment I knew I must have this picture. I didn't know how or why, but I knew someday I would need it. So I sent myself an email with that pic attached, just before our HR person came back in her office.

About 2 months ago, a huge ugly bookshelf was taken out of the office area I shared with 6 other tutors, including MK and J-Rob. That left a giant blank white wall in the waiting area. And the first day I walked in there and saw that big blank wall, I knew why I had needed that picture so long ago.

I dug the picture out of my email, and sent it to a poster place, and had it made into a poster 4 feet wide by 5 feet tall. And this night, as we walk back from Keiko's office across the street, we go into my old office and hang that picture on the wall, along with the poem "Farewell", from the Gitanjali, by Rabindranath Tagore:

I have got my leave. Bid me farewell, my brothers!

I bow to you all and take my departure.

Here I give back the keys of my door

---and I give up all claims to my house.

I only ask for last kind words from you.

We were neighbors for long,

but I received more than I could give.

Now the day has dawned

and the lamp that lit my dark corner is out.

A summons has come and I am ready for my journey.

Here, for your viewing pleasure, is a picture of me, and MK:

It's really unfortunate that you can't see just how totally drugged out he looks in this picture here as well as you could when you were looking at the 5 foot tall version. My only regret is that I could not be there when he first walked in the next day and saw it.

Anyway, we finally finish loading and moving everything at 1030pm, BMFRTE T plus 24 hours and counting. At this point, neither I nor anyone else has had dinner, and we're now a full day behind, so what the hell, let's go have dinner. So we all troop down to my favorite diner- Gracie's, at 86th and 1st, and have a dinner that can't be beat, while I thank everyone profusely for bailing me out of my utterly pathetic attempt to be prepared to move.

And so, at midnight, officially now Sat 8/18, BMFRTE T plus 25.5 hours and counting, Ed and I found ourselves in the truck, finally ready to begin our journey.

Next time: BMFRTE Day 1, or, The Revenge of MK

Monday, December 17, 2007

BMFRTE: Prologue, Part 3

Wed 8/15, 10am, BMFRTE t-minus 36 hrs and counting...

I am frantically putting shit in boxes. I have to leave in 15 minutes to tutor. I am tutoring all day, which is craziness. I am also continuing to have to play the fill the meter game. I have had 3 close calls already, where I forgot about it and had to run out there and hope I didn't have a ticket.

11am: I come up with a brilliant Idea. I will use my phone alarm to remind me when I need to feed the meter. I pull up the alarm and efficiently change my alarm from '8' to '1'. I am a genius.

145pm: I realize the meter has expired and my phone alarm never went off. What happened?? I open my phone and realize I that although I changed the '8' to a '1', I never changed the "a.m." to "p.m."

I am retarded.

I run outside praying for another miracle. Not today, though. There's another $65 ticket. So now I'm racking up $65/day in parking fines because I'm too offended by the idea of paying one of those damn Manhattan parking garages that charges $45/day. If I don't get better at this, then at this rate, by the time I give this car back at the end of its lease, on Dec 9th, which is 116 days away, I will have racked up over $7500 in parking tickets. I put more money in the meter and set my phone properly this time.

8pm: done tutoring. Now off to my Last Night in NYC party, at a nice rooftop bar called 230 5th Ave. Keiko and I head down, and make it through the gauntlet of bouncers.

Aside: Getting into Manhattan bars is enormously complicated. The basic algorithm is this:

1) Do you know someone who works inside, preferably the owner/manager? If yes, you can almost certainly get in. If no, proceed to:

2) Are you a hot woman, where hotness is defined as scoring a 9 or above on the standard hotness scale (SHS)? If yes, you can probably get in. Odds are 95% in your favor. If no, proceed to:

3) Are you in a group, at least 50% of which is composed of women 8 or above on the SHS? If yes, your odds of getting in are still reasonably good- 75% or so. If no, proceed to:

4) Are you in a group, at least half of which is composed of women 6 or higher on the SHS? If so, your odds are about even at this point- 50%. If no, proceed to:

5) Are you willing to purchase "bottle service"? In case you're not familiar, "bottle service" means: take a garden variety bottle of cheap liquor, say a $12.99 bottle of vodka. Now, imagine that very same bottle of vodka, except that you're now paying $400 for it. That's "bottle service." What is happening right now is, you're negotiating with the bouncer over how many of these "bottles" your group is going to pay for. The number of bottles they will demand you buy will depend largely on the percentage and hotness of the women in your group. If there are no women in your group, you'd better REALLY want to get into this place, because you're REALLY going to pay for it.

If you're not willing to pay for bottle service, proceed to:

6) Find another bar.

Fortunately, Keiko is super hot, so they let us in. Anyway, it's Wednesday night, and 230 5th is not the flavor-of-the-month bar, and it's still quite early, so I'm pretty sure everyone will get in even without a Keiko. We stake out an area inside, on comfy cushions, near where everyone will pass on their way inside. Soon others file in, including my boss and his wife, and we end up spending the next 4.5 hours eating and drinking, which my boss pays for. Given the number of people and the price of drinks at this place, I can't even imagine what that bill was like. But here are a few pics from the evening:








Me and Keiko

















Me, Jac, J-Rob, Adam, Tom, plus Ed, hamming it up as always













Almost everyone








130am: I would love to stay here and keep drinking, but I have to pack. The party breaks up and we head home.

230am: Keiko and I are frantically packing boxes. Tomorrow I am scheduled to tutor, pick up the trailer in the afternoon, tutor, load the trailer, tutor, and then leave. Keiko is showing saintly patience as I mercilessly employ her help. Progress is being made, but I'm beginning to sweat internally a little bit. Do I really have this much shit? Is it really this disorganized? But I am determined...

330 .a.m, BMFRTE T minus 19 hrs and counting...

Must sleep. Although I have not uttered this aloud, I'm beginning to think we're leaving a little later than 1030pm tomorrow night. Actually, I'm beginning to think we're leaving a LOT later than 1030pm tomorrow night...

Saturday, December 15, 2007

PC's vs. Macs: A non-techie perspective

I had always been a PC person, but in 2006, when I had the option of ordering either a Mac or a PC through the office, I thought, "What the hell, they're paying for it, why not try a Mac and see if it's better?" After all, Mac people are typically like religious zealots about their machines, so why not see if they're right?

So, over the past two years I have basically become bilingual in Mac and PC. Again, I'm not a super-techie person; my friend Joel gave me a computer that runs only open-source software and I basically couldn't make it do much of anything. And I have fairly simple needs; I'm not trying to hack the DoD or play MMORPGs, etc. So this commentary is by someone who just needs a computer to connect to the internet for email/shopping, make spreadsheets and documents, and play music and DVD's.

So here are my thoughts:

From a design philosophy perspective, the two machines are radically different. A PC, because they more or less run Microsoft stuff, is a prisoner of Microsoft design philosophy, which appears to be this:

"Hey, we know you want your computer to be able to do A, B, and C, but we only kinda know how to make a computer do B, and we have no idea how to make a computer do C, so anyway here's our best try at it. It's going to crash every so often because the B thingy doesn't work quite right, and we know that, but since we over here at Microsoft are basically printing money selling you software of this quality let's face it, we have no economic incentive to figure out how to do B and C properly. If you don't like it, buy a Mac, and then you can hang out with the other 6 people who have them and you can be a happy little family together. A happy little family that we'd get a lot of pleasure out of torturing and killing, but that we never actually will, because if we did, we'd have no plausible way of denying the fact that we're a shitty monopoly."

A Mac, of course, has a very different design philosophy:

"Hey, we know you want your computer to be able to do A, B, and C, and sure, we could make your computer do any of those things, plus D through K, because we're really fucking smart over here at Apple, but you what? If YOU were even half as smart as we are, you'd realize that what you REALLY want your computer to be able to do is A, C, and E, because that's like a major chord, which is intrinsically beautiful, and so that's what we've done- made your computer able to do A, C, and E. Because we're Apple and we know what you want better than you do. That's it, stop your futile resistance and let us assimilate you, and soon you too will realize we know what's best for you.

Or, you can just take the blue pill like the rest of the fucking zombies out there and buy a shitty PC. Your choice."

That's the design philosophy difference. There is another stark difference, which is in terms of what happens when you try to get your machine to do D, an action very similar to C, but which is not a default capability.

My friend Sarah used to have a corgi named Tommy. He was a real sweet dog. But he had a way of getting in the way sometimes, and if you wanted him to go away, you might have tried throwing something in the direction you wanted him to go, saying "Tommy! Go get it!" On a good day, Tommy might possibly have looked in the general direction you threw the aforementioned object, but even if he did, he would quickly revert to his default position, which was looking at you, mouth wide open, tongue hanging out, and head tilted slightly to the right.

A PC is like that. When you try to get it to do D, it does the computer equivalent of tilting its head to the side and looking at you stupidly. It has no idea what the fuck you're asking it to do. And no matter how many times or in how many different ways you ask, it will continue to look at you stupidly, until you want to beat it like the mangy cur it is.

[Note to dog lovers- I did not ever actually beat Tommy, or any other animal for that matter. He was, as I said, a sweet, if simple-minded, eating machine. Only people/things that should actually know better deserve beatings. Like neocons and Windows machines.]

When I was in middle school, I had a neighborhood friend, who coincidentally was also named Tommy, who had a 32 lb. cat. That cat was the biggest cat I have ever seen outside a zoo or a National Geographic special. And it was just as agile as any other cat. Sometimes, in the middle of the night, it would come into Tommy's room when I was sleeping there, and decide that the best place for it to sleep was on my stomach. So it would just jump on up onto my stomach.

Let me tell you something: in the middle of the night, when you are peacefully asleep, dreaming blissful dreams about Andrea Herzog, the cutest girl in school, who wears those soft clingy little sweaters that you have only just recently realized you appreciate, and who does not now, and possibly never will, know that you actually exist, it is extremely disruptive to have 32 pounds of cat land in your gut. And the thing was, when you'd try to shove him off, he'd just squat down, dig in a little bit, and passively resist you. And being as big as he was, he could passively resist pretty hard.

A Mac is like that. You might want to get it to do D, and it probably can, but it doesn't _want_ to, and like a cat, it thinks you're fundamentally misapprehending who exactly is boss around here. So, while you might get a Mac to do what you want eventually, it will passively resist you the whole way, and will do what you want only grudgingly. Somehow, Apple engineers have managed to engineer petulance into machines. More evidence of their misguided brilliance.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Lamentations, Chapter 1

One of the wonderful things about my little beach house in HMB is the closet space. Until you've lived in Manhattan, or someplace similar, you will have a hard time understanding just how very precious closet space is. In the house in HMB, my bedroom has an actual walk-in closet, with fancy Elfa Container-Store shelving and everything. I wanted the house as soon as I saw the view, but I knew I'd actually really take it when I saw the bedroom closet.

I am almost done now completely unpacking and putting stuff away, and in the last week or so I've put all the clothes that used to sit stuffed away in nooks and crannies in NYC onto shelves and hangars. Included among these things were my black suit pants, which I got just before leaving for business school in 1998. At that time, I was in basically the best aerobic shape of my life, having just ended a 4 year run on the competitive ballroom circuit and having spent basically 30 hours a week practicing, which is seriously hard aerobic work.

So yesterday, I took my black pants down off the hangar and put them on, in preparation for going to work. This was the first time I've put them on in some years. And that's when I noticed:

I am a muffintop.

why whY wHY WHY?!?! This can't be happening! Not to ME!!! DAMMIT! I can handle the increasingly creaky joints. I can handle the slowly accelerating migration of my hair southward down my body. But I will _not_ go portly into that good night.

Therefore, it is time. Time to resurrect The War on Pudge. I've been too lax. I leave next week for NYC and StL, but when I get back, I'm joining the local YMCA and I'm fighting back. By the end of 2008, I will be able to put on those damn pants and not be a muffintop. You heard it here first.