Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Author: Scott (Page 38 of 104)

Day 249: goods and bads

Good: I put new wiper blades on the car today, we fixed our broken headlights without having to take the car in to a shop, and there are new tires waiting for us at CostCo.

Bad: My HDMI switcher that I bought not so long ago has decided to stop working.  It’s still well within warranty, so I should be able to get a new one, but it’s a hassle and a pain.

Good: I knocked out King Hippo today.

Bad: He knocked me out once.

Good: The Steelers won today, with Troy Polamalu playing.

Bad: I didn’t get to watch it because the NFL hates me for living in California.

Good: I actually kind of like FlashForward.  And Dominic finally showed up in the episode we watched today!

Bad: Balloon boy was all a hoax!

So, as you can see, today has been a roller coaster of emotions.  Don’t even get me started on the expired yogurt experiment.

Day 248: pumpkin’d

Katie and I woke up at about 6 AM this morning in the quest for pumpkin pancakes.

You see, the Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival was today and the festival kicks off with a pancake breakfast that starts at 7 AM.  The festival itself doesn’t even open until 9, but as there’s only three routes into Half Moon Bay, all the roads are entirely clogged by 8 AM or so.

We made it down to Half Moon Bay before the traffic hit and were able to indulge in some delicious pancakes.  We then spent most of the rest of the day walking around, admiring the expensive homemade crafts, watching a juggling unicycle show (that I participated in!), watching a lame parade, meeting up with some friends, eating a sausage sandwich, sitting in a gazebo, eating pumpkin ice cream, seeing a future Mike Yin, going to a haunted house, leaving the festival, eating hummus, and collapsing at home.

It’s been a very long day, and it’s not even 9 PM yet.

But we conquered today.  We did everything we set out to do, and even a bit more.  We went big.  And then, we went home.

Day 247: where the wild things were

I’ll make this short because I have to go to bed early because I plan to wake up super early tomorrow in order to drive to the beach and eat pumpkin pancakes.

I went and saw Where the Wild Things Are tonight.  It was good.  It was an odd film, as it took a book that can be read in 5 minutes and turned it into a 90+ minute feature film.

It was a strange emotional journey.  I laughed, I cried, and I’m still not completely sure why I did either.  It’s emotional, but I’m not sure why.  It managed to pull me in two completely opposite directions: into the role of a father-to-be and into the memories of childhood.

It was thoroughly enjoyable and I would heartily recommend it, but I feel a bit tongue-tied about actually describing what I liked about it.  Just go see it, I guess.  Then we can meet and discuss it by eating yogurt and toppings while nodding silently at each other.

Day 246: balloon boy

I’m not sure if everyone was as engrossed with the saga of balloon boy today as our little corner of the office was.

A short recap:

At approximately 11 AM, one of my co-workers informed us that there was something going on, that a six-year-old boy had somehow gotten into a homemade helium balloon and was flying through the Colorado air at a high altitude and at high speeds.

I checked Twitter and turned on a live video feed.  The Internet was on fire with balloon boy.  It was gut-wrenching to watch the live video: a small balloon whizzing through the air with a small enclosure at the bottom where the boy might be.  We were all quite nervous when the balloon started to lose helium and to descend.

At around 12:30 PM, it landed relatively softly and rescue crews began deflating what was left and looking for the boy in the balloon.  He wasn’t there.

And there was this moment, this second of absolute terror, because there were now two possibilities: that he had never gotten in the balloon at all or that he had fallen out of the balloon.

It turns out that it was the former.  The boy (named Falcon) had been hiding in the family’s attic in a cardboard box for hours.

If you search for the story now, you’ll find cynical stories about it being a publicity stunt by the family.  But putting all that aside, putting aside why Falcon hid in a cardboard box in the attic for hours when his family was looking for him, those two hours in the middle of the day today were emotional.

I didn’t know who this boy was, but it didn’t matter.  It was happening right now and there were so many ways that it could have ended badly.  It was a moment when we were all just frozen and helpless, watching a balloon fly through the air, armed with nothing but hope.

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