Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Author: Scott (Page 9 of 104)

Day 363: barf’n’poop

As we approach the end of this year-long experiment, I feel like these entries should be important and well-written. But we all know that’s not really going to happen.

Our cats are saucy little minxes. One will occasionally just barf around the house. Why does she do this? We’re not sure. It’s not an everyday occurrence, but it happens often enough to be disconcerting. Sometimes there’s a bit of food in there (is she eating too fast or swallowing hair with her food?), while sometimes it just seems to be stomach acid (is her throat just scratchy?).

Meanwhile, our other cat sometimes likes to take a dump somewhere unexpected. I think that has a valid explanation, though. I think that’s because I don’t scoop the litter enough and she gets a little angry that her litterbox is so full of poop.

I mainly bring this up today because I went to clean out the litterbox tonight (a task quite overdue) only to discover that Daisy had decided to relieve herself on our bathmat. As I tried to consider my options for taking care of this, Princess vomited three times in quick succession, quickly jumping away from the puddles she left behind out of either shame or surprise.

And I can’t blame our cats for doing these things. It’s not like they’re spiteful or trying to anger us deliberately. Princess probably enjoys ralphing as much as we enjoy cleaning it up. And Daisy only poops when the litterbox has gone uncleaned too long.

But it can be a bit much at the end of a tiring day.

Day 362: mail demons

Aside from the occasional package from Amazon or magazine, most of the postal mail we get nowadays is trash.

It’s coupons we’ll never use, ads for local businesses we throw away without ever looking at, and credit card offers that I don’t even bother opening anymore.  I suppose this has kind of always been the case, but in an age where my gmail spam filter sifts so much garbage out of my email inbox, I wish I had something similar for my other inbox.

I’ve tried getting off of different lists, but it’s so much harder with postal mail.  You have to visit the specific website of the specific company that sends out that ad.  If they have an online unsubscription option, it’s often just a series of text fields that you fill out, hit submit, and pray.

Often, the junk keeps coming.  It’s at a ratio now that actually hinders real mail.  Sure, we’ll open up hand-addressed mail right away (the rare card that we get), but I’ve accidentally let updated bank or credit cards sit in their envelopes on our table at home because they look so similar to other envelopes that have nothing useful in them.

And opening postal mail takes so much time.  With an email, I can browse the subject line from my inbox and almost always know immediately if it’s something worth opening.  If a postal envelope is something from one of my banks or credit card companies, it’s hard to know.  Is it an important bill or identity theft notice?  Or is it an offer for a different card or those stupid balance transfer checks that are both useless and a huge ID theft risk?

One last gripe: I’m always paranoid about throwing away postal mail.  With emails, I know that as long I don’t print a hard copy, no one who doesn’t have access to my email account will ever see it.  With paper mail, I feel like I have to shred anything with the slightest amount of personal information, just to be safe.

I guess my question is: when can we start using the postal service only for package deliveries and turn to email for anything else?  I’ll make an exception for hand-written letters, especially from anyone under the age of 12.

Day 361: google ad

I was watching the Super Bowl today, not really rooting for one team in particular (although I have some allegiance to the Colts simply because they’re an AFC team).  And watching the commercials, of course.

I find some of them amusing (I just can’t get enough of that eTrade baby!), some of them dumb (how long can GoDaddy live on manufactured controversy?), when out of nowhere, a sublime Google ad appears.

Here it is, in case you didn’t watch the game:

It was the best advertisement I’ve seen in a long time, because it actually made me stop what I was doing and watch it with my full attention.  It featured the advertised product extensively throughout the commercial, it tells a story, and it hits us where we’re most vulnerable: by showing us that Google isn’t some nameless brand that we buy into because of superior absorbency or better handling.  It’s message is that Google is a part of the story of our lives.

And it does all of this with text and environmental music.  It’s one minute of absolute genius.  I don’t often feel like I’ve been blown away by something, but this really did a number on me.

Mass Effect 2

I’m sure I’ll go back and play more – either another new playthrough or continuing my finished game to fill out some of the exploration and sidequests – but I completed a first playthrough of ME2 today with a male Engineer.

Spoilers after the jump.

I played through the final few missions before doing all of the loyalty missions, which may have been a mistake, as it cost me nearly half of my team. My team mostly consisted of Jack and Thane because I liked having biotic support and they came with a good variety of weapon skills.

ThaneJack

I was able to save Yeomen Kelly Chambers, though. Now the question is, complete the sidequests by continuing with my decimated but experienced team? Or start a new game plus? Or maybe I should go back, finish my second Mass Effect 1 playthrough, and carry that over.

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