Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: pittsburgh

Day 359: what snowstorm?

I remember when weather was something I experienced, and not just something I read about on the Internet.

It’s odd to see something like this

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and then walk outside into crisp 57 degree weather.

Most of my life, I’m used to living in regions that experience winter as a brutal force of nature, where freezing rain is a more-than-weekly occurrence and mornings mean having to dig your car out of the snow.

Nowadays, I live in the lap of meteorological luxury, where rain is considered an unkind weather event.  And in some ways, I miss Pittsburgh, with its cloudy skies and biting cold winters.  I miss the possibility of waking up to a foot of snow outside my windows.  I miss the thought of sipping hot chocolate as the world outside is blanketed by white.  It certainly made those few truly beautiful days each year seem extraordinary.

But at the same time, that’s a bit of a spoiled attitude, too.  While I didn’t move to the Bay Area for the weather, I might as well enjoy it.  I should take comfort in knowing that when we wake up tomorrow to go to our prenatal class, I won’t have to dig the ice scraper and shovel out of my trunk in order to even back the car out of the driveway.  I should enjoy the fact that I almost never have to worry about where to put my heavy coat when I get to work.  I should be thankful that taking out the trash is never a race to drag the containers to the curb before the air can chill me to the bone, a feeling that doesn’t leave your body for an hour.

So to all of you caught in this (as CNN calls it) epic snowstorm, I wish you luck and safety and much hot chocolate drinking.  I’ll be thinking of you from what almost seems like a completely different planet.

Day 326: steel this nation

The regulation football season ended today, and despite the Steeler’s best efforts, they will not be playing the postseason and will not get an attempt to defend their Super Bowl title.

Of course, our defense has had trouble closing out games all season, giving up fourth quarter leads to mediocre teams and the 5 game losing streak that included the Browns and Raiders was a large reason that we missed the playoffs.

And even on the other side of the country, there is a great sadness that emerged after today’s definitive end to the season for the Steelers. It’s an odd thing, to have – year after year – so much of your spirit and heart invested in something like a football team.

But somehow, as a byproduct of living in Pittsburgh for most of my life, I’ve attached myself to this team and this sport, more than any other team in any other sport. At some point (during high school or college? Or subconsciously before that?), I became a Steelers fan for life.

It’s tough to make sense of a season that showed such promise but somehow got sidetracked. It’s tough to admit the faults of something you believe in, to see the fallibility of those you put your faith in. It’s even tougher to put those feelings of anger and disappointment aside and realize that without the lows, the highs wouldn’t feel as good.

So, there’s always next year, eh? Six rings should keep us warm for a while.

Day 46: draft aftermath and garbled thoughts

For reference, here’s the fantasy baseball team I drafted:

  • C Mike Napoli
  • 1B Joey Votto
  • 1B Mike Jacobs (bench)
  • 2B Brandon Phillips
  • 3B Aramis Ramirez
  • 3B Adrian Beltre (bench)
  • SS Jimmy Rollins
  • OF Bobby Abreu
  • OF Matt Holliday
  • OF Carlos Quentin
  • OF Jermaine Dye
  • OF J.D. Drew (bench)
  • DH Jim Thome (bench)
  • SP Erik Bedard
  • SP John Danks
  • SP Jeremy Guthrie (bench)
  • SP Rich Harden
  • SP Derek Lowe
  • SP Chris Young
  • RP Brian Fuentes
  • RP Chris Ray (bench)
  • RP Joakim Soria

Today, I dropped Mike Jacobs and picked up Kevin Gregg after the closer decision announcement came out.  I also picked up and stashed Troy Glaus in one of my DL slots.  I’m shopping J.D. Drew and may look to trade Beltre at some point to try and bone up my pitching (or a better catcher).  Overall, I felt that the draft went relatively well, despite my rather weak starting pitchers.

Of course, we won’t actually know how successful my season will be until the real season starts in a week.

I had a dream last night that I had built an Iron Man-like suit and was flying down the hallway of an old apartment my parents and I lived in when I was a kid.  It was quite strange.

I played Fallout 3 until about 3 AM last night.  That was too late.  I haven’t even bought the Pittsburgh expansion yet!  I do plan to, though, so that I can stand in a ruined Point State Park and shoot mutants.  It was my dream in Pittsburgh, but…the apocalypse never happened.  Oh well.  Maybe one day.

You know, I never thought I’d have one of those guy friends who’s “that guy.”  But now that I think about it, my co-worker Jerome is kind of like “that guy.”  And that’s cool with me.  Like, the movie I Love You, Man just came out.  Looked kind of funny, but would I really see it on opening weekend?  If I’m Jerome, the answer is OH YES.  That guy.  He’s great.  He and his scruffy Euro-face.

I don’t think Jerome reads these.  I guess we’ll see!

I’ve been playing the recently-released EA DS game Henry Hatsworth in the Puzzling Adventure, which is a great title and an addictive game, but I’m not sure how much I actually like it.  I want to keep playing because I want to see what additional powers I get, but the levels and action get a bit repetitive and dying – although there isn’t a large penalty associated with it – is annoying when it’s because I’ve been suddenly surrounded by enemies.  In other words, the difficulty seems a bit manufactured instead of natural.

It’s no Professor Layton, that’s for sure.  Here’s some Professor Layton fan art I found on the Internet:

layton

Day 19: california drivin’

Before I moved to California, I hadn’t really heard too much about drivers in this state.  There were no ominous warnings about the traffic system.  I had thought that driving here would be very similar to driving in Pittsburgh, but I now know that to not entirely true.  Here then, are the driving lessons I’ve learned since moving.

Lesson 1: Left Turn Blues
In Pittsburgh, there’s a driving maneuver which is the city’s collective greedy way of dealing with the fact that left-turners at traffic lights get no respect.  The person at the front of a line of traffic at a red light, if turning left, can gun it as soon as the light turns and make the left before opposing traffic gets up enough speed to beat them through the intersection (or ram them).

Over here, it is near impossible to even find an intersection where one could execute a Pittsburgh Left.  90% of intersections with lights have specific left turn signals.  Is this a more practical and/or elegant solution?  Perhaps.  But it takes the joy and victory out of a left turn.

Lesson 2: Ready or Not, Here I Come
I sometimes wonder if cars made in California have turn signals or if they’ve been scrapped as some part of green program.  I was appalled when I first arrived.  It seemed like no one ever signaled for lane changes, much less turning.  How could these drivers survive?  What kind of world are we living in?

But, like a sinister yet subtle virus, it spreads.  After a few months, a car cutting into your lane with no signal is routine.  A year later, you find yourself neglecting your turn signal at intersections where you’re obviously going to turn.  I fear it will only be a matter of time before I myself am convinced that other drivers on the road can read my mind as I cut across three lanes of traffic.

Lesson 3: U-Turns are Mandatory
Making a U-turn in Pittsburgh was a rare occurrence and only done when mistakes were made.  It was hard enough in the narrow streets to even find a place where you could pull one.  It was much easier to just make three lefts and be done with it.

Here, the streets are paved with U-turns.  It’s frustrating to find intersections where you’re not allowed to make a U-turn because so many directions end with, “…then make a U-turn and it’ll be on your right.”  Whoever designed most of the roads around here was obsessed with the idea that cars driving on one side of the road should have as little interaction as possible with cars on the other side, like some sort of awkward high school dance.  Median barriers are the de facto standard and U-turns are the only way around them.

There are also the obvious natural benefits of just being in California: no digging your car out of the snow a quarter of the year, no early melting of the lower half of your car because of road salt, and the ability to drive with your windows down year-round.

Those help make up for the fact that you can’t pull up to a light with your left turn light blinking aggressively, creep forward as the other light turns yellow, and gun it home as you swing through the intersection, fast, furious, ‘n ‘at.

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