early morning

The lack of coffee filters in this house is distressing. Fortunately it appears all city opened at 6am, so I’m off in that direction shortly.

Seems like it was a drinking weekend. I worked late on some java + couchdb projects Friday night. Java is frustrating. So very much time is spent writing setup code and dealing with classes hidden deep in jars rather than just writing code. But it’s coming together and I got some results.

Sweet, Ken’s going to All City. So I’ll wait for that.

Mom and I met for dinner at Cafe Flora, and made it to the Shark for Dollhouse and BSG. The latter is coming to an end in three episodes and, well, as they say, is heating up. Saturday and Sunday morning were described already. I did get a second outlet into the garage later in the day yesterday, and pulled down the EMT I had picked up to make the bike rack with. I got thinking about my lack of a mitre box for making the 45 degree cuts when Scott and Meg showed up at Jules Maes, so Ken and I joined them. Ken and Scott floated the idea of using a chop saw, which seems mostly like a semi-good reason to blow more money on tools. Meg thinks Colin may have a tube bending machine in his shop that will go that big though.

It took me a couple years, but I got up to Seattle Central and took the compass placement exam for math/english. English scored were near perfect and placed me in ENG101. I assume from that it’s mostly to determine you don’t need any remedial “what is a comma” type work. Having had a math class history that’s suffered from being in and out of school when I was younger, I didn’t know where that would end up. I got placed into Pre-calc II. That class is full, as is the Computer Science class I was looking it, so I think I’m going to take Pre-calc I at night, which has space and will at least get me going. I’m still considering if I should take ENG101 as a correspondence course. I’ve got to deal with getting in-state tuition setup, so perhaps I’ll worry about that later. Oh the maths. And school. I’m not really sure what’s gotten into my head.

The latter part of the story goes as so. After dropping out of high school I spent six months coming to terms with existentialist angst, although I didn’t call it that at the time. Once that was settled, on with life. I spent some time working at the University of Maine in the Chemical Engineering department doing computer work. I wanted to go there, but I’d need a diploma. Since I was under 18, I couldn’t get a GED without a college having accepted me, and I couldn’t apply to UMO without a high school diploma. I got a letter from the college that looked all fancy asking them to let me take the GED, and one from a high school guidance counsellor explaining I was much better off this way, but it didn’t work. There’s some irony in the laws meant to keep kids in school, keeping kids out of school instead.

So I went back and took some night classes, tests and whatever through the adult education department to finish off the diploma, graduating a month early from high school to the surprise of many family members who were still convinced I was a no good drug addict, mostly because I must be immature and a failure because my parents raised me mostly without strong moral guidance tied with strict punishments. And a gold star to my parents for supposing I could learn all that on my own if allowed to. Eastern Maine Technical College (now a community college) was starting a new networking programming which I was interested in. I took a physics class at night there to meet the entry requirements. The class was incredibly frustrating due to the other students and towards the end of the class my attendance fell off a cliff. My instructor looked at me puzzle when I showed up on the last day, but let me take all the tests I had missed as well as the final and not let the time have gone to waste. By the time I was finished with that I looked at the syllabus, and saw the final quarter of the second year would be spent studying the material I had been reading for the last couple of months myself. With that, I that idea went out.

Some time later I had another college foray, taking some Interactive Television (ITV) courses through the University of Maine at Augusta (as opposed to the engineering college at Orono) for business classes. Having given up on getting any interesting Information Technology classes anywhere, I decided some business classes wouldn’t hurt. They did. All of my classes amounted to working out of text books. Having long ago learned to read a book and understand it on my own, I ran out of reasons to be there quickly.

So what exactly do I expect to garner this time around? Certainly not a diploma, at least this decade. Some theory I suppose. My practical skills and my thoughts about them in my industry are already leading edge. Some time ago I realized this when I went to the computer aisle in a book store and realized you couldn’t buy books about the software and technology I’m working with because we haven’t written them yet. We’ll start with some maths, ideally get some computer science classes in there to cover some prerequisites so if I do see something that really engages me down the road I won’t be screwed on account of that. I’ll try to stick to classes that are transferable to UW or directly applicable to something else I do. I’ve considered the meteorology courses for my flying, for instance. It’s sort of like the boy scout motto applied to school. I’m certainly crossing my fingers very hard in hope that I’m not going to be paying hundreds of dollars to be read to.

Which reminds me of a funny story at an unnamed private vocational school for computer certifications. I took a Microsoft SQL DBA (Database Administrator) (MCDBA) certification training course there because at the time the four tests for this certification had two that overlapped with the Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MSCE) certification I was aiming for to get someone to look twice at my resume and actually give me the opportunity to talk. Anyway, the instructor was terrible and read directly from the coursework. We weren’t really held to the material strictly though, so I made due. The funny part was that he ended up leaving, and I had just started working there. I was one of the few instructors that had a solid set of the recent certifications to match the classes I was teaching, and I got picked to teach the MCDBA classes. The argument was that it’s more important you know how to teach than know all of the material. It’s certainly essential you know how to teach well and moreso to engage the students. (I’m curious to see how my experience teaching affects my interest in classes now.) All the same, I always felt a little shifty about the teachers not always having the certifications, or on the job experience, with the technology they were teaching.

Before the event that caused me occured, it was hinted at. I was specifically asked if I was on board, yet without any direct statement of what ship I was joining. This felt like straight out of some business book, or “CYA for Dummies”. In response I said simply that they should do what they felt was right, and I would do what I felt was right. This wasn’t what they wanted to hear. I found some irony in this too because of another event.

A supplier once sent us twice the product we paid for by accident. When I asked what we were going to do about it, I got this lecture about how we were an honest company and expected to make the right decisions. Really, I wanted to know exactly what we were going to do; such as who to call, should I drive over there, etcetera. When folks get up on their soap box like that, I tend to let them have it. I don’t feel the need to justify myself to people acting that way. So I found amusement when shady actions were justified as being on board, having been lectured previously about doing the Right Thing.

In the end, I left the company after said event. It was an extremely difficult choice for me, but I stuck by it because I felt strongly that leaving was the right thing to do, for a number of reasons. I’m getting back to giving The Cathedral and the Bazaar a solid read. By design, it’s one of those books that puts to words things you may already have though, provided you are a part of the open source community. This has brought back a lot of memories of working for people that tried to direct what I did on a regular basis.

I’ve worked in technology almost all of my life. Definitely all of my life since high school. The time before then I often regard as a pre-cursor to life. I’ve never worked in fast food. My after school (and sometimes during school) jobs were in computer repair, then system administration (starting an ISP). Through Matthew, I’ve had a lot of experience in trades, solving unexpected problems daily in unexpected places in the world. I’ve put in a “hard days work” in both labor and tech in ways that I’ve found very few willing to (or capable of). When I employed a few friends doing electronics salvage, I remember one asking me how I was still lugging around piles of scrap cable after twelve hours of work without complaint. How do you explain to someone that you just do? He only lasted a week or two.

I don’t know how people get to feel so entitled. I suppose I could relate by thinking about how difficult it is for me to deal with emotional problems at times. However I’m pretty sure that my difficulties are that I try to, whereas most people don’t.

Reading the aforementioned book and thinking about places I’ve worked shows a pattern of success when working for people that give me a task and let me go; trusting me to come back if I have a question but otherwise get the work done the best I can discover on my own. Those who have ever tried to outline my day have only caused me undue stress, and my eventual departure.

When I told my father I was going to take some college courses, he asked me about how my certifications were going as I hadn’t talked about them for a while. They aren’t going. They got me a couple jobs here, and enough time has passed that I know enough people here that know how capable I am that I don’t doubt my ability to find other work if necessary. Ideally future jobs will be squarely open source, and I think the internet will be able to speak for me in short order. I’d still like an RHCE or a CCIE some day, but I touch Cisco equipment only out of occasional necessity or fun now, and I haven’t touched Redhat since 6.2, despite promising Scott Dodson I’d give it another look sometime. The power of being both a solid system and network administrator fits where I’m going now in a different way than it used to. The jack of all trades skill set sells “I can take care of everything if you let me do it” well, but it’s forming into a background that makes my design choices well founded as I almost subconsciously pick apart systems in search of flaws that aren’t stable or scalable.

Coffee is devoured, I should get to the office.

sundays

Slow and a bit sore today, it feels like Sunday. I’m making my best efforts to get something done, fifteen minutes at a time. I’ve been getting up early a lot. Priorities have been unexpectedly shifted, I’m happy about that, yet vulnerable to it at the same time. I must spend more time practicing keeping the worry down in the times when I feel like I’m on the outside looking in. The times when I stop going and find my mind is sort of a disaster are times where I’m particularly at risk for getting down and experiencing the family trait of worrying too much.

I replaced the electrical sub-panel yesterday. It’s a sub panel off an ancient fuse box where the design appears to have been one #12 wire for each fuse that then connects to other feeders in the walls. When we moved it, there were 30-40 amp fuses which I replaced first thing with 15 amp fuse breakers. The sub circuit panel held the W/D and W/H, but was pretty ancient. I couldn’t acquire fuses for it so I got another and installed it. Today I’m in the midst of pulling the garage off a fuse and putting it on a circuit breaker. This is all motivated by being pretty tired of the circuit breaker tripping when I run the air compressor in the garage. Hopefully this will be some of the last electrical work I’ll have to do here to feel both safe and find it functional.

It’s sort of a drizzly day though. I don’t know what to do with it. I eeked out seven hours of sleep, having gotten home finally at about 3am with Tori and Mom. Yesterday afternoon Wendell and I rode over to Skylark to wait for Hannah to get out of work at her part time job in West Seattle. Then we cruised up to Owl and Thistle for a happy reunion with friends and off to the Shark for Ken’s birthday party. Despite fears of dorkiness it turned out to be a classic shark party and much fun + booze was had. A few of us went to Hurricane to end the night, and I was pretty exhausted by that point.

I’d kind of rather cuddle up somewhere today. Short of that, I suppose I’ll get something done. If I’m lucky, this work will be enough to run the MIG welder in the garage.

since nineteen ninety four

I recall thinking it was weird to see that on the pair of Old Navy jeans Susan bought me a couple years ago. Because really, 1994 wasn’t that long ago, right?

Holy crap, it was. Fifteen years ago, when I first started using Linux, before I had solid internet access. Not only was I young, it was before I had ever really lived.

Why by the way, starts when you drop out of high school.

thinking

Today was the FHR, and it was epic. That uhh, other bike club that was out there seemed really friendly, despite an internet full of old curmudgeons. I suppose that’s why we made the internet though. I have a few before and after photos. None during the ride, because I only stopped once and didn’t have the energy to grab the camera the two times I walked up a hill.

best moment, “pull up your pants or get off the boat” coming over the ferry intercom.

Mother and I spent some time yesterday tuning up her new bike and ended up building another bike from parts in the garage. I’ve got to fix a front derailleur issue, but otherwise I’m happy with it. I’ll probably ride it to work tomorrow.

I called my father for our regular sunday chat a bit after arriving at the afterparty on the pier in Bainbridge. He asked why I was out of breath, and after I told him about the race he said that he was a bit younger than me he used to get on his road bike and “ride and ride and ride”. I wish I had been able to know him before the smoking/drinking/health/depression/angst all settled in. It’s sad that these moments are getting to be so numerous where I feel that I’d like him a lot if I had the opportunity to.

I’ve been working on some couchdb / Java stuff at work, and I’m getting pretty frustrated with how classes and libraries (jars) work. Or don’t for that matter.

I came out of a cave again recently in regards to being distracted and not thinking about life. Not as deep as back in November thankfully, and thus much less anxiety ridden. Hindsight of course gives me the opportunity to look at the choices I made and the people I made them concerning and have clearer view of what was happening and why it was making me feel the way I did.

On one hand, I feel like spending more time alone than ever, but at the same time quite the opposite. It’s possible with spring here that I’m ancy to get out, and my lack of patience is making leaving those who aren’t as eager behind. Adventures are meant to be shared, but with the right people. I’m feeling the need for a trip to Vancouver. I wonder how addicted to love Barner is at the moment.

In short, I’m not ready to grow up. That hinges in how you define growing up. I don’t want a white (or green) picket fence. If anything, I want a warehouse or a pile of containers. It’s not that I’m irresponsible, or want to be. I definitely have no interest in prime time television (short of course of BSG and anything of Joss’s),  it’s that this American Dream seems so placid. Perhaps our education system is tuned to producing laborers and our entertainment industry has found the best way to make consumers of those people. I escaped that system with only minimal emotional scarring in exchange for many good lessons learned.

I’m absolutely fucking tired of having to convince people to get out of their house. I just don’t care at the moment if they rot. Or even stay in their house, but read something non-fiction, or learn or get involved in anything. I hate the concept of being spoonfed. From my okcupid profile, written sometime in the last couple of years:

But, if you’re easy going, cute, simple, quiet, adventurous, you want to live in a treehouse or a warehouse. you like conversing online or in real life but such conversations amount to things other than politics and music. you should have a unique personality, trying to be like anything you’ve seen on TV doesn’t count.

[elsewhere]

I’m much more drawn to people that I don’t have to tell “the top is JUST around the next corner”, and I tend to marry people who take me canoe camping, or live in a van-ing, or whatever.

I’ve dated people that wanted to be the kind of person that did things, or at the very least wanted to be around the kind of people that did these things. Perhaps there were self-esteem issues at the core of it, but they simply didn’t do anything. What I did this week amounted to dishes, pets, and if they were lucky some reading.

After many years in Maine of dragging people together, trying to mediate stupid fucking social group issues, and doing all the heavy lifting in the name of building a community that did something, Seattle has been a god-send for me. Finally I can get up on a Sunday and go on an awesome bike race on an island with one hundred people, a good handful of I see semi-regularly, and not have to organize the whole thing myself. An old cohort from Maine recently asked me why I don’t hang out with another friend of ours that moved to Seattle. Forgetting how terrible a roommate and employee he was, especially as a friend, there are other people here who build ideas and software of value. Here there are interesting minds who have provocative opinions, perhaps who also drink heavily, rather than simply the latter.

I suppose with the Internet I can have all that from anywhere, but the human contact makes a difference. It was bizarre going from having read about SeattleWireless on the internet, to hanging out with them, joining them, drinking with them, and becoming friends with some of them. Nothing was what it seemed, but while what I expected wasn’t, I met some great people. Similarly I had a hard time getting a start in the industry in this city until people started to get to know me (well, the certifications got the start, but those don’t matter much anymore for what I really do and have the opportunity to do now.)

Where to? Like I started to say, I’m not ready to settle. I’ve recently learned that I’m not ready to think about settling either. I don’t know where I’ll be in five years, but any sort of expectation of where I’ll live or where a relationship should be is literally anxiety inducing in a deep dark from the cockels sort of way. I worried for some time if I had commitment issues, but if you drew a line between commitment and settling down, the uncomfortableness exists totally to the latter side of the scale. I’ve questioned the possibility of having some kind of serial monogamy social disease at times. I think the reality is that trying and learning from my mistakes is how I’ve always figured out life. The trouble has been it’s much easier to debug broken code than mend someone’s broken heart. I’m unskilled and learning another way.

It’s not that I simply want adventure, or want to picture myself as the type of person that would, or want to be around people that do. The same drive that upsets me when I take the same route home that I took outbound defines who I am. I won’t simply say I want to be challenged at this juncture, but I’m not going to be the same person tomorrow I am today. Better get on board.

ride bikes!

I really should install wordpress on BikeSeattle, but with sites like SeattleLikesBikes already around I’m not sure it’s needed other than a topical place for me to put bike related posts. It’s a great domain worth saving though. From Sweetbike, the NYPD officer that assulted the bicyclist during Critical Mass has been fired/quit/whatever you want to believe.

Back in December I wrote the SDOT about the Platt Buzzer on the SODO trail. The SDOT folk are super responsive, friendly and seem commited to resolving bicycle related issues. All of my interactions with them have been positive. I’ve been told a couple of them have gone out and experienced the buzzer at night and agree it’s very dangerous, but it’s attached to private property so you can’t really force them to turn them off. I suppose some kind of noise ordinance might apply, but threats of prosecution is just silly and counter-productive to community. Others have told me that they’ve talked to Platt managers about it, and I included them on my second email in Januray to SDOT but didn’t hear back. It’s unfortunate. I’ve been brainstorming different ways to deal with the graffiti problem in that section of the trail, perhaps I should go talk to them myself and see if I can do anything to help.

The FHR is this weekend (Sunday) out on Bainbridge. It’s going to be fun, and you should come even if you don’t consider yourself a serious bicyclist. Chilli, prizes, beer, etc.

I found some frames in the alley in Georgetown, including a 62cm steel frame that’ll make a nice city road bike. Someone from the hood brought by Raliegh internal 3-speed, which will fit my mother well. Once I put some new rubber on it and tune it, it’ll be going with her to Eatonville so she can commute to work on it this summer. By the way, the Pack Forest is incredibly undervalued as far as mountain biking in the woods goes. My MTB is living in Mom’s shed now, waiting.

morning notes

  1. Left monitor really likes right monitor and fades in that direction. Won’t go away permanently. Annoying.
  2. Guy in fancy car + suit actually waved me by in a bike lane today. Acknowledgement is an amazing feeling.
  3. Java bugs me. This is why I’m not a developer.
  4. Some days I hate being empathetic. So much effort goes into making sure everyone else is okay.

It seems like the closest I ever come to making sure I’m okay is when I let myself do whatever I feel like doing. This is generally conceived to be a treacherous idea however. Perhaps for good reason. Looking back the most often I’ve looked to make choices based on how I feel is when I feel the anxiety pushing me to get out of a relationship. I can think of a few times when I’ve been sick and looked to others to take care of me. Is that the same? I don’t think so. I suppose I’ve always been so independent I tend not to have any particular desire to ask for anything. Yet I have such strong feelings. Meh. I will work instead of think about this.

thursdays from a banana

Page 185 of The Public Domain talks about Clay Shirky trying to get AT&T to adopt perl.

As Shirky recounts the story, when AT&T representatives asked “where do you get your support?” Shirky responded, “‘we get our support from a community’ – which to them sounded a bit like ‘we get our Thursdays from a banana.'”

I fought this fight when trying to get a company to switch from SUSE to Ubuntu. We asked the executives when had we ever used support and what exactly did they expect to gain from it. Not much, was the anwser eventually, and being a small company with an excellent VP of engineering, we were swapped over in a couple of months.

sunshine

Nice day, got out and about.

  1. Cleaned up the garage.
  2. Put a new windshield washer pump in the suburban, but I’m still having issues with it.
  3. Put new bearings in the headset in the MTB from my childhood, 90% happy with it.
  4. Gave Derrick some stuff for FHR
  5. Exchanged emails with someone about Strategy
  6. Made two concrete five gallon pails for mounting a bike rack with mom
  7. Biked to Lorettas with W+H, saw ABR Gregg at the bridge, went to Skylark, then the Ma
  8. Saw Kate, Lisa + Vicki at the Ma
  9. After much scheming by others, got a barbacks’ phone number
  10. Ate a bunch of good food all over Seattle
  11. Had a pile of drinks all over Seattle

Going to take as many people as I can get together to Eatonville tomorrow for a little hiking in Mom’s forest, (officially called Pat’s Forest now instead of Pack Forest) and spend the night down there. One week until FHR people.

ninjas

I wanted to restore the old loft post somewhere, but it’s late and I’m tired. I got the old database imported from mysql, but I’ll have to convert it to another format before importing it. I need to figure out what the simplest format that supports comments wordpress supports I think. I want the nostalgia.

What an incredibly long and heart wrenching day. I know time will pass and I’ll feel better. It’s frustrating that sometimes when you’re the loneliest is when you need to be. I wonder how many people out there really have not being able to feel being their biggest problem. I’ve never had a problem with lacking emotion. Of course sometimes it is easier to appreciate how someone feels than others. I try to convince myself that my thoughts and feelings are not mutually exclusive. They can find compromise. It’s hard to do and I worry more and more that the missing link in relationships is going to be something much shallower than I was hoping for.

A long weekend is pretty well needed. I may sleep, or go for some lone bike rides. Maybe take mom snowshoeing or something. I need some distractions and rest to let my heart find it’s rhythm..