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Friday, July 13, 2007
Like the Sun
I've had a lot of exposure to my in-laws lately -- because I'm still stuck in Prescott. I like my relatives a lot. I'm trying to get the damn truck running... but it's not going well. I'm trapped here, and that is what I have a problem with.

I'm leaving on Sunday, either in the truck or on a shuttle. I have to get back to life. My taxes aren't paid, I'm supposed to be moving into a new place in 2 weeks, my birthday's in there somewhere and I wasn't planning on hanging around Prescott for 11 days. I also miss Rachel terribly. I want to go home.

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posted by Steve @ 11:46 PM   0 comments
Saturday, July 07, 2007
Wires & Games
This whole 'working from home' thing is proving to be terribly convenient: I don't think I've ever had the freedom to simply visit a relative without major concern for work. Something I could get used to.

Yesterday, we stripped the wires from the truck today and posted progress on the Dodge forum I visit (link).

Then, I went with Jordan and did some Star Wars role-playing. I refused pretty much flat-out to play someone else's character, and played a 'one-off' NPC. It was the first time I'd played a one-session character, and the first time I'd gamed in about two years.

The party was stuck on a planet and more or less at the mercy of a young man who owned the planet through gambling at Sabacc. My character wasn't a gambler, but a businessman who was at the table. The rich young man who owned the planet (Henry) had broken the heart of my character, Rigel, four years previous. Rigel determined to make money by slowly earning the trust of Henry and taking key parts of his business, which was primarily in mining the type of crystals used to make light sabers. The planet was uncharted and the only planet with these crystals not under the control of the Sith - making it very valuable, and also making it important that it be kept off of the Sith's maps.

Before the game, Rigel uncharacteristically poisoned Henry, and sought to make the game last as long as possible, knowing the young gambler wouldn't quit unless he had lost or won. Of course, Henry wasn't nearly as skilled as a gambler poisoned; the party and Rigel fleeced him fairly thoroughly before the party realized why the famed gambler was doing so poorly. Unfortunately for Rigel, one of the party members sensed that Henry had been poisoned, and successfully used the Force to prevent his death.

Having already won 25% of his profit, and realizing that Henry wasn't going to die, Rigel framed
the party for Henry's poisoning, but bought their safety in exchange for their (impressive) winnings. In exchange for Rigel's support in mining the crystals, ships to get off of the planet, and Henry's 'mercy,' the party was required to give 50% of their profits and charged with keeping the planet anonymous. They would also have Rigel's small spy network to help them.

Win-win. I had a lot of fun coming up with all of that in-game. Plus, the GM now has several extra tools with which to move the players: my spies, their debts to me, their obligation to keep the planet secret, and the fact that their vehicles are now 'on loan' instead of their own (barring sale and meaning they have to pay for them if they are destroyed).

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posted by Steve @ 10:10 AM   0 comments
Monday, July 02, 2007
Prescott for the 4th
Yay! Rachel and I are going to Prescott for the 4th of July. We'll eat great food, see the in-laws, help build their new house, and rewire the truck. It's going to be great to see them and get so much done. I know that a working vacation is just what I need.

Meantime, I'm going out in a bit to check out where our next place is. I'm sad that we're moving, not because I'm particularly attached to this place, but because I've yet to live in the same place for more than roughly a year since I moved out to college - in 1998. That means this will be my 12th place in 10 years, including Okinawa.

Still, we've got enough money to be able to rent both places for a week or two, and so will be able to catalogue every last thing we own (!), partly to get rid of things we don't want or need, partly because getting rid of things will make the move easier, and also for home insurance purposes.

Oh, and this time, I have a nice camera to bring!

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posted by Steve @ 2:00 PM   0 comments
Thursday, June 28, 2007
I think I'm a Republican.
I'm going to visit my in-laws this weekend. I love my in-laws. But I'm a great deal more liberal than they are, and more to the point, much more casually religious. The reason I still like them, though, is because they're very much the kind of Christians I think the country lacks: the ones that recognize that Jesus was a humble, kind, hard-working person that didn't judge needlessly or haughtily. He absolutely knew where he stood on issues, but didn't run around knocking people's heads together when they disagreed with him.

Regardless, I'm going to be there a week, and I'm sure that politics is going to come up at some point or another; after a discussion about how torture is bad with her brother, my wife got an email from her Mom about the war in Iraq.

I don't mind. Being pressed on my beliefs forces me to inspect them.

Thankfully, my belief that the Bush administration is incompetent, unjust and shameful got an amazing proof yesterday: Scooter Libby, who was convicted of conspiracy and then perjury to cover it up, got bailed out of jail by Bush by having his sentence commuted. Bush hasn't used the Presidential (or even gubernatorial) power to pardon or commute a person's sentence pre-mortem almost at all - including an oft-criticized decision not to pardon a born-again Christian her death penalty. He even, in his own book, said that he didn't think it was his job to alter the rulings of the court; he then signed the death sentences.

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posted by Steve @ 10:18 AM   0 comments
Monday, February 27, 2006
Exciting Event no. 10 (full version): Breaking Radio Silence / Job
The previous post - about a month ago - said that I was pretty sure I had a new job. I did. But it's an amusing tale so I will share it.

The last post was put up around midnight on Tuesday, January 31st. The previous day, Monday, started out looking pretty bleak. I had 2 days left in the month, lots of bills and basically no money.

A few weeks previous, I had become a member of the Maloney's Rejects. The week before that, Rachel and I had both been sick with a fever for a week (being absent for a week contributed strongly to the Reject thing, to top it off). So we had missed something like 2/3rds of our income for the month, and didn't even have the nice buffer we expected out of what turned out to be a placid New Year's Night at Maloney's. I will unleash the bile I have stored up about that at another time.

I got so desperate to find employment, I was going to be a DJ at TD's (a strip club). I applied for Unemployment and Food Stamps.

But let's back up even more. A few days before even this, I found myself tutoring a grade-school kid about the physical properties of light (and Bernoulli's Principle also and how it powers flight). I decided I ought to look for a job tutoring at a Charter school (which doesn't require a teaching degree)... and promptly did not do that at all. At least not until the Monday that started our story.

That Monday, I started calling all of the Charter schools in Tucson, in alphabetical order, and trying to find a job tutoring. One did decide to give me an interview the next day - BASIS [sic.] Tucson.

So I showed up at BASIS Tucson, and was shooed in to talk to Olga Block, the director. Olga was from Eastern Europe, shrewd, and to the point. We talked about what educational experience I had - lots of individual tutoring in Okinawa, basically - and talked for about 20 minutes. She then told me that she didn't need me in Tucson, or for that matter to teach any of the subjects I had listed. She wanted me up in Scottsdale to teach kids there Art. She wanted me there as soon as possible, and sent me to check out the Art class in that school.

During the meeting, I got a phone call from the Unemployment Office, who wanted to interview me to verify eligibility. Obviously, I never answered.

I arranged to borrow AZ and Tasha's car (Rachel's being needed to get her to work and mine was still in the shop) and stay with my Grandfather-In-Law, Howard. He and his wife are ridicuously kind people - they are the same ones that put together that truck of Rachel's and gave it to us.

I was to check out BASIS on Thursday, and do a demo lesson on Friday. This of course is an insanely tiny amount of time to put together a lesson, but I did it. Turns out, though, that the regular teachers were the ones teaching the Art classes.

Why?

Well ... the short version goes something like this. Back in August, Mrs. Bae was a fine Art teacher who got pregnant and took her maternity leave. She had a few subs while she was gone, naturally. Then in October she came back ... and left just two weeks later when her husband was promoted and moved to L.A.. Then they got another teacher or two. The most recent one tripped on a backpack and smashed her head into a chair, suffering severe head trauma and bleeding all over the place to the horror of her class. Naturally, she wasn't going to teach for awhile and in the meantime the other teachers had taken turns on their breaks substituting.

Howard and Anita (the grandparents in law) live in Peoria, and with rush-hour traffic I needed a full hour and a half and almost fifty miles of driving to get to work. This is not fun.

I arrived on time on Thursday, though, and when I got there, there really wasn't an Art class to observe (what with the teachers not doing Art) - so I started teaching. I had to improvise 4 Art lessons with kids I'd never met in a situation I'd never been in. It was stressful but fun in a mad way and I made it through Thursday pretty well. That night, I had the "let's talk about God and politics" conversation with Howard and despite my comparatively wishy-washy stances on Christianity (I am Catholic, but not anywhere nearly as religious as he is as a Protestant), it went perfectly well.

On Friday, I improvised several lessons and ... totally had the worst time with the one I had actually planned. Rather ironic, really, that the bosses (being Olga and the Director) saw my worst lesson.

But they hired me anyway. Almost on a lark, and because so many had just ejected due to burnout. I think they could tell that I was ridiculously enthusiastic and not so subject to just bailing out on them.

That night I drove down to Tucson quite elated, and came back up to Prescott to buy AZ & Tasha's new car (a '63 VW), and say hello to the in-laws who live there. The next Tuesday was my first day back, though I had to drive Rachel's truck all the time. Since then, I've been staying with my Mom who lives in a much more central location in Phoenix and my transit time went from and hour and a half to about 30 minutes.

And of course now I have more things to talk about: the school, the kids, and so on but that will undoubtedly take up the next several entries...

Currently reading :
The Enchanted Forest Chronicles: Dealing with Dragons / Searching for Dragons / Calling on Dragons / Talking to Dragons
By Patricia C. Wrede

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posted by Steve @ 3:58 PM   0 comments
 
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Name: Steve
Home: Tucson, Arizona, United States
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