New Girl in Seattle

Angela and I are having another girl. We saw the ultrasound tech yesterday for the typical 18-22 week invasion of privacy (the babies I mean). Can’t even be a lady anymore.
We couldn’t be happier. She is healthy and sound and doing well.
The amazing technology these days is able to check blood flow through the heart and umbilical cord with some kind of doppler that can tell which blood is coming and going and they can even closely anaylyze the ventricles of the heart, the alignment of the spine, the closure of key bones etc. Just the past 3 years (since Abby’s ultrasound) has seen huge strides between comparable technologies.
We told Abby over the past week that we were going to get a picture of the baby that day. Somehow she got it in her mind that we would SEE the baby.

Is it gonna open now?
Is what gonna open now?
Momma’s belly.

She is excited to show her baby sister how to help her put on dresses.
So, the key questions that seem to always get asked:

  1. Didn’t you want a boy? – No. I think there are more differences between people than there are between genders so that doesn’t play a part in it. I am happy she is “cooking well”.
  2. Do you have a name picked out? – No. And even if we did we must have some surprises for The Day. She will tell us her name on that day, and it won’t be Agghaghahhhh Zimmerman.

Without further ado, lets get on with the assault on her right to privacy.
The first shot shows her head on the right and her hand up “in the air” above her nose.
The second shot shows her little foot and partially developed bones in her tibia.
Baby May2006 Waving

Baby May2006 Foot

Big Girl in Seattle

We went and had pictures taken with Santa today.
Everywhere people noticed the beautiful dress, the little Dorothy basket and the beautiful girl.

My you have a beautiful dress! Are you going to see Santa?
Uh huh.
Oh and what a nice basket. How old are you?
(With her fingers) ‘three’
Three years old? You are a big girl aren’t you?!
Uh huh but sometimes I pee in my pants though.

Tearjerker

Okay, you all just better take care what you wish for…I may just pull out a tearjerker to balance the scales.
Take this for example:
Friday night Angela, Abby, and I drove to Vancouver, WA for Jamey G. and his 5th birthday party on Saturday! It was quite the affair, lots of swimming and presents and cake. It was a lot of fun. You can see more of it at Jamey’s Flickr Site.
The uncommon excitement for us started at 9:45 Friday night. We rolled into the Salmon Creek Motel, booked online with 2 out of 5 stars. Budget room for a budget trip right? We got more than we bargained for.

Rolling up it was obviously a cut-rate affair. Abby was being extremely good but it was two hours after bedtime and she was just getting wound up.
We get our key and move the car to the back of the glorified shack, under the stairs, next to the dumpster and the abandoned car. The rain dripping like a Shakespearean tradgedy. Hopped up on Monster Energy, I dutifully unpacked my girls.

Thinking to myself.
Hm that’s funny, the smell in here reminds me of the FourPlex in the Highlands?
Keep unpacking, ignoring my animal instinct to flee.

Oh wise one, keeper of the crystal ball and bearer of enough common sense to know when enough is enough (ala Joe Lake hiking trip circa 2001).

We are not staying here.

One thing I have learned in the last 5 years is when you hear that command in her voice, something is really wrong. It has a period at the end of it, not a question mark or ellipses. It just is. (For those of you doing the math…that is right, I only first learned it 2 + years in).

Abby, dopey and tired: Where are we going?
Daddy, just plain dopey: We are going to change rooms honey.
Why?
Cause Mommy has a crystal ball for things like this.

I didn’t really say that, mind you, but I am the one telling this story now so I can festoon it with whatever clever witticisms I came up with 10 minutes after the fact that I wish I would have said at the time. To be clear, I was thinking that, at least.
So I approached the front desk and used the best line in the book. They never tell you this perk comes with the package when you marry, but I am telling you now, if you aren’t married, it is one of the best perks outside of…well…children. The Blame Shifting Perk.

My wife is really creeped out by that room back there. Is there any way we can get switched to a compar….
Oh sure, (she hastily shot me a knowing look)
Room 26, right next to the office.

I thought to myself, ‘She is so kind. She knows what it is like to have a wife who gets creeped out easily by abandoned cars. Or she at least knows about The Blame Shifting Perk. And no charge! I am such a great negotiator.’
Again, there you go ignoring the instincts Dopey.

Right next to the office, all lit up, next to the friendly lady that stays up all night next door to meet wayward travellers. What could be better?

What could be worse. It is fortunate The Crystal Ball never lets down it’s guard.
A quick round trip to the bathroom in this gigantic, incomparable upgrade is met with a sneer.

Abby: “Can I jump on the bed?” more of a statement really as she is already actively partaking.
Daddy: Unpacking the car.
Mommy: Straight from bathroom reconnaissance performs due diligence on the sheets.
Daddy: Just setting down the last bag and closing the door.
Abby: b O u N c I n G

There are HAIRS in the sheets.

There it is again, that sound? That surety of position that ends in a simple, unstated period.
I lean in for a closer look and notice more. Only a three year old can add the necessary clarity.

there’s HAIRS and BOOGIES in THEBED!

Angela says: What are we going to do?

Now this, as approximately half of you know, really means ‘what are YOU going to do because I have done my part, I have paid attention to my crystal ball, I haven’t ignored my instincts And there is no way on this green earth I am putting my baby in either of these ginormous beds And I will take action if necessary but I am allowing you this one chance to atone for your cheapness.’

I weakly offer some options.

“We can sleep on top of the beds?”
“Or maybe the floor?”
Abby: Again a small voice of reason. She must get it from her mother. Like it’s a game she says:
C’mon Mom! Let’s get ANOTHER hotel!

Shake it off. Listen to yourself. Listen to Abby. The window of atonement is rapidly closing.
Dopey? Hello, McFly? You are not backpacking across Europe. If this is grossing YOU out think about what it must be like in reality.

Without another syllable I strode out and back to the front office where I laid it on the line, no blame shifting this time (maybe I am growing?).
I got a refund.

Maybe it was the look in my eye or maybe it was the true knowledge behind that previous ‘knowing look’ the lady had launched only minutes before.
If she was a good at poker she would have read my tell. She could have kept her $45 and I would have taken it as a cheap lesson. There was no way we were staying there that night.

So for the third time that night we ( I ) packed the car, we drove up the road to The Shilo Inn and a mere two hours after we rolled into town Abby was sleeping soundly in a clean and comfortable bed, her soft little blonde hair strewn on a clean pillow.
In May she will share a clean pillow with her baby brother or sister.

Two down – one to go

Success on one front. I have internet connectivity (typing this on my BSD machine…see). All I had to do was plug in the appropriate hardware (and ethernet NIC) and I was up and running. Thanks Desiree!

Success on another front. I have sound…or rather I have proved that I could have sound. I plugged in my other speakers. I think they are incorrectly powered for this machine (this thing only produces sound through powered speakers) because they don’t sound right. While I have sound, for some reason the CD Player thing doesn’t produce it. I am wondering if it is a memory problem. I suspect yes because even when I click the “test” button for sound it takes about 15 seconds for the test to actually sound off.

Now I have to see about getting the printer running. Then I will have a proper running home machine.

To answer your comment from the previous post, Grumpy Z:
Yes, internet. Yes, office (excel-like, word-like, powerpoint-like). I know the least about Quicken so I can’t say there is something that full featured out there. Yes, home network. That is actually what UNIX excels at. In fact a machine like this (UNIX, BSD, Linux, etc) is really good as a web server, or a file server, or a print server (which I have in mind for it), although this PC-BSD distribution is intended as primarily a desktop solution and there are others specifically “built” for those other purposes.

Boy that got long. All I intended to say was I have PC-BSD mostly running.

PC-BSD

I acquired an older machine over the weekend from Mary’s parents. They bought a new Compaq and asked me if I would set it up for them.
I decided it would be fun to take their machine off their hands for them and practice wiping it clean. (For that I used Darik’s Boot and Nuke utility. It went pretty well and wiped the drive to something slightly less secure than the Department of Defense requires in about 2.5 hours.
After that I installed what is roughly described as a UNIX-like operating system called BSD. This particular variant is called PC-BSD. You can read a little lot about it on WikiPedia if you are interested. Or you can get it from the horses mouth.

It is pretty cool and fun so far and it looks to be capable of doing everything I would require of a desktop OS, like printing, writing documents, playing music, playing kids games (that come with it) etc…only one problem. The machine I acquired only has 64MB of RAM and the minimum recomendation for this OS is 128MB. It runs but it isn’t fun. And the printer doesn’t seem to react to commands and I don’t have the power brick for the speakers so I can’t prove the media player works either. {curses}

Oh yeah, and no ethernet card either so I can’t prove the internet capabilities either. {foiled again}

A quick search found that most current day operating systems recommend a minimum 128MB RAM. I can help (perhaps a great deal) by configuring a different desktop environment (similar I guess to say, turning off the WinXP Pro GUI interface and cranking it back down to Classic mode or something, the effect on memory/CPU usage is more drastic than that but similar concept). And I could always go ‘old school’ with an older version of another variant of BSD…but then it wouldn’t be so easy to install and configure as PC-BSD is/was.

I will update progress, if I make any, or if I end up changing the OS in the near future. There are so many options.

Perfect hot water?

Everything has it’s limitations. Yes this Microwave hot water heater is not “subject to the volatile natural gas market” but it is subject to the least reliable (I think) system in a neighborhood, namely the electrical grid.
I would argue that natural gas, cable, telephone, water, and even mail is delivered on a more consistent, efficient, and reliable system than electricity. Okay, cell service dwarfs the problems the electrical grid has but people don’t freeze when their cell phone doesn’t work.
All that aside this new idea for a water heater sounds long overdue.
I would buy one.

Not so thankful right now

Okay, yesterday I gave thanks for the finer points like playing good ‘ol ‘merican football and celebrating life by thumbing one’s nose at age and injury.
Now I am somewhat less thankful for thumbing my nose at reason as every muscle above my waist is groaning as if I have the worst aching flu or been subjected to The Rack.
The worst is my neck muscles and ribs because they are in the picture with every breath and motion. I would rather not even remember the sneezes.
I am reminded of a quote from Rocky III when asked for his prediction for the fight, Clubber Lang sneered menacingly,

“Pain.”

Today I am thankful for Advil and ice.

Turkey Bowl

Happy Thanksgiving all.
I am giving thanks this morning for 30 something, 45 degree, Turkey morning, hack football.
Some guys from work arranged a Turkey Bowl in Tacoma for this morning at 8:30. We had 18 hacks with beer-guts, three day beards, stocking hats, and our best football skills.
Since we all had family dinners to be at later we started early. I think we were all up and running way sooner than we would be on a work day. We all seemed to question our motives repeatedly in the early morning freezing fog and then we put it on the line.
The 2nd play from scrimmage I had my bell rung (full tackle football) and once I realized it was going to be like THAT I got into it.
I am now thankful for a turned ankle, bruised ribs, and the inability to raise my hands over my head. Aint life great! Let’s celebrate!
TurkeyBowl
See if you can pick me out of the crowd.