On the return from ohio

So, my flight back was mostly uneventful. Slept part of the way, read “Leadership Without Easy Answers” during the rest. Good book. Recommended to our commendable new elected official to the north, , I think you might enjoy it.

One thought from looking out the windows, another from the book.

1) Flying into phoenix, I thought the rock outcroppings were really cool and the city looked kinda neat. But looking at the organization of the urban fabric, the pervasive “suburban style housing pod, pool at the center, one way out for the car, with occasional big box/huge parking lot commercial entities” stuff, I could tell from the air that I’d probably be very sad living there.

2) In the book, he makes a huge distinction between influence and leadership. Influence is accomplishing what one desires. Leadership is guiding people to confront and manage their fundamental conflicts. It’s a very interesting book thus far, and I strongly recommend it to everyone, but especially Aaron. It has a great section briefly discussing primate behavior patterns, dominance, deference, and what not. Thinking about it made me wonder how my own reactions to influence worked. I think I still have some of the reflexive envy/anger/fear reaction to the “popular people”. That’s a bit of a problem there, makes for unsmooth interactions with such.

When I got back, I started chatting with another phoenix resident, lj-er, former roommate to , , , etc, oh yeah, and me, Brandon, *yay* =)

Best place to live?

test source

Interesting that the east coast tops off my list. Climactically, I totally get that, though DC is a bit on the warm/muggy side for my taste (it’s up there because it’s got so many smarties, schools, the library of congress, etc, etc). (Chicago was my climate selection, though I was sad to have to choose only city. I like mild summers, snowy winters, and generally cool climates. So, from the description, I really ought to check out Denver, pity it’s thoroughly land locked. Main problems for it were recreational possibilities, and low high school/college graduates).

I’m surprised by the high transportation scores for LA & Seattle (I chose way high on public transit (duh), train access almost there, plane access just below that.

Pittsburgh was 14, Madison 30, Oakland was 40th (big loser on climate and health (primarily air quality)), Champaign-Urbana was 71st scoring a surprising 0% on recreation (no nearby parks, I guess), Burlington, VT lost big on transportation and libraries (97th), Phoenix got a 0% on climate, and while I doubt I’d like it, I doubt it’d be that bad), Albuquerque was 217th. Good thing I’m not living there. =)

I really wish that you could make a section (like say, transportation) multiplicative instead of additive, but, overall, cool thingy. Thank you

An interesting point, am I a city slicker or country bumkin?

Reading this bit about howard dean got me wondering if I did essentially the reverse. Go from living next to cow pastures and uncut forest to residing in pittsburgh, chicago, and the bay area, with a taste for high density and an active street life. (with a five year layover in suburbia intervening). And wondering what the future holds for me.

http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/week_2003_12_07.html#002296

Lost cell, where to go?

So, I lost my cell phone today. Left it on the bart coming back from *redacted*. It was godawful bloody early, and it wasn’t 30 seconds after the train pulled away before I noticed its absence. Grrr. There goes all the numbers of just about every fucking one I know. *sigh*. I have been deleashed, I suppose, though we now have a land line.

Also, today, Ro, knowing I was going to be in the area ‘alone’ for the holidays, said that if he had a southwest travel voucher (which he may well), I was welcome to it, if I wanted to go somewhere over the holidays. I was vaguely disheartened to realize that there wasn’t anywhere I wanted to go. I’m sorta feeling like everyone already has plans, such that any arrangements I did make would result in me being a third-to-nth wheel. I saw my family (excluding Liz, who I had an extended phone conversation with) over thanksgiving, and I think we get along best seeing one another not-too-frequently, and my parents at least will be out here in late January.

I’ve had a fair number of solo holidays/birthdays, and they generally blow (the long chorus rehearsal on my bday was actually kinda cool), but I don’t think there’s a cold-sleep facility around to hibernate through the holidays. Maybe I can do some work on grad school applications and consultant-work-finding then.

Motivation slowly returning

I completely burned through my motivation globe on that paper. (if you don’t get it, play more diablo{2}). It’s slowly trickling back in.

Soon I will post about the non-Kentucky portions of my trip, and put some pictures up and other things. For now, I think I should manage the train wreck of my finances, and my room, and what not. Making an unturkey dinner tomorrow (including mashed potatoes, beverage, some vegetable or other. It should serve many, we have but few eating with us at this point. I’ve never had an unturkey before, but I hear it’s better than tofurkey’s. I believe it. Now & Zen has generally made good vegan stuff in my limited (airplane cookie) experience with them.

has moved out & is now living in mountainview. Not far from Josh. It was a bitch, moving in the rain, but, despite that, it was one of the quickest/easiest moves I’ve been party to. I really don’t want to move. We went out to garden fresh afterwards. Great vegan-friendly chinese. Pity it’s in mountainview.

Scott, Shannon’s boyfriend, has begun the moving in. So there will be 4 S’s and an R in the house. (the R having been born before the rest of us. How cute).

Oy.

Final Version

Cosmetic changes occured, but basically, I did a quick once over, printed it out, and turned it in. I have mixed feelings about the whole thing. I did a cubic fuckload of reading on the topic, and dispensed only a small part of what I read. It mostly came out as a data dump from my mind, but well, so it goes.

I feel like I understand a fair amount more than when I started the paper. But I don’t expect an especially good grade. Here’s the final draft, for the curious.

be gentle

examining my future and papers (was: free massage and inappropriate dreams)

So, browsing across the net personals, I ran across an attractive masseuse in training, who had marked me as appealing (gaydar has a pretty cool interface). So, I shot him a greeting and offered myself for practice. He said ‘sure, name a time’, so I did, and didn’t hear back for several days. Then he said sure, and lo a massage was scheduled. I had experienced a severe stymying of my paper plans earlier today when I discovered that, no really, the author of this book on homelessness was not a retarded monkey. Once again despondent about my paper prospects I picked up my umbrella and headed to bart, sql and perl dbi books in my backpack.

I’m feeling a sort of a tension about where my life is going to go. Could I hack it in public policy grad school? If I get past my own internal blocks, then almost certainly yes, I think. One of those big blocks is writing papers, probably my biggest block. My vocabulary and comprehension skills are pretty stellar across the board (though not so much for unfamiliar jargon). But when it comes time to select topics (most especially this) and organize my thoughts I run into big problems. So I procrastinate, big time. With this paper I feel like I’m making progress both on the paper and my issues with writing, but is it good enough/fast enough that I’ll be ready by the fall? If I am going to be ready by the fall, I really should do alot more writing of exactly this sort.

The alternative is to give up on public policy, at least for now, maybe take some classes at somewhere with lower expectations than Cal, in stats, econ, and writing. Probably wouldn’t hurt to work on the public speaking either. While doing the tech work I am eminently qualified to do. I think I may overgeneralize. It may be possible for me to have a satisfying job in tech, despite my prior bad experiences. Even so, I think there are other things (like pp) I’d rather be doing.

Anyway, walking down valencia in the mission, I came up with a more modest paper topic. Feels a little high school/early undergrad in terms of its structure, but it clearly demonstrates I know the economic model I’ve been busting my brain to figure out, and have some awareness of things outside of the model in terms of real world concerns about homelessness. I’ll post the rough draft when I’ve finished it. Hopefully sometime in the next 5 hours or so.

Back to Valencia. Made it to massage guy’s place about 15 minutes early. He’s slightly flustered, but warm & friendly. He’s still getting stuff ready, but we chat a bit while he’s doing so. Standard ‘feel free to wear as much clothing as you need to feel comfortable’ (boxers, in my case). He’s pretty good. He caused a bit of pain when working with my shoulders, though, oddly, not on the one I’d recently and repeatedly fucked up. He worked on that one second, and did not repeat the pain giving. Overall it was a very nice experience, the almost completely non-sexual physical intimacy is something I could use more of. I used to get alot of that with women, but I don’t have many women in my life these days. Especially not women I’m comfortable touching, who I suspect would be comfortable with that sort of thing.

Afterwards we talked about other massages recieved, both of us having had massages we’d paid for that turned a bit warmer than initially expected (at least on the recipients end). He said his experience with that, paying about big bucks for a massage that turned out to be brief, followed by admittedly good sex weirded him out. Which was more or less my response to similar circumstances. We exchanged a peck on the lips, which led to a lingering embrace, then I went home. Ran into a friend at the bart station, and chatted with him the whole way from the 16th & mission station to the 12th st city center station. Also had a homeless lady come by asking for a dollar bill, saying she had change, and what not. I gave her a dollar, then asked for the change, at which point she said she was asking for help. At that point, I pulled the dollar out of her hand and put it back in my wallet, while she glared at me. Then she moved on.

Back home, do some work (not much) on the paper. Eat vegan pizza with lots of veggies purchased by Melissa for the house (mmm, tasty, also, long story). Go to sleep. I recall bits of my dreams. One part involved being hit on hardcore by a particular and particularly attractive acquaintance, who I’m pretty sure is not attracted to me. That was fun, if not entirely comfortable. Another involved being cuddled up tight talking in a not-entirely-comfortable sort of way about my foibles with a particular friend, with whom I sincerely doubt I will ever share that sort of intimacy. (And if you think I’m revealing the identities involved, I’m apparently not alone in my dreaming =)

At least the other element I remember from the dream makes a great deal of sense. I was lining up to go into school (end of recess style, though I was my present real-world age), but I felt like I forgot something, or something was missing, and I broke out of the line and ran off to other parts.

Category Scores
Climate Econ. Hous. Educ. Health Crime Recr. Arts Trans.
Boston, MA-NH-ME 8% 6% 5% 18% 9% 6% 6% 11% 30%
Washington, DC-MD-VA-WV 7% 7% 6% 22% 7% 4% 7% 7% 33%
San Francisco, CA 1% 7% 5% 18% 8% 3% 15% 12% 31%
New York, NY 8% 4% 6% 18% 3% 3% 13% 9% 36%
Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI 9% 16% 7% 20% 8% 5% 9% 6% 20%
Long Island, NY 9% 5% 6% 19% 10% 15% 12% 9% 14%
Rochester, MN 9% 20% 8% 23% 4% 10% 0% 5% 21%
Chicago, IL 13% 6% 7% 19% 5% 2% 4% 9% 36%
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA 3% 8% 7% 14% 8% 4% 22% 6% 28%
10  Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA 2% 6% 7% 21% 1% 4% 19% 8% 34%