humid humanity

August 29, 2004


The humidity is close to unbearable. I suppose I could forgive the capricious contractor for not showing up to paint the ceiling after church today -- if he'd called. I'd have understood that it's too humid to work. I couldn't even carry the trash to the dumpster without feeling like I'd run a marathon. The dumpster is full anyway so the remaining trash will stay in my yard offending Pajama Woman and the Crazy Lady until the trash company comes. At leat those weird little flies from yesterday seem to be gone. Whatever they were I never saw them before and hope I never see them again.

While I was waiting for the capricious contractor to reappear I finished reading Work to Live, which actually did give me some insight into what makes a life; cleaned the toaster oven, which I had set on fire yesterday warming some garlic bread (it's fine now, no harm done); watched the Red Sox and Tim Wakefield defeat the Detroit Tigers on TV, cooked up a mess of broccoli rabe with olive oil, garlic, and red pepper even though it's so hot I thought I'd keel over at the stove -- still worth it -- melt a little provolone cheese on it and it's heavenlyl; wrote up the minutes of Wednesday night's cat shelter exec committee meeting and board meeting; washed dishes (my dishwasher is still non-functional due to a hole in the tub -- it's on my list to buy a new one when I earn enough money to stimulate the economy -- meanwhile I was dishes by hand and try to treat it as a path to enlightenment; petted Wilbur; cleaned up some spots on the carpet; threw away a bunch of home decorating magazines (my secret vice); read some more of Birds in the Bush, which is fun but has no narrative drive to keep one reading; and how much longer can I make this sentence?

I also blogged a lot in my new improved stercus blog, New because I am actually blogging in it. Improved because I spelled it right in this incarnation. I tried to name a blog after the Latin for compost a couple of years ago and made a typo, naming it stercos, which I kept because it sounded like a cross between a compost heap and an operating system. Speaking of operating systems I had some brilliant insight about UNIX the other night while I was dreaming about falling out of bed while having to give a speech in Hungarian with cue cards in Spanish (yes it;s a recurring dream) but now I have no idea what the great insight was. I told a guy the other day that when I compain that I'm a UNIX head in a DOS world people either immediately laugh and sympathize or ask "What??????" Usually those are the DOS heads. They don't know they are running DOS in their heads. They don't know there's an operating system under all that .... compost. Anyway I suppose dreaming I have insights about UNIX is a whole lot saner than dreaming I imparted secrets of governing to John Kerry. Why don't I ever dream about Bush? And is Bush DOS or UNIX based?

So anyway back to this blog thing. I don't think I know how to participate in the blogosphere like the big bloggers. I'm not involved in any breaking news except about those really irritating tiny flies, and my opinions aren't any more interesting than the next guy's on most things. Nevertheless, to avoid being left behind to rust in obsolesence I started blogging about birds in the news. It's amazing how much breaking bird news comes out of Scotland. Actually. maybe it's not that amazing. Scotland is after all the land of Charles St. John.

I think I hear a corncrake... Just kidding, twitchers. The odds against a corncrake in the Greater Big Dig Area are astronomical. There's a better chance of the Widen Route 3 project actually widening Route 3. There's a better chance of the Big Dig actually making the commute to Boston faster. There's a better chance ... of ... oh, I don't know.... six impossible things before breakfast? Or my actually learning Hungarian.

Today's Reading
Birds in the Bush by Bradford Torrey, Work to Live by Joe Robinson

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Tim Wakefield


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan