Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Back to Where I Was

Bug crawling on woman's desk meets untimely death

Grad student's animosity over prelim exam five months away starting to build

Hopefully that crackling noise in my headphones doesn't mean I'm going to be electrocuted

Grad student's one beer evidence of how boring she's gotten

Homemade biscotti really good if you have loose teeth

Grad student gets A+on paper, remembers what success feels like for a brief moment

Tuesday this week's Friday

Finally...an Ann Coulter the world can live with!

Monday, November 24, 2008

I Hope There Was a Prenup

I am sorry to say, everyone's favorite right-meets-left couple, Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes are breaking up after a long and painful 12-year on-air relationship....

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Things I Have Learned as a Graduate Student

(to be continually updated for the next 1.5 years)

You know, I really have learned a lot over all of these years...
1.  Sleeping are showering are overrated
2.  You do not have to smell good to be on a conference call
3.  Running is a mental health activity
4.  Be optimistic: your project will begin working within a single-digit number of hours before a deadline
5.  If you are taking classes with undergrads, your paper will be automatically be better (you have been in higher education for double the amount of time they have)
6.  Your work will follow you home into your nightmares
7.  At least once you will calculate the p-value of your chances of actually graduating
8.  Do not plan on using the internet from home to send anything important or anything on a deadline.  You will have to drive up and sit in front of the building to use the wireless.   Don't say I didn't warn you.
9.  Your 401K is a change jar on your fridge.  The interest rate on that is VERY low.
10.  Your stipend can pay for all of the material possessions you desire, so long as you don't waste any of it on eating, rent, or electricity bills
11.  Everything takes longer than you planned.  EVERYTHING!  There are no exceptions to this!!
12.  Load up on free food; you don't know when you will have time/money to eat again.
13.  Own enough socks and underwear so that laundry is only essential every three weeks
14.  Leisure reading is to be done on the toilet

to be continued...and continued...and continued....

Thursday, November 13, 2008

NYC Marathon: Narrative of the Stomach of Death (SOD)

Let me just preface this post by saying it is entirely in no way at all comparable to my post about Grandma's Marathon this summer.  Any attempts at a comparison will leave you sorely disappointed.  For this I apologize.  But NOTHING NOTHING NOTHING could compare to how painful that was.  

I'm pretty sure that running and sh*ting have gone together since the beginning of time.  Pheidippides may very well have sh*t himself and then died of embarrassment--I'm fairly certain we'll never know for sure.  They may have just pretended it was from exhaustion to let Pheidippedes die with a bit of dignity. There comes a time in every runner's career when he or she will deal with a similar situation.  I think that if you don't almost sh*t your pants at least once (not go all the way, however) while you are training for a marathon, then you just aren't ready.  

But anyways, from the beginning....
"Blue" bibb marathon camp
There are many interesting things to entertain one before the start of a large marathon.  For example:  Japanese tourists doing Thai-Chi synchronized to music for a warm-up, 'Team for Kids' members doing jumping jacks, French-men in disposable haz-mat suits frolicking about, seeing how many times one can ration a 3ft. long piece of BYO toilet paper (ahem, about 6).

Starting line, Verazzano Bridge, Staten Island, NY
Certainly the largest contingent in Europeans wearing head-to-toe Spandex I've ever come across.  It's kind of unfortunate for all of us that it's tight right there, sir....

Miles .001-2:  There's something slightly creepy about middle age men peeing off a bridge just because they can...as thousands of innocents stream by and attempt to avert their eyes

Miles 2-13.1:  Brooklyn, NY "Welcome to Brooooouk-lynnn"
Mile 2:  'You're almost done'  I hate you.

Mile 3:  Onset of the Stomach of Death.  This is no ordinary 'I have to go' urge--this is the nausea-rising, chilling in the toilet-room all afternoon feeling.  At first you try to deny it; if I just forget about it, maybe it will just smash into itself and wait patiently for another 3.5 hours for me to finish.  Please, SOD, go awaaaaaaaaay!  
In a race of this length it becomes a balancing act, you see, sugar is an SOD's worst enemy, but your muscles best friend.  For some reason denial doesn't work during a marathon...there are so many people around, but yet, you are so so alone in this thing. 

Mile 11:  I can hang on...maybe...just wait it out until 12

Mile 12:  There comes a point when a runner just can't ignore the Stomach of Death any more.  There was really no choice at this point--either go in the big blue box or go in my little blue Nike shorts.  The line looked manageable at least, and I was second-up.  Maybe had that 200-year-old non-English-speaking Japanese man not cut in front of the entire line, this next near-horror could have been averted.  When you dive into your little blue plastic box for a bit of privacy you expect it to be on solid ground, or more accurately, flat ground.  Well, this runner found herself in a tippy porto.  You're in a porto at your most vulnerable and it is rocking back and forth, seemingly going to fall off the curb--is this a joke, I mean, really?!??  The balancing act that ensued would make any surfer proud.  At one point, I feared I might go over.  
My thoughts at that moment could be summed up into this:  'If this thing tips over how am I going to explain why I didn't finish?  How does one tell everyone they were covered by gallons of human excrement??  They will have to take me away and vaccinate me for every disease known to man.  Nightmare.'  Nightmare narrowly averted.  SOD taken care of several minutes later, balancing act successful, excrement bath narrowly averted.  Whew.  What did I eat? Or more importantly--what ate ME??  

Mile 15.9, Middle of Queensboro Bridge, Queens/Manhattan, NY:  Oh, there up-ahead, is the 16 mile marker, that means water...I guess I will eat a packet of super-charged snot-textured sugar-maltodextrin goo...oh, water station fake-out grrrrrrrreat!  It is possible to gag so hard it feels like someone is stabbing you in the ribs, just in case you were wondering.

Mile 17:  Return of SOD Part Deux.  Ick.

Mile 25:  I begin to hear the crowd erupting in laughter as I approach, before I can check my shorts for stains, I see him--or I should say--his ass cheeks--he is a mulletted man wearing a bright-green Borat thong.  Yes, letting (most of) it all hang out.  Priceless.  

Mile 25.5:  Legs start to get tired...damn you, SOD...I could have gone so much faster.

Mile 26.2: DONE!!  But now we are being herded like a bunch of stunned cattle and the SOD refuses to wait.  The volunteers laugh at me when I ask how far the bathrooms are from here.  A quarter mile later, I beg the medical staff to let me use their blue toilet boxes, after contemplating fence-hoping and then walking salmon-style up-stream, I reach it.  Each individual's heaven could be a function of the situation they are in at a precise moment...and  mine was there waiting, a stable, non-tippy, TP-laden blue box of happiness. 

Well, that's about it.  See, I told you it wasn't as good (bad) as last time.  
All done, wrapped up in fleece coats!

Here are some official pics of number 37001A who finished in 17,375th place with a time of 4:14:26 and who spent 4 minutes stalled in a, ahem, stall....boo...next time, marathon, NEXT TIME you are mine!!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

My Research is Out of Gas...Literally

Me: I made a cake and it's really bad.
Boyfriend:  Oh, I'm sure it's not.
(takes bite, almost gags)
Me:  See, I wasn't kidding.

--
Wheat flour ruins good cake recipe in only 60 minutes

Woman definitely should have made the meringues instead

Wrong-way flow meter causes momentary panic

Tomato soup tastes strangely like Spaghetti-Os 

Woman sure lost wrench going to turn up right in front of her face

Lost wrench turns up right in front of woman's face an hour later

Finally getting air tank changed hallmark of today's accomplishments

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

sNOOOOOOOOOOw

Great quote:
"There are some Southern women who are all 'oh, bless her heart'. Then there are others who are like 'I will cut you'." --lady on MSNBC talking about soon-to-be-ex-NC Senator Elizabeth Dole

--
Liberal displaying unhealthy amounts of optimism for a liberal

Sarah Palin slips back into oblivion, hopefully learns Africa is a continent before next failed political campaign

Viewer wondering what Keith Olbermann will rant about now

Gas slips below $2 a gallon, woman pees self a little

You really need to rake those leaves, buddy

Adult can't stop playing with toy purchased for a one-year-old. Elmo!

Apparently nobody shows up to work on Fridays

First sign of winter: dogs wearing sweaters

Monday mornings and working with razor blades don't mix

Semi-truck parked in front of our building for two weeks really needs to go

Runner pretty sure dog barking, growling, and jumping on a sign of endearment

Watching 'Bigger Loser' so much more entertaining while eating cake

Artificial Mouth From Hell contunues to test patience, draw blood

Grad student to put in undergrad level of effort for group project

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

YES WE CAN!

I was looking for an appropriate quote to sum up how I feel about last night (obviously stealing someone else's words is much easier than crafting my own).  This is what I'm going to go with....

A message has been sent. We can now become the nation we were meant to be. We will now see ourselves differently, and the world will see us differently, as well.

This is a remarkable and potentially transformative event in our history. John McCain just said that this is a great moment for African Americans. This is half right. It is actually a great moment for all Americans.

--James Zogby

A great moment, indeed.

NYC Marathon recap to follow, sometime in the near future....

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Vote Today for Obama!

If you are voting for McCain, your day to vote it tomorrow.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Joe Bowl '08: The Final

















FINAL GAME

Joe the Plumber vs. Joe McCain
Decision: Joe McCain--the IRS knows where Joe the Plumber lives now! And let's face it...it doesn't look like the other McCain is going to win anything this year!

Sunday, November 2, 2008

I'm Running a Marathon Right Now

I can blog while running...I'm THAT good.

Check it out

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Joe the Plumber vs. Joe McCain--Who's it going to be??















Joe the Plumber putting his best assets forward....














The more youthful McCain probably calling someone a communist.