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<p align="right"><font size="6">[[Transition|<font face="Consolas, Courier new">claytoncastle.com</font> •  T R A N S I T I O N]]</font></p>
<p align="center"><font size="6">[[Transition|<font face="Consolas, Courier new">claytoncastle.com</font>]]</font></p>
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=[[2019.03.25 "That's not how it works."]]=
=[[2025.10.18 No Kings]]=
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"That's not how it works."
40,000 people in Portland sending a clear message.


I'm squinting, even more than usual, struggling to understand.  My huge, fuzzy Orbodun partner persist with the questioning.  I can hear his fear underneath his impatience, and it echoes my own. "What?  So you're saying that you don't have to know the plan in order to follow instructions?"
Awkwardly, the current administration has also been sending a clear, fascist message.
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The medically incapacitated Takolee is only capable of conversing via direct contact with his internal comms, which might be what makes his texted responses come across as, shall we say, snippy?.  "No, you towering mound of unreasoning fluff.  IT knows what I'm going to do better than I do, that's the whole point.  IT never gives me good instructions.  Nev-ver.  IT gives me cryptic suggestions, and I always end up doing exactly what IT wants.  Every uncle-zarking time.  There is no double-crossing.  There is no second-guessing.  Just the implacable hand of fate moving game people like game pieces."
<hr>


"So, lots of mathematician stages?I hear my partner state the obvious, but it doesn't fit the gravitas of the Takolee's desperation.
=[[2025.10.04 Federal Troops In Portland]]=
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It's really weird. Just, you know, profoundly weird.


"Zarking NOYou think mathematician, and you think probabilities and really good guessesI've done jobs to fuck with scary mathematicians, and while they tend to not make mistakes they are still limited by reality - you can get at them by sneaking in the really improbable cracks.  This is more than that.  IT isn't making shrewd calculations, IT just zarking <i>knows</i>."
Acknowledging for a moment the footage from 2020 looked bad - as shown on cable newsBut even then that was basically constrained to a couple blocks downtown for actual protestsMeanwhile there were other simultaneous marches about police brutality throughout the city that were completely peaceful and not newsworthy.


Having this conversation purely in text means that I'm much easier to understand, even as it mutes the Takolees ability to emote"Just knowing stuff... that sounds like a mentalist."
I suppose that if one were to conflate the "hundred days of protest" in 2020 with the rising homelessness problem, one could squint and see the folks cowering in tents and vehicles and pretend there's a direct connection of some kindI mean, other than the systematic violence done to the worker class both strip mining us for wealth and trying to overtly pit us against each other.


Itty bitty black eyes roll in my partners fuzzy face"Missionaries are still robots, right?  They don't get access to mentally-based abilities."
But in context of what is actually happening right now - which amounts to a group of 6-16 people regularly taunting ICE agents at a single building - it's wildly disproportionalEspecially with the Portland Police Department stating, in court, that all the altercations they have evidence for so far are mainly cases of untrained federal agents trying to instigate meme-worthy moments with the peaceful protestors.


An awkward thought saunters into my few-track mind.  "It could totally have arranged broad access to a powerful mentalist, though.  Mix that in with a handful of stages of mathematician, and the big bastards going to - pardon me if I don't get the quote totally right - just zarking know a lot of stuff."
So the federal activation of 200 National Guard to "pacify Portland" is, well, purely for show.


The long sigh that flows out of the Orbodun's nostrils is a ripe mix of appreciation and fearFor my own part, I deliberately verify my connection with my mini-missionary weapons to reassure myself that the monster isn't near.  I have no idea of what to do now.
Which makes Portland's main reaction one that endears this city to me even more: to be silly.  Dressing up in harmless costumes, dancing, and handing out cookiesDoing whatever it takes to make the video bites nearly impossible to weaponize politically, as the fascists so clearly desire.


The Orbodun is laughing? I crane my head around to take a better look, to see how badly he's crackedHe's reaching up with a massive paw to wipe a mirthful tear from one side of his scarred muzzle.
And to the person in the inflatable costume that had the inlet of their suit sprayed with pepper spray: I hope you are OK. As much as that must have sucked, and possibly could have caused serious medical repercussions, you embodied the shallow idiocy of their positionIn no way could a bumbling inflatable costume be considered a threat, and to assault you was to show the cowardly and loathsome depth of their antisocial motivations.


"What's going on?" Oh, right - the Takolee can't actually hear anything.
To the federal fucknugget that used pepper spray on an obviously-harmless person in an inflatable costume: Now we all know why you have no real friends and your life is empty of meaning. You obviously don't belong in Portland.
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My partner shifts his own guarded position to reach over and make his own direct connection with the limp Takolee in my satchel.  "Sorry, I was overcome with the beauty of it all."
<hr>


The Orbodun really has cracked, because that makes no sense at all. I feel an awkward lump in my heart as I contemplate putting him out of his misery.
=[[2025.09.17 Bertrand Russell On Fascism]]=
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As mentioned on BoingBoing today:<br>
In 1962, Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, invited Nobel-winning philosopher Bertrand Russell to a debate. Mosley aimed to persuade Russell of fascism's merits.


He must have sensed something, because he catches my eye with his own gaze, and shakes his head meaningfully.  He's got a look of pity about him.  Is he pitying me, or the Takolee... or all of us?
Russell, who was 89 at the time, replied:


"So, basically, this means that your master sent you specifically to get caught by us.  Intentionally, so that you could say this to us."  He's looking at me pretty deliberately.  He's saying something more to me than just these words to the Takolee.
<blockquote>


"Yeah, I get that IT basically sent me to die.  I never thought the day would come, because I'm so useful, but I have never doubted for a moment that if I were to die it would be ITs will."
Dear Sir Oswald,


"Ha. No."  A beatific smile creases the Orbodun's muzzle. "It sent you as a messenger."
Thank you for your letter and for your enclosures. I have given some thought to our recent correspondence. It is always difficult to decide on how to respond to people whose ethos is so alien and, in fact, repellent to one's own. It is not that I take exception to the general points made by you but that every ounce of my energy has been devoted to an active opposition to cruel bigotry, compulsive violence, and the sadistic persecution which has characterised the philosophy and practice of fascism.


Oh.  Fuck.
I feel obliged to say that the emotional universes we inhabit are so distinct, and in deepest ways opposed, that nothing fruitful or sincere could ever emerge from association between us.


"What message?  That you're just as zarked as I am?  Great. Glad to be of service."
I should like you to understand the intensity of this conviction on my part. It is not out of any attempt to be rude that I say this but because of all that I value in human experience and human achievement.


"Pissy, aren't we?  We're going to let you go now."
Yours sincerely,


We are?  Dammit, I'm having a hard time swallowing this idea.  I do a new sweep of the park to catalogue all potential observers and rank them threat-wise.  It's a long list of small numbers.
Bertrand Russell
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"You're going to do what now?"  While the Takolee is incredulous, the Orbodun pings me to do the thing.  So I extract the Takolee-damping dart after giving the RELEASE command.
<hr>


The Takolee is out of the satchel so fast I have difficulty moving my various pointy bits out of its way so that it doesn't hurt itself (any further).  Then it's behind a tree and lost to sensors in the blink of an eye.
=[[2025.08.15 If Not Stupid, Then Why Stupid-Shaped?]]=
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Seriously, there is so much political stupidity going on.


In the subsequent stillness after that flurried moment, the Orbodun and I gaze worriedly at each otherProbably for totally different reasons.
ETA:<br>
Examples?  Hell noIt would be like admitting a vampire into your home to post anything like a meaningful set.


Yep.
If there is permitted to be accurate news and history recorded of this era, simple searches will reveal enough to explain.
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"So, where to first?"
<hr>


I bring a talon to gingerly scratch at an itch on my snout"Well, I suppose it makes the most sense to finish off the shift of your weapon configuration with that annoyingly capable technician."
=[[2025.06.25 Corporate Culture]]=
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Big changes at workNot going to talk about that overly much - it's too boring to even write out.


While the Orbodun is nodding, the Takolee reappears from behind a totally different tree"Wait.  So not only did you let me go, and you're not trying to chase me, you're actually going to wander directly into the place you were sure was a trap? I am clearly missing something."
BUTAn aspect I find interesting is who is excited about these major changes, and who is worried about them.  


With a cock of my ear and and a sideways glance, I regard the Takolee"You still smell terrifiedMaybe we're misleading you with casual banter while we actually plan on tracking you by scent.  Again."  The Orbodun expresses his frustration with my by coving his face with a giant shaggy paw.
Now, obviously, both reactions are simultaneously valid and possible.  I feel both myselfBut whether the excitement is more important compared to the various individual level of concern does speak to where many of us areWhich, in turn, is strongly indicative of the sense of trust we have with the company - or our sense of trust in ourselves to offset any lack of trust in the company we have.
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The Takolee is quite discomfited.  That's a word, right?  He's agitated - even for a Takolee.  "No, you immense talking sphincter, I'm worried because I'm missing something - and <i>I Don't Miss Things</i>."
<hr>


While I'm trying to formulate a joke about that being the Orbodun's line - him being a sniper and all - he goes and intercedes. "Well, really, you explained it perfectly well.  This super-powerful missionary we're in the orbit of, there's nothing we can do to out-maneuver it.  Regardless of whether it's math or magic, it will always be a step ahead of us.  And I think it's pretty clear that we can't fight it head-on, considering that lesser missionaries easily kicked our asses. So it gave our Massetin friend here very few options."
=[[2025.06.14 Head Down, Staying Quiet]]=
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Today there is a multitude of public gatherings around Portland, along with the rest of the USA, to decry "NO KINGS" on this day that Trump has coopted the military's questionable anniversary to be a giant parade for his birthday.


I snort at that.  Not entirely intentionally; the frustration is still bitter in the back of my throat.
All in the wake of weeks of skewing-totalitarian actions from federal departments, most notably ICE agents violating people's rights and subsequent violations of the rule of law to deploy the military to quell protests associated with that.


"What options? I told you that you're zarked."
But I'm a dirty, filthy, job-stealing, woman-claiming, green-carded immigrant non-citizen.  So my rights are in doubt, and I have a [waves arms about] well-documented history of speaking out against cheeto hitler. So I'm going to stay here, catch up on some sleep, and keep my head down - physically.


The Orbodun gives a patient chuckle.  "True, you did say that.  But why?  Does this extremely powerful missionary have a habit of toying with people?  Unlikely; that's a sign of insecurity, and that doesn't fit. Does it?"
And also poke my citizenship application, so that I can theoretically in the future be out and about threatening to punch nazis.
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The Takolee is uncharacteristically still.  "No.  Now that you mention it, it really doesn't.  Now I'm even more confused."
<hr>


"Oh?"
=[[2025.06.01 Puppies And Motivations]]=
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http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_5323_copy.png


"Well, because it must be trying to warn you to go away - right? But it doesn't do that; it just makes people go away before they even know they're at risk.  I was so freaked out by feeling like I had screwed up..."
Say hello to Bergiet, our 9-week-old Bernese Mountain Dog puppy. She's small, bitey, friendly, and has unfathomable charisma in person.  I really should be spending this post writing a MSDS for cuteness, in case it is actually possible to get lethal exposure.


"Right, you must have gone a long time without getting tripped up, it would throw anybody offBut no, it's not a warning.  I mean, it could be if we wanted it to be, and we probably wouldn't be worth chasing - but we'd never really know and it would suck.  No, there's another side to the message you present."
The one down side of the Panda Shark is that house training her involves taking her outside every couple hours - including through the nightSince Amy has 12-hour day shifts, that means mostly me.  I am fucking tired.


"You both are zarking annoying.  Just say something straight, damn it."
However, currently, not being able to stew to clearly on my thoughts is actually kind of helpful.


I grimace and say it"It's a job offer."
Due to current circumstances, the company I work for has pivoted away from the electrification I had been excited to develop for the trucking industryThis was disappointing.


Very disappointing.  It takes some effort to shake off the weight of how hard it is to focus on the fun engineering that is the core of my job when the direction swings to point in the axis of cowardice and avarice.
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=[[2019.03.18 Love, Death, & Robots]]=
=[[2025.04.16 Bandwidth]]=
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[[File:Lovedeath&robots.jpg]]
How many things am I doing right now?<br>  
[loses count]
 
OK, let me re-phrase that: How many things am I actually engaging in right now?<br>
Uh, looks like 5.  1) listening into a technical staff meeting that my designs are involved in but I'm not the responsible engineer, 2) updating a related "concerns" list for the same project, 3) answering a question from a colleague, 4) considering coordinated plans with Amy for after work, and 5) self-soothing by venting here.


Shout-out to my new online obsession.
Why the heck am I doing #5 in context of all the other things I'm "theoretically" doing?<br>
[https://www.netflix.com/title/80174608 Love, Death, & Robots]
Honestly, #5 is a result of failing to additionally do any of the countless other things in my queue.
 
Wouldn't it make more sense to just trim down the number of things to a less-impossible degree?<br>
Everything is already triaged by urgency and by consequences of inaction, but honestly none of the things that persist in my queue are neglectable.  Adulting is a fucking trip, man.
 
Delegate?<br>
Holy fucking shit, you would not believe the breadth of additional taskage is enthusiastically punted to others when and how I can.
 
Am I sure I am working on the most important things?<br>
Oh, I can essentially guarantee that I'm not doing the most important things right now.  The awkward caveat being that the TSM is non-optional, so that process debt is sunk.  So the other 4 are all things that I can also do while half-attending and staying ready to contribute if my expertise is needed.  Most of my actual important tasks take my full attention, and the hard truth is that finding sufficient stretches of time that I can focus on hard topics is difficult with my schedule.
 
Good thing I'm self-soothing here.<br>
Except, of course, for actual recovery I need to be doing nothing for chunks of time.  Alas.
 
Woo!  TSM over!<br>
[flees to do more stuff]
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=[[2019.03.18 Hating Humans]]=
=[[2025.04.04 Personal Values]]=
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I've been trying and failing for a while now to translate my feelings regarding extremists, particularly white power, and have to admit that it's still mostly just incoherent disgust.
We did a departmental workshop to delve into our personal values yesterday, with the purpose to see how best to harmonize as we work together towards supporting our department mission.


But this [https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/whoopsie SMBC] strip is an amusing approximation.
<font size=5>We make the best damn trucks for a better future.</font>
 
It was an interesting bout of self-reflection for many folks who do not seem regularly interested in that sort of public review of internal drives.  There was a wide variety of experiences, ranging from the cursory "I think this is what I would like to say is important to me" to the, "Now that I think about it, I am surprised to admit that this is pretty central to how I exist".  But, aside from a couple manager-types who have recently been on some sort of related training, virtually everyone was unfamiliar with examining aspects of themselves where there isn't anything to fix.
 
To unpack that last part a little bit, I know for certain several of my peers are in or have been in therapy to address mental health concerns.  And in a couple cases I've been unofficial support as a mentor and confidante.  So I know they have considered their values, but it is hard to equip someone for a general philosophical perspective when their interest is to focus entirely on problems.  There was generalized difficulty in cranking out 3-5 core personal values for use in this new context.
 
When I carefully wrote my Big Three on the provided note cards immediately, there were questions.
 
<b>Joy.<br>
Honour.<br>
Wisdom.</b>
 
Q: How did you come up with those so quickly?
 
A: I've not only done this before, I've been doing stuff like this for a long time.  First with my dad, then with my friends as we had conversations about Life, The Universe, And Everything, and then with my first wife.  These were actually engraved in my wedding ring. 
 
Answer I didn't say then: Then also in therapy, after that marriage ended, and are a big part of why I'm doing as well as I am with it.
 
Q: Why just single words, and not more complete thoughts?
 
A: The ideas behind these three words expand and overlap. 
 
Distilled version of the answer I rambled on, making it relevant to work:  I do my best when I'm doing something I enjoy, so do other people, and it's even better when we all do.  Doing work that we are proud of and meeting our commitments leverages tough situations into work we can be satisfied doing. Being open to learning new things, accepting that even things going wrong can be opportunities to learn, and knowing our limits and when to ask for help makes for better collegial bonds.
 
Q: Why are you hiding in the corner to eat the free hawaiian food?
 
A: Mmmph mmmrrrm mrfmm.


https://www.smbc-comics.com/comics/1552921321-20190318.png
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=[[2019.03.15 Rocket Launch Seen From Space]]=
=[[2025.03.06 Employee Appreciation Day]]=
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https://youtu.be/B1R3dTdcpSU
Just got a breathlessly appreciative email from our chief engineer, extolling about how grateful they are to each and every one of us.
 
I'm normally a cynical person, who nevertheless works to see the humour and bright side whenever possible.  But this is especially hard to hold with equanimity in context of one of our brightest engineers being fired last week for embarrassingly stupid reasons. 
 
This is an engineer who was the cornerstone of our cost-efficiency efforts for years, and single-handedly created many of the tools now used as standard to evaluating cost opportunities.  This engineer has a deep wealth of system experience in many of the more arcane functions of our quirky database functions, and has spend much time supporting various other teams.  And, most poignantly for me, was the engineer who was level-headed enough when I turned grey-skinned and crumpled at my desk with ambiguous chest pains to coordinate the emergency response to get me an ambulance.  And afterward were the only person aside from my boss to check on me at the hospital.
 
They were fired for low performance.  Which is not wrong, technically.  But the context is telling.  They moved to a new position to grow their skills, like engineers tend to like to do.  But once in the new position they were not able to receive any training.  Worse, their manager moved on and their new manager is a dominant-type extrovert personality that does not actually understand introverts.  Much less that neurodivergence exists.  The new job without training created anxiety, which impaired performance by itself.  But the new bro-type manager instructed the engineer to improve their performance by being extroverted.  Which, as anyone familiar with introverts understands, is the single most anxiety-inducing thing that they can face.
 
So, really, they were fired for a management failure.  And it pisses me off to hear language about how much we, each and every one of us - that are left - are appreciated.
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=[[2019.03.14 The Closest Planet To Earth Is...]]=
=[[2025.02.09 Identity]]=
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https://media.giphy.com/media/mJzrDOCwZB7wEZE4EK/giphy.gif
Been having lots of thoughts and discussions about identities lately.  Which naturally, fermented in my brain as contemplation about my own identity.
 
Looking at it quasi-chronologically, it aggregates as something like this:
 
==smart==
 
Early on in school, I felt accomplished and continued to feed that throughout my life.  I definitely identified as smart, and still do.  Which isn't to say that hasn't had some problems - University took a big bite out my ego, and with age has come a much greater appreciation for all the things that don't come easily to me.  Staying mentally sharp features prominently in my plans for the rest of my life.
 
==creative/artistic==
 
Also early in school, I realized that I had an eye for things that few others did.  I drew prolifically, illustrating the entirety of the [https://nastidyne.com/index.php/Main_Page AIF]] game system, and filling several thick sketchbooks that I prize.  This also was fed by my love of creating things with LEGOs - mostly spaceships.  Later this included the joy of writing, both exploring my own mind on this website but also telling stories that amuse me.
 
I admit that I get a bit prickly about this facet of my identity.  Partially because I never really pushed it very far, which means that others that identify artistically don't really see me that way.  And my low artistic output has me feeling semi-regular regrets, even though life is way too full to be too angsty about corners that aren't fitting in as well lately.
 
==a good friend==
 
Public school was a rough time for me, especially the move from Nelson (hippy land) to Castlegar (hockey land).  I got bullied.  A lot.  Even my peer group for the first few years was deeply steeped in self-loathing and the result was a finely honed defensive arsenal of snide.  So when I eventually managed to get some good friends, I was not great at being a friend.  That is, until Dave asked my why I was habitually weilding my snide - and I was able to suddenly have the perspective of how important being seen as a good and trustable friend was to me.  And since then, I have made that a cornerstone of how I engage genuinely with people.
 
==engineer==
 
Ever since watching The Original Star Trek as a kid, with all its technobabble, and spaceships, I've wanted to be an engineer.  More than that, as I did the grind of pre-requisites and university and co-op work terms and actual engineering jobs, the sense that I can Figure Stuff Out and Make Stuff Work is profoundly fulfilling.  Even as I wrestle with personal truths, and philosophical truths, I feel grounded in the tactile connection to objective truths.
 
It also is the main mechanism for a career-long pride in the good work I've done.  Not just in solving immediate design needs, but in contributing to making the world better.  First the massive improvement in efficiency of transportation, and now in the huge hurdle of moving to zero-emission transportation.
 
==a dad==
 
Most of my early life had a distinct absense of a drive to have kids.  When my own dad died, this spurred a lot of questions in myself, and was the beginning of a foundational shift in being open to the idea.  But when those little sexually transmitted parasites emerged into the world, the neurological transformation was rapid and confusing.
 
Essentially, even though I'm not necessarily inclined to be entirely selfish and self-centered, I was priviliged enough to get to be so without any consequences.  When my kids were born, it's like a huge mad-scientist-class knife switch was thrown in my internal circuitry to assert, loudly, THEY MATTER MORE.  And getting to be a dad, not just a father, has been a sublime and spiritual re-ordering of my existence.  I love it.  And I'll do my best to keep on being a loving, supportive dad to my kids, no matter what.
 
==a partner==
 
It's weird to say, but getting divorced was a huge learning experience.
 
Reflecting back on the first marriage, it was a steep learning curve on partnership - especially parenting.  And when the marriage needed to end, we were both brave enough to continue to do the work to keep the parenting partnership healthy.  It also highlighted things about myself that I now know are important to me for having a partnership.
 
More than just honesty and good communication, and trickier than being selfless and mindful of boundaries and needs.  Because while I was finding myself in the woods of Quarantinder, I was able to recognize how much energy some things needed and how much other things sucked.  As an introvert, I've long known that I have a different social energy balance than many others.  But translating that to a 1:1 interaction is also important.
 
Long story short: being a good partner and actively nurturing that partnership is important enough to me to consider it a part of my identity.  And I'm really glad to have found Amy.
 
==Canadian==
 
And here we have the kernal of today's Rant.  I've been proudly Canadian ever since I can remember.  This increased as I went to university and was exposed to more diverse international people, and felt proud of my country.
 
Even after [checks calendar] almost 23 years of living in the United States of America, I wear my literal maple leaf tattoo with pride.  And as I contemplate US citizenship too, it causes a lot of complicated emotions.  Which, combined with other current circumstances, had me going back to first principles and contemplating all this stuff.


...usually Mercury.
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=[[2025.01.25 Back To Adventuring In the Future]]=
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So, Amy had to take a break from being the Dorks™ dungeon master due to fatigue, and Dave stepped up to start running us all in an AIF game.
 
Now, clearly, I have some strong bias going on.  But wow is it a fun return.
 
I've played some AIF with Amy and the kids, which is indeed enjoyable and more suited to my general imagination.  But the lower bullshit threshold for running a character in AIF is a welcome and joyful experience.  Which is not to say that I don't enjoy playing D&D characters, because I do, but there is a lot more simultaneous railroaded bullshittery to manage in the process.  As you're playing along, building capabilities, it's not like you want to turn down various added options, but it really is a lot of mildly-pointless minutiae that you really only get flavour options on.  Multiclassing is possible, but only in a limited way as only certain combinations genuinely function well.  And any multiclassing also usually means guaranteed missing out on some capstone abilities.
 
Plus, as a player, getting to use [https://nastidyne.com/index.php/Dice_Pooling dice pooling] again - delightful cinematic elements become more built into the gameplay.  Love it.
 
Anyway, back to my lazy Saturday of reading, watching old TV shows, and filling out citizenship forms.
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https://www.tesla.com/content/dam/tesla-site/sx-redesign/img/model3-proto/specs/top@2.png
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=[[2019.03.11 Murderbot Diaries]]=
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Recently I've found myself sucked into a new science fiction series called "The Murderbot Diaries".  Honestly, I felt it was worth peeking at purely for the title.  That same irreverence is carried satisfyingly throughout the tone of the stories I've read so far.  Also compelling is the very insightful way in which a sense of social awkwardness and profound introversion is lived by the main character.
=[[2025.01.04 Rebel Iconography Lead Candidate]]=
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[[file:Roundel of the United States (1942–1943).gif]]


I give it two assault blaster rifles firing celebratory shots into the air (without consideration for habitat structural integrity).
Because apparently just a plain single star is too "Texas" or "Russia".
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=[[2019.03.03 De-Motivation]]=
=[[2024.12.31 VELMA]]=
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It's hard to admit that all you see your company leadership does as being easily replaced with a simple set of annoying alarms and buzzers.
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_0034_copy.png


One more year of this shit, and I'm transforming all of my efforts for self-improvement outside of the company.
Dealership called us back <i>again</i> and took off the entire 10k$ market adjustment.  So, OK then.
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=[[2019.03.01 CX Champions]]=
=[[2024.12.29 Wrap-Up Free Write]]=
[[File:Cxchampions2019.jpg|800px]]
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A causual review of my update frequency would suggest that perhaps my heart isn't really in talking about what is going on in my world.  And that's probably fair, and politically adjacent.  Nevertheless, there have also been things to mention that either got edited out of existence or failed to make the jump to web publication due to other distractions.
 
With that generalized arm-waving excuse, here are wisps of thoughts that I have been having but not bothering to dredge enough words for.


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Way back in 2004 (ish), the very first version of [[Feeling_Machine_-_beta | The Feeling Machine]] had the Acolyte sections carefully refer to the character as "they/them".  This was long before the current uncoiling of pronouns, and it was an attempt at injecting a futuristic sense of otherness to one facet of the society so the degree of change could be felt.  Obviously, I didn't really predict that it would become a focus of society a scant two decades later.  As I re-read it for editing, it felt quite stilted.  But what really made me change it was reading [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Leckie Anne Leckie's] "Ancillary Justice" in 2013 where everyone was referred to as "she/her" and it felt so much better done than I had managed. 


=[[2019.02.27 Foxy]]=
So it goes. But, just wanted to describe somehow that I've been wrangling with the complexity of gender identity in culture for a while on my own, and am not just a bandwagon-jumping progressive supporter.
https://i.cbc.ca/1.5035136.1551261452!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_780/fox-and-vole.jpg


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=[[2019.02.22 Path To Inner Peace]]=
Amy and I actually had signed for getting an ID.Buzz - First edition, AWD, in the "energetic orange" that we like. This was after bouncing from dealership to dealership where they've all been sold out. We had even managed to swallow the bullshit "market adjustment" of 10k$ over MSRP.  But then things fell apart.
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<font size="6">The path to inner peace is<br>
not my fucking problem.</font>
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First was discovering that all the wrangling and deal-making we had done with the sales department didn't actually mean anythingWe had settled on a price/payment, based on flexing multiple variables the way we could, then they came back with the "real numbers from VW"Totally irrespective of any of the numbers we had negotiated-sigh-  Fine.
This was my favourite quote after a week of collaboration training in AtlantaThe best parts were facilitated by a troupe called [http://www.bandingpeopletogether.com/ Banding People Together], which was a musically-themed approach built around a novel personality assessment resourceIt was rather compelling, even to someone as innately skeptical as myself, and despite my being jaded by personality assessments as the spouse of a clinical psychologist inevitably is.   


The quote, however, was actually from one of my fellow participantsThere were about 200 of us, from all corners of Daimler and Mercedes in North America, and it was an impressively high-functioning crew.
Then was hours spent by the "papers guy" trying to get us to put less money downWhy?  Because arm-waving about how money works for you - failing to grasp how we very much understood that our money-earning-money potential was almost certainly going to be less than the rate we we paying for financing the rest.  Then he repeatedly tried to sell us maintenance plans for things we neither wanted (coverage for things we didn't care about) or needed (a service contract for maintenance - on an EV).
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Finally, they unleashed one final gotcha - another 10k$ for the lease transferral.  Normally not a thing if you move directly to another, bigger lease deal.  But, because the market value of our current ID.4 is sucking balls, they don't want to eat that difference in depreciation.


=[[2019.02.02 Wo-PAH Driving]]=
So we noped out of that dealGot a message from the owner of the dealership to apologize and offered 5k$ off the deal, but fuck those guysWe'll wait a bit and try to get one later in 2025 from Herzog-Meier, who had the only non-bullshit sales team and only 5k$ of market ankle-grabbing.
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As an avid consumer of stylized violence in my entertainment, I have a diverse and detailed understanding of how fighting can be shownThe purpose of the myriad of styles is to convey feelings rooted in some primal corners of the human brainSuch fantasies have a lot of ways to be interesting.


My rather limited understanding of actual violence is pretty radically different.  It's probably abrupt, and efficiency is likely key.
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As an avid driver of performance vehicles, I've experience many sorts of vehicular thrills. There is definitely a trend in the newer performance vehicles I've sampled, they do tend to have generally more peak capabilityAnd that additional capability has been engineered in the manner of a movie fight scene.  The throat-clearing downshifts lead into the exaggerated wind-ups of the building forced induction follow through to the augmented raucous exhaust note battle yells. 
Should I get another tattoo? I've got my aging maple leaf on my left shoulder, and I'm thinking I should get something to match it on my right shoulder after I get my US citizenship - assuming I can get my US citizenship before it becomes trumpistanMaybe a star?


Now, I am partial to a certain amount of theatre with my hooning, because I'm a child.  But the sharply artificial rattle-barking of an over-fueled AMG 43 merely rolling through a parking lot is kind of stupid.  And, if I'm totally honest about it, even my beloved Porsche 911 had a certain Bruce-Lee tension to it as you could feel the increasingly available power as the engine RPMs climbed.
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And if you can get it right, there's a satisfaction in that too.  Because it takes talent to drive fast well.  Not just driving fast, because that's stupid outside of a racetrack, but driving fast well.  You've got to be attentive to your settings and circumstances and all the vehicular variables and so on with the foolish hooning black arts.
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But then you get used to driving a decent electric car, like GHOSTAnd it's not even a little bit about theatreIt's all about just getting it done efficiently.  It's actually really fucking easy to drive fast well, because it's less variable and with less distracting show.  It's all so accessible, and I do dearly love control of that kind.
Teaching Simon to drive taps into an incredibly deep well of mana.  It makes me laugh at how perfunctory my own driving training actually wasI mean, dad did teach me some cool things, but the core fundamentals of driving were mostly intuited by virtue of my machine empathy rather than explained usefullyContemplating it, assuming that my memory isn't totally foreshortened with respect to my dad's direct input, I wonder if it was based on my dad having a lot of faith in my ability to "get it", or if he didn't actually know any of the fundamentals himself.


In the movies, the fighters are mostly these body-builder types with showy muscles.  But you have to know that, in real life, the deadliest special forces badasses are lanky efficient monsters who quietly end fights before others even know there is a fight.
Totally aside from that, sitting with Simon as we train his extending proprioception to feel what the car and drivetrain are doing, I can feel the literal years I've spent being one with a vehicle being recognized and acknowledged inside myself.


Driving around in the Porsche, every asshole would try to race me and every police officer would mentally consider if they had an excuse to pull me over.  But now that I skulk around in GHOST, I just succeed at speeding without anyone having much notice.
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=[[2019.01.29 Pole Machine]]=
=[[2024.11.29 Planning For The Future]]=
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Facing the reality of the rising fascist state of the US is grim.
 
The petty combative side of me wants to goad all the conservatives - show us, motherfuckers.  Make it fucking great.  No excuses - you have the presidency, the House and the Senate, and an ideologically groomed Supreme Court - all 3 facets of  government.  Let's all learn a fucking hard lesson together.
 
Except the wiser side of me knows that isn't how fascists work.  They've whipped up the obviously stupid majority into a hatred and fear soup of misdirection.  So when the clearly incompetent president-elect makes broadly distracting histrionic actions - while he strokes his own ego, lines his pockets, and is used as a vehicle to accomplish Project 2025's dystopian goals - causes the country to objectively do worse for the working class, there will be fresh excuses.  Fresh and refreshed people to arbitrarily blame.
 
People to punish.  And the moron masses will go along with it.
 
No, the future plans need to be more concrete than hopelessly wishing for people to be... well, smarter would help, but mostly less fearfully selfish or hatefully small-minded.


Ummmmmm.  It's hard to even start with how cool this thing is.
Concrete plans include:
* finally get my American citizenship
* become more active in local politics
* become more vocal in meaningful ways about national and global politics


The Nordic Bike Gods over at [https://polebicycles.com Pole] made this model called the [https://polebicycles.com/machine/ Machine].  Instead of using carbon fiber, they decided to use 7075 aluminum - which can't be welded without losing its temper.  So instead they press billets of it into approximate shape and CNC the final surfaces.  Hence one facet of the name "machine" is from it being machined.  It's geometry, which is on the "hold my beer" end of aggressive also qualifies it for being quite a machine.
Basically: time to join the Rebel Alliance against the fucking Empire


Glorious. If I had unlimited funds, some of it would be spent on this.
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/Rebelalliance.gif
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=[[2019.01.27 Portland International Auto Show]]=
=[[2024.11.15 Kakistocracy]]=
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Honestly, there wasn't much time for exploring the show this year.  Because #w*rk.  So there really was only opportunity to peek at a couple highlights before fleeing back to meetings.
I've never felt worse about learning a new word.


A brief shout-out to [https://www.subaruofportland.net/ Subaru of Portland] for gifting me two free tickets.  It is appreciated, and their customer service is one of the reasons we've had so many Subarus.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakistocracy
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=[[2024.11.06 Whaaaalp]]=
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Fuck.
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Our first mission was to team-investigate various candidate next-steeds for [https://www.instagram.com/gnarthaller/ Gnarthaller].  Which is amusing because they're all various flavours of Toyota utility vehicles.  Meanwhile, the only actual photos he posted from the show were of a moldy-green muscle car.  Typical.
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==Jeep Gladiator==
=[[2024.10.05 Trumping Thought: Candidate Of The Hatefully Stupid]]=
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A nihilistic commentary I've seen a few times describes the evolution of the Republican party as naturally leveraging hatred and fear, and fostering that by undermining reason.


Several of us were curious about this long-coming cargo-capable stretched wranglerIt was exactly as we imagined it would be.  As you might be able to discern from the picture, Gnarthaller didn't like it.
So that when Trump snuck up behind the Grand Old Party, in a way that they openly mocked and disregarded, they were woefully unprepared for just how successful they had been at stoking the fires of fear and hatredMoreover, they did not really believe how hungry stupid and uneducated people were for somebody they could feel represented by.


But why?  Because it's a half-assed idea executed half-assed-ly, and would simply not meet the goals of utility and reliability he probably wants.  It's probably going to sell great#MERIKA.
Tangent: the Tea Party movement should have been a warning signAlas.


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The highly polarized political situation in the US is capable of turning anyone into an emotion-motivated supporter of the party they identify with.  But, with candor, this excuse only covers so much.


==McLaren==
After all this time, including all Trump's rollicking efforts at unabashed self-aggrandizing striving for dictatorship, and listening to the words the candidates actually say, a few things are clear.
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http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_1749-web.jpg
# Trump voters are fear-driven, or willing to be complicit in letting fear drive the electorate.<br><br>
# Trump voters are hate-filled, or perfectly fine with hate being instilled as a functional law of the land.<br><br>
# Trump voters are stupid, including both those incapable of understanding how bad Trump's ideas are, and those foolish enough to think that those bad ideas will work out well for them.
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Something something longtail, and I can't remember which what how other one.  What doesn't translate well is how small and jewel-like these vehicles are.  The previous generation of MP4C and even P1 variants were impressive and other-wordly, but in person had an aura of plastic posering on top of a racecar in order to pretend to be Ferrari-ish.  Not any more; now they out-Ferrari Ferrari at the sense of concentrated special-ness.  Very nice.


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==Ferrari==
=[[2024.09.16 Oldness Echo]]=
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Had a pretty good birthday - complete with chocolate cheesecake, playing D&D with Amy, Dave, and Bonnie, playing AIF with Amy and the kids.  Life is good, and all that.


http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_1752-web.jpg
But embedded in all that was also a poignant little vignette of passed-on Castle-ing.  Because Simon and I had on Friday a wee confrontation, where he wasn't in a headspace to hear some parenting that was based on what I felt like was an important bit of philosophy relevant to our lives. He had been ill, so the resistance and defensiveness was understandable and I was able to back off and give hime some processing time.


http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_1753-web.jpg
Until a couple days later, when we were sitting quietly on a couch together and I could carefully bring it back up. Because the distinction of responsibility and being responsible from things such as blame or fault is worth having a shared understanding of.  Simon is extremely canny regarding rules and arguing technical compliance with such, but that is perpendicular to a practical wielding of responsibility.  We talked about how being responsible is both separate from blame, but also can include being willing to take blame for things outside our control.  And we talked about how being responsible is a greater application of making things within our control the best that they can be, or at least recovering from inevitable problems as they occur the best that we can.


There was a berlinetta, which is historically my default lust-magnetAnd there was the most-modest variant (Portofino?) which almost allows someone such as myself to whimsically considerI didn't even bother taking pictures of them.
Once he actually believed I really didn't blame him for anything, which was slow due to his suspicions about blame-related strategy concepts, I feel like he started to internalize much of it.  Maybe.  Probably in a manner very similar to how my dad also tried to infuse me with a sense of ever-expanding generalized responsibility.  To be a responsible hikerTo be a responsible skier.  To be a responsible driverTo be a responsible member of society.


Instead, I felt the need to capture the brawniest Grand Tourer ever - mostly because it felt odd to have a Ferrari seem hulking compared to the nearby McLarens - and the fabulous shooting brake.  That almost-wagon version of Ferrari is very intriguing for me, much to the scorn of my peers.  I think it's because I have a better grasp of what it would be like to live with a high-performance carThe single mission of LOOK AT ME gets dull; I am more curious about something that would rock a road trip too.
But, really, it's not one of those things you can just tell somebodyA person needs concrete examples to witness in order to understand how they can embody it themselves.
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==Porsche==
=[[2024.09.07 2000 km Later]]=
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Only about 1700 km were spent in two 10-hour-long drives from PDX to deepest darkest Canuckistan, but a few hundred km were also burned up acting as chauffeur to my EV-doubting family to and from various funeral related events.


http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_1755-web.jpg
So many bugs. Ghost is filthy enough that I think I'll take him through an automated car wash before I do a regular wash with hose and bucket and shop vac.


http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_1757-web.jpg
And I sure am not constitutionally resilient for such marathon drives any more. I feel very used up, and have been doing a lot of sleeping since getting back.


The Porsches were automatically more memorable than either the McLarens or the Ferrari's because you could sit in themThe 718 (ex-Cayman) telegraphs hysterical joy through its taut steering wheel; none of us could repress brilliant smiles from just being in itThe Panamera Grand Tourismo took the do-everything roadtrip vibe and dialed it up to 11.  Fantastic.
Ultimately, it was very worthwhile to make it to Grandpa K's funeralIt meant a lot to several family members to have me thereAnd it felt important to me to honour him properly as well, to feel like his significance in my life was appropriately prioritized.


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However I can't deny that it was also a difficult social-emotional energy drain to see my family.  I don't mesh with them well - both in terms of me understanding them, and them understanding me.  As I told Amy, I managed to resist beating them with their own banjos.


==Everything Else==
It was good to see Dave and Bonnie, thoughAnd to hang out with their 12th-grader Evan, whom has been too reclusive his whole life for me to have a conversation with before.   
Nothing else was worth spending time to photograph.  Even so, skipped a lot of manufacturers.
===BMW===
No M3? Fuck you.<br>
The M2 felt OK.  M5 was locked - fuck you.
===Volvo===
Seriously pleased with the look and feel of the V90.  I could see myself getting one of those for the family - if I couldn't swing a Mercedes E-class wagon.
===Audi===
Didn't even bother sitting in any of them after determining that the R8 was locked.  The cowardly thing sat huddled and unappreciated looking out through double-doors at a Porsche Turbo tackling a line of ardent fans rotating through its cockpit.
===Mercedes===
Didn't even walk through the section.  Like I need to look at the vehicles I don't want to lease.
===GM===
I don't care what Gnarthaller thinks, your muscle cars misunderstand what driving is about.
===Ford===
The Fiesta ST is obviously a hoot.  Now try making a Mustang that spends less effort posing and more matching its siblings intent to entertain.
===Kia===
StingerDudes, well-played.


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And, fuck, those twisty lonely mountain roads are just sublime driving.  BC is just such a beautiful place, and the mountains echo in my soul.  Along with my dad, and my Grandma and Grandpa Kosiancic.
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=[[2019.01.20 Leslie Odom Jr.]]=
=[[2024.09.02 Angst About Going To Grandpa K's Funeral]]=
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I got called last Wednesday by mom - basically only ever happens when death is involved.  Which would be extremely creepy, and possibly an explanation for why I ended up married to a vampire, but it's really more of an expression of my mom's particular ilk of mental illness.  Is it mental illness, though, if she's happy and always functioned this way?
 
Anyway.  It was to tell me that my Grandpa Kosiancic's interment at the Nelson cemetery would be this Wednesday.
 
It's a 10-hour drive, nominally with charge stops, or a ridiculous overpriced and even longer set of plane tickets.  More complicated, though, was that I would be travelling while Amy is working.  So the original scheme was to reduce the time Zora would be left alone at home by leaving around midnight on Tuesday, such that I had a couple hours flex time to get to the cemetery.  This was an all-too-common a plan for my 10-hour drives to-and-from university, but that was when I was in my 20's and... well, stupid.  Now I'm a weak old(ish) man, and I'm pretty sure I'd have to sleep somewhere after 02:00, which opens up for all kinds of things to go wrong.
 
Plus, and this is a typical problem for me - I have worries about my projects at work. I've already been gone 6 weeks this summer, and shit is going sideways in a couple different dimensions. It makes very little logical sense to be all wound up on behalf of a multi-billion-dollar international corporation, but maybe that's the humanizing work I do to earn my (mildly) vaunted pay.


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Lastly, there's the equipment worry of a long-range trip into darkest Canuckistan with an electric car. Which is mildly hilarious considering the rock-solid dependability of Ghost compared to the rickety steeds I used to flog for endless road trips through the expansive wildernesses of BC. But with age comes cowardice - or, it's euphemistic equivalent, wisdom.
As part of S's adoration of Hamilton, she got tickets to see Leslie Odom Jr. at the Schnitz.  His performance was pretty magical.  The renditions of his heartbreakingly poignant songs from Hamilton were amazing, as one would expect, but his other songs were special in other ways.  Classic jazz covers laid down the deep connections and talent.  Songs from his album were contemporary and brilliant.  Particularly entertaining to me was a cover of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mq4UT4VnbE Minnie the Moocher by Cab Calloway].
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=[[2019.01.17 Robert Frederick Castle Choate]]=
=[[2024.08.24 Summer Event Horizon]]=
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Today I became a great-uncleMy little sister's youngest child just had a childMan I feel old.
It's been a busy-lazy summer, full of bike rides, RPG's, reading books, eating good food, house and yard projectsSomehow in between weeks of kid time and all their associated lounging play, I've also been scrambling with odd weeks of working while truck projects get complicated.
 
But this next week the kids go back to schoolHopefully the kids and I will sneak in another mostly-quiet bike ride up at Sandy Ridge before they do, and then Amy and I have final yard project plans for while they're at school.  And then, after that, we shift into the work/school/home rhythm.  And a new beat to that will be Amy shifting to days instead of working nights, which will make things interesting in a new way.


Welcome to the world, little guy.
I still haven't gotten very far in preparing Simon for driving practice.  I suppose that will be easier once he's, you know, legally allowed to operate a motor vehicle in public.  Which theoretically he will be shortly. -gulp-
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=[[2019.01.11 Tulsi Gabbard 2020]]=
=[[2024.07.27 Soundtrack of My Grief Processing]]=
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[https://youtu.be/P-cjWvUnPtg?si=QVPZf0tUxk7Ibxah My Pet Coelacanth - deadmau5]
I've been mulling the need to participate in the democratic process here in the United States.  This has been simultaneously urged and thwarted by Cheeto Hitler.  On one hand, his election demonstrates the need for people to clearly express their representation and the pitfalls of leaving decisions to the lowest common denominator. On the other hand, it is hard to want to intentionally join a country that elected a sexist racist moron.
 
https://allthatsinteresting.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/coelacanth-full-color.jpg


But then there's Tulsi announcing her intention to run. <br> 
That's pretty exciting.
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=[[2018.12.23 Spider Man: Into the Spider-Verse]]=
=[[2024.07.23 Goodbye Grandpa K]]=
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Grandpa Kosiancic was a stubborn mean little old gnome of a man, full of laughter and caring, and my idol in most things mechanical.
 
When my mom called this evening, I had guessed that he had died before she said anything.  She's a hermit, and she only calls me in emergencies.  Or, rather, in the wake of emergencies that I should know about after they've happened.


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Grandpa K was really old, mid-90's, and had only just last year decided to stop taking care of the hobby farm lot and old homestead by himself on top of the mountain overlooking Nelson BC - and checked himself into a care facility, after re-homing his dogHaving been an unstoppable dynamo his entire life, this transition says to me that he was acknowledging that he didn't have much more wear and tear possible to endure.
It seems like an awkward revelation: that a great way to do a comic book movie is with... animationBecause, <i>DUH</i>.


Yet, it really isn't that obvious.  Partially because of the thundering dominance of live-action comic book movies (mostly Marvel), and the entrenched third-tier-ness of other animated comic book movies (mostly DC).  Indeed, most people reflexively under-estimated SM:ItSV precisely because of its animated natureAnecdotally, this prejudice is part of what drove the creative team to ensure that they made are really great movie.
It's not really possible to unpack in a blog all the ways that my personal conceptions of self-worth and intrinsic value have spawned from my life of observations of my Grandpa KBut I will assert that he was an incarnation of what good can come of a life of hard work and caring for others.


And it is a really great movie.  I'm easily amused by most imaginative-action movies, but it also blew Simon's socks off.  OK, maybe that's not super hard to do either.  But we are clearly the core of the target demographic, and they succeeded brilliantly.  There really isn't a moment of the movie that doesn't suck you in, thanks to a rich tapestry of clever detail both visual and audible.  Plus the story is sublime, with masterfully considered characters.  All this, stuffed into an animated framework that actually helps tell the impossibly visual story in a way that simply couldn't be pulled off as well with live-action.
Perhaps one of my most viscerally proud things was being able to visit Grandpa K, and have him delight in the bright, inquisitive, and joyful great-grandchildren I'm at least partially responsible for.
 
Thank you for being my Grandpa.


Back when I was considering art school, I stumbled on the conundrum of being pushed towards sculpture but being drawn towards 2-dimensional work.  How could 2-dimensional depict something better than the 3-dimensional?  When what you were depicting wasn't possible, even though you could see it.
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=[[2018.12.18 Fredmas]]=
=[[2024.06.15 Eternal Summer]]=
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While Fredmas is a logical time to be thinking about my dad, I have also found myself thinking about him quite often recently.  I suppose that it is impossible to know who he was to himself - the person he thought himself to beIt wasn't the sort of thing that he communicated. Most of my impressions are about how he affected me, and the many things he thought aloud.
By dint of luck and effort, I've got every week I spend with the kids this summer as vacationSix weeks of... stuff.
 
From the perspective of my young self, he was an unknowable force of raw purpose - working and playing. Even his frequent rests, to consume books and beer and televised hockey games, were all done with relished deliberateness.  It gave me a depressed sense of never being able to live up to his example, but it also gave me a clear direction to try to grow.  As I grew into adulthood, I could see more about how he was always working with what he had.  His lack of expressed regrets and regard for what to work towards is something I've adopted wholesale, as much as I can.


Now, as a middle-aged father myself, it is clear to me that he was totally making it up as he went along. There is an innate urge to try to mimic his parenting style, his approach to life even.  But there is this odd aspect by which having lost him so soon before becoming a father has allowed me to be open to honest reflections about what was good.  And there was a lot of good.  But perhaps thanks to our tender wind-down as father and son, I can also see how I can do better.
Hopefully lots of bike riding (and remembering to take pictures).<br>
Maybe some adventure trips.<br>
A few birthdays, with accompanying celebrations and Amy-cakes.


The realization that I am best when considering what utility I can have to the people and ideas I care about, I think I finally understand the source of his purposefulness.  Thanks dad.  Happy birthday.
But most importantly, a bunch of memories to savour.
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=<font face="Arial">[[2018.12.12 Insights on Mountain Biking and Parenting]]</font>=
=[[2024.06.11 Simon's Grade-9 English Final Creative Writing Assignment]]=
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It has occurred to me that there are some striking perceptual similarities between mountain biking and having children.
A flash of lightning and the crack of thunder, a spark alights. The fire burns ever higher, towering above the body of a behemoth creature. The titan collapses, its legs burning away beneath it. The beast’s body slowly blackens and chars, thick scales peeling away to reveal ever more burnt flesh. The plateau that covers its back sloughs off, with trees and homes crumbling as they hit the ground. They become nothing but fuel for the fire.
 


Attempts to explain this have not gone well in person, but maybe a somewhat more deliberate construction here might work better. It goes something like this:
I watch Xolanotl, my home, until there is nothing left to see but smoldering rubble. I see others turn to start gathering food and make shelter. I breathe deeply, the acrid smoke stinging my nose, and turn to help. Most of us had been off scouting; trying to find a safe route for the Xolanotl. A few dozen people have been pulled from the wreckage, but most won’t survive much longer, not without proper medical equipment. There is no conversation over the meager meal we manage to scrounge up. There is no one to talk to I suppose, seeing as most of our friends and families are buried somewhere in the wreckage. I could have stopped this. If I had paid better attention,maybe, everyone would be alive. That night I lay awake, watching the stars drift on by. I decide that the only thing I can do is to leave this forsaken place.


From an objective point of reference, it is entirely reasonable to evaluate idea-X as being characterized primarily by risk and unpleasantness. Further, there is a somewhat disconcerting difficulty for a non-X-inclined person in comprehending the ascribed benefits and joys attributed to idea-X by X-committed individuals. Even worse than that, the testimonials of the X-inclined people seem to revel in the objectively worst parts of idea-X.
The next day is almost harder than the first. This is no bad dream. Our whole lives, our plans, our dreams, our pasts are burned away in the fire. I take all that I own, and say my goodbyes, few as they are. I finally set off, placing my father’s knife on my belt, one last reminder of this place. I climb over burnt logs and blackened undergrowth. I wish I could have helped; the signs were all there, the dry brush, the brewing storm. I should have known. But we had seen many storms in the past, not one had caused such a disaster.  


You take that paragraph, and you can plug in both "mountain biking" and "having children" with equal ease.  For people who are not one or the other - parents or mountain bikers - this might not be obvious. But as a person who regularly tries to describe the painful joys of parenting to non-breeders, and the treacherous thrills of mountain biking to sane people, they share some very similar variability of interpretations.
I eventually find a small cave, sheltered from the elements. I set up camp inside because night is beginning to fall, and the surface world at night has no mercy for anything unlucky enough to be caught in the shadows. The shadows grow, and night falls slowly over the forest. I fall into a fitful sleep.


For example:<br>
I groggily wake up the next day, the sun is already high in the sky; my body is not yet used to the routines of travel. The going is easier now, as the trees slowly open up into an expansive grassland. Only a few trees dot the horizon far in the distance. Far in the distance I hear a strange sound, a bellow from some beast of plains. With nothing better to do, and hardly any reason to live, I head to investigate the noise. I duck below the tall grasses, and slowly stalk towards the bellowing. The creature’s cries soften, and become all but inaudible against the sound of the wind.  
When I comment on being exhausted from being woken up in the middle of the night by my spawn, non-breeders interpret that as a cautionary tale about the horrors of sexually-transmitted parasitic primates. Whereas other parents smile and nod wearily, knowing the sensation of worthy sacrifice for these beings we adore.


For example:<br>
I crest the top of a hill, seeing a slumped and bloodied shape which lays at its base unmoving. I scan the grasses for any sign of what did this, but whatever it is has left, or is too well hidden for me to find. Ignoring my better senses, I approach the creature. Its four wide eyes watch me fearfully, and it calls out weakly. As I study the creature, I realize it looks eerily familiar, this is a juvenile xolanotl, not even old enough to have found itself a shell.
When I share tales of facing down a steep treacherous track while traveling at a speed guaranteed to hurt if I make contact with the plentiful trees and chundery rocks, non-mountain bikers wince and think me very foolish to have gotten myself in such a predicament. However mountain bikers look for the opportunity apply a high-five in appreciation of the base-of-the-brain adrenalin from using skill to overcome fear.


For example:<br>
I couldn’t save my home, but this time I can do something. I immediately start staunching the bleeding with bits of cloth and gauze. The xolanotl stopped making noise quickly after it realized I was there to help. As I wrapped the final slashes on its side, the xolanotl tried to slowly stand. It pulled six shaky legs underneath it, and slowly pushed off the ground. It looked down at me expectantly, before turning and limping a short distance. It looked back at me impatiently. Doesit really want me to follow it? Where is it taking me? I suppose I don’t exactly have any better place to be than wherever it is going, so I quickly catch up.
When I reflect on the price of, well, everything to do with having children, not-parentally-inclined folks laugh and imagine all the things they don't want to give up.  Instead, other people who have kids laugh about the realization that it's all wasted anyway.


For example:<br>
We walk for hours, the afternoon sun slowly setting, and the creatures of the night undoubtedly stirring. The xolanotl only rarely looked back to see if I was still following, all the while maintaining its slow, but relentless pace. Grasses cut at my legs, but I can hardly bother to notice. My whole body aches from the endless walking, but still, late into the evening, we press on. I hope we soon reach our destination, not just for my sake, but if we are caught out here in the open, we might as well set the table for whatever finds us.
When I kvetch about the misery of slogging uphill through the rain, mountain-bike-averse persons hear a tale of misery. The alternate assumption of a veteran chunder-seeker is that this was an investment that would certainly prove worthwhile for the gnar-filled joy to be reaped from the vert.


And so on.
I sigh in relief as we come to a small crater punched in the side of a hill. What look like abandoned nests fill the crater, and trees fill the nesting site. The xolanotl curls up amongst the densest of the trees, while I take food out of my pack and sit down next to it to eat. We soon fall asleep, exhausted from our ordeals.
 
But sleep is not long for us tonight; I jolt awake with the sound of rustling in the branches above. The moon hovers high above, a sliver hanging in the sky framed by growing storm clouds. I pull my knife from its sheath and strike a torch. I jostle my new friend awake, and it slowly rises, tired and wounded. The sounds in the branches above grow louder, and a large shape flits through the treetops. The torchlight glints off the intricate obsidian knife, but just out of the torch’s glow the creature circles us.
 
The monster Lunges from the darkness, six spidery legs thrown back, and a sharp maw open wide. I dip to the right just in time, and thrust my knife at its throat. The blade just glances off of thick scales harmlessly. It turns to face me. It shrieks in frustration, opening its bifurcated jaw, wide enough to fit me whole before turning to my injured companion and preparing to lunge forward. I jump at it, swinging my torch wildly.
 
As I brandish my torch, our assailant flinches and retreats. It shakes its head violently, unused to the bright light. I, more confident, charge the beast, torch held aloft. I stab at the creature, dodging to its side, and aiming for what I hope is the softer underside. I find my mark, and the beast howls in pain. It thrashes about, and its tail lands squarely in my chest, knocking the wind out of me. I nearly collapse, but I find my footing just in time for it to send another blow my way. This time, it throws the torch from my hand. The torch hits the soaked ground, and sputters weakly as the fire dies, cloaking us once again in darkness. I trip and fall on the shadowed ground. The monster, faintly illuminated by the night sky, prepares to dive forward.
 
A flash of light, and a booming sound, louder than any I have heard before, pierces the night. Lightning strikes the ground, brighter than the sun in midday, louder than the calls of even the greatest beasts.
 
The monster stumbles back, eyes milky and blind. It collapses on the ground, confused and senseless. It tries to stand, shaken but not yet defeated, but my friend is done with this. It stands to its full height, and stomps down on our stunned attacker, crushing it instantly.
 
The sun is just rising as I finish patching my wounds. And so we head out, to see what comes next.
 
Far off in the distance, the trumpeting sounds of many xolanotl calling out to each other reverberate across the plains.


It makes me contemplate some possible similarities of questionable evolutionary biology theory to explain how these altered states of perception might make sense.  For the case of parenting, it makes evolutionary sense for humans to have altered neurobiology regarding the having of offspring - because fondly care-taking our young despite the bottomless demands they require helps the fundamental success of the species.  Likewise with mountain biking, it is the same foolish wellspring of enjoying overcoming fear with talent that allowed our species to (occasionally) successfully transition from being cave bear chow to wearing cave bear pelts.
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=[[2018.12.08 Some Chunder Gnar]]=
=[[2024.06.02 How You Spend Your Days Is How You Spend Your Life]]=
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Another cold wintery bike ride today.  Still fun, but not a great display of skill or braveryWhen things are going well, I have a sense of flowing or flying, and there were indeed moments of that.  A far greater proportion was spent feeling like I was just clunking along, trying not to crash in the slippery bits of frost built up on the previously-moist parts of the trails.
After a week of lingering nostalgia, Amy shook me out of my incipient body dysmorphia by chortling about how I'm much better looking nowAs much as I remember how it felt to be whippet-thin and with boundless endurance, I probably don't remember well how nervous I was all the time nor how fragile my ego was.  Plus Amy has similar pictures of her elfin bearing, but she is wildly more attractive now with her full shape and mature demeanour.


It was good to ride with Danny again, not least of all because he was able to give me a ride up the mountain while I'm bike-rack-less.  The rest of the squad is young and fast and skilled and invincible and I didn't see much of them other than when they waited for us to bunch back up.
Also heard from friends living in Germany, and how they're struggling with the transition there.  I'm sure that overall it's a worthwhile adventure, but there's no denying that the enormity of the change is challenging.  I miss hanging out with them.


The sketchy bits of ice on the upper trails were preferable to slushy mud lower down.  The large knobby tires felt like they were shredding the trail on the bottom half, and a terrifying heaping of chunky mud bits were liberally distributed over me.  The mud churn was also disappointing in how it made cornering nervous and bled all momentum from the flowing lines of Lower Hide & SeekBut, as alluded above, even the worst mountain bike riding is still pretty good fun.
But the most amusing meta moment this week was a person on Craigslist asking for a window of time to inspect the bike I'm selling, and I had to honestly tell them that there was only the most narrow windows of time available in my life.
 
Life is goodBusy, but good.
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=[[2018.12.03 Goodbye Lily]]=
=[[2024.05.27 Hello From The 90's]]=
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bq8zieug245/
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In the midst of pulling the kids bikes out of storage to prep them for test rides I also pulled out my dad's old Forest Service backpack, in which I appear to have stashed a bunch of old photos.  Man, there went a whole day full of sweet and sad reminiscences.
 
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=[[2018.12.01 Christmas Wheels]]=
=[[2024.05.04 Awkward Moments Plumb Local Socialization]]=
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As is our annual family tradition, we headed out to murder a tree to decorate our living room withWhile we were driving out to the tree farm, there was a noticeable vibration in the car.
I had to pause before opening up my ship to this port, so I could collect myselfTo hold onto all the things I've learned about myself, and consciously recognize the truth of them.  Because this is a hard place to be: the place I'm originally from.  And they think they know me here.  It's awfully easy to become what other people tell you that you are, and it very rarely serves you well.


S [driving]: "There's a weird shaking in the car."
Grey light from overcast skies bundled between rocky peaks flooded my hatch, and my hand reflexively went to drag my helmet over my head so I could see better - but I stopped.  To stride out of my ship with my helm already in place sends a message, and if I had any hope of making this go well I needed to appear relaxed.  So instead I shrugged on a cloak to obscure my habitual gear, and met the tech ambling towards my still-pinging ship.


Clayton [trying not to be a terrible passenger]: "Yeah, I can feel the vibration too."
"Cargo or repairs?"


S: "Is this going to be OK for me to drive to Hood River today?"
I give them a terse shake of my head.  "Nothing right now.  Maybe later."  They give me a squint, to wonder wordlessly about why I'm even here then.  "I pre-paid the landing fee and parking for a day on my way in.  But..."  I dip my chin and make sure to catch their eye.  "Try to keep folks from getting to near to her.  The security system is a little aggressive."


Clayton: "Well, I'll have to take a look to be sure." Meanwhile, I'm thinking to myself about how I'll make room in the garage to use my sweet sweet hydraulic floor jack and find some minor imbalance-causing thing and be a total hero.  Or possibly find something that I cannot fix myself, but at least ensuring the safe operation of the Moobaru.
The tech gave a glance at the well-patched hull, and gave me a shrugA worried little part of me thought there was a good chance I'd be scraping a charred limb of theirs off of the hull later on, and hoo-boy that would definitely make future visits home even more awkward.


A short time later, while still driving, S slaps me in the arm"Oh!  I remember - there was a thing that I ran over yesterdayI thought it was, like, just a plastic bag.  But then it was all bang thump under the car."
Wending my way past other parked ships, I eventually made it through the personnel gate.  It stood open, as it does generally - other than in times of troubleApparently I couldn't help but make an amused face at the backwater half-assery of the security measures as I walked through, because one of the guards sitting in the guard station yelled down"Something funny, stupid face?"


Clayton: "Ah."
Stupid face?  I have a feeling I know that guy.  Probably doesn't recognize me, though.  Not yet, anyway.


A few minutes later, when we stop at the christmas tree farm.  Clayton: "UUUUH. That's a big, obvious dent in the wheel.  How is the tire even staying inflated?"  I also had a stray thought wondering about some sort of karmic connection between our cars, because I also managed to get some curb rash on Ghost yesterday (something that I basically never do).
"Nope."  I keep walking, and head toward the public transit station.


After murdering the tree the furthest from the parking lot, we coordinated with a local Subaru dealership to find a replacement wheelAs a bonus surprise, when we got to the tire store we noticed that whatever had smashed the front wheel also managed to take a bite out of the rear wheelFun.
No crowds here.  Which makes sense, this is hardly a busy port of call.  And this is the end of the line for the train, so it's completely empty when it glides into station.  The meta-ads for taxis suddenly drop their prices before the train stops, as a last-ditch plea for my credits.  But if I wanted to glide into town in a hopper directly to where I was going, I would have just taken my own out of the hold.
 
The train glides to a stop at the next branch - which connects to the industrial districtDistrict is a bit of a laugh - it's a section of valley out of sight of the main town habitants, where the large ugly machines of industry can efficiently turn materials and effort into credits and means to do more things.  And most of both of those are generally heading off-world.  Or, at least, out of town.
 
Onto the train, fresh off of shifts of grimy toil, several burly people trundle wearily.  I don't stare, but I watch them, doing that thing I can't stop myself from doing every time I'm here: asking myself, "Do I know them?".
 
Perhaps because of my watching them, however low-key I think I'm being, or perhaps just because I'm an oddity on this train, they watch me back.  I imagine them thinking to themselves, "Do I know that person?"  I'm not broadcasting any contact details, and neither are they, and it's likely that nobody actually recognizes anybody right then.  I knew that I wasn't sure about who any of them were, though vaguely familiar aspects suggested that I would if I knew more - but I wouldn't have made any fuss even if I did actually recognize anybody here.  Unlike the folk in this town, who in my experience unfailingly make a fuss over discovering someone.
 
Of course, several of them get the standard far-away expression of someone concentrating on media or commsWhich, in my standard paranoia, translates into at least one of them sending an image of me to someone else asking, "Do we know this person?"  So it goes.
 
<pre>It continues in the same rambling manner on a click-through...</pre>


Luckily, the tire store had some used steel wheels and had an open lift.  So we used the time to introduce the kids to a magical land called <i>Olive Garden</i>, which basically blew Simon's little pasta-loving mind.
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=[[2018.11.25 Murder Elf]]=
=[[Dragon Toasters#Horizon|2024.04.20 Dragon Toasters - Horizon]]=
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While still maintaining a regular AIF night with Dave, I've also started playing some Dungeons & Dragons lately. The more important game is running an adventure for Simon and a couple of his buddies, who are all brand new in the realm of role playing games and discovering all the exciting aspects thereof. In addition to all of that, I've also managed to join a semi-regular D&D game with some of the 'dads' and other adultsIt is particularly amusing to see these assorted personalities come to terms with my roleplaying.
 
"What happened to David?"
 
Curious. Dave peered carefully around his cover, and witnessed a familiar predator-machine standing defiantly on another squarish boulder. "Einstein?"
 
"How do you know name? Did Boss tell you?"
 
This was... unexpected. The simulant appeared to have forged a genuine connection, if this construct was indeed willing to risk itself to inquire about the simulant's fate. Dave had dismissively assumed that much of the sense of relationship it had inferred was projection based on how simulants are driven to fit in behaviourally with real humans. Well shit.
 
Dave shifted the plasma blade to the least-threatening posture he could manage, low and pointing behind him, without actually extinguishing it and sheathing it. He wanted to give this pack of predatory constructs the best possibility of being peaceful, but he also didn't want to risk getting overwhelmed if they all rushed him. Still, he did step out from behind his cover. "I'm sorry, kiddo. David didn't make it out of that crypt. But he did share his databases with me, so at least his memories and ideas live on with us two."
 
"You chased Boss down hole. You kill Boss and steal Boss brains?
 
Dave noted subtle signs of movement. Probably flanking. This discourse might be making things worse for everyone. But Dave couldn't shake the sense of value and specialness that this construct had a friendship-like bond with the simulant.
 
"I wasn't myself when I chased David, and I was so confused that I didn't even find the hole he jumped into until after he woke up an ancient monster. And David gave me his databases as his own idea and motivation."
 
Einstein's antennae shifted and writhed with some complicated internal process. Its broad multifaceted camera arrays betrayed no expressions, but then it cocked its head in a pantomime of inquisitive intent. "Feel like you are bad and terrible, and lying."
 
"Well, I can be pretty terrible, and it would be wrong to pretend that I am not what I am. But, let me say this: I can tell you what happened to the original David."
 
It looked like Einstein was reacting to that statement when a trio of sudden motions lit up Dave's threat-sense. Dave sprung to adjacent cover in the blink of an eye, pivoting behind the plasma blade as he snapped its containment field wide such that a pair of static-pulses caromed off to sizzle against rock. At the cover he came face to face with an off-balance predator machine. As Dave's free hand snagged a grip on the thorax and he heaved the beastie in the approximate direction of the crypt shaft, it appeared comically surprised. Perhaps wasp-headed werewolf satyrs are unaccustomed to being physically assaulted by things they might have assumed were prey.
 
An angry static crackled in the lower EM spectrum as coded comms betrayed various predator machine's locations.  The kids were arguingProbably not a fair fight, considering that Einstein has access to several human's lifetime's worth of dirty rhetorical tricks.


They're all adept at roleplaying, and a couple of them are good at optimizing the rules for their character effectivenessBut when it comes to combat, none of them quite hold a candle to my enthusiasm.  This is where Dave would just grin in an unsettling way and nod knowingly.
"You stop fighting, and we not hurt youAnd you tell us what happened to Human David."


My wood elf ranger has earned the title "Murder Elf" among the crewI think they meant it to jokingly shame me, and were then quietly alarmed by how much I liked it.
A familiar sense of amused cynicism surprised Dave.  "Oh, kiddo - I'm already not fighting."  Dave paused to consult a highly-annotated but outdated map.  "I understand that your pack has probably got both logistic reasons and philosophical reasons to try to dispatch me.  Instead of trying to dissuade you with threats and intimidation, let me suggest that there is a trove of treasure down that shaft exceeding what my small chassis represents.  And your pack will need your David-memories to be able to use it."
 
Soft rustling sounds of movement, far more subtle than machines of that size have any right to manage, told Dave that they were adjusting their distribution.  Perhaps to have line-of-sight for more discreet discussion.  "Is Boss down there?"
 
"Yeah, Einstein.  He's down there.  I suggest leaving him down there - it's a tomb worthy of him."  With reluctance, and in spite of his keen cynicism, Dave extinguished to plasma blade.  "He saved me, you know.  Twice." Leaving the cover of a block of stone, Dave walked casually away from the region of the shaft - and towards the cliff.
 
The insults of static pulses in the back didn't comeDave felt pleased about this, and relieved that he didn't have to decide what to do about it if they had.  Would he have had to do anything?  Probably not.  But he also knew it would have been hard to not run back and cull at least some of them.  "I'm going to go and try to get a look at a giant tank ant for myself.  If you get an urge to hear a story about what happened the original David, come find me."
 
With that, Dave casually stepped off the cliff and dropped from sight.
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=[[2018.11.11 Centenary of Armistice]]=
=[[2024.04.15 A Specific Walk]]=
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It feels hard to believe that we have had 100 years of resolving to avoid the horrors of modern war.
I walked into a meeting room last week, and was met with an uproar from the array of faces on the screen as well as in the room.  "I knew it was Clayton!  I could tell from his walk.


There are many things that human society is very poor at learningRemembrance of the wastefulness of violence is merely one of those things.
Obviously, the frosted glass in the front of the room by the door showed a silhouette of my approach, but not enough to make out my face.  With my standard smug dad-grin, I sat down without saying anythingAnd the meeting began, so I forgot about the comment in the flow of engineering development work.


http://clipart-library.com/img/1981314.jpg
Afterwards, though, it came back to me, and my mind turned over what exactly that might have meant.  I think I remember in the moment feeling bemused, because I do tend to carry myself with a conscious effort about my bearing.  But, really, that's more about posture, as I'm in a lifelong war against gravity conspiring against my also being slightly taller than everything is ideally suited for - so it takes effort not to slouch.
 
But was there... is there something more to be read in my walk?
 
Maybe a haughty imperviousness for being an "old timer" and secure in my reputation's stature in the engineering building?
 
Maybe a lanky impatient stride that I ride officiously from one arbitrary place to another in my recent re-confinement for "return to office"?
 
Or maybe they see a shadow of the wary but determined kid I used to be, who learned to navigate on foot while being stalked by malicious peers eager for a fight.  And being always ready for that fight. And knowing that I'll never win that fight, but damned if I wasn't going to make them regret it as much as possible.
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=[[2018.10.16 Marat / Sade]]=
=[[2024.03.17 Mexican Reflections]]=
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A trip to our plant in Saltillo Mexico earlier this month was quite interesting.
 
The first thing to mention is that this was not my first trip to one of our Mexican manufacturing plants. Last time, the visit to Santiago involved staying in Mexico city - an urban area with the same population as Canada.  That was interesting in its own way.
 
This time involved being in northern Mexico, and it's possible that needing to be escourted most places with a security detail insulated me quite a lot from the granular details of the lives lived there.  Which obviously is an insight of it's own.


LONG LIVE THE REVOLUTION!
The hilarious driving habits of the locals is a delight to witness - from the safety of the back of a van.  Coming from the infuriating obliviousness of drivers of Portland, it was actually a relief to see such vigour and skill.  And the best part was the way in which they we very relaxed about all the interactions that I would have experienced as very intense.
 
But the thing that sticks out most for me, and feels really inspirational, is the camaraderie the workers at the Saltillo plant.  I had to learn a wide variety of individualized handshakes to greet the people I met, and they often laughed and hugged me when I got them wrong.  The ubiquitous friendliness and helpfulness of everyone at the plant is something I've never seen at this kind of scale before.  Makes me wish there was a way to import this, large-scale, into more of the aspects of life.
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=[[2018.10.25 Desired Jerk]]=
=[[2024.02.25 Is That What I Looked Like?]]=
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The derivative of position with respect to time is velocity.<br>
University student ID 1993:<br>
The derivative of velocity with respect to time is acceleration.<br>
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_4850_small.png
The derivative of acceleration with respect to time is... jerk.


No, really.  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerk_(physics) It's a physics term].
University graduation yearbook 1999:<br>
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_4851_small.png


This was relevant to me as I was delighting myself driving GHOST to work this morning. Because, while it is true that GHOST's acceleration is awfully nice - and what gets measured by all the numbers-obsessed - it's the broad prowess to adjust that acceleration that really is a driving delight. Because that's what engaged driving is really about for me: control.
New engineer ID 2000:<br>
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Terrified Canadian engineer suddenly employed in the United States 2002:<br>
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_4853_small.png
 
Resigned Canadian engineer with a family in the United States 2007:<br>
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_4854_small.png


I'm not too bothered by the double entendre, either.
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=[[2018.10.21 Henry Rollins]]=
=[[2024.02.15 Awkward Honesty]]=
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Went and saw the Henry Rollins Slideshow Tour today with my favourite architect neighbor, Lori.  While not the most thorough Rollins fan myself, I haven't witnessed anything he's done that I haven't at least respectedLori had never heard of him.  His songs take a certain mindset to enjoy, which I'm rarely in these days, but his spoken word is always entertaining to me - that is what we got to have for this showListening to his radio shows and podcasts do tend to be a bit wearying if you try to binge them; he has a lot of energy, and a sanctimoniousness that is low grade but cumulativeThis show was just about the perfect dose of Rollins, however.
Found myself this morning in the awkward position of explaining to a group of parents why I hadn't responded to my daughter's ability to participateThe crux of my reluctance is that it's on the handover day where I take the kids back to their mom's house, and I don't get to see them again for a week - and any playdates mean curtailing my time with them.  What seems like a no-brainer helicopter parent supported socialization opportunity for the kids to the rest of the parents is a fraught emotional inflection point for meAdding to the complication is that I have to drive them across town, not just let them scamper out the door to participate like they do back in the ex's neighbourhoodAnd all the while we deal emotionally with "Sunday Energy", there is also weekly chores to negotiate.


He warned us, right up front, that he was going to keep changing directions to keep us engaged.  And that he did.  It landed a few solid gut punches while also managing to share intimate facets that were simply lovely, all the while being delivered with delightfully self-deprecating humourHe showed us the world, his thoughts and hopes about that world, and how it reflected on him in such a way that let us reflect on ourselves.
Meanwhile, I could just imagine one or all of the parents thinking "What's with Emo-Dad™ making such a big fuss over having his kid show up for a play date?  Just say yes or no!  We don't need to hear all about your feeewings, whiner."
 
However it was actually received by most of the parents, the ex did reach out very sympathetically.  It did a lot of credit to how well we've managed to be kind and connected despite the divorceBeing mindful adults has its benefits.
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=[[2018.10.07 Amateur Plumbing]]=
=[[2024.02.11 Qualitatively Hating Working In The Office]]=
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This is really a tale about how I'm glad I have a cushy desk job instead of being a "skilled" labourer.  But before I get into that, let's go back about a year.  That's when the kitchen sink started leaking quite badly.  A quick inspection suggested that it would be a pain in the ass, and I didn't have time to address it right awaySo, in order to buy a couple days until the weekend, I tried wrapping the pipe in some cool hydrophobic tape I've got.  It worked.  A little too well.  I had hoped that it would reduce the pour to a containable leak (a shallow bucket was appropriately situated).  It completely contained the leak instead.  Which meant that when the weekend came, and I got a better idea of how much of a pain in the ass it would be, I felt able to procrastinateAs more time went by, the more I felt complacent about the patch job.
So, having spent a week (well, 4 days) working in the office again, I now have more direct data regarding what it's likeWhich sounds silly after having spent a couple decades having worked in an office setting, but the recent handful of years of mostly working from home has massively transformed my perspective.
 
Firstly, credit where credit is due, when at the office it is much easier to keep the parade of attention mostly work-related.   


Alas, even the coolest hydrophobic clingy tape can't hold a badly corroded pipe together forever.  And this past Friday the leaking resumed.  So Saturday was my day to finally address the fix properly.  At which time, it becomes appropriate for a hypothetical flashback to the last time this was fixed - before we bought the house.  Due to the extremely awkward location of the pipe, it is rather difficult to get leverage on a modest-sized pipe wrench that can fit in the spaceGazing at the deep gouge marks on the fitting, it's easy to imagine how ardently the previous plumber tried to dislodge it.  Worse, looking at how the now-leaking pipe was crudely soldered onto the remains of the compression fitting, it becomes obvious that they gave up trying to get it out, and instead hacked off the old pipe and welded the replacement directly onI also like to imagine that the previous plumber felt some quiet shame, for the mess that the next plumber would have to face when the thin-walled pipe they installed invariably rusted through.
But, and this is a critical "but", it feels like it leads to a considerably bigger problemBecause all my in-between filler moments are more filled with work minutae, that means that my brain gets much less capability to recharge in those pausesIt turns out that spending all those so-called "micro moments" bumping into colleagues, that burns neural resources for an introvert such as myself.


While I could probably have managed to saw off the pipe in the same sort of way that the previous plumber did, I lack both the tools and the skills to braze, solder, or weld on a pipe in a leak-free manner.  Plus, I'd much rather fix the pipe with some corrosion-free plastic.  Thus I began my attempt to unfasten the fitting that the previous plumber had given up on.
The two main results of this are that 1) I'm considerably more exhausted at the end of a work day - not even counting commuting, and 2) I have fewer good/big ideas.


It did not go well.
The exhaustion part is probably easy to understand.  After an intense meeting, or tough bit of design, at home I can quietly do some dishes or some such, letting my subconscious work on stuff.  At work, I have to either bumble through the campus making up social niceties or fend off trawling coworkers looking for verbal answers.


After five hours, I had managed to turn the damn thing just 15°Admittedly, most of that time was spent with the fitting not moving at all.  And 2 hours were spent nursing an array of self-inflicted wounds while watching the Matrix.  The awkwardness of the location of the fitting prevented easy access to leverageThe confines and the elasticity of the plumbing meant that impacts had no effect in budging the pipe wrenchI nearly maimed my face several times trying to use a crow bar on the handle of the pipe wrench while jammed under the sink.  Until finally I came upon a method of bracing bits of lumber as adjustable fulcrums to use a length of square bar to inch the pipe wrench along.
The good/big idea part is actually a discovery that I had during the past weekSee, I would find myself waking up in the middle of the night most nights last week, with an idea about how to solve a problem or something to try at work.  And the previous couple decades came back to me in a flash: that's how work used to haunt meBut that stopped when I was working from homeBut instead of being haunted by work such that it wakes me up, I'd have a couple big "aha!" moments during the day, most days.


Once the fitting was out, it was a 10-minute trip to the local hardware store to buy $16 worth of parts, and a further 2 minutes to install.
Basically, for me, work from home allows me to generate twice as many good/big ideas as being in the office, and in ways that don't fuck with my sleep and stress.


Whatever pleasure I might have for accomplishing this trivial piece of plumbing, even though I overcame what the previous plumber seemingly left as a booby trap, is utterly drowned in the aching discomfort of it allCraning and straining and slipping and smashing and accidentally banging in a confined space with unyielding surfaces sucks giant donkey ballsYes, I used my cleverness to do something difficult.  But I have the joy of getting to employ my cleverness every single day at work - at my comfy desk.
Which is an excellent segue into the motivation I have right this moment: I'm absolutely dreading going back in for another week of this shitIt's hilarious to say, because my job is super fun, my workplace is extremely nice and accommodating full of cool people, and even my commute is a laugh of a bike rideYet here I am, very much dreading it.


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I assume that I'll re-acclimate, and the stress will ease back down as I get re-numbed to the overt dominion of the extroverted and the soul-draining non-stop effort of having to pretend to be social. I'll do cool work that will make it all worthwhile, and loosen up my clenched soul on the privileged experience I had.


If this were a reddit post, I'm sure there would be swarms of commenters urging me to take this newfound knowledge and find the bravery to seek another position that would allow the exact thing I like about the pandemic era WFH.  Which is when I gesture vaguely to my giant golden handcuffs, the kids about to need cars and then university, and the lovely house I couldn't afford to buy again in this market even if I kept this well-paying job.  And I'm chicken.
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=[[2018.10.01 Ongoing Tesla Testing]]=
=[[2024.01.15 Snow Driving Observations - part something]]=
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More detailed exploration of the performance envelope of GHOST has revealed further insights.<br>
 
Portland is funky, snow-driving wise.
 
Generally speaking, PDX is mild as hell, rarely getting more than a dusting of snow at most and not enough to worry about.  And the occasional punctuation of stay-around snow isn't in any way particularly much accumulation.  But despite being infrequent and short-lived, it is almost always expert-level snow situations.
 
Taking a step back, my northern peoples have a great deal of opportunity to hone our slidetastic situational control.  Even those Canuckistanni who do not overtly enjoy a good bit of the slidey-slidey get sufficient exposure to know where their limits are and to be sensible.  More than that, there is a good long ramp up and ramp down of the snow-ness, much of it during climate that is cold enough to have the ice and snow be pleasantly predictable.  So when there is a surplus of the slippery substances, or, more poignantly, when it's sometimes in that dangerous extra-slippery state of melty snow on ice, there is a deep well of useful reflexes to draw from.
 
Meanwhile, here in PDX, the locals almost never have to face snow.  And when they do, they are woefully incapable of doing so.  Augmenting this low-skill demographic is the relatively large influx of Californians, all of whom seem to want to pull over and have a good cry when it so much as rains.  Which it does.  Often.  Maybe more on that some other time.  This leads to a relatively high number of vehicles out and about completely without any winter tires.
 
The hilarious twist that PDX plays on the unsuspecting snow-n00bs is that, since it is rarely very far below freezing here, it is very close to the melting point - the slipperiest sort of snow.  Which, more often than not, gets augmented with PDX's special sauce: freezing rain.  So not only is there very little opportunity to practice driving in snow here, the snow goes from nothing straight to expert snow.
 
Resultingly, there is much chaos to be had here.  And regardless of how capable one and their vehicle might be, it is exceedingly perilous to join in the maelstrom when it starts.  But shortly after everyone freaks out and stays the hell away from the snow covered roads, it's basically glorious emptiness and freedom for snow-loving freaks such as myself to get out and have some joy.
 
Plus, in a more mature vein, it is an opportunity to provide transport to those that need help and reap a healthy crop of brownie points.


* The review mirrors are really quite puny.  Makes for a nice low Cd, but I'd personally trade that for improved sensor capabilities over my shoulders.
* GHOST might be lighter and more nimble-feeling than a Model S, but she's still a hefty girl.  Momentum must be considered.
* Further to that, stickier tires will be required.  Mostly to improve turning and stopping; not that GHOST is a slouch at either, but rather to carve out more safety factor for my enthusiasm.  Though it is rather entertaining feeling the whole chassis squirm under full thrust with the current shoes.
* The turn stalk has a marginal flaw: the left "tap" sensor is mis-calibrated such that a simple triple-blink lane change is hard to get instead of continuous blinking.
* Overall, this might be the exact right embodiment of my car-self.  A bit heavier than ideal, but more powerful and smarter - and carrying more baggage.  And still quite silly.
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=[[2018.09.29 Meet GHOST]]=
=[[2024.01.13 Farewell to the Mayor of Kenton]]=
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It is with deep sorrow that we learned that my favourite cat of all time - Charlie¹ - passed away this week.
 
From the moment he ran up to greet us when we first came to look at this house, we knew he was special.  His legend among the neighbourhood was known by everyone we met; "Oh, yeah - I know Charlie.  I make sure to stop and pet him whenever I come this way."  Our block Whatsapp thread is still pinging with people sharing pictures and stories of him over the years.
 
The peak of his legend might have been his fighting off a coyote, and living with some epic scars.  And his giant murder mittens certainly lent credibility to his prowess.  But it was his calm fearless demeanour that won my heart the most, coupled with his refusal to put up with any shit, desire to lure people into being playfully mauled, and the itty bitty tiny meow that he made out of his lion-sized throat.


Five years and one day after selling Richthofen, my beloved Porsche 911 C4S, I picked up a new alter-ego-class car. It's a 2018 Tesla Model 3, long range battery, dual motor all-wheel-drive.  White.  And we named it "GHOST".
May your legend in the next world be as epic as in this one.
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==The Name==
This was simply a family vote.<br>
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It might have been nice to continue the monster motif set by "Grendel" by using "Wendigo" from the spooky campfire stories my dad used to tell.  TESSA was a lovely runner-up, losing only the all-important Violet vote - who simply insisted on "Ghost".  Even though I thought for sure she might also vote for "Princess Sparkle Prancer", but no dice.  Only Simon was suitably amused by "Tesly McTeslaFace".  And ForAytToo might have had a chance, if we had learned the VIN soon enough give it momentum.


==The Colour==
The thing that most people seem to question is the colour I chose.  Perhaps because I have generally terrible taste in colours.  Even so, I do have preferences.  Seeing the car in person, in white, it makes a lot of sense.  The bright trim fits better than with anything dark.  Plus, only black and white are available without metallic flakes - a feature that has come to annoy me for no good reason.


http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_3716_web.JPG


==Stupid Grin Driving Glee Factor==
Tesla isn't totally transparent about some specifications for the car, but my (unofficial) understanding is that it's got two 191 kW (256 hp) motors, but that the actual power it can apply is limited by the current output of the non-Performance battery management system.  It's supposed to be able to do 0-100 km/h in 4.5 seconds; it feels like less.  It is significantly faster-feeling thrust-wise in all real world situations than Richthofen was, which feels important in my withered soul.  So, while it officially lacks access to "Ludicrous" speed, it is certainly consistently hilarious.  The delighted shrieks of terrified joy from the kids when we merely go in a straight line are simply dad-tastic.


It's quite an experience, and I have a lot more soaking in to do.  Which will naturally translate into more writing.  But for now, it is a fabulous introduction.
¹ He also had many nicknames, including:
</blockquote>
* Chonkmeister
* Chuckie
* Chuckles
* Kaiju Kitty
* Chuck Wagon
* Chonk Chonkerson (Man On The Street)
* Chuckzilla
* Chuck Roast
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=[[2018.06.13 Fuck]]=
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Fuuuuuuuck.
RESISTANCE STATUS:
 
* US citizenship:  APPLICATION PENDING
* local politics:  NULL, WITH FOREBODING
* global politics: NULL, BRAINSTORMING
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Latest revision as of 21:48, 19 October 2025

claytoncastle.com



2025.10.18 No Kings

40,000 people in Portland sending a clear message.

Awkwardly, the current administration has also been sending a clear, fascist message.


2025.10.04 Federal Troops In Portland

It's really weird. Just, you know, profoundly weird.

Acknowledging for a moment the footage from 2020 looked bad - as shown on cable news. But even then that was basically constrained to a couple blocks downtown for actual protests. Meanwhile there were other simultaneous marches about police brutality throughout the city that were completely peaceful and not newsworthy.

I suppose that if one were to conflate the "hundred days of protest" in 2020 with the rising homelessness problem, one could squint and see the folks cowering in tents and vehicles and pretend there's a direct connection of some kind. I mean, other than the systematic violence done to the worker class both strip mining us for wealth and trying to overtly pit us against each other.

But in context of what is actually happening right now - which amounts to a group of 6-16 people regularly taunting ICE agents at a single building - it's wildly disproportional. Especially with the Portland Police Department stating, in court, that all the altercations they have evidence for so far are mainly cases of untrained federal agents trying to instigate meme-worthy moments with the peaceful protestors.

So the federal activation of 200 National Guard to "pacify Portland" is, well, purely for show.

Which makes Portland's main reaction one that endears this city to me even more: to be silly. Dressing up in harmless costumes, dancing, and handing out cookies. Doing whatever it takes to make the video bites nearly impossible to weaponize politically, as the fascists so clearly desire.

And to the person in the inflatable costume that had the inlet of their suit sprayed with pepper spray: I hope you are OK. As much as that must have sucked, and possibly could have caused serious medical repercussions, you embodied the shallow idiocy of their position. In no way could a bumbling inflatable costume be considered a threat, and to assault you was to show the cowardly and loathsome depth of their antisocial motivations.

To the federal fucknugget that used pepper spray on an obviously-harmless person in an inflatable costume: Now we all know why you have no real friends and your life is empty of meaning. You obviously don't belong in Portland.


2025.09.17 Bertrand Russell On Fascism

As mentioned on BoingBoing today:
In 1962, Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, invited Nobel-winning philosopher Bertrand Russell to a debate. Mosley aimed to persuade Russell of fascism's merits.

Russell, who was 89 at the time, replied:

Dear Sir Oswald,

Thank you for your letter and for your enclosures. I have given some thought to our recent correspondence. It is always difficult to decide on how to respond to people whose ethos is so alien and, in fact, repellent to one's own. It is not that I take exception to the general points made by you but that every ounce of my energy has been devoted to an active opposition to cruel bigotry, compulsive violence, and the sadistic persecution which has characterised the philosophy and practice of fascism.

I feel obliged to say that the emotional universes we inhabit are so distinct, and in deepest ways opposed, that nothing fruitful or sincere could ever emerge from association between us.

I should like you to understand the intensity of this conviction on my part. It is not out of any attempt to be rude that I say this but because of all that I value in human experience and human achievement.

Yours sincerely,

Bertrand Russell


2025.08.15 If Not Stupid, Then Why Stupid-Shaped?

Seriously, there is so much political stupidity going on.

ETA:
Examples? Hell no. It would be like admitting a vampire into your home to post anything like a meaningful set.

If there is permitted to be accurate news and history recorded of this era, simple searches will reveal enough to explain.


2025.06.25 Corporate Culture

Big changes at work. Not going to talk about that overly much - it's too boring to even write out.

BUT. An aspect I find interesting is who is excited about these major changes, and who is worried about them.

Now, obviously, both reactions are simultaneously valid and possible. I feel both myself. But whether the excitement is more important compared to the various individual level of concern does speak to where many of us are. Which, in turn, is strongly indicative of the sense of trust we have with the company - or our sense of trust in ourselves to offset any lack of trust in the company we have.


2025.06.14 Head Down, Staying Quiet

Today there is a multitude of public gatherings around Portland, along with the rest of the USA, to decry "NO KINGS" on this day that Trump has coopted the military's questionable anniversary to be a giant parade for his birthday.

All in the wake of weeks of skewing-totalitarian actions from federal departments, most notably ICE agents violating people's rights and subsequent violations of the rule of law to deploy the military to quell protests associated with that.

But I'm a dirty, filthy, job-stealing, woman-claiming, green-carded immigrant non-citizen. So my rights are in doubt, and I have a [waves arms about] well-documented history of speaking out against cheeto hitler. So I'm going to stay here, catch up on some sleep, and keep my head down - physically.

And also poke my citizenship application, so that I can theoretically in the future be out and about threatening to punch nazis.


2025.06.01 Puppies And Motivations

IMG_5323_copy.png

Say hello to Bergiet, our 9-week-old Bernese Mountain Dog puppy. She's small, bitey, friendly, and has unfathomable charisma in person. I really should be spending this post writing a MSDS for cuteness, in case it is actually possible to get lethal exposure.

The one down side of the Panda Shark is that house training her involves taking her outside every couple hours - including through the night. Since Amy has 12-hour day shifts, that means mostly me. I am fucking tired.

However, currently, not being able to stew to clearly on my thoughts is actually kind of helpful.

Due to current circumstances, the company I work for has pivoted away from the electrification I had been excited to develop for the trucking industry. This was disappointing.

Very disappointing. It takes some effort to shake off the weight of how hard it is to focus on the fun engineering that is the core of my job when the direction swings to point in the axis of cowardice and avarice.


2025.04.16 Bandwidth

How many things am I doing right now?
[loses count]

OK, let me re-phrase that: How many things am I actually engaging in right now?
Uh, looks like 5. 1) listening into a technical staff meeting that my designs are involved in but I'm not the responsible engineer, 2) updating a related "concerns" list for the same project, 3) answering a question from a colleague, 4) considering coordinated plans with Amy for after work, and 5) self-soothing by venting here.

Why the heck am I doing #5 in context of all the other things I'm "theoretically" doing?
Honestly, #5 is a result of failing to additionally do any of the countless other things in my queue.

Wouldn't it make more sense to just trim down the number of things to a less-impossible degree?
Everything is already triaged by urgency and by consequences of inaction, but honestly none of the things that persist in my queue are neglectable. Adulting is a fucking trip, man.

Delegate?
Holy fucking shit, you would not believe the breadth of additional taskage is enthusiastically punted to others when and how I can.

Am I sure I am working on the most important things?
Oh, I can essentially guarantee that I'm not doing the most important things right now. The awkward caveat being that the TSM is non-optional, so that process debt is sunk. So the other 4 are all things that I can also do while half-attending and staying ready to contribute if my expertise is needed. Most of my actual important tasks take my full attention, and the hard truth is that finding sufficient stretches of time that I can focus on hard topics is difficult with my schedule.

Good thing I'm self-soothing here.
Except, of course, for actual recovery I need to be doing nothing for chunks of time. Alas.

Woo! TSM over!
[flees to do more stuff]


2025.04.04 Personal Values

We did a departmental workshop to delve into our personal values yesterday, with the purpose to see how best to harmonize as we work together towards supporting our department mission.

We make the best damn trucks for a better future.

It was an interesting bout of self-reflection for many folks who do not seem regularly interested in that sort of public review of internal drives. There was a wide variety of experiences, ranging from the cursory "I think this is what I would like to say is important to me" to the, "Now that I think about it, I am surprised to admit that this is pretty central to how I exist". But, aside from a couple manager-types who have recently been on some sort of related training, virtually everyone was unfamiliar with examining aspects of themselves where there isn't anything to fix.

To unpack that last part a little bit, I know for certain several of my peers are in or have been in therapy to address mental health concerns. And in a couple cases I've been unofficial support as a mentor and confidante. So I know they have considered their values, but it is hard to equip someone for a general philosophical perspective when their interest is to focus entirely on problems. There was generalized difficulty in cranking out 3-5 core personal values for use in this new context.

When I carefully wrote my Big Three on the provided note cards immediately, there were questions.

Joy.
Honour.
Wisdom.

Q: How did you come up with those so quickly?

A: I've not only done this before, I've been doing stuff like this for a long time. First with my dad, then with my friends as we had conversations about Life, The Universe, And Everything, and then with my first wife. These were actually engraved in my wedding ring.

Answer I didn't say then: Then also in therapy, after that marriage ended, and are a big part of why I'm doing as well as I am with it.

Q: Why just single words, and not more complete thoughts?

A: The ideas behind these three words expand and overlap.

Distilled version of the answer I rambled on, making it relevant to work: I do my best when I'm doing something I enjoy, so do other people, and it's even better when we all do. Doing work that we are proud of and meeting our commitments leverages tough situations into work we can be satisfied doing. Being open to learning new things, accepting that even things going wrong can be opportunities to learn, and knowing our limits and when to ask for help makes for better collegial bonds.

Q: Why are you hiding in the corner to eat the free hawaiian food?

A: Mmmph mmmrrrm mrfmm.


2025.03.06 Employee Appreciation Day

Just got a breathlessly appreciative email from our chief engineer, extolling about how grateful they are to each and every one of us.

I'm normally a cynical person, who nevertheless works to see the humour and bright side whenever possible. But this is especially hard to hold with equanimity in context of one of our brightest engineers being fired last week for embarrassingly stupid reasons.

This is an engineer who was the cornerstone of our cost-efficiency efforts for years, and single-handedly created many of the tools now used as standard to evaluating cost opportunities. This engineer has a deep wealth of system experience in many of the more arcane functions of our quirky database functions, and has spend much time supporting various other teams. And, most poignantly for me, was the engineer who was level-headed enough when I turned grey-skinned and crumpled at my desk with ambiguous chest pains to coordinate the emergency response to get me an ambulance. And afterward were the only person aside from my boss to check on me at the hospital.

They were fired for low performance. Which is not wrong, technically. But the context is telling. They moved to a new position to grow their skills, like engineers tend to like to do. But once in the new position they were not able to receive any training. Worse, their manager moved on and their new manager is a dominant-type extrovert personality that does not actually understand introverts. Much less that neurodivergence exists. The new job without training created anxiety, which impaired performance by itself. But the new bro-type manager instructed the engineer to improve their performance by being extroverted. Which, as anyone familiar with introverts understands, is the single most anxiety-inducing thing that they can face.

So, really, they were fired for a management failure. And it pisses me off to hear language about how much we, each and every one of us - that are left - are appreciated.


2025.02.09 Identity

Been having lots of thoughts and discussions about identities lately. Which naturally, fermented in my brain as contemplation about my own identity.

Looking at it quasi-chronologically, it aggregates as something like this:

smart

Early on in school, I felt accomplished and continued to feed that throughout my life. I definitely identified as smart, and still do. Which isn't to say that hasn't had some problems - University took a big bite out my ego, and with age has come a much greater appreciation for all the things that don't come easily to me. Staying mentally sharp features prominently in my plans for the rest of my life.

creative/artistic

Also early in school, I realized that I had an eye for things that few others did. I drew prolifically, illustrating the entirety of the AIF] game system, and filling several thick sketchbooks that I prize. This also was fed by my love of creating things with LEGOs - mostly spaceships. Later this included the joy of writing, both exploring my own mind on this website but also telling stories that amuse me.

I admit that I get a bit prickly about this facet of my identity. Partially because I never really pushed it very far, which means that others that identify artistically don't really see me that way. And my low artistic output has me feeling semi-regular regrets, even though life is way too full to be too angsty about corners that aren't fitting in as well lately.

a good friend

Public school was a rough time for me, especially the move from Nelson (hippy land) to Castlegar (hockey land). I got bullied. A lot. Even my peer group for the first few years was deeply steeped in self-loathing and the result was a finely honed defensive arsenal of snide. So when I eventually managed to get some good friends, I was not great at being a friend. That is, until Dave asked my why I was habitually weilding my snide - and I was able to suddenly have the perspective of how important being seen as a good and trustable friend was to me. And since then, I have made that a cornerstone of how I engage genuinely with people.

engineer

Ever since watching The Original Star Trek as a kid, with all its technobabble, and spaceships, I've wanted to be an engineer. More than that, as I did the grind of pre-requisites and university and co-op work terms and actual engineering jobs, the sense that I can Figure Stuff Out and Make Stuff Work is profoundly fulfilling. Even as I wrestle with personal truths, and philosophical truths, I feel grounded in the tactile connection to objective truths.

It also is the main mechanism for a career-long pride in the good work I've done. Not just in solving immediate design needs, but in contributing to making the world better. First the massive improvement in efficiency of transportation, and now in the huge hurdle of moving to zero-emission transportation.

a dad

Most of my early life had a distinct absense of a drive to have kids. When my own dad died, this spurred a lot of questions in myself, and was the beginning of a foundational shift in being open to the idea. But when those little sexually transmitted parasites emerged into the world, the neurological transformation was rapid and confusing.

Essentially, even though I'm not necessarily inclined to be entirely selfish and self-centered, I was priviliged enough to get to be so without any consequences. When my kids were born, it's like a huge mad-scientist-class knife switch was thrown in my internal circuitry to assert, loudly, THEY MATTER MORE. And getting to be a dad, not just a father, has been a sublime and spiritual re-ordering of my existence. I love it. And I'll do my best to keep on being a loving, supportive dad to my kids, no matter what.

a partner

It's weird to say, but getting divorced was a huge learning experience.

Reflecting back on the first marriage, it was a steep learning curve on partnership - especially parenting. And when the marriage needed to end, we were both brave enough to continue to do the work to keep the parenting partnership healthy. It also highlighted things about myself that I now know are important to me for having a partnership.

More than just honesty and good communication, and trickier than being selfless and mindful of boundaries and needs. Because while I was finding myself in the woods of Quarantinder, I was able to recognize how much energy some things needed and how much other things sucked. As an introvert, I've long known that I have a different social energy balance than many others. But translating that to a 1:1 interaction is also important.

Long story short: being a good partner and actively nurturing that partnership is important enough to me to consider it a part of my identity. And I'm really glad to have found Amy.

Canadian

And here we have the kernal of today's Rant. I've been proudly Canadian ever since I can remember. This increased as I went to university and was exposed to more diverse international people, and felt proud of my country.

Even after [checks calendar] almost 23 years of living in the United States of America, I wear my literal maple leaf tattoo with pride. And as I contemplate US citizenship too, it causes a lot of complicated emotions. Which, combined with other current circumstances, had me going back to first principles and contemplating all this stuff.

2025.01.25 Back To Adventuring In the Future

So, Amy had to take a break from being the Dorks™ dungeon master due to fatigue, and Dave stepped up to start running us all in an AIF game.

Now, clearly, I have some strong bias going on. But wow is it a fun return.

I've played some AIF with Amy and the kids, which is indeed enjoyable and more suited to my general imagination. But the lower bullshit threshold for running a character in AIF is a welcome and joyful experience. Which is not to say that I don't enjoy playing D&D characters, because I do, but there is a lot more simultaneous railroaded bullshittery to manage in the process. As you're playing along, building capabilities, it's not like you want to turn down various added options, but it really is a lot of mildly-pointless minutiae that you really only get flavour options on. Multiclassing is possible, but only in a limited way as only certain combinations genuinely function well. And any multiclassing also usually means guaranteed missing out on some capstone abilities.

Plus, as a player, getting to use dice pooling again - delightful cinematic elements become more built into the gameplay. Love it.

Anyway, back to my lazy Saturday of reading, watching old TV shows, and filling out citizenship forms.


2025.01.04 Rebel Iconography Lead Candidate

Because apparently just a plain single star is too "Texas" or "Russia".


2024.12.31 VELMA

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Dealership called us back again and took off the entire 10k$ market adjustment. So, OK then.


2024.12.29 Wrap-Up Free Write

A causual review of my update frequency would suggest that perhaps my heart isn't really in talking about what is going on in my world. And that's probably fair, and politically adjacent. Nevertheless, there have also been things to mention that either got edited out of existence or failed to make the jump to web publication due to other distractions.

With that generalized arm-waving excuse, here are wisps of thoughts that I have been having but not bothering to dredge enough words for.


Way back in 2004 (ish), the very first version of The Feeling Machine had the Acolyte sections carefully refer to the character as "they/them". This was long before the current uncoiling of pronouns, and it was an attempt at injecting a futuristic sense of otherness to one facet of the society so the degree of change could be felt. Obviously, I didn't really predict that it would become a focus of society a scant two decades later. As I re-read it for editing, it felt quite stilted. But what really made me change it was reading Anne Leckie's "Ancillary Justice" in 2013 where everyone was referred to as "she/her" and it felt so much better done than I had managed.

So it goes. But, just wanted to describe somehow that I've been wrangling with the complexity of gender identity in culture for a while on my own, and am not just a bandwagon-jumping progressive supporter.


Amy and I actually had signed for getting an ID.Buzz - First edition, AWD, in the "energetic orange" that we like. This was after bouncing from dealership to dealership where they've all been sold out. We had even managed to swallow the bullshit "market adjustment" of 10k$ over MSRP. But then things fell apart.

First was discovering that all the wrangling and deal-making we had done with the sales department didn't actually mean anything. We had settled on a price/payment, based on flexing multiple variables the way we could, then they came back with the "real numbers from VW". Totally irrespective of any of the numbers we had negotiated. -sigh- Fine.

Then was hours spent by the "papers guy" trying to get us to put less money down. Why? Because arm-waving about how money works for you - failing to grasp how we very much understood that our money-earning-money potential was almost certainly going to be less than the rate we we paying for financing the rest. Then he repeatedly tried to sell us maintenance plans for things we neither wanted (coverage for things we didn't care about) or needed (a service contract for maintenance - on an EV).

Finally, they unleashed one final gotcha - another 10k$ for the lease transferral. Normally not a thing if you move directly to another, bigger lease deal. But, because the market value of our current ID.4 is sucking balls, they don't want to eat that difference in depreciation.

So we noped out of that deal. Got a message from the owner of the dealership to apologize and offered 5k$ off the deal, but fuck those guys. We'll wait a bit and try to get one later in 2025 from Herzog-Meier, who had the only non-bullshit sales team and only 5k$ of market ankle-grabbing.


Should I get another tattoo? I've got my aging maple leaf on my left shoulder, and I'm thinking I should get something to match it on my right shoulder after I get my US citizenship - assuming I can get my US citizenship before it becomes trumpistan. Maybe a star?


Teaching Simon to drive taps into an incredibly deep well of mana. It makes me laugh at how perfunctory my own driving training actually was. I mean, dad did teach me some cool things, but the core fundamentals of driving were mostly intuited by virtue of my machine empathy rather than explained usefully. Contemplating it, assuming that my memory isn't totally foreshortened with respect to my dad's direct input, I wonder if it was based on my dad having a lot of faith in my ability to "get it", or if he didn't actually know any of the fundamentals himself.

Totally aside from that, sitting with Simon as we train his extending proprioception to feel what the car and drivetrain are doing, I can feel the literal years I've spent being one with a vehicle being recognized and acknowledged inside myself.


2024.11.29 Planning For The Future

Facing the reality of the rising fascist state of the US is grim.

The petty combative side of me wants to goad all the conservatives - show us, motherfuckers. Make it fucking great. No excuses - you have the presidency, the House and the Senate, and an ideologically groomed Supreme Court - all 3 facets of government. Let's all learn a fucking hard lesson together.

Except the wiser side of me knows that isn't how fascists work. They've whipped up the obviously stupid majority into a hatred and fear soup of misdirection. So when the clearly incompetent president-elect makes broadly distracting histrionic actions - while he strokes his own ego, lines his pockets, and is used as a vehicle to accomplish Project 2025's dystopian goals - causes the country to objectively do worse for the working class, there will be fresh excuses. Fresh and refreshed people to arbitrarily blame.

People to punish. And the moron masses will go along with it.

No, the future plans need to be more concrete than hopelessly wishing for people to be... well, smarter would help, but mostly less fearfully selfish or hatefully small-minded.

Concrete plans include:

  • finally get my American citizenship
  • become more active in local politics
  • become more vocal in meaningful ways about national and global politics

Basically: time to join the Rebel Alliance against the fucking Empire

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2024.11.15 Kakistocracy

I've never felt worse about learning a new word.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakistocracy


2024.11.06 Whaaaalp

Fuck.


2024.10.05 Trumping Thought: Candidate Of The Hatefully Stupid

A nihilistic commentary I've seen a few times describes the evolution of the Republican party as naturally leveraging hatred and fear, and fostering that by undermining reason.

So that when Trump snuck up behind the Grand Old Party, in a way that they openly mocked and disregarded, they were woefully unprepared for just how successful they had been at stoking the fires of fear and hatred. Moreover, they did not really believe how hungry stupid and uneducated people were for somebody they could feel represented by.

Tangent: the Tea Party movement should have been a warning sign. Alas.

The highly polarized political situation in the US is capable of turning anyone into an emotion-motivated supporter of the party they identify with. But, with candor, this excuse only covers so much.

After all this time, including all Trump's rollicking efforts at unabashed self-aggrandizing striving for dictatorship, and listening to the words the candidates actually say, a few things are clear.

  1. Trump voters are fear-driven, or willing to be complicit in letting fear drive the electorate.

  2. Trump voters are hate-filled, or perfectly fine with hate being instilled as a functional law of the land.

  3. Trump voters are stupid, including both those incapable of understanding how bad Trump's ideas are, and those foolish enough to think that those bad ideas will work out well for them.



2024.09.16 Oldness Echo

Had a pretty good birthday - complete with chocolate cheesecake, playing D&D with Amy, Dave, and Bonnie, playing AIF with Amy and the kids. Life is good, and all that.

But embedded in all that was also a poignant little vignette of passed-on Castle-ing. Because Simon and I had on Friday a wee confrontation, where he wasn't in a headspace to hear some parenting that was based on what I felt like was an important bit of philosophy relevant to our lives. He had been ill, so the resistance and defensiveness was understandable and I was able to back off and give hime some processing time.

Until a couple days later, when we were sitting quietly on a couch together and I could carefully bring it back up. Because the distinction of responsibility and being responsible from things such as blame or fault is worth having a shared understanding of. Simon is extremely canny regarding rules and arguing technical compliance with such, but that is perpendicular to a practical wielding of responsibility. We talked about how being responsible is both separate from blame, but also can include being willing to take blame for things outside our control. And we talked about how being responsible is a greater application of making things within our control the best that they can be, or at least recovering from inevitable problems as they occur the best that we can.

Once he actually believed I really didn't blame him for anything, which was slow due to his suspicions about blame-related strategy concepts, I feel like he started to internalize much of it. Maybe. Probably in a manner very similar to how my dad also tried to infuse me with a sense of ever-expanding generalized responsibility. To be a responsible hiker. To be a responsible skier. To be a responsible driver. To be a responsible member of society.

But, really, it's not one of those things you can just tell somebody. A person needs concrete examples to witness in order to understand how they can embody it themselves.


2024.09.07 2000 km Later

Only about 1700 km were spent in two 10-hour-long drives from PDX to deepest darkest Canuckistan, but a few hundred km were also burned up acting as chauffeur to my EV-doubting family to and from various funeral related events.

So many bugs. Ghost is filthy enough that I think I'll take him through an automated car wash before I do a regular wash with hose and bucket and shop vac.

And I sure am not constitutionally resilient for such marathon drives any more. I feel very used up, and have been doing a lot of sleeping since getting back.

Ultimately, it was very worthwhile to make it to Grandpa K's funeral. It meant a lot to several family members to have me there. And it felt important to me to honour him properly as well, to feel like his significance in my life was appropriately prioritized.

However I can't deny that it was also a difficult social-emotional energy drain to see my family. I don't mesh with them well - both in terms of me understanding them, and them understanding me. As I told Amy, I managed to resist beating them with their own banjos.

It was good to see Dave and Bonnie, though. And to hang out with their 12th-grader Evan, whom has been too reclusive his whole life for me to have a conversation with before.

And, fuck, those twisty lonely mountain roads are just sublime driving. BC is just such a beautiful place, and the mountains echo in my soul. Along with my dad, and my Grandma and Grandpa Kosiancic.


2024.09.02 Angst About Going To Grandpa K's Funeral

I got called last Wednesday by mom - basically only ever happens when death is involved. Which would be extremely creepy, and possibly an explanation for why I ended up married to a vampire, but it's really more of an expression of my mom's particular ilk of mental illness. Is it mental illness, though, if she's happy and always functioned this way?

Anyway. It was to tell me that my Grandpa Kosiancic's interment at the Nelson cemetery would be this Wednesday.

It's a 10-hour drive, nominally with charge stops, or a ridiculous overpriced and even longer set of plane tickets. More complicated, though, was that I would be travelling while Amy is working. So the original scheme was to reduce the time Zora would be left alone at home by leaving around midnight on Tuesday, such that I had a couple hours flex time to get to the cemetery. This was an all-too-common a plan for my 10-hour drives to-and-from university, but that was when I was in my 20's and... well, stupid. Now I'm a weak old(ish) man, and I'm pretty sure I'd have to sleep somewhere after 02:00, which opens up for all kinds of things to go wrong.

Plus, and this is a typical problem for me - I have worries about my projects at work. I've already been gone 6 weeks this summer, and shit is going sideways in a couple different dimensions. It makes very little logical sense to be all wound up on behalf of a multi-billion-dollar international corporation, but maybe that's the humanizing work I do to earn my (mildly) vaunted pay.

Lastly, there's the equipment worry of a long-range trip into darkest Canuckistan with an electric car. Which is mildly hilarious considering the rock-solid dependability of Ghost compared to the rickety steeds I used to flog for endless road trips through the expansive wildernesses of BC. But with age comes cowardice - or, it's euphemistic equivalent, wisdom.


2024.08.24 Summer Event Horizon

It's been a busy-lazy summer, full of bike rides, RPG's, reading books, eating good food, house and yard projects. Somehow in between weeks of kid time and all their associated lounging play, I've also been scrambling with odd weeks of working while truck projects get complicated.

But this next week the kids go back to school. Hopefully the kids and I will sneak in another mostly-quiet bike ride up at Sandy Ridge before they do, and then Amy and I have final yard project plans for while they're at school. And then, after that, we shift into the work/school/home rhythm. And a new beat to that will be Amy shifting to days instead of working nights, which will make things interesting in a new way.

I still haven't gotten very far in preparing Simon for driving practice. I suppose that will be easier once he's, you know, legally allowed to operate a motor vehicle in public. Which theoretically he will be shortly. -gulp-


2024.07.27 Soundtrack of My Grief Processing

My Pet Coelacanth - deadmau5

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2024.07.23 Goodbye Grandpa K

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Grandpa Kosiancic was a stubborn mean little old gnome of a man, full of laughter and caring, and my idol in most things mechanical.

When my mom called this evening, I had guessed that he had died before she said anything. She's a hermit, and she only calls me in emergencies. Or, rather, in the wake of emergencies that I should know about after they've happened.

Grandpa K was really old, mid-90's, and had only just last year decided to stop taking care of the hobby farm lot and old homestead by himself on top of the mountain overlooking Nelson BC - and checked himself into a care facility, after re-homing his dog. Having been an unstoppable dynamo his entire life, this transition says to me that he was acknowledging that he didn't have much more wear and tear possible to endure.

It's not really possible to unpack in a blog all the ways that my personal conceptions of self-worth and intrinsic value have spawned from my life of observations of my Grandpa K. But I will assert that he was an incarnation of what good can come of a life of hard work and caring for others.

Perhaps one of my most viscerally proud things was being able to visit Grandpa K, and have him delight in the bright, inquisitive, and joyful great-grandchildren I'm at least partially responsible for.

Thank you for being my Grandpa.


2024.06.15 Eternal Summer

By dint of luck and effort, I've got every week I spend with the kids this summer as vacation. Six weeks of... stuff.

Hopefully lots of bike riding (and remembering to take pictures).
Maybe some adventure trips.
A few birthdays, with accompanying celebrations and Amy-cakes.

But most importantly, a bunch of memories to savour.


2024.06.11 Simon's Grade-9 English Final Creative Writing Assignment

A flash of lightning and the crack of thunder, a spark alights. The fire burns ever higher, towering above the body of a behemoth creature. The titan collapses, its legs burning away beneath it. The beast’s body slowly blackens and chars, thick scales peeling away to reveal ever more burnt flesh. The plateau that covers its back sloughs off, with trees and homes crumbling as they hit the ground. They become nothing but fuel for the fire.

I watch Xolanotl, my home, until there is nothing left to see but smoldering rubble. I see others turn to start gathering food and make shelter. I breathe deeply, the acrid smoke stinging my nose, and turn to help. Most of us had been off scouting; trying to find a safe route for the Xolanotl. A few dozen people have been pulled from the wreckage, but most won’t survive much longer, not without proper medical equipment. There is no conversation over the meager meal we manage to scrounge up. There is no one to talk to I suppose, seeing as most of our friends and families are buried somewhere in the wreckage. I could have stopped this. If I had paid better attention,maybe, everyone would be alive. That night I lay awake, watching the stars drift on by. I decide that the only thing I can do is to leave this forsaken place.

The next day is almost harder than the first. This is no bad dream. Our whole lives, our plans, our dreams, our pasts are burned away in the fire. I take all that I own, and say my goodbyes, few as they are. I finally set off, placing my father’s knife on my belt, one last reminder of this place. I climb over burnt logs and blackened undergrowth. I wish I could have helped; the signs were all there, the dry brush, the brewing storm. I should have known. But we had seen many storms in the past, not one had caused such a disaster.

I eventually find a small cave, sheltered from the elements. I set up camp inside because night is beginning to fall, and the surface world at night has no mercy for anything unlucky enough to be caught in the shadows. The shadows grow, and night falls slowly over the forest. I fall into a fitful sleep.

I groggily wake up the next day, the sun is already high in the sky; my body is not yet used to the routines of travel. The going is easier now, as the trees slowly open up into an expansive grassland. Only a few trees dot the horizon far in the distance. Far in the distance I hear a strange sound, a bellow from some beast of plains. With nothing better to do, and hardly any reason to live, I head to investigate the noise. I duck below the tall grasses, and slowly stalk towards the bellowing. The creature’s cries soften, and become all but inaudible against the sound of the wind.

I crest the top of a hill, seeing a slumped and bloodied shape which lays at its base unmoving. I scan the grasses for any sign of what did this, but whatever it is has left, or is too well hidden for me to find. Ignoring my better senses, I approach the creature. Its four wide eyes watch me fearfully, and it calls out weakly. As I study the creature, I realize it looks eerily familiar, this is a juvenile xolanotl, not even old enough to have found itself a shell.

I couldn’t save my home, but this time I can do something. I immediately start staunching the bleeding with bits of cloth and gauze. The xolanotl stopped making noise quickly after it realized I was there to help. As I wrapped the final slashes on its side, the xolanotl tried to slowly stand. It pulled six shaky legs underneath it, and slowly pushed off the ground. It looked down at me expectantly, before turning and limping a short distance. It looked back at me impatiently. Doesit really want me to follow it? Where is it taking me? I suppose I don’t exactly have any better place to be than wherever it is going, so I quickly catch up.

We walk for hours, the afternoon sun slowly setting, and the creatures of the night undoubtedly stirring. The xolanotl only rarely looked back to see if I was still following, all the while maintaining its slow, but relentless pace. Grasses cut at my legs, but I can hardly bother to notice. My whole body aches from the endless walking, but still, late into the evening, we press on. I hope we soon reach our destination, not just for my sake, but if we are caught out here in the open, we might as well set the table for whatever finds us.

I sigh in relief as we come to a small crater punched in the side of a hill. What look like abandoned nests fill the crater, and trees fill the nesting site. The xolanotl curls up amongst the densest of the trees, while I take food out of my pack and sit down next to it to eat. We soon fall asleep, exhausted from our ordeals.

But sleep is not long for us tonight; I jolt awake with the sound of rustling in the branches above. The moon hovers high above, a sliver hanging in the sky framed by growing storm clouds. I pull my knife from its sheath and strike a torch. I jostle my new friend awake, and it slowly rises, tired and wounded. The sounds in the branches above grow louder, and a large shape flits through the treetops. The torchlight glints off the intricate obsidian knife, but just out of the torch’s glow the creature circles us.

The monster Lunges from the darkness, six spidery legs thrown back, and a sharp maw open wide. I dip to the right just in time, and thrust my knife at its throat. The blade just glances off of thick scales harmlessly. It turns to face me. It shrieks in frustration, opening its bifurcated jaw, wide enough to fit me whole before turning to my injured companion and preparing to lunge forward. I jump at it, swinging my torch wildly.

As I brandish my torch, our assailant flinches and retreats. It shakes its head violently, unused to the bright light. I, more confident, charge the beast, torch held aloft. I stab at the creature, dodging to its side, and aiming for what I hope is the softer underside. I find my mark, and the beast howls in pain. It thrashes about, and its tail lands squarely in my chest, knocking the wind out of me. I nearly collapse, but I find my footing just in time for it to send another blow my way. This time, it throws the torch from my hand. The torch hits the soaked ground, and sputters weakly as the fire dies, cloaking us once again in darkness. I trip and fall on the shadowed ground. The monster, faintly illuminated by the night sky, prepares to dive forward.

A flash of light, and a booming sound, louder than any I have heard before, pierces the night. Lightning strikes the ground, brighter than the sun in midday, louder than the calls of even the greatest beasts.

The monster stumbles back, eyes milky and blind. It collapses on the ground, confused and senseless. It tries to stand, shaken but not yet defeated, but my friend is done with this. It stands to its full height, and stomps down on our stunned attacker, crushing it instantly.

The sun is just rising as I finish patching my wounds. And so we head out, to see what comes next.

Far off in the distance, the trumpeting sounds of many xolanotl calling out to each other reverberate across the plains.


2024.06.02 How You Spend Your Days Is How You Spend Your Life

After a week of lingering nostalgia, Amy shook me out of my incipient body dysmorphia by chortling about how I'm much better looking now. As much as I remember how it felt to be whippet-thin and with boundless endurance, I probably don't remember well how nervous I was all the time nor how fragile my ego was. Plus Amy has similar pictures of her elfin bearing, but she is wildly more attractive now with her full shape and mature demeanour.

Also heard from friends living in Germany, and how they're struggling with the transition there. I'm sure that overall it's a worthwhile adventure, but there's no denying that the enormity of the change is challenging. I miss hanging out with them.

But the most amusing meta moment this week was a person on Craigslist asking for a window of time to inspect the bike I'm selling, and I had to honestly tell them that there was only the most narrow windows of time available in my life.

Life is good. Busy, but good.


2024.05.27 Hello From The 90's

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In the midst of pulling the kids bikes out of storage to prep them for test rides I also pulled out my dad's old Forest Service backpack, in which I appear to have stashed a bunch of old photos. Man, there went a whole day full of sweet and sad reminiscences.


2024.05.04 Awkward Moments Plumb Local Socialization

I had to pause before opening up my ship to this port, so I could collect myself. To hold onto all the things I've learned about myself, and consciously recognize the truth of them. Because this is a hard place to be: the place I'm originally from. And they think they know me here. It's awfully easy to become what other people tell you that you are, and it very rarely serves you well.

Grey light from overcast skies bundled between rocky peaks flooded my hatch, and my hand reflexively went to drag my helmet over my head so I could see better - but I stopped. To stride out of my ship with my helm already in place sends a message, and if I had any hope of making this go well I needed to appear relaxed. So instead I shrugged on a cloak to obscure my habitual gear, and met the tech ambling towards my still-pinging ship.

"Cargo or repairs?"

I give them a terse shake of my head. "Nothing right now. Maybe later." They give me a squint, to wonder wordlessly about why I'm even here then. "I pre-paid the landing fee and parking for a day on my way in. But..." I dip my chin and make sure to catch their eye. "Try to keep folks from getting to near to her. The security system is a little aggressive."

The tech gave a glance at the well-patched hull, and gave me a shrug. A worried little part of me thought there was a good chance I'd be scraping a charred limb of theirs off of the hull later on, and hoo-boy that would definitely make future visits home even more awkward.

Wending my way past other parked ships, I eventually made it through the personnel gate. It stood open, as it does generally - other than in times of trouble. Apparently I couldn't help but make an amused face at the backwater half-assery of the security measures as I walked through, because one of the guards sitting in the guard station yelled down. "Something funny, stupid face?"

Stupid face? I have a feeling I know that guy. Probably doesn't recognize me, though. Not yet, anyway.

"Nope." I keep walking, and head toward the public transit station.

No crowds here. Which makes sense, this is hardly a busy port of call. And this is the end of the line for the train, so it's completely empty when it glides into station. The meta-ads for taxis suddenly drop their prices before the train stops, as a last-ditch plea for my credits. But if I wanted to glide into town in a hopper directly to where I was going, I would have just taken my own out of the hold.

The train glides to a stop at the next branch - which connects to the industrial district. District is a bit of a laugh - it's a section of valley out of sight of the main town habitants, where the large ugly machines of industry can efficiently turn materials and effort into credits and means to do more things. And most of both of those are generally heading off-world. Or, at least, out of town.

Onto the train, fresh off of shifts of grimy toil, several burly people trundle wearily. I don't stare, but I watch them, doing that thing I can't stop myself from doing every time I'm here: asking myself, "Do I know them?".

Perhaps because of my watching them, however low-key I think I'm being, or perhaps just because I'm an oddity on this train, they watch me back. I imagine them thinking to themselves, "Do I know that person?" I'm not broadcasting any contact details, and neither are they, and it's likely that nobody actually recognizes anybody right then. I knew that I wasn't sure about who any of them were, though vaguely familiar aspects suggested that I would if I knew more - but I wouldn't have made any fuss even if I did actually recognize anybody here. Unlike the folk in this town, who in my experience unfailingly make a fuss over discovering someone.

Of course, several of them get the standard far-away expression of someone concentrating on media or comms. Which, in my standard paranoia, translates into at least one of them sending an image of me to someone else asking, "Do we know this person?" So it goes.

It continues in the same rambling manner on a click-through...


2024.04.20 Dragon Toasters - Horizon

"What happened to David?"

Curious. Dave peered carefully around his cover, and witnessed a familiar predator-machine standing defiantly on another squarish boulder. "Einstein?"

"How do you know name? Did Boss tell you?"

This was... unexpected. The simulant appeared to have forged a genuine connection, if this construct was indeed willing to risk itself to inquire about the simulant's fate. Dave had dismissively assumed that much of the sense of relationship it had inferred was projection based on how simulants are driven to fit in behaviourally with real humans. Well shit.

Dave shifted the plasma blade to the least-threatening posture he could manage, low and pointing behind him, without actually extinguishing it and sheathing it. He wanted to give this pack of predatory constructs the best possibility of being peaceful, but he also didn't want to risk getting overwhelmed if they all rushed him. Still, he did step out from behind his cover. "I'm sorry, kiddo. David didn't make it out of that crypt. But he did share his databases with me, so at least his memories and ideas live on with us two."

"You chased Boss down hole. You kill Boss and steal Boss brains?

Dave noted subtle signs of movement. Probably flanking. This discourse might be making things worse for everyone. But Dave couldn't shake the sense of value and specialness that this construct had a friendship-like bond with the simulant.

"I wasn't myself when I chased David, and I was so confused that I didn't even find the hole he jumped into until after he woke up an ancient monster. And David gave me his databases as his own idea and motivation."

Einstein's antennae shifted and writhed with some complicated internal process. Its broad multifaceted camera arrays betrayed no expressions, but then it cocked its head in a pantomime of inquisitive intent. "Feel like you are bad and terrible, and lying."

"Well, I can be pretty terrible, and it would be wrong to pretend that I am not what I am. But, let me say this: I can tell you what happened to the original David."

It looked like Einstein was reacting to that statement when a trio of sudden motions lit up Dave's threat-sense. Dave sprung to adjacent cover in the blink of an eye, pivoting behind the plasma blade as he snapped its containment field wide such that a pair of static-pulses caromed off to sizzle against rock. At the cover he came face to face with an off-balance predator machine. As Dave's free hand snagged a grip on the thorax and he heaved the beastie in the approximate direction of the crypt shaft, it appeared comically surprised. Perhaps wasp-headed werewolf satyrs are unaccustomed to being physically assaulted by things they might have assumed were prey.

An angry static crackled in the lower EM spectrum as coded comms betrayed various predator machine's locations. The kids were arguing. Probably not a fair fight, considering that Einstein has access to several human's lifetime's worth of dirty rhetorical tricks.

"You stop fighting, and we not hurt you. And you tell us what happened to Human David."

A familiar sense of amused cynicism surprised Dave. "Oh, kiddo - I'm already not fighting." Dave paused to consult a highly-annotated but outdated map. "I understand that your pack has probably got both logistic reasons and philosophical reasons to try to dispatch me. Instead of trying to dissuade you with threats and intimidation, let me suggest that there is a trove of treasure down that shaft exceeding what my small chassis represents. And your pack will need your David-memories to be able to use it."

Soft rustling sounds of movement, far more subtle than machines of that size have any right to manage, told Dave that they were adjusting their distribution. Perhaps to have line-of-sight for more discreet discussion. "Is Boss down there?"

"Yeah, Einstein. He's down there. I suggest leaving him down there - it's a tomb worthy of him." With reluctance, and in spite of his keen cynicism, Dave extinguished to plasma blade. "He saved me, you know. Twice." Leaving the cover of a block of stone, Dave walked casually away from the region of the shaft - and towards the cliff.

The insults of static pulses in the back didn't come. Dave felt pleased about this, and relieved that he didn't have to decide what to do about it if they had. Would he have had to do anything? Probably not. But he also knew it would have been hard to not run back and cull at least some of them. "I'm going to go and try to get a look at a giant tank ant for myself. If you get an urge to hear a story about what happened the original David, come find me."

With that, Dave casually stepped off the cliff and dropped from sight.


2024.04.15 A Specific Walk

I walked into a meeting room last week, and was met with an uproar from the array of faces on the screen as well as in the room. "I knew it was Clayton! I could tell from his walk."

Obviously, the frosted glass in the front of the room by the door showed a silhouette of my approach, but not enough to make out my face. With my standard smug dad-grin, I sat down without saying anything. And the meeting began, so I forgot about the comment in the flow of engineering development work.

Afterwards, though, it came back to me, and my mind turned over what exactly that might have meant. I think I remember in the moment feeling bemused, because I do tend to carry myself with a conscious effort about my bearing. But, really, that's more about posture, as I'm in a lifelong war against gravity conspiring against my also being slightly taller than everything is ideally suited for - so it takes effort not to slouch.

But was there... is there something more to be read in my walk?

Maybe a haughty imperviousness for being an "old timer" and secure in my reputation's stature in the engineering building?

Maybe a lanky impatient stride that I ride officiously from one arbitrary place to another in my recent re-confinement for "return to office"?

Or maybe they see a shadow of the wary but determined kid I used to be, who learned to navigate on foot while being stalked by malicious peers eager for a fight. And being always ready for that fight. And knowing that I'll never win that fight, but damned if I wasn't going to make them regret it as much as possible.


2024.03.17 Mexican Reflections

A trip to our plant in Saltillo Mexico earlier this month was quite interesting.

The first thing to mention is that this was not my first trip to one of our Mexican manufacturing plants. Last time, the visit to Santiago involved staying in Mexico city - an urban area with the same population as Canada. That was interesting in its own way.

This time involved being in northern Mexico, and it's possible that needing to be escourted most places with a security detail insulated me quite a lot from the granular details of the lives lived there. Which obviously is an insight of it's own.

The hilarious driving habits of the locals is a delight to witness - from the safety of the back of a van. Coming from the infuriating obliviousness of drivers of Portland, it was actually a relief to see such vigour and skill. And the best part was the way in which they we very relaxed about all the interactions that I would have experienced as very intense.

But the thing that sticks out most for me, and feels really inspirational, is the camaraderie the workers at the Saltillo plant. I had to learn a wide variety of individualized handshakes to greet the people I met, and they often laughed and hugged me when I got them wrong. The ubiquitous friendliness and helpfulness of everyone at the plant is something I've never seen at this kind of scale before. Makes me wish there was a way to import this, large-scale, into more of the aspects of life.


2024.02.25 Is That What I Looked Like?

University student ID 1993:
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University graduation yearbook 1999:
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New engineer ID 2000:
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Terrified Canadian engineer suddenly employed in the United States 2002:
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Resigned Canadian engineer with a family in the United States 2007:
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2024.02.15 Awkward Honesty

Found myself this morning in the awkward position of explaining to a group of parents why I hadn't responded to my daughter's ability to participate. The crux of my reluctance is that it's on the handover day where I take the kids back to their mom's house, and I don't get to see them again for a week - and any playdates mean curtailing my time with them. What seems like a no-brainer helicopter parent supported socialization opportunity for the kids to the rest of the parents is a fraught emotional inflection point for me. Adding to the complication is that I have to drive them across town, not just let them scamper out the door to participate like they do back in the ex's neighbourhood. And all the while we deal emotionally with "Sunday Energy", there is also weekly chores to negotiate.

Meanwhile, I could just imagine one or all of the parents thinking "What's with Emo-Dad™ making such a big fuss over having his kid show up for a play date? Just say yes or no! We don't need to hear all about your feeewings, whiner."

However it was actually received by most of the parents, the ex did reach out very sympathetically. It did a lot of credit to how well we've managed to be kind and connected despite the divorce. Being mindful adults has its benefits.


2024.02.11 Qualitatively Hating Working In The Office

So, having spent a week (well, 4 days) working in the office again, I now have more direct data regarding what it's like. Which sounds silly after having spent a couple decades having worked in an office setting, but the recent handful of years of mostly working from home has massively transformed my perspective.

Firstly, credit where credit is due, when at the office it is much easier to keep the parade of attention mostly work-related.

But, and this is a critical "but", it feels like it leads to a considerably bigger problem. Because all my in-between filler moments are more filled with work minutae, that means that my brain gets much less capability to recharge in those pauses. It turns out that spending all those so-called "micro moments" bumping into colleagues, that burns neural resources for an introvert such as myself.

The two main results of this are that 1) I'm considerably more exhausted at the end of a work day - not even counting commuting, and 2) I have fewer good/big ideas.

The exhaustion part is probably easy to understand. After an intense meeting, or tough bit of design, at home I can quietly do some dishes or some such, letting my subconscious work on stuff. At work, I have to either bumble through the campus making up social niceties or fend off trawling coworkers looking for verbal answers.

The good/big idea part is actually a discovery that I had during the past week. See, I would find myself waking up in the middle of the night most nights last week, with an idea about how to solve a problem or something to try at work. And the previous couple decades came back to me in a flash: that's how work used to haunt me. But that stopped when I was working from home. But instead of being haunted by work such that it wakes me up, I'd have a couple big "aha!" moments during the day, most days.

Basically, for me, work from home allows me to generate twice as many good/big ideas as being in the office, and in ways that don't fuck with my sleep and stress.

Which is an excellent segue into the motivation I have right this moment: I'm absolutely dreading going back in for another week of this shit. It's hilarious to say, because my job is super fun, my workplace is extremely nice and accommodating full of cool people, and even my commute is a laugh of a bike ride. Yet here I am, very much dreading it.


I assume that I'll re-acclimate, and the stress will ease back down as I get re-numbed to the overt dominion of the extroverted and the soul-draining non-stop effort of having to pretend to be social. I'll do cool work that will make it all worthwhile, and loosen up my clenched soul on the privileged experience I had.

If this were a reddit post, I'm sure there would be swarms of commenters urging me to take this newfound knowledge and find the bravery to seek another position that would allow the exact thing I like about the pandemic era WFH. Which is when I gesture vaguely to my giant golden handcuffs, the kids about to need cars and then university, and the lovely house I couldn't afford to buy again in this market even if I kept this well-paying job. And I'm chicken.


2024.01.15 Snow Driving Observations - part something

Portland is funky, snow-driving wise.

Generally speaking, PDX is mild as hell, rarely getting more than a dusting of snow at most and not enough to worry about. And the occasional punctuation of stay-around snow isn't in any way particularly much accumulation. But despite being infrequent and short-lived, it is almost always expert-level snow situations.

Taking a step back, my northern peoples have a great deal of opportunity to hone our slidetastic situational control. Even those Canuckistanni who do not overtly enjoy a good bit of the slidey-slidey get sufficient exposure to know where their limits are and to be sensible. More than that, there is a good long ramp up and ramp down of the snow-ness, much of it during climate that is cold enough to have the ice and snow be pleasantly predictable. So when there is a surplus of the slippery substances, or, more poignantly, when it's sometimes in that dangerous extra-slippery state of melty snow on ice, there is a deep well of useful reflexes to draw from.

Meanwhile, here in PDX, the locals almost never have to face snow. And when they do, they are woefully incapable of doing so. Augmenting this low-skill demographic is the relatively large influx of Californians, all of whom seem to want to pull over and have a good cry when it so much as rains. Which it does. Often. Maybe more on that some other time. This leads to a relatively high number of vehicles out and about completely without any winter tires.

The hilarious twist that PDX plays on the unsuspecting snow-n00bs is that, since it is rarely very far below freezing here, it is very close to the melting point - the slipperiest sort of snow. Which, more often than not, gets augmented with PDX's special sauce: freezing rain. So not only is there very little opportunity to practice driving in snow here, the snow goes from nothing straight to expert snow.

Resultingly, there is much chaos to be had here. And regardless of how capable one and their vehicle might be, it is exceedingly perilous to join in the maelstrom when it starts. But shortly after everyone freaks out and stays the hell away from the snow covered roads, it's basically glorious emptiness and freedom for snow-loving freaks such as myself to get out and have some joy.

Plus, in a more mature vein, it is an opportunity to provide transport to those that need help and reap a healthy crop of brownie points.


2024.01.13 Farewell to the Mayor of Kenton

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It is with deep sorrow that we learned that my favourite cat of all time - Charlie¹ - passed away this week.

From the moment he ran up to greet us when we first came to look at this house, we knew he was special. His legend among the neighbourhood was known by everyone we met; "Oh, yeah - I know Charlie. I make sure to stop and pet him whenever I come this way." Our block Whatsapp thread is still pinging with people sharing pictures and stories of him over the years.

The peak of his legend might have been his fighting off a coyote, and living with some epic scars. And his giant murder mittens certainly lent credibility to his prowess. But it was his calm fearless demeanour that won my heart the most, coupled with his refusal to put up with any shit, desire to lure people into being playfully mauled, and the itty bitty tiny meow that he made out of his lion-sized throat.

May your legend in the next world be as epic as in this one.



¹ He also had many nicknames, including:

  • Chonkmeister
  • Chuckie
  • Chuckles
  • Kaiju Kitty
  • Chuck Wagon
  • Chonk Chonkerson (Man On The Street)
  • Chuckzilla
  • Chuck Roast












































































































RESISTANCE STATUS:

  • US citizenship: APPLICATION PENDING
  • local politics: NULL, WITH FOREBODING
  • global politics: NULL, BRAINSTORMING