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A blog with delusions of grandeur

Circular Theory

'Toine is back! I don't think this is the time for my "AC's feelings on basketball" blog, but I should at least mention that I don't care about basketball. In October of 2003, Danny Ainge traded Antoine Walker to Dallas for some other players and maybe some draft picks or cash. Who knows? Anyway, while listening to WEEI this afternoon one of the substitute hosts for the "Dale Arnold Show" (possibly more on this later) said by far the most interesting thing I've ever heard on sports talk radio. This is a paraphrasation of the quotation, but... "If Danny Ainge hadn't traded Antoine a year and a half ago, he wouldn't have been in the position to make this trade today." The context of the discussion let me know that what he meant was that without the players he got for Walker a year and a half ago, he wouldn't have been in the position to pick up an impact player for the playoff drive. The obvious point, though is that if Ainge hadn't traded Antoine he wouldn't need him as an impact player because he would have already been there. Which wouldn't have made him an impact player, but a current player. Walker wouldn't be a big midseason boost, but maybe if he had been there all season, they'd have won more games?

AC Basketball Talk Episode One over and out.

Look Out Below

I’m broken. As I write this, I currently can’t lift my arms above my shoulders. I can’t really turn my head more than 90 degrees. My knees are so bruised my pants hurt. Crossing my legs makes my hips ache, and don’t even get me started on my back and ankles.

Yesterday, I went snowboarding. I don’t know why you’re so surprised. Given my crippling fears of both heights and going very fast down a mountain, snowboarding seems like the perfect activity for me.

Admittedly, I was a little apprehensive at first. The idea of dangling from a thin steel cable hundreds of feet in the air above a snow-covered mountain, for God’s sake, only then to plummet down the mountain with a large piece of wood strapped to my feet – well, you get the idea. I was apprehensive.

The thought of me snowboarding came as quite a shock to my father, who’s been trying to get me to go skiing with him since I was, I don’t know, ambulatory. The aforementioned phobias led me to turn him down every time he invited me to join him and his partner for their semi-annual trips to Colorado or Utah or whatever square-ish western state he tends to go to. When he called from Park City (or wherever) and heard my plan, he literally dropped the phone. My dad has recently retired, and as a result has sort of lost touch with the way life works for the rest of us. “If you like it,” he said, “you should come out and join us if you can get a day off from work!” Sure, Dad, I’ll just have the Learjet fueled up and hop out to Breckenridge (or wherever) to join you for the day. He did try, in his own inimitable way, to encourage me about my fear of heights: “The chairlift’s pretty scary, I don’t know how you’re going to manage it.” Thanks, Dad.

The preparations changed my mind a little. After talking with the people I was going to go with, and making a list of everything I’d need to have, I started to think that snowboarding just might be an activity I’d really enjoy…buying the equipment for.

I have a weakness, I admit, for this sort of thing. Two years in a row I went on a multi-day canoe trip with my (now-) wife’s stepfather and a group of other guys. Now, I’m not a big fan of the outdoors, with all the bugs, and the paddling, and the sleeping in a tent, and the bugs. (As my mom used to say, my idea of “roughing it” is a Holiday Inn where the elevator’s broken. I like to think of myself as an avid indoorsman.) But buying camping gear? That I can get behind. Waterproof bags, sleeping bags, backpacks, travel toiletry kits…set me loose in an L.L.Bean and I’m a happy camper. (Camper! See what I did there?) Oh, and packing the gear is almost as much fun as buying it. Deciding what items should go in each compartment, tightly rolling t-shirts and socks to take up the minimum amount of volume, and sealing nearly everything in an individual Ziploc bag was just heaven. It’s always a little disappointing when the packing system collides with reality, though. After one night on the river, the socks got all uncoiled and I couldn’t quite remember which pocket the lens cleaner was supposed to go in. Next time I should bring a schematic. Ooh, I could laminate it!

Anyway, faced with the prospect of a whole new gear-buying activity, it took a lot of willpower not to go all “Supermarket Sweeps” at Ski Market, but I managed to restrict myself to a new pair of ($100) long underwear (or, as we snowboarders call them, “thermals”), some glove liners, and some ($25) socks. Seriously, these socks have so many features I think my iPod was jealous.

Even before we actually hit the snow (is that what we say? Hit the snow? I’m not really sure), it was an adventure. The mountain didn’t have a changing area, per se, so we had to change into our gear in the car in the parking lot. I definitely feel as though I got a little more intimately acquainted with the folks in my car, as well as the lovely young couple in the car next to us. (I’m familiar with the sheepish wave you give when you’ve accidentally cut someone off while driving, but what hand gesture do you use to indicate “I’m sorry I got a glimpse of your girlfriend in her underwear?”)

We dressed, we rented, we waited for Andre to stuff his t-shirts down his pants (for protection, he insisted), and we ended up missing the first lesson, so we decided to just hit the easy slope and let June, who’d snowboarded before, show us the ropes. My companions are all a bit more athletically inclined than I am, but I’m proud to say I was definitely the best at clipping my boots into the bindings. After a little while, we decided we were ready to try from the top of the hill, which meant riding the chairlift.

To say that I was nervous would be an understatement. The chairlift is a ridiculous contraption, an obvious deathtrap, and I would have probably been immobilized with fear except that we rode up with a delightfully vulgar New Yorker, and I got to talk baseball. (Apparently, last year was just our fucking year, even if Schilling does have a fucking mouth on him, but this year the fucking Red Sox better watch out. Oh, to be sure, we fucking deserved to win, it was a great fucking series, but, he wanted me to know, he hates the fucking Red Sox.) This was entertaining and distracting enough that I got to the end of the ride without mewling in fear too audibly.

Then we boarded back down. I fell a lot. I guess somehow I thought that all of the time I had spent playing “SSX Tricky” on the Xbox would have helped. If I can only figure out what muscle group maps to the left trigger, I will be awesome.

When we finally took our lesson, I was pleased to discover that I was, at least, better than the 12-year-olds in our group, although my self-esteem was taken down a peg or two by the 6-year-olds whizzing past us at Mach 2 and then cruising to a graceful stop. I think the lesson (and the fatigue) sapped my confidence a little, because our second run down the mountain went not quite so well as the first one. Going ten feet and then falling, then getting up and going ten feet and then falling gets pretty irritating, and after one spectacular fall on my ass (so hard my hat popped off), I decided to walk the rest of the way down.

But, look, I made it back in one (bruised) piece, and now I can say that I’ve gone snowboarding. I may even go back. One more lesson, and maybe I’ll figure out how to turn left. Then, watch out. No, seriously, watch out, because I can’t stop either.

Mascot 1, Cris Colinsworth 0

This morning, as I was waking up, I had a ridiculous dream and I was wondering if you thought it was a problem. The New England Patriots were playing in a "Big Game" against the San Diego Chargers. I don't know the signifigance of the opposition being the Chargers, but it was the Chargers in the way you know certain facts in your dreams. Anyway, the Patriots were at the goalline when Bill Belichick inserted himself as quarterback. He was wearing his oversized gray sweatshirt and instead of a helmet, he was wearing his headset. He called for a QB sneak and ran the ball in easily, even sticking it out a little in a somewhat taunting manner.

This is where it gets interesting. I didn't see anyone hit him, but all of a sudden a Chargers player is running out of the endzone with the ball before he gets decked around the 50 yard line by, who else but, Rodney Harrison. At this point the dream turned from a linear story into a choppy highlight real. There was a Terrel Owens-esque scene of a Charger's player spiking the ball on the Patriots' midfield logo, there was a scene of Patriots players on top of Chargers players in the end zone punching the crap out of them. This was weird because the Patriots players were raising their fists and punching in unison (imagine the Rockette's in a street brawl).

Right before I woke up and as if my dream was returning from commercial, there was a scene of the Patriots mascot being held down by Cris Colinsworth in the way that players are held down during a kick off return. The mascot gets up and punches at Cris Colinsworth missing most of him and Cris Colinsworth slaps him. I didn't realize this at the time, but slapping the mascot wouldn't really hurt because he had one of those giant heads. I think in the dream, though, the mascot's head was a real giant head and not a fake giant head. This mini battle ended with the mascot decking Cris Colinsworth in the mouth and Cris Colinsworth walking way shaking his head and scowling with bloody teeth. And then I woke up. Red Sox pitchers and catchers reported on the 17th and the position players reported today. Although it is snowing outside, today is the first day of spring.

What part of “Due by noon on Tuesday” don’t you understand?

I hadn't planned on being so prolific today, but something about the first post of the year and this head cold gave me seven billion ideas.

This being just one of them:

I'm not sure, and I don't mean to sound like I have a higher than average sense of personal responsibility, but is it possible that one of the reasons that most Americans seem to have a completely unrealistic sense of, well, reality is that since they were younger someone has always bailed them out?

I'm sure I sound like a schill for conglomerates, but this is just ridiculous. Most of my generation, and possibly the one before it has grown up with the solid understanding, that there will always be someone there for them. While this is reassuring, it has made us into a country of irresponsible chumps. When we were chastised in school, there was a parent defending us and now, when we can't return our movies, who comes running, but the beautiful state of NJ.

Blockbuster has made a big deal recently of canceling their late fees. It appears that NJ believes its citizens have been wronged by this seemingly in-good-faith act by Blockbuster. In reality, I believe Blockbuster was acting more in their own interests than the customers, they crunched the numbers and realized they'd retain more customers and even regain lost customers if they changed their late policy. That doesn't change the fact that you should be able to return a video on time, or at least ask what happens if you don't. I've returned movies late, and I always feel like a dolt for having to pay a late fee. I've never understood why Blockbuster charging late fees was a problem, but even before their recent policy change, they were facing lawsuits. Am I supporting tort reform? Not really, but I definitely don't support the government sueing companies for charging fees that can a) be easily avoided b) will be explained by a clerk if asked.

(I'm not a good blogger yet because I'm about to say something that I don't have a link for so just bear with me and take my word for it or google "blockbuster late fees". Would you have noticed? Probably.) I've read that Blockbuster has used the cancelation of late fees to raise their rental prices, at least for video games. This I find abhorrent. Still, there's no reason to not return your movies on time.

My first post of the new year.

Uhh... So in my first post I wrote that I hoped that I would continually post. I'm not sure if I can get credit for that, but maybe I will redouble my efforts today. Topics I could talk about in the coming weeks or months or years:
The end of an era?
Commuting to work?
Cats?
Hopefully all of the above and more in the next couple weeks or months or years.
We'll see.

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