3.11.14

Halloween / Check us out on Instagram / Etc

Howdy folks, it has been a while. Guess what, we had a Halloween party!? Much fun was had.

Emily baked cool stuff.


The bathroom had a certain "shine" to it.


The table was set.


Scary sangria was prepared.


Pumpkins galore.


All we needed was Velma, Scooby, and - lest we forget - Shaggy. Thankfully they were all there!



Sarah - on the right here - was the costume contest winner.


Jesper - holy something I am terribly scared of clowns - came in second.


Maimed-fisher-woman Helle came in third. Props to Berit for the outstanding makeup.


It was an awesome night. I was happy to spend it with my friends.


Additionally, despite my disdain for social media, I am now on Instagram! You can follow our exploits photographically there.

Instagram

30.7.14

Update to Arles Update, Largely Involving Bobby Hill

I was slightly let down by my last post. Hopefully this redeems me.


In addition to eating and reminiscing about the genius that is Bobby Hill, we have actually done / seen stuff! What kind of stuff? How about the city of Gordes?!


How about the Abbaye Notre-Dame de Sénanque?!


Yes, if these pictures look old / weird it's because I'm messing around with the iPhone's fancy schmancy filter settings! I am very sorry to any actual photographers in the audience that actually know how to take real pictures sans Siri gimmicks.

29.7.14

Culinary Update from Arles

I have no idea what day it is blog-wise as I'm on holiday thoroughly enjoying bread, wine, and cheese. This is surely a valid excuse. Surely.

And the charcuterie. Oh the charcuterie. Specifically the saucisson pictured at the top right of this plate of delicious meat products.


Again, this blogger app is terrible so you probably can't see it in all of its cheesy meaty glory. Yes, cured meat fans, this combines delicious cured meat with Roquefort cheese. France is awesome. If I stay here much longer, gout will surely set in. Cue Bobby Hill in a Rascal.

Au revoir! 

25.7.14

Day 573 - C'est la vie

Tomorrow we head to France. Frankrig.

Will I bicycle around Paris with a mustache on my face and a baguette in my basket? Probably not. I'm ashamed that I cannot find EVEN ONE of the many Conan clips where he does THIS EXACT THING. Just imagine if you will. Conan is exhausted and embarrassed by my lackluster searching and my lack of creativity.


 I'm sorry Conan. So Sorry.

23.7.14

Day 571 - No Shoes? No Shirt?

No Problem!


I made this extra-large so you would extra-enjoy it! 

Danes have a serious problem with respecting personal space in places like lines, the metro, elevators. Stop the presses, we might have a serious solution! Just lose that shirt! Look how far back the guy in the camo shorts is standing! Did I use enough exclamation points?

Note, snagging a picture of the shirtless middle-aged man at the grocery store stealthily is both weird and difficult. I didn't feel very good about it at the time and I feel somewhat worse now.

16.7.14

Day 564 - T Shirt Wacky

It's always fun to see the random Dane wearing English language shirts. Often they contain random profanity! Yay!

This morning I saw a 50-ish / 60-ish man wearing the always fun;

What Happens 
in This Shirt 
Stays in This Shirt

I can only imagine what's happening in that shirt, because sadly, I will never know.

This afternoon at work I saw the also always fun;

D.A.D.D. 
Dads Against Daughters Dating

If it did nothing else, it reminded me of this.

We got new clothes from the donation bin! I'm a surfer! 

Look, Daddy, Todd is stupid and I'm with him!



15.7.14

Day 563 - METROSUCK

Today began some sort of Metro servicing / construction that renders the run from Frederiksberg to Vanløse useless. I don't know how long this will last. The replacement is METROBUS. METROBUS is terrible. Oh let me count the ways...

One! Ah ah ah ah ah! METROBUS is slow! So slow!

Two! Two terrible things about METROBUS! METROBUS is crowded!

Three! Yes THREE terrible things about METROBUS! Major major major pedestrian traffic around my apartment. All of those folks that used to ride the Metro? Now they're on METROBUS. And now they're above ground. And now they're everywhere. And it is terrible.

SHAKES FIST AT METROBUS! METROBUS.


8.7.14

Day 556 - People on the Bus

In 2008 I wrote the following thinking, hey, I should start a blog! This was the only entry! Lesson...I give up far too easily. Without further ado, the post no one asked for or probably ever read - completely unedited! Enjoy!


Every day I ride the bus to and from work. It’s cramped and usually uncomfortable, but it’s convenient and cheap. I find people watching unavoidable.

Hey look, there’s the lecherous drunk guy who details his sexual exploits to everyone on the bus! And over there, it’s the crazy guy who repeats the same nonsensical sentence over and over and over! And in the back, there’s those junior high school girls I’m terrified of, celebrating the latest ass beating they just handed one of their enemies at the playground!

Some days are more exciting than others. Today I saw someone less explosive, but no less interesting. I haven’t seen him in at least a few months. This is man in his forties, lunch bag in hand, NBA on NBC hat on head. Not once have I seen this man without this hat. This hat looks, or quite possibly is, brand new. I have no idea where one might get a new NBA on NBC hat, but I hope that John Tesh has an entire closet full of them. It’s really a shame if he doesn’t.

Does he clean it compulsively? Is it that special? If so, why? Does he just really miss the NBA on NBC? Is this a silent protest? Maybe this is one of those, ship the “Chicago Bears: Super Bowl XLI Champs!” tshirts to Ghana and perhaps no one will see them kind of thing.

If anyone else was playing people-on-the-bus today, I would be right-side-of-a-fat-lip-guy. Did he get in a fight? Is it a cold sore? Is it infectious? Let’s move down a seat.

Sadly, it was none of these things. I seem to have an allergy to – of all things – corn.

When I was a kid my parents took me to an allergy doctor, a petite aging Scot, Dr. Maggie Burke. Dr. Burke tested me against all sorts of contact allergens – mold dust, plants, animals, you name it. To summarize, the wee doctor pricked my arm with the allergen to be tested, waited half an hour, and measure the size of the bump on my arm as compared to a control bump containing no allergen.

At the end of my appointment, arms covered in obscene welts, I moped back to the exam room. In many cases it was difficult to discern where one bump ended and the other began.

“Looks like you’re allergic to everything. You should avoid the outdoors. You’ll need to come in every week and get some shots”. Nothing says cool like weekly allergy shots and an order to avoid leaving the house.

As a rule, I’ve always approached allergies with a grin-and-bear-it approach. “Hey, this is pretty uncomfortable, but I can sort of breath. At least I’m not dead”. This served me well for activities such as mowing the lawn, petting the neighbor’s cat, or going outside in the fall.

Peanuts, however, are a different animal. You know that thing that happens to people that touch Rogue when she’s not wearing flapper gloves? That’s pretty much me after accidentally eating peanuts, things made out of peanuts, or things that touched things made out of peanuts. I can’t breathe and it feels as though something is actively sucking the life out of me. Sadly, this does not pass on my allergy to others for their own personal enjoyment.

As I had never actually been tested for food allergies, Emily suggested that I be examined once more. What if I wasn’t allergic to peanuts at all? Was this completely in my mind? Did I even want to know? It is perfectly fine to have a body that attacks a Snickers bar with extreme prejudice. It is not perfectly fine to have a mind that tells your body that said Snickers bar is deadly poison and deserves a world class freak out reaction. And also, if it turned out that I wasn’t allergic to peanuts, should I just start eating them? After enough pestering, I agreed to set up an appointment.

This involved a similar skin test, this time on my back. My entire back looked much like my arm, as if it was attacked by a swarm of angry mosquitoes hungry for human blood. Each bump received a score from zero to four – zero being “fine, go ahead and eat it” and four being “may as well be cyanide”.

Peanuts. Four.

Huzzah! I’m not crazy! But there was more.

Almond. Three.

Brazil Nut. Four.

I always thought that I was also allergic to other nuts, the test seemed to bear this out. The doctor gave me a list, essentially a food family tree. The idea being that if you were allergic to one food, you were probably allergic to other closely related foods. Interestingly enough, peanuts are actually more closely related to legumes than they are to other nuts. So, if you’re allergic to peanuts, you would be more likely allergic to soybeans than say pecans. I think of it as comparing chimps to humans and monkeys. Chimps my look like they’re more closely related to monkeys than they are to humans, but they are not.

Hazelnut. Three.

Pecan. Four.

Cashew. Zero.

WTF, I can eat cashews? Do I even want to?

Chicken. Two.

Potato. Two.

Corn. Two

At this point, I’m dismissing everything that’s not a nut. Chicken? Really? I eat chicken all the time! Corn!! Potato!!! Is there any food more simple than a potato? How can I be allergic to a freaking potato? This is crap. I’m eating whatever I want.

Fast forward to now. Lately, I had this sneaking suspicion that the corn chips I love were conspiring to kill me. I’d eat them and then my mouth was itchy and my stomach uncomfortable. Too bad stomach and mouth. I still love you Tostitos.

Last week, I made some polenta. Shortly after eating it, my face went red and puffy. I looked like Boris Yeltsin. Today, half of my lip swelled to twice its normal size after eating the leftovers. This is a serious problem that demands scientific testing that I’m completely unwilling to do.

So for now, I’d like the people on the number thirty-nine bus to know that I am not one of the crazies to stay away from. Please don’t judge me. I’m helpful, friendly, and uninfected. I just ate some corn. Really, cut me some slack. This is totally not my fault.

4.7.14

Day 552 - 4th of July Amager Style

My friend Anders happily informed me that there would be a 4th of July party at the Amager Bryghus. Amager makes some pretty badass beer, and really any chance to experience Amerikanerdag with some Danes is well worth it. Also, note, that's pronounced AH-mah.

I met up with Anders, his friends, and our friend Scott at Ølbuttiken, an awesome bottle shop run by Anders' friend Morten. Great stuff on hand, good atmosphere, good times. Morten referred to my small kroner as "washers" - they have holes in them - and it forced me to try to share the David Puddy Kroner awesomeness but I failed massively. Sorry Morten. Sorry Larry David.

We had some beers and some cheese / cured meat from Spain / cheese / olives / homemade liver paste / etc. It was great. I thoroughly enjoyed both of my beers. Specifically the Wookiee. It made me want to break it down like Chewbacca.

Next it was a train ride to the brewery...except...the train was broken! The train we attempted to take goes all the way to Sweden - it's a shared Danish / Swedish endeavor. According to the train staff, the Danish system was failing this Swedish train. Scandinavian squabbles! We sat on the tracks for about 20 minutes. This should have been an eight minute trip. The sent us back to the central station and we finally grabbed another train.

Finally, we made it to the brewery!


Yes, in case you didn't notice from my terrible photo, Amerikanerdag involves classic cars! It also involves rockabilly!


It also involves delicious beer!


Favorites of the day were No Rice & Curry and Shadow Pictures Double IPA. Shadow pictures was ridiculously good. I split a 12-case with Anders and I should have gone all Shadow Pictures. For shame.

I learned that until recently, it was illegal - without permit, and it might still well be illegal - to fly any flag other than the Danish flag. America. F&*K YEAH.


Afterwards, we hit Fermentoren - literally The Fermentor - for some nice beer garden chill. This place was great. Solid tap list. Solid prices, but really, the outdoor seating sold it. Perfect.

Thank you fellow travelers for an excellent day.

3.7.14

Day 551 - Storm in the Clouds

Emily's trip from Boston to Chicago took far too long. Here's a fantastic look at the why.

2.7.14

Day 550 - The Joy of the Underdog

America / Americans - often rightly so - face so many sorts of big-ugly-American stereotypes abroad. We're the biggest. We're the baddest. We know it. Absorb our culture at your own peril. You know you want to. If you don't want to, we'll happily do it for you.

It's rare that we receive underdog status, particularly in international competition. But then there's the World Cup.

Last night I watched some sketchy pirate feed from the BBC of the USA / Belgium match. Great, agonizingly terrible, but still great, match. Soccer is one of the few realms where we're not even in the conversation.

The English commentators, time and time again called out the American's grit and determination while we held on for dear life against a vastly superior, skilled squad. These were likely backhanded compliments, perhaps not. I'm taking them. I'm taking them well. They capture nearly all of that cliché that is America. We will outwork you. With whatever substandard flotsam we have. Git. R. Done. I'm more than mildly embarrassed by typing this. Mildly is putting it mildly.

That idea of America may not ring true today, but it's nice to think that it does. Hearing USA USA USA bouncing around the stadium as we attempted to rally back in extra time, well, it was great. Reports stated that about 30% of the audience were USA supporters, 10% Belgium supporters, and 70% other. That other...I'd like to believe that, based on the noise of the crowd, they were all-in for USMNT.

Country didn't matter. Policy didn't matter. American greed and arrogance and excess and obfuscation didn't matter. What mattered is that the US was over-matched and yet continued to work. Scratch and claw and grind and grit and grit and grind and etc. The audacity! Everyone loves an underdog.

1.7.14

Day 549 - When Blogs Collide

Our good friend Kevin will be blogging about his upcoming adventures in London, Europe, and then, eventually Kenya. You can check it out here. It's a very cool program. Wish him luck.

We're happy to have Kevin visiting us in the KBH at the end of the month. Blog-duel perhaps? Fun times ahead.

30.6.14

Day 548 - Moving Day

Today was moving day and I am officially in a new office. I have a smaller desk and a tighter space, but it's worth it if only to see this on a sunny day.


If you zoom in, or if my camera was better, or if my photography skills were more than rudimentary, you might see some cows. Cows!

I sadly moved all of my "personal items" out of the office a few weeks ago and have yet to bring them back to work. Tune in soon for a glimpse of my desk replete with personal items! Breathless anticipation, surely. That's how we sell this sort of stuff. Buzz. Marketing.

As a thank you to my old office mates I made some Blondie. Ah nuts, that's blondies. Despite the "no-fail" title, I had originally thought that these were a total failure. Too much chocolate chip. Too much almond extract. They didn't really set. This is why Emily is the baker in the family. Charlie could probably surpass me with a little practice. And thumbs.

You know what? They were a hit. Score one for Collin. No-fail indeed.

Name plate movement. One of these things is not like the others. Which one is different, do you know?. Hint, it's me!


It's at this point that I would also link Dave Chappelle's excellent Sesame Street bit, but it's way too NSFW for this blog. If you haven't seen it, watch it. Comedy. Perfection.

29.6.14

WotD #28 - drikkepenge

Literally drink money. Basically a tip.

Tipping isn't the norm in Denmark, I often don't leave one. It's really up to you and is generally saved for exceptional service.Servers are fairly well compensated here, so it's perfectly fine to skip it. They obviously appreciate it, but it's not expected. No need for Mr. Pink to pull out the world's smallest violin here.


Tonight I ate at Gorm's with an old colleague. It's pretty solid for a reasonable - by København standards - price. I had some sort of World Cup special pizza that was weird but good. Some lime-marinated flank steak, tomato, mozzarella, and beans.

Next time I go I will probably try the Giro D'Italia, it sounds deliciously dangerous...

28.6.14

MUSICSATURDAY

They've been playing this on P6 lately. I. Am. Hooked.



It's just shockingly appropriate that the uploader decided to put this in time to Richie Tenenbaum's melancholy. Sometimes I feel like I'm in the Matrix. Note, the original Elliott Smith track is just tremendous. RIP Elliott.

27.6.14

Day 545 - Advance with a loss / Graduation Exhaustion

It's weird to be happy with a loss, but the US has advanced and we're (they're if you're going to be like that) out of the group stage. Success.

It's also once again graduation season, and I for one, am already tired of it. I am old. I am cranky.

There are many Danes wearing white hats. Wearing white hats. They've got their white hats on.




26.6.14

Day 544 - USA USA USA

I'll watch the US win anything. More of this please.


That is all. For now.


25.6.14

Day 543 - New Office Digs

On Monday I will be moving office.


The red square is where I currently "live" as the Danes would say. Each of those protruding spokes are referred to colloquially as "fingers". I live in the A finger.

I will be moving to the green square, the C finger on Monday. It is a much nicer view. Rather than looking out the window on the ground floor to see more building, instead I will see things like this.


Thanks to Emily for taking that pic. Fun fact, I will be practically in her old office - I think one office over. It's much nicer with sunlight. Even with gray, it's still better than my current situation.

I'm bummed to leave my old office mates. It's a good group and I will miss them.

24.6.14

Day 542 - NBA Draft Woes

In 1999, Jay and I had our first let's-watch-the-NBA-draft-get-together-extravaganza. The Bulls selected Elton Brand with the first overall pick. IIRC, Jay wanted Stevie Franchise and I wanted to trade down to nab Rip Hamilton. I was also a big Lamar Odom fan. In retrospect, it was probably the right choice.

We enjoyed / suffered through - think the following year for suffering - many more NBA Drafts together. Thursday marks this year's draft and - as in every year I don't get to enjoy it / suffer through it with Jay - it's far less enjoyable. It should also still be on TNT.

This year marks a big one for the Bulls. Trade possibilities. Assets. Multiple picks. It will be a fun one. Sadly it's on a Thursday! Collin will not be watching.

Barring some sort of deal resulting in Melo or Mike Love's Nephew, I imagine that it will again result in disappointment. My favored attainable dudes are - in no particular order - Kyle AndersonNik Stauskas, and Adreian Payne. Anderson doesn't fit a need, but I love his game. Stauskas fits a need. Payne fits a need. Hopefully this blog lasts forever so these preferences can be thoroughly mocked.

The more likely situation is that the Bulls do next to nothing, draft a few stash-a-euro dudes and continue to drive Tom Thibodeau insane while saving Jerry Reinsdorf's money for his other team

23.6.14

Day 541 - "Danish Summer"

This morning I went to take Charlie for a walk and it was - in my own words - freezing. Windy, no sun, cold. The Danes in my office made fun of me when I said it was freezing. Freezing? This is Danish summer. Whatever this is, it is not summer. It is an affront to all that summer stands for.

Checking the calendar, we are now officially full in on summer. I totally forgot about the solstice. It appears that today is the day that we set the witches on fire.
This burning sends the "witch" away to Bloksbjerg, the Brockenmountain in the Harz region of Germany where the great witch gathering was thought to be held on this day. Some Danes regard the relatively new symbolic witch burning as inappropriate.
Here's hoping that the witches we send back to Germany affect Die Mannshaft on Thursday. Thanks to the Germany's tie with Ghana and the United States' last minute failure against Portugal, we need a tie to guarantee a trip out of the "Group of Death". Let's enjoy this awful again.


That's pretty much the worst thing that can happen in a match. Literally at the last second. It's the latest goal scored in group play in the World Cup. Ever.

So now our fate may once again rest with Ghana - the team that has knocked us out of each of the last two tournaments. If this happens, Ghana truly reaches bogeyman status. 

I'm happy that due to scheduling, I'll actually get to watch USA / Germany. USA. USA. USA.

We were at The Pig when this happened. 



I'll be watching in my flat on Thursday. Here's hoping for more of the of the same magic.

22.6.14

DotW # 11 - Harry August Jansen

Harry August Jansen, 1883 - 1955



As mentioned previously, I love magic.

Jansen, better known by his stage name Danté, was a prominent magician / illusionist / performer in America during the golden age of vaudevillian stage shows. In some estimations, he was the last great magician of this era.


Jansen was born in Copenhagen. He and his family moved to Minnesota when he was six. For reasons that we could possibly explore later, the northern mid-west has long been a destination for Scandinavian immigration. 

He started doing magic professionally at 16. He grew up to cut women in half.



Danté's catch phrase was sim sala bim

21.6.14

Day 539 - This cozy old dog

When one of us is gone, Charlie's couch time increases. Exponentially.


There he is, more than likely slobbering all over our very nice Scottish throw. Yeah, I should probably move that.

He's doing well for an big old dog. His muzzle / eyebrows / etc have grayed at a rapid rate, but in the Clooney / Connery realm. Distinguished. Charlie is a distinguished gentleman.

Mostly it's great to have a big old cozy buddy.

20.6.14

Day 538 - Strange Things are Afoot at the Frederiksberg Centret

Any excuse to show Keanu at his most brilliant is well worth the time. Mine and yours.



It's tough to tell from this terrible picture, but there was quite the line queue in front of our local mall centret this morning.


This was around 6:20. I'm not sure what they were waiting for. Mostly women. Mostly in their 30s. Camped out for? More detective work is required here.

To note, today was not a nice bright shiny day in Denmark. Today was weird weather - think tropical rain-with-sunshine but sadly not tropical temperatures.

19.6.14

Day 537 - It's raining here in København

I have no idea what's happening fifty - I really could have sworn that line was fifteen - miles east, or who's around there, or who should be.



It's likely somewhere in Sweden, but I'm far too lazy to figure out how to map it out. It might be somewhere in the Baltic. Holy cow has this blog become increasingly mopey. Thanks Adam Duritz! Sorry friends and readers!

I should definitely - and by definitely, I mean probably not - post a top ten weepy-Collin-songs. Fun for everyone!

We've been quite lucky with an excellent early summer thus far - tons of sun and warmth. Today, not so much. I have this terrible habit of not dressing appropriately based on previous experience. Yesterday was awesome, today will be as well! I am dumb. Sandals were a bad idea today. Cold, cold, toes.

Our new American friends finish up at Novo tomorrow and will be headed back to the States on Saturday. Here's hoping that they had a nice visit and get to enjoy one - or two, let's be optimistic! - days of Danish summer.

WotD #27 - verdensmesterskabet

This is sometimes just abbreviated as VM. It's The World Cup, the Olympics of soccer.



Breaking it down further, verdens = world, mesters = champion, and skabet = community. Rougly. Mester sounds at little bit like meister. I would definitely enjoy calling the Spurs this year's NBA-meisters. It's much more fun.

Denmark did not qualify for the Cup this year. They lost in spectacular fashion to Armenia during qualifying but closed out reasonably strong. I think that they were the last - or possibly second to last - team left out when all was said and done.

As such, there isn't so much World Cup fever happening with the Danes in the office. That's not to say that there's not World Cup fever in the office. Start your vuvuzelas!


Yes, that is my German colleague Stefan on Monday morning all sorts of ready to cheer on Die Mannschaft. He is generally a mild-mannered scientist, but around Cup time? It's a different world. I've never seen him as happy as he was on Tuesday morning. I think I'm pulling for Germany this year just so I can see Stefan after they win.

As an aside here, is there a better nickname than Die Mannschaft? After a quick something search, I've found that there are all sorts of awesome nicknames out there! Just a few favorites...

 ColombiaLos CafeterosThe Coffee Growers
 GuadeloupeLes Gars de Guadeloupe[59]Guys of Guadeloupe
 GreeceΤο Πειρατικό (To Piratiko)The Pirate Ship
 BelgiumLes Diables Rouges, Rode DuivelsThe Red Devils (French and Dutch)
 Thailandช้างศึก (Changsuk)[42]War Elephants
 BeninLes Écureuils[5]The Squirrels
"The Squirrels" is fairly intimidating.

The women's squads in Asia are particularly awesome...
 Vietnam (Women's)Những cô gái vàngThe Golden Girls
 Philippines (Women's)Malditas.[40]Feisty Ladies.[40]
 Japan (Women's)ナデシコ (Nadeshiko)Large Pink[37]
 China PR (women's)铿锵玫瑰The Steel Roses
Stefan is particularly pumped about the cup this year. The Germans are amongst the favorites. He's already penciling them in for the semi-finals. So far so good for the US. Thanks to Germany's shellacking of Portugal on Monday, a draw against the Portuguese would all but assure the US a trip to the knock-out round. Fingers. Crossed. We could still probably use this guy...

18.6.14

Day 536 - Someday / Growing up Cubs

Apologies in advance, but this will be fairly melancholy. Emphasis on fairly. Let's go!

...

Baseball isn't my favorite sport. Today, I can take baseball or leave baseball. I'm, first and foremost, a basketball guy.

But there's something. Something that I can't put my finger on. Something terribly intangible about the Cubs that affects me in a way that I can't explain and I can't change.

I've often joked with others that raising a child to love the Cubs is - at the least - mildly abusive. Training a child to love a sad-sack team that will never amount to anything, it's masochistic. Or is that sadistic? It's probably both.

But I'm stuck with it. It has stuck to me in a way that I can't let go. Should I have children, I'll absolutely subject them to the same abject misery.

...

My Father's Father was a hard man. I didn't know him well. He struggled with emphysema throughout my childhood, sucking on oxygen as the disease ate him away breath by rasping breath. We spent summers and the occasional winter with him and my Grandmother on Little Pickerel Lake doing the Chicago-ans in the north-woods thing.

My Grandfather loved the Cubs. My Father was raised a Cub fan, and I was in no position to do otherwise. There was no choice. Nor should there have been.

My Grandfather once lent me a book about the 1969 Cubs and I ate it up. The names, the faces, the pain, the everything. Cementing that connection to the past. Have I mentioned that I share a birthday with Ron Santo? To note, I vividly remember the Brant Brown game. Ron's call was on radio, and I heard it after I had watched it, but it's still the best. It all worked out, the Cubs still made they playoffs in '98.

I spent the whole summer of 1989 devouring the Cubs. This was probably the year that sports were irrevocably etched into my psyche. I watched nearly every game. I lived the Cubs. I breathed the Shawon-O-Meter. My life was WGN, Harry and Steve. It was a foregone conclusion that this was the year.

...

In the summer of 1989, this happened.



On the previous play, Ehlo scored on a give-and-go off the inbound and put the Cavs up by one. I was crushed. My pathetic-bad-fan-kid-instinct was to turn the game off and walk away. My parents told me to hang in there and see, who knows what could happen?

The Shot happened.

The Bulls went on to beat the Knicks and then get smothered by the Pistons, but that was somewhat inevitable. It didn't crush me. I was all sorts of anything-can-happen-let's-just-see-it-definitely-will!

I watched the final game of the Cubs-Giants NLCS upstairs in my parents bedroom on the tiny TV. I don't remember why I wasn't watching downstairs. Will Clark just killed the Cubs that series. Killed them. This crushed me. They lost, and so did I.

I didn't want to watch baseball anymore. I sat in my room and sobbed. Why? How could they lose like this? I didn't understand. The first time that you realize that it doesn't always work out with sports, well, it sucks.

...

I ended up serving as a replacement / impromptu pall bearer at my Grandfather's funeral. I was probably 12 or so. I don't remember. It was weird. I think that this was the first funeral that I attended where I felt, oh I don't know, feelings. I didn't know what to do with them. My Father gave the eulogy. I'd never seen him that vulnerable.

...

I grew up with Go! Cubs! Go! I still love it.

Despite what Billy Corgan thinks about him and it, Eddie Vedder sums up my feelings on the Cubs with "All the Way". It kills me every time I hear it.



For me it's that longing, that desperate longing that brings it home. It hits that spot. That perfect spot where the world fades away and every moment breaks my brain vividly. My moments. My Father's moments. My Grandfather's moments.

The hope, despite all of that misery, makes it work. Someday we will go all the way.

Go! Cubs! Go! is a celebration written by a folksinger. All the Way is a cry-in-your-beer song in the best sense. It speaks. It plays out that story. That story of being one. Of being in love.

17.6.14

Day 535 - Masa Huge-ina

On Emily's list of PLEASE-BUY-THIS was masa for making tamales / tortillas / deliciousness. She's sadly not bringing one of these home.



Yes, that's fifty pounds of masa for a mere $21.49. When I was looking to order masa from the UK, it would have been - shipped - about $20 for 2.2 pounds. Thanks Sam's Club!

16.6.14

Day 534 - Eat like a Bachelor

Yes, when Emily is gone I typically go one of a few different ways with food. Cook stuff that Emily doesn't really dig. Cook stuff that's easy. Cook a lot of meat. Skimp on sides. Skimp on veg.


Yup, that's sausages buried in other deliciousness. My meat-in-tube-form consumption rises significantly when she's gone. An aside, Tony, you're totally right. Chicago dogs freaking pwn all. Sadly, I think Hot Doug's is closed forever and I never got to eat there. Sniff.

These sausages weren't so good, but the curry onions / mushrooms, sauerkraut, El Yucateco, and spicy mustard covered up any sort of permanent sadness.

15.6.14

MUSICFATHERSDAY

I should credit my Dad with much of my early music education. Some things stuck - Dylan, The Beatles, Neil Young, etc - other things stuck and I wish they hadn't - America, Jimmy Buffett. I still know most of the words to Pencil Thin Mustache!

This tape was most likely worn out in the Taurus / Celebrity / other cars I can't remember. Happy Father's Day!

Day 533 - My New "Pet"

One of the drawbacks of our apartment - and from what I can tell most apartments / houses here - is that we don't have screens on the windows. Bugs aren't a problem for most people, I guess, but we have them. In spades.

Our flat is directly above a restaurant and my kitchen windows look directly at the garbage area. Delightful. This means big nasty black flies in the summer. They like to hang out in gangs of 4 or 5 in my living room, menacingly circling this light.


It's disgusting.

About a month ago, I noticed some fairly elaborate webbage on one of the kitchen windows. There was a pretty weird looking spider just chilling out. I - unlike Sirhan Sirhan - have no problem killing flies, but I'm not very good at it. My new method is using the hose attachment on the vacuum cleaner. This is probably a bad idea.

Maybe this little guy / gal could be put to work killing all of the flies for me?! My spider friend gets a nice home and I get dead flies. It's a no-brainer.

Then this happened.



I'm not quite sure what our little friend is doing here. Is it eating? Is it preparing some sort of egg? Is it pregnant? Do spiders even lay eggs? Will my home now be infested with spiders? What is that giant thing on its back?

The spider looks even weirder now. Like crab pincers popping out of the big back thing. Note, in case that last paragraph didn't make it painfully obvious, I know nothing about spiders.

I am at a crossroads with my spider friend. There are no flies in the apartment, so that's good. This is a creepy spider. Maybe if I gave it a name I would feel more comfortable. My Grandma took me to see Arachnophobia when I was 12. Hopefully this won't happen.



Yes, I went with my Grandma to see Arachnophobia. I'm also pretty sure that's Happy Gilmore's Grandma in the bed.

14.6.14

Day 532 - Bottles, Beach, and Bakken

This morning - in an effort to keep myself busy - I decided to go over to the beach to get some sun and then meet my friends at Bakken for lunch and some wandering.

On the way to the Metro, I decided to stop at the grocery store and return some bottles. We talked about it before, but it's actually worth returning bottles here. Anyway, the machine was broken so I had to wait. While I was waiting, an old lady asked me - in Danish - if anyone had been called to fix the machine. I explained to her that someone was fixing the machine and that it should be working shortly.

Thirty seconds later, the machine was up and running again. The old lady - who had to know that I was waiting to use it - decided to move to the front of the line and return her bottles. It took forever. She only had something like five plastic bottles but it took something like ten minutes.

I love old people, but I think that there should be an age limit on the redemption center. And the self checkout. We need some sort of call system whereby the elderly are assisted in these DIY situations by grocery store staff.

I finally returned my bottles, got some cash for my trouble, and I was off. There was someone waiting in the Metro station snacking on some corn-on-the-cob. It was really weird.

I made it to the beach and got an hour of "sun" in. It was the kind of weather that I wouldn't normally sit on a beach, but I was there and committed, so why not. Awesomely I somehow managed to lose the forty crowns I gained on bottle deposits. Excellent.

Afterwards I met Jesper, one of his good friends, Marianne, and her husband for lunch at Bakken.

Both Jesper and his friend worked at Bakken for many years and had loads of interesting anecdotes not to mention insider access to the Rutschebanen!



Wooden roller coasters are awesome and this one is no exception. I didn't ride it today, but I got to check it out from the infield.




That's one of the "old" cars with metal wheels that have since been replaced with modern rubber / plastic wheels. The old wheels were supposedly much more fun and danger-y. Add to that that each car had it's own brakeman! In the last seat, a man would sit and work the brakes manually. Amazingly only one person died with this system. I was told it was a Swede who was wandering the tracks. 

The emphasis on Swede here is important. Due to the expense of alcohol in Sweden, Swedes have a reputation for coming to Denmark, not handling their access to cheap alcohol, and doing stupid things. I'm just repeating reported speech here. We at watersindenmark love you Sweden.

Another decidedly non-Swede problem with the manual brake system was a conservative brakeman. If the breaks were applied at the wrong time or applied too aggressively, the cars lacked enough momentum to climb the next incline and proceeded to roll back and forth and forth and back until finally resting in a place where fun doesn't exist. Stupid physics. Someone would then have to push the cars back up the incline. 

There is a small house situated in the roller coaster infield. A family lives there! Year round! Bakken is interesting in that each of the rides and attractions are owned independently - I think that there's something like sixty different owners in the park.

It was a fun day.