Wednesday, September 06, 2000

Alpha, Omega.

Well, not too much has been going on since the last journal.

Not too much, that is, if you don't count my mother's funeral and my wife's positive pregnancy test.

Mom's situation deteriorated after moving back to Westfield. Nevertheless, she was happier there, where her friends and memories were. Toward the end I don't think there was much difference between the two. Matthew gave a remarkable eulogy, I rediscovered old friends and powerful mid-June allergies, and my brother and I harvested our friends' memories of the woman who raised and influenced us and not the confused, deceptive, tired old person I tried to save.

Two weeks later we were back at the Phoenix airport, escorting Ruth to a plane to Raleigh-Durham this time. Our friend Sandy, who had gone to library school with Ruth, had had enough of North Carolina and found a tech job in Provo. Sandy needed a Thelma to her Louise for the road trip and we spent the night near the airport in Tempe (that's pronounced tem-PEE, not tempeh).

Seven weeks later Ruth couldn't understand why she was sick to her stomach and dizzy all the time. Understand, we'd been trying for the better part of five and a half years to conceive, with medical intervention and no success. Boxer underwear, no hot tubs, mineral supplements, complicated physical positions worthy of the Kama Sutra excepting the 'enjoyable' component, repeated visits to do it with a plastic cup and drive halfway across town...

And in the end it took nothing more than a hotel bed.

Thursday, May 18, 2000

Geek Chic

Well, I've successfully avoided owning a palmtop computer for at least five years. There's an unusual idiosyncrasy about technology in my family: we always want to know what's best, but we won't buy into something half-baked. Everything is an investment in the future, I guess.

At the age of eight or nine, I recall seeing the Radio Shack insert in the Sunday paper and goggling my eyes over their Color Computer, which only cost about as much as a color TV then. My father wasn't impressed with the cost to value ratio. When I wanted the $6.98 Steve Austin action figure, (the real, bionic SA, not that bald-headed thinly-veiled homoerotic sex object) I had to convince Harvey I would continue to play with it past Christmas day. This probably explains why at 32 I still stubbornly hold onto it. (That and the amazing likeness of Lee Majors -- if anyone out there knows who the artist for Kenner was please contact me). Maybe he was concerned about his son playing with dolls...

Anyway, as peeved as I was with his attitude I soon found myself marching in step. When I bought my first computer, a Sinclair ZX81, it was after geek-like precision reviewing against the other offerings of 1982. Bought a crappy secondhand b&w TV for $10 from a repairman who stated that he never wanted to see me bring it back, and I was well on my way.

A touchpad computer not much heavier than a pack of cards, with monochrome display and a whopping 16K added on. Needless to say I was in heaven: a computer of my very own, not a terminal hooked to a PDP somewhere. Before long I passed BASIC and started messing with Z80 machine language.

To make a long history short, I went from ZX81 to Atari 800XL, to the earliest days of Macintosh, and currently own a G4 7500. All carefully picked. In fact, too carefully. When we bought our first Mac Classic, Ruth suggested we get the 80M hard drive. I said, "C'mon, 40M is enough." I'm still mentally bitch-slapping myself over that one.

I wasn't even an instant Mac convert until I went to college and had to use them, back in the dark days of 1985. You remember then, back when copying a MacPaint graphic and pasting it into the KeyCaps desk accessory would bomb the machine out...

So when the Newton arrived on the scene, my feelings were mixed. Incompatible with Mac, but fits in your hand, dude. In retrospect, I'm glad I didn't go that route, but I was miffed when a tech I knew defined the fledgling PalmPilot as "a Newton that doesn't suck."

The Palm didn't suck. But most of the applications for it made it look like a four hundred dollar datebook, and nearly every demonstration model in stores was broken. If you're a college student (or recent escapee from whence) it may not be the most practical use of that much money.

Also, I'm a devotee of the non-computerized method. Not really a neoLuddite, but concerned with recognizing the value of the genius that went into movable type, two sliding pieces of plastic that calculate logarithms, and paper time management tools that creatively challenge you to organize your thoughts. One of the people I worked under in college as a geek computer support person spends his weekends farming, raising chickens and getting to know the dirt around him. Weekdays he runs an ISP. He and I both believe technology should know its place and we shouldn't become hopelessly dependent on it.

Last week Ruth made me an ultimatum. She said that I had two choices. Buy two Handspring Visors or she'd buy one for herself and I could suffer not getting to play with it.

Note to young, unmarried men: when chicks fight, they fight dirty. Expect this.

I gave in, and $250 isn't that much to pay for something that can spreadsheet, send and receive mail, control your TV, let you compose music, play games, store novels, and oh yes, keep track of your appointments. It has the three prerequisites of a real computer:

  • Addictive games available
  • Limitations to whine about
  • "My brand X platform is better than your Y platform" flamewars
    on Usenet

If it's worth arguing fiercely over, it's probably worth having. Go visit the soporific discussions on WebTV's own forums if you don't believe me.






Mainly, one of the reasons I love this gadget is because it keeps me from being bored when I have some free time. I like to write. I like to draw. This lets me do either or both, and upload the results later. Ms. Croft, here, is a good example of how to kill some time, even if it does bring me back to 1985, tools-wise.

So, here I am again, the owner of a touchpad computer not much heavier than a pack of cards, with monochrome display. Go figure.

Wednesday, May 03, 2000

Potsherds

The weather here's beautiful, as usual.

This morning, the news awoke me to let me know that the next likely tsunami strike is along the midAtlantic coast, between Virginia and North Carolina. Since I just sold a house in that area and moved away four months ago, I can't say I regret the change of location.

North Carolina is a beautiful state, excepting Charlotte, Durham, Winston-Salem and Raleigh. The coastal region never drops below 40, the western Blue Ridge Mountains contain the highest peaks east of the Mississippi, and I'd never lived somewhere before where even the weeds are pretty. Wilmington enjoys an interesting tourist synergy with Myrtle Beach: Wilmington passes itself off as historical and well-mannered, and Myrtle Beach is South Carolina's conception of Sodom and Gomorrah: amusement parks, titty bars, outlet shopping and one of every theme restaurant. 70 miles of rural US 17 separates the two; the perfect day trip or even dinner jaunt.

Flagstaff is more isolated. Phoenix is the nearest city in any direction, three hours to our south, and Flagstavians consider Phoenix the way the Amish see us. Phoenix TV news is an education: I've never seen so many creative forms of murder and manslaughter before moving west; my original conception for this site was to be an index of the baby killings, high speed freeway chases and automotive homicide, pitbull maulings... The times I'm disappointed at being so far away from a metro center are ameliorated by ten minutes driving through Phoenix.

Phoenix, down in the flatlands, is the imitation potted ficus plant of cities. The streets are proudly lined with obviously non-native palm trees, which looked amusing in the Cape Fear border islands, but just plain vulgar in the middle of Arizona. Competing with the palms are beautiful citrus trees bordering the yards of the homes, except that the plump orange fruit are bitter ornamentals, to prevent the homeless from picking and eating them. The air is referred to by the locals there as "hazy," the same sort of "haze" that typified Los Angeles a decade back. Before long you realize the intense whitebread perspective of "The Family Circus," whose creator has been a Phoenix local for some time, isn't a caricature. Still, Phoenix is enjoyable to visit, and shop for stuff you can't find here.

The first thing about Flagstaff that took me by surprise is how small it is. Perhaps twelve miles at its widest axis, it constitutes the seat of and largest city within Coconino county, the largest county in the United States (San Ber'dino subdivided last year, losing the title).

A longtime native took us out on a road trip a few weeks back, to a large but secluded portion of the country just twenty miles out. Atop one of the hills, we could see for seventy miles in one direction, and no signs of civilization in any direction save a dusty car trail in the scrub. In another nearby location we stood in Hopi ruins, vividly-colored potsherds at our feet that were baked before William the Conqueror set face on England. As we heard nothing around us but the wind blowing, a potsherd caught my eye and I picked it up. On the inside of the rim was a small crack the potter had tried to fill in with slip, and suddenly I realized I was sharing an artist's secret with someone from another world. Our tour guide, a potter himself, summed it up neatly: "You're looking at a thought from a thousand years ago."

It's one thing to see artifacts in a museum, butterflies pinned to cotton in a window box, but to handle them yourself in their original context, where you are the alien element...

Monday, April 24, 2000

Site unseen

Apologies: The code inside the last journal routinely said everyone was using an off-brand browser. My bad. It's fixed now.

Also, I've narrowed the column width to something more easy to read. Let me know if you like it or not.

A correspondent recently commented in an email that she felt like putting a journal on her site would be casting pearls before swine. Before you get judgemental on her, understand that she's been running this site since before everyone could get a free googol-gig sitespace on the Net, at personal cost and time, and most of her visitors only want to know if she's putting up more pictures of tits.

I don't agree with her viewpoint, but I understand it. From 1995 to 1997, I edited a SubGenius/humor zine called obloquy, putting out a grand total of five quarterly issues before circumstances interrupted. As far as I'm concerned it rocked, and I'll probably scan the pages as PDFs for this site some day.

Nonetheless, each issue took thirty hours to edit, lay out, format, inkjet print (and burn out a cartridge)... If I hadn't had a background in graphic design it probably wouldn't have taken as long, but it wouldn't've looked as good, either.

In any case it was a labor of love, and there was always the hope for some token of appreciation from those who read it. Credit is due to the fan mail I did receive. But producing a zine, like a site, is an expression first and a call for recognition second.

In the end I put obloquy on hiatus not because the warm fuzzies weren't coming in fast enough, but because I had a series of life events that forced me to redirect my energy elsewhere. The zine would have been pure crap if I'd tried to fit it into fighting an insurance company and a police department, overcoming a depressive episode, and trying to figure out what the hell to do with my life. All told 1997 felt like being Atlas.

It's better now, and I'm doing this site instead of the zine. The work is less grueling, the results more immediate, and the distribution speaks for itself. But I can still hear that voice that tells me to check the hit log, and wishes more people would contribute or at least comment.

If you trip across one of these kinds of sites, please drop the author a line, even if it's just to say "Kilroy was here" and you liked/disliked the site. It won't cost you a thing, and you might wind up making an acquaintance.

Thursday, April 13, 2000

Closed due to browser incompatibility...?

Since I started working here at NAU I've had the opportunity to dive into a lot of Web technologies. Dynamic HTML, JavaScript, Java, C++, general object-oriented programming principles, CGI scripting with Perl...

It's pretty fascinating, and challenging at times. One particular challenge that's making news is the matter of crossbrowser compatibility. You're browsing this site with [ancient browser sniffer code deleted] I know this because this page sniffed your browser when it loaded, a piece of code I wrote. Visit this page with other browsers if you don't believe me.

This type of code is becoming increasingly necessary because the companies that author browsers keep "innovating" things which aren't W3C standards. (The World Wide Web Consortium encourages this by taking forever to determine standards: their team on downloadable fonts hasn't put a new paper on their site on the subject since 1996) Netscape pushed through their own version of layers which virtually no other browser supports. Microsoft duplicated Netscape's misnamed JavaScript, but rewrote the object structure of a document and the properties which refer to and control it in several incompatible ways.

The end results of that gap are as follows:

Web designers write code that sniffs the browser and follows a different codepath. More sophisticated designers end up rewriting their own version of the basic functions that compartmentalizes the differing codes and returns the same result. While elegant in its execution, it represents a tremendous waste of salaried time, and time in development. I spent an entire day debugging one such function to ensure compatibility across three browsers, and I expect to see similar roadblocks in the near future.

The EC loses its patience and announces that like HTML, there will be an international standard for JavaScript called ECMAscript, effectively taking the football away from Netscape.

Web designers are faced with the unpleasant choice of implementing proprietary technologies like Microsoft's data binding (which allows the browser, when pointed at a plain ASCII delimited data file, to display it in a formatted table), moving heaven and earth to translate them when possible, or to essentially pretend they don't exist and never use them. Since IE4, Explorer has had an impressive array of visual transition effects, almost none of which I've seen in practice and some of which are duplicated by bandwidth and memory-hogging Java applets.

I think it's great that someone like myself with a dual background in art and programming can feel both halves of the brain humming on the job. But with the increasing gulfs between browsers and lack of support for the standards the W3C can come up with in a human's lifetime, the emphasis has changed from "Look what I can do!" to "Look what I had to do to get it to work."

Some people believe that the browser "wars" are over and Microsoft's model is the de facto standard, and whether it's good or not it's the world we live in and we better get used to it. These are the same people who scrapped six thousand dollars of investment in Macintosh graphic workstations in a previous job of mine because they read something in the Wall Street Journal saying that Apple was circling the drain. Four years later, Apple is still around, at the forefront of technologies like USB and FireWire and showing no signs of slowing down. Did those selfsame people foresee Microsoft's losing struggle with the DOJ, the decline in their stock, and one of the least charismatic CEOs in America making a personal appearance on TV to put a PR spin on those events?

Just to make it clear I'm not gloating, I despised the iMac when it came out and thought it would be the final nail in Apple's coffin during a bad year, an innovation which would be remembered as "Jobs' folly." You see the extent of my oracular powers there.

Basing tactical decisions on longterm predictions of a product's viability is ill-conceived and generally smacks of self-justification for premade decisions. The mindset divides neatly along these lines: end users solely familiar with one product, and executive sheep whose collective memory chants the 1960s slogan "Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM." When was the last time you saw a new IBM-brand PC in the workplace?

I digress. The chief objection I have with Microsoft's contribution to the browser market is that they are not only incompatible with their competitors, and with the W3C, but with the release of IE5, incompatible with IE4, and to some extent with IE5 Macintosh (whose incompatibilities are based off a more correct implementation of those properties). Even assuming 4.0 browsers are a dim memory by the time you read this, the millions of sites based on them are still here.

Netscape's Mozilla project, as well as Opera, has chosen to focus on standards compliance, making the innovations in improving useability. Remember that the root of "innovate" is the Latin for "new." The Gecko web engine in Mozilla is potentially portable to handheld devices in much the same way WindowsCE was intended to entice developers to remain brand loyal. With the backing of America Online (and the implicit promise of bringing that technology to AOL's much-maligned browser), it's safe to say Mozilla won't have to worry about short-term returns on their long-term investment.

Which brings me back to web design. I work in academia, salaried regardless of the "market." My colleagues in the private sector are fiscally dependent on the viability of their code. Sites that stop working because of incompatibilities in a new browser (instead of the expected backwards compatibility) are sites that cost those designers' firms money, time and potentially their reputation. I leave it to you to guess their decision.

Saturday, April 01, 2000

I don't wanna grow up, I'm a Toys 'R Us kid...

To all the people who've argued with me about my choice of computers over the last five years, I'd like to bring you up to speed on my Mac.

I bought this thing on academic discount back in 1995, I think, when a 603 was still faster than the crop of Pentiums out there. I think I paid about $1800 for it, monitor included. In the intervening years, PCs grew more powerful and Mac applications started demanding more power (like 604 PowerPCs). Having worked in several Windows-dependent businesses since then (and currently), what I've noticed is the necessity of replacing entire systems every three years insofar as Intel decided not to make Pentiums replaceable like they did the earlier x86 chips.(4.13.00: please excuse the previous brainfart. I have been corrected) A friend of mine who will go nameless has recently entreated her folks to replace hers.

In the space of ten minutes this morning, the 1995-era PowerPC became a 2000-era G4 PowerPC. Five minutes after that the 1992-era mouse (don't get me started on the crappy mice Apple makes now) is replaced by a Wacom Graphire tablet (cordless, batteryless pen and mouse included). Some months back USB capability was one PCI card installation (another five minutes). Total cost, $640, shipping included. Was your last up-to-date Windows machine this cheap?

Don't get me wrong. I like Windows. I use it professionally and NT is one of the most stable OSes I've worked with (95, on the other hand, can suck rocks from my butt). However, it's stuck on a legacy chip that still works off the idea of complex instruction sets, when everything else is using RISC for its unmatchable, naked speed. If Apple could move off the Motorola 68000 series, first by emulation and then by fiat, I can't understand why Bill Gates couldn't retool Windows for the G4--emulating Pentium IIIs at first,then slowly telling the rest of the world to catch up with the times and releasing a G4-native Windows, which would scream compared to the current PIIIs (which are, again, slower than the current Mac microprocessor).

Then again, Microsoft's got competition from Linux to contend with. End users like yourself are snickering while reading this, but Linux powers more servers out there than you'd imagine and the numbers are only rising. And it doesn't cost anything and the source code is open to systems people. Apple is not quite as shaking in their boots over the analogue, the fascinating but experimental BeOS, which still to some extent depends on Apple cooperation to exist. It's up to Mr. Gates to decide how to keep his grip.

Saturday, March 11, 2000

Thoughts, ramblings, utter bullshit

Welcome.

Pull up a chair. This is a place to keep up with events, to share ideas, and maybe show off a bit. Most of you already know me in one facet or another; consider this an attempt to fuse these diverse sides.

There's another reason. After eight years in diverse areas of commercial design, I got hired in web development at a state university in the southwest. That was four months ago, and it's grown unusual to have no personal Web presence, especially with an increasing number of friends, acquaintances and relatives who already do.

Everything here will not interest you equally. We diminish the Web's potential to broaden our minds if we only use it to zero in on what we find most attractive. When television was first introduced into our homes, its proponents told us it would bring unimagined learning to the masses. Fifty years later, we know new media won't make us smarter if we don't exploit it. If I want to see a better use of the Web, it's my responsibility to add my voice. You'll hear me return to this theme again in later entries. And believe me, I want to hear what you have to say. There's no reason for either of us to be here otherwise.

Wander.

What a long, strange trip it's been.

It's been over a decade since I left college, no diploma in hand. Bravery and foolishness go hand in hand at that age, and I was no exception. My grades were dropping like a rock, my attention span was nil, and in the restlessness of youth some kind of change felt imminent. When an old girlfriend of mine, smart as a whip, told me she had no intention of following three years of computer science, it seemed like The Sign. Change I was used to, as long as it was of my own design; I'd switched majors halfway through a creampuff Economics program to English Lit, changed my clothes and haircut...

I left college for home in the fall of 1989, just before the start of what should have been my senior year. The first thing I did was register with temporary agencies. Office temping is probably the fastest way to learn about the inner workings of business, and the most forgiving. Years of hand-typing hexadecimal machine-language code from magazines into my Atari 800XL had given me a remarkable accuracy rate in data entry, and I was popular with the clients. One offered me a permanent position as a forms typist, but after you've spent five minutes correcting each typo on four carbonless sheets with four different colors of carbonless Liquid Paper and blowing them semi-dry, it doesn't seem as attractive.

Besides, what I wanted was a graphic design job, or at least something in technical documentation. Remember, this was the age of Windows 3.0 and Macintosh skills weren't as ubiquitous as they are now. I had piss for a portfolio, except for the pile of technical docs I'd done for the college computer center. Pictures and words, pictures and words.

A year passed and what I learned was that New England was in the worst economic slump it had seen since the Ford administration, the tech jobs in demand were in SQL database management, and a twentysomething self-proclaimed desktop publisher with no sheepskin didn't impress the few, low-paying markets for graphic skills.

I took a job as an assistant manager with a local newsstand bookstore. The pay sucked, the hours often meant working completely alone at night, the central management kept details of the bookkeeping secret from us, and they refused to stock or order books they couldn't get at their preferred discount from the publishers. However, as the only news distributor for the three-county area, our continued existence was a given. My manager was a giant, broken old Irishman with a tremble in his hand and a nameless fear of the owners, who lived in a motel and kept to himself. In retrospect I think our customers spent more on cigarettes and the state lottery than books.

Ruth, my girlfriend from college and now pursuing a Master's in library science at UNC-Chapel Hill, came up to visit and offered me an ultimatum: either move down South with her or call it quits. I looked at the hometown where nothing has changed in thirty years, the culture is nonexistent and the jobs were too, and packed up my Toyota. Ahhh, the fresh air of change again...

Ruth and I lived in nearby Carrboro while she finished her degree. Again I dutifully registered with the temp agencies, figuring that the hi-tech world of the Research Triangle would have better options. Ruth informed me that the Ph.D.s in Chapel Hill were waiting tables. After a brief stint as a telephone customer sales rep for Adam & Eve (and those Better Sex Videos), I answered an ad for a typesetter position. The job was at a high speed copy shop doing a brisk business, and the pay was mediocre but with potential. Moreover, the owner felt talent was more important than degrees. In other words, he could pay me less. Meanwhile, my mother (widowed since 1978) landed a job correspondence school job teaching fiction-writing, a job she could do out of her home.

Besides typesetting resumes and fixing poorly-formatted theses, I did a fair bit of graphic design for Chapel Hill's businesses and locals and built up a reasonable assortment of samples. The hardware and software I was using was good and I got experience managing a large database of documents. I also had some of the friendliest co-workers who were mostly my age. When Ruth graduated I was sorry to go.

Where we went was Wilmington, NC, where they shoot "Dawson's Creek." At the time, they were finishing the last seasons of "Matlock" and it was a mecca for TV-movies and B-movies. This had something to do with the nonunion laws in North Carolina that made it possible for films to be made without union employees at union pay. This particular advantage didn't seem as attractive after the nonunion weapons supervisor working on "The Crow" went home early one night and Brandon Lee got the wrong end of a hollowtip in his abdomen.

Wilmington is a handful of paradoxes. It's a remarkably small town in an undistinguished coastal location, which originated as a major port city in colonial times. The chief export was what were euphemistically called "naval stores," pine tar to you and me. The place dried up when the railroad moved out of town in the fifties (and the city converted the rails to parking lots), only to experience a small surge of regular tourist income from the proximity to the beach. As other coastal ports along the Carolinas popped up, with deeper riverbeds and therefore able to handle larger cargoes, Wilmington found its lock on shipping slowly degrading. Add to this the lack of interstate access within ninety miles or a clear route to Raleigh...

By the early 1980s interstate 40 rolled into town and major franchises not far behind. Hotel construction exploded and hasn't slowed yet. At this time Dino de Laurentiis needed somewhere to shoot "Firestarter" cheaply and he sent Frank Capra, Jr. to scout locations. Capra found a town with an interstate, nonunion laws, burgeoning theatre community and what's more an airport with a studio-sized parcel of land right across the street.

Optimism over the future brought a wave of urban professionals from other parts of the country who dug in early. In fact, too many of them, and the first thing they learned was that tenth-generation North Carolinians cut off from cities didn't think they had much need for public relations people, graphic designers, ad agencies... The second thing these newcomers learned was that the locals had grown used to paying people chicken feed with no benefits and weren't interested in paying "city" rates for professional services.

It took six months to find a job in graphic design. In fact, any kind of permanent work. The firm I worked for did local graphic design and published a free music-events monthly, with two designers, a part-time resume writer, three sales representatives and the owner, who divided his time between aspects of all these positions. The clientele was impressive, and the office was small but suitable. Ruth and I got married the next summer.

The next two and a half years I gained considerable experience in spot color and 4-color graphic design work, direct contact and contracting with printers, conventional pasteup, layout, publishing deadlines, sales, marketing, invoicing, advertising design, oh, and resume writing. Which was a good thing, because over that same period the other designers, sales reps and resume writers looked at their paychecks, especially the ones that bounced, and moved to greener pastures. By the end it was just the employer and myself, and one cold morning in March I told him I was leaving for an embroidered goods catalog looking for a technical artist. We were living in a house by then and between our student loans and the mortgage we weren't cutting it.

The company, recently transplanted from New York after thirteen years, needed someone who could redraft customer logos six times lifesize for embroidery digitizers, who later traced over the enlarged image on a giant tablet with a crosshairs puck. This time my tools were french curve, 2H mechanical pencil, T square and drafting tables. The computer was used for crude scans for preliminary enlargement (my actual drafting was done on onionskin traced over the enlarged scans), and laying out type. After some pointed suggestions that the illustration program could actually be used for the redrafting and save some time in the process, I was evicted from the art pool and moved directly into digitizing.

Embroidery digitizing turned out to be an almost perfect job for me. The tasks were short, I could concentrate easily on each, and there was always room to be competitive with myself. Moreover, I could compete with the mooks at Lands' End and LL Bean, whose work was not always on par with our company's, and we knew it. I trained new digitizers and artists and expanded the number of art formats we could accept from customers and began experimenting with new techniques. The conventional art tools grew dusty and we moved into a completely computerized system. Old paper tapes were systematically converted to archives. And our first-time customer design approval rate turned over from mostly rejections to approvals, dramatically upping our throughput (and making our CSRs' lives a living hell). In the interim I learned more about DOS and Win95 than I expected, especially troubleshooting. The pay was better (after a few negotiated raises) and I had real insurance.

I asked my mother to move down to Wilmington to live nearer us. With only a week's vacation a year, spending it each year in the place I spent my life getting away from didn't seem like a good idea, and besides her other son lives in Moscow now. Her job could go anywhere she did. The house was over a hundred years old, and we knew she spent most of her time in a few rooms. She eventually agreed and after some wrangling she sold the house and bought a nearby condo in 1997 with a tidy profit to spare.

Unfortunately there was some other baggage we didn't count on. Her health had deteriorated in the previous years due to a steady diet of cigarettes, Kahlua and food consisting entirely of starch soaked in butter. A trans-ischemic attack (or TIA to you) in the previous year had left her verbally aphasic for two hours, but she recovered. The next attack wasn't as kind, leaving her unable to speak ten words consecutively without one being the wrong word. She promised her physician she would change her diet, start exercising and drop the cigarettes.

Ruth and I had concerns of our own trying to start a family due to medical complications. This wasn't distraction enough. One bright, clear July afternoon visiting an old friend in Charlotte, our car was rear-ended at 45 miles an hour, totaling both cars and injuring both Ruth and our passenger. We learned soon after that the officer at the scene decided we were at fault and the next six months were spent on the telephone and fax machine fighting with both insurance companies, the other party's adjuster, and the Charlotte police department. (During that year there were 36 more accidents at the same intersection, and a drunk pro basketball player died there just two months ago) After much work the police officer changed the report to our advantage, but the stress had taken a toll on my outlook and our marriage, sending me into a clinical depression I didn't fully recognize yet.

I had also played the top of my game at the shirt catalog company, and knew it. A much smaller company down the road, which primarily did contract digitizing for other embroiderers around the country, had an opening for another digitizer. They liked my sample portfolio and before long I was working in a reconverted Piggly Wiggly supermarket, digitizing jacket-sized logos, shirt logos, cap logos and having a ball. I didn't supervise or train anyone, but we had a good time. Now that there were two full-time digitizers and one half-time (our supervisor, who also handled marketing), our customers noticed our turnaround was faster than the competition and started increasing their orders. In the next 2 years we added as many digitizers (one of which I trained in the previous company) and found it necessary to restructure our filing system to keep up. Without notice Mom quietly quit her job, eventually telling me it was to finally resume writing on her own.

Meanwhile I discovered Prozac and cognitive therapy, where my counselor made me read a book called Driven to Distraction. Those of you who have ADD know what I'm talking about. A lifetime of wondering why I was restless, why a driven, bright kid had been kicked out of two schools for failing grades and was now working as skilled labor while my brother worked as a corporate attorney in Russia and my wife held a Masters', whether I was totally fucked up... it all came together. (and if you're one of "us," I can't recommend enough Thom Hartmann's book ADD: A Different Perspective. If you never take another piece of my advice read this book.) I felt whole, and even suggested Mom might benefit from seeing my shrink.

Ruth, on the other hand, had spent seven years in the same cubicle at the same university library. In her typical fashion, she had taken the bull by the horns on the professional development front and surpassed the expectations of her job description. Despite this the resources of her department couldn't keep up with the growing needs of the electronic library, and her chances for advancement were nonexistent. Wilmington, despite a recent infestation of coffee bars, was no more progressive or diverse than it had been in 1992. Hurricanes were now a guaranteed fall phenomenon and we'd already suffered through Fran. Carolco had gone under and the film and TV jobs had moved to Vancouver. One local director friend of ours actually commuted to Baltimore every week to work on "Homicide."

By a peculiar twist of fate (karma?) a dear friend Ruth had made in library school (later her bridesmaid) had recently left a position at Northern Arizona University, and had much positive to say about the place (which had an opening in Ruth's field). She applied.

About this time she received a phone call at work from the credit union wanting to know why we were attempting to transfer insufficient funds from savings to checking. "We" weren't; I shared joint checking accounts with both my wife and my mother there, and from time to time the credit union got confused over who was who. To our horror we discovered that the profits from the sale of the house were kaput. The condo was in wretched condition and she had been untruthful about nearly everything she told us she was doing, largely to keep us from interfering. Disoriented, alcoholic and malnourished, we attempted to stabilize her nutrition and finances, but despite her agreements to cooperate she managed to undermine all these efforts. Her friends back home, who hadn't seen her in two years, weren't much help. At the age of 31 I had no choice but to put her in a rest home. This is a diary all its own, for a later date.

NAU offered Ruth the job the same week.

The next five weeks were a blur of packing, saying our goodbyes, answering complaints from the rest home about her behavior, disposing of goods to Goodwill, fixing strange leaks in the house, and little or no sleep. Bertha arrived two days before the mover, flooding the interstate between him and us. Our attempt at escape nearly stranded us in Raleigh. Despite it all we got into our cars, drove onto I-40 and kept going for the next five days until we arrived here in Flagstaff. Flag is almost as different from Wilmington is can be, and this time we were both jonesing for a change like this.

If you aren't familiar with Flagstaff, it is not a desert like Phoenix. When the temperature hits 80 the local paper prints hints on how to "beat the heat." The snow stops falling as late as May. The San Francisco Peaks look like a picture postcard and the air, while thin, is clean and dry. Because the elk cause car accidents when they salt the roads in winter, they use ground lava cinders instead. Consequently cars never rust out here and it isn't uncommon to see vintage AMC Eagles choogling around. Aging hippies pepper the population, and the new agers with more money than common sense live down in Sedona.

After a while I found a temp job on campus stocking textbooks in the bookstore, and then a position in the library's web development team opened up. Which is what I'm doing.

To our good fortune the house sold in January. However, with the market as depressed as it was, we made a net profit of minus five hundred dollars. Still, being a homeowner was a very useful experience, and I'm a much handier man with tools for it.

In general, I'm a handier man than the one who left college with no clear idea where he was going. I still don't have a college degree, but I can cook better than most men I know, I can handle plumbing, painting, refinishing, reupholstering, minor car repair, entertaining guests, designing, drawing, writing, billing, delegating, supervising, training, programming...

Butchering a hog, conning a ship and dying gallantly aren't on that list, for those of you who read too much Heinlein in your teens, but you can't have everything. As Steven Wright once said, "Where would you put it?"