Matt

  • Grandpa

    My Dad’s eulogy for his dad, my granddad:

    Do not go gentle into that good night,
    Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
    Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
    Because their words had forked no lightning they
    Do not go gentle into that good night.
    Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
    Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
    Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
    And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
    Do not go gentle into that good night.
    Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
    Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
    And you, my father, there on the sad height,
    Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
    Do not go gentle into that good night.
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

    — Dylan Thomas

    Dad raged against the dying of the light. He did not go peacefully.

    Yet his entire life was one of live and let live. He wished no one harm and harmed no one.

    He loved his family, his forest and trees, which he planted, his dogs, multiple generations which he borne and raised. He was a doer…he made things and made things work. Not always successfully, but ample enough to get the job done.

    He ran a farm, a coal mine, worked for a corporation, and developed a wood business that never made money but kept him busy and sane.

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    He loved his tools, his workshop, his freedom to do what he pleased. He ran wild with thoughts and feelings and work and enjoyed getting up every day of his life. It is to be envied.

    He reveled in building his house, his farm, the pond, and making things (and us) work. Many are the morning I arose to his ‘get out of bed you lazy bones’. Coffee was on, the sun was rising, and trees needed to be cut, split, loaded, dumped for props for the mine, and stacked. Then we had the cows to milk, the chickens and pigs to feed, the milk to churn into butter, and the rock shot to do in the mine. But, we all bear our cross…

    Dad never ran out of things to do, to fix and to talk about. He lived a full life, always searching for things to do. We should all be so happy.

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    Dad taught me to fish, to hunt, to plant gardens, to care for animals, and embedded in me a sense of honesty. You have to be responsible and proud of what you do and how you do it.

    For all Dads’ social isolation, he was one of the original party animals. He loved to talk, dance, eat, and have a good time. I remember his trying to control our Friday night ventures into NY State, as we were 18 and could drink there. (This was popular at the time).

    He bought us a keg of beer and had me and my friends stay in our back yard. Of course, by one o’clock, we were out playing football by moonlight. After the many calls from irate mothers the next morning over torn clothes and bruises, he never did it again. But the thought was pure.

    I think what I will most miss about Dad is his calm presence in any situation. He just knew what to do and what to say to help us on our way.

    God’s nature harsh and untamed,
    Cold, wet, wild, un-named,
    Create yourself in your own terms,
    Make use of the abundance that is provided,

    Dad made his choices and struck a claim
    Worked the earth above and below
    To keep his family fed and clothed
    Hard work and fortitude
    Honesty and frugality
    Fun and laughter
    Strong hands and strong bonds
    Dad built a foundation out of nothing.

    Yet end of days comes for everyone
    To move on to another plane of life
    But the transition is a new birthing and hard
    Especially for those of us remaining here
    Dust unto dust, but life ever-lasting

    Dad is running free in the woods with his loving dogs
    Fishing the streams for rainbow trout
    And tuning the Chevy to purr like a cat
    We are but moments and seconds from seeing him again
    When he will turn and say, what took you so long, slow-poke?

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  • Jordan’s Furniture short-selling the Sox

    With just a few weeks until opening day, Jordan’s Furniture is placing a massive bet against the Red Sox winning the World Series in 2007 by offering a full refund on furniture items purchased by April 16th. I understand the idea behind these kind of promotions in say, 1998, but come on, we won the World Series less than three years ago and we have one of the best starting rotations in baseball this year.

    jordan.jpgFor those of you not from the Boston area, Jordan’s Furniture is yet another furniture store with annoying commercials, although unlike Bernie, Phyl, and the Flea Market guy, they do try to contribute something to civilization other than matching living room sets. For instance, their Reading store singlehandedly quadrupled the number of fun things to do in Reading with trapeze lessons, liquid fireworks, and an Imax theater.

    Of course, this ruined the quintessential-New-England Lake Quannapowitt with light pollution, but it’s all worth it for a mural of the State House made entirely of Jelly Beans (sidenote: who knew Wakefield had a parody website?). Unfortunately Barry & Barry are still pretty annoying, although apparently one of them is now working with John Lithgow on a Broadway show (Wikipedia never fails).

  • How to give a great presentation

    It always helps if you can incorporate mouse nuts and Jimmy Hendrix.

    How the makers of Guitar Hero decided to live the dream and make video games like they gave a damn.

    Link courtesy of Brett’s Blog, a pretty cool site and the only reason my traffic didn’t dip while I was in the Wifi wasteland of Pennsylvania for three days.

  • …it’s back

    thanks to BD for the initial pass-on and Phil for finding it again

  • Hands down worst (best?) local commercial of all time

    I thought Massachusetts had some quality local cable furniture commercials (see: Bernie & Phyl), but this one might take the crown:

    I didn’t even know where to begin with this eyelid-less man, but fortunately Slash did:

    Grievances with/things i couldn’t understand about that commercial:

    – who takes pride in comparing themselves to a mini mall?

    – it’s nothing like a mini mall, the ad was two minutes long and as far as i can tell they only sell three things

    – why is that ad two minutes long?

    why wouldn’t you just take the money earmarked for a music video and instead spend it on replacing the “FLEA MARKET” sign outside with a comparable one reading “MINI MALL ???? ”  ?

    – why is it necessary to, at the one-minute mark, “make it a dance”?

     

    fantastically entertaining though. i may consider visiting that place if i ever enter the confederacy for any reason

  • March of the Irish

    Is it just me or has St. Patrick’s Day become a month-long affair? I’m not complaining, it just means more Guiness to drink and music to jig to, but it’s kind of like when your 2nd grade teacher decorates the entire classroom and wants to milk it before putting up “spring” a.k.a. Easter decorations.

    Except now it seems to be the result of post-college kids with no spring break to go on* with lots of pent-up energy and unspoilt livers.

    Last week was the Irish Walk and tomorrow’s Shamrockfest. And it’s still a week ’til the actual day of corned beef and roasted potatoes.

    And sticking with the green theme, TWO WEEKS ‘TIL TMNT!

    *I know far too many people taking spring break trips anyway to not include this asterisk

  • No love for Napoleon

    The TV commercial version of the trailer for the new Will Ferrell / Napoleon Dynamite Guy movie humored me, although not in the “two guys figure skating together” sense the producers intended.  No, what strikes me is the long awkward silence they left in after Will Ferrell’s top billing.

    I just hope this will continue to entertain me the next 350 times I see this trailer.

    …and already eating my words, there are a few funny parts in the full version of the trailer (and Jon Heder gets billed):

  • OOH snap(.com)!

    As official king of the blogosphere, I’d like to welcome back Jason Yovanoff.  He broke his 4 months of silence with a post about how annoying those snap.com website previews are.  And then he added some water tower pictures.

    Oh, and because he didn’t actually provide the answer, to turn those things off go here.

    Via Lifehacker

  • Columbia Heights

    Another blog?

    Nope, this one’s a Tumblr.  Tumblr’s are good when you don’t feel like expounding on a subject at length, but do want to routinely share mixed media like pictures, text, and videos.  It also highlights quotes and, channeling the fun of quoting someone out of context (like in many away messages), conversation snippets.

    I thought it’d be a good platform for the occasional publishing of things I witness living in Columbia Heights (in the spirit of Found).

    http://columblr.tumblr.com/

    Maybe I’ll find a way to cross-post here.  I’m 100% confident it’s possible, but not all that much of an RSS / WordPress pro yet.

  • Use your energy

    This is an idea I had a while ago, but clearly did nothing about, so it’s great to see someone else working on it.

    Why not harness the kinetic motion of workout machines to power the gym? You already have hundreds of human hamsters bounding up stair machines, do you really need a coal plant miles away to power the TVs?

    A gym in Hong Kong is on it, and while the technology is still pretty primitive (essentially a car battery) and costly ($15,000 investment to save $183 on the power bill), it’s an exciting thing to keep your eye on.

    Those machines already contained small motion-powered generators used to light up their display screens. But the generators were producing significantly more electricity than was needed to power the screen, and the excess energy was being thrown off as heat.

    The article also mentions generators embedded in shoes (so soldiers can stop carrying heavy batteries) and in the entrances to busy subway tunnels.

    Wall St. Journal, via That’sFit

  • Explorations: Roosevelt Island

    Have you ever looked at a map and found things that looked cool and wanted to go there?

    roosevelt-island.gif

    Well, I have, and I’m going to explore these places, time permitting (read: DC only).

    Our first installation will be Theodore Roosevelt Island. I had always kind of wondered what was on this magical land-locked island and Saturday was warm enough to explore / run.

    Teddy Roosevelt, besides saving the day in Newsies, was also an early conservationist. So his society bought the land from George Mason, whose mansion had been spoiled by stagnant water, and renamed it, washing the original Native American name out of history [wikipedia doesn’t lie].

    img_0237.jpgFortunately for us, we have boardwalks to run over (most of) the swampy guck. This part reminded me of Plum Island, MA.

    Being that it was a boardwalk over water.

     

    The only way this island could be cooler is if there were a tram to it, like New York City’s [Franklin D.] Roosevelt Island:

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    Next in this sure to be long-lived series: a squiggly road I found. If you have any suggestions of things that look fun (at least on a map), let me know in the comments and we’ll explore.

    Oh, and you need directions to Roosevelt Island? But wait, you want them to be as tacky as possible? Don’t say I never did anything for you:

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    bikewashington

  • Free Things I Could Have Acquired Off Craigslist

    (but refrained for lack of space):

    • Doctors Examining Table
    • Vending machine
    • Used Peanut Oil for Bio Diesel
    • foam alphabet puzzle/play mat
    • Upper Back Exercise Machine

    Make the free section your homepage and we can have broken TV collection contests.