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March 29, 2007

Your Education Dollars Hard at Work

I have been watching this event occure for about two weeks now and it keeps getting funnier every day. Finally I realized I needed to share.
Universities, places were young fertile minds can soak in the wisdom of the ages, drink, party, have sex, and still manage to follow some sort of daily class schedule. Math, science, the arts, language, communications, sports, but no "reading". I remember in elementary school we had a book where each week we learned 10 new vocabulary words, and over the course of the week we learned to spell them, and learn what they mean. I especially liked the part where we had to use the words in sentences. Good times. I don't remember in all of my 10 years in elementary school, ever getting the word "pedestrian" though. I guess these find young minds haven't either.

If there had been more battery life in my camera I would have shown you more pictures with more college students in them. If the weather had been better they would have been in various states of undress too. Strangely I find I have some sort of strange ethical qualm with staking the place out on an 80 degree day with my camera though. More pictures here. Who knows what next week may bring....

March 28, 2007

Beautie: Sara's Plan

Sara is my partner in this venture and the project manager. I mentioned before I want this done right, and I know good and well that I am not that guy, as I tend to be impatient. I realized talking last night that she and I each have different series of events with different short term goals in mind.
Our biggest difference is I want to be on the road driving yesterday and make upgrades as I can. In her master plan the car would not see asphalt until the project was complete. Note I'm not making judgments about whose plan is best. I know one of my fatal flaws is a lack of patience with these things so I can accept that my list of goals would reflect this impatience.

Her list looks something like this, but this is only my estimate of her list. She hasn't yet discussed her task list with me in detail so I fully plan and expect to edit this after the fact to accurately reflect her list.

1. Fully clean and prep the interior and exterior.
2. Get the engine running.
3. Re-replace window rubber so car doesn't leak.
4. Get trailer capable of hauling the car.
5. Get transmission repaired.
6. Upgrade braking system
7. Fix up interior.
8. Have engine and drive train modified.
9. Paint, body, and rechrome
10. Wheels and tires.
11. Insurance and plates.

Her plan means I have to wait a very very long time to drive the car again, but when I did it would be perfect. My plan gets me behind the wheel sooner, but I would be driving a work in progress that would be burning gas, and costing insurance.

I wonder if there could be a compromise position? We will see as we get serious about putting a finished plan together and working out the time line.

Beautie: My Plan

I figure a blog is as good a place as any to keep a record of where we are, where we're going, and when. The project to bring my dream to reality will take a lot of time and a lot of money. I view this as a project so the triangle applies. If I want it done sooner I need more money or more people willing to work on it. if I want it done cheaper I need more time. As I have lots of time and not much money this project will probably take years. Good things come to those who wait.

I am breaking the work up in phases with deliverables organized first by what gets us back on the road, and then by cost what makes us fabulous. Phase one is what I can do myself, phase two is what I have to pay someone for.

So for starters I'll need a battery and to replace the hoses (2) and belt (1). I'll also need an air pump for the tires. There is a little bit of old gas in the tank and I will want to pump that out and replace it with five gallons of fresh fuel. At this point I will have everything I need to crank the engine and circulate the fluids. My end date is April 30th.

Once the engine is running and the tires hold air, it will be time to log a couple of miles. That means I will need insurance and fresh plates. This will have to wait until at least May 1st. That's the way the money flows.

Issue One: When I parked her, the transmission had started slipping. Something tells me this problem hasn't gone away, so I will need a trip to a garage to have that worked on.

Unknown: I don't know what condition the tires are in. They may be functional, they may have dry rotted. I would like to get rid of the Keystone Klassics which have been there since 1997 and replace them with a wheel that has the correct offset for the car. When I bought the Keystones, the sales guy never mentioned offset, and I didn't know any better. Ever since I have had to use air shocks in the back to hold the body up high enough that the outside of the tires wouldn't rub against the body. If I have to replace the tires, I will either put them on the original wheels I have, or buy new rims at that point. This could be a setback. The original wheels were designed for hubcaps, and the original hubcaps, besides being...well...ugly, tend to fly off at highway speeds.

Assuming the tires are OK, once the transmission repair is finished and paid for I can begin raising money for a front brake upgrade. I am trading up from drum brakes to disk breaks and I believe I can do the front end myself. The rear brake upgrade will come later.

It will be at this point where we'll be looking for "professional help".

1. Rear brake upgrade.

2. Sheet metal repair and replacement, with paint job.

3. General body stiffening.

4. Suspension and steering upgrade.

5. Engine future-ization. (Modernization alone is not enough, and "futurization" isn't a word for some weird reason.)

6. Interior modernization. (Though I want the interior to be as ultra high-tech as the engine)

The finished product won't from the outside look really any different than it does now, sure there will be no rust and different wheels but there will be no changes in chrome, lines, trim, or color.
The dramatic changes will be where you can't immediately see. I want this car to handle as well as any modern sports coupe. The engine should be "maxed out" while still fitting neatly and completely under the hood. The design should be smart enough and elegant enough that at the press of a computer touch screen or voice command I can go from a "balanced" every day sort of driving personality to one of ultra efficiency, or ultimate power depending on whether I am going on a road trip across country or just 1/4 mile down the race track. Ultimately this will be my daily driver, so every modification has to keep this simple fact in mind. Show cars have their place, but this was and will always be a driving car.

The interior should appear stark, almost sterile in that Star Trek: The Next Generation kind of way. The seats should offer both safety and comfort. The dash should be flat and lacking any obvious instruments until the engine is running. The basic driving information I want "heads up" so I won't have to glance down for speed, fuel, temperature, or trouble. All engine, environmental, and audio controls should be accessed through a single touch screen interface that is invisible when the car isn't running. The stereo should sound good and be well balanced without being obnoxious. Windows will be powered. Interior colors should be kept to an absolute minimum.

March 27, 2007

Magnum Duckie Escrime

This may take some explaining.
There is this guy called Zefrank, who did this thing called The Show with ZeFrank which was a year long vlog project that was so amazing that he got a huge following of people who loved him and his work.

He started many projects of which the world could join and contribute and one of his projects is called "the ORG". The ORG is a place where people can get together and work collaboratively on stuff, share stuff they have made, and generally connect with humanity. The ORG has what are called "Packs", which are groups of people with a similar interest. We have created the pack Magnum Duckie Escrime which is open to all fencers or those interested in the sport of fencing.

Why not? It doesn't cost anything.

Recovery booster

After fencing on Sunday, and again I wasn't going for the gold or anything, I went out to have some fun, get some exercise and hang out with friends. I was completely successful on all counts. However, Monday all day I felt like I had fenced and then walked home from Raleigh. I was exhausted, my muscles were exhausted and recovery wasn't on anyone's radar.

By the end of the day I was more than a little worried about being able to do anything at all in my foil class. Mario was back but he had been out a week sick and I didn't know what condition I would find him in. It seems to me in situations there is only ever one thing that will do. Protein!!! And as much as I can hold.

So just before leaving for foil, I ate an order of chicken wings, and an order of General Tso's chicken (no rice please, I'm trying to quit). I scarfed the food down before I was really aware I was eating, it was disappointing to see it gone. The effect however was almost as good as the effect spinach has on Popeye. I got to class, dealt with the biological issues associated with suddenly having battered deep fried chicken in a fat and sodium laden sauce, and commenced to fence some pretty decent foil. It was a good night.

Now today, I feel like the Monday after should have felt. The lesson I have learned is this. The meal I eat after a fencing tournament should be meat. Not a sprinkle of meat on a salad. Salad? I must have lost my freakin' mind. Clearly I had forgotten the Omnivore's Creed, and it won't happen again. Balance in all things, measured by weight, not by volume.

March 26, 2007

Another weekend, another tournament

Man I'm tired.

I have no idea why, sure I competed yesterday, but I didn't fence all that hard. I went to a tournament that was rated "A2". Of the 29 people fencing all were rated but 10. I was of that 10. Therefore, I had no expectations to kick butt and take names, so I could relax, focus on the fun part of fencing, get a little exercise, and hang out with my friends.

I ended up winning a bout that I had no reason winning. Of course I lost a bout or two I didn't have much business losing, but those aren't mysteries. The guy I won against is a rated fencer, who I have inexplicably beaten before. I don't know if he always seriously understates the fat man, or if I do something that completely unravels him. Either way, I always feel dumbfounded beating him.

Today I feel like I walked to Raleigh, fenced the day, and ran back home chased the whole way by demons. My dreams were messed up too. I dreamed that someone mistook me for an actor that even as I type this I have no idea what he even looks like. She had a newspaper and his face was on the cover, and it did look like me. I decided to play along with her, be real nice, and leave a good impression. I have no idea if the actor is a nice guy or not, but it was important to me that the woman believed she met a nice guy. I don't even remember the other dream, but I do remember it didn't have cars or women in it, so at least I know it couldn't have been a nightmare.

Fencing hangovers we call it. And its been months since I have even had a beer. I must be wearing out or something.

March 24, 2007

The Women of Fairlane

It was brought to my attention that yesterday's entry told a grand story, but didn't necessarily tell the whole story. I couldn't agree more. In saying what I wanted to say I glossed over some very important bits that today I intend to share with you.

We have all heard the old saying that the guys with the great cars get the girls. You yourself probably saw some guy in high school with a hot car and his passenger seat was never without a girl to go with it. Although there looks like a correlation, it isn't as real as you think. Cars will NOT get you girls. To put it simply, a car is a modifier to your charisma score. A great car could add +3, but if you were only an 8 to begin with, your car isn't going to help you all that much.

This said, in the course of my life the ladies in it were of two basic types. The first type were jealous of the car because it got more attention from other guys than they did. I'm not kidding as funny as it sounds. Everywhere this girl and I went, strangers (mostly guys) would stop me and tell me how beautiful my car was. Typically, they never even noticed the girls in the passenger seat. One girl was so put off by this that I put a little plate on the front bumper proclaiming young love for her, this way she would literally come before the car. You are probably now getting this image in your mind of me being the sort of guy who every weekend was under the hood, or applying exotic waxes to the paint. This could not be farther from the truth. Then as now I HATE getting my hands greasy. I did the minimum necessary to allow me to go pick up the girls and take them out on dates. I guess this is why you can't use a model for a wingman.

The second type of lady in my life knew Beautie for exactly what she was and treated her like family. Of this type there were only two. First was the Danish foreign exchange student in high school who not only named the car "Beautie" but actually liked the car more than me (its true to this day). The second is Sara my wife.

Sara is the logical one. Sara makes the tough decisions because I can't. She is absolutely trustworthy and hasn't (to date) made a bad decision. Her decision to park Beautie came from the fact that we were newly married, low on cash, up to our ears in debt, and between us had three cars. At the time, the transmission on Beautie was starting to slip and that is never a cheep fix. Especially as I have no special skills were mechanics are concerned, and as previously mentioned, too wussy to stand the sight of grease under my nails. Sara made sure when she told me that it was best to park the car, that this was only temporary and she herself would make sure that Beautie would be street worthy as soon as it was financially possible.

While I am pretty sure that now is not the time, Sara is allowing me to move ahead anyway, so long as I hold off on the supercharger a while and have no delusions of dumping the Saturn and driving Beautie full time anytime in the next year.

For that, I thank you Sara. You are the voice of reason, and the one who will be responsible for making my grand dreams come true. Dreaming is easy, turning a dream into reality takes skill, and between us, only Sara has that wonderful talent.

March 23, 2007

Resurections

There is something about proximity. We joke about people resembling their dogs all the time. We don't joke so much about married couples beginning to resemble as they age, but we have all seen it happen.

There is just some sort of bond created that is stronger than justice and thicker than blood that joins you to someone in an unexplainable way. It also works with somethings. In 1965 my father bought a brand new Ford Fairlane 500 Sports Coupe. It was the first new car he had ever bought, and my mother cried for a week wondering how they were going to pay for it. Just about the time she got pregnant with what would become me, she totaled the car in a light rain on fresh pavement. The water brought the oil out of the pavement, and she lost traction. When the world stopped spinning she was sitting in the back seat across from the driver's seat, with nerve damage. To this day she can't really feel what's going on in her abdomen. The car was too beautiful a thing to let die so young so the better half of Dad's Fairlane, was welded to the better half of another Fairlane who had suffered similarly. When I was born, I was brought home from the hospital in that car. Dad had bought himself an F100 pickup and the Fairlane became Mom's car. Most of my "first" were in that car. First trip to the doctor, first trip to the emergency room, first trip to the dentist. First trip through a drive through, first trip to a drive in. Christmas eve laying in the back seat on the way home from Grandmother's house looking out through the back glass at the stars above wondering if I would see Rudolph. My first day of school in Kindergarten I went in that car, and my last day of High School, I went in that car. In 1985 my parents bought a car for my mother to replace the Fairlane, which they had deemed too old and too unreliable for mom's daily commute to work. The Fairlane sat in the driveway. They weren't going to sell it. They saw it as the perfect first car for their only son. It was big, heavy, and expendable. The popular wisdom was that teenagers were going to wreck their first car so why buy something new when that would be good enough.

The never counted on two facts. First, while they considered me an only child, I always felt like I had an older sister who just happened to have four wheels and a taste for leaded gas. After all, the car had been in the family longer than I had. In the time before I turned 16 I planned, schemed and saved my pennies. Second she had always been my dream car. By the time I was 17 the car had new paint, new wheels, and a professional tint job. It didn't need much else. Body wise she was nearly flawless, the interior was careworn, but certainly not warn out. It was in the Fairlane that I got my first kiss. It was in the Fairlane that I ever got my first up close and personal look at the real difference between boys and girls. It was the Fairlane who took me to and from work every day and took me cruising the beach every night after work. A Danish foreign exchange student I went to high school named her "Beautie", and it stuck.

Meanwhile in 1997, the car that was suppose to replace Beautie for my mother died suddenly and had to be replaced. In 1992 my father bought me a car to take me away to college in. It was used, but it was newer and better on gas. Beautie sat in the yard at home until I came for her and brought her to college with me. A few years later, she needed $3500 in repairs to the front suspension. Her replacement needed $3500 in repairs to the engine. I drove the replacement car to the junk yard, sold it as scrap and never looked back. Beautie became my one and only once again.

February 29th 2000 I brought another woman into my life on a full time basis. Soon after she grounded Beautie - temporarily. I trusted my wife 100% with the money and she said it would be for the best to take the insurance off of the car that got the worst gas mileage. Besides, she never felt comfortable riding in Beautie, and she feared driving her. It takes more than five senses to drive Beautie. Just to start with if you think of her as a mere "car", a tool to take you from point A to point B you are doomed to failure. Driving with Beautie is a partnership and a compromise. You'll always get to where you are going, but you have to be willing to release some control to get there. You also have to have a sense of humor, but that is a story that Rob Parrish can tell much better than I as I was the butt of one of Beautie's jokes, and he had a front row seat to the jape of the century.

My parents gave me the car they bought in 1997 that was the car that replaced Beautie in 1985. It was practical and pleasant enough as far as conveyances go. My wife approved and Beautie sat in the yard. Over time the air seeped out of her tires. Her paint lost some of its luster. The mice made themselves a home. While this was going on, I put on 110 pounds, I got too tired to mow the grass. My knees ached too much to fence and I taught classes from a chair. I was immobile and falling apart.

But then something happened. I am not sure what or how, but Beautie came to me in my dreams filling me with comfort and hope. I noticed that the chrome started to sparkle and the mice moved out. Grass did not grow up around her and I found myself getting my own health together. The more healthy I became the more "healthy" she looked. Or perhaps it is the other way around. I brought up the subject of putting insurance on her again and my wife was very agreeable. It was like Beautie was a battery that held an energy that sustains both of us and it was suddenly charging. Either I am charging her, or she me, I will never know, but the effect is the same. We are becoming reborn.


Yup. Real beauty, ain't she? Yes sir. Tell you what. You take this ship - treat her proper - she'll be with you for the rest of your life.
-Firefly

March 19, 2007

The Sum of My Weekend

My leisure time this weekend was spent watching episode after episode of Red Dwarf. Say what you will by product placement, it works. How do I know?

Sara and I just went to India Palace on Tate Street for dinner. Why were we craving Indian food so badly that we couldn't wait until half priced lunch buffet tomorrow? Red Dwarf. Specifically David Lister's constant craving for all foods of India. Next time I'm getting the chicken vindaloo double extra spicy. And maybe a lager to go with it. Start off with some pompodoms, and round it all out with kheer. Yeah man, that would totally make my day.

March 16, 2007

Myspace the second time around.

I created my second Myspace page today. More "internet bread crumbs". If you live in both worlds as well, friend me. I'm real social.

My first attempt at myspace last year ended in tragedy as I boned the spelling on my email address. The credentials went into the either, and I bombed the password as well. It looks great, it looks real and it points here, but if you find me there, I am unable to answer. We'll refer to that page as "Evil Anti-Social Woody's Myspace Page". Anti-social bastard...

Just don't expect much by the way of new and cool super secret "Myspace Content". My space is there, my content is here. Too bad it can't rss my blog feed. That would be awesome.

March 14, 2007

48 Hour Film Project Greensboro (Our First Entry)

This was a blast from the past found on Rod M's myspace page. Imagine if you will the first year the the 48 hour film project was in Greensboro. Our crew only had two people with any film experience at all. Our cast...well...we had one. Fortune smiled on us and we drew Mocumentary. With a little bit of rented equipment we were able to knock this out. Many MANY people have made better films. In fact, as we drew mocumentary we had to work pretty hard to keep the production value low. Imagine actively trying to work a boom shadow into a shot so it would look like an accident and yet still be obvious.

The point is, we had way more fun than should be legal, and even now we can look back at this and get a good and hearty laugh out of it. I sort of miss the days when we did it just for fun and didn't give a wet slap what anyone thought of it. I guess that's what happens when you do something like this and end up successful with it. Yes, it actually won three awards that year. After that we felt like we had to always try to out do ourselves. Pity. Anyway, enjoy.

Purely Platinum

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The Science that goes "Duh"

There has been a scientific study that shows that men like an hourglass shape. Finally! In spite of women's instance to the contrary several billion men really aren't wrong.

Nah! nah!

March 13, 2007

The Prawn Problem

What is it with shrimp these days? I remember the days of my childhood up all night in the bow of dad's boat sorting shrimp. Well, more like sleeping among the life preservers, I was really little at the time. At any rate, I grew up eating shrimp in two fashions, first lightly floured, and even more lightly fried. Second, head off, shell on, boiled up with a generous dose of Old Bay. In both cases shrimp were a finger food, one just required more work than the other to eat.

These days I am a little too employed, a little too inland and a little too smart to go catch my own. My own father fondly remembers the day he pulled his boat ashore, parked it in a field and set fire to it. A boat, for those of you who didn't already know is a hole in the water into which you pour money. Burning that boat saved my dad a fortune! And no, there was no insurance or plot to scam an insurance company. Dad built the boat, as many in that part of the country used to do.

These days my shrimp come frozen, or from a restaurant. I have been noticing something a lot lately and it is really starting to tick me off. My mother went to a lot of trouble to try to teach me to use utensils, some people have even managed to devolve me into chop stick usage. I have worked hard to get where I am being able to eat most foods without getting my hands dirty. Modern shrimp meals do vex me so. Why oh why are there so many shrimp meals out there these days where the tail shell is left on? Is it suppose to be some sort of proof that this is real shrimp or something? All I know is that if I get Japanese shrimp sushi, or Italian shrimp and pasta (in that yummy pink sauce), I am going to end up getting my fingers dirty because I am going to have to pull the shells off of the tail. I HATE getting pink sauce on my fingers. It reminds me too much of my childhood in the days before I had really gotten the hang of the fork. I am no master of the fork today, but at least in most meals I will put forth a solid effort to have table manors. Shrimp shatter the illusion. Fried, I don't care about. The way the people around here overcook their shrimp the shells are crispy and crunchy and eat as well as french fries. But steamed, sautéed, or any other way I have to put down the fork, pick up the shrimp and remove the tail section, or at the very least, fork it, put half of it in my mouth and pinch off the shell (carefully such that the meat is left behind and only the shell gets tossed on the table beside my plate).

And no, as a matter of fact I am not going to stop eating shrimp. Could this be a plot to make me give up shrimp so the rest of you can have more? Well played....

March 12, 2007

Sock Inequities

I have been silent too long. It is time to speak my mind on a matter most pressing. Guy socks come in every length from footie to thigh high, but in far to few colors. Yes, I suppose that between medium blue and indigo there is an infinite number of shades of blue, just enough to keep your socks from matching for all of time. Same with white to black, same with tan through taupe. You can also have any pattern you want, so long as it is paisley or squares. When I was a kid I spent hours with my father's socks trying to separate the different shades of burgundy, gray, and dark blue. One bad decision on my part, and dad got teased at work for having a colorblind wife. No one actually believed that a child could be made to match socks. I was mixing and matching in defense of my mother's very pride!

Meanwhile, women's socks come in all of the same lengths of men's socks but in all the colors of the world, plus every pattern imaginable. Why the inequity? I can buy a florescent colored shirt, why can't I have matching socks to go with it? In fact, I have a bunch of brightly colored shirts that need matching socks and my choices are white, or mismatched shades of not quite black. Where is the equity in that?

Tell you what I am going to do though, I am going to have to replace many of my socks soon. Far too much of my sock drawer has found religion and become (w)holier than thou foot can bare. The day of reckoning for my tootsies draws nigh, and I will have to shop for socks again.
When I do, I won't be in the men's department. Turquoise is my Shepard, I shall not want navy.

March 9, 2007

Is Killing a Medical Procedure?

This has been on the back of my mind for a while. I have slept on it, I have showered on it, I have driven on it, I have walked to my office thinking it over. The reasons I am pondering such an odd subject is the NC prison system requires a doctor on site during executions. The NC medical board says it will take action against any doctor who does so because it violates the Hippocratic Oath. The prison system went to court to try to force the medical board to not take action against the doctors. Their argument? "An execution is not a medical procedure."

I have thought this over and I agree with the prison system. Any fool can kill someone and the prisons are full of fools that do. Therefore they don't need a doctor on site at all. Fill the role the doctor had with the next guy in line for the procedure. Chances are if you are on death row, you've already had some practice killing someone, and you are going to be killed for it anyway in keeping with the bibles "Thou Shalt Not Kill" and "Eye for an eye" clauses. What's one more going to hurt. Plus they will already be familiar with the method of their own demise so they can face it more relaxed when their own time comes.

Of course it is actually more complicated than that. They want someone there to make sure that the guy being killed doesn't actually get hurt in the process, and they believe the doctor has some sort of leg up here. They are worried about the killing of someone being inhumane. I don't see the big issue. The Humane Society has occasion to put wayward pets down. They are very humane, everyone knows it. They even use "humane" in their name. If you kill the person the same way they kill the animals you would be humane about your killing and wouldn't have to worry about it. Again no doctor necessary.

If you are worried about if you actually successfully killed the guy, perhaps you are not ready to be in the killing business yet. Again, utilize your experts already in death row. They could teach you a thing or two about killing and if you still aren't sure, when the ambulance comes the next morning to haul the deceased to the morgue, while they are riding over they can run a few standard "are they still alive" test. Remember, no one survives embalming anyway, so if the guy is mostly dead he will be all the way dead once his blood is replaced with embalming fluid.

If he comes back from that he's a zombie, and we have ways of dealing with zombies.

Bottom line lets keep the doctors as far away from the state mandated killing as possible. It just isn't what they do.

March 8, 2007

An Official Police Visit

Last night just before my Saber class I was visited by one of Greensboro's finest, and I am not speaking ironically or sarcastically. The police department was aware of my previous entry on the safety of the area surrounding the YWCA, and the excellent comments it attracted. The officer outlined what they were doing to help improve the security of the area. I outlined what we were doing to improve our own safety.

Each of us was satisfied with the action plans the other was taking and I taught my class as the solo coach no longer feeling like I had to keep one eye on the door to the front desk in case I needed to be called to instant action. I liked being able to focus wholly on my students again. I felt they got a better lesson. At the end of class, we left in groups. As the last fencer out (and usually the last patron), I pulled the external doors to, assuring that those YWCA employees left inside were secure. It was a good night.

Many thanks to the Greensboro Police Department for coming by, it was appreciated.

March 5, 2007

Greensboro's Regional Fencing Circuit 2007 Wrap-up

Over the weekend we had 50 fencers competing between the ages of 9 and 14 in 18 events, that puts us at about 200 people with coaches, parents, grandparents, siblings, and the competitors themselves. We received no complaints, and everyone seemed to have a good time.

The Downtown Fencing Club fielded 11 fencers with 16 entries total on our roster. We brought home a total of 9 medals, 1 first, 4 seconds, and 4 thirds. It was a good two days for our club.

On the running side, we had few obvious goofs, and a couple of quite goofs. Our biggest unforseen goof was that thanks to new technologies fencers can now preregister and prepay for tournaments through a website called askFRED. This is a very good thing. As now when we hold a tournament we know in advance how many to expect and can plan referees, and strips accordingly. It also allows word of our events to reach a wider audience. For instance this RYC attracted youth from as far south as Florida and as far north as Maryland. For the fencers it is a good thing because they are able to pay for the event with a credit card. The site takes a modest cut and mails us a check after the results are posted. Everyone wins. The drawback we stumbled onto at the last moment was this. We wanted the fencers to have a great experience so we hired five referees and two armorers. It took half of our gross to do this, but we felt it was worth it for the quality of the event.

Then suddenly Sunday afternoon, someone said, "If almost everyone paid with a credit card online how are we going to pay the referees today?" Panic!!! Through selling bottled water, and a few last minute entries at the door, we had about a forth of what we needed. We ended up having to pass the hat amoung the leadership of the club and write IOU's. At the final hour we had managed to scrape up enough to pay the referees and armorers.

Lesson Learned: Have the YWCA write checks for the referees time in advance. We don't have to give them their checks until the end, but we need to have to them.

Other lesson learned: Booser clubs rock! Thanks to the generous donations of food from the parents and local businesses we were able to feed our referees, armorers, and volunteer staff. This meant that for once we were able to host a quality event with a good turnout that didn't end up being a loss or a break even financial situation. All clubs hold tournaments as fund raisers, because we focus on youth events, we can never hope to get the draw and the money that opens bring in. At least now we can be sure that our program doesn't cost the YWCA anything.

March 4, 2007

Greensboro RYC 2007 Day 2

Yesterday was a good day. As a tournament organizer, everything was smooth and on time. No one needed medical help. No one cried, and no parents behaved badly.

As a coach it was a good day too. We fielded seven fencers and we brought home five medals. All in all a good day.

Today we have four fencers and I predict we'll be taking home four medals. We have good kids. No we are not one of those feel good sports were everyone wins and everyone gets a prize. This is fencing, not happy feel good Barney day. If the blades were sharp there would be just one winner and a room full of dead kids. As we are a sport, there is a first, a second, and two thirds (that way we don't have to fence off for third).

As I wrote this one of our fencers just took third in Epee. That means the other will take first or second. The other two medals are still up in the air, but I am confident in my fencers.

If you are interested in coming out and seeing what all of the fuss is about, we are on the UNCG campus, in the Health and Human Performance Building (HHP) in the UNCG ancestral home of fencing the Coleman Research Gym (room 248).

I suspect the fencing will wind up today by about 4pm.

Ya'll come!

To know someone is to peer deep within their cart.

I was in the grocery store last night and like most times you go into the store you see a cross section of humanity, the haves, the have nots, the good, the bad, and the ugly. Last night I saw something I thankfully don't see all that often.

Before I reveal what I saw, I feel it necessary for you to understand me. Without that context, my reactions are at best meaningless, at worst just plane crazy. Though I am actual size when you see me, yes morbidly obese, but actual size. You see my dimensions as they truly exist, but in my own mind, I seem much bigger to me. In my mind, I am the bull in the china shop. If you have ever managed to even catch me in one of those little gift shops with all the fragile glass figurines, you would have noticed that my hands were in my pockets, my elbows pulled tightly to my side. I move in slow motion and I want nothing more than to be outside in the wide and safe outdoors. I avoid fragile things, (I decorate my house in wood and steel), I avoid babies, and children under fencing age except under special circumstances. For instance, Jake Quigley, gets the occasional fencing lesson from me. I won't throw him over my shoulder but I will teach him the skills he is going to need as he gets older, as I have a duty to do so.

In the store was a young woman who might have been beautiful once inflated. She was an "instant hotty" just add water (or in this case 30 pounds of fat might do). I wasn't judging, I wasn't assuming she had an eating disorder. There are people out there who can eat most mortals under the table and never gain a pound. She may have been one of these, she may have even had a medical condition that kept her from carrying bodyweight. But I also never went down the same isle as her. I'm actual sized but I seem much bigger to me, and I'm pushing a shopping cart. So I went out of my way not to get within harms distance of her.

This all worked out fine until it was time to check out. Most registers were open, and instinctively I headed for the shortest line. As it would happen once I got there, she was in front of me. At the moment I realized I had chosen a bad line, she looked up and registered my presence. If I moved now, she might take it as an insult, and that isn't my intention either. So I put my cart between her and myself and I didn't attempt to put any of my food on the belt until all of her food was scanned and she moved to the check writing area.

It was here I realized I had an opportunity to truly know her. No matter who you are, or how you try to hide who you are with cloths, makeup, and fancy ring tones on fancy cellphones, the checkout of a grocery store reveals your true naked self. Now I would know. Is it medical? Is it high metabolism? Is it an eating disorder?

She had "lite" wine coolers, fat free ice cream, uber healthy snack cookies, a diet coke, a fashion magazine, and baby food. I am not a doctor, but I paid attention in my health classes. A woman with so little body fat wouldn't even be able to menstruate, let alone carry a child to term. Plus I saw the nutrition label on one of the jars. Baby food is fortified with vitamins and minerals, is low fat, and pretty low calorie.

She had fat free junk food, baby food, and a fashion magazine. I rest my case, she had an eating disorder. Heck, the fashion magazine alone was enough to get a circumstantial conviction on, the other stuff was the smoking gun. Case closed.

I have always tried to lay bare my soul, not pull any punches, and guarantee that I would never hold public office. So in keeping with these facts I am willing to share with you the contents of my own shopping cart. A jar of horse radish, a bottle of ketchup, a box of dryer sheets, 2 bags of coffee, a roasted chicken, a half gallon of skimmed milk, a quart of low fat low calorie ice cream, and an apple pie.

Now you know me.

March 3, 2007

Fencing: Mid Atlantic RYC 2007

The Downtown Fencing Club is hosting this years Mid Atlantic Regional Youth Circuit fencing tournament. As I am the one behind the desk at the computer running the event, you get first hand play by play fencing blogging action.

Our first event was Y10 saber "Y10" means that the fencers are ten years old or less. Our fencer, took second, and as I am the solo saber coach for our club right now, that makes me pretty happy.

The second event (In progress), is the Y14 Saber. We have no fencers in this age group. However over all this is a touch competition. In this state, we have some very strong young saberist. The finals was fenced between a "C" and a "D" rated fencer. Ratings are no easy thing and it starts with "E" and goes up to "A".

The other event going on right this second is Y10 epee. All of the fencers in this event are from our club! Needless to say, no matter how it turns out, our club rocks. :)

After lunch we will have Y12 Foil and Y14 Epee. Both will be strong events with great fencers. In case you are interested, we are on the UNCG Campus in the Health and Human Performance building (HHP) in Room 247 known as The Coleman Research Gym. Things are on schedule, so we should be finished by 5pm.

Tomorrow things pick up again at 8am and again I suspect baring great chaos and anarchy, we'll be finished by 5pm.

Y'all come!

March 2, 2007

Booster Clubs Rule!

I don't know whose idea it was to organize the parents of youth athletes into a volunteer force of nature, but my hats off to them. Wow! We got ourselves some of that booster club and I can't say enough good about them.

What normally takes the coaches hours to do getting ready for a tournament, cost our club hundreds of dollars in the process, is taking very few hours to do now, and almost no expense to the club at all.

It went so well for the tournament setup that we had time to give the children competing in the tournament a group lesson. We have never had that kind of extra time before. We have never had that kind of volunteer force before!

If your youth activity doesn't have a booster club yet, you really need to get one. They rock!




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