ANWR Drilling Shelved.
Right The Fuck On.
The Campfire Headphase. Natural progression, artistic growth, improvement on the formula—good stuff. I’m glad I bought it.
Well, after three weeks of an exceptionally busy schedule, tons of freelance work, and several well-timed checks coming in the door, there’s been some exciting stuff going on around here. Last night I had the second of two unusual and unorthodox interviews over two pints of Bass, and it looks like I might be joining a new company—doing web development again. More on all this later, but keep yer fingers crossed.
Jen suggested the idea to get out of the house and go for a walk in the park near our house on Sunday. We got lucky with the weather and the timing; it was 70° and sunny, and the leaves are all in mid-change. I’ll write more later in the day, but now it’s time to work.
All the pulls, lighting, and the new microwave got installed today. That area around the window is my responsibility for this weekend. I can’t wait to get in there!
Sub $100 Laptop.
This is great on so many different levels. I’d love to get my hands on one of these to build stuff for it.
The mortgage is due on the house this week, and that’s not too bad. I was expecting that, and I had the scratch saved up. What I’m sort of choking on is the $800 COBRA payment I have to make today to keep our health insurance going. Yikes.
Last night we picked up our microwave (actually an oven/convection microwave, sort of a microwave on steroids) and $70 worth of drawer pulls from the IKEA, just in time to have the cabinet guys come back and finish up the major work in the kitchen this afternoon. I don’t know what’s going to be better for my mental health—getting the kitchen finished or ending this big-ticket spending period.
I suppose it doesn’t help much that we just bought a pair of flat files from a friend whose design business was downsizing, but considering the price we paid (1/10 the retail price) we couldn’t pass them up. And, a little freelance gig came in yesterday that should pay for the files, drawer pulls, and groceries for the kitchen. So I’m not complaining.
The five or so regular readers here are probably wondering where I’ve gone. After all, I’m working from home, so I should have lots of time to write, right?
The sad truth is that I feel like I have less time to write than before. Between three current projects that actually pay money, our kitchen installation (countertops are going in as I peck away) and life in general, I think the folks here at the Lockardugan Estates have less free time than they did two months ago.
There have been several folks who have made our lives easier this past month, as we hunt for food out of the boxes in our dining room and wash dishes in the bathroom. The Cauzzis generously offered their kitchen during our demolition phase downstairs, and we’ve taken them up on many delicious warm dinners. They are also raising three tiny babies, so we’ve tried to be respectful of their time and help out if we can. When Todd asked me if I could take a look at their front windows before the cold weather swept into Baltimore, I took him up on it without thinking twice.
Indulge me for a minute as I bring up a little Dugan History here. During my junior year of college, I got a side job painting the house of one of my professors, which made eating and drinking (primarily drinking) more economically feasible. I spent the fall of 1992 on her porch, scraping and painting the ceiling, listening to Pearl Jam and Nirvana from the nearby Loyola dorms and working until the dusk made it too dark to see. As word got out in the neighborhood about the student handyman, I got another job after that working on her friend M’s house, shifting to interior work for the winter and back outside in the spring. She liked having me there, and we settled into a comfortable routine during the season—I’d come out and work for four hours, and she’d cook us both dinner. We became friends outside of the work I was doing on her house, and she went so far as to host a graduation party in her backyard for me.
After leaving college with a less-than-practical degree in Illustration, I kept housepainting, switching back and forth between houses, getting more and more involved as time went on. Simple painting gave way to repair carpentry, removing shingle siding, basic roofing, restoring sash windows, running air conditioning ductwork, insulating, and eventually gutting/rehabbing a bathroom in a third neighbor’s house. I worked in that neighborhood for the better part of two years, and while I thought I did a pretty decent job, I was a lousy businessman. After two years I had to give it up to seek a better-paying job doing design.
Working at the Cauzzis’ yesterday reminded me of that first fall I spent outdoors, working hard to keep warm and race the sun. I pulled the storms out, scraped and glazed the windows, and got a coat of primer to dry with an hour of sunlight to spare. H. made me lunch, which I finally ate at about 3, and I headed back out to put a coat of paint on the windowframes. As I was on the ladder, I was thinking about all the people in my life who have helped me along the way, and about the simple pleasure of helping my friends. I don’t think I’ve done a very good job of tipping the scale back, but I’d like to think I made a good start yesterday. So, thanks to W. and M. for keeping me employed (and fed) back in the day, and thanks to the Cauzzis for letting me pay it forward.
US Patent & Trademark Office
Great information on trademarks, including links to an online trademark search.