After a few brief weeks of being a bit of a social
butterfly, my friend Brian went back to New York state, and since then I
have only socialized once. Ouch. I was really starting to get into it. I
was having fun. I was trying new things.
I played Just Dance 3 which is friggin awesome!!! Karaoke was tons of
fun as well. Instead, I find myself either working or at home. Even
though I have a stack of books to read, I have stagnated on that as
well. I haven’t gone for an honest run in weeks. I
am really not sure what it is. But it isn’t all bad. I am so very glad
that Castle is back on the air. For my mom’s birthday last week we
watched the first new episode of the year, and it was fantastic. We also
started re-watching Firefly. I am not sure what
it is, but Nathan Fillion just seems to be a great actor for our
family. Well, those that are still home. Both my brothers have bones to
pick with Fillion, Castle, and Firefly. Where my mom and I find the
smarmy arrogance of Fillion’s characters fun and an
addition to the show, T and Brando find it irritating. That is what I
have been able to gather from them thus far, at least. Even his roles as
Captain Hammer and the OB/GYN in Waitress fit his perceived persona
perfectly. To be quite honest, he probably is
rather like that in real life, but I do not know seeing as I have never
met him. It is a great deal of fun to look back into old episodes after
watching new ones and see how much weight he has gained, though. It is
also fun to realize other roles he has been
in, such as watching Saving Private Ryan and realizing he is the other
Private Ryan that does not need to be saved because he is not Matt
Damon. Fun stuff! But 1 episode three days a week is far short of the rate I was watching them before I had a job. That really takes up my time.
So I think what I am getting at is if anyone is in
Sheboygan and is looking for a good time, please come up with a good
idea, cause I ain’t got none, and try and catch me when I’m not working. But I guess what I'm kinda trying to say is, does anyone know how to squeeze a movie in the 37 minute time window I have available?
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Not as Soon as I Would Like
I used to try and post to my blog each and every
day. Then, the college football regular season ended, and I was only
posting every 2 or 3 days. Then, the Packers were eliminated from the
playoffs, and I didn’t post for 2 months… okay,
it didn’t quite go like that, but it is kinda close. I was pumping out
posts like crazy when I first started, but then on my mission I could
only post once a week, and I found that worked fairly well. There are
some instances that will make it better for me
to post more often, when something important arises. This is that type
of post.
My plans to return to school have been put off
another semester. I was offered my old position back at the bank, and I
accepted. I will be working here for a number of months in preparation
of returning to school. This was not the only
factor keeping me from returning to school. I did not get a reply from
the Admissions office until late November, and then I did not receive a
financial aid package until mid December. Because of this, I was unable
to even begin to sign up for classes until
everyone else, including procrastinating Freshman, had already snatched
everything up, leaving me to take classes that A) I didn’t need, B) I
had already taken, or C) that were at 3 in the morning. I want to only
spend another 2 semesters at school, and going
back this next semester would be far too costly relative to the minimal
progress I would make on my degree.
It was a decision I wrestled with. Even though I was
given a raise, and flexible hours, and every Sunday off work, it was a
wrestle within myself to decide to not return. I want so badly to be
back at St. Norbert, to wach the ice flow down
the Fox, to see the leaves turn and fall across campus, to get to see
my friends more than just those rare occasions when I can come up. The
biggest reason for me to return this spring had nothing to do with
academics; it was solely for the opportunity to
see you all again. I am sorry to those who greatly anticipated my
return. I will be doing what I can to visit, which I know is nowhere
near the same. Take care, enjoy your graduations, many of you, and I
look forward to a return.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Not Quite a Confession of a Not Really Shopaholic
I think I may have become an online shopping
junkie. I have spent such a great deal of time perusing Amazon, and eBay
now has a large selection of buy it now items that operates very much
like a far more sketchy Amazon. Due to this, I have
spent over $200 since Christmas on these two sites alone. I have also
planned spending as far ahead as the end of March. I continually find
things that are of great interest to me on these sites that have NO USE
OR ACTUAL WORTH!!! It’s so very similar to window
shopping, but far easier, and without the guarantee that the clothes
will fit. You can effortlessly flit from an electronics store to an auto
shop to toiletries to whatever else you so choose. It is not for me…
because I like it way too much and find it far
too enticing.
My standard technique for not spending money is
simple; leave my debit card at home when I go to work. No problem! By
doing this, I never use my debit card. But when I am at work and what
something to munch on, a complication arises; I
work in a grocery store, so even if I have cash on me, the constant
smells and the allure of the Snickers bar a mere 40 yards away from me
proves to overpower my weak self control. Solution # 2; leave my wallet
at home. BOOM!!! No cash, no card, no spending,
right? WRONG! I work at a BANK in a grocery store. This means I can get
money whenever I need it, meaning that I can always buy that tasty,
diet killing snack. But wait, there’s more! We do not get a great deal
of customers here at Associated Bank, Sheboygan
Festival Foods, so I spend a great deal of time on the computer. When I
become overborne with tutorials and online classes and organizing the
back room, I turn to the internet and find that if I log into my Amazon
or eBay account at work, MY DEBIT CARD IS
ALREADY POSTED!!! The fact that I left my card at home has no hindrance
to capping my spending. So now I am fat AND broke… a bad combination.
SO I have tried some new techniques. I transfer all
my money into my account that doesn’t have the debit card… oh wait, I
work at a bank that instantly transfers money. Okay, I tell my employees
to not transfer my money when I ask while
at work, and also to not allow me to do a withdrawal. Done deal! Oh, I
have online banking that allows me to transfer funds between my accounts
at my whim, loading money back onto my debit card in the blink of an
eye. So now I am only broke, but no longer
fat. How do I stop spending the rest of my money on the internet?
I stumbled across this possibility by accident. I
was pulling money out of my account in preparation to go to Arizona at
the beginning of December, and then found myself in Fond Du Lac craving a
burger and ice cream… Culvers, anyone? So
I decided to drive over and get me my fix, when a thought popped into
my head; how much money is on my card? I could not say for certain,
having pulled out my cash to take to Phoenix and not really knowing what
my account was at before and since I had to buy
gas to get to Fondy, as well as Milwaukee on two separate occasions
that week… well, the burger isn’t worth maybe over drafting my account.
Finally! A great solution. If you suffer from buy-crap-at-random
syndrome, and do not have a good enough interest rate
at your bank to offset the risk spending your money, then I suggest
pulling it out, and hiding it under your mattress. Except for the
mattress part, that is what I have done. It works!... most of the time
at least…
Now what am I to do with this new jacket I didn’t really need…
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
The new year can begin when I SAY it begins!!!
I don’t think I posted anything all December. I
could easily check the dates on that, but I am currently at work and
therefore am not supposed to be going online, therefore, I will be
writing a post for my blog instead. Productive? I guess
so, in a way, but not really.
It is now January 2nd, 2013. I have
another 28 days to continue to write ‘2012’ on forms for the year before
recognizing my mistake, crossing it out, and correcting it, but I only
have another 5 days to write in ‘12’ for the
month with leniency. The days are going to be getting longer, the
weather should start to improve, and I have a lot of work to do. I have
high hopes for this year. I am really hoping to be better in oh so many
ways, many of which I will not be telling the
masses because I think that many of you have already read 8 such blogs
so far today and will read another 15 by the time you decide you are fed
up with Resolution Posting, 2012… uh, I mean 2013. So, let us take a
different train of thought for a ride.
Country music. I have never been one to like it,
but dang it all it is catchy. You hear a country song and it can stick
with you for years. I once heard a song probably titled ‘Letters from
Home’ while I was a teenager. I was in a car with
a former MP; an intimidating man standing nearly six and a half feet
tall, weighing 23 stone, and driving a very large pickup truck. He was a
very nice man, a friend of my dad’s, and also owned numerous guns. Oh,
and he listened to country. It was while driving
home from church with him that this song came on the radio, and 8 years
later I can still hum it in my head. So, when I was on my mission and
one of my Zone Leaders had a country CD, and it was one of the few
approved CDs that we had, so it was played very
often. Weeeeeeeell, it got stuck in my head. When I left the field on
mid October, my Zone Leader gave me the CD. Much to my chagrin, I
listened to it. Multiple times. And still listen to it. It’s addictive. I
know most of the words to many of the songs. “Ol’
Red,” “John Deere Green,” and “Dirt Road Anthem” play through my head
rather often now, though the tracks we listened to in the field most
were country adaptations of hymns and religious songs found in “Oh
Brother where art Thou?”. But still, bloody country
is all up in my head!
What I find to be a brighter note is that I am
somewhat expanding my reading horizons. My brother has a great deal of
time to read. He is stuck in a hospital hours upon hours a day and
doesn’t want anything to do with much of what goes
on around him if he doesn’t have to, so he does two main things with
his time; plays Words with Friends, and reads between turns on Words
with Friends. He has found a few new series of books and gave some of
them to me for Christmas. I am now reading a book
called “The Name of the Wind,” I think. I am only about 10 pages in, so
forgive me my ignorance as to what it is about or even if the title is
correct, but it comes very highly recommended by most of my family, so I
give it a go.
I have also taken up being an imposter; I have
posed as a dancer, a singer, and an athlete. In other words I have
played Disney Sing it, Glee Sing It, Just Dance 3, and also I am back to
playing Madden 08. I was okay at the Karaoke games,
but I was surprisingly good at Just Dance, but I had a flashback to
when I was at dinner with my Ward Mission Leader back in Lodi and his
kids had the demo version of the game. The only songs they had were
“California Girls” and “Dynomite” which played constantly
from the living room. Good times.
I also believe that Madden 08 is the best version
that I have played thus far, and I have played ‘99 through ’12. My
favorite thing to do is find the best players for the price at each
position (Shawn Merriman, Tommie Harris, Patrick Willis,
Frank Gore, Vernon Davis, Steve Smith, Jason Campbell, Kevin Schaffer,
Deon Hall, Reggie Nelson, Nick Mangold, just to name a few), trade for
them, and then proceed to see them hold out and demand massive
contracts, or wait until their contract ends and ask
for a ridiculous sum of money. It just isn’t worth it, though. It is
also strange to see marquee players sit in free agency because eams
can’t afford to pay them what they want. Marc Bulger (rated 94 or so in
that game) is on a one year, $4 million contract
to start the game. At the end of the first season, he becomes a free
agent. He typically goes for about 5 years, $70 million. Many teams just
can’t pay that, so he sits, waiting. Same thing with Julius Peppers.
His contract expires at the end of the first
season and we see him demand a substantial pay raise. If the teams
can’t afford him, there he sits. I have seen a free agent pool with 10
players ranked 90 or more. Most teams are lucky to have 6 guys rated
90+, so there is, theoretically, a playoff team made
up entirely of players that remain without a job. I think this is a
very cool feature. I find it more within bounds of how the business side
of football should behave. In the NFL that we see today, teams simply
cut players, or restructure contracts, or pay
front or back heavy deals to absorb a big hit to the cap now or push it
off to the future. The way the game is structured, you can’t do that,
so you end up not being able to acquire top tier talent because you made
a bad couple moves by signing less than dominant
players to huge deals, or those back heavy deals are now being played
out by players far past their prime, but they are still making 8, 10,
12, 15 million dollars because they had 14 sacks when they were 26, or
15 touchdown catches, then tore their ACL 4 times.
By playing within the structures of the game, I find I have to plan for
five seasons down the road as much as I have to plan for winning now.
It’s cool to me.
Well, I wrote far more on that subject than I
thought I would, and I believe this is as good a place as any to stop. I
had a fabulous time with family and friends last month, and look
forward to good times to come. Happy New Year, and may
the odds be ever in your favor… gosh, I’m a nerd.
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