Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Living room coming together

Amazingly, my blog is getting hundreds of "hits" per day. I put "hits" in quotes because somehow when you do a google search for Kenny Powers images... my blog is the 4th picture listed. Thanks, Kenny. Your awesomeness knows no bounds, even if no one is probably sticking around to read anything else.

"It's just that when we started kissing and touching I got all hot and sweaty and then I saw a bunch of colors and then I just came in my pants. But that won't happen again."

"There is one vision that gives me constant happiness, your two enormous breasts."

Needless to say, this show needs to come back for a second season.

Yesterday - I got a pleasant surprise. My new title came in for my car and with it, a surprise check for $350! Score! Little did I know I put a security deposit down on my vehicle all the way back in 2005. I'm doing a great job paying off debt and budgeting on my own so I decided that this is free money and I'm going to spend it. I had a few options that I considered; take the money and save it for a few weeks until I put together another $150 or so and buy a dining room set. I thought about it but wasn't really for it.

It came down to two choices; get a new dishwasher (my current one is probably from the 80s and starting to crap out) or start working towards finishing off the living room.

You may remember from my post on Friday some of the problems I have with my living room. Well, I took care of "The Ugly" and painted the connecting board white. It looks very nice and fits in the room much better. And now I went ahead and took care of "The Bad." I found a very nice coffee and end table set that are really going to tie the room together.





It's really going to make a big difference I suspect. Then there is only one piece left to buy:


It's a bit more expensive then the rest so it might take a few months but after I get that I can get the AirTunes router and the speaker system to start streaming my audio collection throughout the entire living room using only my phone as a remote. That will be fun times.

Yay for free money! And thanks to Kenny Powers for drawing so much traffic this blog. Only a few more thousand views and we can pass my poker blog as "most viewed blog I've ever done".

Monday, March 30, 2009

Yesterday

Yesterday was a strange day. Very strange. I was sitting around most of the day just waiting for 5:00 pm, when my beloved Tarheels would fight to earn a spot to their second consecutive final four (they did, easily)... but the strangest thing happened in the early afternoon.

I just got this overwhelming sense of dread. I was looking over some things and I couldn't escape the thought of "what does it matter?" I was looking at things I wanted to buy and I just kept thinking that I'm just going to have to re-sell them at a loss when I lose my house in a few months. Or looking over my budget and planning on selling my house and moving back home.

It was just all so ODD. If you know me at all, you know that I never think or act this way. I'm always trying to see the positive side of things and like to think that I don't lose hope in the face of adversity. Nothing in my life has ever caused me to think or expect bad things to happen.

But there it was.

It was all so very strange. Luckily it went away before the game even started, and the demolishing of Oklahoma helped me feel much better.

There is no place in my life for negative thinking. Just need to stay the course. Save the money. Buy the furniture. Pay off the debt. Lose the weight. Simple. That's it from now until my self-imposed deadline of July.

(no girls! we think...) (at least that's the plan)

Also: if I finally make it to the magical 185 barrier that I've been planning for almost a year now then I am going to treat myself with a secret special surprise. Hint: something I was really talking big about a year ago but then kind of forgot about. Double hint: it's tied in with my weight getting below a certain point.

Now that I know what it feels like to be depressed; even for just one hour... I don't envy that at all. Awful.

Friday, March 27, 2009

The Ivy League kind, ma'am

Reprinted from a Facebook blog originally posted July 17, 2008:

Saying that I was difficult growing up is a bit of an understatement. No – my family never had to worry about me doing drugs or joining a gang or committing crimes. Although at times I think my mother may have preferred that. The problems arose from my sharp tongue and complete lack of respect for anything or anyone. I had no problem telling people what I thought, sometimes in the meanest most condescending way possible. Imagine get talked down to by a 12 year old? I’m lucky that no one beat me to death.

I have a vague fuzzy memory that’s imbedded in my head. It sounds like the sort of thing that someone would make up years after the fact to embellish a story but it’s one that I know for a fact happened. I recently asked my mother if I was remembering incorrectly but she verified that my memory is accurate. It was in the 6th grade and I was in the process of terrorizing teachers and spending nearly every 2nd or 3rd day in the principal’s office, all while getting straight As. My teachers hadn’t really seen anything like it before. I’m not sure what straw broke the camel’s back but I was called in to a parent/teacher conference with a few of my teachers and the school guidance counselor. They all sat me around a table and explained to me that I had a lot of talent and potential but I was wasting it by being a miserable and awful child. I was probably mostly just bored and wanted to get out of there and play video games (or eat something – because I was a fat kid)… but then they asked me what I wanted out of my life. Odd question to ask a 12 year old. Surprisingly, and to this day I have no idea what possessed me to say this, I answered that I thought that maybe I wanted to go to Cornell. I didn’t even know that Cornell was an Ivy League school until I got to high school. And so it began.

Eight years later I still remember the day I got accepted to Cornell like it was yesterday. All of the daily suspense was taken out of play early by the school. You knew right away that you weren’t going to find out anything at all until April 15th. On April 15th, 2000, I jumped out of bed before the alarm and spent most of the day pacing around like a nervous wreck. School ended and I distinctly remember my friend, Mike Struckus, racing ahead of me to his car and telling me that he was going to go to my house and open my letter before I got the chance. I ran to MikMobile v.1.0 (a teal 1990 Chevy Corsica – what’s up ladies?) as fast as my no-longer-not-so-fat legs could carry me and raced him the five minutes to my mother’s house (while obeying all traffic signals and posted signs obviously). He beat me there and jumped out of his sparkling red Dynasty…moving quickly toward the mailbox. I was nervous and hell and slightly furious. How could he? If he opened this before me and ruined my moment then I could potentially be spending the next four years in prison instead of Ithaca, because I was going to murder his ass (I would only come to learn later that prison is probably not much worse than Ithaca). I exploded out of my car, ready to pounce at a moment’s notice and wrip his windpipe clear out of his throat. A track star at the time, he obviously beat me to the mailbox. I quickly took stock of the situation, best planning on how to end the life of one of my best friends. He pulled the envelope out of the mailbox and then just calmly turned around and handed it to me. Phew.

I didn’t even have to open it to know. At this stage in the game every high school senior knew one thing when it came to college admissions. Big envelope equals welcome to our institution, please bring cash. Small envelope equals, “Well, there’s always community college. Try to reapply when you’re actually worthy.” Emblazoned in the upper left corner of the envelope was the Cornell crest. The envelope itself? Big. Fucking. Envelope. I just about burst into tears right there in my front yard. I knew that I had wanted to go to Cornell but if I was being completely honest with myself I didn’t think I was ever going to get in. I still remember riding in my car a few months earlier with my good friend at the time, Gene, who looked and me and asked me why I was wasting my time applying to a school like Cornell… I was only going to fail out and embarrass myself even if I did manage to get in. It’s at moment like that that you realize how lovely it is to have good and supportive friends. I spent the next few months wondering if maybe he was right. Maybe I was wasting my time. I still held out hope and on a beautiful sunny April day (note: weather may not be accurate – positive memories may be artificially correlated with good weather) everything I wanted was vindicated with one fucking envelope. Take that, motherfucker.

Most students who apply to schools in the Ivy League spend their high school careers studying for hours a night, taking AP classes in subjects they aren’t even remotely interested in, joining a million random clubs to superfluously pad their resume, and filling themselves with a genuine angst that getting into the nation’s top colleges is SERIOUS BUSINESS. Me? I took hard classes without killing myself, never brought a home a book to waste my time studying, skipped school to compete in prestigious Tecmo Super Bowl tournaments, listed baseball as the only club on my glorious resume and was once famously fired from a grocery store as a 17 year old for stealing hundreds of dollars worth of scratch-off lottery tickets. My college stock was solid gold.

Two of the “good students” in my grade also applied to Cornell. When I ran into them over the next few days the exchange with both was nearly identical. I asked them if they got in, they put their head down a bit and said no; no they had not. They asked me the same question and looked at me waiting for an identical response, waiting for the two of us to share in a mutual display of fake sympathy for the other. I replied with, “Well, yes, in fact I did get in.” Both of their faces immediately changed from the waiting-to-feel-sorry-for-you-as-a-proxy-to-feel-sorry-for-myself face to the “ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING ME?” face. While not being friends with or keeping in touch with these two people I know for a fact that they are both doing quite well for themselves, one a lawyer, the other a fighter pilot for our armed forces but in those breezy spring days when I was the happiest kid alive I was the one savoring my bit of glory.

To say I was on the low end of social class scale when I arrived for my freshman year would be pretty accurate. If it were a middle aged feudal society, I surely would have been considered a serf. So while I was at school I was a typical college freshman…exploring my freedom, making friends with as many people as I could, and basically wasting a hell of a lot of time. There – I was normal. When I went home for holidays and breaks, however, I was a monster. My sense of entitlement was probably only exceeded in size by, I don’t know, the Pacific Ocean? I took every single opportunity I could to remind anyone and everyone that I went to an Ivy League school. I’d find ways to drop this nugget of information into the most unrelated innocent conversations. “Boy, this grass sure needs to be cut.” “That it does. Hmm, grass. Reminds me of the grass at my college. Which is Cornell. In the IVY LEAGUE. Ok, well… see you later.” It’s a miracle that I was not beaten to death with a claw hammer at this stage in my life.

The greatest example of this happened a few years later during my senior year of college. I had calmed down a bit by then having lost some of my arrogance traveling the world and realizing exactly why Americans are hated everywhere else in the world (hint: it’s not apple pie). But the beast was still liable to come out every now and then if reasonably prodded. I decided to visit all of my best friends at their college for a big New Year’s party. I had been there before and knew a lot of the people in the area. My girlfriend at the time decided she would join me, this being our first new year’s together as a couple. I guess she did not want to come alone so decided to bring a friend. I had only met this girl, who we’ll call Megan, one time before and she seemed like a nice enough person. The more the merrier, right?

It’s a tradition among my friends and I to get either Japanese food or Chinese buffet on New Year’s Eve every year. We all went there and we’re being our usual selves; cracking jokes, busting balls, and being flat out ridiculous. My then girlfriend was a saint of a girl with a great personality and although they were both only meeting my friends for the first time she was taking the punishment and teasing my better than her friend. Megan started to be sour almost immediately. While everyone would tell jokes and maybe tease each other every now and then she would say legitimately mean things that made everyone uncomfortable. None of us were in love with Megan, to say the least, but hey it was a holiday and no one is going to ruin it for us.

We went to the party and it was a typical New Year’s party. What else to say about that really? Megan, to her credit, continued to be a tremendous disappointment all evening. Around 11:55, my girlfriend taps me on the shoulder and asks if we could go back to my friend’s apartment. I don’t remember exactly what my initial reaction was but I’d like to imagine it involved pointing at a clock of some sort and mouthing the words “are you fucking serious”? It turns out that Megan is having some sort of asthma attack and left her inhaler at my friend’s apartment and desperately needs it to survive or something overly melodramatic like that. I’m legitimately torn at this point. I want to spend the beginning of the New Year with my girlfriend, who I legitimately loved at this point, but on the other hand… I’m not leaving a New Year’s party at 11:55. Let’s just get serious. I said what I’d imagine any logical human being might say when confronted with this situation, “Can’t this wait five minutes”? Apparently it could not and off they went while I made the executive decision to stay at the party to the delight of my friends. Me being a glorious asshole always resulted in the highest of high comedy.

It ended up being the wrong decision in more ways than one (who could have ever predicted that?). For one, I had no fun from that point forward. I watched the ball drop alone while standing in the corner and gave a half hearted celebration, missing my girlfriend. At the same time I was wondering to myself what kind of special individual it requires to pull this kind of stunt at this particular time point. At no point did the fact that she might actually be telling the truth ever cross my mind. She was so negative all night that she definitely made this up. I think I wanted to kill her. I ended up walking back to their apartment from the party alone around 12:30. My night was already ruined but I had no idea how much worse it was about to get.

My entire walk consisted of me wondering to myself exactly how much trouble I was in and if/when I was going to get dumped for my actions. The two of them were “sleeping” on the two couches in the living room. The rest of my friends were still at the party, except for my friend Shawn, who was trying to seal the deal in a bedroom with a girl that may have actually passed out hours ago (it’s a mystery and for this kid, did it honestly even matter?). I laid down next to my girlfriend and did the smartest thing I could think of. I didn’t even give her a chance to say a word before I launched into a massive apology which included my rationale for staying. No later than the words “I thought she was faking it” had come out of my mouth; Megan had bolted upwards on the opposite couch in a full sit-up position like a demon zombie of some sort. “YOU FUCKING ASSHOLE” she yelled starting off a long profanity laced tirade that I barely even remember while spittle flew out of her mouth like a rabid dog.

I’d like to say that I took stock of the situation and reacted in a calm measured manner but that…that is not something I can say. Do you know how sometimes a man goes on a killing spree, viciously murdering five people and then later claims that he has no recollection of even doing it? Well, I understand where he’s coming from because at this particular moment I lost my fucking mind. If I could describe what my mental state was at the time it would be equivalent to the white noise on a television set. Luckily I didn’t do anything stupid, although I think I might have been capable…because as I already mentioned I was in another world. What I did manage to do was to kick this girl out of my friend’s apartment (yes – I kick people out of places that aren’t mine and then you wonder if I’m the fucking man or not – the answer is yes) at approximately 1 AM on New Year’s Eve. Bonus points: the girl lives in New Jersey and we’re in Pennsylvania. My girlfriend, saint that she was, decided to stay with me and leave her friend to fend for herself.

I ran downstairs and at this point managed to snap back into consciousness. Without even realizing it, my face was covered in tears. Except – I wasn’t crying. No – there were intense anger tears. My friends came strolling around the corner at that exact moment. My friend Bob took one look at me and said simply, “I don’t even want to know – I’m going to bed.” And with that, I thought Megan was out of my life forever.

The next day I’m recovering at my mother’s house when I get a call from a number that I don’t recognize. I’m not the type of person to let a call go to voicemail to see who it is, so I pick it up. In a deep New Jersey guido accent I get “HEY YOU FUCKING ASSHOLE, HOW THE FUCK ARE YOU GOING TO DO THAT TO MY SISTER?” Ruh, roh, Shaggy. Like most people would, I feigned ignorance for a bit. “Whose sister? Who is this?” Once that song and dance was over – I got to the heart of the matter. The girl really as asthma (asthma attack in question: still inconclusive). Megan’s brother thought I knew this fact and sent her into the middle of the night with not so much as a “goodnight, sweet prince” anyway. After I explain to him that I just met her and I had no idea he seems satisfied and calms down. I think that this situation is over and I’m ready to hang up the phone. Wrong. Here comes Momma Bear.
Again, in a deep New Jersey female guido (picture Susie Essman from Curb Your Enthusiasm) “YOU PUNK MOTHERFUCKER, YOU DO THIS TO MY DAUGHTER? IF I EVER FIND YOU I’M GOING TO CUT YOUR FUCKING BALLS OFF. YOU STUPID FUCK.” I’d like to transcribe the entire conversation but honestly I absorbed this for nearly 30 minutes. Being the bastard that I sometimes am, I tried to make nice while at the same time needling the hell out of her. After threatening to get me kicked out of school because she “knows the dean”, she was just about finished with her angry tirade and line of questioning, but I guess she had one more thing that she needed to know.
She phrased her next question very seriously when she uttered “what kind of scumbag would do this to a girl with asthma”? I was silent for a good 10 seconds, formulating my answer as the wheels turned slowly in my head. I paused another beat before uttering the phrase which would pretty much signify an entire ten years of my life. “The Ivy League kind, ma’am,” I said simply. She was appalled.

She probably had every right to be.

Five years later I am still forced to retell this story at parties on a regular basis. And if I am not there one of my friends handles the duties for me, filling in admirably even without all of the pertinent details. They aren’t needed. In the hands of a capable story teller, which I am and all of my core friends are, it’s a killer at parties. It has everything a funny story needs, including the transcendent asshole who utters a line so preposterous it feels like a team of Hollywood writers brainstormed around a table for hours to come up with a singular line that is at once both hilarious and repulsive. Am I proud of my actions? Not necessarily, but to paraphrase the great Steve Zissou… This story makes me look like an asshole. But I said those things. I did those things. I guess I’m an asshole.

These days when people ask where I went to school, I usually mention that I went to college in New York. I’m not shy to mention that I went to Cornell, as the follow up question is almost universally, “Oh yeah, where?” but I don’t trumpet the information like it’s a direct beacon from the lord himself. Every single day I try to be a better person and show humility. I often succeed and I think that most people who interact with me now on a daily basis would call me a good person. But every now and then these things slip out. When I get talked down to by person at work who probably shouldn’t be talking down to me, the first thing that pops into my head is along the lines of “bitch, please, I have two Ivy League degrees, which is probably two more then anyone in your family will have for the next two hundred years.” Is this a bad thing to think? Of course it is. But at least I don’t say it. It happens less and less these days and hopefully in due time it won’t happen at all. I’m not a special individual. I’m only blessed with the best memory of everyone I’ve ever met despite a real lack of any other tangible skills, (except hopefully comedy) often including motivation. I have focused and dedicated myself to working harder and being a better person every day. I guess that’s part of growing up.

Admission numbers at the Ivy League schools are now at an all-time low. In 2008, Cornell University saw a record number of applicants and accepted the smallest percentage of applications in the history of the school. And that’s just at one of the worst schools in the Ivy League. I’d imagine that similar stories are commonplace in every small town across the country. Every Ivy League student who isn’t expected to be there by birthright, who doesn’t belong to a country club or own a yacht, probably has said or felt something similar at least once in their life.

Like it or not, humans are prone to being proud. A job well done doesn’t seem worth it to a lot of us unless someone notices. It’s just human nature. I did something in my life that I was not supposed to do. No one expected it of me, including myself. And while I was extremely proud of myself, for many years of my life this pride manifested itself in arrogance. Unfortunately, one of the worst aspects of my current life is that I only get to see my best friends anywhere from 10-15 days a year. Hardly ever and not nearly enough. They still see me as the exact same person I was during my college years, which is fine, because I don’t need to impress them anyway and they would probably support me even if I lived in a van down by the river. The fact of the matter is, I will always be proud of who I am and what I have done, but these days are hopefully behind me forever. Much in the same way that I watch politics now, base nearly all my decisions on not only my own feelings but my dogs, or spend all my time and money worrying about how I can upgrade my house… I’m growing up. Some, including myself, would say that it’s about time.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go and check on my “Ivy League Alumni” Facebook group.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

If you know me... you realize that I can have dramatic bursts of motivation. I don't care about something until suddenly I do... and then I care A LOT. When I'm focused on something - I want it to turn out the way I want it to turn out and nothing less than perfection is acceptable. It's this slight streak of ambition that has got me very far in life, I think.

The problem with improvement, for me, is that when things get better I tend to focus on the things that still need to be improved. I'm never happy; always striving for perfection.

This happens a lot with my weight, unfortunately. I don't care until all of a sudden I do; and that's when you find me working out 12-14 times a week. (Not the point of this post but this is sort of happening now - be on the look out)

Today's nagging things that needs to be perfected? My living room.

I found paintings that I absolutely loved on Overstock.com, so I went ahead and bought them. They arrived today. I love them just as much as I thought I would; which is to say it's practically a love without bounds.

So we can go ahead and label the paintings as:

THE GOOD


Improvement needed: None. I'm very happy with this.

The BAD


Improvement needed: New coffee and end tables are needed as soon as I can possibly afford it. I'm going for a very modern living room and these tables stick out like a sore thumb! They don't match at all. The tables... they need to go. I have a few ideas in mind for tables, depending on price, but the tables will be black. I've already mentally re-arranged the missing pieces of my living room many times, but now I'm pretty sure where they are going to go. It's going to look incredible when it's finished... in 2011 (or never).

THE UGLY:


Improvements Needed: Um, paint the eyesore board? To be perfectly honest, I'm not even clear how this unpainted board lasted so long when all the rest of the molding and trim in the room is white. I guess when junk is surrounded by junk - you don't tend to notice it as much. As it begins to be surrounded by nicer things, it starts to stick out. Needless to say, it's getting painted this weekend (second weekend in a row that I'm painting - oh my word).

Hopefully I have some time to obsess over these improvements. I'm trying to rid myself of distractions and focus on nothing but constant improvements in all aspects of my life for the next 3-4 months.

(Yet I'm talking to girls already - oh Mike, will you ever learn?)

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

People I Hate at the Gym: "Bad Form Guy"

My second least favorite person at the gym is the guy who lifts with such poor form that it makes you want to club him upside the head.

Caveat: if someone is lifting a small amount of weight and obviously doesn't know what they are doing... this does NOT apply to them. They are excused. This is meant for one type of person and one only.

The "poor form" guy that I'm talking about most likely has a few other stereotypical gym-douche characteristics, but he takes it to the next level by grabbing a weight anywhere from 50% to 150% too heavy and doing an exercise that only barely approximates what he's trying to do.

You see this a lot for biceps curls. Johnny Toughguy walks over to the rack and pulls off a 70 pound dumbbell. You're curious and you're thinking to yourself... "what's he going to do with that?" Your mind immediately gets blown to smithereens when he stars doing curls that are 90% accomplished by twisting and contorting his back. The exercise isn't even working out his biceps. Not only is this stupid and not only does it make him look like a douchebag, but it's also dangerous. It's this kind of behavior that leads to weekend warriors getting injured at the gym.

So you watch and you hope that the motherfucker just completely obliterates his back, because let's be honest... he deserves it. But he doesn't. So he moves on.

Shoulder press? Comes down approximately 10% from the top of his press. Muscle worked: mystery.

Bench? Same. Nice upper tricep workout on that 275 pound bench, buddy. We're all brimming with pride.

Dips without even lowering your body enough to work the lower chest and triceps? You're on the fast-track to success!

This is all made worse by the accompanying swagger and the look on their face that says, "did you see how much weight I was just handling." This person has no idea that anyone with a clue has already marked them as a clueless loser - but hey... dream big or don't dream at all.

Bonus: I don't see this any more since I left college but along similar lines: the team lift. You all know what I'm talking about. A guy comes in with his witty fraternity t-shirt (it says something like: we bring the balls if you bring the holes: SIGMA PI 2007 MIXER)... throws about 350 pounds on the bar. Has his two boys on each side and one in the back to "spot" him and proceeds to "lift" it 2 or 3 times with his three spotters doing over 95% of the lifting. Always the highest of high comedy. Usually followed by some grunting, some congratulating, and a lot of use of the word bro. Actual workout accomplishment? Minimal.

The problem here is that a lot of people use their time out of the house and at the gym attempting to show off for other people there (which is mostly other dudes - good job) and forget why they are there. No one cares if you're throwing around all that extra weight; if you're not using the proper form you're defeating the entire purpose of going to the gym in the first place. You go to the gym to look better when you're not at the gym. You don't go to look good while you are there. Please do not lose sight of this. You're not helping your cause and you're embarrassing yourself in the process.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Kenny Powers is a legend... he does legendary things

Don't have HBO? You're missing out on that show that everyone is talking about and quoting. Guess you're not alone - the ratings apparently aren't so hot. But Eastbound and Down is one of the funniest, quotable shows on TV right now.

Too bad the first season just ended up after only 6 episodes, but do yourself a favor and track them down if you can.



The show centers on Kenny Powers, a washed up redneck, racist, homophobic, drug addict pitcher who was once on top of his game with a 100 mph fastball and famous for his crazy statements and party legends. Think John Rocker but MORE awful and hilarious.

Predictably, his career divebombs and he ends up out of the majors. He moves back to his old hometown where he becomes a middle school teacher.

Kenny Powers is played by Danny McBride, a guy who my friends and I all love and find hilarious. I first saw him in The Heartbreak Kid playing the crazy cousin and tormenting Ben Stiller. He was funny in that. He showed up in a few more movies in smaller roles, like The Pineapple Express, Drillbit Taylor, and Tropic Thunder.

It turns out he got famous for this small little indie movie called The Foot Fist Way. He plays a karate instructor with a terrible attitude. It's total campy, craziness. The rumor is that Will Ferrell saw it and bought the movie for distribution because he loved it so much and boom... Danny McBride is now somewhat of a comedy star.

The guy has perfect delivery, great lines, and plays the sarcastic asshole pretty much to a tee. He's incredible.

It doesn't let up in the show. It's nonstop put-downs, one liners and just general craziness for 30 minutes every Sunday. A few classic guest appearances from Will Ferrell as a crazy BMW car salesman don't hurt either.

The last 10 minutes at the end of the 5th episode, where Kenny stages a pitchoff against Daryl from The Office while Will Ferrell looks on is one of the funniest scenes I've seen in any TV show ever. Track this show down if you can.

Also; check out the fake twitter at KFUCKINGP

Not going to put the best quotes here because it doesn't do them justice. Find the show!!

Friday, March 20, 2009

Quick question



What's the fucking deal with Grimace? I never got it...

Random thoughts on a Friday

It's that wonderful time of year again where the weather aligns just right so that you need a hat and scarf in the morning, as well as sunglasses, and by the afternoon you carry the jacket and scarf with the hat tucked in a pocket. That's always fun to have that kind of variation throughout the course of your day.

I missed 4 games in my NCAA bracket on the first day. I only entered one pool this year and the entry fee was $10. There happens to be 67 people in the pool so let's go final 4 of Louisville, Missouri, Pitt, and UNC with UNC beating Louisville in the finals. Papa Bear needs a new pair of shoes (or dining room table in this case).

I have been giving some thought to getting a second dog. Specifically this one at the Syracuse SPCA:


He could be Jack's little brother-slash-best-friend-forever. It's almost too perfect!

Unfortunately, I am not really sure I have the time, patience, or more importantly the money for a second dog. Yes, I can easily afford it, but I'm not really sure I want to take on that extra expense right now. I'm trying to pay off my debt (more than 50% there in 6 months - suck it haters) and start building some savings before I inevitably lose my job, sell my house at a loss and get the fuck out of Syracuse. Better to dash off into the night with one dog instead of two.

Didn't mean to write about this but since I just kind of stream-of-consciousness segwayed in to it... My original plan was to stay in Syracuse approximately 5 years. That plan may be completely thrown off the tracks, though. My job security at BMS is next to zero and where else am I going to work in Syracuse with the salary range I'm comfortable with (and deserve nothing less)... nowhere.

So I might be blowing this popstand at 2 years or less. If that's the case I'm losing money on my house - no question.

Oh - it's all so stressful.

Best not to think about it. Just go back to staring at that cute mini-Jack that I am not going to get and get ready for an awesome weekend of hoops.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Mike's Embarrassing Moments: Muay Thai kickboxing class

I've been brainstorming some ideas for recurring themes that I can write about, because honestly just writing about what's on my mind will always come back to the same core circle of things. I obsess about a few things, and I want this to be relatively interesting.

So here's an idea I had - these always seem to be people's favorite "stories" that I tell. I'm not sure how embarrassing I'm willing to get, I'll probably leave out the sexual ones that seem to be a big hit. But that's for obvious reasons.

We'll start fairly harmless and talk about 90 of the worst minutes of my life and a time when I was definitely embarrassed.

Let's travel back in time, if you don't mind, far far back into the past. It's January 2008. Yes - we're going way back in time here. For some background, I'm just winding up with my poker "career". That coupled with a series of bad decisions has left me at a whopping 270 pounds. (For reference, I weigh 225 right now and I'm an out-of-shape walrus... so this was bad news bears)

This was just at the beginning of my insane spring last year when I went on to lose 60 pounds. I had already started some of my good habits, and was even doing the insane practice of going to 6AM spinning class about two times a week. But let's not lose sight of the fact that I am completely out of shape.

Cornell offers a Muay Thai kickboxing club. I figure, oh, what the hell, right? I love to watch the UFC and it's only a club. This will be a great way to get back in shape. I have a year of boxing experience so I know how to hold my hands the right way and throw punches the right way. This shouldn't be too bad, right?

Oh boy.

The first and only session I attended took place on a Friday evening. I showed up early and quickly noticed that the group of people who were filing in where NOT what I expected. I figured there would be some wanna-be toughguys with TapOut shirts on or something like that. Incorrect. Everyone there was rail thin - ranging from around 120-150 pounds. There was one guy who didn't fit this mold and was in really good shape and was around what I was expecting. In a dramatic turn of events, he was the only person there who didn't turn out to be a total dick.

A smarmy looking young gentleman named Quentin came over to me and introduced himself as the president of the club. He made me fill out some paperwork and it was time to train. But first let me say a few words about Quentin. Quentin was also on the polo team. He was about 6'2 and weighed about 130 pounds. And he was one of those guys who just LOOKS like a cocky motherfucker from the moment you see them

Quentin did not let me down.

So we start to "warm-up" and we're being led by Max. Everyone grabs a jump-rope and I expect this because this is what you do in fighting practice. As I previously mentioned, I'm terribly out of shape but I was still able to jump some rope. Well, jumping some rope turned into jumping rope for 10 minutes, and then 15, and finally 30 minutes. 30 straight minutes of jumping rope! That's an entire high impact workout in itself.

I'm just about dead on my feet at this point, but I keep going. Max signals for a brief stop and all I can think is "Thank God, I just might not die here today." 30 seconds later, he's like ok, here's what we're going to do. And he proceedes to jump rope 5 times, drop down to the floor into a pushup position, spring back up and continue to jump rope another 15 times. Excuse me, what?

I did what I would best guess would approximate what he did but my heart was silently whispering to me that it would not suffer any more of this nonsense without exploding on me. I didn't want to quit, because who wants to look like a bitch?

Anyway - I just went really slow while all of these super skinny cyborgs continued to kill themselves.

That passes and I'm doing ok. Neeeext up, abs. Ok, well this is never fun but at least I can catch my breath. Luckily, this was a team ab building exercise. You lock legs with your partner to support your base and each of you do crunches at the same time. Added bonus; you pass a 15 pound medicine ball back and forth between each crunch.

Can I take this opportunity to remind how out of shape I am? Oh, and my partner was Quentin.

Somehow I miraculously made it to 30 crunches. I told Quentin that I think I should stop and that I feel like I'm going to throw up. (True statement). While most normal people might consider the situation and allow it, that doesn't include Quentin. Without missing a beat, he's like, "What are you, a fucking pussy? Are you a man or are you a bitch? Quitting is what lead to you being so fucking fat in the first place. You're doing 50."

Ok, then.

I somehow did it. And then I needed some Mike time to hold my bodily fluids inside my body where they belong. Luckily, I did not puke.

Next up and final in the warmups? Pushups. Let me say again, this is ALL THE WARMUP. A one minute timer was set and we were supposed to do pushups nonstop for the entire minute. This is A LOT harder than it sounds. I think I did about two pushups. I spent the rest of the alloted time laying splayed out on the floor contemplating how glorious it would be not be alive at this very moment.

So then we do the kickboxing workout. Ha. At this point my kicks had the force of a 70 year old arthritic grandmother. But I was partnered with Max and not Quentin. Max was not a dick. There is nothing really to report here.

Finally, we had to practice some Muay Thai technique. Basically it was clinch work that included using and breaking the Muay Thai plum, which is a handgrip you use around the other persons neck. My partner, Quentin. One of the hold-breaks involved taking your hands and sticking them in the other persons face to break the hold. Quentin automatically jumps back and says, "Break, break, stop!!" I'm thinking, what the fuck? I didn't even touch him.

Immediately..."your hands fucking stink, dude. What's wrong with you? It smells like sweat." Blah blah blah blah.

I think I wanted to murder Quentin at this point, and if someone handed me a gun I would probably be typing out this blog post from a maximum security prison.

Practice winded down after that and even though I wanted to smash Quentin's head into the wall until he stopped breathing I slunk out of there so embarrassed that I hoped beyond hope that I never saw any of these people again (luckily I did not).

I slept the entire next day.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

i <3 march

Typically, March is a great month. For one, daylight savings happens and suddenly I feel like moving off my couch past the hour of 5 pm. This is beneficial. Also it starts to get warm (ish) out and we have days like yesterday - where I find myself taking Jack for a nearly two mile walk and nearly killing him in the process. That's ok - he needs to get in shape as much as I do. Except both of us being out of shape is 100% my fault.


The best part of March, though, is the NCAA tournament... one of the greatest sporting events of the entire year. The first weekend of the NCAA tournament is nonstop action from Thursday around noon to Sunday night - and the beauty is... you never know what's going to happen.


This is the first year I have a real job and won't be able to watch all the games on Thursday and Friday. I can already imagine that my productivity is going to be down at work anyway, checking scores all day - but luckily the first round game I care about the most is Friday at 3pm, meaning that I'll get home just in time to hopefully not watch Cornell get slaughtered too badly. This is the second year in a row that my alma mater has somehow made its way into the NCAA tournament and even though they have little chance of advancing past the first round... well, it's nice to see them there just the same.


My other "alma mater", well... that's a different matter. Anything other then the championship game is a total and abject failure this year. Two years ago - they ripped my heart out in the Elite 8 when they let their lead against Georgetown completely evaporate in the closing minutes of the second half. They then proceeded to completely not show up for overtime - not hitting a basket for the first three minutes or so while Georgetown went ahead and just ran them off the floor. That one hurt.


Last year hurt worse. Preseason favorites, Tyler Hansbrough as the reigning player of the year, and the #1 overall seed going into the NCAA tournament. They cruised through to the Final 4 where they immediately went down by about 30 to Kansas in the FIRST HALF, leading Billy Packer to proclaim the game "over" with about 30 minutes left to play. (The silver lining to this is that ultimately led to him getting fired - leading to NCAA fans nationwide to jump with joy.) North Carolina came back to within 2 in the second half on an insane run that only served the purpose of getting everyone's hopes up before they finally lost by about 10.


Most schools - a final four is something to remember forever. At UNC, a loss in the final four is something you want to forget as soon as possible.


This year is the last shot for the players I have been following for years. Many of them stayed one last year just for a chance at the title they should have won last year. In the preseason, many thought they had such a strong team that they could run through the season undefeated. Injuries slowed progress along the way, but they still have a #1 seed. I'm hoping that this is the year, but every sports fan says that about their team every year until the dream is cruelly snatched away.


Well, there's always the chance that Duke can lose in the first round again...






Tuesday, March 10, 2009

People I Hate at the Gym: "Flexes in Mirror Guy"

Let's make one thing perfectly clear; I silently judge everyone I see.

Nowhere is this more evident then at the gym, where people routinely forget they are in a public forum. At least I hope that is the reason.

This will be a many multi-part series, because, well... I hate a lot of people at the gym. I figure it would be a good idea to start with my least favorite person at the gym.



The guy who flexes in the mirror at the gym is the bane of everyone's existence, can we all agree on that? If the myriad of douches who go to the gym were to form a "douchepyramid"... this individual would certainly comprise the apex.

How bad this is depends. If you happen to look over and catch a guy who could legit be a bodybuilder just happening to give a little flex in the mirror of some random muscle...whatever. It's not even mildly annoying.

On the other end of the spectrum is a guy who has no muscle definition but never comes to the gym without his wife beater on. He doesn't wear deodorant, because really... what's the fucking point? He's as white as Ron Howard but he has two diamond studs in his ear because he too hopes to one day fuck Kim Kardashian. Hey, the earrings work for Reggie Bush. He has this greasy passed over look that makes you think that he has a very difficult time making friends, but he certainly loves to work out.

You know what makes his workout even better? Flexing in the motherfucking mirror for everyone to see. I know for a fact that if I just had a hard set of benching 135 I want to bounce right up off the bench and let everyone see it. Majesty like that doesn't come around the gym very often. That's right, guy, stand up and let everyone know full well that you just obliterated the hell out of your triceps and chest.

People try to be sneaky about this but rest assured, you will be duly noted and marked forever as a gigantic douche. There is no way around this. If you think I'm the only one who is noticing this...good luck trying to chat up the hot (ok - mildly attractive girl if you're going to Ballys) on the treadmill next to you.

I think I speak for nearly everyone when I say that no one is impressed and wait until you get home in front of your bathroom mirror before you start dreaming of touching yourself.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Excuses are typically not exclusive

Excuses are a way for people to make themselves feel better about something. Typically, it's for something that they should be doing but aren't.

"I know I said I wouldn't eat sweets but that cake was my favorite kind."

"I only bought that $4000 plasma TV because it was $7000 two weeks ago."

"I only punched that monkey in the face because I didn't like the way he was looking at me. You would have done the same thing!"

As hard as it is for me to admit - I am so guilty of this. Perhaps I didn't punch any monkeys in the face (that you can get me to admit to) but I've made my fair share of excuses in the realms of saving money and diet/exercise.

I ran up so much debt in college (and particularly grad school) that I would be killing myself with it for years if I wasn't handling it so aggressively now. I make over $50,000 a year right now but it hardly seems like it. I pay anywhere from $400 to $1000 a month in credit card payments currently. I don't need to do this... it would only be around $225 or so if I made minimum payments but I want this debt off the books as soon as possible.

I don't necessarily regret the fact that I have this much debt. I went on some very nice trips and bought some very nice things that I could not afford over the last few years and I'm very glad I have them. But now that I make a good salary I can not enjoy it nearly as much as I would be able to if I didn't have the debt.

My number one excuse as I was racking it up? "I'll make enough money when I get out of school that paying this off will be no problem." As it turns out - the excuse is relatively true. I expect to be out of credit card debt in just over a year (from $12,000) but what I never managed to realize is that paying off this much debt SUCKS. Let's just hope I still have a job a year from now and I don't have to worry about being in debt this much ever again.

It's good to cover that first because while that was an excuse I made quite often when I had no money - now that I am in a position to pay off my debt I truly expect to never be in that position again. I have more pressing excuse problems...

I think the most tangible time I told myself I would never be lazy and gain weight again was when I was laying on an air mattress in a basement in Ithaca... three months left on a lease with what by then is my ex-girlfriend and she's already dating some new guy and possibly having sex with him directly above me in what used to be MY bed. On the plus side I'm back living in a place I had no intention of ever living again and wishing upon all wishes that I was back in North Carolina where it was warm and sunny and I had good friends.

Now - you might think that this was such a negative experience (which it certainly was) that I would never eevvvver allow myself to get out of shape again. Well - to a degree you'd be right but you'd also be wrong.

I did manage to get myself in good shape... in fact, last summer I was under 210 pounds (barely under is still under!). I was well on my way to getting down to my goal weight of 185. But Jack and I were starting to get lonely in Syracuse (I can only snuggle with him so much) and I started dating again. I told myself (very firmly!)... you already learned your lesson. Don't put on any relationship weight.

Well - fast forward six months (six lovely wonderful amazing months if you happen to be reading this, darling) and I've gained twenty pounds. Not the end of the world but not ideal. I've had many excuses along the way with the most prominent being my favorite that I use every year all the time..."It's hard to go in the winter. It's dark out by the time I get home and then I don't want to do anything."

This is a true statement, but that doesn't make it valid. I waste so much time at home browsing random internet sites and wasting time on the internet in general that I could easily take the 90 minutes per day going to the gym requires and not miss that internet time at all. It all boils down to me being too lazy to do and justifying it with some stupid excuse.

I know a few facts that are 100% true:

1) I only lose weight when I'm exercising. Diet alone just won't do it. But they are related. I only tend to eat healthy and stay eating healthy if I'm working out.

2) I can't keep the motivation to keep going to the gym unless I'm lifting on a regular basis. Going and just doing cardio just can't keep my motivation high enough.

I just found this last fact out recently but it's startling to me how it hasn't dawned on me earlier. From last January to last April I was lifting four times a week without fail (didn't miss a single workout!) and surprise surprise this led to me being thinner and in the best shape I'd been in years. Try to go "just cardio" and bad things happen. Another excuse.

Back to lifting tonight and this time we hope it's going to hold up. With daylight savings my favorite excuse is no longer valid and I also have to work off my post viral clearance belly.

If I can't get this done, frankly, there is no excuse.