Wednesday, May 28, 2008

HELP - What do I Wear in Wisconsin Weather?

I have no idea how to pack for this trip! I completely forgot what the weather in Wisconsin is like this time of year! And Humboldt County weather weirdness has left me scarred for life! Somebody help me!

What are you people wearing these days?

Speaking of which, yesterday my boss gave me some "advice", which was basically twofold, basically unsolicited (OK, sort of solicited, but not REALLY), and basically contradictory, well at least I think so. But here, this is what he basically said, and YOU decide what it is:

'First, you are a bright young woman, and you are very skilled. You will go far in life, if you just have some confidence in yourself. Just make decisions, and don't worry so much if they are the right ones or not. You can't make everyone happy, and you WILL make mistakes, so just have the confidence to make your own decisions and then go with them.'

So that is cool, right? I like that advice. But then he said this:

'Some future advice you can either take or leave is this: this is a professional office, and you generally don't dress appropriately. I know I have been lax about this, because I have never before said anything about it, and I know that I often wear jeans into the office, but you dress weird, and people have commented to me about it, so if you think you are going to go far in life you need to start dressing more like other people.'

OK, so those weren't his EXACT words, not all of them, but I am serious that this is what he said. He didn't necessarily use the word "weird" but might as well have.

So now I'm confused, am I supposed to make my own decisions and go with them, or am I supposed to do what other people think I should do when it comes to how I dress? Or maybe the first advice is not applicable to the second advice? Oh man oh man oh man, what do I do?

P.S. If you saw how many, if not most, people in Humboldt dress, you might be a little offended by this advice. I was at first, but now I decided to take it as a compliment. And I also decided not to change it. I like it, so there! How's that for confidence, baby?

BUT SERIOUSLY WHAT SHOULD I WEAR IN WISCONSIN?

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

No, I'm Working, Really

This is me, to a "T" - even down to the purple bag!

natalie dee
nataliedee.com

This comic is titled "it's the thought that counts but not really". Yup.

But seriously, I'm working! I was just taking a little break to read webcomics. For FIVE minutes. Stop judging me.

(I'm coming to Wisconsin tomorrow night!)

Kinetic Sculpture Race - I am Addicted

The 2008 Kinetic Sculpture Grand Championship was this past weekend, starting Friday at the Arcata Plaza and ending Monday on Ferndale's Main Street.

That doesn't mean much to you Wisconsin Folks, but I will dare say that it was way cooler than Bratfest! (I realize that is blasphemous, but I LOVE Bratfest, so keep that in mind, OK? I am bummed that I have to miss Bratfest now that I no longer live in Wisconsin. I thought about Bratfest at least twice last weekend. But Kinetic Sculpture Race is still cooler.)

Anyway, I will definitely post pictures when I can, but if you are just dying to see how amazing the Kinetic Sculpture Race is, Google it. I heard one person describe it as a triathlon for artists. Doesn't that sound amazing? Because it is! So check it out.

In other news, today is my last day at the Festival office, at least for a while, and tomorrow evening I fly out of here, destination Madison. And man, am I anxious/excited about it!

See y'all soon! xoxoxoxo

UPDATE: Here is a link to the Wikipedia entry about the Kinetic Sculpture Race (apparently it is "also known as" the "Triathlon of the Art World". Awesome.) Link. YouTube also has some videos, as do I, but mine will appear later, probably after I get back from Wisconsin.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Actual Number of the Temperature Means Nothing

IT IS FREEZING HERE!

OK, it's not actually "freezing" - it is mid-50's, which is the same temperature it usually is. Apparently though, temperatures here are meaningless. It is the same 10 degree range year round (with the exception of the "HEAT WAVE" of last week - it was 85 degrees people, that is HARDLY a heat wave for anywhere else, but on the north Pacific coast it was HOT; and with 100% humidity it was terribly sticky here for a day or two - it was brilliant and I loved it - we went swimming in the ocean and laid on towels in the sand and were like actual normal beach-going people) and that 10 degree range can feel either gloriously warm on your skin or bitterly cold, depending on the status of the air, i.e. lovely cool breeze vs. bone-chilling wind.

So, my point is, temperatures here are meaningless.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Sugar Comas and Indian Music Videos

5/21

There's an Indian restaurant on the corner. It's modest at best. They call themselves, appropriately, Indian Cuisine, and have delicious samosa's and naan and their special "hot milk tea". They always have Indian music videos playing on the flat screen TV they have mounted on the wall, which are fascinating to watch while I wait for my channa masala.

Also, the "Daily Specials" on the marker board haven't changed in months, maybe not ever.

5/22

I believe I'm going into a sugar coma, and it's all the fault of chocolate cake and caramel cheesecake and sweetened ice tea and coworkers with no self control who encourage bad choices.

OK, fine, it's my fault. MY FAULT, OK?

But seriously, that cake was as big as my face - and I have a big face. Good thing I shared it with my coworker or else I would be a goner. (Never mind that by sharing I mean she swapped half of her caramel cheesecake for half of my chocolate cake.)

I think I might need to go take a nap now. It's a good thing we have a "napping chair" here (and by that I mean one of our board members took a nap in a chair here yesterday afternoon).

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Office Planter, Bus Work (or Working on the Bus), and Web Comic(s) - But Not in that Particular Order

5/20/08

Dreary drizzly day. Took the 9:05 AM bus into work. Going to Wisconsin next week. Hard to focus on other stuff.

5/21/08

So the sun's out today. That's always nice. Got on the bus, and heard a voice say "Hi Naomi!" Turned around, and there was my coworker. Sat next to her and talked about work and stuff. Let her know how it all works, as I'm passing the torch onto her. I wonder if we can say our workday started at 8:30 (the time we started "talking shop" on the bus)...

*

So, there's a planter in my office, located next to the refrigerator, where a garbage can used to be. People apparently don't look very carefully at it as they pass by, and just dump garbage in the planter. Which then motivated me to make a sign that says:

"This is not so much a garbage can as it is a planter. Thanks for your time."

Wonder if it will work.

*

Also, this is funny (and sometimes how I/all office workers feel - well sort of, but in a bit more twisted way):

toothpaste for dinner
toothpastefordinner.com

Also this is definitely me (sometimes):

natalie dee
nataliedee.com

But not today. So don't worry about it!

Thursday, May 15, 2008

It's HOT!, plus Riding the Bus

It's definitely in the mid-70's here in Eureka, which is so not like Humboldt County any time of the year. And it's only going to get warmer according to The Weather People.

Yeah, I'm enjoying it. It's funny to hear people "complain" about it though. Maybe their lives are just so good they have nothing else to complain about ... but I sort of doubt it.

So, I have been riding the bus into work in the mornings, which has been truly wonderful, because:
a) I get to read a book instead of fight traffic and/or
b) I get to stare out the window and look at the lovely bay
c) it's actually much cheaper to ride the bus right now than to buy gas that is well over $4 per gallon
d) I'm helping the environment
e) I have a stress free commute (OK, this is similar to reasons "a" and "b", but whatever, I like stress free, OK?)
f) I don't have to try and find a parking spot in downtown Eureka, which is only two-hour parking if there is no spot in the lot, which means I spend all day moving my car around every two hours, which is LAAAAME, plus I have forgotten several times, and a $20 parking ticket is not nice.

So, there it is. Why I love the bus.

But this morning I had one of those, what do you say, Uncomfortable Bus Moments. You know, the ones where you don't know how to act, or not act, what to say, or if you just ignore it altogether.

I went the ignore route.

I don't know if the man in the seat next to me was talking to me, himself, or a tiny cell phone chip implanted in his head, but all of a sudden the relatively normal looking guy I sat down next to starts mumbling angry expletives under his breath. I didn't feel like they were meant for me, especially since when I glanced out the window he stopped and just sat there looking like nothing was going on. I couldn't make out anything that he was saying except the "f-bomb" and the "s-word," but what I could understand is that his tone was very angry.

So, I'm trying to focus on my book, but it's hard. And then I realize that I am actually letting this guy get to me, and I'm feeling really hot in the face, like the feeling you get when someone is yelling at you. So I tell myself, inside my head, of course - otherwise I wouldn't have thought this was weird behavior - that I REFUSE to let this guy get to me, that I REJECT his poison.

It worked. I felt much calmer. I considered putting my ear phones in and listening to some music, but we were getting pretty close to my stop by this point, and I also worried that it might be really obvious if I suddenly whipped out my MP3 player. So, I just ignored the guy.

I don't know how I'm supposed to treat this kind of a thing. Just like I haven't figured out if I'm "supposed to" ignore homeless people or say hi to them. Saying hi to them often gets them following me asking me for money. It makes me feel uncomfortable and guilty. I help when I can, but I worry about getting taken advantage of too. There is quite a drug problem in Humboldt County, and no, I'm not talking about weed. It's hard to differentiate between the honest-hearted down-and-out homeless guy and the tweaker who is just trying to get a fix. And really, who am I to judge anyway? I'm just trying to go to work!

Anyway, I still love the bus either way. And excuse me if I sound naive, which I'm sure I do, but Wisconsin just doesn't have the homeless problem that northern California (all of California?) has. It's not like I have a problem with the homeless people, but I do have a problem with the systems in place that force people to live on the streets and beg for their livelihood. But that rant is for another time.

By the time I got done writing this, the weather increased 10 degrees. It's hot, y'all! My hair is rebelling, i.e. frizzy as all get-out (I don't even know what the phrase "frizzy as all get-out" means). But that rant is for another time too.

California Supreme Court Legalizes Same-Sex Marriage

In the California news:

http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_9269719

California Supreme Court legalizes same-sex marriage
By Howard Mintz
Mercury News
Article Launched: 05/15/2008 10:11:17 AM PDT

A sharply divided California Supreme Court today legalized same-sex marriage, an historic ruling that will allow gay and lesbian couples across the state to wed as soon as next month and inflame the social, political and moral debate over gay unions.

In a 4-3 ruling written by Chief Justice Ronald George, the Supreme Court struck down California laws that restrict marriage to heterosexual couples, finding that it is unconstitutional to deprive gays and lesbians of the equal right to walk down the aisle with a marriage license in hand.

The California and Massachussetts Supreme Courts are now the only top courts in the country to uphold the right of gay couples to marry.

"The California Constitution properly must be interpreted to guarantee this basic civil right to all Californians, whether gay or heterosexual, and to same-sex couples as well as to opposite-sex couples," the court observed in a 121-page decision.

The reaction was immediate.

A spokesman for San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom sent a simple e-mail to his press staff: "We won."

The ruling marks a watershed moment in the conflict over gay marriage, with the most influential state Supreme Court in the nation, dominated by Republican appointees, ruling in favor of gay rights advocates in the state with the largest gay population. California was considered a crucial battleground for civil rights groups, which have lost a number of major legal challenges in recent years in other states such as New York, Washington and New Jersey.

The decision is sure to spark a furor that could spill into the ballot box in November, when there is a strong chance voters will be weighing a ballot initiative to change the state Constitution to outlaw same-sex marriage. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger previously announced his opposition to the ballot initiative, and reiterated his opposition today.

"I respect the court's decision and as governor, I will uphold its ruling," Schwarzenegger said within minutes of the ruling. "Also, as I have said in the past, I will not support an amendment to the constitution that would overturn this state Supreme Court ruling."

The three dissenters in today's ruling argued that it should be up to the voters or Legislature to sanction gay marriage, not the courts. A divided state appeals court reached that conclusion in 2006 when it upheld the ban on gay marriage, but that ruling was overturned by today's Supreme Court decision.

Justice Marvin Baxter, in one dissent, warned that the court had overstepped its judicial powers by overturning existing marriage laws.

"There is no deeply rooted tradition of same-sex marriage, in the nation or in this state," Baxter wrote, adding there is no constitutional right to gay marriage "because marriage is, as it always has been, the right of a woman and unrelated man to marry each other."

George was joined in the majority decision by two other Republican justices, Kathryn Mickle Werdegar and Joyce Kennard. Justice Carlos Moreno, the lone Democratic appointee on the court, also joined George's ruling. Baxter, Ming Chin and Carol Corrigan dissented.

The Supreme Court's intervention has been inevitable since February 2004, when San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom ignited a national outcry by giving same-sex couples the short-lived right to marry at City Hall, a move that attracted lines of couples to City Hall steps each day. The Supreme Court quickly put a halt to Newsom's edict, invalidating thousands of marriage licenses - the justices found that Newsom had overstepped his authority by violating state law, but invited a broad legal challenge to California's ban on gay marriage.

San Francisco city officials, civil rights groups and gay couples then filed a series of lawsuits challenging a state family code section that restricts marriage to heterosexual couples, and also a 2000 voter-approved ballot initiative, Proposition 22, that defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

The lawsuits argued that the state is denying gay couples equal treatment. One of the leading cases to back their cause was a 60-year-old California Supreme Court ruling that struck down the state's ban on interracial marriage, at the time the first such decision in the United States.

California officials have defended the current law, despite the fact that both former Attorney General Bill Lockyer and current Attorney General Jerry Brown do not oppose gay marriage. State lawyers have argued that California's strong domestic partners laws essentially already provide equal benefits to same-sex couples, eliminating the need to tamper with the traditional definition of marriage laws.

Conservative groups opposed to gay marriage have taken a stronger view, arguing that the state has a crucial interest in restricting marriage to heterosexual couples for social cohesion and because they maintain marriage is rooted in procreation. Throughout the court case, they have vowed to turn to the voters if the current laws are overturned, a strategy that has worked in other states.

A San Francisco trial judge initially found the state's gay marriage ban unconstitutional, but that ruling was overturned by the San Francisco-based 1st District Court of Appeal in 2006.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

My Favorite Park (in Pictures)

Sometimes there are no words, and then I show pictures. Here is one such time, and I present: Redwood Park, which is only blocks from where I live. This is one of the places I never tire of hiking.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Good Times (A Photo Album)

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Learning How to Make Glass Art

This is how I feel about playing with glass last night after we went for a lovely walk at the marsh at twilight:

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My hand is getting steadier as I turn the glass (Learning how to turn glass in the flame with a steady hand is the single most important skill one can learn in order to have success at this - and it's a lot harder than you might think! I've taken to turning pencils while I go for walks and sit in the car, for practice.) and I'm getting the hang of the loops (pendant bales) and I am just about able to make my own pendant from start to finish! I can't wait to show you pictures of my little line of progress, from atrocious pendants to hopefully beautiful ones!

Yay for getting to learn how to work with glass and make things out of it! It's addicting... like everything else when you have an addictive personality.

I can't believe I didn't try this before!

Monday, May 12, 2008

I Will Be in Madison in 2 1/2 Weeks...

...and this is how I feel about it:

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(That means I feel REALLY good about it, FYI.)

Thursday, May 8, 2008

You Can Buy One-of-a-Kind Art on eBay

Click links below to view some of Mike's art glass on eBay right now:

Jellyfish Pendant #1

Jellyfish Pendant #2


Jellyfish Pendant #3

Until now, these jellyfish pendants have only been available in local galleries and shops, where they fly off the shelves they are so popular.

Click more links below to see some of Mike's other pendants we have up right now:

Asymmetrical Dichroic Fractal Borosilicate (Pyrex) Pendant

Sideways Oval Dichroic Fractal Borosilicate (Pyrex) Pendant

Lily Pad Flower Millefiore Borosilicate Pendant


Round Dichroic Fractal Borosilicate Pendant


Round Dichroic Fractal Borosilicate Pendant #2


Lot of 14 Lampworked Beads and Pendants

And then of course, here are some of Mike's marbles up for sale:

Optic Flower Millefiore Borosilicate (Pyrex) Marble

Inside Out Dichroic Borosilicate Marble

Inside out Dichroic Contemporary Marble


Seven other marbles already sold/auctions are over. We plan on putting up more auctions shortly. I'm working on more pendants in the moment. Mike is at work making more marbles, or so I'm told. I'll let you know when I get my own techniques down and something I make is worth listing on eBay.

Oh, and I GUARANTEE YOU, if you buy one of his jellyfish pendants, you will be really glad you did! (I am shameless, I know, hitting up my own friends and family this way. Oh well!)

Saturday, May 3, 2008

My Favorite California Place - A Photo Album

We went on a little road trip last week down to Mendocino County, which is the next county down the coast below Humboldt, and brought back some pictures and memories. We went down to hear a favorite band play, and managed to get Mike's art into two high-end art and glass galleries in the area while we were there. So that is super awesome.

Here are pictures from the trip:

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It was chilly the afternoon we got in to Fort Bragg, where we stayed:

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This is Glass Beach, which has an interesting history. All these rocks are actually pieces of glass:
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It was much warmer and sunnier the next day:

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Standing on the footbridge looking at our motel:

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The village of Mendocino:
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