Get Back: part, the second

You’d better read Part the First first, or you’ll be even more confused than usual on this blog.

Pamela Anderson X Ray

Back in the days before cellphones (although Alexander Graham Bell had been invented, parts of what we considered to be the civilized world were still on a party line, and this was one of them) breaking your back when you’re three miles from home down a back road, with no way to get home but to climb back on the horse and ride it, was what could be considered something of a challenging situation, not to overstate the case.

Fortunately, Abby the quarterhorse, who was colloquially known around the barn as Flabigail, was not the kind of horse that notices her rider has fallen off and then high-tails it for the plains of Alberta. No indeed. Flabigail was the kind of horse who notices her rider has fallen off and then stops dead and attempts to cram as much grass into her gullet as possible before she has to go back to work. That horse would stop halfway out a burning barn for a mouthful of hay, and she was never what you’d consider “malnourished” in the first place.

Fat Horse

So catching the horse was less a matter of standing up and chasing her as it was rolling over to the ditch, uprooting a handful of crab grass, and waving it in the air until she focused in my direction. Mission accomplished, the next task was climbing back on, given that it was clear I’d be unable to walk. Unfortunately, climbing onto a 16:2 horse when you’ve got a broken back isn’t really measurably easier than walking three miles, but I’d wasted half an hour trying before I figured that out. With a lucky combination of climbable rail fence and helpful passer by, I managed to mostly drag myself up by the strength of my arms while using the fence as a ladder I climbed backwards, and assumed a graceful position lying in agony along the horse’s neck for the slow plod home, whereupon I called my mother on the, yes, party line, who drove over to the farm and took me to the doctor, who sent me to the hospital for X-rays and expected me to walk, they really WERE cruel in those days, gave me a lot of weird tests including that funny one where they hit your knees with the little mallet and one where he scratched my feet with a nail (felt like a nail on the left, like a q-tip on the right) and explained that I had cracked two vertebrae, that I had done some minor but probably permanent nerve damage, and that I’d simply have to tough it out.

No fancy body casts for me. No crutches. Not so much as a note, so when I discovered I could only go up stairs sideways (couldn’t lift my knees in front of me) and was consequently late for all my classes that were one or more floors apart, I got detention. And then the teachers got a piece of my mother’s mind, and suddenly that wasn’t a problem anymore.

So.

So, that was the last time my back gave me trouble. And that was neither yesterday, nor the day before. Hard to believe, but true.

Until.

Until…nothing. It was quite recent, but whatever it was, it wasn’t anything; which is to say: a phenomenon manifested, a phenomenon almost entirely consistent with my earlier injury, except I haven’t fallen off any horses lately. I haven’t fallen of a horse in FAR TOO LONG, in fact! I’m relatively sure that the doctor would find nothing, but the paranormalist would find a great deal of interest in my case. And you can insert any cheap jokes you like at this point.

In any case, suddenly, out of the blue (indigo? turquoise? what kind of blue does it come out of? surely not the same kind that porn is named for, or does it and if so is there a connection? because a lot of those moves look like they’d be quite hard on your back, now that I think of it, particularly the one with the piano) I was in similarly excruciating pain, although this time I’d been smart enough to have it strike at home.

Well, what were its options, really? I’m either at home, at the web cafe, or at the Irish Heather, and if it had happened there I’d simply have called for more whiskey until I couldn’t feel the pain anymore. So it struck at home, and for a period of about five weeks I had to pick my legs up one by one to get into the bathtub or cross my legs or put on my socks, and as for trucking this whopper of a laptop all over town in the backpack as I was wont to do, well I just didn’t wont to do it anymore. And why not? Because it wasn’t possible, that’s why.

And so, time passed. Unfortunately, the bad back thing, whatever it was, did not, and going to the doctor and getting X-rays again got me exactly what it got me the first time, although this time it came from a very nice lady doctor with very unfortunate taste in decor (Dolores Umbridge, MD) and not from a very brusque, bearded Englishman with no time for silly girls who fall off horses. So, the pain continued.

So, I did what I always do when I have a problem. I whined about it on the internet.

Those of you who mock this do not understand the power of social media. The power of social media is specifically the power to give me what I want when I’m whining, as even the most cursory glance over this blog would tell you. I whine about my header on Valleywag and Matt Mullenweg fixes my blog. I whine about my ancient, stuttering computer and five people on three different continents pitch in to buy me a new one. I whine that my power cord is dead and soon I have a positive lineup of free power cords, enough to knit my own computer if only I knew how. I’m sure there are instructions on Make somewhere.

So, I whined about my bad back. I whined on Twitter. I whined on Facebook. I whined on the blog. I whined in the forum. And since I added Getsocial buttons to all of those posts, I’m sure that somehow I’ve managed to whine on Stumbleupon, Digg, Reddit, and any number of other platforms of which I am not even a member. All of which is to say, if you think you’re a whiner, sweetie, you’re not even in it!

And, as always, someone I know from online talked to someone else online, and before you knew it (well, you didn’t know it till I told you, did you, and we haven’t even gotten to that part of the story yet, so you don’t even know it yet, although you may suspect, for lo, my blog has a discerning and intelligent readership) my problem was solved, and that for free.

Which is about all I can afford lately, but here’s how it went down:

I whined. Right, we’ve covered that part. Well, Cathy Browne is not one to take whining lying down, so she (if only to shut me up) contacted Coast Mobile Massage, whom I’d met at the ING Tweetup, which was truly one of the best tweetups of, like, all time, it containing not only many interesting people I hadn’t already met at five other events that week, but also an open bar, free sushi, and free massages, of which I availed myself, you better believe!

And my back did, indeed, feel significantly better after ten or fifteen minutes of chair massage, which is by the way, way cooler than chair dancing. Chair dancing will never be cool, and no way is that good for your back. You see that Numa Numa guy? Does he look like an avatar of Apollo to you? I rather think not.

Apollo Belvedere, but I don't see any vodka in this shot at all

So. I felt slightly better for a number of days, and then my back decided that was enough of that and decided to regress. Six weeks and no progress is a long time to be picking your knees up by hand, my friends, so I whined. Oh, right, we covered that.

And the next thing I knew, Coast Mobile Massage was hitting me up on Twitter, saying they knew about my issue and they thought a good session of proper table massage would be just the thing, in which we were as of one mind. Well, we wouldn’t have been, as I am a massage skeptic, except that the chair massage had unquestionably helped, and I am far too poor to say no to valuable services which are offered to me for free. Although perhaps auditing sessions are an exception; L Ron and I have never seen eye to eye on the Thetans in volcanos thingy. So, even though I had a masseur as a roommate for eight months and was daily lectured on the benefits of massage, holistic healing, and a raw vegan diet (or maybe because of it, now that I think of it; that info about the goose shit in rice paddies was just way more than I needed to hear over lunch or, really, ever) I was resistant to the orthodoxy of the massage-industrial complex.

No more. Hell, I’d even PAY for this if I had to!

And I don’t say that every day. I don’t even say that every decade, ask anyone I owe money to. To whom I owe money. Whatever. JustFuckingGoogleIt.

And so, it came to pass that I got a proper massage. And by that I don’t mean one of those trendy aromatherapized, coloured-lights and heated rocks rubdowns from a male model who’s just biding his time till Calvin Klein takes note (not that, if you’re offering, I’d turn you down. Try me); I mean the kind that involves ninety minutes of being stretched as effectively as if you were on a rack, except that on a rack you don’t have the diversion of wondering if the platform will collapse under the pressure.

Apparently, as the masseuse [update; it was Katherine, and very grateful to her I am, too!] was “smoothing out the deep tissues” or whatever it is that they’re doing when my back is turned on them and I’m staring at the tweed carpet thinking a shag would at least be more interesting to stare at for ninety minutes, she could actually see my spine getting longer. I was all creased up in there, somehow. And now I’m not, because after she finished, I got off the table feeling not a little contused and dented and somewhat grumbly (we have previously established, have we not, that complaining is my default? yes) I got dressed, bent over to tie my shoes, and nearly snapped my back in two bolting upright as I realized I’d just bent literally double to tie my shoes without the slightest pain or difficulty. That nasty catch that I had been experiencing for the past six weeks went into the ether, buh-bye, and simply has never come back.

Elvis can have it.

And, according to Coastal Massage, you can have 20% off if you mention this blog post when you book with them. Which you should do, because otherwise I will start whining again, this time about the loss of my social media pulling power, and nobody wants to hear me whine, now, do they?

Do ya, punk?

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in the name of Cthulhu and for the love of all that is holy has anyone seen this laptop cord????

Technical difficulties; the story of my life. And bitching about them publicly seems to be the key to success in my life. They were supposed to have ended nearly a year ago, when I arranged to buy Eve, my fantastic new (lightly used, only driven on Sundays, albeit by a Vangroover singleton, not a little old lady) laptop, a Dell Inspiron. It has bells! It has whistles! It has the machine that goes PING!

It has a dead laptop cord.

And, of course, they are available for sale. For almost exactly half of what I paid for the computer in the first place.

I went to ReBoot, my favorite little DTES computer bits and bobs shop. They were very sweet and went through all their cords and turned up blank. I went to FreeGeek, which I dare not do by myself since they’ve probably read what I’ve said about them (repeatedly, over the last three years) and would off me if I walked in without escort, so I got an intimidatingly-tall escort and away we went to the retail shop of Freegeek, where we were told “You want a laptop cord? You’ll have to wait till So-and-So gets back. He’ll be back in a half an hour. Maybe.” No, here’s the box, you can look through it yourself. No you can leave the model here and we’ll see if we have it. Nada.

I believe the technical term for this is “par for the course.” I do believe they mean well. I do believe they have a wonderful mission. And I have never, not once, seen them deliver that mission to anyone on the Downtown Eastside, although I have frequently offered my ear to my friends who have to vent about their experiences therewith.

I support them, I really do, I just wish they didn’t routinely suck.

Anyhoodlewinklewhatever, we rooted around for far too long anyway and So-And-So never showed up and they didn’t have the cord in any of the boxes we could get our paws on, nor did they seem to have any index of anything they had. Or if they did, they weren’t telling.

Which brings us to YOU!

Knowing as many people in the tech scene as I do, I have reasonable faith that one or more of you has, in that inevitable pile of plastic-coated macrame under your desk, a cord exactly like this except for the fact that it, you know, works. It is, of course, unlike every other cord on the face of the planet (certainly different from all of mine, and who thought we’d ever see the day when I have an extensive collection of laptop cords, eh? and a fine lot of good it has done me).

And the netbook I’ve borrowed from my friend Cathy Browne is, of course, unable to upload the pictures of the laptop cord, so I’ve had to wait a week and a half until Roland had the brilliant idea to take the chip and upload the pix to Flickr from a computer that could do that, which is really something I should have thought of myself, except that experiencing the internet by essentially looking through a straw has a way of limiting one’s vision over time.

And now, to the sexiest centerfold you’ll ever see (assuming you’re a retro-tech perv who doesn’t get out much):

Back of the brick of the power cord

Back of the brick of the power cord

Super duper closeup action of laptop cord brick wooo, exciting!

Super duper closeup action of laptop cord brick wooo, exciting!

and this is what it looks like supine. Did you know that word, supine?

and this is what it looks like supine. Did you know that word, supine?

and another aspect:

the pointy bit Tab A which goes into Hole B in the computer

the pointy bit Tab A which goes into Hole B in the computer

Three the hard way, the bit that goes into the brick

Three the hard way, the bit that goes into the brick

And that’s all she wrote, except that there’s a reward for the first person to solve this problem for me. I dunno what, but it’ll be nice, I promise. And unusual, considering the source. I ain’t got nuthin usual. I’m all out of it.

Vancouver International Film Festival Contest

]Vancouver International Film Festival Contest

You’ve got ONE day, Vangroover. Contest ends tomorrow.
What are you doing sitting at home when you could be at the Vancouver International Film Festival, watching movies that the nasty greedheads you know and love from Entourage never got their filthy paws on? How can you be there? Easy:

You win my contest, you get tickets. Two tickets to one of these films FOUR tix to the film of your choice. (not includig galas, not including sold out performances, not including getting the star’s phone number; you’re on your own for getting those) Simple, right?

How do you enter? You leave a tasteless joke in the Comments section right here, preferably a tasteless Hollywood joke. Or, if you can’t think of or Google a tasteless joke that nobody else has told yet, you can just leave a plain old vanilla comment. But tasteless jokes get automatic priority in my completely slanted system. Tasteless jokes featuring Cthulhu count triple!

We’re talking Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus. You want to see Heath Ledger‘s last (and possibly best) movie, don’t you? Support the twisted genius of Terry Gilliam and piss off major studios while you’re at it.

We’re talking The Agony and the Ecstasy of Phil Spector. Who doesn’t want to know what twisted, murderous mania lurks under that hideous fright wig? A man who is capable of convincing himself that THAT looks good is capable of anything.

(sorry, the Beeb took down the trailer and it’s not on YouTube yet. You KNOW what you must do, little soldiers)

We’re talking Beyond the Game, World of Warcraft made actually interesting for non-WoWers. I just want to see if this can be done in the first place, really.

We’re talking…hell, just READ this:

Empire State Building Murders (France,
73 min.) <EMPIR>William Karel (The World According
to Bush) has created something entirely
new. He’s “mixed” scenes from more than 50 classic
film noir and recruited the very much alive
Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall, Mickey Rooney and
Cyd Charisse to play along from the point of view
of today, adding whole new layers of meaning.
Ben Gazarra leads us through this seductive maze.

I dunno about you, but frankly Ben Gazarra can lead me through a seductive maze any time. It’s Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid meets … well, every film referenced in Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid. Trailer is here: Empire State Building Murders

and we are talking about The Great Contemporary Art Bubble, which is basically every story John Richardson ever wrote for Vanity Fair magazine, in documentary format. Watch Damien Hurst sell dead critters for more digits than you’re accountant has ever seen! Watch ostentatious Eurotrash frenemies air kiss in Monte Carlo auction houses! Watch…the auction audience, trying to spot the prostitutes.

Let the Great Tasteless Joke Contest for Vancouver International Film Festival Tickets begin!

Out to Lunch with Emme Rogers and Raul Pacheco

Emme Rogers and Hummingbird604 at Elixir

Emme Rogers and Raul Pacheco at Elixir

I don’t know about you, but I’ve always enjoyed lunching with my imaginary friends. They never sass you, they’re not expensive to feed, and they always tell you that you look mahvelous, dahling. And so it was with great anticipation that arranged to take in the swanky jazz brunch at Elixir Bistro in the Opus Hotel with two of my best friends, only one of whom is imaginary.

Can you tell which one just by looking?

Yes, right there in the heart of deepest, darkest Yaletown, Raul Pacheco and I entertained one of Vangroover’s most popular imaginary friends, Emme Rogers, everyone’s favorite poster girl for post-tomboy twentysomething singletonhoodnikism. As imaginary people go (they go anywhere they want; how could you stop them, eh? Answer me that!) Emme manifests a little more manifestly than most, as you can see from the photograph above. She manifested right on time (I, of course, was late, for entrance-making purposes and also because, well, I’m always late; hey, I was born a month late, so I figure I’m 29 days early for everything) and settled into a cozy banquette seat in the smaller, plusher room away from the main bistro floor. Sort of a posh, padded snuffbox of a room: there was velvet. There may have been ormolu. But I don’t actually know what ormolu is, so I can’t say for sure (isn’t it an endangered species?).

After a brief discussion of why everyone in the neighborhood seems to dress for cocktails when it’s still breakfast time (Pucci halters and hotpants?), we scan the menu interestedly. The coffee manifests immediately, always the sign of a quality brunch establishment to my mind, and it is, by the way, excellent. We ordered, and it was not long before I heard my favorite words.

Not, “Johnny Depp would like your number.”

No: “The chef would like to send you something special.” Why yes, YES, the chef may indeed send over a platter of amuse gueles: fried bread with vanilla-infused maple syrup, wild berries and creme fraiche, and spiced hot chocolate (one of my very favoritest things, which you can rarely get in this too-WASPY city), and all excellent.

Then the gossip is served, cold. I ask about a typical week in Emme’s life. She replies that there is typically nothing the same from one week to another in the life of an imaginary girl-about-town. Summer has been dead quiet for, as everyone knows, Vancouver shuts down in the summer; everyone is either at their cabin in the Gulf Islands/up at Whistler or pretending to be at their cabin in the Gulf Islands/up at Whistler. Emme’s looking forward to the Fall, when the parties start up again and the “duelling vacation game” stops.

“I do love the big, fancy parties,” she says, “but I can’t completely relax at those. It’s when I’m in someone’s back yard or at a great party standing at the sink, washing dishes and just chatting, that I can really relax.”

“In fact, I really enjoy downtimes with my nieces and I’m taking them out for a fancy tea. We’ll wear boas and tiaras. Oh yeah, the whole nine yards! That’s actually my big event for the season, the one I’m looking forward to most.”

Awwww. I don’t have the heart to tell her Debrett’s says you can’t wear a tiara unless you’re married. Why do I even know these things?

Brunch arrives, and is delicious. I’m a sucker for salade Nicoise, and I’ve never seen or consumed a better one than the one at Elixir. Behold:

Elixir Salad Nicoise

Elixir Salad Nicoise

Part II Coming Soon

Housekeeping

Unicorns, bitches!

I’m doing a little housekeeping in my meatspace space, otherwise known as offline, otherwise known as Operation Global Media Domination HQ, otherwise known as my office.

Now, originally my office was in my apartment, which looks like this, only without the vintage Burgess Meredith:

Burgess Meredith on the Twilight Zone

Then, one glorious day, I got a slot at Workspace, which looked like this:

Duane Storey Workspace Interior during Blogathon

but now Workspace is no more. Indeed, there I was, sitting at my desk, typing away (or more accurately I was surfing Gawker and monitoring drunken spats among my Followees on Twitter) at one in the morning, when a cheery Asian fellow walked in and started unplugging the routers and pulling the art down off the walls.

Normally, this would not bother me, but I quite liked that art and besides, I was only there because I was acting as a fierce, even vicious replacement for a guard dog, keeping Workspace safe for all the bloggers of Gastown, and I thought I should at least try to earn my keep.

I raised an eyebrow.

Apparently, I do so in a very menacing fashion, for he immediately began apologizing.

Aha, he’s Canadian! I thought. I’m very used to intimidating Canadian men (ask any of them): the only ones I can’t seem to intimidate are Albanians, but I think that’s just because they are too thick to understand the danger.

I got some mumbled excuse about “doing a changeover.” Well, sure, I’ve only been here a few weeks, I thought. Maybe they DO bring in fresh art in the middle of the night on Tuesdays. How would I know?

And so, because I am Canadian and, thus, good at rationalizing when faced with a polite young man in techie-approved cargo shorts, I let it go.

Well, almost.

In fact, I hit up the only cop I know on Twitter, which has the benefit that you can use it while the perp is still in the room and he probably thinks you’re just reposting a lolcat or some damn thing. Alas, the cop was away on vacation (and why doesn’t 911 have text input? Eh? Wouldn’t that be darn handy? Sure as tootin’ it would be!) and so my tweets went into the void.

More than usual, I mean.

So I go out to the kitchen to make myself a coffee, to find yet another guy packing up the espresso machine.

This was getting serious. You Do! Not! Fuck! With my right to espresso.

So Yet Another Guy was, in fact, someone I’d already met, again in the middle of the night at Workspace, and when I did he seemed quite startled to find me there. He told me he was the owner, and then farted around here and there, not doing any work, but also not settling down and doing any thing at all, just sort of haunting the place and keeping an eye on me. I outlasted him that time, and left with the dawn.

So I have, at this point: one stranger dude and one “I’m the owner. No, really” dude, and I’m getting a “this isn’t the whole truth” vibe off both of them. So what do I do?

I give them the espresso test.

“Gee, I was kinda hoping to make myself a coffee,” I say, wistful-like, for if there’s one thing any Vancouverite can sympathize with, it’s caffeine withdrawl.

Quick as a flash and quite palpably sincerely, Yet Another Guy offered to fire up the big, professional espresso machine that only the daytime pros get to use and make me a latte.

He passed the espresso test.

I mean, in all likelihood 40% of burglars in Vancouver have at least some barista training, even if they flamed out in the first week. Let’s face it: in all likelihood 40% of Vancouverites overall have barista experience, and the only reason it isn’t more is all the old people and babies. But they very rarely show visible familiarity with the machines they are trying to disconnect and cart off.

So, espresso test passed, I leave the guys to get on with their de-Workspacecombobulation.

The next day, Hummingbird604 tells me Workspace is kaput. Well, technically, kaputting on Friday. Whereupon I hit up Twitter and Facebook and start screaming all over the internets, looking for another sweet deal of the same nature or, really, just a swivel chair in some drafty hallway.

Will Blog For Shelter.

Which brings me to my new home: The Network Hub. Which looks like this:

The Network Hub

which is a great deal more “Silicon Alley loft” and a great deal less “stunning view over the water to the mountains and inside there are always models wandering around” but still unquestionably more than I deserve. Hoping to move Eve the laptop and sundry papers over in the next 24 hours, and quite probably a wall hanging or two. Ah, I remember my first day at an office job for Starbucks; they were taking the new corporate accountant and partner relations manager around and introducing them, and I was pinning up a batik so I didn’t have to stare at the grey tweed of a cubicle all damn day, and I didn’t even get off the desk to shake hands. I think they were impressed.[oh well, it was good while it lasted (3 days?)]

Dooced!

More later…that’s a threat!

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