Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Akalaka woki woki...HAWAIII

The title is my Hawaii song. It does not, in fact, contain any real Hawaiian words, but it is fun to hula to, and may border upon the sublime should you strum a ukelele while singing; I can't be sure.

For 10 days I have been to that lush and tropical island. While the rest of the country languished in the growing cold, my days were greeted with the sun-kissed humidity of a rainforest. And roosters; lots of roosters decided to serve as my alarm clocks. Some were set to crow triumphantly at 5am. The more considerate ones decided to spare me until a half-hour later.

But my purpose there was not for the idle work of the vacationer; no, I was there for business, and spent entire days cooped up within a windowless and temperature controlled nondescript building of dubious purpose. In spite of this, there was time yet for some rest- meals, mostly, but a few times there was an idle hour to recklessly embed temporary footprints along the sandy shore or appreciate the greenery. And always present, from any vantage was the wild and trackless sea, stretching out towards the bounds of vision and thought. And chickens, which I had previously mentioned. From time to time they could be observed at the edge of the road, pausing perhaps to consider if they wished to fulfill that ancient joke and become nothing more than a punchline, or if destiny had some greater purpose for them.

From a societal standpoint, it occurred to me as we drove past fields with high-grown and blossoming sugarcane that, if located within the contiguous United States (and not, as one Simpsons character said, in "the freak States") Kauai would be somewhere in the middle of Nebraska. It's exceedingly rural, with little in the way of infrastructure that has been built in the past 30 years. Charming, in a what-a-quaint-little-small-town sort of way, but also a little disturbing in a this-place-is-willfully-frozen-in-1978 sort of way.

The people are friendly and courteous. The weather is warm, sunny and only slightly marred by unexpected storms, the pizza is vile trash that shouldn't be foisted upon living people, and the land is a tapestry of breathtaking scenery layered upon itself. Island living has a lot going for it; a simple life, lots of delicious fish, good weather and a culture that encourages topless native dancing. But I am a worldly man, and I fear that I am deeply entrenched within a society that only serves to drive me more towards that end. Without a convenience mart in a 5 block radius at any time, I might wither and die like the mayfly with the cresting of the spring sun.

I am returned; renewed by my travel, but invigorated by the sights and sounds of home.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

A moving experience

Son of a taco. I had a nice post written and managed to wipe it out while somehow absolving the computer from rescuing me with the undo function.

Watch this space for the real post, but here's a synopsis

1. Today I moved
2. I rented a truck that is several hectares long and grumbles like the Beast beneath the Earth when started. Was given until 7am tomorrow to return truck.
3. Took 7 hours to load truck, during which the follwing occurred:
a. Called by loan officer. House won't close until tomorrow afternoon.
b. Called by escrow officer. Lender wants more homeowner's insurance coverage.
c. Called insurance. I can increase coverage, but they will only pay for the original amount. However, I do get to pay more each month.
d. Called by realtor. Since seller has Close+2 days to move in contract, they will only give me the house key for $200 tomorrow.
e. Swore profusely
f. Called by two people at work- the other IT people are incapable of doing anything, apparently
g. Buyer of current place wants keys delivered tomorrow at 10:30.
h. Dad, while helping pack, drops my beloved train lamp and it bursts apart. It can be repaired, fortunately, but I am nearly ready to commit suicide.

Lovely.