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18:00 CET: Sorting My Books on Saturday Night

Books on the shelf...

My excitement for the evening is to shift books around my bookcases because… I have books that do not fit where they are supposed to go.

It’s the sad consequence of liking and buying books that books must be shifted if they are to be shelved in a logical manner. I’m fortunate enough that I have one empty shelf right now – but in an hour’s time, that will be filled, with the books below.

New books that need a real home...

Following up on yesterday’s photo – the meatloaf was excellent – and I had leftovers for an early dinner tonight.

18:00 CET: Makin’ Meatloaf

Oven Light

Looking into my kitchen!

When I woke up this morning I had no idea what I would be doing at 18:00 this afternoon.

My original plan post-work plan was to go shopping and pick up some goods for my upcoming trip, then hit up a grocery store, and then make my way home. But this plan was cut short due to issues in the apartment – and I really hope that my need to be home for things to be repaired is over – I’ve had to be home four times in the last week.

The previous three times were for a stupid, yet expensive, technical issue with one of my belongings.

Today was for something more important: my heating. I have five radiators in my apartment, and three of them worked, the one in my kitchen and the one in my bathroom, not. I thought that my problem was “air in the radiator”, and so, I borrowed a Heizungsentluftungschlüßel yesterday, and when I went to let the air out, I discovered that the radiators were completely full of water.

The end result was an appointment to get the radiators fixed – and because the heating expert’s weekend began promptly at 2:00, I had to be home by 1:30 in order for it to be fixed.

So I left work early, got home at 1:30, and then, 8 minutes later, the heat was flowing in the bathroom and kitchen. It wasn’t air in the radiator, but something behind the control knob, I asked what it was called, but I seem to recall it was something called ventilator-uh, but I don’t know any more.

This early work departure put me far from where I wanted to go shopping and in my Keiz, so I decided to go to the gym (for fun), where I did cardio. After that I headed to my neighborhood Turkish Supermarket, where I picked up a pound a half of seasoned ground beef in order to make meatloaf tonight.

Meatloaf about to be mixed...

I really like the flavoring and the recipe is a bastardized version of the Easy Meatloaf – first in that I buy seasoned ground beef, and also add a scorching hot pepper and a lot of fresh garlic.

Meatloaf in the pan!

I’d show you the after picture, but I’m posting this while the meatloaf is still in the oven.

18:00 CET: On the Vario

As I sort of expected, I was at the gym at 18:00 CET today – I’d already lifted all the weights and so I was on to my cardio for the day, the Vario machine.

18:00 CET time came at roughly 45 minutes into my 50 minutes of cardio – I sort of had to pause, as you can see, to snap the photo – and I used my iPhone to take the photo.

My Vario Stats

The top line shows my heart rate, and the longer that I’ve been using the Vario, the harder it is for me to keep my heart rate between 115 and 130, which is what my trainer tells me is the optimal range.

The bottom block of information tells me what intensity my workout is going – yellow (hard to tell) indicates “Power Watts” – or what I think of as resistance. The blue line tells you my “speed” – the rate at which my feet go. It’s pretty clear when my music hit slow spots – that drop near the middle of the screen was a pretty slow moving Coldplay song – it’s going to be removed from the rotation pretty quickly.

For those of you curious as to what the Vario looks like, I took a picture of the machines before I got on (and when none of the ones in this set of three were being used) – I was on the one in the middle of this photo.

Excite Vario at my gym

Below the fold is a video… if you are curious what the motion looks like.

Continue reading →

18:00 Central European Time: Today I was at the dry-cleaners…

A couple weeks ago, I realized that I haven’t been playing with my camera enough and I decided to set myself a challenge of documenting my life every day in February – by taking a photograph at the same time, 18:00, Central European Time, every single day.

Picking the time was a bit tricky because I tend to do the same things at the same time most days – Five days out of seven, at 9:00 in the morning, I’m at my desk at the office – so I settled on early evening, 6 PM, even though there’s a pretty good chance that I will be at the gym every other day.

But it’s February and I’m taking a vacation – so while today at 18:00 CET, it is actually 18:00 for me, it won’t be 18:00 for me all month: on many days it will be 10:00, 11:00, or 12:00 local time – but still 18:00 CET.

My general rule is that I will take the photograph at 18:00 ± 15 minutes, CET. However, due to the circumstances around my vacation, I will not be able to post the photograph on the day it was taken – but I will post it when I can.

Today’s exciting start comes with my dry-cleaning—perhaps not the most exciting subject in the world. Truthfully I try to avoid buying clothing that requires dry-cleaning. It’s expensive, annoying, and inconvenient.

But I have a lovely woolen winter jacket, made by Joop!, that I bought about ten years ago. It’s perfect for cool weather that’s too cold for a sweatshirt or lightweight jacket, but too warm for the all-out heavy-duty jacket.

Needless to say, I’ve been wearing it most of January and I became acutely aware that it needed to be cleaned, and so when the temperatures started diving late last week, I switched to the heavier jacket and took the woolen one to the dry-cleaners.

This turned out to be a greater challenge than I had expected for several reasons, including an embarrassing one: you see, I’ve thought for a long time that there was one across the street from my gym – I’ve stared at it for over a year now while doing cardio – but it turns out it’s not a dry-cleaner, it’s a tailor’s shop. Fortunately I realized this before I actually walked in, but it’s still embarrassing that I hadn’t been observant enough to noticed that it wasn’t a dry cleaner.

The second challenge was, oddly enough, finding a dry cleaner – unlike in Weimar where there was one immediately next to my local tiny supermarket, there aren’t any in my immediate Berlin neighborhood (my Keiz!)—and so I had to resort to Google before I found one at the nearby Bayerischer Platz, Rein & Fein.

I dropped off my jacket last Friday morning and was told it would be ready today after five, and so, after finishing a work project at home, I headed out to pick it up – and let me say, tonight at 6pm, it was -6C (21F) – a bit cold to be playing with my tripod and exposed hands, but I did it.

Rein & Fein at Bayerischer Platz, Berlin

And I picked up my jacket – and might I say, it’s also challenging to shoot something that has a plastic film over it.

My dry-cleaned Joop! jacket, hanging at home, with other jackets in the background

A note on the February Photo A Day Meme that I recently learned about – I had my idea long before I learned about the meme, and, given that I had decided to not participate (intentionally) in any meme in the future, this threw a wrench into my plans. But ultimately I decided that I’m not going to ditch my plan. Besides, their thingy has a different theme each day and I have decided that my challenge is to take a photo around 18:00 CET, not try and fulfill an arbitrarily declared theme.

Warning from my gym’s dominatrix!

Yes, I will realize my good New Year’s resolutions.

Message from gym: Ja, ich will meine guten Vorsätze umsetzen.

Or, and this is my interpretation,
the dominatrix will use her whip on me.

Marlboro marketers must not know what “>” means…

Be > Marlboro advertisment at Bahnhof Zoo in BerlinAs most of you know, I’m not a huge fan of smoking for a myriad of reasons, but I have to confess that the geniuses behind Marlboro cigarette advertising campaign have caught my attention.

In fact, by some measure, their campaign must be a success because I’ve had several conversations about it.

The first wave is what caught my attention: gigantic white signs with the word MAYBE written across them and the letters MAY crossed out with a gigantic X, leaving behind, “BE”.

The only clue as to the product being offered was the warning message that smoking is going to kill you and your children, as well as make you and your clothing smell bad.

It was at this point I stopped paying attention to the ads because (1) I don’t smoke, and (2) I don’t think cigarette companies should be allowed to advertise.

Be > Marlboro advertisment at Bahnhof Zoo in Berlin: Maybe Never Wins

But then the second wave of advertising started with strong messages like, “MAYBE NEVER WINS” and “DON’T BE A MAYBE” – with, at the bottom, the message “BE > MARLBORO”.

Be > Marlboro advertisment at Bahnhof Zoo in Berlin: Don't be a maybe.

It was this bottom tag line that caught my attention and made me wonder about the advertising geniuses. In my experience the > symbol indicates greater than, meaning that the tag line reads “be greater than Marlboro,” which is to say, don’t smoke – be better than cigarettes.

Maybe some advertising expert can explain to me what it is I am missing, because, in my book, I am greater than Marlboro, and that’s going somewhere.

Be > Marlboro advertisment at Bahnhof Zoo in Berlin: Maybe goes nowhere

Saturday in the City

Brandenburger Tor on the U-Bahn - what you see looking through the windowOne way that I have adapted to life in Berlin is that I’m much more likely to go shopping at street markets than I was in Weimar – principally because there was only one in Weimar and, well, it never really entered my shopping patterns to go there.

Here in Berlin, I wouldn’t call myself a regular, but I do hit up the Winterfeldtplatz Markt at least once, if not twice a month – depending up on what’s going on. It is, for example, where I went on Christmas Eve in order to buy a fresh chicken, a bunch of vegetables, and other assorted goods to get through the long holiday weekend.

Today I had a hankering for one of my favorite things at the Winterfeldtplatz Markt: Tiramisu. There’s this stand that’s there most weeks, run by Il Mercante Del Sud/Ristorante Lucano, that has the most wonderful Tiramisu ever created – and I wanted some.

Tiramisu at Winterfeldtplatz, along with a cup of coffee

So I had it – along with a cup of coffee – thus getting a huge shot of caffeine, which will be sure to keep me going through my evening ahead.

But I’d also brought a book along with me and I wanted to sit somewhere and read, so I found myself at a coffee shop, Impala, where I got a caffeine-free latte with lactose-free milk. With an order like that, you probably do not want to be behind me when I am ordering it.

Cafeinee-free, lactose-free Latte at Impala

The book that I’m reading is Gypsy Boy, which is the amazing tale that I mentioned last time – but the further I get into the book, the less willing I am to read it directly before going to bed. It’s a tough, hard, read – and I do not mean the words are difficult, but the content is disturbing, and I find myself needing to put the book down every so often and taking a breather, much like I did with Augusten Burroughs’ Running With Scissors.

The 24 Hour Kaisers at NollendorfplatzAfter that, I headed home – realizing that there’s a 24-hour supermarket at Nollendorfplatz – I hadn’t realized that the Kaiser’s there was open 24 hours, but it’s nice to know that within a 20 minute walk of where I live, I can shop whenever I want, as long as it is between 7am on Monday and midnight on Saturday – just not Sunday or too early Monday morning.

Present Failures: The Baseball Glove.

Yesterday, while killing some time, I picked up and started to read Mikey Walsh’s Gypsy Boy, an autobiographical tale of his upbringing as a Romany Gypsy in the United Kingdom.

He reflects back upon one of his Christmas presents – the ones when he received, as a four year old, a battery operated quad bike and a pair of boxing gloves. He wanted nothing to do with either, and was warned by his father that, “ You ain’t getting nothing else, you know.”

Oddly enough, this was enough to cause me to reflect back to my childhood, and it’s safe to say that not many of the presents stand out, and the ones that do, tend to stand out for the wrong reasons—with one large exception.

The exception was that in first grade we were doing puppet shows, and for my birthday, I wanted a place to put on puppet shows – and I got one. It was cardboard and it probably lasted a week or two, but even today I remember it fondly. I guess there is some hidden theater-fag inside me.

One of the memorable, for the wrong reasons, presents was a magnetic detector – forgettable because it never really worked. I still remember my grandfather “hiding” a coin somewhere on the dining room floor carpet and I was supposed to “find” it with the metal detector. Yes, the batteries were brand new. Honestly, I doubt the metal detector would have gone off had it been pointed at the metal garbage can that it quickly found itself within.

Another memorable, for the wrong reasons, present was a baseball glove. It was a birthday present, probably back when I was 8 or 9 years old.

It was a gift from my Father.

He was a huge baseball fan and loved playing baseball. He grew up as a Dodgers fan – no, not Los Angeles Dodgers, but the real Dodgers. After they ditched Brooklyn, he ditched them, eventually becoming a New York Mets fan, and then, back in 1993, pretty much became a Rockies fan.

It was expected, naturally, that his children would be interested in baseball – and, I suppose, we all are, but more as fans watching the game both on television and in the stands.

I’m not really clear, as I look back at it, what prompted the gift, other than a father wanting to get his kid to share in something that he truly loved – which, I suppose, is admirable, albeit, in my case, clearly misplaced. I’ve never shown a great interest in playing sport, and, to make matters worse, I have terrible hand-eye coordination. I still remember, running after a baseball (or maybe softball) that had escaped the field my Dad was playing on – only to have a woman get there before me, and throw it to me.

It hit me in the eye.

To this day, I avoid situations where I might be called upon to interact with a ball that’s being used by others in a park. If they’re playing soccer, and I want to get to the other side of the field, I will happily walk way out of my way and make sure that should the ball come near me, that I am not the closest person to it.

The baseball glove fit me, perfectly, and, I suppose, I might have used it once or twice, but it quickly took up a place of faux-honor on top of my fancy desk – collecting dust.

I actually have no idea what happened to it – I assumed that it was still on top of my old desk, but the last time I was in Denver, I was cleaning the desk, and when I looked on top, it wasn’t there.

Honestly, had it been there, I probably would have brought it back to Germany with me and put it on top of my bookcase here.

It was a totally misguided present, but, now that I am pausing to reflect upon it, it had staying power.

Do you remember a trippy movie about a boy, a witch and pancakes?

I do – it is a film I associate with wintertime, when, after eating lunch, it was too cold and/or snowing to go out on the playground.

On such days, instead of being pushed outside, and out of our teacher’s hair, we were herded into the school gym, where a screen would be set up and movies played.

One of these movies, as I vaguely recalled featured a boy and a witch living in a big house and, errr… pancakes.

Completely illogical, I know, so I dismissed it as one of those strange things at the back of my mind that I couldn’t ever explain.

However, it turns out that such a movie actually exists: Winter of the Witch

I might note that I am not the only one with fleeting memories of this odd film. Last spring, The New York Times did a piece on the film, and when I read, “Something About a Witch“, I felt like it was quoting me and my memories.

It’s 182 miles, 3 hours and 20 minutes from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Bloomington.

I know this distance because I just looked it up and because I paid for a FedEx 2Day Envelope that weighed 0.5 lbs (0.2 kilo) to travel this distance.

Naturally I didn’t know that the envelope was going to come from Fort Wayne – but the envelope holds a ticket for me to see a musical in New York City next month, a ticket that I purchased through StubHub.

I had the ticket shipped to my address in Bloomington because I (a) was using my American credit card with an American billing address; and (b) I didn’t see the need to pay for international shipping since I will be passing through Bloomington on my way to The City.

What fascinated me, though, was the route that the package took.

Apparently, since it was a 2Day Envelope, FedEx wanted to make sure it spent two nights in transit and didn’t some how arrive a day before it was promised to arrive, so the package went from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Indianapolis, which is, I happen to know, a FedEx sorting hub.

If you’d asked me what FedEx was going to do, I would have said, “They’re just going to put it in a warehouse for an extra night.”

How wrong I would have been.

Read my package’s actual itinerary, from the bottom up.

FedEx Tracking Results for my package show that it goes from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Indianapolis, Indiana, then to Memphis, where it then goes back to Indianapolis, then to Bloomington, Indiana.I guess there’s a reason that I’m not in logistics.

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