Monday, October 24, 2005

First day of marking period 2

Today started off...

...well, weirdly.

The first 2 minutes went OK, but when i walked into the kitchen, all hell broke loose from the instant I struck the switchm and the kitchen lightbulb blew out. This was not a big event in itselfm except that I then discovered that I was out of coffee, so I had to grind a new batch, which when I went to the coffeepot ended up in the water part of the pot and not the filter part. AArrrgggHHH!!!! So in the darkness, here I am trying to scoop out the coffee while somehow attempting to salvage the water/coffee operation, with a really bad prognosis. Grinds dropping everywhere, in the dim light of the hallway.

So in a rage, I resolved to fix all the broken lightbulbs then in the house -- in the lobby and now the kitchen -- right there and then. Pulled the last 2 out of the closet, pulled the stepladder over, stepped up to replace the kitchen bulb, reacahing up to untwist the light fixture -- did I mention that I had just taken a shower and was wearing only a towel? I was -- when the towel started dropping off, forcing me to reach down fast to grab that, when ny wife came out of the bedroom, wondering what in hell was going on.

So we finally got all that cleaned up, got the bulbs replaced and actually managed to get a few cups of coffee out of the whole thing, and then Ting and I left the house together and got on the R train, and things seemed back on track again, until i remembered that I couldn't get to work from the R train.

On to Times Square, then, where I got the train to Queens and ended up getting to work from the opposite direction I usually did. Except for this 4-hour window if craziness, the day actually went pretty well in school.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Testing Flock

Now I am testing the posting from Flock, a new browser...

I am testing ecto

This is a test. Ecto is being tested

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Do You Know Where You're Going To

So I just found this website which is the answer to something I have been hoping would reappear in NYC sometime soon: Hopstop.com, which will give you travel directions in New York, Boston, and Washington using public transportation. If you live in any of these cities and you, like me, do not generally drive around from place to place, this is very useful. Hell, even if you are only visiting, it could come in handy. I just wanted to pass this on.

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Back to School

So I am now officially back in school, barring problems with validating (something involving the all-important concept of tuition. Sigh...)

I got to the Bronx after a particularly trying day - it seemed as if a multitude of deadlines for a multitude of items were all converging down to a time period of about three hours, which forced me to multi-multi-multitask just to get out of the house in time to eat lunch. The only break I caught was when the realty agent failed to get in touch with the person whose home we had been scheduled to see, freeing me up for a crticial half-hour. I scarfed down lunch and made it in time to stroll into the first class about 5 mintues before it was due to begin.
The classes themselves went OK, and that was even without the smoking HOT chick who is in both of them. The feeling of being in school is reassuring and dreadful at the same time - (I mean dreadful in the literal sense of the word, full of dread). A lot of the same feeling I had last year is there once again, and with my knowledge of what was to come - that half-semester at El Puente - I have a hard time not taking the similarity of feeling as a sign that I not bound for a similar experience all over again. I am not sure whether every teacher feels this impending doom that I am feeling, but I would sure love to know for sure.
A sidebar. That chick in class I mentioned above -- name of Tamara, deeply tanned skin, possibly Dominican, wearing a black, midriff-bearing tube top and a white peasant skirt, and did I mention the high-heeled sandals, or that she constantly adjusted her boobs in class, for God's sake? - sorry, got carried away for a moment - promises to provide some serious eye candy...dammit, where were teachers who looked like that when I was in junior high? It's not fair, man....

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

So this is the last day of school and I am sitting in my (soon to be former) cubicle, posting a quick one before I bounce. We will be holding house in 15 minutes, when we will be handing out report cards, then on an awards ceremony across the street at LaGuardia college. After that, who knows? It has been a hectic year in general, and not only because of the career change: Grandma's death, 2 new babies, meeting Mikey again, all of it, has made this what the Chinese called "interesting times." More to come later.

Monday, June 27, 2005

Sith and Stuff

So it has been a while. Just some updates, then:

Star Wars III: Revenge of the Sith - saw this at the Midway at the midnight show. Not bad, though not great. It had definite moments of greatness, but you sort of had to swirl through the rest of the stuff to get to it.
In the plus column:
Coruscant (I love the Coruscant stuff);
The final battle, which was OK;
Lotsa Wookiees;
Finally seeing Darth again.

In the minus column:
The de-badassification of General Grievous, which defeated the purpose of the Clone Wars cartoons, although Lucas probably did that on purpose;
All the love scenes, which were ham-handed and crappy, and of which there has been plenty mentioned already;
Anakin's sudden and seemingly arbitrary switch from good to evil;
The birth scene, which (yet again) violates apparent continuity --
this has happened so often and so consistently that I have given up trying to reconcile events anymore.

Overall a good film, though it could have -- should have -- been great. Keep Lucas off the word processor and in the computer lab, where he seems happiest. Let him generate the ideas by all means, because the fecundity of his imagination is staggering, he really needs to keep away from anything having to do with dialogue.

I dread the train wreck that the fourth Indiana Jones flick threatens to be.


What else?


Work went OK, I got a Satisfactory rating from Aaron, the principal, which means my career is on track. School is finally almost over. Some students failed my classes who I did not think were going to fail, others failed as expected, and some, happily, passed despite expectations.

This has been a time of reflection for me. It has been almost a year since I left Citigroup. I always have a bittersweet memopry of my time there, ending the way it did. I am happy I left on my own terms, though, even if it did mean taking a huge cut in salary.

Monday, May 09, 2005

Back from P.R.

So we have been back for a week now, and do I post anything?
Nope.
So I will, but I wanted to throw this in really quickly before I run into class today. More to come.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Grandma

Grandma
So yeah. Was she cute or what?
Ana Luisa Ortiz Cordero, daughter of Jose and Delfina, was born in Los LLanos, Coamo, Puerto Rico, in August 1915, but because the record of her birth was not submitted until December of that year, she always celebrated her birthday in December. In 1934, at the age of 19, She married my grandfather, Pedro Rodriguez. In 1935 Flor de Maria, the first of their six children, was born, followed by my mother Nelly, uncle Mario, uncle Pedro (Pete), aunt (Titi) Rosie, and finally Hector (Tito), the baby, who was born in 1950, when Grandma was 35.
Driven by the same economic problems that motivated so many islanders at the time, my family joined the exodus of Puerto Ricans to the supposedly healthier economic climes of America, arriving in New York in 1950 or 1951, one of thousands of families that made the trip and which established P uerto Ricans as the city's first dominant Latino ethnic group. For the 50's, 60's, and 70's, if a New Yorker referred to a "Spanish" kid, they were likely referring to a Puerto Rican or a New Yorker of Puerto Rican roots. My family moved into a tenement apartment on 104th Street, between Lexington and Park Avenues, in El Barrio.
Grandma was faced with the daunting task of raising 6 kids (and occasionally grandkids) pretty much alone, while my Grandfather set about supporting the group by opening a bodega. The hours he kept at the store kept them separated, and my mother Nelly was obligated to drop out of high school to help Grandma raise the younger kids. Once everyone was old enough, both Grandma and Mami Nelly got jobs in factories to supplement the family income. Grandpa began a habit of being gone from home for longer and longer periods of time, dropping in occasionally to visit and to be treated like a lord whenever he did.
Grandma's life was never easy; she never complained. She had to contend with such obstacles as a philandering husband, the necessity of learning English, the need to put food on the table, and the growing problems of managing 3 boys and 1 girl who were coming into adolescence during the 1960's.
The 1960's, especially, caused Grandma a lot of grief. My mother gave birth to me in 1962 and my sister Joanne in 1963, only to suffer through my little sister's death after only one month of life. The growing drug culture swept over and overtook both Tito and Pete, both of whom had resulting problems for the rest of their lives. My aunt Rosie married and moved to Brooklyn. My Mom had married my late father Joe, but they had problems and broke up sometime after I was born. Only my aunt Flor and uncle Mario were able to sustain an overall normal home life, each marrying and settling into homes nearby. Things reached a low when Grandpa was ambushed on a Bronx street in April of 1970, apparently by someone with whom he was in conflict over a woman. He hit his head or was struck on the head; I am not sure which. He went into a coma and died a week later. Grandma was 55 and a widow. She never remarried.
After this, there was a brief period of stability during the early and middle 1970's, interrupted by drug-related problems suffered by my 2 uncles Tito and Pete. Pete especially proved problematic, and spent the remainder of his short, tortured life in and out of rehab centers and mental hospitals. Grandma always gave him a room and a bed, and he would be quiet and docile and sweet for a period of time before the monster woke up and he would be gone again, but not before stealing a radio or a TV to sell for drug money. Tito, meanwhile, was trying to clean up his life and joined a GED program, where he met Gladys, his future wife. He kicked the drugs and had three daughters and had a happy life, for a time.
The 1980's proved troublesome. Pete tried to kill himself by jumping off the building on 112th Street where we were living at the time, but succeeded only in knocking out all of his front teeth and spending months in the hospital. He came out of that and fell into the full grip of drugs once again; my grandmother suffered through this all through that decade. In the meantime, Mario developed Parkinson's disease while still in his 40's and needed to move to Puerto Rico to be cared for by his in-laws.
My aunt Rosie began drinking heavily and lapsed into alcoholism.
In the late 80's, my uncle Tito, depressed over some problems, left his home one night and wandered over to 104th Street to see some friends. His friends, all addicts, invited him to shoot up to take his mind off his troubles. Tragically, he did so, and they shared the same needle. Shortly thereafter, he developed health problems and went to the hospital, where we found that he had contracted the HIV virus. Both my Mom and Grandma went to the hospital every day for years. In 1990, my uncle Tito, Hector, my grandmother's favorite and her baby, died of complications from the HIV virus, although he never actually developed AIDS. He died on his wife's birthday. He was 40.
His death opened the floodgates that consumed the family.
Two years later Petey, by now broken in spirit and completely docile and sweet, died, also of complications from HIV. He was 49.
My Mami Nelly contracted Parkinson's disease in 1993-94.
Titi Rosie, overwhelmed by depression, drank herself to death that same year. She was 49.
In 1996, my aunt Flor de Maria, Mami Flor, who raised me for a time and whom I thought of as a second mother, died of breast cancer. She was 61.
In Puerto Rico, my uncle Mario was steadily deteriorating because of the Parkinson's. By this point he had wasted away, could no longer speak, could only look out at the world with sad eyes.
My mother, too, was beginning to worsen. In 1998 she collapsed and could no longer fend for herself.
My grandmother moved into a smaller, more manageable apartment that was also free from the ghosts of the past.
By 2000, only 2 children were left, Mario and my mother, and they were both suffering from Parkinson's disease. My Grandma was diagnosed with clinical depression. She was suffering from poor circulation and from nightmares.
My uncle Mario finally died in the summer of 2004, after more than 20 years of illness. Only my mother Nelly was left of the 6 siblings.
On April 1st of this year, Grandma developed breathing trouble and was rushed to North General Hospital, in Harlem, where she was diagnosed with pneumonia. I did not find out about it until 4 days later, and I went to see her on Saturday, April 9th. Although she was uncomfortable, she seemed in good spirits; her room was bright and cheerful and she had the overhead TV set to Univision. She had no appetite, however, and complained of being hot. As I was about to leave, Gladys and Yarisa, Tito's widow and one of his daughters, arrived, so we stayed until 7:45, kissed Grandma goodbye, and left together. She was scheduled to be discharged sometime the next week. That was the last time we were ever able to speak to her.
The next morning, about 5 AM, Grandma suffered a heart attack and was transferred to ICU. When we went to see her, she was sedated and unconscious, on a respirator, and hooked up to various plastic bags, Her lips were parched almost purple and dry; she was almost unrecognizable.
I came back to see her on Tuesday, April 12th, after work. She had deteriorated earlier that morning, and the floor doctor on duty did everything but actually come out and say that Grandma was dying. We knew that she was the most critical case on the floor, and judging by how she looked, she would not last the night.
She did not. At 4AM on Wednesday, April 13, at the age of 89, Grandma passed away.
I remembered how I once dreaded needing to write those words one day. But I also knew that truly, she was ready to go. So I grieve, but I am also content that I spent time with her for the last few years, and called her, and celebrated her birthday, and spent Thanksgivings with her. I will miss her, and I will never forget her.
I love you, Grandma. Beloved Grandma. Thank you for the lunches, the coffees. Rest easy and be happy. Amen.

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Bye-bye, Grandma...

This morning, my phone went off at 4 am. I already knew what it was going to be about, having left my unconscious grandmother the previous evening in North General Hospital, where she had lain in ICU for two days following a heart attack.
It was Rafael, my cousin. "Well, you know why I'm calling," he said.
"Yeah," I said. Calm. Expected it. We spoke for another few moments, made plans for later that day, and rang off.
I told my wife that Grandma had passed away. And wept. Then I called our family in Puerto Rico to tell them the news, wrote up a couple of lesson plans for use in my classes that day, emailed them out to the school, slept for an hour, woke up to call the school to tell them I would be out, went back to sleep, overslept, ran out the door, took a cab to Manhattan, met my cousins and Gladys, went to the hospital, kissed Grandma's forehead in the morgue, walked down to 105th Street and St. Cecilia's rectory to arrange for the funeral mass, walked down to 91st Street, left messages for my Mom's nurse and psychiatrist, spoke with Mike in Puerto Rico, and puzzled with Ralph as to whether his father had already hopped on a flight to New York. A busy day. I will post more later, after I have gotten my thoughts in better order.
I am very tired.
Good night, Grandma, Abuelita. I love you. Bendicion.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

Parent-Teacher night

Here I am at school, in an empty classroom, waiting for parents to show up so that I can either praise or eviscerate their kids. It is 7:53 PM as I write this and I have seen a slew of people, and while it is a no-brainer to suppose this, it really is hard to bring bad news to a parent when their child has been under-performing. The look of distress and pain on some of those faces bring home to me what an important job this really is, and what an incredible responsibility I have taken on. Seriously, it is overwhelming if I think about it too long. Now I have taken on the onus of alerting some of the families if their child begins to slip or improve, depending, although some of the kids have already checked out and I am not too sanguine about the prospects for some of them. I would like to be able to say that every child is reachable, but...I don't know, sometimes.

Monday, March 14, 2005

Remarkable piece on the Atlanta shooter...

...in the Palm Beach Post, of all papers. It is an interview with the woman whose apartment Brian G. Nichols, the courthouse shooter, hid out in during his final hours of freedom. That she survived is a minor miracle, but the extraordinary account of the time she shared with Nichols is gripping and puts a human face on a killer whose scowling picture has been broadcast around the world. It brought home all the accounts of Nichols's high school friends, all of whom described a friendly and popular guy who exhibited no sign of one day blowing up the way he did. I don't know how to feel about all this as yet; while I am usually unsympathetic to criminals, this was unsettling in the way that he became, almost, a nice guy. For a moment there.
I also believe he wanted to be caught; else why let her go out, unsupervised, to see her daughter? Anyway.

Saturday, February 12, 2005

Blogs in general...

There are a staggering number of blogs out there, for (I am quite certain) every subject or interest out there. I know mine is just a droplet in that vast ocean, and my interests range so widely and so disparately that I despair of trying to ever successfully maintain a manageable reading list. I will try to attach a noteworthy blog, then, every week or so, just for my reference and also for you, the accidental reader of this posting.

This week's blog:
99 Zeros, by Mark Jen, erstwhile employee of both Microsoft and now, infamously, Google, who let Jen go after he posted some sensitive information about them on his blog. This raised hackles internally, and although the execs at Google called him in on it and his postings subsequently deleted the information that Google did not like, others in the company apparently were upset about what Mark had (in all innocence, I believe, if not completely thought out) divulged, likely about compensation packages and the like. Nobody ever wants to know that someone got relocation expenses, for example, to come from Seattle to California, if they didn't get the same deal.
I'm just guessing about this. For all I know, Google could just be pissed off that Mark had revealed some hints about their future financial performance and technology initiatives.
This paves the way for the formation of a corporate blogging policy that will restrict and otherwise inhibit, at the very least, a person's divulging their true identity if they post unflattering information or comments about their boss. It will certainly ensure that the only job-related blogs that do make it out there are either a) toothless or b) nothing more than shills for their creators' employers. Too bad, if yet another example of corporate interference in the Internet.
In any case, it is an interesting read, if unlikely to be updated past where it is now. A cautionary tale in this increasingly blog-centric world.

Friday, February 11, 2005

Can't you take a Joke(r)?!?

I really like this pic. Just wanted to have it up for reference. Cool...


End of the first week, part 2

So here I am at home at 3:38 PM, having completed my first full week of school. I am sitting on the sofa next to Ting Ting, watching TCM and thinking about the fact that Donna Reed was actually pretty attractive. See fer yerself. funny how I didn't think that when I was younger, but tastes change, eh? Hopefully they evolve, but anyway...


Thursday, February 10, 2005

Holy Moley, it works!!

Well, how bout that? Maybe there was some sort of policy change or something, but that is enormously welcome. The funny part is that i probably won;t actually be using these woeds at all, or much anyway. I am glad I can read them now, though.

This is another test...

to see whether the bad words are still blocked out, lo these many months later.

ahem :

fuck
shit damn
hacker

how did that go?

this is a test