22867. alistairconnor - 11/9/2007 2:12:13 PM Sounds like you left town? No immediate job in your own line of business? Something like that?
You know we'd really appreciate the opportunity to give you naive, well-meaning advice and moral support. 22868. judithathome - 11/9/2007 5:48:24 PM Why am I not surprised that Conn'd feels the need to disable the check engine light? Don't come in here crying when your car overheats and blows up when a simple check by a mechanic periodically could have prevented it.
Give the car maker's headquarters a call...they might be interested in hiring a guy who knows far more than they do about designing cars..."warning light? we don't need no stinking warning light!" 22869. Ms. No - 11/9/2007 6:36:35 PM My warning lights all work just fine so far as I know. I feel fortunate that none of them are on since I wrecked my car a week ago. It's drivable and nothing's leaking, but it needs serious repair if I'm going to keep using it.
This was NOT the time to total the car...although I suppose after 20 years I was due for an accident however humiliating the experience is. At least no one was injured.
Bleh! I hate car hassles! 22870. alistairConnor - 11/9/2007 11:39:01 PM ah crap. First rule of car misery : it arrives when you can least afford it. 22871. arkymalarky - 11/10/2007 12:19:14 AM Dang, that sucks, No. Glad you're okay. 22872. Ms. No - 11/10/2007 9:04:34 AM Yeah, I'm fine. I was a little sore for a couple of days and I could feel where the seatbelt saved me from injury, but it never came up a visible bruise or anything. I just hope the lady I hit isn't suffering too badly. I was only going about 15mph when I hit her, but it was from behind so she could have some soft tissue damage or whiplash and that sucks rocks as I know from personal experience. 22873. judithathome - 11/10/2007 6:25:14 PM Glad you're okay, No....as you say, could have been much worse. And I am sure if the lady you hit was damaged, you'd have already heard from her lawyer. 22874. judithathome - 11/10/2007 6:28:17 PM MsNo, with the news of Norman Mailer's passing, I was thinking of suggesting "The Executioner's Song" to your list...pretty long for teenagers but both it and Capote's "In Cold Blood" changed the way books were written for their time...docu-novels of the highest order. 22875. arkymalarky - 11/10/2007 8:27:50 PM I've never read Norman Mailer. One of those many lit gaps I need to fill. 22876. Ms. No - 11/11/2007 2:45:01 AM I've never read him either, but I'm definitely intrigued by genre-starters. It's one of the reasons Jane Eyre is on my list and also Poe's Tell-Tale Heart and Rue Morgue.
Jane Eyre is my friend K's favorite book of all time. She says she finds something new in it every time she reads it. I haven't read it for ages and what I mainly recall about it is that it is the pattern for modern romance novels however good or bad they turn out to be.
In fact, K was over today keeping me company while I sort and discard and pile up things for the Salvation Army. She was going through my music collection and burning MP3's to check out stuff she'd never heard before and came across the Posey Hill CD and loved it. We played it through two times before moving on to some Tom Petty. 22877. arkymalarky - 11/11/2007 2:51:37 AM Hey, that's great! 22878. Ms. No - 11/11/2007 8:28:35 AM When she picked it up and asked who they were I said "Oh, that's Arky's brother's band," and she said "Arkymalarky? How cool!"
So you're famous in Sacramento circles! 22879. wabbit - 11/11/2007 4:52:32 PM Hey Ms. No, glad to hear you're ok after the accident. Does your insurance cover getting new wheels?
And say hi to K for me! 22880. wonkers2 - 11/11/2007 6:43:56 PM Mailer was prolific but uneven. "The Naked and the Dead," his first novel written when he was in his twenties made his reputation. I remember reading "The Deer Park" which was about the McCarthy witch trials. According to the long NYT obituary, critics regard "The Executioner's Song," about convicted murderer, Gary Gilmore, as Mailer's masterpiece. Mailer had six wives one of whom he stabbed and, I believe, eight children. He was still actively writing when he died at 84. 22881. Ms. No - 11/11/2007 7:06:56 PM Hiya Wabz,
No, I was only carrying liability on the car so I have to pay for my own repair work -- which is actually a good thing in this case because they would've totalled my car and then not given me enough money to actually get something comparable.
I'll definitely tell her you said "hi" --- she was bummed that she couldn't get free to see you when I met you in S.F.
22882. judithathome - 11/11/2007 7:57:46 PM Mailer's "Armies of the Night" was pretty good, too....
22883. arkymalarky - 11/12/2007 12:57:20 AM If I'm ever there maybe we can all go karaoke!
22884. arkymalarky - 11/12/2007 1:03:50 AM I'm at an odd point. I just signed up as a volunteer for the Obama campaign. I have lots of time and an easy work load this year. I have a long list of things I want to do. But I picked up the guitar Bob bought me and I'm having to relearn everything. I picked up a doily I'd almost finished, and I can't remember how to do any of it--all my old crochet stitches. My house and yard are out of control and I am overwhelmed over where to start first. So I decided to take one small project at a time, starting with the loveseat I sit on, and get it "right." But I have to beat myself to be productive. I've lost some weight, but have to beat myself to walk and eat reasonably. It's like I want to sit and pretend I'm on the beach or something, though I'm really interested in all my projects. Ennui. Is that it? Anyway, I hope the holidays fix it. I'm not down or stressed, just uninterested in moving and disgusted that I have to relearn the things I enjoyed before I became a rural activist. My (Republican) counterpart has always been much better at compartmentalizing things, and she never got behind. But she did retire, she's WAY overworked, and I wonder any day if she'll burn out--I already have, really. 22885. arkymalarky - 11/12/2007 1:05:23 AM But on my CO vacation right after my last class I about went ape. It was like my mind was still in high gear, even though I was done. 22886. concerned - 11/12/2007 6:08:10 PM Hi, Arky -
Well, I did a little research on the shower valve, and sure enough, there was a replacable 'cartridge' (for 'only' $40) that I was able to find at a local Menards, so that one is working fine now.
But IMO, it's a very flawed (unacceptable, IMO) plumbing design that fails virtually without use after only a few years in the absence of other problems.
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