Not real life at all

I spent some time using City of Heroes to create pictures for Kat. She will be making a cover picture for one of my stories, and I am pretty optimistic about this one. It should fit her style, and she has had more practice since “The Boy, the Girl and the Werecat”. Which wasn’t bad either, since it fit the style and summed up the story pretty well without serious spoilage.

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Well, I think it is cute, but then again I know the characters.  It isn’t dramatic, though, and the next will be somewhat more of that.

The story is a spinoff from my Lightwielder series, and there will eventually be Lightwielding.  The best way I have found to illustrate this is with the Peacebringer power effects from City of Heroes.

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A practicing Lightwielder will always be “leaking” some light, although at first it is no more than a glow.

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Serious Lightwielding going on.

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I wonder what Kat will make out of these.

2009-05-18 23:44:53

Non-aggressive aura.  Lightwielders don’t have destructive magic, unlike Peacebringers (ironically,  given their respective names).  Anyway, the idea is to have a picture in the style of Japanese game covers, similar to manga but generally more “chibi” (small, childish).  It will take some time before it’s finished, of course, but hopefully you will see the results sooner or later.

Random observations

As I came home from work today, the doormat outside was turned upside down and put to the side.  I doubt the neighbors would do that, so it is almost certainly the landlor or his family.  Leaving the mat like that may be a subtle way to say “we are watching you”.  Which is OK as long as they don’t go through my papers or my hard disk.

On a related note, I have continued throwing away something each workday. Actually, each morning another glass jar, and pretty much each afternoon something else, usually a couple more CDs.  (Although I also took a bag of paperbacks to the used-book store on Monday. )

There are a few CDs I don’t intend to thow away.  1: The first two CDs I bought.  (I don’t remember which of them was first, therefore two.) 2: Classical music, which supposedly actually sounds better off a CD than an MP3. Although I will consider ripping them to FLAC instead (lossless compression, much larger files). 3: Japanese CDs.  My Japanese reading is still not up to telling apart all of the CDs (although I recognize a couple) so I depend on the pretty covers to tell which is which.

I use the manual lawnmower pretty much every weekday unless it is raining.  It is nice exercise, not too hard but as hard as I want it too.  It will become less pleasant if I do it mid-summer, when the heat of the sun is brutal.  It is quite nice now.  And there is a lot of lawn.

While mowing, I stopped for a breath and saw that it is actually possible to see the spire of the village church from the farthest corner of the lawn.  I had not known that.  In a couple year it will likely be hidden by the growing forest. Like everywhere in Norway that I know of, the forest is growing eagerly.  Perhaps it likes the extra CO2 in the atmosphere? Well, I am not sure, but I suspect I contribute more CO2 by my breathing when I use the manual lawnmower than I would have done with the gas-driven one.  So drink it up, forest.  The churchyard can wait, as far as I am concerned.

The Net is slow!

For some time now, my Internet access has been slowing down.  This is perfectly normal in the USA, of course, but I live in Norway. And it is not only American web sites, although those are bad enough.  But lately, even my Scandinavian net bank has been so slow as to be unusable in the evening.  I managed to queue up some bills tonight, but it took a long time of fervent button mashing. I was not amused. 

Using Traceroute, I found that there was a bottleneck – well, more like a corked bottle – at the beginning and end of Telia.net.  Telia is the Swedish near-monopoly on telephone, much as Telenor is in Norway, formerly a government agency until knowledge of the American way of life made people yearn for freedom here in Scandinavia as well.  But evidently we have not yearned enough, or at least the Swedes haven’t.  Guess they are a bit insulated from the western winds, lying on the other side of the Norwegian mountains…

It looks like my ISP, NextGenTel, uses Telia for all Internet traffic that leaves the country, even temporarily.  And of course that includes my journal. The more text there is, the less chance of getting it uploaded.  I hope something is done about this soon.  

I would hate to have to go back to Telenor, which had downtimes of a week or more, and lied like toddlers when I called them about the problems, completely stupidly made up fake explanations at the moment. You could call two times in the same day and get two completely different stories about why the Net was not working. It was painfully obvious that they were paid to lie rather than actually find out what was wrong.  It will, I believe, be a very chilly day in the idyllic Norwegian small town of Hell, before I go back to Telenor. 

The wireless broadbank I use in the city is fine, though. I may have to upload things from there, or take my portable home.  Or perhaps it has to do with the time of day?  Perhaps Telia’s lines are completely clogged with BitTorrent traffic… or hate mail after a kangaroo court meted out draconic punishment to the four young men who run Pirate Bay.  Or perhaps it is the Swedish Internet censorship – mandated by a recent law that lets the government read all mail that passes through the country – that slows down the Net too…

Anyway, that’s my excuse for today!

Race: Alien/Other

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Talking is a very important, basic action in the universe.  In your universe, at least.

This entry is about mobile telephony, not racial issues.  But just for the context, rest assured that Norwegian census data do not include the concept of “race”, and hopefully never will. I get the impression that in the USA this is actually a required field, which makes no sense since people there can have any number of ethnicities in their immediate ancestry. There is probably some ticky box for that too.  But here at least it would be considered unspeakably rude (and probably illegal) to register someone’s “race” anywhere. Also, it would probably be sabotaged.  At the very least, there is a good chance that I would choose “other”, and then only for lack of something more exotic.  Like  “utterly nonhuman”. Read on as to why.

It started a few years ago when my phone company introduced a service called “Free family”.  It allows you to call and message a reasonable number of family members for free. To the best of my knowledge there is not even a flat fee. Which means, unless they get their profit from the Tooth Fairy or some such, people like me pay for other people’s family.  Now, as I believe I have said before, I am not opposed to paying for families, at least reproductive units. Their children are my pension, after all.  People who shack up, with or without papers, for non-reproductive reasons, meet no such sympathy from me.  They already have their reward.  There is no way I want to pay their taxes, and certainly not their mobile phone bill.  Unfortunately the other main (as in not liable to suddenly go into bankruptcy) phone company has the same system.

Today I got the cheerful and photo-illustrated mail from my phone company that they have introduced yet another service: “Best friend”.  You can now call and message for free to the person you call the most. O_O  It really seems like a bad business move, but I could not find any fees this time either.  And I was again slightly miffed, because unless they get their profit from the Tooth Fairy or something, it means people like me are paying for people who have friends.

Wait a minute.  This was the point where my train of thought collided head on with reality and derailed.  There are, to the best of my knowledge, no “people like me”.  Having a family and/or friends is universal for the human race, certainly for anyone coherent enough to actually use a telephone.

You know, even when I considered myself having a best friend, it was someone I talked to perhaps once a month, and saw perhaps twice a year.  Thinking back, I tried to find out when I actually had friends I spent my time with. And the tentative answer is “never”.  I mean, I had my friends in the Church, and better friends you can not wish for.  But we always knew that our friendship was conditional on our religion and indeed simply an effect of that.  Sympathy and antipathy were both reviled and usually in the same breath.

This may sound like a bad thing, but you have to understand that the Church was essentially a mystic university. Left to themselves, virtually all people will pick friends who prop up their ego: Their prejudices, their habits, their existing worldview.  “Friends and relatives do their best to comfort our flesh” to loosely translate one of our most beautiful songs.  Presumably Jesus did not pick his original disciples based on whether they enjoyed hanging out together, either.

Even back then, I never called anyone just to chat, as far as I can remember.  It has been a long time, and “never” is a strong word, but this is how I remember it, and I seem less likely to rewrite my past than most people. (I have written journals going back to the early 1980es actually, so I think I have some authority in saying so. They largely concur with my memories, except the person writing the journal was more confused, afraid and narrowminded than I am today. And purer of heart, although I am not sure it was a good thing since it took the form of not seeing my real nature, but it was a necessary thing at the time. But enough about that.)

As a child, I was chatty at times, but not on the phone. That kind of luxury was beyond us.  The telephone was for necessary communications. We shared a line with four neighboring farms, so you did not bind up the line for no good reason.  It wasn’t exactly cheap either by the standards of the day.  Telephone was a state monopoly at the time, and unimaginably bureaucratic and inefficient.  On the bright side, they did offer some form of phone service even to remote farms on the edge of the wilderness.

Anyway, today I am this person who only uses a telephone in emergency or nearly so. And the chattiest I get is these journal entries.  And the closest I come to having friends in this world would be my couple readers.  That’s “in this world” of course, or should we say “of this world”.  I am hardly to be pitied; for I can call my invisible friend at any time of night and day, and it does not cost me anything.  Except perhaps my humanity, but in this particular regard I am not sure I ever had one.  The idea of calling someone just to chat is to me… utterly alien.

Real life! Really!

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The end of spring, the coming of summer.

Well, it is real to me, but you are already one step removed, having only a photography and my word for it.  And some of my games already have so realistic graphics that the casual observer may be fooled.  But for one who is there, real life is still a cut above the rest, to say the least.

Games can give a reasonably lifelike picture of the landscape, but I have so far to see any that has real depth. And even when they one day get the sight and sound right, I will still not be able to feel the spring-chilled wind ruffle my hair and smell earth and flowering trees. (The smell of “natural fertilizer” is luckily gone for this time.)  And I rather prefer tired legs after a long trip over the wrist pain after a long gaming session.  So, all in all, real life still has its advantages.  I would definitely miss it.

Short health update

I refer you to my entry from Thursday, in which I had sudden and inexplicable stomach pain.  Today I have “stomach pain” too, but it feels completely different.  Actually it feels more like muscle pain tham for instance gut pain, while the pain on Thursday felt a lot like gut pain, only much higher up and hitting a larger area at once (especially in the beginning).

I had a more local pain above the navel yesterday, but that too felt more like muscle pain even though it was in the exact spot where I use to feel stomach pain from too much acid.  I thought it was perhaps because my doctor prodded me there the night before.  (Then again I also had a bad flare of haemorrhoids, and he did not prod me there. So who knows.)

Today the area that hurts is much larger, and feels sore as if I got punched in my lower stomach. Which actually to some small degree happened today when I was handmowing the lawn. I suddenly ran into a small hole in the lawn and ran into the handle of the mower, but not at high speed luckily.  Those things can be dangerous!  But when they don’t kill you, they make you stronger. At my age, that is a pretty compelling excuse. Or so I thought.

Anyway, I don’t have fever and the pain is like most of them, an inconvenience only.  So unlike something new happens, I will mostly ignore it.  It is soon bedtime anyway. I slept for like 9 hours last night, but that was only barely enough to pay off the sleep debt from Thursday when I spent much of the night visiting the ER instead of my bed.

Intense stomach pain

Intense stomach pain for about an hour now. Weak, sweating. Normally I am quite resistant to pain, but this is something new.  Called taxi to emergency room.  Probably overkill. If so, you will hear from me again.

3 hours later:

Another black star in my hypochondria book, no doubt. I have really tried to avoid going to doctors to let my reputation cool off, but I’ve never felt this kind of stomach pain in my life. So I called the emergency room and they said to stop by. I took a taxi to the other side of the city where they are, near the hospital. And of course, the pain faded during the taxi trip, and while I waited at the emergency room, it disappeared entirely. (I did “finally” become queasy though, but still haven’t thrown up.) The doctor kneaded my stomach and surrounding areas but found nothing. This happens as regularly as clockwork: No matter how acutely ill I am, when I meet the doctor I am in perfect health, better than most healthy people. There must be something about the aura of those places that supernaturally buoys my health while there, or something. I KNEW this would happen, but it does not happen while I stay at home. I have to actually go destroy my credibility to get healed.

The doctor wrote a letter to my regular doctor. He did not have an explanation for the pain at all, but wanted me to get checked for “cholelithiasis” and for some discoloration of my skin that cannot possibly have anything to do with stomach pains. On the bright side, I walked briskly for half an hour from the hospital to the city, something I feel pretty sure I would not have done with a ruptured stomach. Or indeed any medical condition worth its Latin name. So apart from wasting a measly $250 or so, and further making sure nobody will take me seriously when I finally come down with Death, it was worth the trip.

CDs that leave my home

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Music is difficult to let go of. Especially when cute girls are involved, I guess, and surprisingly often they are.

I have come to the CDs that resist being thrown in the garbage. Even though the song being ripped right now is actually called “Trash”. It is by Suede, from the album “Coming Up”. I have not played it for some time – a couple years, surely. And even when I did, I only played two of the tracks. One was “Trash”, the other was (even more appropriately) “Lazy”. There is a story behind that, of course.

I bought this CD (like so many others) after listening to these tracks repeatedly at the home of my best friend over many years, the amazing Superwoman. (I wrote about remembering this already in 2001. Complete with embarrassing daydream about her. Well, more like embarrassingly safe for work.) Whenever I heard them later, a part of me remembered those times, which were good times indeed. Not that times are bad now. They are good in a different way though. One of the differences is that I can’t sit down with my online friends and listen to music together. At least not yet. I am mildly surprised that this is not yet possible. Perhaps it is, but I just don’t know about it?

In any case, over several years most of my new CDs came from listening to music together with her. She had great taste in music, although she was more omnivorous than I. It took me quite a while to find some music on my own after we parted ways completely. And most of what I’ve bought after that has been Japanese pop that I learned from watching anime.  Eventually I also found some songs via Last.FM, but those are mostly bought via iTunes so I don’t need to rip them and throw away the CDs… Someone did that already.

The previous CD that I ripped today was “luring” by Odd Nordstoga. If you think Odd is an odd name, you are probably not Norwegian. He is one of the few remaining artists that create and sing songs in my native language, Nynorsk (New Norwegian). If you think it looks more like New Norse, that is not far off either. It was created during the time when Norway was awakening to national independence, and its purpose was to gather the heritage from old Norse that had been preserved in our dialects during the centuries of Danish and later Swedish rule. But the pressure from the Danish-Norwegian BokmÃ¥l (Book Language) favored in the cities has gradually polluted the ur-Norwegian language, so that today only a few of us can write it fluently without unwittingly bastardizing it with Danicisms. Among those few are I and Odd Nordstoga. And possibly my friend Zimena (her name changes from time to time, as she has a lot more to protect than I, and anyway her journal is friends-only for a while now). She is a much greater fan of Nordstoga than am I. Truth be told, the only track I played more than once on that CD was the first one, the national smash hit “Kveldssong for deg og meg”. Ooh, I wrote about it in 2004.

The first of the tree CDs I throw out today is “Dreamland” by Robert Miles. Again this was one I learned about from my best friend, but while she was taken by the song “Children” (if I remember correctly), having seen a music video of it, I preferred the song “One & One”. Ooh, I wrote about it in 2001. Seems I did remember correctly after all those years. Woo, go me! And I already wrote about it in 1999, one of my entries most worth reading actually, once it finds it was a bit down the page. “Let’s stand still in time” – that was indeed in some ways the high point of my life. A part of me wants to go back and live that year again – and again, and again. Yes wouldn’t that be nice… if I could do it without losing what I have gained since. But I can’t. But at least I don’t need to lose the song, even if I throw away the CD.