Scott gets cranky about a strip club in Georgia – woohoo!!!

So a letter to the editor that I submitted to The Tampa Tribune over a week ago finally got published today!

The letter… (last one on the page – “Waste of Public Money”)
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/sep/16/na-letters-to-the-editor/

The editorial that I wrote concerning…

Protecting Community Standards
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/sep/08/na-protecting-community-standards/

And finally, the original article that got me all riled up…

Risque Business Dooms Strip Club
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/sep/06/na-risque-business-dooms-strip-club/

It kind of caught me off guard when I saw it because the original article that I was writing about appeared in last Saturday’s paper – think Sept. 6th – so it didn’t really make sense to me for them to publish it long after everyone would’ve forgotten what the original argument was, but whatever. Maybe they ran out of letters arguing about campaigning being too personal this year or Sarah Palin doing a fine job of spreading God’s love of war and hockey and a woman’s right to choice in all things non-abortion-related, but either way, even if nobody remembers the first article, it’s always fun to see your name in print. 🙂

Final Thought: So if I’m one of those guys who writes letters to the editor NOW, what am I going to turn INTO twenty or thirty years from now?!

I think everyone should be required to keep a blog.

Maybe it’s just me, but I like being able to catch up with people and find out what they’ve been doing lately by reading about it instead of actually having to interact with them. Now I know that that sounds incredibly anti-social, but I really only meant it to be partially anti-social…

Think about it: you call a friend up who you haven’t spoken to for a long time and chat with them for maybe an hour or two on the phone, but chances are unless you happen to be rekindling some old friendship or something, you probably won’t chat with them again for a good length of time, when you’ll proceed to talk for a couple hours again and repeat the cycle. The thing is, in doing so even in a couple of hours at a shot, you’re still probably only getting the highlights – what they’re doing for work now, how the family’s doing, possibly anything interesting that happened that week. You may not have time to get into what they thought about The Dark Knight or just how unqualified they think Sarah Palin is to be anything more than Cheer Mom for the Wasilla hockey team, even though you’re probably curious regarding both.

But if they kept a blog up to date, you’re free to browse through those thoughts at your leisure, whether you keep up on it regularly or even binge and go through several months of entries one lazy night when you find yourself wondering how Danny’s doing. Even better, if you are keeping fairly up to date on the thing, you have the option to comment along the way, so you can get your own replies to those thoughts in without having to try to find time to make the call, hoping that they’ve got time to answer it! I know it might sound a little crude to someone who doesn’t blog, but when I’ve got such a limited amount of time during the day that I literally can go weeks without having time to call somebody for a general conversation unless I can squeeze it into a car ride somewhere, it’s kind of nice to still be able to follow other people’s lives by reading what they have to say online, even if it’s 3:00am and they haven’t been awake for hours.

Of course, for this little scenario to work in Scott’s perfect world, everyone would also have to actually enjoy writing enough to have the desire to put their thoughts down every couple of days … which I understand is the reason why this plan would never work! Between those of us who have legitimate blogs who still can’t find the time or desire to write in them and all of the MySpace “blogs” that have exactly four posts in them before the author got tired or too drunk to be able to login to MySpace anymore, I do understand that actively blogging on a personal level is something that not everyone cares to do. To each his own, I suppose, however I will confess that I still have a good time every now and then jumping back into even my own archives here to see what I was thinking two years ago or even five years ago at this point, and ultimately I think it’s kinda cool to have that sort of resource available to you. I never really got into keeping a diary or journal growing up, but I enjoy blogging – even if occasionally in spurts and more often than not just rambling that no one else will ever care about!

Talk about a cool concept – if my oldest post is from May 2003, right now I’ve got more than five years worth of memories stored in this blog. What about five years from now, when I’ve got a little baby running around terrorizing the house, or even ten or twenty years from now, when said baby is now running around terrorizing in an entirely different manner?! Why sit down and write my memoirs fifty or sixty years after the fact when I can just pen them along as I go?

glasses conundrum

So Sara and I both made it a point to get new glasses and contacts last weekend, and I went back to pick them up yesterday. She primarily wears glasses, but wants the contacts for days when she wants to be able to wear sunglasses or just doesn’t want to wear glasses, whereas I’m a contacts guy who just wanted to get a pair of glasses to satisfy those early morning hours when I first get up and don’t feel like either rushing to throw in my contacts or walk around blind in the meantime.

My problem is, I’m not sure if I can wear glasses now.

Keep in mind that I haven’t worn a pair of glasses since I was probably fifteen – possibly even earlier, but I can’t really remember, but regardless, I know that I got my contacts sometime around the 10th grade, meaning that I’ve been used to contacts for over a decade now. Switching back to glasses seems like trying to gargle fire in the middle of a hurricane … I tried them on for a couple of hours last night, but I nearly got a headache just from the differences. It seems like there was a glare just about everywhere, and I’m not entirely sure if that’s a subtle “feature” from the eye doctor to prove that I should’ve paid the extra $39 to get the special “non-glare coating.” Also, I can’t help but notice how bad the fuzziness is around the outside of the lenses, especially in my peripheral vision – I suppose you sort of take for granted the concept of the lens covering your entire cornea when you only wear contact lenses. And don’t even talk to me about how the computer screen seemed to pulse back and forth as I was typing…

And mind you, I did wear my glasses for several years growing up before I made the switch, but maybe it’s a combination of my vision not being as bad back in the day and also having gotten so used to the alternative since then. Right now it’s just weird because I find myself having to actively focus on only things through the lens themselves – if I catch myself looking around the rims, not only is everything obviously blurry, but my eyes start to hurt if I’m looking half through one and half the other at the same time.

Granted, it’s only the first day with them and I certainly won’t be wearing them full-time, but I do hope they get at least better enough so that I can stand to wear them for watching TV in bed and whatnot. Any thoughts from folks that actively wear both? It’s funny that I remember “the switch” from glasses to contacts being toted as “not always easy” by my eye doctor at the time, but that was pretty much just because I wasn’t too fond of the girl jabbing her finger into my eye to “show me” how to put them in…

Who knew that the switch back would be just as bad?!

The Cheapest Person I Know…

I normally can’t stand these four sentences at a time article layouts that all of the “traditional news outlets” seem to love so much these days, but I’ve got to admit that these ones were pretty amusing…

http://www.walletpop.com/specials/cheapest-person-i-know-7th-edition
http://money.aol.com/special/cheapest-person-i-know-2008
http://money.aol.com/special/cheapest-person-i-know/2007
http://money.aol.com/special/cheapest-person-i-know
http://money.aol.com/special/cheapestperson0608

Also, I think I know some of those people.

pre-election homework : REGISTER the Vote!!!

Don’t forget that you have to register in advance if you want to vote on the most important day of the year this fall in most states. I could go into a rant wondering why there are so many hoops to jump through for a simple registration, or why every single state gets to set its own rules for how to register (i.e. it took me an extra 10 seconds to register when I renewed my license up in Michigan, but either it’s not as easy here in Florida or I just really wasn’t paying attention when I got my license five years ago!), but instead, let’s just leave all that behind us and get down to the nitty-gritty…

Here’s the form that I just printed out, if you also happen to live in the Sunshine State…
http://election.dos.state.fl.us/pdf/webappform.pdf

Also, there’s a link right in the middle of the Rock the Vote page that will e-mail you the right form for your state, although it looks like you might also be signing yourself up for solicitations…

Home

Lastly, here’s the actual site that I found the link to Florida’s details on – if you need the form for another state, you can look here without having to hand over an e-mail address…
http://www.declareyourself.com/voting_faq/state_by_state_info_2.html#F

In the State of Florida, you need to be registered for at least 29 days before you can vote in an election, meaning that it’s looking like October 6th is your deadline – only a month away! I’m normally not one to care much about politics, but look where that attitude has gotten us over the last eight years! Just print the form, spend the 42 cents, and let’s get this change train a-rolling… 🙂