Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Flu Shots and Crayons

I stopped at the Adult High School on my way home from work and got my flu shot today. Filled out the forms and was ushered straight to a nurse. I assured her that I have no allergies and have never had trouble with a flu shot. She told me take tylenol but not aspirin if my arm hurts afterward and slid the needle in. Barely felt it.

She reminded me that I was supposed to wait 15 minutes and I said, "you bet," but my plan was to leave as soon as she was looking the other way. Until I saw the table with crayons and pictures of Gerri the Immunization Giraffe. I suppose it wouldn't hurt to colour one of these pictures, I thought, and if it takes 15 minutes, that'll be okay.

I have a tip for Ottawa Public Health - Either get better crayons or get a drawing that is less finely detailed. I tried to stay inside the lines but it was freaking impossible.

You know, when I was a kid it was clear to everyone that I would never be an artist because I couldn't draw inside the lines with crayons. Well who can?

Are there still adults out there who comment negatively on crayon colouring that goes outside the lines? If so, I'd like names and addresses so I can send them nasty letters.

City of Ottawa Free Flu Shot Clinics

Ontario by Region

Do we have to say it in sign language? Get the flu shot

The Robot Rebellion draws nigh

If news of the high breakdown rate of the Roomba vaccuum cleaner robots lulled you into thinking the Robot Rebellion is many years away, I have bad news for you. Evil scientists have melded a robot with a cockroach brain. They could have chosen an insect that likes us, say the honey bee or the ladybug, but no, they chose the cockroach. An insect that we have been at war with for generations, and one of the only animals expected to survive a nuclear holocaust.

BoingBoing TV Episode

Robot Vacuums driving owners insane

Monday, November 26, 2007

Dave Cooper Opening

The Dave Cooper opening at Artguise on Friday was quite a scene. Lots of babies and small children. And lots of parkas. Far more parkas than will likely be at the Los Angeles showing of these paintings in February. My Flickr set Artguise Dave Cooper's currently out of date site Dave Cooper's more out of date site

Saving Time with Mittens

Mittens and Gloves should have a way of quickly identifying which is left and which is right. Why do we slavishly wear identical gloves and mitts anyway?

Maybe you knitters could get to work on this. I suggest having red on right-hand mittens and green on left-hand mittens as this is the colour scheme followed in ocean and aeronautical aviation.

Minimum Benefits of this idea:

  • (28 million Canadians outside BC) x
  • (3 seconds per having to figure out which is which) x
  • (0.5 to account for people who don't try to figure it out, but switch when they get it wrong) times
  • (30+31+31+28+15 days in November, December, January, February and the first half of March)
    = 180 person-years!
    Plus, if the green-red system is adopted, lives could be saved in situations where pilots or marine navigators get food poisoning and have to be replaced by ordinary citizens who will now know the left-right colour code.

A Great Moment in Advertising

I heard a radio ad on Magic 100 this morning that went something like this [I am not making this up]:

As the holiday season advances, we will all eventually be overcome with a strong feeling that material things do not matter.

Before this happens to you, head on down to the storewide sale at the Bay!

I went online to see if this message has made it into any of the Bay's other advertising material. It doesn't seem that it has, so I have taken it upon myself to put together a little artwork for them. [From this and this.]

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Christmas with the Maple Leaf Brass Band

Two Christmas Concerts: Sun, November 25, 2 - 4pm
Orleans United Church 1111 Orleans Blvd, Ottawa, ON [Map] Sunday, December 16, 2:30 - 4:30pm
St. Matthias Anglican Church 555 Parkdale, Ottawa, ON [Map]
And you can buy our new Christmas CD (for only $10, I think)

Monday, November 19, 2007

The New Beard and Alzheimers Prevention

One reason my blogging frequency has been low in the past month is I've felt I should blog about the Beard before I blog about anything else.

I've been delaying on the Beard because I didn't have a photo I wanted to use and I didn't know how I wanted to approach the topic.

But now I have this excellent quiz night photo from Kevin McPhee and I've decided to just do it.

About five years ago, I stopped shaving several days before Halloween so that I'd look more like a Viking. That did not exactly work, but I thought I'd continue with a goatee moustache combination (which many refer to as a "Van Dyck") to see if maybe I could pull off looking like a Musketeer.

One day, two itchy, irritating months later, I came to the conclusion that I could pull off looking like a Musketeer, but rather than looking like Dartagnan, the dashing one, I looked like Porthos, the big-eater. I shaved it off.

In August, I spent a lot of time sleeping in tents and got out of the habit of shaving. Back in Ottawa, I realized that Talk Like a Pirate Day was fast approaching and some facial hair would be appropriate. I decided to try a Van Dyck again.

Within a week, I had a noticeable growth and my face itched like crazy.

Like I always do when I have a problem, I went to the internet. Sure enough there are beard forums out there where guys ask "what can I do about the itching?" and other guys answer. Some answer with suggestions like "brush to remove dead skin", "use moisturizer", or "use conditioner". Most say you just have to wait for the itching to go away. It doesn't seem like there has been a scientific study on the topic.

I suspect that a study would confirm that, of the proposed solutions, waiting is the only one that works. I also suspect there are guys out there that waiting doesn't work for and these guys don't have beards. Unless they live in cultures where they have to grow them anyway and these fellows may well be why extremism becomes associated with bearded cultures.

I may be a guy that waiting doesn't work for. Why do I still have the Beard even though we are two months past Talk Like a Pirate Day? First, there was Halloween; the Beard made it easier to be a space pirate. Second, the ladies seem to like the Beard. Third, the Beard may stave off senility.

That's right. I'm growing facial hair to prevent dementia. Here is my reasoning: Forcing new circuits to grow in our brains is supposed to be good. They tell us to solve crosswords, vary our routes to work, brush our teeth with the other hand, take Spanish, etc. I figure that getting my brain to deal with the bizarre sensations of having a mat of prickly hair below my nose is going to force all sorts of new neural connections.

Beard growing for brain circuit growth has a few benefits over the other recommended methods that make it ideal for the lazy man:

  1. It doesn't take time that you would have to take away from another activity;
  2. You don't have to remind yourself to do it;
  3. While it's irritating, it is not hard like learning a new language.

Oh, I almost forgot my favourite quote about the beard, from a gathering at the Manx:

Me: So yesterday, someone at band practice told me I look like Mark Twain, "but in a good way".

Others: What? You don't look like Mark Twain.

Dave T: But you do look like a Mark Twain character. You'd make a great riverboat gambler.

It's funny because it's true.