Categories
Football Politics

A Thought About the Redskins Name

I’ll start by stating I hate the Redskins. I hope they lose every game they play. With the possible exception of their games against the Giants. If the Giants have a better record, that’s the one time I’ll root for Redskins since they can at least do some good in that instance by marring another hated team’s record. Such is life as a Cowboys fan.

Look, I need something to look forward to. With the current state of the Cowboys, looking through the scores and seeing a Redskins loss can at least make me feel a bit better as a football fan.

That said, I’ve been really put off by the renewed attempts this year by folks, such as Mike Florio, to get the Redskins to change their name. In general, I view it as bullying. The Florio’s of the world believe they have the better of the argument mostly because everyone they deem as important agrees with the basic premise: the name is a racial slur against Native Americans.

This morning, I came across the first article I’ve read that attempts to defend the name. The point made by the author is that there is no offense intended in the use of the name. Quite the opposite in fact- the team name has been a source of pride for a storied sports franchise. From what I’ve seen, this is generally acknowledged by the Bob Costas’ of the world, but they don’t find it convincing.

The argument always circles back to the most recent usage of the “redskin” outside of the NFL world- as a pejorative against Native Americans.

I’ve stayed out of the argument because I haven’t had anything useful to say or offer that I thought was unique. After reading the Reason article, I finally had an inspiration.

According to Wikipedia, the term “redskin” did not begin life as a pejorative. I won’t rehash the etymology here, other than to note that it eventually became perceived as a slur. It then occurred to me: if the word could change from a non-slur to a slur, why can’t it change back?

While the pro-name-changers have a fair point arguing the dubious past of “redskins” as a slur, they fail to account for what the word could become. I’d refer back to the Reason article’s exposition on how the word “yid” was appropriated by a soccer team’s fans. “Yid” is a slur for Jewish people, yet these fans embraced the term as an unofficial term for their team. Doing so robs the term of it’s sting and power, I think.

Anyone who has faced down bullies will also note that the quickest way to defuse a verbal assault is to not allow it to affect you. When the mob starts calling names meant to offend and hurt, the best defense is to turn it around and make a joke of it. Not allowing the words to offend robs them of their power.

I’m not sure what power the term “redskin” as a slur has left in it at this point since it’s not in common usage anymore. So why not use the moment to change the usage of the term? If the English language isn’t dead, then surely this is possible- though the method isn’t exactly obvious to me. Perhaps a sustained campaign by the Redskins organization to honor Native American culture.

Still, the point is that the word “redskin” only has power if it’s allowed to. To ban it would go a long way to augment it’s power. By forcing the name change, it would join the ranks of other “forbidden” words. This is currently a conscious choice the Costas-Florio’s of the world are trying to force upon the rest of the world- to cement the word Redskin as a slur for the future.

It needn’t be so.

Perhaps, in the end, the way to change its perception is simply for every time someone is told “You shouldn’t use that word because it’s a slur” the response should be “I don’t use it as a slur, and you think of it that way because you choose to.” If intent is what got it started down the road towards becoming a slur, then surely intent can be used to change course.

Categories
Archery

I Shot an Arrow Into the Air…

After spending most of today in the service of the kids, we got home and I went outside to spend a little time practicing my archery. Our neighbor had visited yesterday and he’d suggested I might want to figure out a way to raise my target block so I didn’t have to aim down so much. I think the idea is to be able to practice technique without concern for aiming right now- just practice the draw, anchor and release stages of the shot to develop some muscle memory.

So when I went out I took my 2 arrows and the shooting block and scanned around a bit to determine if I had any simple options for elevating the block. After ruling out a few options, I looked at the kid’s play gym. It has an elevated platform which the monkey bars are attached to. From the platform, there is a slide down to a sandbox. There is also a short rock wall climb on one side and a rope ladder climb on the other. The platform is open from one side to the other along it’s length, with a roof made of the old tent material covering it. I went and measured my shoulder height against it.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was close. If I set the target on the platform, I judged I could stand about 5 yards away and fire away at it with a straight arm and little aiming to worry about. Just to be sure, I nocked an arrow and raised my arm into drawing position and it lined up with the lower half of the target.

Perfect.

So I paced off 5 yards and turned towards the target. I set my other arrow down on the ground next to me and then began my shot progression. I placed my fingers on the string. I set the string into the first joint of my index finger just above the arrow. My middle and ring finger go below the arrow and curl around the string allowing me to take the weight of the bow off my bow hand. I then relax my grip on the bow. At this point, I look up and stare at the center of the target, then raised my bow arm into position. As I raised the bow into position I brought my draw arm elbow parallel with the ground and began my draw, rotating my body then transferring the draw to my back (at least, that’s what I’m trying to do.)

I anchored my string hand under my chin with the string touching my nose and the corner of my mouth. I paused a moment, made sure my bow hand was relaxed and my arm was straight out from my shoulders. I felt the tension in my back as the weight of the draw pulled against my fingers. I then relaxed my fingers…

The string sang and the arrow flew.

There are those moments when something goes awry where our mind takes a moment to fully comprehend what happened. When the mind recognizes that something went amiss, but can’t quite put the whole picture together. In my case, I distinctly remember thinking “Where’s the THOCK?” That satisfying sound every archer knows as their arrows strikes a target.

Full understanding came quickly from there. I’d missed the target. High. The arrow has sailed through the opening in the play gym’s platform. It had hit nothing and passed unimpeded into the woods behind the house. Beyond our yard, there is a drop off of about 15 feet into wetlands. The arrow had flown somewhere into there, with barely a whisper.

And where it landed, I know not where.

Categories
Family

The Crankies

“The Crankies” visited the boy this morning. He has to go do a fundraiser with me this morning for Scouts and he didn’t want to. “WHAT?!? You mean I have to go and do fundraisers every day for the rest of my life!?!” he exclaimed when the Wife reminded him. Prior to that, he’d been engaging in other favorite cranky behavior, needlessly antagonizing his sister.

As for the fundraiser, never mind that we do it for about a month-and-a-half out of the year. Never mind that he actually enjoys doing it. Never mind that I’ll spend the remainder of the year trying to make his Scouting experience fun fruitful. Never mind that he only has to work for an hour today (THE HORROR!!) All that seems to matter is it interferes with his busy Saturday and weekend schedule consisting of… nothing.

He loves to poke at the lass when he’s cranky. He’ll intentionally poke her, (nothing hard- just enough to be annoying like only a brother can manage) until she’s literally screaming at him to stop. When he’s called out he accuses her of being a baby and always making a big deal of out nothing. If she gets up, he’ll slide over into her spot on the couch, which he knows will infuriate her when she returns. He also tends to make lots of snide comments about her- subtle put-downs and such that individually aren’t a big deal. But taken together with the steady drip-drip-drip of a leaky faucet add up to more than their constituent parts.

If it isn’t the boy, then it’s the lass who gets “The Crankies.” She tends to exhibit different behaviors. Namely, an out-of-control defiance for everything. Tell her to make her breakfast and she’ll put on a frown, fold her arms across her chest and say “Hmmmph. I’m not hungry.” Ask her to feed the dogs and she’ll repeat the above with the modification that she “always feed the stupid dogs. Why doesn’t my brother ever feed them?” Never mind that he fed them just yesterday.

There is no cure for “The Crankies.” At least, no sure fire cure. Depending on the severity of the affliction, distractions or redirection can work. Sometimes, feigning excitement for something they like can snap them out of it. Other times, getting some food in them fixes things.

Just as often as not, however, nothing works and the only saving grace is that they get dumped at school for the day and we get a reprieve from them for 6 hours or so. It’s a crap shoot whether “The Crankies” are gone by the time they get home.

It’s almost enough to be willing to use them as collateral for renting an iPhone. Although in all likelihood, Apple would be demanding their phone back well before the rental was up.

Categories
Family

On Pushing Your Kids

A few years back, we started the boy on his martial arts lessons. I say a few years… I guess it would be a bit over 3 years now. As it stands, he’s well on his way to earning a junior black belt, an interim belt level that pre-teen kids can earn at the school. The instructors very rarely award full black belts to pre-teen kids because the curriculum is much more advanced and challenging, including self-defense techniques against weapons. The boy is at the point now in his training where he’s looking forward to classes and practice and even voluntarily practices outside of class.

It was not always so.

In fact, when he first started out there were many a tearful day where he didn’t want to go. He was too tired he’d say, or he just didn’t feel like it. It wasn’t infrequent that he claimed he didn’t like martial arts.

Yet the Wife and I persisted and struggled with him and kept getting him to his classes. Often times, when he put up the biggest stinks about going, he would get into class and clearly enjoy himself. Just as often, when the class ended he’d quickly change to a grousing demeanor. But if we asked him if he’d enjoyed the class, he would begrudgingly admit he had. So we continued to push him along.

We were always on the lookout for a point where it was clear he was not enjoying the classes. Had it become clearly evident, I like to think we would have ceased making him go to fulfill his obligations.

When he was in 1st grade, the boy was involved in something all year long. He started with Scouts and martial arts in the fall. Then moved on to hockey through the Winter. Finally, he concluded with baseball in the Spring. By the end of the Spring, he was doing something all but one day of the week.

I’ll never forget the night he came home with about 2 weeks to go in the baseball season and basically cried uncle. At that point, he had a coach pitch game to attend and he flat out didn’t want to do it. He lamented “I never have any time to do anything I want because I’m always doing either karate, baseball or Scouts.”

That was the last year he played organized baseball. We’ve offered to let him do it every year since. Every year since, he’s declined. He underwent a similar trajectory with soccer. After having played in the Fall leagues for the past couple of years, he chose to stop this year and the Wife and I let him.

It’s hard for me to say what the difference is between karate and baseball and soccer in this context. I suppose part of it is, at the time, he had more invested in karate (even if he couldn’t understand that). Another part of it is, frankly, I’m not a baseball or soccer guy so I wasn’t going to be heart broken about him not wanting to play.

But another part is that he was, and is, still young. So how hard were we going to push him to be doing things and going places and committing himself to activities if he really didn’t want to be doing them? On the one hand, we want to instill in him the need to work and practice to hone and develop skills so he can be accomplished at a skill. In that consideration, allowing him to quit seems counter productive. On the other hand, why run the risk of burning him out when he still has so much mental and physical growth to undergo?

Where are the lines drawn? And how much do we let him draw them?

The Wife and I both only have our own experiences growing up to inform our choices: the things we like and the things we didn’t like. But still, that experience is of limited utility because our kids are not us and we are not our parents. Parallels and patterns may present themselves, but there are no rules, no hard and fast lessons to be applied.

Ultimately, we’ve tried to walk a balance. We try encourage and push him in things that we think are important. We try and instill a sense of drive and obligation to complete a task that isn’t easily completed with those things. And we give him options for things to explore and pursue so that he might eventually find something he is truly passionate about.

I have my doubts that he’ll become a lifelong martial artist and I have my doubts that he’ll want to become an Eagle Scout. But I like to think that when he finally does find a passion, he’ll know how to go about fulfilling it.

Categories
Politics

For All the Know-it-Alls Out There

Considering I’ve embraced my inner radical, and now that the government showdown is all but over, I have some questions for all the political know-it-alls out there. Particularly the ones that claim they want smaller government.

First, what has any of the current crop of “good” Republicans done to reduce the size of government? I suppose the smart-allecky ones will say “the sequester.” I’d answer we still have multi-hundred-billion dollar deficits. That’s not shrinking government.

Second, what proposals have you put forward that actually shrinks government? What ideas have you mentioned? Whom have you backed that’s willing to go after entitlements? (Alright, that’s 3 questions…)

Third, what level of debt will finally get your attention? If $17,000,000,000,000.00 and counting doesn’t, what will? $20,000,000,000,000? $25,000,000,000,000? $35,000,000,000,000? $50,000,000,000,000? Seriously, what is that magic number? What’s the point where you’ll finally say “Holy crap, we can’t possibly ever pay that amount of money back!”? While you’re at it, do you really think we should set our debt ceiling at a level where “Holy crap, we can’t possibly ever pay that off”?

What’s insane? People who don’t believe that we should have $17 trillion in debt and decide to take a stand and say “No more.” Or the people who think $17 trillion in debt is no big deal and it’s just business as usual? Please explain to me your definition of insane.

Do you think the music will play forever and that none of the seats will be removed? Or do you just want to make sure you get yours before the music stops and that it’s some other generation left standing when it does?

Categories
Computers Notweet Programming

Twitget Improvement Addendum

Awhile back, I posted a modification to the Twitget Twitter widget I’m now using to display my tweets over there on the side bar. I’ve now made some further improvements since my original changes made an erroneous assumption about processing the tweet information.

First, hashtag links were losing the leading space when being displayed in the sidebar. The fix here was trivial, as it simply requires adding a space to the to preg_replace function calls in the process_links function that deal with generating the hashtag links.

The second fix is slightly more significant. Basically, if there are no URL entities in the tweet metadata, then the code needs to find link text within the tweet and turn it into a link. Here’s the new batch of code:

function process_links($text, $new, $urls) {
        if($new) {
                $linkmarkup = '<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="';
                $text = preg_replace('/@(\w+)/', '<a href="http://twitter.com/$1" target="_blank">@$1</a>', $text);
                $text = preg_replace('/\s#(\w+)/', ' <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23$1&src=hash" target="_blank">#$1</a>', $text);
        }
        else {
                $linkmarkup = '<a rel="nofollow" href="';
                $text = preg_replace('/@(\w+)/', '<a href="http://twitter.com/$1">@$1</a>', $text);
                $text = preg_replace('/\s#(\w+)/', ' <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23$1&src=hash">#$1</a>', $text);
        }

        if (!empty($urls))
                foreach($urls as $url) {  
                        $find = $url['url'];
                        $replace = $linkmarkup.$find.'">'.$url['expanded_url'].'</a>';
                        $text = str_replace($find, $replace, $text);
                }
        else {
            if ($new) {
                $text = preg_replace('@(https?://([-\w\.]+)+(d+)?(/([\w/_\.]*(\?\S+)?)?)?)@', '<a href="$1" target="_blank">$1</a>',  $text);
            }
            else {
                $text = preg_replace('@(https?://([-\w\.]+)+(d+)?(/([\w/_\.]*(\?\S+)?)?)?)@', '<a href="$1">$1</a>',  $text);
            }
        }

        return $text;
}

The framework here is pretty much identical as before. The main addition is the else clause in the if(!empty($urls)). The code after that is actually the previous link code- regexes like that are too persnickety to reinvent.

So this will suffice until the next problems surfaces.

Categories
Misc

Why I Don’t “Like” Anything

Doug Mataconis alerts us to a way to opt out of the new Google user endorsement regime.  While useful, I have an easier way:  don’t “+1” or “like” anything,  anywhere, ever.

If companies like Google are going to insist on playing these games, then the best option is not to play.  It may not be as fun, but it beats the privacy headaches that inevitably result.

Categories
Family

Really?

I’m sitting here on the couch with the kids.  It’s halftime now so they are getting a little bored.   The lass sticks her tongue out.

The boy takes this as an invitation.  He starts squeezing her head so her jaw clamps down on her tongue.   The lass is mildly amused by this which encourages the boy to take the next step.

He starts bumping the underside of her jaw with one hand while pushing down on the top of her head with the other.  He tries it once, twice, three times.

At which point I’ve had enough.  “What do you think you’re doing?” I start with.

He looks at me, unsure what to say.  He’s got a deer-in-the-headlights look that confirms he was not thinking at all.

“What do you think is going to happen if you keep doing that?” I then asked.

“Ummm, I don’t know.  You’re going to yell at me?”

He’s not wrong.  I suspect, however, he still doesn’t get it.

“Will that be before or after you successfully get her to bite her tongue?” I ask.

“Oh, well I knew that woud happen…”

“So wait,” I cut him off.  “You mean you know that you’ll eventually hurt her and that you’ll get in trouble for it but you’re doing it anyway?  That’s sooo much better.  I mean, that’s just brilliant.”  I turned up the sarcasm to 11.

Now he got it.  His face fell and he stopped.  There were no snappy comebacks or attempts to laugh it off.  He fully comprehended the foolishness of what he was doing.

I don’t know when either of them will start demonstrating the ability to think about what they are doing and the likely consequences.   It won’t come soon enough.

Categories
Family

Hello?

The Wife and I are raking the yard today.  While we’ve been working, the boy is walking around with a rake in his hands.  He keeps asking random questions about school and books he’s read.  The rake in his hands voes unused.

Finally, I ask him “So are you going to use that rake in your hands or just wander around with it?”  I was a touch accusatory with my tone.

He replied, just a little sheepishly, “Well, I’m not sure where you want me to start.”

This is what the yard looks like:

image

image

I simply spread my arms and motioned in the general vicinity of the yard.  It’s hard to figure them out sometimes.

Categories
Family

A Walk in the Woods

I’d finished up a little archery practice after dinner when the kids cornered me and wanted to know if I’d go on a hike with them. It wasn’t too late, yet. The light was fading fast though as it was close to 6 o’clock. In truth, I really didn’t want to go. I think that, sometimes, I tell them “No” too many times when they want me to do something with them. That’s a funny thing to say considering my situation, but there it is.

Counter-intuitively, that probably makes it easier for me to say it. I’m around them so much that I never want for “kid time.” Most of that time, though, is kind of the family equivalent of “business.” Going to school, picking up from school, meals, going to martial arts, and all the other running around. Doing things that are just fun and frivolous aren’t as frequent anymore.

So, in the end, I took them for a hike.

I grabbed a flashlight and a toothpick (just finished dinner, remember?) and we headed out. There are two ways we could go that don’t involve roads- South and North. South is a short hike that skirts the several neighbors’ backyards and ends near a stream. North takes us to a different part of the stream that we can cross. From there, it’s fields and woods into the next town.

We went North.

“What’s that for?” the boy asked pointing at the flashlight.

“It gets dark quick nowadays,” I replied.

“What’s that for, Dad?” asked the lass about 5 seconds later. She’d lagged behind and caught up. I told her to ask the boy.

The initial part of the hike was through some woods. The path is easy enough to pick out, but there are tall grasses and twiggy brush along the way that is impossible to avoid. There are also downed trees that are easy enough for me to step over. Not so much for the kids. The lass was soon complaining about her legs getting scratched- she’d chosen shorts for her hiking attire. The boy was looking forward to seeing “The Mansion.”

“The Mansion” isn’t really a mansion, but it is a large house. It’s located across the street from us and up a hill. It actually can’t be seen from our house or from the road. But if we hiked far enough the way we were going, we’d be able to get to an elevated point that would allow us to pick out “The Mansion” on the hill. I think I’d mentioned this once before in the boy’s presence. He’d clearly never forgotten and had it in his mind that he’d finally get his chance to see “The Mansion.”

He asked how far we had to go. By this point, we’d come out of the stretch of woods and into our first field. To get to the point where we could see “The Mansion,” we had to cross the stream and continue East. There was a second, longer stretch of woods to pass through and we’d come to another field. Then, we had to go to the other side of that field and we’d be able to view it. I wasn’t so sure it would work out since the light was fading fast, but this was the adventure he had set his mind on. After finishing The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised. No dragons though.

We crossed the stream and continued along into the next field. It was a corn field that had already been harvested. Shaved stalks created neat rows and patterns all around us. The lass grabbed the nearest one and proclaimed it “her stalk.” Our first trophy from our adventure, I suppose. The boy was asking questions about how I knew where to go. In spite of her trophy, the lass was getting bored and regretting coming on the hike. She came up and took my hand as we entered the woods on the far side of the field.

I used to bring our oldest dog for walks back here. Back when I still had a normal job and walks in the woods with your dog was a stress relieving adventure. She wood run all over. If I walked 1 mile, she loped 5. She was never out of earshot, though many a time I lost site of her. I’d call and she’d come racing back to check in, then bound off again in search of other things to sniff.

We trudged through the woods. The boy was peppering me with questions about what it was like with the dog back here. Did I have her on a leash? What did she do? Where did she go? Did she come back? Could she follow a scent back to the house? Would she be happy to come back here now?

The trail is over grown from when I used to hike back there. Not so much that it was hard to follow the trail. But enough that the grasses continued to nip at the lass’ legs. The boy’s too. They would take a few steps, then pick a leg up and wipe it with there hand to stop the itching.

The boy was wondering where we were headed now and if we had much farther to go. I told him we were looking for a wall and that we had a ways to go. The field we were heading too is several football fields long, plus the remainder of the hike through the woods. He didn’t complain and the lass just continued to concentrate on putting one foot in front of the other.

The wall we were looking for is an old stone wall. Looking at it now, with my new eyes for stone wall construction, I could appreciate that it was a well built wall. Even spacing between stones, a nice flat face and a flat defined top. Someone, at sometime, had taken some care in assembling it. Trees were slowly wrecking it now, though. Either because of trees falling on it or because of roots coming up under it. Attacked from above and below, it was slowly ceding ground. There were also sections that had clearly been dismantled by people who’d decided they need a way to pass through. But the parts that are still intact are a testament to it’s builder.

We walked along the stone wall for the final leg through the woods. This is a gentle uphill stretch that’s a bit tricky due to roots jutting out from the ground. It’s easy to catch a toe and get tripped up. There were also tree limbs that I had trouble dodging. The lass noted “Sometimes it’s better to be short, huh Dad?” She wasn’t wrong. The boy could see the opening to the field and bounded up to it, buoyed by the realization that he was at the final leg of his journey.

The lass and I emerged and she sighed. The field was looooong. Just like I’d told them. The boy had his hands on his knees about 50 yards in. I think he’d run all the way there before realizing he would never be able to sprint across the entire field. The lass griped again about going home. The complaints about the grass were worst for this stretch. Long and thick, it caused there legs to itch on every step. Even the boy finally admitted he should have worn jeans.

The boy was marvelling at how he didn’t feel tired. The lass was wishing she’d eaten more for dinner. Then she asked whether the dog had been this far back and when I told her she had, it seemed to lift her spirits to think of the dog trotting through the field she now trudged through. She like the thought of her being happy and exploring. She kept asking, trying to flesh out all the details of what the dog had done, where she’d gone.

We finally reached the other side of the field and turned around. I could make out a light on the hill, way back across our street. It was well into dusk now, and without that light it would have been hard to see “The Mansion.” As it was, there was little detail that could be discerned. If I hadn’t told the kids that it was a big house that sat there, they’d never have known based on the view.

We stood and admired the view for a bit. The gray clouds in the sky were streaked red from the sunset. The boy noted what looked like a rainbow next to the clouds. Even though he couldn’t really see the house, he didn’t seem disappointed. The lass too, seemed to be in a better mood. Perhaps it was because she knew the next stop would be home.

Still, with the light almost gone, she took my hand for the walk back. She wanted to hold the flashlight, but I declined. When I wouldn’t pass it to her, she asked me to turn it on. I told her “When we get back to the woods. There’s still enough light to walk through field. You wouldn’t want the batteries to run out, would you?” She didn’t push the matter any further.

The walk back seemed quicker than the walk out, in spite of the darkness that descended up on us through the woods. The boy commented on the difference and I tried to explain that when you don’t know where you’re going, you tend to notice everything and it makes time seem longer. But on the return journey, everything is familiar, so you tend to notice less and the time seems to go by quicker.

Along the way, I’d occasionally shine the light into the woods and scan it around. I did the same in the field. Both kids kept wondering what I thought I’d seen.

“Nothing,” I answered.

“Then why do you keep shining the light into the woods?” the boy asked.

“Because if I don’t stop and look, I won’t see anything. Maybe there’s a deer, or a rabbit, or a coyote out there. If I keep shining the light on the trail, that’s all I’ll see. So I stop and look around every now and again, because you never know.”

We walked together through the night. We detoured from our original path as we neared our house. Rather than passing through the woods to get back to there, we went around to the road. This was to benefit the lass, whom didn’t want to deal with the sticks and bushes nipping at her legs anymore. She’d held my hand the whole way, but let it go at the road. We walked with them in front of me so I could light them up with the flashlight for cars to see.

The lass had held onto her corn stalk all the way back to the house and she now tossed it onto the side of the driveway. The journey was over.

Before heading up to take showers, they both said they liked the walk. The lass added that she’d like it better if it had been during the day. They both wanted to do it again someday, they said.

I’ll have to oblige them.

Categories
Archery Notweet

An Impromptu Archery Equipment Lesson

The limbs for my riser arrived yesterday and I’ll admit to being excited about the prospect. For one, having the limbs would officially make the bow mine, instead of half borrowed. I’d been using my neighbor’s limbs in the interim. Also, these limbs are longer and more appropriate for someone with my draw length and finally, they’re a tad bit heavier in draw weight.

So after about a half-hour of setup time, I marched outside and took my first shot and exclaimed “OUCH!!” Didn’t see that coming. At least the shot hit the target with a satisfying THOCK.

On the release, the string had smacked me on the bony part of my wrist just below the thumb. Right where my arm guard wasn’t covering because I’d never been struck that far low on my wrist before by the string. In fact, since I’d started shooting more regularly, I hadn’t been striking my arm much at all anymore. To do so on the first shot with the new limbs was disappointing.

I fired a second shot. I figured it was a one-off. Alas, no. My new bow gave me the exact same treatment as on the previous shot. In fact, that would be the treatment I’d get on every shot I took with it. I ultimately slid the wrist guard down to over that spot. The pain stopped, but I could still feel the impact.

The short of it, literally, was that my brace height was way to low.

What happened was when we strung up the bow, the neighbor wasn’t sure how many twists it would take to measurably shorten the string. So we started with 10 turns, with little change. Then we went to 20 turns, again with little change. Finally, we stopped at 30 turns because that just seemed like way too many turns. Still, the brace height was only about 7 1/4 inches. He told me that for the longer limbs, I should really be closer to 9. It seemed like it would be impossible to shorten the string almost 2 inches when after 30 turns, we’d barely shortened it a quarter inch.

So after shooting today and continuing to hit my wrist, I basically became desperate. I’d tried various different grips and positions to keep from getting hit and none of them worked. I realized that if I had to tolerate getting hit like that on every shot, I’d drop this new hobby as quickly as I’d picked it up. The bow was almost unshootable.

I took a close look at the setup. When I gripped the bow, the string rested just a few inches above the wrist-hand joint. I also noticed that when nocking an arrow, the fletchings were almost touching the riser. As compared to the previous setup with the neighbor’s medium length limbs, both of those were different- the string rested in the middle of my forearm and the fletchings came no where near the riser when nocked. So I decided to go back to the brace height and resolved myself to twisting that string right up to the point of knotting if I had to.

Before doing so, I did a little investigating and determined that the 9 inch measurement for brace height for a recurve with long limbs was a starting point. It could be decreased or increased around that for tuning purposes. I wasn’t interested in tuning, since I don’t have enough consistency to know the difference anyway. All I wanted was to make sure I was getting it to a reasonable point and hopefully stop the string from striking my arm.

So I unstrung the bow and started twisting. I counted my additional twists at first, but then stopped counting after realizing what mattered was the measurement, not the number of turns. I was able to significantly shorten the string with the twisting without any sign of knotting in the string. The first time I restrung the bow, I could immediately see I’d made a significant change. My measurement confirmed it: I’d increases the brace height to 8 1/2 inches.

Encouraged, I opted to keep going. From this point, I counted 10 turns and immediately noticed I had a hard time getting the string back on to the bow. Once I did and then restrung it, I was astonished to see that the brace height had increased a half-inch! I was now at 9 inches. So this is why I couldn’t find any information about the number of turns earlier- because it’s non-linear. There is an inflection point beyond which individual twists can significantly alter the length of the string, but prior to that point the change is minimal.

After getting a chance to shoot, I was much relieved. I was no longer striking my wrist. In fact, I don’t think I was hitting my forearm at all. The bow seemed significantly quieter as well, with little of the loud THRUM I’d been hearing and had simply assumed was what to expect. Interestingly, the brace height had shortened up to about 8 3/4 inches after shooting, which I wasn’t entirely surprised at. The string is under pretty significant tension after all.

Most importantly, though, it’s shootable.

Categories
Family

Spelling Practice

“SUN,” I say to the lass.

She has a list of words she’s working on for spelling. We were taking a couple of minutes for her to practice them. This week, the letter ‘U’ seems to be the focus, as all the words involve that letter.

The lass was sitting on the couch. Upon hearing the word she looks up. She sticks her tongue out for a moment, grimaces, says “SUN…. S.” She now puts both arms back against the couch with her hands up by her ears, shifts her weight to the side and flops over so she is lying on her side on the couch. Then she says “U.” Now, she rolls over onto her belly and stretches her arms down by her side while swimmer-kicking on the arm rest with her feet. Finally, she says “N.” She brings her arms up under her chin and props her head up. Her feet are now kicking back on forth in the air behind her head. This all transpires over about 5 seconds.

She’s now looking at me waiting for the next word.

“RULE,” I say.

She starts by face planting into the couch, followed by pushing herself back up into a sitting position. “R,” she says. Her face is contorted with concentration. She flows from a sitting position to draping herself over the arm rest on the couch, her back on the rest as she stares up at the ceiling. Her hands tap-tap-tap against the wall next to the couch. “U,” she says. Now she rolls back over onto her stomach. She is facing away from me, her feet are closest me while her head is on the opposite side of couch. Again, she pushes herself backwards and up into a kneeling position. “L,” comes next. As she’s doing this her hair is flopping from one spot to the next and she starts playing with it. “E,” she finishes. She stops moving, waiting for the next word.

Things continue like this for the next several words. She snakes all over the couch as she spells her words. Eventually, she rolls off the couch and barely seems to notice. For the final few words, she barrel rolls across the floor saying letters as she goes. She pauses her movement after she completes her spelling. She never does work her way back onto the couch.

I was exhausted by the time her spelling practice was done.

Categories
Misc

Fall

This stuff looks nice:

image

But this is the inevitable followup:

image

image

image

Time to get the rake out.

Categories
Family Notweet

Watching The Hobbit

With the boy having finished The Hobbit, he’s been after us to let him watch the movie. The only catch is the Wife and I haven’t pre-screened it yet. We’re doing so now.

I’ve been wondering how the heck they were going to turn a relatively short story into 3 movies. I just didn’t believe the source material was sufficient. I figured maybe the whole story was worth a good 3 hour-epic type format.

We’re about halfway through now and the basic tact has been to extend certain scenes, like the dwarves arrival, for comic relief. They also seem to have added filler material here and there.

Overall, it’s been good and, I think, at it’s best when working straight from the source material. Luckily for the boy, nothing to object to so far.

Categories
Family

DO YOU KNOW HOW HARD IT IS TO PICK UP PEANUTS!?!

We received a couple of packages last night. One of them was filled with packing peanuts, in addition to the stuff we’d ordered. We asked the boy to place the boxes out in the garage, and he did so.

But in the process he managed to spray packing peanuts all over the floor of the garage. In a classic child maneuver, he simply left the mess on the floor of the garage.

The Wife was the first one to call him out and insist he cleanup the mess he made. He did so, but not before vociferously voicing his displeasure at the prospect. He came in several minutes later and went back to more important things, like arranging rubber bands for making bracelets.

Sometime later, I ventured out into the garage. There were still peanuts laying on the floor.

I turned and asked him “I thought you cleaned up the peanuts in the garage?”

“I DID,” he said with just a touch of defensiveness.

“Well, then why are there still peanuts lying on the floor of the garage?”

What followed was something just short of breathtaking.

“WHAT? DO YOU EXPECT ME TO PICK UP EVERY LAST PEANUT OUT THERE?” he yelled. Just a touch defensively. The veins in his neck were sticking out.

“That’s what cleaning up meant, last I checked.”

“HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO DO THAT?” He was turning red.

“With your hands, maybe?” I suggested. It was hard not to be amused at his tantrum.

“DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA HOW HARD IT IS TO PICK UP PEANUTS?” he bellowed as he stomped off towards the garage.

Well, guess he told me. Incidentally, he managed to pull it off. Somehow.

Categories
Politics

Quick Thoughts on Obamacare Rollout

I had promised myself I wouldn’t post anything about Obamacare simply because evaluating healthcare policy is outside my wheelhouse. That said, the software portion of it is something I find myself interested in. Particularly the aspects related to the design.

With that, obviously the rollout has been less impressive than expected. This article says the President blames high traffic:

President Barack Obama is encouraging consumers not to give up enrolling for insurance under the new health care law.

He says sign-up problems have been caused by a website overwhelmed by high traffic. The president says officials are working “around the clock” to reduce waiting times.

Also, Ezra Klein is saying similar things and is not pleased. He does offer a silver lining regarding the overwhelmed servers:

The good news for Obamacare is that lots of people want to sign up. Lots and lots of people. Many more, in fact, than anyone expected. The bad news is that the Obama administration’s online insurance marketplace — which serves 34 states — can’t handle the success.

“The amount of demand is really driving the issues,” a senior administration official told me. “But we’re adding capacity every hour.”

Megan McArdle is a little more circumspect on the high demand theory.

I don’t know anything about the software or design of the system. Never the less, I have several questions related to the high demand problem. First, what kind of load was the system designed to handle? Do we know anything about the designers and their experience with such systems? I’ve seen the claim that the government is adding “capacity by the hour.” The government is in shutdown, so who is doing that? I assume they are considered “essential personnel”? How are they adding capacity by the hour? Are they throwing more servers at it? Better connectivity? In McArdle’s articles, she hints that the servers are getting millions of visitors. For a sense of scale, Google gets roughly 5 million search requests per day. It was claimed there are 47 million uninsured in the US, what percentage of those were estimated to enroll? What kind of equipment is being used and what’s the server platform?

Instapundit has a link worth reading. It also gives rise to other questions. Like, how capable is this system of withstanding various known cyber attacks like denial of service attacks? How tested is the system against garbage input? My understanding is a fair amount of personal information is requested during the signup. How secure is all that information?

Categories
Family

The Irrational Child Mind

The boy and I went on a grocery store run to pick up some items for dinner tonight. Along the way he asked me what I was planning to make. I told him it was a sausage dish that I’ve made before to great reviews from the lass and the boy. He was immediately disappointed.

I was confused at his reaction since I was sure that he like this dish. When I gave him the full details, he sighed in relief and said “I thought you were going to make the other sausage dish with the sweet sauce.”

He was referring to another sausage concoction I make with peppers and a sweet onion. I basically cook the peppers and onion down into a juice and the result has a sweet flavor to it. I asked him what he didn’t like about it and he replied “It’s too sweet.”

“What do you mean it’s too sweet? So is candy too sweet?” I asked.

He answered in earnest “Candy isn’t sweet. It’s got sugar in it.”

Dumbfounded, I asked for clarification. “You mean sugar isn’t sweet?”

“No, it’s just sugar,” he answered. “It’s not sweet like that sausage stuff you make.”

I had to stop there for fear that he might be contagious. This is the sort of stuff parents have to deal with all the time.

Categories
Politics

My Only Post About the Shutdown

I tweeted this yesterday and the more I thought about it, I figured I’d extend things a bit. Ross Douthat penned a very nice article explaining what I think has to be considered the source of right wing anger. In it, he summarizes the “ascendant” conservative movement which began with President Reagan and supposedly continued until President George W. Bush supposedly ruined everything.

What Douthat basically states is that there was never a conservative takeover of politics in this country. Perhaps in the sense that more conservative politicians were elected, but not in the sense of governing and policy. He points out that even during Reagan’s hay day, the federal government never, not once, got smaller in absolute terms. No departments were closed, nothing lost funding. In fact, it was well nigh impossible to actually reduce funding to anything because even a reduction in the growth of a program was painted as a “Draconian cut” that would put Grandma in the poor house while some opulent businessman smoked 100 dollar bills in a hot tub while sucking down martini’s.

In fact, the only “success” that conservatives ever achieved was on taxes and welfare reform.

As a result, the very term “conservative” is now awash in confusion. Is a conservative someone that wants to preserve the status quo? Someone that wants to reduce the size and reach of government? Someone that wants to keep progressives from running amok? Someone to vote for other than another Democrat? Someone who wants to blowup the US government? Someone that wants to return to the days of Jim Crow?

I’ve seen all of these definitions applied to the “conservatives” since I started reading blogs and generally became more politically aware. It always depends on whose doing the arguing and what they are arguing about. In general, the more left we go on the political axis, the cruder and meaner the implied definition of “conservative” becomes.

So at this point, I’ve come to the only reasonable conclusion about my own politics: I am a radical. I want to reduce the absolute size of government. I’d like to see whole departments shuttered or dramatically scaled back.

The reasons for this are difficult to put into a blog post that won’t become a book. I’ll start with this: it is not because I am a racist homophobe that wants elderly people to suffer. It is not because I am a mean-spirited jackass that doesn’t want people to get health care or help when they don’t have a job. It is not because I want to see taxes eliminated, the federal government abolished or any of the other caricatures of “conservatives” that are routinely deployed.

It is because, speaking in broad strokes, I believe that less government is better for the country. I think less control and rules leads to more flexibility and robustness in the population which translates into a healthier overall country. I think less government means the people of the country will be better able to weather downturns of all sorts because they will by definition be more resourceful. Will people all make the same choices that policy makers would prefer? No, and that’s a feature not a bug in my opinion.

Based on my observations of politics over the past decade-and-a-half, I’ve concluded that we are on a path to the politicization of everything. And I do mean everything. We are slowly watching the attempted conversion of our economy from a free-market model to a “command-and-control” model. Lawmakers routinely pass tax breaks, refunds, incentives and laws benefiting preferred interest groups or campaign supporters. We are constantly talking about “what the government should do” to improve the economy: infrastructure programs? helicopter dumps of cash? implementing large healthcare policies? student loans? business loans? business grants? state funds? more taxes? less taxes? I think many of the current fights regarding healthcare are a foreshadowing of healthcare arguments to come when talking about what should and should not be covered and who should and should not qualify and who should and should not pay.

We are at the point where the assumption anymore is that the government needs to do something, somewhere, all the time. The thought that a given problem should be allowed to resolve itself or that people should be allowed to resolve the problem or situation is never broached anymore. More succinctly, government involvement is never questioned anymore, only assumed. It is my opinion that this is a completely unhealthy attitude. It stunts initiative, free-thinking and problem-solving because who wants to do something when it’s a certainty that the government will step in?

All of these thoughts are incomplete, but I wanted to try and keep this post a manageable length. So I’ll wrap things up by circling back to the shutdown. I understand all the arguments against it and the wisdom of the approach and in my more politically congenial moods I agree with them. I’ll even grant that I don’t really know what the endgame is. But I can’t help but feel that having the government shutdown and having people experience that life continues without it is worth something. So from that perspective, I’d like to consider it a good thing.

Categories
Family

Let There Be Light!

The boy came home from school today and, as has been his wont, got started immediately on his homework.

I finished up some impromptu archery lessons with the neighbor and returned to make sure the lass was all set for her soccer practice. While tending to her, the boy started whining about not understanding his homework.

I was more focused on his sister than him at that moment, so I dismissively asked him if he had read the instructions. He said he had and proceeded to read them to me. It was a 1 sentence instruction telling him to fill in a multiplication table. For some reason that still escapes me, that operation just wouldn’t compute.

He began getting overly excited. I ignored him. Shortly thereafter, the lass was off to her soccer practice so I turned more of my attention to the boy. He was still frustrated. This is still a problem for him- he gets so frustrated with something that he essentially locks up. He refuses to calm down and think things through, refuses to try coming at things from a different angle, refuses anything other than someone fixing his problem for him. One of these days, I, or the Wife- whomever draws the short straw, will have to just let him flounder about until he unlocks himself or explodes.

Today was not that day.

I worked him through to the point where he understood he had to fill in the multiplication table. Initially, he was pleased with understanding. His face then fell. He was staring at 100 little squares that all required numbers in them, and he had to fill them in. I left him like that for a moment to go take care of a few other things. When I returned, he was balling on his homework.

There was a brief instant where I was ready to lay into him for making things more difficult on himself. What good was sitting there balling on his homework going to do?

Fortunately, I course corrected and calmly suggested he walk away from his homework and calm down a bit. Naturally, him being completely around-the-bend irrational, refused. He got up to go blow his nose, though, and I seized my opportunity. I walked over, picked up his homework papers and put them in a cabinet far out of his reach.

And just like that, he went from miserable to mad. If he had been a cartoon, he would have changed colors from a sky blue shade to a crimson red. Maybe he would have gotten the volcanic-eruption treatment out the top of his head. I would have been Woody Woodpecker, laughing. Then, I would have pecked him in the head and flitted off in the direction of…

Ahem…sorry.

I refused to give him his homework sheet back until he’d calmed down. He slowly came to grips with the fact that I was serious and started looking for other things to do. Eventually, he started playing with a piece of wire and battery. Then, he started asking me questions about what he could hook it up to. He got an idea and went and grabbed a light bulb. Guess you could say a light turned on!

I agreed to help him hook it up, even though I knew it wouldn’t work. It was a lamp battery that required AC current so there was no way a battery, probably mostly drained, would work.

When it didn’t work, I explained the problem to him. He then went rummaging around in the kitchen and found a flashlight bulb. Now he was in business. After a little bit of finagling, we managed to connect the battery and sure enough, the bulb glowed a bit. It also confirmed my suspicions about the battery’s status.

That led the boy into a quest to create a flashlight. He came up with somewhat workable contraption involving a D cell, some tape, a piece of wire and the bulb. He didn’t like that he had to manually hold the bulb against the battery. Happy, but not satisfied, he asked me if I had any ideas.

I did. I told him to go get me a hanger. It had to be a metal wire hanger, I specified. One that didn’t have any clothes on it.

When he came back with the hanger, I first verified that he hadn’t ripped his sister’s clothes off of it moments earlier. I then proceeded to cut a section of it off. I stripped the plastic coating off it on both ends, then wrapped one end around the bulb. Finally, I bent what remained into a rough handle shape that clipped on to the other end of the battery and voila:

We had a flashlight. My siblings will likely recognize this as a little project our Grandfather introduced to us many years ago. It had the same effect on the boy today as it did on us back then. He was delighted and hooked at the simplicity. Shortly thereafter, the hanger was chopped to ribbons as he worked on his own variations.

Here’s a low-power version he managed on his own:

He even came up with a 2-D cell design, with a little help from me.

Somewhere along the way, I took his homework out of the cabinet and placed it out for him to complete. When he finally remembered that he had homework to do, he was astonished to find that I’d put it out for him. He’d been so engrossed in his engineering, that he’d completely missed that I’d returned it to him.

He even managed to complete it without anymore tears.

Categories
Family

The Lass Seems to be Turning the Corner

Last week, I worked with the lass on her homework packet. She chose to start at the beginning (perfectly reasonable) which involved writing a paragraph. The assignment was to write a “story” about a bike.

Things started off rough, and went downhill from there. The back of the page, where she thought she had to write the story, didn’t have enough space for a story. She wrote a single sentence and thought she’d finished because she wouldn’t be able to fit more. After that, the weeping started and she didn’t know how to write a story about a “stupid bike.”

Rather than fight her and force her to finish, I steered her towards the rest of the homework. She gradually settled down as the rest consisted of fill-in-the-blank type questions, spelling practice and some math. By the time we’d finished, she only had the bike story to work on and I chose not to push her on that for the rest of the evening. Instead, I tried to give her some ideas to think about. She still had most of the week to figure it out.

The Wife was able to get her to complete the paragraph the next day. Her spelling practice continued and there were no more emotional outbursts over homework for the rest of the week.

We also met with her teacher towards the end of the week to discuss her difficulties. We were most concerned with her attitude towards reading. Reading has been a chore for her and she’s been very resistant to it in any form. She doesn’t want to leave the comfort of her picture books and his suggestion was to not force the issue. We even came up with a ploy to offer to let her read to kindergartners. The Wife and I figured it would appeal to her Mother-hen streak.

Yesterday, she received her latest homework packet and she worked on it without issue. She hasn’t completed it yet because it’s a big packet this week, but she’s completed most of it. There is another writing assignment in it as well. Amusingly, this time the teacher provided a separate page for the paragraph with plenty of space to write her story.

Also, she was excited to tell the Wife that her teacher had asked her if she would like to read to the kindergartners. There was little doubt as to her enthusiasm for the opportunity and she even told the Wife how much she “likes to read.” The Wife did a good job of sounding surprised at such a revelation.

So her current status is a marked improvement in her homework attitude. I suspect there will be future bumps along the way because when it comes to children, nothing comes easy. The fact that she’s on more favorable footing though, is a welcome relief. Now it’s just a matter of helping her build momentum to keep it that way..