Monday, May 28, 2012

Washington Tweets

by Bill Adler

Washington tweets. A lot. The Washington Tweets column is a collection of the most interesting, recent Washington-area tweets. These tweets reveal a candid and fascinating portrait of what is on our collective minds: Twitter gives a snapshot of what we're doing, thinking and hoping for. Washington Tweets is Washington in the raw. Washington Tweets is published on Monday. Bill Adler tweets at @billadler.

It appears DC summer arrived just in time for Memorial Day weekend again #HelloHumidity (@BrookeM1109)

This Bolt Bus has too many newbies on it...taking pictures and ish... #haveaseat as @LoraDaExplorer would say... (@aye_ash)

I was in DC eating in a little restaurant that had these. I want a table like this in my place. http://pic.twitter.com/ebIPEWwt (@taramomo)

why would anyone ever wait in line to get into Local 16? this has always perplexed me. (@amorrissey)

Emergency giant iced Americano. Ahhhhh (@ Tesoro Restaurant) http://4sq.com/JZRMTF (@hillarygrove)

Rolling Thunder this weekend in DC. Supporting our troops and veterans. (@NancySinatra)

Men of the online dating world: pick better pictures. xoxo, ally (@allybug99)

Related: the problem w being single and dating in DC is that every third dude honestly believes he is Josh Lyman. (@LizScott)

Making the dog do tricks before I feed her table scraps (pizza crust). I swear I saw her roll her eyes at me before she would roll over. (@stephaniekays)

Ridership was 151,466 in March on Circulator's Woodley Park-Adams Morgan-McPherson Square route. Highest since route started in March '09.
(@JimGrahamWard1)

No surprise to anyone in the DC Metro area today - this spring is on track to be the hottest on record for the District (@ClimateReality)

"Food trucks may help reduce parking congestion by bringing food to people, which helps reduce overall parking demand" http://ow.ly/b1ZXt (@bbqbusdc)

I vote we retire the cliche phrase "think outside the box." We've all been outside the box for quite some time now. (@Lindsaydec)

The rebirth of the wi-fi free coffee shop: http://bit.ly/Ki6azS @wcp

I love my hood! Go go band practicing in the church down the street which I can hear from my stoop. Don't be jealous #ripchuckbrown (@Chef_Mike_)

If you shop at the Harris Teeter in Adams Morgan, you may have seen or heard this rooftop violinist: @DCist_Updates (@DCist_Updates)

Swallowed my fear and took the down escalator at the Dupont Circle red line metro stop. (@suz8)

Check out a great photo gallery: "D.C. baristas create art on your latte" http://ht.ly/aJ0nw (@TBD)

Friday, May 25, 2012

Still Life With Robin: Lazy Memorial Day Weekend

by Peggy Robin

This Friday of the 3-day Memorial Day weekend I am proclaiming Lazy Friday. Lazy for me means doing a quick, virtually-no-effort column, which I can accomplish simply by recommending a few cool websites.

If you’re not planning to spend this weekend at the beach, you can see the virtual beach, and it doesn’t have to be dumpy old Ocean City or Rehoboth. How about Bondi Beach, Australia? Take a look at the Bondi Beach cam: http://bit.ly/KvJv7r

From the peaceful beach to the dramatic volcano – here’s the view of the Pu’u O’o thermal vent at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano: http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/cams/panorama.php?cam=WTcam

If you’d prefer something charming, try this hummingbird cam:
http://www.ustream.tv/hummingbirdnestcam

Perhaps the most appropriate bird cam for this Memorial Day weekend is the bald eagle cam:
http://outdoorchannel.com/Conservation/EagleCam.aspx

I’m not sure how to segue into this last recommendation, which is for an invention that I hope may be available to the public in time for next year’s Memorial Day picnic. It looks to me to be the greatest thing in food since sliced bread. It’s …get this…an easy-pour waste-free ketchup bottle:

http://www.fastcoexist.com/1679878/mits-freaky-non-stick-coating-keeps-ketchup-flowing

Enjoy your holiday, everyone!

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Still Life With Robin is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and All Life Is Local on Fridays.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Real Talk with Rachel: Political Infighting; Blasting Your Neighbors Away


By Rachel Kurzius

Dear Rachel,


I am very involved in a political group in DC.  There are about twelve of us who attend the weekly meetings and take on additional responsibilities like organizing rallies, actions and outreach. I dedicate a lot of time, energy and passion to this group.


Because of the time we spend together and shared interests, many of us have become close friends. However, there is one guy in the group I cannot stand. He is full of ideas but short on execution. He is also quick to criticize the efforts of others. I think constructive criticism and open dialogue are important, but I don’t think he adds anything to the conversation.


Others in the group share my perspective on this guy, but some key members seem enchanted by him. What should I do?


Political Infighting


Dear Political Infighting,

What intrigue! A political group gains a new member, only to learn that he is a warlock. Perhaps he can use some of his magic for political ends, instead of just to ingratiate himself with some of your crew?

In all seriousness, this guy is charismatic enough to have charmed his way into the fold. Charisma in itself can be a powerful tool, and you might find his wiles useful for your group, even if it’s grating for you.

Because let’s face it -– this all comes back to your political group, right? You’re asking me whether you can justify kicking this guy to the curb because he is distracting your group from the work you all want to be doing. The big question for me is whether I can believe that this guy is tearing your group apart, or whether he merely happens to be someone you don’t like.

If this guy is making everyone feel bad, I would imagine that he burns a new bridge every meeting. Are people being open with him about how he makes it harder to get things done? Maybe he just doesn’t know that his flip attitude has a negative effect on others. Make him aware. If he keeps hurting feelings and people keep calling him out on it, he might tire of coming to meetings.

If the group is irritated that he keeps taking on tasks and then doesn’t follow through, then stop giving him important jobs to do. If he asks why he’s being marginalized, then you can all explain that he needs to prove he’s dependable before you all start depending on him.

You’ll notice that all this advice involves action from more members of the group than just you. This way, your group can come to a more
consensus-based decision or the guy will leave of his own volition, rather than have you stage a great schism based on personal enmity.

You never know what kind of skills, connections or ideas this person might have beyond his charisma. Best not to create an enemy for your group or cause; if you’re working on a controversial issue, you’ll have enough without creating more.

Best,
Rachel

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Dear Rachel,


I live in a rowhouse, so there are neighbors on the other side of my
roommates and my living room wall. No one in my house has a relationship with our neighbors. While we nod or wave when we see each other, I’m not even really sure who lives there, let alone their names.


I tell you this because I just got a new, very loud pair of speakers. I want to listen to music or even a movie at full blast. But I worry about these neighbors. They’ve gotten angry when we’ve thrown parties that have gone late into the night, but I wonder if I can utilize my new speakers at all without being inconsiderate.


Trying to Live at Full Volume


Dear Trying to Live at Full Volume,

General rule of thumb: if you have to ask if you’re being inconsiderate, you are probably being inconsiderate, at least to some people.

But your question gets to the heart of what it is to live in a community: how much must you limit your own wants for the benefit of people with whom you have little interaction?

While I have never asked my neighbors for the clichéd cup of sugar, largely because I don’t bake, I would like to think they would let me use their phones in an emergency situation, or call the police if they see something awry when I’m away. To ensure this, I try to play it a little safe.

To me, that means extending very general courtesies -– no littering or having pets poop in their yard, no heckling, scant loud parties (and advance warning of said parties, if possible), etc.

Where does blasting speakers fall on that list? Depends how long, when and what’s coming out of the speakers. Try out those speakers at full volume during the day for a song or two, but don’t overdo it. And don’t expect a cup of sugar any time soon.

Best,
Rachel

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Rachel Kurzius revels in giving advice, and has provided counsel both as a columnist and a friend. She lives in Washington DC, where she works as a reporter at a financial trade publication. Real Talk with Rachel is published on All Life is Local and the Cleveland Park Listserv, www.cleveland-park.com, on Wednesdays. Need advice? You can write to Rachel at advice (at) fastmail.net .


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Tech Column: Bag Envy, Part II, Airplane Bags

by Bill Adler

Somebody's playing a cosmic joke on me. There can't be any other explanation. Just as I settled into my new, great iPad messenger bag, which I wrote about in last week's tech column, along comes the maker of my favorite iPad case debuting its own iPad bag.

My Cumpler Skivvy, http://bit.ly/JARDSz, the world's best tablet computer messenger bag, may be displaced by the ZooGue Case Genius iPad Padded Zipper Travel Bag, http://bit.ly/JzDWHl. The ZooGue Travel Bag isn't a messenger bag, but it's the kind of bag that makes me want to go out just to use it.

But as great as these bags are, when I fly I prefer to take along a backpack rather than a messenger bag. A backpack holds more than a messenger bag, so I can fly with ample snacks and drinks to get me from here to there without my empty stomach crying out out for help. The longer the flight, the more stuff I need to bring -- especially an emergency book or two, should my iPad's battery run dry. (A strange but true fact of modern tech life: a paperback book has become the backup for e-reading devices.)

I used to fly with a basic backpack, but it had one large, unpadded compartment that didn't provide any tender cushioning for my iPad. Fortunately, I found a backpack that does everything I want and more -- and it's the "more" part that's the problem. This backpack, the SwissGear Computer Backpack, http://amzn.to/JlGSmz, has a padded comparment for a tablet computer or a laptop, many pockets, many more pockets, exterior water bottle pockets (essential!), an easy to access interior, an inner zipped compartment so that my keys don't go on an adventure if I turn the backpack upside down, and
comfortably padded shoulder straps.

But it has two other features, one of which is weird, the other a problem. The weird: It has an audio compartment, a place to put your phone or MP3 player with a little opening to snake the cord through. That way you can keep your device in your backpack while listening to music. But every time you remove your backpack and forget that the headphones are connected to it, the headphones get yanked right out of your ears.

The second problem with my SwissGear backpack is that it's the perfect size, except for when I inevitably get assigned the seat on the airplane that has the movie controller underneath the seat in front. You know -- that box that occupies half of your foot area and controls the entire movie and music array for the whole row. That box that lets you watch the one movie you decided you were not going to see last year because the reviews were so awful. That box. That's the seat I usually get and the seat that's incompatible with the large SwissGear backpack.

While I was searching for a smaller travel backpack to replace my SwissGear, I thought I'd add add another criterion: I decided to get a backpack that was airport security-friendly. These are backpacks which open so that your laptop or tablet computer is lying flat with nothing on top of it, meaning that you don't
have to remove your laptop before putting it through the airport x-ray machine.
I like that: It not only speeds up the security screening process, but not having my iPad riding solo through the x-ray machine makes it less likely to be stolen.

I picked the Targus Checkpoint-Friendly Air Traveler Backpack, http://amzn.to/rPUQPu. It's smaller than the SwissGear, but not so small that I have to leave behind candy corn or other snacks when I fly. It even squashes into the under-seat space that's half occupied by the plane's entertainment controller. It opens up in clever and quick way so that I don't need to remove my iPad when I go through security.
Which brings me to this final part of my bag quest story. The first time I flew with my Targus backpack, I was so excited because I knew that I could just unzip the middle, open the bag up, lay it flat on the conveyer belt to the x-ray machine, and by the time I had my shoes on again, my backpack would have passed
through successfully, iPad still inside. But. (Sigh, -- there's always a "but" when it comes to flying these days.) After my airport security-friendly bag was x-rayed I was reprimanded by the screener for not taking my iPad out of my backpack. Back went both the bag and the iPad through the x-ray machine, each
riding now in separate, plastic bins.

Actually, you actually don't have to remove your iPad or other similiar sized tablet from any bag or backpack before it goes through the x-ray machine at the airport, according to TSA itself: http://blog.tsa.gov/2010/04/traveling-with-e-readers-netbooks-and.html. However, security is, well, unpredictable. At least with the Targus backpack, it's easy to remove a tablet computer, should security screening take an unexpected turn again next time.

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Bill Adler is the co-publisher of the Cleveland Park Listserv, www.cleveland-park.com. He is the author of "Boys and Their Toys: Understanding Men by Understanding Their Relationship with Gadgets," http://amzn.to/rspOft . He tweets at @billadler.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Washington Tweets


by Bill Adler

Washington tweets. A lot. The Washington Tweets column is a collection of the most interesting, recent Washington-area tweets. These tweets reveal a candid and fascinating portrait of what is on our collective minds: Twitter gives a snapshot of what we're doing, thinking and hoping for. Washington Tweets is Washington in the raw. Washington Tweets is published on Monday. Bill Adler tweets at @billadler.


DC you spoil me this weekend. Behind it all is an evil grin of things to come. Namely, August. @frijolita

Perfect sleeping weather, terrible walking to work weather. #DC (at O St Flat) — http://path.com/p/20S5ek (@g3rd80)

Hill East is the Klingle Road of DC development. Administrations take different positions. Folks get all riled up. And nothing happens. (@NeibsWBJ)

Apparently Jean shorts are back.... I did not know this. Thanks #hstne (@Chef_Mike_)

Rainy day here in DC. I discovered http://www.rainymood.com the other day, which plays rain on a loop. Beautiful. (@craftivista)

I love the blood sausage, pork belly bocadillos at @estadiodc, but scallops and sweetbreads were amazing! Friends from Boston were happy. (@stephaniekays)

Are the @fojolbros racist? http://bit.ly/Jep7dn (@wcp)

The honey ricotta mini cakes at @DCpalena are so perfect and delicious! #breakfast (@CPUptownGirl)

A extortion text and a unique plan led to the return of a stolen cell phone and the suspect's arrest. (@TBD) http://wj.la/JZV2K2

Boys went out for one drink. That was two hours ago. I think they were eaten by Adams Morgan. It is Friday night after all. Sigh. (@SamGrieder)

Talking about boyzzzzz. (@ Ripple w/ 2 others) http://4sq.com/JbzcGO (@kb20008)

DC is chock full of villains? RT @blakehounshell: A man wearing a Captain America costume is walking through Dupont Circle. Why? (@smsaideman)

DC Council approves more #speedcameras in bid to raise $30M for city, reports @alanblinder: http://bit.ly/Kt1VqR (@kytja)

Can't believe we're taking a taxi to Nationals Park. Super job this weekend, #wmata (@sommermathis)

I just saw a food truck in Columbia Heights ... at night. Times are changing. (@GhostsofDC)

Woman in Arlington are being urged to be vigilant following a two attacks in the Clarendon area. (@TBD)

Sign the petition! I did it twice! Mayor Vincent C. Gray: Proclomate Chuck Brown Day in Washington DC via http://chn.ge/KLIaY1  @change (@TheRealNekaRay)

Pepco is finally trimming trees around its lines; not everyone is happy about it: http://wapo.st/JExjjD on http://ggwash.org/14799 (@ggwash)

DC continues 2 be the worst 4 S biz RT @HuffPostDC: D.C. officials are cracking down on vintage shops and record stores (@RonaldMoten)

Brunch on patio at Lillies in Woodley Park. Really need omelets in Cleveland Park. (@kcivey)

got a new iphone over the weekend and now I'm afraid to use it outside. feeling like a crime victim in abeyance. (@smencimer)

Friday, May 18, 2012

Still Life With Robin: Song1

by Peggy Robin


Today I will attempt to play two unfamiliar roles: art critic and website content provider, both for the sound/light show,  Song1 , currently running each evening on the exterior walls of the Hirshhorn Museum. I’m doing this for two reasons: 1. I loved the show so much that I want everyone in Washington who hasn’t already done so to run out and see it -- and there are only three nights left! And 2: Somebody’s got to give out the practical info you need to enjoy the show. I came to this latter conclusion after I spent way too much time on Google, just trying to find out what time to arrive, how long the show lasts, and where’s the best vantage point for viewing.

What I found on the internet was pretty much useless. The Hirshhorn’s website , where you would expect to find whatever you need to know, is the artsiest thing imaginable...but devoid of any actual content. You position your mouse over the Song1 photo, and immediately, before you even have a chance to click, a beautiful series of image start sliding along, and you have no idea where you'll end up or when they’ll stop. It's maddening! Whoever designed this thing, go back to working on your dissertation in Fine Arts, and let’s hope the Smithsonian gives the contract for web design to someone who knows how to provide some actual, printed copy that the tourists can, you know, read.

Well, there are lots of other sources on the web about art events in DC, I figured, leaving the Hirshhorn site in befuddlement. But after checking four more sites  But after checking four more sites --The Washington PostDCistCity Paper, and the Huffington Post's DC Around Town page--  I still knew little more than that the show begins "at dusk." I could not find a word about which side of the Hirshhorn offered the best view. Or whether I would encounter crowds and would need to arrive early to stake out a good spot. What kind of seating is there? These are the kinds of thing you should be able to find out in advance. And once I failed to find them, I resolved to put these kinds of tips in my review.

The main thing you need to know is that this show needs darkness. True, it begins at 8:00 pm. That is, the music begins playing, and after ten or fifteen minutes, you can just make out some light shadows playing along the blank walls of the building, more or less in time to the music. But it will be at least another 45 minutes until you can begin to discern the colors of the images. And even then, not the sharp, vibrant colors nor (at other times) the deep, moody tones the artist meant for you to see against the blackness of the night.

So the best thing is to arrive no earlier than 9:00pm. The show goes on until midnight. It does not matter where in the music/image cycle you arrive. It’s a repeating loop, projected 360 degrees around the building, and there are no transitions or stops between segments. The whole show runs about 40 minutes. My advice would be to see it through at least twice.

You don't have to worry about crowds. The Hirshhorn is a huge building, and there's viewing space all around. You'll be able to choose your space, and change your view, as you like. That's worthwhile, as you may well want to get a close view, a long view (including the lit-up Washington Monument in the background) and then settle in for a full viewing of the loop at just the distance you prefer.  The worst mistake, as I see it, would be to camp out on the soft and inviting lawn in front of the Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden on Jefferson Drive. I saw lots of people sprawled out on blankets, never moving from that spot. The problem is that they were seeing the Song1 images broken up by the long, horizontal window cut-out that breaks up the otherwise smooth, rounded facade of the building facing them at that location.

After viewing Song1 all the way through the first time around from the 7th Street sidewalk, I decided to walk around the entire perimeter of the Hirshhorn to view the show from all the different perspectives. When I was done with my walk, I felt like addressing the lawn-campers during a lull in the music to let them know, if they would just get up and move 100 yards to the east, from the corner of Jefferson and 7th Avenue, they could view the images as if on a great, rounded expanse of screen, just like in Cinemascope. That, I think, gave the viewer the best appreciation of the artist's work. (I see I have not mention's the artist's name yet, so let me insert the credit here: Bravo, Doug Aitken!)

If you want to be able to sit in comfort, bring along a stadium cushion to soften the seating available on the bench-height garden walls you'll find along both Jefferson Drive and 7th Street. Or don't worry about finding a spot on the wall: Just bring along your own light, folding lawn chair. (Crazy Creek (www.crazycreek.com) makes a light, portable one, with or without legs, that is quite comfortable and will last forever.)

My final piece of advice: Other than this column devoted to practical tips for viewing, I would say don't read the reviews of the piece as artwork until after you've seen the show. You'll want to be surprised by the play of images and sound, at least the first time around. You'll want to notice on your own the timing of certain images to the lyrics of the song, and let the serendipity of the whole event in its surroundings --with the buses, cyclists, joggers, and commuters going by-- work its magic. Afterwards, you might enjoy seeing it again on the internet, on a small screen, with the artist's commentary, or the art critic's insights layered on.

When you're ready for that, here are a few to start you off.

From DCist:
http://dcist.com/2012/03/doug_aitkens_song_1_hirshhorn.php

From City Paper:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/artsdesk/visual-arts/2012/04/05/all-song-1-considered/

From the Washington Post:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/exhibits/song-1-hirshhorn-360-degree-projection,1220692/critic-review.html

And from the Huffington Post -- including a video of the artist discussing his work:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/28/song-1-at-hirshhorn-musuem_n_1386942.html

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Still Life With Robin is published on Fridays on the Cleveland Park Listserv and All Life Is Local.


Thursday, May 17, 2012

Coming Events: Spring Fairs, Bike Rides, Rock, Car Wash and More!


We wanted to share some events and activities coming up this weekend and beyond. 


Bill Adler and Peggy Robin
Publishers, Cleveland Park Listserv and All Life Is Local
www.cleveland-park.com

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Friday, May 18, noon - 10pm, Saturday, May 19, noon – 10pm, Sunday, May 20, noon - 7pm, St. Sophia's Spring Festival, 36th & Massachusetts Ave, NW. Enjoy live Greek music and dancing, traditional Greek meals prepared fresh and onsite, exotic Greek pastries and sweets, beverages including Greek beer and wine, children's games, merchants with a variety of household goods and tours of the Cathedral. Free admission; rain or shine.

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Friday, May 18 (11 AM - 7 PM), and Saturday, May 19 (8 AM to 2 PM), huge "New To You" Yard Sale at St. Columba's Church, 4201 Albermarle St, NW. High End Boutique, Housewares, Clothing, Toys, Baby Gear, Books, DVDs, Sports Equipment, Furniture, Plants and More. See www.Columba.org for more.

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Saturday, May 19, Rivers to Rockets Bike Rally, departing from Bladensburg Waterfront Park (4811 Annapolis Road, Bladensburg) at 8:30 AM.  $25 for a single rider, $40 for a combo, and $60 for a family of four - includes the cost of food and the t-shirt. More at www.marylandmilestones.org/bike-rally.

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Saturday, May 19, at 9 PM. Explore the Rich Blend of Rock, Folk and Reggae Sounds from Moshav at Adas Israel with Yehuda and David. For tickets and more information visit http://www.goldstar.com/events/washington-dc/moshav

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Saturday, May 19, 11 AM - 3:00 PM, Maret School's spring fair, the Fete Champetre, with a French café, other foods of the world, bake sale, arts & crafts vendors, music, games, moon bounce, rummage sale and more. Free admission. For more information go to www.maret.org/parents/fete_champetre/index.aspx

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Saturday, May 19, 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM, BCC Boys' Lacrosse Team Car Wash. Support the team by bringing your mud-splattered, pollen-coated car to the Chevy Chase Fire Station, 8001 Connecticut Avenue.  Players will hand wash and dry your vehicle with a smile.

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Saturday, May 19, Ward 3 Animal Health Fair, 9 AM - 11:30 AM, Newark Street Dog Park, 39th and Newark Street, vaccines and licenses for your dogs and cats. Visit http://bit.ly/KGr2ri for more information.

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Saturday and Sunday May 19 and 20, Andrews Air Force Base Airshow, 8 AM - 5 PM. Need we say more? For information visit http://jsoh.org .

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Sunday, May 20, 5pm, BloomScreen Food Justice movie nights presents: Food Stamped, a documentary about a couple attempting to live on a food stamp budget. Discussion afterwards. Free/donation. At Bloombars, 3222 11st St, NW. More info at http://bit.ly/KXlsvj.
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Monday, May 21, 6:30 PM - 8 PM, High School Service Fair at Georgetown Day School, 4200 Davenport St., NW. Learn about various opportunities for high school students to get involved in various local non-profit service organizations. More at  www.gds.org/campsandclasses.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Real Talk With Rachel: Manipulative D-I-L; Ditching Old Jobs


by Rachel Kurzius

I’ve gotten some interesting feedback from last week’s queries. Regarding the writer stuck in a boring job, dreaming of a more romantic writerly existence, one reader recommended the writer join an online freelance community to get assignments. While I had mentioned the writer should spend time writing for pleasure after work, a reader noted that someone could set aside moments in the morning as well, to get creative writing done “before tackling daily boredom.” I confess, I am biased against early mornings, so I am glad someone else brought it up.

The letter-writer asking about how to introduce a son who used to be a daughter got some responses as well. One reader took offense to my use of the word “kid,” another suggested that I use the pronoun “hu,” a
third-person singular gender-neutral pronoun. The website describing the uses of “hu” is www.hupronoun.org. I have also heard of a gender neutral pronoun called “ze.” Slate suggested that people use the word “they” in a timely piece.

Thanks to readers who took the time to respond, and especially to those who have submitted queries. It has been so fun to engage with you.

Rachel Kurzius
advice [at] fastmail.net

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Dear Rachel,

I have three adult children and we have all been pretty close as a family. My eldest son got married a few years ago to a woman that has, to say the least, caused a great deal of tension amongst the family. She is extremely manipulative and has influenced my son’s behavior, which has hurt all of us. It has created distance between us.

What do you think?  Should I talk to him and let him know or just keep my mouth shut? I don’t want to lose my son but I don’t want to add additional stress to his life as he under a great deal already with two little ones and a demanding wife.

Devil in Law


Dear Devil in Law,

Isn’t it strange that our loved ones can fall for people who seem so wrong for them? I try to refrain from judging relationships I’m not in, despite temptation, because it’s hard to know what people seek in their significant others. You don’t mention whether he seems happy in the relationship or whether he senses the growing tension between his wife and the rest of his family.

I also wonder what kind of manipulation is going on here. Does she try to play other members of your family off one another? Is she getting in the way of you seeing your son and grandchildren?

You talk like she is your son’s puppet master. Give him a little more credit here. She might be his wife, but your son is still capable of independent thought. Make sure you’re not blaming your daughter-in-law for everything you find distasteful in your son.

If she really does sow seeds of discord at family affairs, just try your best to ignore her drama. Make sure you are not easy to manipulate -- don’t tell her highly personal things and don’t listen to her offhand remarks.

It’s not ideal to have to deal with that at family gatherings, but it seems tough to sit down your son and tell him, “Listen, your wife is a manipulator and everyone really can’t stand her.” He’ll get defensive and the conversation won’t end well.

After all, your son has made a commitment to this so-called manipulative woman -- they married and started a family together. Even if they do divorce, she is the mother of your grandchildren. Just be there for your son. When he needs someone to talk to, about his relationship or otherwise, be an open and non-judgmental ear. Sometimes, I find that asking questions in conversation can make someone think more critically about his or her relationship than putting them on the spot with a list of complaints.

All the best,
Rachel

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Dear Rachel,

I am a college junior. I’ve worked at a local summer program every summer break for the past three years. I had a conversation with the program directors this March about continuing my job there. A week ago, I got a different offer. I would be making more money and getting a new and more interesting experience somewhere else.  But I feel bad about leaving my old bosses in the lurch so close before summer, especially because I’d like to use them as references in the future. What should I do?

Stuck Between a Job and a Hard Place


Dear Stuck Between a Job and a Hard Place,

You got a different offer, huh? Is that a euphemism, or did someone really offer you an alternate opportunity? I’m not trying to give you a hard time; I just think it could make a difference in how you approach the situation.

Here is why: If someone popped up with a job offer, you weren’t sniffing around for a new gig after already accepting another. It’ll make your old employers feel less like they were jerked around by you, preserving a good recommendation for the future.

Say something along the lines of, “I’ve had three great summers working with you, but I was offered a great opportunity that would allow me to save more money. I know I’ve made a commitment to you and I would like to help honor it.” If you have friends you think would do a great job, let them know you can give them recommendations for replacements. Offer to train whoever would take your position, if you really feel like it.

After working together for three years, hopefully they will be happy for you. Should these program directors turn out to be vindictive, then you wouldn’t want them writing you recommendations anyway. Also, I doubt they’ll have much difficulty finding a qualified candidate, considering the job market.

If you think you can find a more interesting experience that pays better, go for it. And feel fortunate that you’re stuck between a job and another job.

All the best,
Rachel

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Rachel Kurzius revels in giving advice, and has provided counsel both as a columnist and a friend. She lives in Washington DC, where she works as a reporter at a financial trade publication. Real Talk with Rachel is published on All Life is Local and the Cleveland Park Listserv, www.cleveland-park.com on Wednesdays. Need advice? You can write to Rachel at advice @ fastmail.net.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Tech Column: Bag Envy


Photo by Richard Masoner

by Bill Adler


I have bag envy.

I want to preface that by saying that while I like my messenger bag, whenever I'm out I'm on the lookout for other bags to carry my iPad in. There's always better, right?

After many weeks of online shopping agony I chose the Crumpler Skivvy small in gunmetal/black, http://bit.ly/JARDSz ($110.) I knew that when Crumpler called the bag's color "gunmetal" I wouldn't be shy about carrying it.

My Crumpler bag is great, but I thought that the bag I had before was terrific, too. My messenger bag has a padded compartment for my iPad (it also works for other tablet computers), plenty of pockets, is waterproof (tablet computers and rain don't mix), has a quick-access exterior pocket, opens without an attention-grabbing velcro rip sound, has multiple interior pockets, and, most important of all, doesn't look like a purse.

If you've never owned a Crumpler bag, www.crumpler.com, let me add that I've purchased a number of camera and other bags from them and have always been very pleased. The bags are sturdy, have practical compartments, use a shoulder strap that doesn't make you feel like you need a shoulder transplant after an hour, and look good.

The Crumpler Skivvy wasn't my iPad's first transportation system. It may not be the last either. Not because Crumpler doesn't make great bags -- they do. But because I have bag envy. Is that bag I see on someone else's shoulder on the Metro better than mine?

Before my Crumpler bag, I used a Tom Bihn messenger bag, www.tombihn.com. It's also superbly constructed with interior pocket padding for tablet computers. I had --still have-- the Tom Bihn Ristretto, http://bit.ly/JwZaCT ($125) in olive/cayenne color. Before buying it, I only agonized for a week over which of the six possible color combinations to get. Tom Bihn bags also let you customize the shoulder strap.

Enter the Targus CityGear Mini, http://amzn.to/L1tkey ($25), a bag that I took on a recent trip to New York City. The Targus is a considerably smaller and noticeably lighter than either the Crumpler or Tom Bihn (and costs a lot less, too.) Despite being relatively lilliputian, the CityGear Mini carried my iPad, iPhone, pen, flashlight, and portable iPhone battery charger without looking like an overstuffed pinata.

But the CityGear Mini isn't for me. Sure, it's inexpensive, practical, protects my iPad with padded compartment, is lightweight, and carries everything I need. But it's not everything I want so my CityGear Mini will be spending its remaining days living in a sad, dark corner of my closet.

Before I pressed the "buy" button on Crumpler's website for the Skivvy, I almost bought a messenger bag from Timbuk2, www.timbuk2.com. Whenever I'm out I see people using Timbuk2 bags and I've always wanted one. Timbuk2's bags are infinitely customizable through multiple colors and fabrics (you can even make your Timbuk2 bag's three panels each a different color), and have brilliant interior layout. Timbuk2s are the bags that you see real bike messengers using.

I also was tempted by one of SF Bag's enviable messenger bags, www.sfbags.com. As with Timbuk2 -- almost. It was a close call, and I could easily have been that guy with the Timbuk2 or SF bag that you're envying, rather than the guy with the Crumpler messenger bag. Meanwhile, I am that guy who's checking out your messenger bag on the Metro.

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Bill Adler is the co-publisher of the Cleveland Park Listserv, www.cleveland-park.com. He is the author of "Boys and Their Toys: Understanding Men by Understanding Their Relationship with Gadgets," http://amzn.to/rspOft. He tweets at @billadler.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Washington Tweets

by Bill Adler

Washington tweets. A lot. The Washington Tweets column is a collection of the most interesting, recent Washington-area tweets. These tweets reveal a candid and fascinating portrait of what is on our collective minds: Twitter gives a snapshot of what we're doing, thinking and hoping for. Washington Tweets is Washington in the raw. Washington Tweets is published on Monday. Bill Adler tweets at @billadler.


A showery commute for DC area - looks like on and off showers all day. Drive safely, and carry the umbrellas... (@capitalweather)

The anti-transit ideology we've seen around the country now endangers the Silver Line: http://ggwash.org/14750 via @ggwash (@ggwash)

I think it's odd how we have pigeonholed "progressive" in DC into some sort of @TommyWells issues litmus test. @kcivey @timcraigpost (@BryanWeaverDC)

#DC RT @TBD: Guardian Angels will start patrolling near Columbia Heights Metro Station today after a beating last week (@ccooks3)

Check it: Parking Panda is available in #DC now. Such a great idea. http://bit.ly/KT4xvG (@originalgriz)

While it's true that DC is full of eligible bachelors, somewhere around zero percent are what I want. #dating (@cscchick)

trying to write but OH HELLO ADORABLE BABY PANDA TRYING TO CLIMB A LADDER.
http://ow.ly/a9hMi (@amorrissey)

I will never understand how people can sleep on the metro without missing their spot. Hell, I'm baffled people can sleep on it, period (@hillarygrove)

Monkey see, monkey do. Teens are texting just like their parents -- http://ow.ly/aTgpd (@postmetrogirl)

Try'n to find a parking spot here in "Glover NO Park" SMH We never really have problems finding a parking spot?!? SMH (@DawnBuxDC)

Cyclists wearing helmets while plowing down sidewalks, there is a circle of hell just for you filled with pitbulls who like to chase things. (@heathermg)

Though I'm guessing the helmeted doctor/nurse in scrubs who made me leap out of the way was just thinking, "This will be good for business!" (@heathermg)

There's something about watermelon. Not only does it taste good, but it reminds me of childhood with my family. (@cajunjen)

Did my mitzvah today - helping two stroller families get to the zoo. NOW STAND TO THE RIGHT. (@allybug99)

#DC officials are moving closer to allowing charter schools to grant preference to families in nearby neighborhoods (@postlocal)

Stoddert Elementary staff lead cheers for science fair winners. @StoddertNews @dcpublicschools (@gloverpark)

Ledroit Park in NW #DC is a neighborhood known for its rose bushes, but now, it's being plagued by bees. (@TBD)

DC is getting new parking signs to reduce sign clutter. http://pic.twitter.com/FkYvfn3v (@DMVFollowers)

Of all mass transit systems I have ever ridden, #wmata Metro is in all respects the least informative and most unpleasant. (@datawench)

Today I became "the boss". (AKA the summer intern started.) (@kb20008)  

Wow. Gem of a old #WMATA ad on cutting thru congestion to get to work. http://bit.ly/K9LGJy h/t @emrldcitychick (@kytja)

Bag checks at Cleveland Park Metro. Surely there are better (& more constitutional) uses for police. #wmata #securitytheater (@kcivey)

I usually like artsy bike racks, but the new Adams Morgan ones make it hard to lock a bike up to them. http://bit.ly/KQvmPb (cc @alexbaca) (@dcist_martin)

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Dog Owner Seeks Info on Attack Dog in Glover Park

Freckles, the dog killed in the attack
Photo by owner, Yates Baroody
This plea for help from an owner of a chihuahua that was attacked was posted on the Glover Park Listserv and on the Second District Police listserv. If you think you recognize the dog or know the owner, please call the police or call Animal Control at 202-576-6664.

Friends and Neighbors,

I'm desperately asking you for your help.

On Tuesday night at approximately 10:30pm, my chihuahua Freckles was attacked and killed outside of my house in the 2400 block of Tunlaw Road.

She was standing on the ledge in my front yard when she was snatched by another dog walking down the sidewalk with its owner. I struggled with the dog for about 20 seconds, but by the time I was finally able to pull her from his mouth, it was clearly too late. When I ran up and took her inside my house, many of my neighbors had assembled in my front yard because they either saw it occur or heard me screaming, but the owner and his dog were long gone. He didn't try to restrain his dog, he didn't try to help me pry her from his dog's mouth, and he didn't even bother to wait around, and he's yet to come back.

I'm asking you for your help in locating this man and his dog. The police and Animal Control departments are both doing their own investigations, but if anyone recognizes the description of this man and/or dog, I am
begging you to please let me know.

Owner: Tall, thin, older (maybe 50s or 60s), light colored hair, white man

Dog: Large, between the size of a weimaraner and a great dane. Long, lanky legs, very tall, with a dark colored body and white head.

They were walking southward down Tunlaw Road, towards Benton Street. If anyone happened to see a man and dog who fit that description walking around Glover Park at around 10:30pm on Tuesday, or if you know who they are, or if you see them again, please please let me know. If this dog has already been deemed "dangerous" from a previous attack, then it should have never been out without a muzzle in the first place. If it hasn't been deemed dangerous, it needs to be. Owners are required to report any sort of biting incident to the Department of Animal Control, and for good reason. A dog this vicious does not need to be on the streets where it could do this sort of thing again to another animal, or God forbid, child....

Thank you so much for any and all help.

Sincerely, 

Yates Baroody