You read or hear about it all the time. One half of a couple feels that their sexual needs are not being met. One way to deal with this issue is for the unsatisfied person to find another person to get, er, satisfied with. Sometimes open relationships are involved, but often people skip that part and just cheat on each other, with resulting drama.

All of my needs in that department are met, thank you very much. But I have another source of dissatisfaction. I’d like to go to parties in my area once in a while, and my spouse finds socializing to be the source of much anxiety.

I’m putting out feelers for someone who would like to be a party escort. Actually, I thought of posting something along these lines to CraigsList just to see what happens, but I’m not sure I could handle the hilarity.

Looking for one person living in the greater Boston area who wants to enjoy the occasional pool party or group outing with me. Gender is irrelevant. Applicants must have car and must not smoke. In return I will make sure you have a good time, and will reciprocate with baked or knitted goods and a split of gas money.

And if anything particularly funny results from this quest, I’ll be sure to blog it without names or identifying information. If nothing funny happens, I’ll try posting to CraigsList just for the LOLZ.

 

I haven’t got much knitting done this year.  It aggravates my RSI issues, and I had to sort of re-learn how to hold the needles after my finger got broke in the car accident.  However, cold weather is a big impetus to knit.  I’m working on an Aran-style cabled sweater.  Here are some pictures. As usual the formatting will probably get screwed up on LJ, but the pics should still be visible. The three pictures are, in order, one sleeve, an annoying mistake in the OXO cable pattern, which I will have to fix, and the beginning of the body.  The sweater is being knit on size nine circulars.  The yarn is KnitPicks Comfy Bulky Yarn.

sweater arm

sweater arm

sweater mistake

sweater mistake

sweater body

sweater body

 

I’m sorry I don’t have any gorgeous man-nipples to show you today. However, I do have news about the car. After the Honda dealer ripped out the carpet and the sodden and mildewed jute beneath and started taking stuff apart, they found the leak source. There was a manufacturing defect where three panels were supposed to be welded together. The weld had failed. They put it back together and tested it with a power washer, then replaced the jute and the carpet, which had been sent out for cleaning at a specialty shop.

We had a very interesting conversation with the head of service about the whole thing. Many apologies were tendered.

Meanwhile, I haven’t driven in about two years. I’d been having trouble with driving somewhere and getting a migraine so miserable that I couldn’t drive home. I’ve taken the new car out twice, once with the spouse along, then later on a short trip where I could leave the car and walk home if my head blew up.

While the car is a remarkably plain white Civic, some people have asked for pics. I’ll get those soon when the weather improves and I remember to take the pictures before the sun sets.

 

What the dealer said about water in the car was not correct. For one, more water appeared on the driver’s side floor when the car was not being steam cleaned. There aren’t many ways to get water in the car when it’s not actually raining or you haven’t been careless with your Poland Springs bottle. In this case, we believe the airconditioner condensate drain is responsible. Even though it’s November, the a/c has been on because we didn’t understand some of the details of the climate control system. In Honda Civics any setting that involves the front windshield defogger will turn on the a/c, and pushing the a/c toggle will not turn it off. If not for this, we might not have noticed until next summer.

We have an appointment for the fairly inept dealer to look at the car on Monday. In fact, I’d rather our shop deal with it, but we’d have a hard time getting them to pay for it, while the lemon law requires them to fix it to my satisfaction. I did talk to a manager who seemed to grasp how annoyed I am about it. That said, a clogged drain should be easy to fix, and taking up the front carpet and cleaning it adequately should be possible even for these guys.

 

Having Asperger’s sucks. I’m not into the big “proud of who I am and won’t change” thing, and if there was a cure I’d take it in an instant. I’m tired of constantly embarrassing myself and not noticing until weeks or months later. However I may have found a use for it: torturing used car dealers.

As I wrote previously, I lost my car in an accident. This sucked. We’ve been using Zip Car to get around, and it’s pretty cool. However, winter is hovering, and we’ve been starting to think that having a car again would be nice. And warm.

My previous car purchases were sleek, black sporty things. But I do so little driving myself (because of the headaches) these days, and my spouse is completely uninterested in the finer points of cars. They’re just a way to get around. With that in mind, I hit the internet to shop for used Honda Civics.

Everything you’ve ever heard about buying used cars is true. I have some edge in that while I’ve only bought one other car myself, I’ve watched my dad torture dealers before, which is pretty easy for him since he knows more about cars than most dealers do.

Our criteria made things a little harder. We don’t care about much, but we wanted a car that had never been smoked in, ABS, and a manual transmission. It turns out that all Civics after 2000 have ABS. While I’ve had some trouble getting private sellers on Craig’s List to answer questions about smoking, it turns out that dealers these days only have unstinky cars on the lots and send ones with smoke smells straight to auction because they are too hard to sell. Manual transmissions, on the other hand, are awfully hard to find.

After a couple of weeks of fruitless questioning of car sellers, I found a likely prospect on cars.com. It is a white four-door, 2001, with a standard transmission. It also had a rare clean one-owner Carfax report. I made an appointment with the dealer, and we rented a Zip Car to go look at it.

It was a perfectly reasonable car, except that it smelled. Not of smoke, but of mildew. What probably happened is that it was steam cleaned but not allowed to dry out properly. This was pretty darned lame. However, it wasn’t a deal breaker, because smells can be cleaned up.

I had a Buddha-like lack of attachment to buying this car. It was the first one I looked at. I wouldn’t mind not having to look more, but I didn’t care either way. This is a good attitude to have when looking to buy something expensive. The dealer, on the other hand, didn’t want to let me out of the place without extracting a deposit. More fool them.

The car had been listed on the web at $7700. This is just about the blue book price (something easy to check on the web). Word from the dealer is that they’d originally listed it at $9900, to which I can only say I want what they are smoking. The car had been traded in two months ago and sat on the lot ever since because no one wanted a manual. The hapless car guy asked me what price would make me sign an agreement to buy the car that day. I’d been doing some thinking, so I told them $6900.

Now we get to the part where I unleash the full powers of Aspergers on the unsuspecting manager. I have to work hard to get along with people in the best of circumstances, and I do not care one bit whether or not the manager of a car dealership likes me or not. Thus when he said things like “You’ve got to meet me half-way here!” I answered with things like “Why?” The manager tried asking me if I’d seen any other cars at that price, with full confidence that I hadn’t, and that the logic of it would force me to relent on price. In fact, I hadn’t seen any other Civics at that price, but I didn’t see that as a reason to agree with him when I’d only looked at one car. My spouse thinks that this was the funniest part. It doesn’t sound funny as I write it, but that’s because you can’t see the manager’s face. Since nothing he said to me accomplished anything, he finally caved. I signed an agreement with some big, fat contingencies on it.

One of them was that we get the car checked by our own mechanic. The dealership tried to talk me out of doing this because “Your mechanic isn’t a certified Honda mechanic, and ours is!” Right. It turns out that their certified mechanics has overlooked belts, hoses and a thermostat overdue for replacement, a leaking axle boot, and a pressing need for a coolant flush. By then the guy we were working with looked like he was going to cry. I got them to agree to do all the needed work. They’ve been dragging their feet on it a bit, but we expect to have the whole thing wrapped up by Friday.

Assuming nothing happens to derail the sale, my next big decision is whether to apply a Darwin fish or a Flying Spaghetti Monster emblem to the car’s rear.

 

I just shelled out a bunch of money for an pre-owned Aeron chair and it landed on my doorstep Saturday. I’ve sat in Aerons before. After a little time in one, you may start to feel that having to sit in any other desk chair is in fact a form of abuse.

This purchase was, ironically, made possible by my recent car wreck. I got the payout for the totalled car, and decided to go with ZipCar for now. I’ll admit that I’m completely neurotic about not having a car, which is very stupid considering how I haven’t driven a car for over a year due to migraines. I got tired of driving somewhere and being unable to drive back when the blurry vision and auditory hallucinations kicked in. However, I do have a spouse who drives. If we’re lucky we won’t have too many arguments due to the additional hassle of having to pick up the ZipCar.

Other purchases have included some fairly nice yarn for warmer sweaters since I’ve been so darned cold since I lost so much weight. I’m probably going to cave and buy some alpaca, even though whatever I buy will need to be hand washed (current plans do not include replacing our ancient washer/dryer with something that approximates handwashing). I picked up a little something for myself at Toys in Babeland, but you don’t get to know what. Under serious consideration is a fairly simple 8-plait bullwhip to start learning new ways to make loud bang noises in the park, though first I have to learn to get a forward crack out of the signal whip without removing my ear. And then there’s replacing the house’s water main. It’s an expensive job, but will be split with downstairs (cause it’s a condo, natch). It would be nice not to get stucked freezing and covered with soap every time someone flushes the toilet.

Happy Night of the Living UHauls!

 

Lately I’ve been reading Raymond Chandler. His work is exciting and well-written, with prose that is often more fun than the meaning, like a present where you can entertain yourself for half an hour with the ribbon and the wrapping paper before you even get to the contents. He’s been an inspiration for many scifi/fantasy authors, and (important for a person with little money and less shelf space) you can find lots of it in the library.

A lot of stuff I’m ‘supposed’ to like has been disappointing, especially erotica. In some cases I end up feeling like I’m a better writer than 99% of the folks writing erotica. It’s nice to go swim in a pool that’s big enough that my fiction is nothing but a modestly interesting backwater and whereever I swim I have plenty to learn.

However, it’s only a matter of time before I run out of Chandler.

So where should I go swim next?

 

This weekend I went to Pi-con, a small sf con near Springfield, MA but just over the border in Connecticut. It was a pleasant little con with three tracks of programming, a dealers’ room, and lots of pretty young things dressed in home-made steampunk outfits. I only regret that since I wasn’t a hotel guest I couldn’t get in the pool. As per usual, I was wading through some fairly crippling headaches and medications for most of the day, but I managed to keep from wobblinpag or speaking in tongues. I think.

The first panel was Gender and sf/f. I was thinking about gender from the point of view of having just edited a book of transgender sf erotica. The other presenters were thinking primarily of how women are treated in sf/fantasy, and also of the treatment of women in TV shows (not always sf/fantasy). I was a bit handicapped on the grounds that I don’t watch TV. Having figured out the dynamic, I mostly stayed out of the way. However, I did bring up the treatment of men in M/M romance written by women and had some fun watching one of the other folks try to explain how that was different from how men treat women in fiction.

The panel on horses and other animals suffered for being up against the guest of honor reading and had fewer audience members than panelists, but was still kind of fun. One of the audience members grew up in Holland after WW2 so remembers when people still used horses for agriculture and transportation on a daily basis.

The main feature of the panel on tools for writers was to illustrate how a panel is less interesting if the moderator doesn’t do enough traffic cop organization to keep one person from talking the whole time. Especially, I think, if you’re going to do most of the talking in a panel about how to write, you should have some credits to your name other than a novel you’ve been working on for six years but haven’t finished. Throwing an application that provides charts and diagrams to keep track of your characters and plot items seems a poor substitute for finishing the project already. Do writers have some innate talent that enables them to convert ideas into structured text, and can software substitute if you don’t have it?

I had an erotic reading scheduled, splitting an hour with Raven Kaldera, who I haven’t seen in ages, certainly not since he transitioned. As we were getting settled a gentleman sat down in the front of the row to demand of me who was reading and what was to be read, since he couldn’t find anything about it in the program. Since the program listed the participants (me and Raven), and at a con readings are usually from the writers’ own works, I’m not sure why he was confused. Let me describe this man for you. As a right-thinking person you believe you are, you do your best not to stereotype people when you first meet them. However, you’re not as successful at this as you like to think you are, and you fail hopelessly when faced with this man. He’s the sort of man who looks like he doesn’t have any friends and is hoping you’ll be the one he deserves, especially if he decides you meet his standards for feminine attractiveness. You start hoping that you are not attractive. I gave a short introduction and started reading from The Memorial Garden. I picked a nice juicy bit, which is to say not a het bit. Not at all. The man left. I was relieved, even though the remaining audience was small. I am pleased to note for the future that I possess the spell of banishing creepy straight men. The audience grew a bit when I was reading, and those who remained were extremely enthusiastic. Raven read from a story in the Circlet pub “Like a Sacred Desire” which is either out now or will be out soon.

I finished off the night as the moderator of the first half of the BDSM panel. Yes, indeed, the topic is so popular that they have two hours of it and divided the panelists into two batches. I did a lot of active moderation for the first half, then opened the panel up to let other people be the top. The first half was much more fun. I’ll keep that in mind.

And then it was time for a two-hour ride back to Boston.

 

Last month I wrote about whip practice in the park. A month later, post car accident and all sorts of excitement we went back. I’ve now got enough muscle in my right arm that I can crack for a much longer time before I get sore. The downside is that I can now crack long enough to give myself blisters. My skin tends not to toughen up, so I put in an order for golf gloves as some of the other participants suggested. Also, my strength is greater than my control over the lash, and my arm hasn’t learned how little force I need to get a decent bang out of the whip. The upshot:

Front of arm welts

Back of arm welts

The welts faded a bunch before I got pix.  From my point of view, some of them hurt enough to give me pause, though that was less the pain than the buzz of endorphins making me dizzy.  In any case, no whip welt on the planet can hurt as much as a migraine, and I’ve never got an endorphin rush from one of those.

I still have work to do before the signal whip is all the way broke in, and I’m already thinking of picking up an inexpensive 6′ 8-plait bull for a different feel and–this is important–louder noises.  The folks using 12′ and longer whips got some really nice echoes coming back from the water.

 

I saw a hand doctor today, and he said I could take the splint off.  Since nothing hurts, I’m typing for the first time in over a week.  This is a huge thing because I need my fingers to think.

Here’s what happened with the accident:


View Larger Map

We were traveling westbound on Massachusetts Avenue, a few feet behind where the red car is in this picture. The cross street to the north is Blake. A driver on Blake wanted to cross both westbound lanes of Mass Avenue and turn left (east). The traffic in the right lane was stopped, and someone in that lane stopped and let her through. Instead of easing out into the right lane and waiting for the left to clear, she punched the gas in hopes that if she ran fast enough through the raindrops, she wouldn’t get wet. On the positive side, given all that’s about to happen, you can see the fire station at the interection of Blake and Mass Ave.

I was a passenger in my car. Unlike my spouse, who was driving, I could see her coming and realized that she was committed and that there was nothing we could do and started screaming my head off. I do not remember screaming. I remember a really loud, really horrible impact, and suddenly I had an airbag in my face. Airbags do not smell nice; I could have gone my whole life without smelling the insides of one and been happy. The stupid bitch had gotten just in front of us, and we hit her so hard that the make of her left front tire is readable from the impression in our front bumper (Dunlop). She claims to have been traveling 30 mph; since neither of us saw the other there are no skid marks on the ground to show you.

I was ok but too stunned to climb over the shifter, so I was stuck until the helpful firemen and first responders unhooked the cars. When they started the cars up and started moving us apart, I was struck with the feeling that my car was screaming. I started to cry, but I quickly discovered that I could not draw a breath because of how badly my chest hurt, so I was stuck with a really stuffy nose and the world’s worst case of hiccups. Furthermore, my ring finger hurt and it was starting to swell. With a fracture (albeit a finger) and some seriously messed-up ribs, I ended up on a board in an ambulance headed for Mt. Auburn Hospital. All along the way the spouse and I gathered lots of ferverent thanks from EMTs who were glad to hear that we were wearing out seatbelts.

I lucked out in the emergency room. The nurses, who have a lot of practice at these things, were able to remove my rings without cutting them off. Also, once the staff got organized, they left me take some of my own pain relievers that I carry along in case I get a migraine while away from home. I actually carry better drugs as a matter of course than the emergency room is willing to hand out. And then I spent the evening staring up at the doorway under which my stretcher was plunked, with a break for a CT of my neck, x-rays, and an ekg. My spouse had a big bruise on his shin from an unfriendly encounter with the steering column. Given the traffic of seriously mangled people in the ER, he declined to be admitted and walked all the way to Harvard Square for some otc pain relievers. I was released with a confirmed broken finger and a bunch of negative tests, a testimony to exactly how much more soft tissue injuries hurt than broken bones.

So a week on I’m pretty well sore still. The worst of it is the migraines. I’d been getting ahead of those, but most days I’m swimming in drugs to keep them tolerable. The other driver admitted 100% fault, so I expect to throw a lawyer at her, turn her upside-down, and see what comes out when we shake.

© 2012 Lauren's Tales Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha

Bad Behavior has blocked 448 access attempts in the last 7 days.

Better Tag Cloud