Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Funniest Picture of the Week


Found this on Collegehumor.com (hey, I work at a college).
Cat Love Meat!

Caution: site may include pictures of girls kissing. Ignore those. Unless, you know, you're into that sort of thing.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

I'm a Media Darling


Not long after Kirsten and I got back from our honeymoon (I promise I'll put a post up about it soon...I promise I promise I promise), I got an email from an intern at a local magazine. I won't use their name for the time being. Anyway, this email asked if I had any tips for grooms to know that would be publishable.

I had several that weren't, by the way.

Anywho, this is what I sent back, for those of my readers who might care to know:

We picked an all-inclusive site for the wedding, called the Larimore House Plantation in north county. They have an outdoor wedding space, an indoor chapel, and a reception hall all in one. The fact that there was no real hassle with finding sites for every eventuality made it much easier. There was also the matter of the horse and carriage; on your first visit to the site, they plop you down in front of a dvd featuring (quite prominently) this majestic entrance by a bride and her father seated in a well-appointed open carriage. As soon as Kirsten saw that, it was a done deal. They could have tacked on a "venus is in poseidon during your wedding" charge and we would have gladly whipped out the credit card.

As a bonus, the Larimore house had a recommended list of vendors they had worked with before, and they weren't all overpriced the way recommended subcontractors usually are. Saved all sorts of hassle in finding all of those important people who turn a place from an old rickety house into a backdrop for a wedding.

My wife is not a doer - she's a planner. So when it came time to make visits to florists, bakers, photographers, and DJs (we haven't got the dough for a live band), she told me who to call and I went ahead and arranged it. Frankly, it was a hassle, but worth it too. I was constantly in contact with these folks since event planning is part of what I do at work anyway, and it's habit. I made sure that since I was the one who had made the original call, I was the one who fixed any problems that came up. There were no surprises, and that's important.

I picked groomsmen, and especially a best man, who had my best interests at heart when it came to the bachelor party. Yes, there was drinking. I won't commit to where we drank or who we drank with, or what clothing they were wearing. But I will say that they all looked out for me, and for each other, making sure that none of us would be too hungover the next day to stand in the heat for half an hour.

My wife gave me "The Talk" before we were engaged. You know, the one that goes, "If we aren't engaged by such-and-such a date, we'll have to have The Other Talk?" That one. And yet she still seemed surprised when I proposed just days before her deadline. The lesson? Propose to your girlfriend when she's just coming back from work and has a thousand other things on her mind.

Families paid for nothing, so we made sure to cut costs where we could. Deluxe bar or regular? After two drinks, nobody notices the difference. Sunday or Friday? Well, sunday was cheaper, and it turned out to be better weather anyway. Our officiant or the one the site recommended? Ours, because as far as I know, he was free (he hasn't asked, anyway).

We did the pre-wedding counseling thing, which Kirsten isn't into. She thinks that psychiatrists and therapists are basically quacks. But we did learn a little bit about each other, and our officiant recommended someone who he'd worked with before and who had a sliding scale. So we got the whole getting-to-know-you-better bit, and we saved some money in the mix too.

Dancing lessons. Important. Get.

Only do one parents' dance instead of a separate mother-son dance and father-daughter dance. Among other things, it saves the hassle of having to find ANOTHER song to can dance to in front of all of those people staring at you and eating your cake. Jerks.

Make sure you get a slice of your own wedding cake. All I managed to eat was what my wife shoved into my gaping maw during the cake-cutting. I think I'll regret that for my whole life.

As for in-laws - well, they're across the country. It's much easier to deal with them there than here. I had to deal with the whole "he's-trying-to-corrupt-my-daughter" bit early in our relationship, so it's easier to deflect now. And my father-in-law is a pretty cool guy, easygoing and polite. Kirsten's brother is a bigger version of me: he's a nerdy guy who likes to make random pop-culture references. We get along great. So yeah: marry a girl who's brother is exactly like you, unless you're a self-destructive jerk. If you are...well, that's your concern.

Finally: getting married is hard. I was an only child, so this was never an option, but if you're the second person in your family to get married and your bride-to-be can get with you on this: ELOPE.


Also, one other thing: Kirsten and I went over the minutes limit on our cell phone in the month around the wedding. Like, 200 minutes over. Not only is getting married hard, apparently people want to talk to you about it.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Neat!


One of the great things about living in a city with a real winter?

Now that the days have turned colder (current temperature: 50 degrees) I don't need to find a space in the refrigerator for my lunch. I can just leave it in the car.

The only downside is that I have to walk OUT to my car to get it, but that's OK, because (to be frank) I could use the exercise. I'm not exactly skinny anymore (well, I am still skinny, but not as much as I used to be). Besides, the brisk fall air is good for you. Puts hair on your chest and all that.

Ladies, please do not breathe fall air.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Back to Work


So I'm back in the office this week and being productive after 8 days on honeymoon (10 if you count the weekend).

And I have to say that I kinda missed work. In addition to being next to the gym, which is always nice, I feel like I have stuff to do and I don't just have to find ways to kill time. For example, I sent our local appointment-setter a list of professors I want to see over the next few weeks, as well as finalized plans to meet with the Dean's office about the dinner a few days ago. As far as I know, his office is happy, but I'd like to hear that direct-like.

Also, I've caught a little flak from one of my coworkers who offered some suggestions about improving the dinner next year. Ordinarily, I'd thank her: when it goes better next year, I'll look like an even cooler dude than I do already. The problem is that all of her suggestions are things we already do or that are just stupid. The worst part is that the things we already did, she was involved in. I've heard to watch out for her in the past, so I know that I can expect her to take my email response to her suggestions and twist it out of context to make me look bad, but still, it's pissing me off a little bit. If there's one thing I can't stand (there are several, I'm sure), it's backstabbers who do it for the sake of screwing other people over because they know that they've been blackballed, too.

As an aside, I've decided I'd like to become an assassin. I want to stalk and kill people only in the late afternoons, and be known as The Five O'Clock Shadow.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Awesome filler


One of the best wedding presents I could ask for was a circular saw with a laser on it (as a way of making sure that your motions lined up with the pencil or chalk line you'd already drawn).

That came from Berney and presumably Liz, my old roommates who are now themselves caught up in the throes of love.

While Kirsten and I were away on honeymoon, we got a box from Berney and Liz, containing...

A stuffed shark.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Nearly Over


Well, I have to admit I haven't been updating as much as I would like over the last few months, but I do have an excuse. I've been planning a wedding (which went well) and the annual Scholarship Dinner at work (which I hope will go well tonight).

Once those are over, it's off to honeymoon in Antigua for a week - they had a Hurricane Season sale, and it's an all-inclusive resort, so we get a pipe to tie ourselves down to like in Twister free of charge. We have to pay for laundry service, though. Bummer.

Anyway.

Once we come back, I promise more updates. Life will undoubtedly slow down afterwards, and all I'll have to do is arrange some visits with some folks. Mostly lightweight stuff, I think. So my boring and mundane life will be out on the Internets again...aren't you all so lucky?

Sunday, October 07, 2007

This Feels Kinda Weird


So, as of about 3:25 or so this afternoon, I am going to be married. To a woman. For real. And it feels kind of awkward. I'm not altogether sure if I'm ready to start saying things like, "my wife" and, "the ol' ball and chain." It's not that I'm not ready to be married, because I am, and I'm pretty sure I'm ready for the whole responsibility package that comes with it. But still, it's a tad strange to think about it.

At any rate, enough about me.

I'd like to say thanks to all those who've congratulated Kirsten and I in one form or another. It means a lot to us at this juncture. Also, the centerpieces are free to take home.

Not sure how to end. Will sit.