Sunday, December 31, 2017

Window Seats

My sister asked me to make her a window seat in her kitchen nook. When I told my roommate that I was planning on making it she said "You aren't a carpenter." What has that got to do with anything? :)
I did some online research about how to make window seats and found a blog about someone making one. I took that general plan and created a basic pattern. Then my Dad and I set out to make it. With my Dad's expertise and tools and with two heads and four hands (well plus some additional ones from friends and family) we made a window seat. I think it looks really nice, but it was a bigger project then I thought it would be. My nephew you helped us work on the frame work and then saw it finished said it was really nice to see the fruits of his labor.
An Aesthetic Break (Our cut 2 by 4s)

The frame

Frame with top and bead board leaning up against the base

The complete (more or less) with the kitchen table in position
Apparently I didn't take any with the curtains up.
It was cool to see it come to fruition especially when it just started as some boring 2 by 4s. To watch a bare frame, the smidgen of an idea, become a reality.

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Time and Change

Shortly after my twenty-first birthday I began an 18-month mission for my church. It began with a three week training period in the MTC (Missionary Training Center). The morning I entered the MTC I ate breakfast with my family, hung out with a friend and then drove to the MTC. There I entered a closed campus, got shots, stood in long lines, went to meetings and was surrounded by complete strangers. That night when I took out my journal I started an entry with the date and time like usual and then wrote about my day outside the MTC, then I started a new page with the same date and time and wrote about my day within the MTC. The experiences were too different they felt like at least different days maybe even weeks.
Late this week I returned to my college life after spending a week or two with my sister and her kids. I spent days talking to my sister, holding babies, wrapping presents, dropping kids off at school, and screwing in door-stoppers. Then I was back, going to campus, living with adult roommates, being asked about my life plans, doing things with friends, working on my own projects in relative quiet.... Surely I wasn't with my sister just four days ago!
Both these experiences felt like more time should have passed because so much had changed.... Although it makes sense that our brains link time and amounts of change together it is also kind of weird.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Wrapping Presents

My dad has always been the one to wrap presents.... My mom buys them and my dad wraps them while listening to Christmas music.
One Christmas eve my sister and i stayed up talking so late that my parents knocked on our bedroom door and asked if we should help wrap presents for our brothers because they didn't have time to wrap all the presents.
Once, my siblings and I were wrapping the presents we had bought for each other. One brother was reading on the top bunk while some of the rest of us wrapped his present. I begged my sister to wrap my present while I was still in the room. I even climbed into the closet but she refused, saying that I would peek.... And I probably would have. What is funny is that last year or maybe the year before one of my brothers gave me my present in the mail packaging and made me wrap it. My own present.... And I didn't peek. I must have grown up some...
I remember wrapping presents with my sister. She showed me how to line up the wrapping paper so that the stripes matched and the little penguins weren't weirdly overlapped.
I can't decide if I think wrapping presents is actually really boring....I kind of think I do.... I know how to do a nice job but who cares that much. I find it much more entertaining to wrap things poorly.... As in mismatched (if not downright clashing) wrapping paper pieced together..... Basically I like to wrap presents so bad that it's funny... But I always completely cover the gift... Because it has to be a surprise!
I also think it is fun to wrap odd shaped presents sometimes, if I can think of a sneaky or visually appealing way to do so. Or, making obvious presents look (or sound) like something else or otherwise make it hard to guess is entertaining. Like the time we put bells in with the puzzle for my dad so he couldn't hear the pieces shifting around over the bells.... Or when we wrapped a stack of tumblers for my mom in a long tube and then added a hook so the whole thing looked like a candy cane.
Anyway.... Those were some random thoughts and memories of wrapping presents. Happy December.

Sunday, December 3, 2017

A Beast Named ...

Three years back I heard rumors about a mysterious monster hidden in the depths of the mountains. Vague descriptions told of a mottled brown beast, entirely unappealing. It was no majestic dragon, enigmatic sphinx, or noble griffin. However, according to the castle armorer the beast was thought to guard a sizable treasure and it needed to be vanquished for the sake of the poor mountain dwellers. I reluctantly agreed and he placed in my hands a long spear. It glowed with a faint blue light.
"What is this?" I asked.
"A magic spear, of course," the armorer said. He also spoke of an old knight who knew more of the beast than anyone. Then he shooed me away. And thus I went forth to combat the beast.
The old knight found me as I left the city. "Beware the great head, with it's fierce teeth," he said. I gulped and set out.
It was a long trek into the mountains and the beast was elusive. The occasional track on the rocky ground and far off glimpses revealed only the motley brown I had been told to expect but despite myself I was intrigued. One foggy day, as I made my way down a ravine I found myself unexpectedly at the very maw of the beast's lair. It leapt from its' cave, mouth gaping, long neck darting out towards me. I jumped back, and clumsily threatened him with my spear. One fateful blow bounced off the creatures teeth. The head darted back into the hole and I heard a great scraping and a thump as of a great footstep. I turned and fled. Luckily it did not pursue. I knew now that my clumsy attempts with the spear would not be sufficient, but at least I knew now where the beast lay. As I made my way back toward the castle my  shoulders in shame how had I thought I was prepared for this? A passing woodsman saw me and joined me for a stretch along the rocky trail. He asked what I was doing and I explained my mission. He looked on me with compassion. "Didn't the armorer show you how to use the spear?"
"Um, no" I said, feeling sheepish. "I thought I would just learn on the way." As I said the words I realized just how ignorant I was, using a magic spear as a walking stick was no way to prepare to fight a beast!
"There is a hermit high in the Canyon of Mirrors," he said, "go to him and he will train you."
"Thank you," I cried, and shook his hand vigorously before I turned from my castle-ward trail and headed to the Canyon of Mirrors.
For months I studied with the hermit. At first all I learned was what I was doing wrong, but slowly I began to understand the spear, and how to wield it effectively. The only thing that kept me from my training was an attack of hippogriffs that kept me busy with some of the other knights in training for a few weeks and when I travelled home to help my parents with the harvest.
After such a long time I decided it was time once more to confront the beast. Leaving the hermit and the Canyon of Mirrors I approached the beast's lair for the second time. Again the beast, sprung from its lair, not one but two heads threatening me with fierce teeth, but this time I met it with a steady spear. With the magically lengthened spear I swept out and cut through bone and sinew. The beast's head lay at my feet. I thrust my spear upward in triumph only to see two heads spring fully-formed from the severed neck. I staggered back for a moment, but then stepped back into the fray. Thrice more I cut out with my spear and thrice more heads fell at my feet, and yet each time new heads sprang out of the creatures neck to take the fallen's places. For the second time I fled the lair and for the second time the beast failed to follow.
I returned to the Canyon of the mirrors but alas, the hermit knew how to wield the magical spear, but not how to defeat such a creature. Then, I sought out the armorer. He offered belief in my ability but his advice was based on the rumored beast, not the beast I had come to know. For days and weeks I wandered, not knowing what course to take. Soon, I realized I had returned to tracking the beast. Watching it from clifftops and from caverns. But as I watched I began to learn its patterns, and count its heads. Additional heads kept popping up, and I decided it was time to hunt down the old knight once more. He welcomed me into his hut and told me once again to beware of the beast’s heads.
“Heads?” I asked.
“Aye,” he said.
That was when I noticed his sword, leaning in the corner of his hut, a bloody rag on the ground next to it.
“You keep chopping heads,” I accused.
“Aye, if I don’t find them you surely would. He will run out of new ones eventually and then you can pare him back to one.”
The advice was strange but something rang true and so once more I returned to the lair and I fought. At dawn I began, fighting until piles of heads lay scattered on the field, and exhaustion spread through my very soul. As the sun set, turning the rocks red, the beast looked at me with a single set of eyes that spoke of loss but also relief. We sank together to the ground, and I patted the head of my foe. No longer was he the fierce beast set on destruction he had been at our first meeting.
The next several weeks I worked with the brown creature and we became friends or companions of sorts. I even brought him home to plow my parent’s fields.
When we returned, I left him in his lair and went to see the armorer. He complained of the beast and told me again that I must conquer him. I told him I had, but not in the way he had envisioned. I brought him and a few nobles to see the beast. They were not immediately convinced but I pled with them, defended him. He did not deserve death. I even showed them how I had trained him to the plow. Finally, they agreed that if I brought back glowstone dust,  spider’s blood, and a griffin’s feather and used them to anoint the creature, I could save him. I nearly sank to the ground in despair. Did not they understand the months and years of training, and tracking, the great battle, and the weeks of working with the creature. I was tired, but they were adamant. And so, I left the lair once more and hunted down the strange ingredients. Three times I brought back spider’s blood, only for them to shun my offering. It is not the right type of spider they claimed, but finally it was deemed acceptable. I anointed the creature, and he was accepted as harmless. I patted his head once more, and whispered goodbye to him. It was time for me to move on. I led him to the old knight’s door. “He is yours now,” I said.
The old knight smiled, “you have done a great feat, thank you. He will be of great value to me, and the villages he tormented will now benefit from his labor.”
“Yes.” I smiled a sad smile.
“And what is his name?” he asked.

“I call him, Thesis.”


Well that was a lot longer than I was intending.... I hope you didn't get too bored. This is a fantasized retelling of my Master's thesis experience. The armorer is my thesis advisor, the old knight is a paleontologist from my field area who I worked with extensively. The hermit was a book about databases that I read in the early stages of the project. Notice that I defend the beast near the end. The strange ingredients represent the annoying nit-picky hoops, deadlines and miscellaneous signatures I had to gather after my thesis defense. The ending is a little less detailed and a little more imaginative then the first part (because I got tired of writing and because I got into the story more). I started writing this as stress relief because it tickled my sense of humor to think of signatures from people I've never met as weird potion ingredients instead of dumb hoops to jump through. After my defense the paleontologist (old knight) I referenced earlier sent me the following as a text "I'm glad you were foolish. (er .... wise0 enough to undertake this. You,... [the armorer], me and others have created an amazing thing. No one else would have done it.... You should be very proud of this. It is like fighting the 7 headed hydra of Greek mythology ... chop off one head and two appear!...."  But I just couldn't bare to actually kill the beast... I kind of like him.