Memories are a tricky thing.

I was searching my computer for a specific photo because I thought a story about that photo would make a good blog post.  I couldn’t find the photo that I was looking for, but I did find this one, and it’s amazing.

glassmanboys

Yesiree bob, what we have here is a vintage Olan Mills studio shot of the Glassman Boys.  My older brothers Scott and Jonathan, and me in the most ridiculous shirt the 1970s could possibly throw up around my neck.  There’s another one with the three of us and our parents, but not my sister-  I assume this is when Michelle was off at college.

Here’s the thing about this photo that is the most interesting to me:  I don’t remember it.  I don’t even remember going to this photo session a little tiny bit.     I didn’t even know I had this file on my computer until just a few minutes before I started writing this post.

I know that I was about ten years old here, because I was wearing the same horrible Art Deco shirt in my 1982 elementary school class photo.  (Seriously, it looks like Andy Warhol and Piet Mondrian got drunk together and threw up on a canvas!)

Guess who didn't fully understand the "cowboys and indians" theme they wanted for class photos that year?
Guess who didn’t fully understand the “dress up as cowboys and indians” theme they wanted for class photos that year?   Yup, that would be me!

I do remember another studio photograph that was taken with my siblings, including my sister-  that one is indelibly burned into my brain for two reasons-  the first is that I actually had a copy of that one all these years, whereas the sibling picture up above is actually new to me.  The second reason the other one is far more memorable is that my sister drove us to and from the studio, and on the way home a neighborhood girl chased a ball into the street in front of our car.  The girl survived, but I remember her having a nearly full body cast for a while after.  Michelle was traumatized, naturally, because running over a person is scary and stressful. (Or so I imagine.)

My memory of the times before high school is fragmented at best.  I’m not really sure why that is.  Some people have really detailed memories of their childhood, but the only things I remember clearly tend to have to do with times that I was either very embarrassed, very angry, or with very dear friends.    Memory is weird that way.

Speaking of memory, I have no idea what my original idea was for the primary thread of this post, so I’ll wrap up with another childhood memory.  This one is more funny than traumatic.

In the late 1970s, my brothers had a giant Habitrail with a bunch of gerbils in it.  For the uninitiated, Habitrail is this system of tubes and spires that allows you to take any standard sized fish tank and make it a playground kingdom for gerbils.    It’s changed over the years, but do a Google Image search and you can get a basic idea of what a Habitrail looks like.

I don’t remember what all of the Gerbil’s names were, but I know that one of them was named Chip.  I know this, because at a few minutes before 8pm one night, one brother says to the other, “Let’s go watch CHiPs.”  The Larry Wilcox/Erik Estrada show premiered when I was about five years old, and I didn’t watch nearly as much television back then.  For one thing, there were only about a dozen channels between the VHF and UHF dials, and we didn’t have cable television yet because it was still the 1970s.

“Let’s go watch CHiPs,” said my brother, and I pointed to the Habitrail and responded in the only way that made any sense to my tiny brain at the time:

“But why are you going in there?  Chip’s right here!”

What’s the earliest thing you remember?

Editor’s Note:  I’m attempting to blog every day in November with CheerPeppers.  I don’t expect to succeed because life be crazy, but any blogging in excess of my previous post-free month is a win, right?

The Boston Molasses Flood of 1919

The Boston Molasses Flood of 1919 is one of the most fascinating disasters I’ve ever heard of.   Here’s how it went down:

The Purity Distilling Company had a large storage tank, 50 feed high and 90 feet in diameter, sitting at 529 Commercial Street in Boston.  It had been filled a few days before, and contained more than two million gallons of molasses.

north_end_molasses_tank

On January 15, 1919, around lunch time, the structural integrity of the tank failed.   More recent research has shown that the tank was not as thick as it should have been for its size, and the steel used was more brittle than it should have been.  Additionally,  the tank was not tested properly for leaks, and was already leaking molasses so badly that the company painted it brown to hide the leaks.  The weather on January 15th had warmed up rapidly, and researchers believe that this contributed to fermentation which would have increased the internal pressure of the tank.

When the storage tank burst at around 12:30, a fifteen foot high wall of molasses traveling at 35 miles per hour swept through the streets of Boston.  From Scientific American:

All that thick syrup ripped apart the cylindrical tank that once held it, throwing slivers of steel and large rivets in all directions. The deluge crushed freight cars, tore Engine 31 firehouse from its foundation and, when it reached an elevated railway on Atlantic Avenue, nearly lifted a train right off the tracks. A chest-deep river of molasses stretched from the base of the tank about 90 meters into the streets. From there, it thinned out into a coating one half to one meter deep. People, horses and dogs caught in the mess struggled to escape, only sinking further.

The wall of molasses completely demolished some buildings, knocked others off of their foundations.   Ultimately, the flood killed 21 people and horses, injured around 150 more people, and caused immense property damage.  Some of those killed were not found for several days, and were so glazed over by molasses that identifying their bodies was difficult.   Roughly half the victims were crushed by debris or drowned in molasses.  The rest died from injuries and infections in the days and weeks that followed.

It took weeks to clean up the molasses from the streets.   It was ultimately sprayed down with salt water from a ship in the harbor.   The water was brown from molasses until the following summer.  This is what this area of Boston looked like during cleanup from the flood:

bostonmolassesdisaster

This is the track of the El train that was damaged by the flood:

boston_1919_molasses_disaster_-_el_train_structure

And, lastly, the Boston Post from the following day.

boston_post-january_16_1919

Today, there’s a plaque at the entrance to Puopolo Park commemorating the disaster.

Credits for this post:
Eric Postpischil’s Molasses Disaster Pages, Yankee Magazine Article
Eric Postpischil’s Molasses Disaster Pages, Smithsonian Article
Scientific American: The Science of the Great Molasses Flood
Good Job Brain Podcast, Episode 173: A Sticky Situation
– All images stolen shamelessly from Wikipedia.   Credit: Wikimedia Commons

What’s the disaster that most fascinates you?

Editor’s Note:  I’m attempting to blog every day in November with CheerPeppers.  I don’t expect to succeed because life be crazy, but any blogging in excess of my previous post-free month is a win, right?

Kafka Style

This post is partially inspired by a recent WordPress Daily Post prompt using the word “transformation.”

Last night, I dreamed of work. This isn’t an unusual dream- I generally assume that a work dream just means that I need a vacation.    This is different though.  I’ll explain.

When people ask me “what do you do,” I usually scoff and say that my job isn’t who I am. I say that there are so many more interesting ways for them to get to know me than to ask about my employment.

I’m lying, though.

For so long, I’ve identified a large part of myself as who I am to my coworkers. They’re another family, really. And my particular experience with our European partners has made me “the guy” for any questions about that.   All of this is changing now.  I’ve begun the process of “knowledge transfer,” which basically means telling the guy taking over my stuff where I documented everything that I do.

Also, I have to burn off sick time that would not be payed out at the end.  This means that I’ll be sprinkling my remaining sick days throughout the next few weeks. Yesterday was the first of these self-enforced exiles, and it’s difficult for me to not work. I was home and working on other things, and the urge to check my work e-mail creeps in. “I’ll just work one tiny trouble ticket. Nobody will know.”  It’s insidious.

Amelie's resolve face. I see this whenever I'm doing something I shouldn't be doing.
Amelie’s resolve face.  I see this whenever I’m doing something I shouldn’t be doing.

This is part of the challenge ahead of me.  I have to get used to doing other things.  I have to stop checking in on my e-mail or the ticket queue when I’m not at work.  It’s gotten so bad that if I have my own command line stuff up on my computer, Amelie will give me a stern look and ask if I’m working.

This is the time that I have to become someone else, in a manner of speaking.  I must separate out the part of me that works even on vacation days so that I can re-purpose him for the next employer, the next adventure.

I’m still making decisions about where I want to be after this employment ends, but one thing I know for sure-  I won’t still be “the guy” for my current job responsibilities any more.   That guy only has about a month left to do his thing.

I wonder who I’ll be next.

Who are you at work?

Editor’s Note:  I’m attempting to blog every day in November with CheerPeppers.  I don’t expect to succeed because life be crazy, but any blogging in excess of my previous post-free month is a win, right?

National what day?

I brought my laptop with me to Panera Bread so that I could get on with the business of rewriting my resume to reflect modern times.  The last time I  really updated my resume was well over a decade ago, after all.

Once I had my lunch, I opened Firefox and it dutifully reloaded the last few tabs I had open.    Naturally, this included the great time sucker, Facebook.  Facebook told me in the trending bar on the right side that today is National Sandwich Day.

How fortuitous, then, that my Pick-2 includes a rather tasty turkey and avocado sandwich!

sammich

Today is also National Stress Awareness Day, which is hilarious to me-  I’m plenty aware of stress.  National Chocolate Day was a few days back, and it’s a travesty that I totally missed that one.

Today’s also National Candy Day, but I feel like that one really ought to be synchronized more with halloween.  National Pastry Day and National Brownie Day are one day apart, but I feel like they should be grouped together.

While my birthday has no truly fun National days, the 15th of December is National Cat Herders Day.  I quite like that one!  The good news here is that we all have plenty of time to prepare for National Pretend To Be A Time Traveler Day.  That one sounds like fun.

National Procrastination Day was January 4th this year,although the date of this one changes yearly for some reason. Maybe I should celebrate it officially today, because I really should be working on my resume.  That is why I brought my laptop here in the first place.  I’d better get on with it…  right after I figure out why today is National Chicken Lady Day!

What’s your favorite National ______ Day holiday?

Editor’s Note:  I’m attempting to blog every day in November with CheerPeppers.  I don’t expect to succeed because life be crazy, but any blogging in excess of my previous post-free month is a win, right?

Open to interpretation.

I’ve had this screen-shot saved to my desktop since March of 2015, and I’ve been meaning to post it to the blog ever since.

In this scene, Spider-Man is fighting with the Green Goblin. (Don’t get me started on when Gobby became some sort of giant troll monster; I’ve completely lost track of all the things that have been changing in comics over the last few years. Get off my lawn!)

The moment that I paused this video was accidental, but in that moment, the very violent and fast-moving fight suddenly became a tiny instant where the Goblin is just reassuring his little Spider-friend.  Without the frames before and after this one, it looks less like a battle and more like the prelude to a warm and squishy hug.

screen-shot-2015-03-30-at-8-16-44-pm

It makes me wonder-  how many of my disagreements really aren’t all that disagreeable?   Maybe some of the people I dislike really aren’t all that bad.

What do you think?

Editor’s Note:  I’m attempting to blog every day in November with CheerPeppers.  I don’t expect to succeed because life be crazy, but any blogging in excess of my previous post-free month is a win, right?