Off to the dentist

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Why do I travel two thirds of the way up the peninsula to go to the dentist?

I've been going to the same dentist for the last eight years. I've even managed to get Kris to go to the same dentist, though he works closer than I do, making the trips slightly less painful.

When I was working for PDI, I asked a couple coworkers for dentist recommendations. Kevin suggested Dr. Happy in Palo Alto, with the commentary, how could you not go to a dentist named Dr Happy? Randy offered his dentist who, though nominally far away, was fabulous. Randy was correct, and I'm very happy for the great relationship with my dentist. I've clued into some of the subtle ways they make the experience better, including asking personal questions and jotting notes down in my files so that they can ask about it the next time, six months from now.

I just wish all of my health related relationships were as good.

Wants and shoulds

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I'm back to the uncomfortable balance of wants and shoulds in life.

I know I should be working on work work. I know I want to be working on personal work. I know I should fix this one feature in a client's site. Then, I can bill them, and make money to keep me in the plants I've grown accustomed to having around.

But I keep thinking about my projects and I really don't want to be working on the billable work work.

Maybe just ten minutes on the fun work. Then the work work won't seem so unbearable.

Master Gardener bio

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I'm getting good at writing my biography in the third person.

My Master Gardener biography:

"From farmlands in Indiana to the Valley of Hearts Delight by way of Arizona deserts, Kitt Hodsden has been around plants and gardening her entire life. An avid ultimate frisbee player, Kitt enjoys building community websites at her day job, being outdoors hiking with her husband and two beagles, and gardening. She continually wonders if this year will be the year her front yard ceases to be the disaster it has been for the longest time."

Dearth of forks

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What is it with the lack of forks in this office?

Every time we order lunch and eat in, I have to scramble for a fork. We have a bazillion knives, and a dozen spoons around here. But no forks. Maybe we should just go around saying, "fork you!"

The Saga of Heather's Car

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Heather called last night, sorta to talk, sorta to complain, sorta to ask advice on what to do about her car getting towed. She was clearly blue, so I listened, offered as much advise as I could, given that my car has never been towed (knock on wood, throw salt over the shoulder and touch the doorknob three times).

Kris knew what to do, and told me to call her back to tell her to call the police. Whenever a car is towed, the police will have a record of the towing, presumably so that when you call to tell them your call has been stolen, they can tell you it's been towed. After she called back, having talked to the police, and yes, the car was towed, it became very clear she needed someone to help her get her car back. What a crappy situation to be in, car towed and no way to get to the car to get it back.

I offered, she accepted, and I drove up to Oakland for the Great-Grand-Car-Retrieval.

Perhaps needless to say, there are parts of Oakland two women should not be in as night falls.

We waited in the wind for the towing company employees to come back to the facility so that she could pay for her car. We stood in the lobby waiting for the supervisor to release the car. We endured the supervisor's indignation when Heather (rightly) refused to sign the release form that waived all rights to claims for damages resulting in the towing before she saw her car and had a chance to inspect it. We followed the towing company guy from storage facility to storage facility, chasing away cats and claiming rights to short semis, looking for her car before we finally found it hidden in the prosecutor's garage where the good cars were stored.

We went to dinner afterward.

I felt bad for Heather. Having a car towed is stressful. Having to spend money on an unexpected expense is never fun. Ending a stressful week with an even more stressful event super suck-a-sauruses. I just hope the bottle of champagne (bubbly!) I bought for her helped ease the rough day. We toasted to the start of good days, beginning with that first swig.

(Note, I didn't feel badly. Feel is a linking verb requiring an adjective as the object of the sentence. To say I feel badly means I am unable to sense or touch something well, as if my nerve endings are shot.)

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