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  <title>design</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/188"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/188/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/188/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2007-10-28T13:50:58+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>proving ground</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2007/10/proving-ground" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2007/10/proving-ground</id>
    <published>2007-10-28T14:19:19+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-10-28T14:19:19+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="coding" />
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="work" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The tally is now at fourteen months, and verging on fifteen.</p>
<p>I'm amazed anyone still reads this site; it has to be obvious that my design time and energy has been diverted elsewhere for that period of time.  It used to bother me.  I still apologize for it, but I've stopped giving estimates on when I might finally reach the finish line and be 'back.'  I don't know.  I stopped knowing about six months ago.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The tally is now at fourteen months, and verging on fifteen.</p>
<p>I'm amazed anyone still reads this site; it has to be obvious that my design time and energy has been diverted elsewhere for that period of time.  It used to bother me.  I still apologize for it, but I've stopped giving estimates on when I might finally reach the finish line and be 'back.'  I don't know.  I stopped knowing about six months ago.</p>
<p>From my very first day at The Job, the understanding has been that I would 'fix' the website.  The depth and complexity of that task did not become clear to me until a few months in, when I realized that I was dealing with many small scripts scattered all over the site, undocumented, uncommented.</p>
<p>I did the only thing I knew how to do:  I buckled down.  My first priority was assessment.  What was wrong?  Why was it wrong?  I went from directory to directory, cataloguing, making notes, writing down questions for later.  Through that assessment, it became clear that my first priority needed to be a calendar conversion; the homebrew calendar we were using at that time had no comments, no documentation, and had major flaws and limitations.  </p>
<p>Fast-forward a couple of months.  I moved forward - finally getting a new calendar system purchased, adding in the old data, then adding new data in tandem with the old calendar, writing functions to do the extra display work the homebrew calendar did, then finally turning off the old calendar.  I breathed a little easier.  The day I was finally able to do repeating events without keying in every instance of the event was a joyous day.</p>
<p>Since then, progress has been glacial.  Most people can't even see it, and that's been the disheartening thing.  I've been re-coding the scripts one at a time into a language I'm more familiar with, and more importantly documenting and commenting them as I go.  I now understand about 90% of what the scripts on the website do.  But the end goal?  Transparency.  End users <em>shouldn't</em> have seen a change, and neither should my co-workers.</p>
<p>Stage three was a content management system.  I identified drupal as the way to go for this site about six months ago, and my coding work has been aimed toward making every page on the site insertable into drupal.  I'm most of the way there.  I have two major subsections of the site to go before everything's included, and we can consider moving the site live.</p>
<p>I've been solo on this project for fifteen months.  It's left me feeling isolated both at work and at home.  I am the only programmer at The Workplace, and it's been made clear to me that they love me, but I bewilder them.  I'm a sausage-maker.  What I do scares them, makes them sketch warding signs and think of alchemists -- but they want that end result.</p>
<p>I want to be done.  I remember real life.  I want to stop asking my co-workers for patience, to just show them what I've been working on, to find answers to these last two major problems...  This project is very much my proving ground.  If I do it to <em>my</em> satisfaction, there will be no doubts as to why I was hired.</p>
<p>I've held fast to something a co-worker found out for me.  We've been looking at a similar website overhaul/revision, and through family contacts, we were able to find out details on what it took to achieve their website overhaul.  It took ten full-time programmer-designers working on only that project for a year.</p>
<p>I am solo, am doing this in conjunction with print design, and have been at this for fourteen months.</p>
<p>So, Santa?  Here's what I want for Christmas.  I want the final two big questions solved.  I want to fix the book clubs problem, and I want to find the answer to the training center problem.  Give me those, and I can wrap up the rest.  Let me hand them a beta before I get on the plane on December 27th.</p>
<p>I want my life back, but right now I think it is more important to myself (and a lesser degree my co-workers) that I prove myself.  The people working with me in my department know it has taken endless cups of tea and headphone hours to get where I am now (both appearing in tandem are a sign of a major code problem) but I want so very much to show the rest of my co-workers that <em>this</em> is why I was hired, that <em>this</em> is what I'm capable of doing if I'm allowed time and space to do my job.</p>
<p>December 27th - is that so much to ask?</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>teh linkyfood, it wubs me</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2007/02/teh-linkyfood-it-wubs-me" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2007/02/teh-linkyfood-it-wubs-me</id>
    <published>2007-02-01T02:13:30+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-07-15T15:54:44+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="graphics" />
    <category term="insanity" />
    <category term="librarians" />
    <category term="libraries" />
    <category term="links" />
    <category term="taglines" />
    <category term="valentine&#039;s day" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>In the guise of aliveness, I present two things:<strong>THING THE FIRST: </strong> should you wish to continue the harmless cycle of attention-whoreness that Valentine's Day perpetuates, consider doing Valentines online.  If for no other reason that if I see my friends doing this online, I'll feel less guilty about not sitting down and actually designing/printing/mailing actual creative/funny/amusing/thoughtful/touching/smarmy Vallies on my own.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>In the guise of aliveness, I present two things:<strong>THING THE FIRST: </strong> should you wish to continue the harmless cycle of attention-whoreness that Valentine's Day perpetuates, consider doing Valentines online.  If for no other reason that if I see my friends doing this online, I'll feel less guilty about not sitting down and actually designing/printing/mailing actual creative/funny/amusing/thoughtful/touching/smarmy Vallies on my own.  I have the best of intentions, except on Tuesdays when I know I always have the worst of intentions, but unless I can get around to asexually budding off a clone in the next twenty minutes, I don't think the clone will have developed enough fine motor skills to properly address envelopes by 14 February, leaving me out of luck and you guys with no love-mails from me.</p>
<p><a href="http://wishroll.com/valentinr/domesticat" title="My valentinr - domesticat"><img src="http://wishroll.com/widget/valentinr/small/domesticat.jpg" alt="My Valentinr - domesticat" border="0" /></a><br /><a href="http://wishroll.com/valentinr">Get your own valentinr</a> (Thanks simultaneously to Angel, aka <a href="http://offensivemango.livejournal.com">offensive mango</a>, and Russ, aka <a href="http://arkhamrefugee.livejournal.com">arkhamrefugee</a> on LJ, for the link.)</p>
<p><strong>THING THE SECOND:</strong> a link to the custom-made shirt I <a href="http://dyo.customink.com/cink/r.jsp?E=amy%40domesticat.net&amp;F=lipsticky2">created and ordered on customink.com</a>.  I've accepted that I'll never beat the 'lipstick librarian' rap while at my current job, so I might as well embrace it.</p>
<p>I'd like to thank the friends who suggested such lovely taglines as&hellip;</p>
<blockquote><p>"feel free to check my bindings"</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>"lipstick librarians prefer to be leather bound"</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>"librarians do it in the shelves"</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>"they sure are stacked"</p></blockquote>
<p>I will continue to pretend that I am vaguely traumatized (the 'but she was wearing a short skirt' defense fails when I'm forced to admit that I made up a few of my own that were just as bad) and you will all continue to pretend to believe me.</p>
<p>I will now huddle up in my house and wait, bemusedly, to see if the mythical HALF INCH OF SLEET actually falls on Huntsville, paralyzing the traffic system, causing the soccer moms to crash their SUVs into whatever soccer moms crash their SUVs into while calling their friends and saying "OMG THERE'S HALF AN INCH OF MELTY SLEET HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO DRIVE IN THIS?" and maybe &hellip; just maybe &hellip; giving me the opportunity to sleep in tomorrow.</p>
<p>Whatever.</p>
<p>I'll strap the pantyhose on and see you at the library bright and bloody early tomorrow.  I've got enough Splenda, creamer, and tea to last until the apocalypse, which, according to my to-do list, I am scheduled to finish beta-testing prior to lunch.  Right after fixing the Chinese-language sign that was my nemesis today&hellip;</p>
<blockquote><p>So!  How many of you read this and said, 'Hey, that sounds like the humor of someone who just worked a ten-hour day!'?  Those of you who did are all winners and can come over to my house and claim the unbaked chocolate chip cookie dough and eat it out of the bag.  Just, uh, wash the spoon you licked before you stick it back in the bag, mmmkay?</p></blockquote>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>the hat-rabbit and the teacup goddess</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2007/01/hat-rabbit-and-teacup-goddess" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2007/01/hat-rabbit-and-teacup-goddess</id>
    <published>2007-01-21T03:55:39+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-07-15T15:56:05+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="librarians" />
    <category term="libraries" />
    <category term="stress" />
    <category term="tiredness" />
    <category term="work" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>It's been a long week.Without lapsing into a sea of complaints, I'll say this:  right now, I'm overwhelmed and mentally exhausted.  I knew going in to this job that there would be periods in which I simply wouldn't be able to cope with the tide of work, no matter how intelligently I planned my time or how many hours of overtime I put in.  I'm sliding&mdash;fast&mdash;into one of those periods.  I guessed rightly that it would be coming at the end of January, but I misjudged its strength and ferocity.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>It's been a long week.Without lapsing into a sea of complaints, I'll say this:  right now, I'm overwhelmed and mentally exhausted.  I knew going in to this job that there would be periods in which I simply wouldn't be able to cope with the tide of work, no matter how intelligently I planned my time or how many hours of overtime I put in.  I'm sliding&mdash;fast&mdash;into one of those periods.  I guessed rightly that it would be coming at the end of January, but I misjudged its strength and ferocity.</p>
<p>I belong at this job, belong so much it scares me&mdash;fate has a sense of humor, and I'm still waiting for the punchline to stomp into the middle of my back.  They've not yet thrown any single thing at me that I can't handle, but my boss was completely honest when she interviewed me.  Most people specialize in one thing:  code, graphics, PR, human resources; they needed me to be able to be competent-to-expert in all of those fields from the moment I walked in the door on my first day.  Politics, graphic design, code, research; from day to day, I rarely have any idea which of those will be first up on my tasklist when I walk in the door, but I can count on touching on nearly all of them almost every day.</p>
<p>I knew I was in pretty deeply the first time I tried to stick my office key into a lock on one of the doors of my house.</p>
<p>There are days that I walk out of the office and rest my forehead against the cool metal of the elevator as it takes me down from floors three to one, grateful for the moment of calm between work and commuting.</p>
<p>I've had a phrase in my head for the last week, and I've tried saying it to a few people and been surprised at how little it was understood:  in this line of work, you are only as good as your last piece of work.  It's great when people compliment you, or love what you've done, but the truth is that in a few days' time, there will be another project, another design task, and you have to start all over again, prove yourself yet again, knowing that your co-workers have no reason not to expect the same level of brilliance that you tossed out last Thursday.</p>
<p>Saying "I'm only as good as my last piece of work" is an acknowledgment of a massive fear.  Where does the creativity come from?  Why does it go away?  How do I coax it back out when I need it?  I have no answers for this, just the nagging fear that there will be a big project, a Massive Something that someone's counting on me for, and I'll sit in front of my computer and reach deep down into my brain-shaped hat and realize that I'm totally, utterly out of rabbits.</p>
<blockquote><p>"Broadway duchess<br />Darling if you only knew<br />Half as much as<br />Everybody thinks you do"<br />&mdash;Steely Dan, 'I Got The News'</p></blockquote>
<p>Jake and I chatted for a while last night, through the abbreviated conversational medium of phone-based text messages.  In that medium, words are carefully chosen; each phrase is thought out ahead of time for maximum impact.  We talked about feeling overwhelmed at work, about putting our personal lives in stasis, about how much focus it takes to get through the day&mdash;and how, at the end of the day, we both often felt like we had nothing left to give.  </p>
<p>It was telling that we had this conversation via text, and neither of us considered transforming it into a phone call.  A phone call would have required quicker response times, more mental intensity, than either of us were capable of giving.  Still, it was comforting.  It was nice to be able to acknowledge what was going on, to someone who understood it, who wouldn't say silly cheering things but would instead just acknowledge that sometimes, simply surviving the day is tantamount to winning.</p>
<p>Last night, after sending my last message, I wrapped myself up in blankets, and slept a sleep of nightmares.  My body does that when I'm stressed.  Enough long-term worry and I don't even have to ask&mdash;when faced with overload, my brain will take the opportunity of unconsciousness to yell and stomp and say everything it needs to say.  </p>
<p>I woke up at five-thirty, grateful to emerge into a sensical world in which those I loved were still alive and nothing was on fire, and fed the cats.  For once, they chose to be grateful little brats, and immediately came back to bed with me.  They piled upon me, and I fell asleep in a comforting snuggle of purrs and tailthumps.  </p>
<p>When next I dreamed, I dreamed of comfortable couches, of friends and teacups, of the warmth of hands wrapped around steaming mugs of liquid solace, and I realized that no matter how tired I am right now, how frustrated and overwhelmed, I still have resources that give me comfort.</p>
<p>The project that landed on me on Friday&mdash;I'll figure it out.  Patrick was right.  I'll find a way.  It's too big, too prominent, too important; it's the kind of high-profile work that mortals like me build portfolios around.  The overtime&mdash;well, I'll just have to look at it as my way of making sure that I've got enough comp hours for a trip I need to take in a couple of months.</p>
<p>Right now, though, I'm planning quite the Teavana purchase next weekend.  One cannot be a teacup goddess when one is rapidly running out of tea.</p>
<p>Here's hoping for lots of rabbits.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>fontgasm?</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2006/06/fontgasm" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2006/06/fontgasm</id>
    <published>2006-06-06T20:33:58+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-12-26T16:03:45+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="fonts" />
    <category term="linkfood" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Taking a break from my unofficial hiatus due to code work&hellip;</p>
<p>Courtesy of <a href="http://blog.amber.org/2006/06/06/typographic-tattoos/">Chris Petrilli</a>, I present to you <a href="http://www.veer.com/products/typedetail.aspx?image=UMT0000149">Ministry Script</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p>'Alejandro Paul designed Ministry Script to be "A time capsule that marks both the American ad art of the 1920s, and the current new-millennium acrobatics of digital type." The idea was to make as many possible variants of each letter as he could possibly handle.'</p>
</blockquote>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Taking a break from my unofficial hiatus due to code work&hellip;</p>
<p>Courtesy of <a href="http://blog.amber.org/2006/06/06/typographic-tattoos/">Chris Petrilli</a>, I present to you <a href="http://www.veer.com/products/typedetail.aspx?image=UMT0000149">Ministry Script</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p>'Alejandro Paul designed Ministry Script to be "A time capsule that marks both the American ad art of the 1920s, and the current new-millennium acrobatics of digital type." The idea was to make as many possible variants of each letter as he could possibly handle.'</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>'Ministry Script goes overboard with ligatures, which involve standard, discretionary, contextual, and even swash features of the font. Says Paul, "At one point during the long, long testing phase, I found myself looking at twelve noticeably different visual instances of the same word, all set with this same font. I believe this sort of flexibility is not currently offered in any single script font on the market today."<br /><br />Ministry Script contains 99,814 kerning pairs.'</p></blockquote>
<p>I wonder if it cuddles, but I'm not sure if I care.</p>
<p>It's $99.  I think I should find a couple of graphic-designer-geek friends to go in on this purchase with me.</p>
<p>Either that or &hellip; uh &hellip; Jeff?  I know what I want for my birthday.  <img src="http://domesticat.net/sites/all/modules/smileys/packs/example/lol.png" title="Laughing out loud" alt="Laughing out loud" class="smiley-content" /></p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>so shall all the grumbling be!</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2005/05/so-shall-all-grumbling-be" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2005/05/so-shall-all-grumbling-be</id>
    <published>2005-05-10T02:40:16+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-10-29T00:27:07+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="doctor who" />
    <category term="knitting" />
    <category term="marriage" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[This weekend I was teased, and rightfully so, about the similarity between knitting and software design.  There was, as Brian explained, a vast gulf of difference between something that was 'done' and something that was truly finished and out the door.  In software design, 'done' means you've finished coding, and 'finished' means you've done everything that comes after:  debugging and testing.    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[This weekend I was teased, and rightfully so, about the similarity between knitting and software design.  There was, as Brian explained, a vast gulf of difference between something that was 'done' and something that was truly finished and out the door.  In software design, 'done' means you've finished coding, and 'finished' means you've done everything that comes after:  debugging and testing.  In knitting, 'done' means you've finished the knitting, and 'finished' means you have completed all cleanup details, like weaving in your ends and attaching trim.There's a weird sort of serendipity that seems to happen when knitters and Doctor Who fans coincide.  Eventually the question is asked, "Why not make a Tom Baker scarf?"  Jeff and I both grew up watching the Tom Baker incarnation of Doctor Who when we were kids, and it seemed rather obvious that, eventually, I should make him a Tom Baker scarf, because it'd be the perfect combination of our geekery and my knitting.

It should be noted that Jeff never asked for the scarf.  He liked the idea of having one of his own, but the decision to make it was mine (and so shall all the grumbling be!).  Originally, I toyed with the idea of making the scarf as a surprise Christmas present for him.  Then I did a little bit of research and came to my senses.  Not only was the scarf enormous, but I didn't know which season's scarf to knit.

"But how big is it?" you say?

<blockquote>"When Tom Baker was cast as the Doctor, costume designer James Acheson picked up a load of wool and asked a knitter called Begonia Pope to knit a scarf for Tom. She inadvertently used all the wool Acheson had given her, resulting in a scarf that was some twenty feet long."<br><br>from <a href="http://doctorwhoscarf.com/history.html">doctorwhoscarf.com</a></blockquote>

I confess:  unstretched, <a href="#" onclick="window.open('http://domesticat.net/popup.php?z=http://domesticat.net/images/2005/doctor_who_scarf.jpg&amp;width=195&amp;height=600&amp;title=his%20scarf','photopopup','width=195,height=600,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=no,status=no,toolbar=no,resizable=no,screenx=150,screeny=150');return false" onmouseover="window.status='photo popup: his scarf';return true" onmouseout="window.status='';return true">his scarf</a> is only thirteen feet long.  It could be stretched and blocked to make it closer to perfect, but I'm not sure that's a good idea.  Jeff is a good deal shorter than Tom Baker was, and a scarf <em>that</em> long would be truly unwieldy on him.

I've been working frantically on this scarf for the past month, amidst surgery and sickness and all the other fun stuff that transpired.  The block of 20 brown <a href="http://doctorwhoscarf.com/pattern1.html">in the pattern</a> is the stripe I worked on while waiting to be taken to the operating room for my tubal ligation; obviously, I've been knitting at warp speed since then.

I woke up painfully early on Saturday morning, on a weekend in which we were supposed to be relaxing with friends; I decided to curl up in the living room, to see if I couldn't harness the early morning peace to make my scarf 'done.'  I started at 5:30 in the morning with about six inches of scarf left to go; at 8:32 I put on the kettle to celebrate a newly-knitted BBC-tv-show scarf with a proper pot of tea.

That morning, I sat in the living room as we all talked, painstakingly weaving in the ends, one at a time.  Later that afternoon, after some rest and some food, I attached the tassels and did the most pathetic, sneeze-filled chairdance you've ever seen.

A six-month project, done.

Two days later I'm already twitching and wondering what my next project should be.

Tonight I spotted something on <a href="http://knit.atypically.net/scarves/hogwarts/pattern.shtml">knit.atypically.net</a> that I think might have some of my friends happy:  yes, the information I need to make any and all of the Hogwarts scarves (and they're incredibly easy).  While I've enjoyed the Harry Potter series of books, I can't quite call myself a major fan.  However, I know a few friends who are&hellip;

Buy the yarn and we'll talk.  :)

But in the meantime:  <em>*wigglebouncesqueal*</em>  It's done!  At last!    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>comPLEATed</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2004/08/compleated" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2004/08/compleated</id>
    <published>2004-08-13T06:28:20+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-10-28T13:50:58+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="design" />
    <category term="dragon*con" />
    <category term="techops" />
    <category term="travel" />
    <category term="trips" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Twenty-eight new adult-swim-style slide sets are ready to be animated.  I thought I'd get them laid out as .png files tonight and animated, but I'm still sitting here typing and it's well past one in the morning.  I'm thinking it's time to give up for the night.  They'll get animated tomorrow.Winamp is going to cry if I play those songs again.  I'm not sure how software plans to cry, but I think it will find a way.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Twenty-eight new adult-swim-style slide sets are ready to be animated.  I thought I'd get them laid out as .png files tonight and animated, but I'm still sitting here typing and it's well past one in the morning.  I'm thinking it's time to give up for the night.  They'll get animated tomorrow.Winamp is going to cry if I play those songs again.  I'm not sure how software plans to cry, but I think it will find a way.</p>
<p>Tomorrow we head for Atlanta again, for the last pre-dragon*con tech staff meeting.  Friday night, I get to meet one of the last few DCTV folks I haven't met yet - Shannon, part of the Tennessee Goon Squad, who shot video and edited their own spots separately from us.  Saturday, we go to the meeting, where we'll hopefully see preliminary schedules for this year - </p>
<p>(and spend the next hour yelling, "Oh my God!  We can't do that!  That's insane!")<br />
(and then spend the next hour figuring out how to make it work anyway)</p>
<p>Sunday I'll send Jeff home with Patrick, and I'll stay on at Brian and Suzan's for one more day.  Brian will continue editing DCTV footage.  I'll offer up useless commentary while helping Suzan with her costume, and talking over plans for running Harris (the equipment room), Ops (the public office of techops), and geek feeding (that job I do for techops when the website, staff database, and DCTV aren't gobbling my brain cycles).  Then I'll start running errands.</p>
<p>Errands will last until Monday, at which point I'll crawl home, marching orders in hand, and bury my head in Photoshop, Illustrator, and After Effects for the next two weeks.</p>
<p>The black skirt has been carefully hand-pleated, and is almost ready to go.  I'm not entirely happy with it yet, but I suspect many of its flaws will be taken care of once I get all the pleats ironed, straighten the front panel, and add on three or four big, scary-looking buckles to close the skirt.</p>
<p>It's not 'con clothing if it doesn't show a boob or have big scary buckles on it, you know.</p>
<p>Chris, Jake, and Kat have their plane tickets.  I have a packing list, a to-do list, a sewing list, and if I'm not careful, a list of all the lists I have to keep up with.</p>
<p>Yep, it's time.  Time to go to 'con, or time to go to bed.  I don't know which.</p>
<p>I think I'll start with 'bed.'  Hush, Winamp.  Happy now?</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
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