rivka: (ice cream)
rivka ([personal profile] rivka) wrote2009-03-15 05:18 pm

Some otherwise-unrelated things I've been appreciating lately.

1. [livejournal.com profile] hazelchaz sent Alex a giant box of Big Sistery goodness. Key features of its excitingness:

  • The box was super-huge, big enough to climb in and play. A smaller box inside held the actual goods, but the mindblowing size of the delivery box was very much appreciated.

  • Both boxes were liberally packed with bubble wrap (yay!) and these cellulose (I think) packing peanuts that double as bath toys because they dissolve in water.

  • Books! Including a replacement of a long-lost favorite, Richard Scarry's Best Storybook Ever, and Alex's first introduction to Calvin and Hobbes, and some chapter books - one suitable to read now and two to grow on. Very much Big Kid material.

  • The book was addressed to Alex care of "CDA," her imaginary workplace. Which shows that [livejournal.com profile] hazelchaz has an unbelievable memory for detail. She was thrilled. Waiting to open it, she speculated, "Maybe my boss is being very very kind to me." The fact that the package was signed inside "from Mama's computer friends" did not diminish her belief that it actually came from her job, which she apparently believes is just real enough for this.


2. Our lovely and charming next-door neighbors celebrated Colin's arrival by going on a shopping spree at Whole Foods for us. They arrived at our door with the perfect baby gift: a big bag of tasty and healthy treats that can almost all be eaten one-handed by someone who is holding a baby with the other hand. Including, if you can believe it, organic cherry-pomegranate Pop Tarts.

Is it condescending of me to be charmed by picturing this hip urban gay male couple picking out a box of organic "mother's milk tea" to add to the bag? "Look, Scott, it has fenugreek to boost her supply."

3. Grocery delivery service. I know it's been around for years and years, but we had never done it before. Then, a couple of weeks ago, we saw a Safeway delivery truck parked down the block and decided to investigate. Dude, it's cheap. I had no idea. The prices are the same as at the store, and the delivery charge ranges from $7-13 depending on how much you spend and when you want them to drop it off. I really like the web interface - you can shop by category/store aisle, or you can type in a list and they'll pull up all the things they have that match items on your list. It saves your old shopping history, so you can easily rebuy the things you've bought before. And you can go back and add things to the list right up until the night before delivery.

We've done a full shopping by delivery service once. They don't have everything the store stocks on its shelves, which is unfortunate but I suppose understandable. I was very pleased with the quality of the produce and meat they picked out for us. (That's always been my sticking point for grocery delivery - wanting to select produce and meat myself.) The delivery driver showed up one minute after the start of our two-hour delivery window.

I can't believe I kept dragging myself to the store when I was nine months pregnant. I just had no idea.

4. I've discovered a fascinating new-to-me TV show, a Canadian production called Survivorman that runs on the Discovery Channel here. This show probably isn't new to anyone else, given that it's had three prior seasons and is now in reruns only, but I find it utterly fascinating. The premise is that the host, Les Stroud, gets dropped off in various remote and mostly inhospitable locations and picked up a week later. Survival in the interim is up to him. Unlike similar shows, he doesn't have a camera crew with him - he films himself. So there isn't a hidden infrastructure and connection to civilization - it's just him and a stack of cameras, on a rock or a barren beach or a raft floating in the ocean or whatever.

He has varying small amounts of gear - in most of the episodes I've seen, they've tried to simulate a particular kind of accident that might've led to him being stranded, and he has appropriate gear that one might retain after that kind of accident. For example, when they dropped him off on a South Seas island, they simulated a scuba diving accident. He had his dive gear, and a wreck of a boat with a few miscellaneous things in it like a tangle of fishing line and a rusty gas can with a little gas mixed with seawater. He always gets a Leatherman-type multitool and a harmonica, but he doesn't usually get matches or a tent or food or fresh water or medical supplies. It's pretty brutal. Which makes it fascinating.

5. Five things make a post, right, but I can only think of four that fit this category. No, wait! My friends Daria and Lo are coming up to Baltimore with their kids for a day of sightseeing next week, and they have promised to come by and do housework for me. My friends are awesome.

[identity profile] wcg.livejournal.com 2009-03-15 10:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I had a powerpoint presentation come past me last week that had CDA mentioned several times. (In the context of a Critical Design Analysis.) I thought about forwarding it to you so you could show Alex that her company works with mine.

[identity profile] aloha-moira.livejournal.com 2009-03-16 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
Is it condescending of me to be charmed by picturing this hip urban gay male couple picking out a box of organic "mother's milk tea" to add to the bag? "Look, Scott, it has fenugreek to boost her supply."

If laughing hysterically at this is wrong (slash-condescending), then I don't want to be right. It is VERY charming. :)

I do like Survivorman more than, say, Man vs. Wild - much less fake-feeling. Probably because it is less fake. With Man vs. Wild, every time the guy eats some root or kills a small animal I find myself wondering why he doesn't just go for the Clif bar his camera guy has on hand.

[identity profile] jerusha.livejournal.com 2009-03-16 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
Oh my god I love your icon! I am laughing like a loon...

[identity profile] aloha-moira.livejournal.com 2009-03-16 03:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! I actually work with planaria in the lab, so anything I can do to raise their public profile... :) The only problem is that now every time I see one of these road signs I want to go draw googly eye(spot)s on it.
hazelchaz: (Default)

Packing peanuts

[personal profile] hazelchaz 2009-03-16 10:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Both boxes were liberally packed with bubble wrap (yay!) and these cellulose (I think) packing peanuts that double as bath toys because they dissolve in water.

Cornstarch, actually. They're non-toxic. You could eat them. (You'll quickly learn that, by comparison, rice cakes are quite flavorful.)
hazelchaz: (Default)

CDA

[personal profile] hazelchaz 2009-03-16 10:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Did she notice the return address was "CDA (Southwest)"?

My shipping department didn't actually know the joke, so it was played completely straight: which is why it was addressed to the Receiving Department, CDA (Mid-Atlantic).

I know lots of people, kids and otherwise, love pictures, which is why I thought she'd appreciate the photo card of me and [livejournal.com profile] library_lynn.

Re: CDA

[identity profile] curiousangel.livejournal.com 2009-03-18 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think she noticed the return address, but I certainly did. :)