too darn hot

June 9, 2004


It's too darn hot. Even with my air conditioners both running full blast (upstairs and downstairs) it's 87 F in my living room. There's no thermometer in my study up here but I think I just burned my finger on the USB hub.

The forecast, in as much as they can forecast New England weather, says this uncomfortable heat will be long gone before the Beach Boys' wedding on Saturday. They've asked me to do a reading, either write a few words/a poem and read them or select something apropos and read that. I have no idea what to write. I've written wedding poems before and I've written beach poems before, but nothing seems to be coming to mind. Nancy's advice was "Whatever you do, don't write about bones on the beach!" I reallly wasn't planning to. I want to say something about the tenacity of love being like the tenacity of beach grass (Ammophila breviligulata). After all, it does have love in its name -- Ammophila is "sand loving" (Greek ammos for "sand" and fileiu (phila) for love) - come to think of it that describes the Beach Boys too. Anyway, I found a passage from Diane Ackerman's A Natural History of Love that I really liked and ran it by them for approval. They like it too, so whatever I write will be a personal add-on, not the centerpiece. Now all I need to do is find an appropriate t-shirt to wear over my bathing suit -- something that says "I Love Massachusetts" or "Thank you, SJC" or the like or just pick one of my Pride shirts from the tangle at the bottom of the closet. Only three more days...

Yesterday's writing project, besides infinite letters of inquiry seeking grants for the conifer book, was a letter to Governor I've Got Great Hair and Live in Utah asking him to please stop trying to stop gay marriage. The funniest part of his approach has been to try to apply a 1913 law making it illegal to marry out of state people if their marriage wouldn't be legal in their home state. Duh? That law is still on the books? It was meant to stop miscegnation (that's a big word for "race mixing"). What makes this funny is Governor I've Got Great Hair and Live in Utah's going after nonresidents getting married in Massachusetts when he's a nonresident. So nonresidents can be elected governor but can't get married?!?

Y'know, I do love Massachusetts.

In between writing projects -- more and more letters of inquiry and grant applications won't some rich dude who loves conifers just give us a whole bunch of money please -- I shuffled downstairs to fetch the mail from the front hall. Birding came today and lo and behold there's an article on identifying seabirds from shore. And it takes on my question/frustration about scoters. Of course they recommend distinguishing them in flight and I'm always trying to identify them bouncing up and down between waves. Nothing in there about stress hormones in bait fish though, after all, it's Birding not Fishing...

My personal Hungarian dendrologist phones with news that we got half the money we asked for on one of the grant applications and a rejection from another. That's about the right batting average for grant applications, so I'm feeling good at this point. This book is gonna be great.

I answered the phone "Dick Cheney's office", which has become a family joke, and Zsolt thought I meant I had gone to work for the government -- he asked if I was going to war in Iraq and have the Ex-Pat sitting here writing grant applications.... I don't think so!

I'm deliberately messing with the punctuation and over using italics because I've been laughing my head off at Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss. Sticklers unite! Indeed. She's orders of magnitude nuttier about punctuation than the nuttiest grammar teaching nun I had in my entire educational experience. The one thing I wonder about is whether debates about semicolons and commas are as common in other languages. After all, other languages have no need for spelling bees. We know that languages whose pronunciation matches their orthography don't have the weird spelling problems that English has. Do they also have fewer problems with punctuation? Another thing I've always wondered, which has nothing to do with punctuation, is whether populations who grow up with languages whose pronunciation match their orthography have as high an incidence of dyslexia. Just another weird thought from the weird side of the table.

Now I had really better shut down this computer because lightning is flashing and the power is vulnerable.

Today's Reading
Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss, Walden Pond by W. Barksdale Maynard

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Bronson Arroyo


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan