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  • Timmy posted this earlier...

    "A
    child's position in the family impacts his personality, his behavior,
    his learning and ultimately his earning power," states Michael Grose,
    author of "Why First Born Rule the World and Last-borns Want to Change
    It." "Most people have an intuitive knowledge that birth order somehow
    has an impact on development, but they underestimate how far-reaching
    and just how significant that impact really is."


    Conley concedes
    that birth order is significant in shaping individual success, but only
    for children of large families -- four or more siblings -- and in
    families where finances and parental time are constrained. (In wealthy
    families, like the Bushes and Kennedys, it has less effect.)

    It was interesting, but it doesn't really apply to our family. I'm technically a middle child in grad school, a younger brother going to med school this fall, and younger siblings that are rockstars compared to me. The article does disclaim families where the parents are able to be at home a lot (full-time in my case) and money is not a restraint (and it really was not looking back).

    First Borns:
    More
    conscientious, ambitious and aggressive than their younger siblings,
    first borns are over-represented at Harvard and Yale as well as
    disciplines requiring higher education such as medicine, engineering or
    law. Every astronaut to go into space has been either the oldest child
    in his or her family or the eldest boy. And throughout history -- even
    when large families were the norm -- more than half of all Nobel Prize
    winners and U.S. presidents have been first born. Famous eldest
    children include: Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton, Richard Branson, J.K.
    Rowling and Winston Churchill. And macho movie stars are First Born,
    too, including Clint Eastwood, John Wayne, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce
    Willis and all the actors who have played James Bond.

    Kinda describes all of us... except none of us are at Ivy League schools. Okay, so maybe money was a limiting factor.


    Middles:
    Middle
    children are more easy going and peer-oriented. Since they can get lost
    in the shuffle of their own families, they learn to build bridges to
    other sources of support and therefore tend to have excellent people
    skills. Middle children often take on the role of mediator and
    peacemaker. Famous middle children include: Bill Gates, J.F.K., Madonna
    and Princess Diana.

    Still, we're a family of easy going people. I had no people skills until recently, and they're starting to grow now... but maybe it's the nature of our family.


    Youngest:
    The youngest child
    tends to be the most creative and can be very charming -- even
    manipulative. Because they often identify with the underdog, they tend
    to champion egalitarian causes. (Youngest siblings were the earliest
    backers of the Protestant Reformation and the Enlightenment.)
    Successful in journalism, advertising, sales and the arts, famous
    youngest children include Cameron Diaz, Jim Carrey, Drew Carey, Rosie
    O'Donnell, Eddie Murphy and Billy Crystal.


    In a good way, it reminds me of Esther who is the youngest. She certainly identifies with the underdog and is committing her life to helping them. It'll be interesting to see how Christina and Victoria go - I can see Christina (second youngest) being the one to choose an "egalitarian cause" to champion.


    This week at our company, we had fire extinguisher training! It was fun. You start with a fire and a fire extinguisher like John here:

    And ideally, you extinguish it like I am here. I've never done it before, but it was a rush! Highly recommended to anyone! Not recommended for children.


    How to Deliver Flowers to a Downtown Location

    Step 1

    Identify a cute girl who recently landed a sweet job in an office building near your dentist so that you can make a surprise delivery to her while she's working there. Check.


    Step 2

    Purchase flowers. Not necessarily spare no expense because it's the thought that counts, but at least get something nice. Even a single rose will work. In this case, a small bouquet is selected. For future reference, there are many flower shops in the downtown area.

    Step 3

    Locate cute girl. This is a challenging step. Here's an unedited, exclusive glimpse at the text message exchange required. *not work safe - contains mushy lines*

    Outbound: "Aaaahhh! I'm getting a cavity filled now! I'm numb!
    Inbound: "You have your first cavity?! bad boy. i love this job, i have to convince them to keep me"
    Outbound: "Awesome! What suite did you get assigned to?"
    Inbound: "1234"
    Outbound: "I mean what kind of office. I hope 1234 stays your work address!"
    Inbound: "Im [sic] the head receptionist. i want to give you lots of kisses later to make your mouth feel better :) "
    Inbound: "The 12Th floor with a view of the lake"
    Outbound: "Sweet what color is it? I might remember it." [note: this message was never delivered for some reason]

    Step 4

    Using the limited information, attempt to deliver flowers.

    Target's desk

    Step 5

    Leave flowers with substitute receptionist as part of backup plan since the target left for lunch until 1pm (coincidentally coinciding with my eye doctor's appointment today).

    Step 6

    Return to the rest of your day.

    ^^ numbed up with the truck garden in the back.

    Wait for the text message.

    So yeah, that was my day. I had my first cavity of my life - in a baby tooth that's been in my mouth for 20 years and has no adult tooth to replace it. So it never got the sealant that my other teeth did... Can I add that permanent retainers make it hard to floss your front teeth?! Wow, I was bleeding profusely! And then to have my eyes dilated and desensitized at the ophthalmologist... I was a basket case driving to lunch with my granddad. Headed off to Waupaca tonight. Catch you all later...

  • THANK YOU XANGA FOR SHUTTING DOWN TODAY WITH UNDER A DAY'S NOTICE.

    That's right, I paid $100 for this kind of wonderful customer service. Noobs.

    Hopefully they get their heads out of their flowers and get some redundancy.


    On the topic of bugs.

    (click for a good example of what you can do with a cheap camera )

    That guy was on my shirt in Dunedin right after I had a really bloody nose. Not just in the British English sense, a bloody nose. Really.

    All while at this little house (bee picture and all).

  • I wrote an e-mail to a college friend of mine last week. He had died on February 3rd in a hiking accident in Colorado while he was out by himself and found the next day by searchers. While going through my e-mail contacts, I ran across his name and paused - then wrote a little note. The sad part was when it bounced back saying his account was shutdown due to inactivity. Hello, someone needs to work on that automatic e-mail.

    It strikes me how people think of deceased people. Some say "my dad is...." when, of course, it ought to be "my dad was..." But you can't correct them when it's how they think of someone. Yet I wonder what is a healthy way to think of people who are no longer with us. In one culture, you are to act as if the person never existed, removing any reference of them and never speaking of them again. Compared to an Egyptian pyramid, we've got quite a contrast.

    Do you wish you could say something to someone who's died? Do you think they can hear you?

  • My first home.
    You can make one too with Google SketchUp.


    I've gotten 138,292 spam e-mails since April 4th - and counting.


    Today is my brother David's birthday. He was born today in 1987 and died five months later. I've got some time today, and I think it would be good to stop by to remember him.

    Time for a flower picture? I think so... All of these are from right before I left while in Dunedin and Christchurch. Fitting and fun, I think.

  • Ahhh.... 3 GB of memory is sweet! This baby is crushing! The $150 that I spent on eBay was absolutely worth it.

  • Um, hmmm. Maybe I need college.

    Maybe I don't.

    Well, either I can't count or I can't remember. Let's recap.

    • Applied to and attended UW-Milwaukee in 2000.
    • Applied to and attended UW-Stevens Point in 2001.
    • Applied to and attended UW-Milwaukee over winter break in 2003.
    • Applied to and attended UW-Milwaukee in 2004.
    • Am applying to UW-Milwaukee in 2006.

    Looks like five times, Nick. Plus I took a bunch of classes at two different tech schools while going to UWSP. This fall will be my first semester with under 18 credits (undergrad) or 12 credits (graduate - teehee, ask me about my first graduate semester with 15 credits!). *sigh* Now I have to get my own health insurance! And dental...and short and long-term disability....and another life insurance policy that I have to pay for this time. But it's all cheap at my age!

  • So yeah, there's this girl named Esther who lives near me.


    Last night, I received an Outstanding Service Award! It was a complete surprise - to me - from the Wisconsin/Northern Michigan District of Royal Rangers, a boys group through my church that I've been a part of since I was 6 years old. They gave out two of these this year, and I was completely shocked since it's the highest award you can get from them. The reason was because of my initiative in volunteering, but I'm very grateful for all the people who were volunteering with me. My friend Matt was the other recipient, and he totally deserved it. Together we've done a lot to improve the camp in Waupaca, and this award was way more than I expected. Which is probably good when you're volunteering...

    At any rate, I think I'll be headed up there again this weekend, so...um...if I say I'm busy or gone this weekend, that's why. mmmK?


    I'm now applying to college for the 4th time.

    My acceptance rate is 100% so far, and I'd hate to break the streak. So I'm aiming low....applying for special student status here at UW-Milwaukee so I can keep taking classes for "personal enrichment" and to prep myself if I do go on for a PhD.

  • Today in Classical Music History
    On April 22, 1723, J.S. Bach becomes music director and cantor at St. Thomas Church in Leipzig. He was their third choice.


    So I'm a big fan of classical music - if you're in Milwaukee, I think you should go with me to see the Bel Canto Chorus perform their live finale of their 75th anniversary season. Bel canto is an extraordinary art form - here's a description of the concert:

    Next Sunday, April 30th at 3 PM at Uihlein Hall, the Bel Canto Chorus and music director Richard Hynson present the final concert of its 75th anniversary season, "Together with One Voice", with the Bel Canto Chorus, Chamber Orchestra, and soloists performing Poulenc's "Gloria" and music of Bach, Mozart, Brahms, Mendelssohn, and the finale of Beethoven's Symphony #9. Tickets are $25 or $18 and are available at www.belcanto.org, or by calling 414-481-8801. Group discounts are available. Following the concert, the audience will be invited to join the chorus for birthday cake celebrating Bel Canto's 75th anniversary.

    Uihlein Hall is quite the place, too. They have Anna Quindlen, the author and columnist, coming on the 24th. You've probably seen her in Newsweek, but here's a quote that I liked.

    All of us want to do well. But if we do not do good, too, then doing well will never be enough. (citation)

    I would be the most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves.(citation)

    Or what about the statue in California currently said to be crying bloody tears? Why worry about the alleged weeping of a plaster effigy when so many actual human beings have reason to cry? (citation)

    The world is full of women blindsided by the unceasing demands of motherhood, still flabbergasted by how a job can be terrific and torturous. (citation)

    Okay, so more than one quote, but I think she's interesting. I don't always agree with her, but that's probably what I think is interesting. But what a lineup! Dr. Maya Angelou is coming then the Broadway Little Women and the perennial Milwaukee Ballet performances of Swan Lake and the Nutcracker. I'm sidetracking myself.

    The other reason for logging on to Xanga here was to share some pictures, but I think I'll mention one last venue. At the Pabst Theatre, George Winston has a performance tonight that I won't be able to attend because of a banquet in Appleton for Joe, but la Fleck and the Flecktones are coming on Wednesday night (Pete, Amanda, Melina, Esther [right? =)] and I will be there plus many other Hal Leonard employees since their company is hosting it). Tony Bennett is coming too on next Saturday. What I'm looking forward to, though, is Bell Orchestre featuring members of The Arcade Fire which I would love to see with Brent if he can make it, but he usually only comes when the Brewers are playing! Which they aren't - they're out on the road around then (May 7th). Anyways, I would love to see INXS and Mythbusters there this summer too. And Gordon Lightfoot this fall. Yes, go look this all up. The Rave is undergoing a prolonged drought of good music, except for Coheed and Cambria and the Alkaline Trio.


    Okay, my reason for posting!

    This turned out to be an exceptional week for running into the police. In Chenequa, my co-worker Jennifer and I were sitting down to lunch and triggered a window alarm that brought a couple squad cars that were bored out of their minds but very serious because it came in as a panic alarm. =)

    Next up, we were working in River Hills, spraying an invasive weed called garlic mustard when Jennifer thought she saw something under some leaves in the woods. They were passports! About about 7 of them plus a handheld computer, MiniDisc player, remote control, and the mouse half of a cordless mouse! We called the police, and the cop took it all, promising to call INS, but since they had clearly been there for years (I mean, MiniDisc player? how many years has that been!), and it was probably part of a long-ago break-in. Here's a pic of the station...

    Finally. Today, I received a parking ticket today. Here's the carbon copy of it. Apparently, some bored citizen wrote ticket for me while I was legally parked with cones out on the side of the road. It's a neighborhood that has such a small access road that you have to park on the city road then hike in with the equipment. Anyways, I speared the slip with a stick and stuck the stick in the ground for the schelp to scavange someday.

  • Off to Boise, ID on flight numbers 18 and 19 of 2006 to help my girlfriend with the driving as she moves to Milwaukee for the summer.

  • Milford Sound

    Great Buckets! New Video At The End!

    click for high-res versions

    There were an incredible number of waterfalls created by the pouring rain. With little or no soil on these cliffs, the water just runs down them, making these spectacular views. While we couldn't see the mountaintops, we had our own treat. The crew apologized for the rain but said they had not seen the waterfalls before as intensely as they were that day


    This Next One Is
    Jojo's Pic:






    The Ship We Were On & What It Would Look Like On A Sunny Day


    Three Boys Hit the Milford Sound

    You will
    need Quicktime
    to view this. Direct
    link
    to the video clip.


    I really enjoyed making this video clip, and I'm sure you'll enjoy watching it. The WMV video format isn't supported by Firefox, so I'll keep using the Quicktime movies. Plus the files are smaller. If anyone is interested, I do have the DVD version of this with me too.

    You get the idea of how exciting it was to be in New Zealand, especially with the company that I had! Go Jojo! He's still in New Zealand, touring as much as he can. Lehnert and I will be collaborating on more video projects soon - and I desperately need 4GB of memory in this computer.

    Hope you liked it! I need to sleep cuz my coworker is coming in two hours.