Archive for the ‘Family etc’ Category

Falling down the stairs

Monday, May 21st, 2007

For the second time in two days Nathan has taken a head first tumble down the 14 steps between our ground and first floors. Yesterday I watched him do a cartwheel and then go down the stairs feet first while trying to grab the stair above him; today it seems that he went head first all the way down.

Both times he is understandably upset and then back to normal, while Carrie and I are standing by him in shock wondering what we can do about this terrifying new event.

Sunday dinner recipes

Sunday, May 20th, 2007

Decided to be a good father and cook a Sunday dinner for the family today, plus good sandwich material for the week. I used this recipe with a slight modification (mustard as opposed to mustard powder :)) and while the pork took a long time to cook, it ended up tasting wonderful. A good experiment.

We also had peas, a curry/apple gravy (very interesting), pax stage and onion stuffing (imported from UK) and roast potatoes. I use Delia Smith’s potato recipe; pour boiling water on the potatoes, add salt and simmer for ten minutes. While that’s simmering, put some fat on a tray and stick it in the oven. Then put the potatoes on the tray (hot fat seals the potatoes) and cook for an hour, turning halfway. Works each time.

Downside; Nathan fell asleep and slept for the rest of the evening so I didn’t get to find out if he’d eat any of it.

Recovering

Friday, April 27th, 2007

Looks like the fever lasted a mere five days, from Sunday to Thursday. Today I feel - well not hot. Just knackered. I also burnt my tongue a few days back on a cup of lemsip and that lead to be having a strong metallic taste in my mouth yesterday as it healed. Very weird. Hopefully that’s gone now, though all I can taste at the moment is the salt water a website recommended I swish to get rid of the metallic taste.

Now to spend the day catching up on work, bugs and emails without exhausting myself. Maybe today I’ll manage without a midday 3 hour siesta.

Working from Not Home, and Sick, sick, sick.

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Last week I ‘worked from home’ from my in-laws in KY while Carrie and Nathan were visiting family. It also let me have lunch with old work colleages a couple of times. Things went very well productivity-wise, I got 24 of the 25 odd issues I wanted to get done that week resolved by the end of the Tuesday, and the other issue was an easy one that was just blocked on my getting a WebLogic install (resolved on the Thursday I think). Apparently sitting at your in-laws with nothing to do but work or watch daytime television is a great productivity boost.

Things went pretty well on the way back, Nathan loves being on planes now so as long as we’re patient and listen to his constant asking to go down the tunnel and for the plane to move. Thunder over Louisville was happening on the day we flew out (big fireworks show preceded by an air show) and the air force planes were taking off from the airport. We got to see some jets landing and some big planes taking off.

The downside of the flight back is that I managed to pick up a virus - whatever it is it’s a complete bastard. A high fever (103.8F on Monday evening) that has lasted from Sunday night to Tuesday night so far, though I’m down to 99.8F now. Carrie also has the same symptoms, though her fever’s highpoint is said 99.8F so hopefully she’s doing a better job of fighting this. I’ve also noticed while writing emails and this blog entry that my spelling is rather dyslexic. “if” instead of “is”, “weight” instead of “weighed”. This is the first time I’ve had a fever that didn’t just break in the night, it was quite a surprise to not be ready for work on Monday morning.

When I got back from Louisville, I weighed myself and noticed I’d put on a bit of weight from the lunches and lack of exercise. Not having eaten that much over the last few days means I’ve lost the 5lbs I’d put on. So that’s a benefit.

Apologies if the above is a bit incoherent - or if I’ve not replied to your email or noticed a thread online that I should have.

My earliest memory

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

I read the words “My earliest memory” today. It’s been one of those days - I’ve not achieved the potential I believe I should achieve and so together with self anger there is depression. My earliest memory….

My earliest memory is being pushed by my mother in a pushchair in West Wycombe on my way to playschool. As we moved when I was 3 and a half, it was probably not long before said move. It’s a fleeting memory, less an image and more a sensation, a state of being. That feeling of motion without moving, and a sense of peace. It’s the only memory I have of West Wycombe when we lived there, my grandparents bought our house so I often went back but in other memories I’m much older. Many other memories tend to get reinforced by photos or things parents say, but in this case I’m the one who’s always had to insist that it happened to bring back the memory of it in my parents. It’s a rare memory that I can trust as first hand.

When I think of home, I remember concrete paving stones at an angle. This is from later, living in West Hyde where I spent most of my childhood. Concrete paving stones, aged slightly by weather and the grass growing up between. One of the stones is new. Its predecessor must have grown too cracked and been replaced. The picture widens from the stones to metal railings, trees, red brickwork buildings with easily climbable drainpipes. A graveyard and a long built up barrow of trash. Oddly none of this was my home - a nearby playschool/football field that I’m lead to by that first memory of concrete.

Fields of wheat, overgrown undergrowth, a curving lane. Slowly the images idle by until there are rose bushes, a T-junction and the light smell of car fumes. Mottled yellow brickwork is the order of the day, the door is brown glaze with a pane of glass, and I think I can see an older white door in my memory when I think of that door. Lions and dolphins. My memories start to head in the door, but I don’t want that for now. When I remember outside, it is always lazy summer, when I remember inside it is the safety and warmth while endless drizzle rains down outside. I want to enjoy this lazy sun some more.

I’ve been replaying these memories in recent days. Thinking of childhood and wondering what Nathan will remember of now. Soon he’ll be storing these memories that linger, the tiny images and sensations that he’ll be able to reflect on in three decades time. I wonder how silly it would be to take Nathan to see those concrete stones, and what the chances are of a lazy summer day appearing. Having spent my memorable childhood in one house, I wonder when we need to get out of rented accommodation, and will it be bad to move between cities in the future.

Then I think of my boy… “Play cars?”… and none of this matters because it’ll be the weekend soon.

Many thanks to Carrie and Nathan

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

The last few blog entries have been mentioning the JIRA plugins I’ve released. Carrie and Nathan have definitely suffered over the last week, I missed the bus twice last week because that last hour of play at work had turned into two, and both have had to deal with my habit of talking out loud when I’m thinking about things. That was all for the Release plugin. So thanks especially to Carrie for putting up with that.

The other plugin (FilterList) has an older history. It’s something I’ve wanted for a while, but had never found the energy to work on. Grief is an odd thing though, and I’ve noticed that my preference is to find flow and let the grief work its way through my subconscious. The subconscious let the sadness through from time to time, but it also resolved many of the thoughts with a strong urge to live life. Sadly for my family, that means finding flow in code and doing/learning new things. Thus I dove into JIRA.

FilterList was written the Sunday after we found out. I knew I had to make sure I was available as much as possible for Carrie and Nathan, but I also knew I needed to find time to lose myself. It took an afternoon/evening. It’s very little code, but there’s so much Javadoc for JIRA that it takes an age to find the one that does what you want. On the plus side, it’s pretty easy to end up with something that looks polished and professional with JIRA, so the payback for the work is incredibly high.

I suspect I’m the first person to find solace in an issue tracker.

When Life mugs you with randomness

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

As my wife has mentioned it, I feel I can now. The last couple of weeks have been pretty hellish since we found out that our baby was now classified with the wonderful term of ‘foetal demise’. Her cord had knotted and she passed away while we thought she’d just rotated and was kicking air. Carrie does a great job of talking about Abigail Beatrix, so I won’t say much.

I don’t know you, but I will miss you
didn’t even get you out of the box
I’ve not met you, or even seen you
just reflections of your heart.
You were gone before we knew
absent while still part of our life
we don’t know you, but we miss you
we miss you from the start.

Bank of America (formerly MBNA) Linux credit card

Sunday, February 11th, 2007

I’ve had a Linux credit card for a while. I’m sure I’ve mentioned it on the blog, but apparantly I can’t find it. Last time I looked, the money was piling up and not being used; but I looked again today and it looks like things are far more organized. Check out the Linux Fund page on who money has gone to.

It's a girl! Maybe.

Wednesday, January 24th, 2007

And the last post of the night… We went to the 19 week ultrasound a week or so ago and the technician announced that it’ll be a girl (with the usual proviso’s that they could be wrong).

We’re both very excited (not sure if Nathan groks it yet) - 20 weeks to go. Need to get to work on the website overhaul.

Cookies…

Wednesday, January 24th, 2007

I’ve been experimenting with cookies for the family. Here’s the current favourite recipe:

  1. Mix 1.5 cups of white sugar, 1 teaspoon of vanilla, 2 sticks of room temperature butter and a healthy pour of molasses up with a fork.
  2. Add two eggs and mix them in.
  3. Sift 1.5 cups of plain flour, 0.5 cup of cocoa, 1 teaspoon of baking powder and 1 teaspoon of salt.
  4. Turn oven on to 375 F. Timing wise this seems to work well for me to have it pre-heated when I’ve got them ready to put in.
  5. Add a cup of oats. Mix it all together.
  6. Form flattened balls on baking trays with either greaseproof paper or tinfoil on them. I put 2 trays in with 6 balls each.
  7. Cook for 10-15 minutes.
  8. Do a second batch as you should have only used half the bowl’s contents.
  9. Eat while warm before the family notice you were baking.

Most of the recipe is from the side of the sugar, but I’ve been changing it a fair bit.