All posts by Robin

I'm a woman in my early thirties living in North Carolina, USA, and I have a lot of varied interests; I love creative writing, music composition, web design, surfing the Internet, thinking out loud, and gaming. And yes, my glasses are crooked. :)

Why, Yes, That IS So True: Slices of Life in Animated GIF Form

If you’ve never been to That’s So True, you’re missing out on countless chances to LOL. Using animated GIFs of scenes from movies, TV shows, and Internet comics, submitters to the site tell their own funny stories–and believe me, there are quite a few gems to find!

Below are some of my selected favorites from That’s So True, simply reformatted for my blog. Enjoy!

I Identify with the Second GIF xD

when i’m cleaning
with music Icon
without it Icon

I Used to Live in Fear of These Moments…LOL

telling my parents something funny Icon
then they take it seriously Icon
and turn it into a life lesson Icon
and you just sit there like… Icon

True, Especially When It’s Too Hot to Move

What you think you’re gonna do during summer Icon
what you actually do Icon

Graduation at Various Levels of School

elementary school Icon
middle school Icon
high school Icon
college Icon

What always happens at Olive Garden

Super full from the all-you-can eat breadsticks and salad Icon
waitress comes with your entrée Icon

…This Face is Usually Accompanied With a Gasp and “…No!”

when your favorite character dies in a book Icon

This Happens to Me EVERY. TIME.

start to clean your room Icon
but then you find somthing you loved as a kid Icon
3 hours later Icon

Have I Ever Mentioned How Much I Hate Auto-Playing Sound? xD

Have a million tabs open on your computer Icon
mysterious music/ad starts playing Icon
scrambling to find source of sound Icon

Making a “Good” Layout Better

Web design is not always a simple matter of knocking something together in Notepad, putting pretty pics with it, and uploading it. Sometimes, as we well know, layouts just end up looking…blah on the page.

Take the following layout, which I was trying to craft for my upcoming webdesign tutorials page.


(click for larger size image)

This, in terms of a layout’s pure functionality, works. It displays what it’s supposed to; nothing’s out of place, misspelled, or obviously buggy. And yet it just looks…blah. The icons look too small, being dwarfed by the text and the header image. Not to mention there’s a lot of open, unfilled green space. It’s just…empty.


(click for larger size image)

This was my first attempt at fixing the emptiness and too-small icons of the first layout. I resized the icons and tried to reposition them where they wouldn’t just be hanging out in the middle of nowhere…and yet, again, I ended up with a problem. This time, the issue is that the layout looks cluttered–there is nowhere for the visitor’s eye to rest, because the icons stick out like sore thumbs and the header image looks off-center. And again, the layout has a bunch of empty space, especially on the left side. Sigh…


(click for larger size image)

Third time is the charm, I believe! This time, I centered the header image over the two-column layout below, leading to a more symmetrical look. I also included the navigation icons WITHIN the image div itself, and, After much tussling with HTML and CSS, got them to be positioned where I wanted them. (Who would have thought margins and padding would kick up such a fuss?) But the result is a much cleaner and more understandable look. It might not be “the BEST LAYOUT EVAR OMG,” but it’s much better than the one I had when I started out!

Sprucing Up a “Blah” Layout

If you’re having similar difficulties with a layout of yours, you might not need to go back to the drawing board completely. Instead, you might benefit from just reworking a section or two, as I did with my troublesome layout. Here are some general tips:

Change the Positioning of Graphic Elements

If the visual balance of your layout looks off, or it feels cluttered with graphics, try moving some of your images/icons around a bit. Try them positioned in a completely different place on the page, or even going a different direction (like vertically instead of horizontally, or vice-versa). You’d be surprised how much a little strip of icons can affect a page, as I found out!

Take Away Text, Add Icons

If, however, your layout feels heavy with text, you may be able to transform some of those words (especially textual navigation) into iconic navigation. (In my example layout, I challenged myself not to use text links in my navigation unless it was absolutely necessary, so that it wouldn’t detract from my content.) It may not seem like text is overwhelming your page, but it can easily swamp your visitor with information overload. An icon, by contrast, looks simple and neat.

Experiment with Content Positioning

Does that old left-aligned sidebar look dated and tired? Then maybe all it needs to do is flip over to the right side! Placing content in slightly-unexpected areas can change the look of the whole layout; moving smaller blocks of content around within your layout can also affect your users’ experience. Keep this thought in mind every time you design: “What do I want my users to see/click first?” This should be closest to the top of the page, and your header should “point” toward it, drawing their eyes to it.

Work With Your Fonts

Sometimes, a layout can seem too crowded simply with a too-small font, or a font that isn’t very clear. If you’re having difficulty displaying content attractively, as I was, a font change may be in order. Trying a bigger point size, a clearer font, or even a different class of font altogether may help clear away the “text-cluttered” look.

Summary

You may feel like scrapping a layout that you feel is too ugly to save, but don’t be so hasty! Experimenting and reworking just bits and pieces may just save you a lot of time and hassle designing a totally new look. I was about to give up on that example layout of mine, till I experimented around and found a clean, simple new way to put the same elements together.

The Stupidity of Trying to Produce Art Alone

For weeks–maybe months, now–I’ve been trying to bring my novel to fruition by myself, trying to continue the story I was once bursting to tell. Sadly, it’s not working out that great. It almost seems like I’ve lost the fire for it. Some days, I just look at the filename and feel sad; I feel like nobody will like it, or that nobody will want to read it.

During the years I’ve been writing this novel, I’ve been scared to show more people what I’ve written, either for fear it’ll get stolen/ripped off, or afraid that others won’t like it. It’s a ludicrous feeling, like a pregnant woman being afraid to give birth because she fears her baby will be ugly, while at the same time she fears that her baby will be stolen. And yet…it’s a valid feeling, too; this half-finished novel is a product of my hard work, and I don’t want that hard work credited to someone else, or cast aside as unworthy.

Why Artists Can’t Create in Complete Solitude

Pop culture (and even some art about artists) generally paints artists as loners, but that’s at least partially untrue. As much as we might need peace and quiet to finalize our ideas, we actually can’t produce art in a vacuum–other people help and influence us, even if they never realize how much they’ve helped.

So many times I’ve been in public, for instance, and heard an exchange between people that reminds me of something in my novel, or reminds me that I should put something similar in a certain scene. Not to mention my friends’ opinions on the bits of novel I do share with them, the snapshots of scenes I’m not too scared to share with them. Talking about our art with other people is a way to keep us believing in what we’re doing; isolating ourselves, or our art, slowly kills the budding artistic expression.

And yet, creating in isolation is precisely what I’ve been trying to do for the last few months. I love my little novel baby, but I’m afraid she’s not good enough for others, or that she will be stolen from me, so I’ve isolated her and hidden her from the world. How silly and stupid of me, in retrospect. No wonder I can’t write anymore; no wonder I get sad when I look at even just the filename. The novel is becoming synonymous with failure and sadness instead of joy, because I only have my opinion to go on, and my opinion becomes more negative by the day.

This is, as I have unfortunately discovered, dangerous territory for me, and indeed it’s dangerous for any artist. We who make art simply can’t hoard it to ourselves; art is for sharing with other humans, whether that’s a small group of people to a worldwide audience. I have big dreams of this novel going worldwide and brightening lives everywhere, and I would wager a guess that other artists dream of showing off their works, too. But in order to get our art to completion, it’s almost necessary to let a few, trusted friends see it, to help us shape it and better it. And, much as a mother-to-be needs help from others in the last months of pregnancy, an artist’s friends surround him or her and help keep the process grounded.

Breaking Out of the Isolation Shell

As artists, we have to realize that it’s okay to share the knowledge of our unfinished art “babies,” even if we’re afraid of the feedback. I suppose it’s much like an expectant parent showing off ultrasound pictures–people will still ooh and ahh, even though the little one is not yet fully formed, because we respect and admire the miraculous process.

Likewise, people at least know a little about the artistic process, and sometimes are willing to help, to offer feedback that will bring our baby projects into the world at last. We just have to be brave enough to let someone else see the ultrasound pictures first. Others, and others’ opinions, are not to be feared; that fear is actually the enemy of art itself.

Is Happiness Futile?, Unrealistic Movie Events, TheSite.org, and Punchfork

The Futile Pursuit of Happiness
Downer philosophy of the day? LOL

14 Things that Never Happen in Real Life
Stuff that always happens in the movies, but isn’t actually realistic (be ready to LOL).

TheSite.org
Advice on all areas of life, plus photos and videos and slideshows galore.

PunchFork
Need ideas for dinner tonight? Click and browse tons of recipe ideas!

9 Ways You’re Accidentally Annoying Your Opponent

We don’t always give a lot of thought to how we treat our human opponents in games. In fact, sometimes we can get so lost in the actual playing of a game that we forget we’re playing against another human being.

Today, as both a reminder to myself and to raise awareness about respecting other gamers, I’ve written this article to help us all remember to treat each other better. We help make others’ gameplay experience either fun or not fun, based on many of the issues I’ll be covering today, but it all comes back to respect. Read on, for the surprising ways you may be annoying your opponent!

#9: Disrespecting Their Stuff

As gamers, we don’t appreciate it if someone handles our stuff without asking, flipping through Magic decks or picking out random Clix figures while we’re in the middle of another game. Yet many gamers do this to each other as if it’s accepted behavior. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve been playing another game, only for someone to go rifling through my stuff, picking out things they want from my boxes without asking whether the items are for trade. Not only that, they sometimes handle my Near Mint collectibles with dirty or sticky hands, drop the items everywhere, or shove them back into the boxes willy-nilly.

It’s important to ask before you handle anything that isn’t yours; it’s doubly important to be careful with their items if they give you permission to look through. When you look through someone else’s stuff, remember that they probably spent a good bit of money to get what you’re looking at, and treat it accordingly.

#8: Not Stating Your Actions Clearly, Every Turn

Silent games may be fun for some, but not for everyone. I, for instance, like to know what kind of combos or actions my opponent is doing, so that I can have time to respond if there’s a game opportunity. But if you’re hunched over your side of the table, and you either don’t tell me what’s going on or you mumble it where I can’t understand, you’re in fact making it harder to play the game.

It’s tempting to leave the explanation of your game actions out–believe me, I know. We get so familiar with our strategies that we think they don’t need explanation anymore. But to someone who’s not familiar with them, those strange silent moves seem incomprehensible. Take just a little time to explain what you’re doing–this will help all players understand what’s happening in the game and enjoy it more.

(I do realize that extreme shyness or even medical conditions can lead to silent games as well. If you’re uncomfortable or incapable of speaking loudly, you can also simply offer your opponent the chance to look at the cards or figures you’re playing, so that they may see the abilities for themselves.)

#7: Only Playing Games/Game Types that You Can Win

It’s boring and sad to play a game that you know already is a foregone conclusion…well, at least for most gamers. But there are some gamers who truly enjoy soundly defeating others, so much so that they only play games they know they can win. Unfortunately, this can be very annoying to other gamers, who might like at least a chance of winning. Soon enough, a gamer who only plays what he or she can win will find themselves fresh out of opponents.

We all like to win; that’s natural. But the most fun experiences of gaming, I find, come from a real tooth-and-nail struggle, a game that’s truly “anybody’s game”–not a game where the same person always wins and it’s over in 5 minutes. You grow more as a player when games are not easily won, for one thing, and it’s just more fun for everybody when every player can share in the (imaginary) carnage. If you’re always playing one type of game, allow someone else to teach you a new game similar in style, and branch out. Who knows, you might find out you have a new favorite game! (Just don’t monopolize it… xD)

#6: Not Being Careful with Food/Drinks

You wouldn’t want your hard-earned collection ruined with someone else’s careless positioning of a drink or food item, would you? One of the more annoying things that a fellow gamer can do is to put an open drink right next to where they’re playing, well within range of getting knocked over by a careless hand gesture, or even another player. Greasy food items also come under this heading: if the grease splatters out from the food as you’re trying to eat it, where is that grease going to go but onto the tabletop, where possibly hundreds of dollars of gaming stuff lies?

Using drink cups or bottles with tight-closing lids (and keeping lids closed!), and having napkins handy for surrounding greasy food, are both easy solutions to avoid annoying or worrying your opponent. Plus, you run less risk of messing up your own gaming stuff, too!

#5: Whining About Your Luck

“Yes, I know the Dice Gods are smiting you and Lady Luck is not being a lady for you. You’ve said that 10 times this game already.” I find myself thinking this often during tournament play, when it seems the whole community of gamers becomes overly superstitious. xD A few mentions of luck not being with you is one thing–it can lighten up the mood. But talking about it over and over as if luck is the only thing against you? It sounds suspiciously like whining to most people, and whiners are not happy gamers to play against.

If you’re really having a tough time of it, try talking about other topics other than the game to get your mind off it–anything where you’re not focusing on how bad your luck seems to be running for you. I can be whiny about my luck, too, and this strategy surprisingly works, especially if you’ve got an opponent who’s a little more laid-back. And, if you’re facing an opponent who is doing nothing but whining about luck, try getting him or her off the topic–distract them from the bad dice rolls and card pulls, if you can. One person’s whining quickly casts a pall over other people’s games, and the quicker you can stop the negativity train, the better.

#4: Being Continuously Distracted During the Game

It’s great to have an opponent who’s interested in lots of different games. It’s not that great to have to play someone who’s involved in about 5 different games at various tables, or who has his or her phone out texting the whole time, etc. If you’re playing one game, stick to doing that activity and nothing else if at all possible. After all, who wants to be stuck at a table waiting on your opponent to get back from winning/losing two other random games?

Focusing on one task at a time will make you a more alert player, make the game more enjoyable for everyone, and might actually help you win instead of lose because of player errors and distractions. It also lets your opponent know you respect them and their time enough to play the game in a timely manner.

#3: Taking Forever to Do Your Turn

Slightly dovetailed with #4, “taking forever to do your turn” could mean you’re highly distracted during the game, but also could mean having small nervous crises over which card to play this turn, or which figure to move into combat. It also could mean an impossibly long, detailed, combo-ridden turn, in which the other player(s) are forced to watch you basically play and win the game by yourself. Any of these scenarios are incredibly annoying to opponents–they can end up thinking, “why did I bother even playing?”

If you’re unsure of how to play a new strategy, or just aren’t certain how to move forward, it’s not a sin to ask someone else for strategy help. These are games, not real war tactics, after all. And, if you look around the table and notice that most of your opponents’ eyes are glazed over after your 15-minute turn of ultimate doom, you might want to rethink how you play–at least, if you ever want to play against human opponents again. Super-combos of supreme ownage are great against computer-generated opponents, but we humans like to feel that we’ve got at least a fighting chance of winning. Instead of proving your authority by taking over the game, allow others to be part of the experience, and perhaps take time to observe how they play the game, too!

#2: Being Loud/Inappropriate/Offensive, and Refusing to Act Otherwise

Telling slightly offensive jokes (or hearing them bandied about) is pretty much par for the course amid gamers, but there’s a difference between being funny and just being loudly offensive/inappropriate. Most especially, if you’re playing a game and your opponent is having trouble concentrating because of your “humor,” you could end up alone at the game table in a matter of moments. Not to mention that someone might just decide to leave if you’re talking offensively and refuse to stop even for polite requests.

It’s important, especially in a large group environment, to be sensitive to how others are responding to your words and actions. If you notice that someone looks a little uncomfortable with what you just said, apologize; if someone asks you to tone it down a little, simply do so and make no further comment on the issue. I admit, I’ve made some pretty inappropriate remarks in my past, but learning how to apologize and keep going is part of getting along with others in general. We don’t have to self-censor all the time, but being aware of the people around you can keep you from making major verbal faux pas.

#1: Showing Poor Sportsmanship

Nothing is more annoying to a fellow gamer than to see his or her opponent stalk out of the gaming shop, mad because he or she lost. Mild fits of temper, especially in high-stakes tournaments, are naturally going to happen, but when a gamer lets one loss color the rest of the experience, both for themselves and for the other players, you know the poor sportsmanship has gone too far.

I’m preaching to myself here a good bit, because I don’t like to lose, and I don’t like to lose in 5 minutes with barely any time to fight; it angers me, much more than it should, and I can’t seem to let the anger go easily. But it’s important to realize that every game will have a winner and a loser, and you can’t be the winner every single time. The best thing you can do is to be a cordial, pleasant loser, so that the winner doesn’t end up feeling bad about it. Angrily stomping around, or getting in your car and speeding off, is not going to change the result, but it will disturb the other players and cast a good-sized shadow over everyone else’s games.

Summary

As I said at the beginning, many of these points go back to respecting other gamers and being considerate. I’m not saying that gaming should be conducted with the pinky finger perfectly extended, but perhaps we could put the middle finger away, just for a while. đŸ™‚

If All Witnessing Was Done This Way…

1 John 1:1-3
1 That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched —this we proclaim concerning the Word of life. 2 The life appeared; we have seen it and testify to it, and we proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and has appeared to us. 3 We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ.

In this set of verses, which reads very similarly to the opening verses of the Gospel of John, much of Christian doctrine is explained and shared in brief, but in a joyful manner.

For one, John characterizes the Word of life as “eternal,” having always existed, and having become flesh in the form of Jesus Christ. Second, he characterizes Jesus as this Word of life, because He personally lived for a time on earth, brought the hope of salvation to us through His death and resurrection, and is sovereign over life itself. Thirdly, he introduces the living disciples as “witnesses” to Jesus’ life, ministry, and teachings, and invites the readers into joyful “fellowship” with them.

It’s important to know at this point that this small New Testament book was written primarily to battle early Gnosticism. Gnostics taught a few strange, not-quite-Christian ideas, among them the following:

  • Spirit is good, flesh is evil;
  • Because flesh is “evil,” Jesus was never really made flesh;
  • Jesus was actually two different people–human Jesus and spiritual Christ, which separated right before crucifixion.

These ideas are considered heresies by the church today, since they do not actually reflect the teachings of Scripture. First, flesh is quite susceptible to sin, but not inherently evil, not even according to God. Second, Jesus was indeed made flesh, according to Luke 2 (Jesus’ birth story, which definitively involves the Virgin Mary, a human woman, in His birth). Third, where is the Scriptural evidence that Jesus was actually considered two separate entities, when from the beginning He called Himself “Son of Man” just as much as “Son of God?”

In this little book, John sought to correct these “kinda-sorta-not Christian” ideas; however, he also demonstrates a peaceful, celebratory style of witnessing that is little seen in today’s world. Today, many Christian churches are known for preaching messages of “fire and brimstone,” talking more about the damnation of sinners and burning judgment. This turns off many people who might otherwise want to learn about Jesus–all they hear is how much their sin is sending them to hell, and they’re NOT hearing what makes Christian living so much better.

If we all could witness to others as John is doing here, sharing the joy and life of Christ (as well as true doctrine) with others instead of sharing tales of damnation and judgment, then I think we might have more listeners. We need to be able to share what makes living in Jesus’ light a much more awesome and wonderful existence. I’m not saying we lie and pretend there’s no punishment for unbelievers, but shouldn’t people should know how much better life is with the Savior first?

Try the “White Slime” in NEW and IMPROVED Ammonia/Spoiled Flavor!

A few days ago, I got a few chicken tacos from my local Taco Bell, fixed like I always have them fixed–just chicken and cheese. (It’s been months since I’ve eaten the beef at Taco Bell because the quality has REALLY gone down, at least in my opinion–more about that later.) But the chicken has usually been a refuge for me.

I bit into the first of my tacos, only to realize that the chicken had an unusual sharp flavor, almost a cleaning-product flavor. Not only that, but it was oddly-textured. One more bite, and I realized there was another dimension to the bad taste–it tasted off, as if it had been kept past its expiration date.

As I peered into the depths of the taco shell, wondering if I’d gotten hold of some strange ingredient by mistake, a piece of “chicken” fell out…and it didn’t look the slightest bit like chicken. Instead, it looked like something that had been formed into the vague shape of chicken pieces. The color was nearly pure white–it almost looked like meat fat that had been reshaped.

I honestly don’t know what I got hold of that day, but all three of my tacos were like this–I tried bites out of each one, in the hope that maybe only one or two was affected. That wasn’t the case. Unfortunately, it was what I had spent my eating money on that day and I had long since left the store, so I had to try to salvage what I could of the meal. I ended up eating around the meat entirely and just throwing away the horrible “meat” product I had been served.

This disgusting taste, plus the slight nausea and dizziness I experienced about an hour and a half after eating what I could, convinced me that I had gotten hold of something terrible. And it looked and tasted a lot like what most people are describing as “white slime.”

What Exactly IS “White Slime?

The technical term is “mechanically separated chicken” (some pictures are available here). During mechanical separation, meat is basically sieved like flour (just under really high pressure) to get all the bones out, making it look a lot like meaty cake batter.

While the process sounds (and is) a little disgusting, in ways, it’s a more efficient way to get all the meat off an animal carcass, and it does reduce waste. And, after all, mechanically separated meat forms bologna and hot dogs, two things I’ve eaten in great quantities most of my life. In fact, this process has probably helped food prices over the years since it was introduced back in the late 1960s, according to the Wikipedia article.

So What’s the Big Deal?

There have been health concerns about MSM before, especially concerning connections between mechanically separated beef and mad cow disease. But, since outlawing beef from mechanical separation, this has been widely reduced. Unfortunately, keeping mad cow disease out of the meat does not stop other health concerns. The standout issue to me is that both mechanically separated chicken (“white slime”) and pork (“pink slime”) are treated with ammonia to kill bacteria before being packaged.

Knowing that ammonia is poisonous, and knowing that it’s used in a lot of industrial-strength cleaning supplies, this bothers me. Is ammonia what I was tasting in those tacos? Was the meat perhaps treated a little stronger with “bacteria-killing” solution to disguise the fact that it was a little past its expiration date, perhaps?

I worry that the addition of ammonia is actually making the meat product less nutritious and more poisonous. Whatever was in those tacos (whether it was simply spoiled meat, ammonia-treated meat, or a combination of the two), it did make me nauseated and dizzy afterwards, and I don’t usually react badly to any food. I don’t have the answers, but I do have some disturbing questions which need to be answered. Are we cutting corners too much just to make a profit, if slightly-spoiled or over-treated meat products are now being served?

The Wider Picture: General Fast-Food Quality

In the last few years, quality in fast-food cuisine has gone measurably down–I used to love Taco Bell’s ground beef, for instance, but ever since they got sued over it recently, the taste is no longer rich and slightly spicy, but kinda flat and over-reheated. Most people I talk to don’t seem to notice a difference, but then again, I get my tacos without lettuce, tomato, and sour cream, so the flavor of the meat itself is not overshadowed for me. I’m left wondering what exactly I’ve been eating all these years, to be honest.

It’s not just Taco Bell, though; foods at other fast-food restaurants that I used to love are no longer as good as what I remember, and I’m a very picky/sensitive eater, so I pick up on taste subtleties more often. The “cleaning flavor” has been sneaking into other types of food, too, and I’m wondering if the addition of ammonia is as necessary as people make it out to be.

Now, I know fast food is definitely not health food, but at least it’s supposed to taste like food, right? Even if what I got in those terrible tacos wasn’t “white slime,” I’d like to know what it was (or what it was supposed to be). The production of “white slime” and “pink slime,” while having existed for decades, seems to have taken a turn for the worse, and I’m afraid it’s mostly because of the bottom line.

Summary

More (and professional) research is needed to discover whether these strange tastes are a result of individual franchisees trying to stretch their dollar, or whether corporations are trying to cut corners to make a little more profit. But I really hope we all can get to the bottom of why cheap food production seems to be going a little too cheap. After all, when one cannot afford to eat anywhere but fast-food places, as is increasingly the case, that cheap and available food should still be edible!

For More Information

Mechanically-separated meat (MSM) article @ Wikipedia
Meat Product Chart @ ProPublica
Specified Risk Material article @ Wikipedia
Meat slurry article @ Wikipedia
Pink and White Slime: Videos @ Gothamist

Phrases Webdesigners Say

Author’s Note: This is done in the style of the popular “S–t ______ Say” videos and articles; I thought it would be a fun twist to include webdesigners in the scope of this meme. Enjoy!

  • “REALLY, Photoshop? You decide to crash RIGHT in the MIDDLE of my huge photo edit. Great.”
  • “I just woke from the most horrible dream–I dreamed I uploaded index.html and it killed my whole site!”
  • “Can I absolutely position this code where the sun don’t shine?”
  • “Don’t talk to me right now; I have to finish this pixel alignment first.”
  • “Am I REALLY going to have to put this layout in a table format to make it look right?”
  • “…*really big sigh* Go away, Internet Explorer. Just go away.”
  • “What the–‘Database parsing error?’ Are you KIDDING me?!”
  • “Ugh, I can’t go to sleep yet–these two divs just aren’t lining up straight.” (OCD, much? xD)
  • “No, I’m not going to the movie tonight. I have to stay home and update my websites…”
  • “Parse THIS, MySQL!”
  • “Whoever designed this buggy, horrible script deserves a sentence of 15 years–15 years of browsing the Internet with IE 6.”
  • “I have never wanted to strangle digital code so badly in my life.”
  • “What language am I even coding in anymore? Klingon?!”
  • “Okay, there is no reason this code should even work…but it does. Okay, fine, HTML, whatever.”
  • “I think I’m tied to the rails that Ruby’s on.” (reference)
  • “I’ve tried padding, I’ve tried margins, and I’ve tried absolute positioning. The only thing I haven’t tried is smashing the keyboard with my face.”
  • “…Shoot, it works. There IS a God.”
  • “Oh, Save button, I love you. Let me count the ways…I love that you save all my grueling HTML edits; I love that you never forget a single keystroke.”

…And Yes, We Really Do Say This Stuff…

Most of these are (sadly) direct quotes from my webdesign experience. Do you have any funny phrases you’ve uttered during your coding experience? Share them in the comments!

Keyboard Barf (a poem)

It is not my day for writing,
Though the “New File” button waits
It’s just not the day for writing,
‘Cause my brain is not in gear

I’ve begun to type a couple of lines,
But can’t continue my thoughts
So the Backspace key is my best friend
And the document remains blank

How am I supposed to create like this?
How am I supposed to write?
My brain won’t ignite, and will not take
The spark I’m trying to light

No plainer words can I state it in:
I’m well and truly stuck
Because every word that I’ve written so far
Just sounds like keyboard barf

…and ironically, this is probably the coolest poem I’ve written all year. My Muse has a maddening sense of humor.

10-Minute Self-Boosts, WoW Condolences, Lucky Couple, and Colllor

10 Things You Can Do for Yourself in 10 Minutes
Writing a thank you note, sitting quietly for a few minutes, finding some water to hang out by…and 7 other quick but beautiful things you can do for yourself. (No, not THAT. Get your mind out of the gutter. :P)

On The WoW Forums, Only One Thing Matters…
…and that’s loot. No matter how somber the subject. (Sad/accurate)

Couple Cheats Death as They Watch 300-Ton Landslide Just Feet Away
Uh, yeah, this couple is incredibly lucky/blessed!

Colllor
Change one color into a range of shades, for all your graphic design needs!