Puppy

Almost ran over this hyperactive puppy yesterday as I was coming home. I got out and caught him, put him in the car and pulled into my driveway. Gave him some water, but didn’t have any food I thought he’d like. I walked around the block with him, hoping the owners would spot him. Talked to some lady about him and she decided to take him from me and said she’d put up posters for him. Too bad I didn’t have the kids last night. They would have had fun with him. But I’m glad I didn’t have to keep this thing overnight.

Other than that, yesterday was boring and sucked.

UPDATE: Hyperactive Puppy Video!

Homelessness

The first time I was officially homeless was when I was 17. I slept in a motel parking lot in my car somewhere in Louisiana. The next day, it was Galveston, Texas for the next several months. I mostly slept in my car in the Kroger parking lot, but sometimes I would lay out on the beach, which was right across the street from Kroger, and sleep there. It was great, waking in the middle of the night and walking across the sand to pee in the ocean. It’s not often in life that your nightly pee precedes a short walk along the beach.

I paid a campsite $3.00 each time that I wanted to use their showers, so at the very most being homeless cost me $90 per month in Galveston. Eventually I found a graveyard shift job at Circle K, right across from the beach. Many mornings after work I would walk across the street and sleep on the beach during the day for 8 hours.

Being homeless gave me complete freedom from pretty much all financial responsibility. No rent, no utility bills, no place to be, nobody to answer to. Since I always kept a job and never had all the normal expenses of life, I had plenty of cash. I spent my days exploring the island, reading at the library, playing video games and watching TV at the campground, and using the computers at the community college. Eventually I found roommates and got a house, but those first few months of homelessness were quite an experience.

My next experience with homelessness was in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. I moved there with pretty much no money at all so my first month was spent sleeping in my car in various parking lots from North Myrtle Beach to Surfside Beach. One night a cop started banging on my car window, I think with his flashlight. I was in a deep sleep and ended up screaming when I opened my eyes and saw him there.

He made me get out of my car and attempted to search through all my stuff, I guess for drugs. I told him I was just passing through town on my way to North Carolina. He let me go and said if he ever caught me sleeping in my car again, he’d arrest me. I slept in my car for another week or so in Myrtle Beach, but finally found a place to live with roommates.

I didn’t have to pay for showers in Myrtle Beach. There were a lot of campgrounds along the beaches, and I would ask the guards if I could take a look around their campground to see if I wanted to stay there. I would drive to their shower house, take care of everything, and then leave. Eventually a guard remembered me and told me to get lost and don’t come back. After that, I just started entering the campgrounds by getting on the public beaches and walking to their back entrances.

Sylvia and I were homeless once or twice. Once we spent the night behind a gas station somewhere in Illinois, the night before we hitchhiked to Normal. Our plan was to be homeless in Normal, but instead she convinced Chris to let us stay in his dorm room for a couple months. Then we lived in Los Angeles for awhile and I really wanted to be homeless there, just for the experience. But instead we stayed with her mom for awhile and then a friend of mine for awhile. Not that I’m complaining, but being homeless in Hollywood would have been a lot more memorable.

Back in Galveston, I stayed in a homeless shelter for the first time. I don’t remember why, but it’s probably because it was cold out. For some reason I never stayed in homeless shelters and after staying in this one, I was glad I didn’t. They aren’t fun. The staff treated us like scum, the residents were all idiots and smelled bad and we had to wake up and be out by 6 or 7am. I think they provided breakfast, but I skipped that. I spent two nights in a row there, and then never again.

Later that week I was sleeping under an outdoor stairwell at a Holiday Inn and I noticed that a door was cracked open. Eventually I knocked on it but there was no answer. I went inside and the room was clean with no signs of anyone staying there. So I slept there for the night and had a night shower and shave in the morning. I blocked the door with a big chair, just in case somebody attempted to come in during the night. Then I toilet papered the room before I left in the morning. I bet they were surprised.

In 1993 I spent about a month being homeless in Miami. I used various showers by hotel pools and I lived underneath a part of the boardwalk that spans a large part of the beach there. Every morning around 5 or 6am, joggers pounded by overhead, waking me up for the day.

In Indianapolis, I often switched between being homeless and living in weekly hotels. Several of the nights that I slept outdoors next to buildings, I woke up covered in snow. It was damn cold that year. Another spot I slept in next to a parking garage had bats flying overhead all night. I’d sleep in the Greyhound station sometimes, but the manager would sometimes decide to throw me and the other homeless people out of there. He said to me once, “I see you in here every night!” Occasionally I would take Greyhounds to other cities in Indiana, just for fun on my days off, and I would try to make a point to let that manager see that I’d bought a ticket. I wanted him to just think that I traveled by bus a lot.

I slept on some giant heating grates a few nights, which were warm but windy. Eventually I found a perfect indoor home – the IUPUI campus. The entire campus seemed to be completely unlocked all night. Even some of the basement rooms with giant radioactive warning signs on them were unlocked. Some nights I slept in a student lounge or in a random classroom. I’d toss some of my books and notebooks around me, hoping to make anyone walking by think I’d just fallen asleep studying. And I always got to shave/shower/brush in the campus pool’s shower rooms.

My regular sleeping spot ended up being under some stairs on the bottom level of a building. Apparently I wasn’t the first one to live there, since there were stickers pasted on the slanted ceiling and burn marks all over the place from a lighter. One day I was caught sleeping there. I guess I must have been snoring and some lady said to me, “Hey, you’re not supposed to be under there!” I told her I’d leave and I never slept there again.

I worked evenings at the Lafayette Square movie theater and usually wouldn’t get off work until 11pm or so. Sometimes the buses wouldn’t be running anymore, so I’d walk to a nearby bridge and sleep under it. I’d tell my manager that there was still one more bus I could catch and he believed me. I don’t think I ever told anyone I worked with, anywhere, that I was homeless. One night he insisted on taking me home so I let him. I had him drive me to a hotel that I’d stayed in before and I walked inside until he left. Then I walked to downtown and found a place to sleep. I always thought about sleeping behind the screens at the theater. But I’d hate to end up getting caught by the janitor.

In Portland, Oregon I used stolen credit card numbers to fund a week or two of hotel stays. But after that stopped working, it was back to being homeless. I stayed in some weekly run-down hotel called the Jack London for a little while. Then I found a college campus (I think it was some Christian college) and slept in their auditorium occasionally. Since I worked nights, a lot of times Colleen would let me stay at her house and sleep since her dad worked all day. I also slept in the airport a lot and I remember sleeping in some bushes in downtown once.

Cincinnati was the usual stuff – staying at the college campus. I managed to get my own locker there to keep my stuff in. I slept in a few random places around downtown and a few times I slept in grass fields.

Anyway, I’m not going to say I actually miss being homeless. But it sure was interesting. I almost always had money since I would always have a job and not much to spend it on. Especially after getting rid of my car. Basically all I had to do was eat. When other homeless people would ask me for change, I could say, “Yeah right, I’m homeless too!”

That’s something I rarely did, was beg for change. In Hollywood, I did sit at an exit ramp with a sign that said “SPARE ANY CHANGE?” which got me a few bucks. I resorted to this because it was so hard to find work in Hollywood. And I remember in Florida, asking a guy for some change for the bus. This guy actually took me to his trailer and let me paint it for $20. I think I just ended up painting two sides of it that were left. Then he offered to let me live there, which I declined because he was creeping me out. I always preferred working to begging, though. I hated begging and I hate when homeless people ask me for money.

Today I was walking around downtown Portland and some teenagers were sitting outside the doors to a mall with a sign. This one kid, who looked about 16, says, “Can you spare any change to help get us off the streets for one night?” He was wearing trendy clothing and had styled hair. He looked like some suburban kid. Completely healthy and completely clean. I wanted to laugh at him, but I didn’t. Portland has always had a huge teenage homeless problem. I remember Colleen saying to me, back in 1994, that most of them move back into their parents house during the winter.

It’s hard to have much sympathy for any homeless people under 30. Most of them seem like they’re in perfect health and I’m sure they could find work if they put any effort into it. It’s complete laziness. I think they just enjoy the lifestyle of hanging out on the streets all day, not having to work and just being hippies or artists or whatever they think they are. I never give them money.

A street performer that I was watching today worked some homeless statistics into his act. (He wasn’t homeless) He said that there were anywhere from 500 to 1,000 homeless people currently living within two blocks of where he was performing. Then he accidentally dropped whatever he was juggling, lost his train of thought, and didn’t finish whatever point he was trying to make.

Same goes for me, I’m losing my train of thought. It’s late. I’m going to bed.

Bradley Ramone

# Posted by Kt and Ali on March 29th, 2007 | 12:50 pm

Hey!!! A long time ago, like five years ago, My friend and I found a pictures of you on phonelosers.org. You were about 10 in the picture, and we saved it and other pictues of random people on the internet mostly from howfreshisthisguy.com and made ya

My week

Wow, what a terrible week. Car problems, deaths, hard drive crashes. I scanned my drive this morning and found some bad sectors which have been causing Windows to continue shutting down. It’s an old drive that my neighbor gave me years ago, so I upgraded it. I guess by defragging my drive the other day, I moved some important Windows system files into bad sectors. Right now I’m copying files over, for the second time this week. I won’t even get into the other computer issues I’ve had this afternoon/evening.

One thing that really bugs me, though, is that I HAVE a legitimate copy of Windows XP that came with this computer that refuses to work. It goes through the recovery procedure and seems like it should work, but it refuses to boot correctly. My guess is that it’s because I’ve changed around some of the hardware on the computer over the years. That’s all I can think of. The recover thing has failed to work on two different drives now. It’s forcing me into a life of piracy.

One good thing came out of this, though. I realized how incredibly valuable Hiren’s Boot CD is. Someone on the PLA Forums recommended that I download it for some laptop bios issues I was having a few months ago. This bootable CD can clone drives, repair errors, scan disks, recover passwords, and so much more. It saved me from losing a lot of data during my 2nd crash this week. A Google search will find you download links for it. I’m hoping I’ll be able to use some of the utilities on it to recover my old hard drive that crashed last year. I’ve got a lot of stuff on that one that I didn’t have backed up.

My trunk lock stopped working a few weeks ago, so my trunk hasn’t been able to lock since then. Yesterday I finally got around to removing the power locking mechanism from it. I haven’t tried to take it apart to see if I can figure out what’s wrong with it yet. But I called a place about it and they told me it’d be $80 for the part and about $120 in labor. At the very worst, I’ll just pay the $80 for the part and install it myself. $120 to put that thing in, though. And it only took me 10 minutes to remove it. Hopefully I can repair whatever the problem is myself.

Kids and I saw a couple movies this weekend. The Last Mimzy and TMNT. The Last Mimzy was great and TMNT was retarded. Both fulfilled my expectations. We were at the theater for more than 4 hours.

On Friday, as we were leaving the school, some kids were taking down the flag as usual. But this time some girl had one flag draped around her shoulders and another over her head, running away screaming as another student chased her. Another girl was sitting in the rope that was hanging from the flagpole, swinging on it. Damn kids need to learn respect for the flag! But wow, that was hilarious to see.

Jammie is finally using the domain I bought her a year ago! I feel so appreciated now!

boot-time defragging

Yesterday I got a copy of Diskeeper to properly defrag my hard drives, which I haven’t done in several years. Possibly 7 years. The program works great and I’ve run it on my laptop and office computer several times now, and the drive looks better each time.

On my office computer, though, the page file was spread into tiny pieces all over the hard drive. The program recommended that I do a boot-time defrag, which reboots the computers and starts up a DOS-looking application that takes care of the page file and a lot of other boot-up things. The problem is, I started it at 5pm yesterday and it’s STILL GOING.

Right now it’s at STAGE 3. I don’t know how many stages there are and there’s no kind of status indicator on the screen. I know it’s running because I can hear the hard drive making noise. I left it running all night, thinking it would be done by morning. Has anyone ever done this? How long did it take you?

Argh

This morning sure sucked. As Payton opened the passenger door to the car, I noticed it hadn’t even been latched all night. Meaning he didn’t shut the car door yesterday morning when we got home. I didn’t say anything, though, I just started the car so we could leave for school. I mean, I tried to start the car. The battery was dead. Payton’s open door caused the dome light to stay on all night, resulting in a dead battery.

I called a couple people I know, hoping to get a jump start from one of them but nobody answered. It sucks, not having anyone to help you out when things go wrong. If this had happened in Illinois, I’d have dozens of friends, family and neighbors to choose from. I really should get around to meeting more people.

The kids and I came back inside. They played DS while I got prices on a jumpstart from every tow service in town. The cheapest ended up being $35 and it took him about 30 minutes to arrive. The jump only took a couple minutes and we were on our way. As I was pulling onto the ramp to get on the highway, I flipped on the heat since the windows were fogging up. That killed the car again. I thought it’d be okay since the car had been running for 5 minutes at that point. But no.

The tow guy had called me from his cell phone earlier since he wasn’t sure where my house was so I called him back on his cell. He asked where I was, then noticed that I was right in front of him. He pulled over and gave me another quick jump. Luckily, he didn’t charge $35 again. He recommended that I stop by their shop and have the battery checked out, which was free of charge. So I took the kids to school, signed them in an hour late, and went by the shop.

The shop tells me that the battery isn’t looking too good, but it might be because it was drained overnight. They recommend a new battery which is something like $79 installed. I tell them that I’ll have to wait until later in the week when I can afford something like that. I planned to check out a couple automotive stores for cheaper batteries that I could just install myself.

So I run a few errands around town (not battery hunting though), leaving my car running as I visit each place. My last stop is the bank to cash a check for groceries later. When I come back outside to the car, it’s dead again. I’d left it running but for whatever reason, and it turned itself off. Shit. I call the battery place again and ask them to send their tow guy. I asked if they could just go ahead and bring that battery for me and I’d buy it from them. They said they couldn’t do that and I’d have to pay another $35. My hope was that if I bought the battery from them, they’d be nice enough to not charge me $35 again. But that didn’t happen. Goodbye, grocery money.

BUT the tow guy did show up with the battery and installed it for me. I’ve had no more problems since then. I’m sure I needed a new battery anyway since I’ve never bought one for this car after 4 years of owning it. Payton felt bad about it all and apologized a few times. I told him maybe he did me a favor by killing my battery now instead of it dying someday when I’m driving out in the middle of nowhere. Gotta teach those kids to be optimistic.

I might be wrong, but I think the only time I really complain about life is when my car does frustrating things. I’m pretty easygoing, but I can’t stand it when my car doesn’t work. I guess because it seems like it screws up my entire day whenever something goes wrong with it. Which it definitely did today. And I hate cars. I wish so much that I didn’t have to own one. We are slaves to these stupid machines.

But in happier news…I got really cool stuff in the mail from Spessa today. And I got a letter from some law office, representing one of the credit card companies that I quit paying last year. The letter says, “This letter is to inform you that our client has authorized us to offer you a settlement (reduction) on the remaining balance. Please call our office for details.” My whole plan with ignoring my credit cards for the past year was for them to go into collection status to eliminate the high interest rates and late fees. I didn’t expect them to offer reductions! The balance on that one is only $600. That’d be great if they knock off a 1/3 from it. I’m going to call them in a day or two.

Also, my car/renters insurance dropped. A lot. I think it’s $17 or $18 per month cheaper now. I got my first bill from them at the new rate. It was $100 per month before and now it’s $82 or so. They sent me a letter a couple weeks ago, letting me know that the rates were going down. I didn’t know insurance companies lowered your rates when they could. I thought they only raised them. I’m happy about this.

Tonight the kids and I didn’t do much. They played DS all evening (geez, 5 hours straight I think) and I worked a lot to catch up from this morning. They’re addicted to a game called Animal Crossing. It’s the online version where they can visit other worlds and have visitors in theirs. It looks completely unappealing to me. I’m more of a Super Mario Bros. person, which I finally beat on DS yesterday.

I got rid of cable TV a couple weeks ago, to save $40 per month and since I never watch it myself. The kids play DS so much now that they don’t even miss it. I still have the basic network stations, because it was cheaper to keep those than to completely get rid of it since I have internet and phone service through them. So at least we can still watch Simpsons occasionally. But TV is pointless for me. I’m too addicted to the internet to watch it. And if I had to watch one more episode of The Suite Life of Zach and Cody…

This is a long entry. I’m defragging my hard drive right now. I don’t think I’ve defragged any of my drives since I installed Windows XP in 2000. The graphical representation of them looks pretty messy. Just look how cluttered this is. Whatever happened to the old defrag with all the different colored blocks, where you could actually see what it was doing? I know Windows 98 had that, but with XP it’s just a bar across the screen and you can’t really tell how bad it is or what it’s doing. I used to sit and watch an entire drive defrag when it had the blocks. It was like a game of Tetris, but with no effort! The DOS version was especially soothing to watch. Wow, bedtime.

Phone lines, dumpsters and Godaddy

I got overly OCD about my phone lines at my desk today, disconnecting everything and untangling it from the mess of electrical and network wires that wrapped along the walls behind my desk. I put hooks into the underside of the desk to hang the wires from and mounted a 5 port phone jack into the middle of it all. All of the phone wires are off the floor now, completely away from the rest of the wiring. While doing all of this, I had Cool Edit monitoring the line to make sure the background noise level didn’t get too high. I completely eliminated a buzz that was showing up in phone recordings before. I even labeled the lines with my Dymo labeler.

phone lines

That’s how I spent a few hours of my Sunday. I also disassembled a metal frame that’s been sitting on my back porch for several months and threw it away with some broken chairs. I took it all to a nearby apartment complex and threw it in their dumpster. I was expecting some kind of resistance from the residents for using their dumpster and had arguments all planned out, but I met nobody there.

While I’m taking apart this metal frame, I hear this woman’s taunting voice but I’m not really paying attention to it. But after a second I realize she’s talking to me. She thinks I’m the next door neighbor and says something about me hiding behind my fence. She calls me by my neighbor’s name a couple times during it but doesn’t actually look in my direction. The people next door always have weird drama happening so I don’t know what it was about. I know that if it really was my next door neighbor she’d been talking to, he’d be out there screaming obscenities at her down the street. I bet she wondered why he didn’t.

All of my Godaddy sites were down for about an hour this morning. I joked with murd0c that it was probably because of daylight savings time. Later in the morning, I saw an article on Slashdot, stating that Godaddy was actually having DST issues and that’s why they were down.

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