Posts Tagged ‘projects’

Look like a real champ

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

Ack… it’s American Thanksgiving, and the first time in over a month that I’ve felt relaxed enough to post an update to this thing.

There isn’t an awful lot of news to report on. I’ve been working like crazy on both the dancing and singing for Joseph, which opens in only a couple of weeks. It’s terribly difficult but I’m doing okay, at least when I’m not actually in the moment where we’re performing the scene. It will get to where it needs to be in time, but it’s still nervewracking. There are a lot of men and women in this show who are more “pro” than I am (or at least vastly better equipped with the necessary skills to be in the chorus of a show like this) and it’s hard not to feel like the odd man out.

Combine that with work suddenly getting extremely busy. I’d been assigned to a different project and was suddenly crunching in a way I hadn’t for months. It seems like the worst of that is over, but I should be careful about jinxing it.

The good news is that my replacement green card finally arrived. The previous one had arrived about five months earlier, but had the incorrect date of birth on it. It took longer than the average posted time (3.5 months) and I was getting quite stressed about it. When it finally arrived, everything correct this time, I was more relieved than anything else. Now my biggest dilemma is that I’m required by law to carry it with me everywhere I go, but I now have first-hand knowledge of how painful they are to replace if lost or stolen ($450 fee, the forms and biometrics appointment, and up to 6 months of waiting where you’re in a tough spot if you need to travel internationally). Conversely, the fine if you’re “caught” without it is a maximum of $100 and 30 days in jail. The jailtime wouldn’t be cool (although I can’t imagine anyone has ever had to serve such a term) and I wouldn’t want a misdemeanor on my record, but it seems absurd to me that the fine is less than a quarter of the replacement fee. I’ve decided to carry it with me in spite of what seems like poor reasoning. After all, the odds of my wallet getting lost or stolen (just recently there was a rash of personal effects stolen from improvisers at Theatresports while they were performing) are immeasurably greater than the odds of any local authorities asking to see my card. There is a huge divergence of opinion on the Internet regarding this matter. Some people carry a color photocopy in their wallet, but this is still clearly agains the law and the typical response to that is to see how effective it is if you’re pulled over carrying a photocopy of your driver’s license. I wish I had a good solution to this.

I had a little adventure in home-ownership the other day: my kitchen faucet has always been somewhat leaky, and even though I successfully repaired it back in March it recently began leaking again, even worse than it had before. Since I was evidently unable to do anything long-term to fix it, I decided to run over to Home Depot and just pony up for a new faucet. It seemed almost like poor judgment that I hadn’t done so the first time: sure, it was more expensive, but installing a new faucet is actually a pretty straightforward process, a whole lot less mysterious and error-prone than repairing a thirty-year-old existing faucet.

I estimated it would take less than an hour of work, but it wound up being over seven hours total, accounted for over an afternoon/evening and the following morning. All because I had no idea what I was getting into trying to remove the existing faucet. It’s difficult enough when you’re crammed into a 1-foot-by-2.5-foot opening underneath the cabinet, and the furthest bolt holding the sink in place is about three feet away from you, and there are two sink basins, a garbage disposal and drainage pipes blocking both your arms and vision. The nuts on these bolts were rusted in place, and the majority of my time was spent just getting them to move. I’d already bought a basin wrench to help reach the nut, but I wound up having to buy an even larger one to get sufficient leverage. I had to let them soak in WD-40 multiple times and strike them with a hammer before I could finally summon up enough strength to get them to turn, even the tiniest bit. Even after that, removing the first was a slow, laborious and painful chore. The second one – the further away of the two – proved even more difficult, though: when I finally applied enough force to free the nut, I also disconnected the bolt from whatever was holding it in place, so it would now spin freely when I tried to turn the nut. This meant the only way I could get it to move was by holding the bolt still somehow, which was nearly impossible to do.

I finally managed to get a large and strong enough pair of pliers in there with my other arm to hold the bolt steady (a feat enough in itself, as getting both my arms near the bolt with all of those obstacles was nearly impossible) while I twisted the nut off with the basin wrench. It took multiple tries and multiple bursts of strength, until I finally was able to pull the faucet out enough to jam the pliers in place from above while I twisted the nut the rest of the way off.

Even that wasn’t the end of my difficulties. After putting the new faucet in, I was dismayed to realize that the old inlet valve on the hot water had a built-in tube that didn’t match the new faucet line… and as I tried manipulating the thirty-year-old tube, it snapped off. So the next morning I needed to return to Home Depot and get a new inlet valve, which meant shutting off the water supply to the condo… of course, water still leaks from the pipes after you shut off the source, so I was dealing with the constant dripping and spilling of water as I attempted to install the new valve. I got really anxious when Elizabeth first turned the water back on and it started leaking out the end of the valve… it was already very tightly installed, and they caution you about over-tightening. Still, I tightened it some more and the leak went away, and after all that I finally have a shiny new faucet with a removable spray head that most importantly doesn’t leak and had better not for the remaining days I live in this condo.

My entire body is still sore and tender from the experience. Next to going into the crawl space it’s easily the most difficult task I’ve undertaken in this field. I was a total wreck at rehearsal that night as well, and the dirt that wouldn’t come off my hands or out from under my nails must have made me look like a real champ. At least it’s done, though, and next time if it’s going down this sort of road I’ll know to call a plumber.

Dan.

Working out so far

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

Well, I hardly planned on taking up another theatre project so soon after Cannibal ended… but I’ve been somewhat unexpectedly cast as Vice Principal Douglas Panch, the semi-downtrodden, bordering-on-tragic overseer of the day’s events in The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at SecondStory Repertory (the same place I did The Underpants and Urinetown). It doesn’t begin rehearsals until March, though, so at least I have quite a while off before diving into it.

I say “unexpectedly” as the callback was unusually… generous toward me. There was only one other person called back for the role of Panch (versus six or more for most other roles), and he was probably around 20 years older than me and with a completely different look and body type, so even if I turned out to be a poorer acting choice than he was the decision could have easily slid my way based solely on the visual composition the director wanted for the show.

The role isn’t the one I would have chosen for myself… it’s a good role and an important one with quite a lot to do and some good comedy bits, but it’s extremely light on the singing, to the point where I’d almost call it (and I imagine it’s often perceived as) the only non-singing role, and while he’s listed as a principal I’d say he’s the closest the show has to an ancillary character. I’d really love to play William Barfée, which is a role I know I could nail acting-wise, but of course the competition there was far more intense with people whose vocal caliber I cannot hope to match.

It will be nice to do another show at SecondStory, which is walking distance from me when the weather, my schedule and enthusiam permit it. It will be equally nice to be in another high-profile musical, even if the role itself isn’t exactly a résumé-buster.

I returned to doing improv at Unexpected last weekend and will again this weekend, and it’s felt good so far. We had a really excellent workshop last night where we explored the style of opera with a guest lecturer from the Seattle Opera. Everyone learned a ton about the format, and I got to be in a fun scene where I spent the better part of five minutes singing about how I was killing my dog without ever getting around to actually doing it.

The last couple of weeks have been busy for me in other ways as well. My glasses came back from the lab and I drove over to the optometrist again, and the moment I picked them up I could tell that the lenses were still loose in the frame. I remained calm but got pretty stern with her, expressing my disappointment that the product had been supposedly “fixed” but that clearly nobody from the lab to the doctor’s office had so much as laid a hand on them to see if this was the case, that it seemed like their lab was doing some awfully amateurish work if they didn’t notice the lenses were still popping right out of their frames, and that I shouldn’t need to drive over there just to demonstrate to them that the job still hadn’t been done correctly. They sent the glasses back to the lab again for another week and change, this time ordering a replacement frame as well under the warrantee, and today I finally got them back after being called with multiple assurances that they had actually checked the lab’s work this time. I’m pleased to report they’re working out so far.

In addition to this, I also spent some of the last couple of weeks scrambling to get all the necessary work done for the next step in my green card application. I had to get passport photos taken, as well as a medical examination by a civil surgeon… the latter involved a bunch of needles including flu shot, tuberculosis test, tetanus shot and a blood drawing to make sure I’d had all the necessary vaccinations when I was a child. I’m optimistic this may mean I’m close to obtaining the actual prize of a green card, which would be a huge deal for me… if I understand the process correctly – which I’m quite sure I don’t – at this point they may need to simply send in the application and then I wait in the queue 4-8 months or so until I pop out the other end, a fully qualified resident alien of the United States. I’ve been communicating with the lawyer as much as I can without being a nag but it’s hard to know anything specific about at what rate things are progressing, and my fear is that as the holidays loom steadily closer that rate will drop.

It’s been very grey out lately and winter is fast approaching. It’s supposed to be a cold, snow-heavy one this year. (American) Thanksgiving is coming up next week, though, and I will enjoy the time off, and Elizabeth and I are heading to Florida for our vacation after Christmas wraps up, so we are both looking forward to that.

Dan.

That first taste of freedom

Monday, November 8th, 2010

This second run of Cannibal went out with less of a bang and more of a whimper, at least for me. In particular I succumbed to a cold the final weekend and my voice pretty much gave out on me, making it an extremely difficult final couple of shows. I will miss it as much as I miss any show I’ve enjoyed doing, but it’s pretty rare to arrive at the end of a five-weekend run of anything and still be craving more of it, especially once you’ve had that first taste of freedom on a weekend where you’re not already booked solid with performances.

Which isn’t to say this past weekend wasn’t busy, but it was nice not having the same marathon of performances… I had to work pretty hard in that show, and it took its toll on me. Instead we went and saw a friend’s show on Saturday, and then a wedding on Sunday. The wedding was something else… it was between two relatively high-profile members of the musical theatre community, and was utterly delightful in an incredibly dorky way, to the extent that it took place on a theatre stage and had a number of performances by their singer/actor friends, and even a villainous attempt to kidnap the bride (which I totally predicted would happen). The truly best part was getting to hang out with one of the largest cross-sections of both Elizabeth’s and my friends, and generally have a fun, relaxed time (in formal wear!) with a lot of people we don’t get to see as often as we’d like.

The cold, meanwhile, has pretty much vanished, as most colds tend to do for me: it greatly improved after only a couple of days, but I’ve been stuck with a few lingering symptoms ever since.

My spare time is also being highly monopolized by a super-secret project I’ve been working on for a long time, but is now finally picking up steam… I won’t divulge the details of it online, but it’s exciting!

Fall has hit us pretty hard but we’ve also had some extremely unusual and delightfully sunny, crisp days amid the ones where we are drenched by a constant onslaught of rain and darkness. I’ve begun using the fireplace again, which is a balm to soothe my frazzled nerves that I will never take for granted, although I had a rather strange experience trying to purchase firewood from Safeway where the cashier told me they stopped stocking it at the end of summer, as the managers thought people only wanted firewood for camping and couldn’t imagine any possible reason a person might want it when it was cold and wet outside. So I bought it from QFC instead.

Dan.

Rely on the craftsmanship

Friday, October 15th, 2010

As usual, it seems you can’t rely on the craftsmanship of pretty much anything. My replacement lenses kept popping out of my glasses frame, so I had to return them to be sent back to the lab again… once more I am stuck wearing an old pair; thank goodness I’ve held onto them.

The replacement parts for my barbecue arrived, and while I was able to install the side burner there’s no wiring diagram for the starter unit and my experiments with it have so far proven fruitless, so I’m pretty much at a loss there. Which is very annoying. At least I got to crack out my soldering iron for the first time in years, though.

I’ve been taking vitamin D supplements for about a year now, ever since the doctor told me I was deficient and recommended doing so. He said that vitamin D, which we normally get from the sun (no big surprise that people in the Pacific Northwest tend to be deficient), is supposed to help improve our mood. Well, I’ve noticed absolutely no difference from the supplements either way… something tells me the “science” behind this is more to do with people just enjoying the sun and less to do with the vitamins it supposedly bestows on us. I’ll keep taking them, though… if anything, I enjoy the ritual of consuming my daily gummies.

I have a personal project I’m starting on! It’s a handheld game concept that struck me like lightning some time ago; surprisingly simple but I think has the potential to be extremely compelling. The best part is that I’ve been successful in enlisting a former colleague to do the artwork for it, and he’s pretty damn amazing, so I’m excited to see where that will go.

Cannibal continues to be fun… we had an extremely close call with our accompanist being absent this weekend, but I managed to enlist my vocal teacher to jump in at the last minute. He’s the musical director at SMT and while none of us relish being in such a tight situation I know we couldn’t have been luckier as far as finding a highly skilled replacement goes. The show is awesome, and you know I wouldn’t be plugging it if it weren’t… you should come see it already!

Dan.

Crawl space

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

It’s been a slow process catching up with my life. There’s a lot of stuff going on at work and my pace varies depending on what I’m working on… there’s a lot of high-level engineering and planning that goes on in what I do, and I spend a lot of time carefully building and adjusting systems that have no face to them, and are merely the bedrock of other systems. It’s slow work, and I’ll feel like I’m barely making any headway on a problem when suddenly all or enough of these little components will be done and I’ll be able to quickly plough through an entire feature and redeem myself for another week.

It’s tax season, and I cut a cheque to the IRS for the first time ever. That stung a little, but I am glad to be fortunate enough to be in a position where I owe the money.

The noise from the construction on my condo has been wearing me down. They begin quite literally at the crack of 7 A.M., which simply doesn’t jive with my sleep cycle. After pressing the construction manager I finally got them to send their cable installation guy to my unit in order to reroute my existing cable line behind the wall, which was basically the trigger event I was waiting for before attacking my project of running additional cables throughout my condo. I knew there wasn’t much hope in trying to get him to do the entire project for me, but it was a good opportunity to learn what to expect when I went to do it myself. My plan was to run all of the cables through the crawl space beneath my building. Once I’d found out where the entrance was I scoped it out and did some reconnaissance – just a little bit – it looked pretty intimidating, with detached insulation hanging everywhere and tight cement bulkheads that would make it very difficult to get around. Possibly the worst part was that there are about six condos per floor of my building and the entrance was in a storage unit on the opposite side, and the underground was a complete maze that was going to be nearly impossible for me to navigate.

As it turns out, even just drilling down into the crawl space is fraught with complications. But the biggest discouragement came when his partner came back up and told us of his experience down there… “hell on earth”, crawling in the dark on gravel amongst dead rats and mounds of their feces, and putrid water that had been standing for heaven knows how many years.

I very nearly abandoned my plan… I’m not entirely faint of heart but it just sounded like too much; I’m creeped out enough by rats when they’re alive, and I wasn’t exactly Andy Dufresne trying to escape from Shawshank. But at some point I realized this was something I’d wanted badly and long enough for my place, that I wasn’t going to let a little rat feces stand in my way.

So I started drilling, which was difficult enough, as my drill is old and underpowered, and the batteries (I have two of them) can barely hold a charge anymore. I would only get a few minutes use at best before having to swap them and let one recharge. I’d managed to learn a few things from the cable guys, fortunately, such as that my office wall was plywood-backed (and that I would therefore have to drill holes; a drywall saw wasn’t sufficient) and where the concrete was I’d have to drill past. The poor guy who went into the crawl space before me also informed me that there was a white electrical cable running through the maze that I could follow which would lead me right to my unit.

That day I went to Home Depot and purchased what I could to prepare myself: a couple of mini-flashlights, work gloves and a surgical mask (in part to protect myself from the dust, but mostly hoping to ward off the smell). Once I’d finished drilling holes and dropping cables down in the evening I plucked up my courage and went off to the storage closet where the entrance was. I wasn’t keen on going at night when it was dark, but I needed Elizabeth’s help inside the condo to both feed the cables and retrieve them for me, and I didn’t want to put off the endeavour until the next time we were both there and available to do it.

I reckon the whole ordeal took about two hours. I had two sets of cable to run from two different locations: a network cable and an HDMI cable from the den into the living room, and then a second network cable and a regular phone cable from the bedroom to the den. The first set of cables should have been relatively straightforward as I would be wiring along the exact same path that the cable guys had. I wasn’t at first certain that I wanted to go the extra mile to do the wires to the bedroom, but I figured that if I was committed to going to all that trouble, I may as well get everything I want out of it and not leave myself ever tempted to go down there again.

Getting around was even more difficult than I anticipated, and I likened it to Catherine Zeta-Jones’ big payday scene in Entrapment. I was literally squirming on my belly through blocks of concrete and squeezing my body between pipes and the ceiling above me. There were smatterings of feces but I never actually saw a dead rat; I expect it’s because I chose to go in the evening and was spared by darkness and luck. Each room was its own miniature expedition to get across on my hands, knees and belly. That was the only way for me to do this kind of thing: very slow, patient progress, bite-sized morsels of a few metres or so and then stopping for about five minutes to catch my breath and summon the energy to proceed. My biggest regret was not thinking to get knee pads… my whole body was dinged, bruised and banged up pretty badly from the experience, but my poor knees on that rough gravel suffered the worst of it by far.

I followed that white electrical cord with the same naked trust of a sailor navigating from the North Star for what seemed like an eternity… when I finally saw the first of my cables dangling from the ceiling I nearly collapsed out of relief that I’d found it. It took me quite a while to get my bearings and run the two cables that were there from the den to the correct spot in the living room, but it was a big victory for morale when it was done. The two cables I’d dropped from my bedroom proved far more frustrating, though, as I was completely unable to locate them. The worst part was being about 75% confident that I was in the right area, with Elizabeth above me banging on the wall, trying to give me some kind of sonar location, but still having that 25% uncertainty about both where I was and how I was oriented relative to the wall.

I finally came to the conclusion that the wires were most likely sticking into the insulation above me, and nearly despaired entirely as there were rows of the stuff overhead, I couldn’t be certain of where I was, the cables could still be anywhere, I was on the threshold of a bulkhead that was difficult and painful to cross, and I my reserves of energy were getting desperately low. I made my best guess, though, and was fortunate when I yanked on the insulation there and my two wires neatly dropped down. I ran them over to the den, and spent the next twenty minutes or so slowly but triumphantly working my way back to the entrance… even still, it took forever, and even the light of the trap door when I finally could see the exit couldn’t speed the passage of time.

Four days later I still ache and am tender from the whole experience, but I am healing well enough. I’ve finished most of the terminations and wall plates for the various cables, although I still have one special part I’m waiting on delivery for. Before this project, I had only wireless networking throughout my condo, no phone line to anywhere other than my kitchen and bedroom, and cable in the living room only by virtue of a hack job I’d done running an extension cable outside the condo and back inside. Now I have:

  • Cable television run cleanly to the living room (instead of a loose cable outside my condo)
  • Network cables run from both the living room and bedroom to the den
  • Phone cable running to my den (where I have the fax machine for my office)
  • An HDMI (high-def video cable) running from the den to living room (so I can run high-def off my computer to the television)

It was a gruelling mission, and I wouldn’t go back down there again if you paid me a thousand dollars to do it, but all in all I’m both happy with and proud of the results of it!

Dan.