We went to a teppanyaki-sushi place. The chef made a cute little volcano out of an onion — leaving the rings intact, stacking them to make the cone, then dumping a little booze down the middle as fuel for the flames. Nice. And the food was good, too.
Forty-nine. A perfect square. I’ll have to make it to 64 to hit the next perfect square. And then I’ll be 1000000 in binary.
I’m reading Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games trilogy, and am on book two at the moment. (Mild spoilers follow, if you care.) Interesting stuff, what with its hardboiled protagonist who is still so clueless at love, its curious mix of violence and romance. In book one, I thought I had it pegged as a romance variant of some sort, but then Collins trashed any chance at the HEA.
So Katniss, the protagonist, is torn between two guys: baker’s son Peeta, whom the fascistic Capital plans for her to marry, and Gale, the boy she has hunted with ever since her father died. Both are strong, noble, likable, yatta yatta. Both are nuts about her. I suspect Collins’s fans fight amongst themselves as to who Katniss’s true love should be.
Then I remembered Twilight‘s Bella, and how she is torn between the sparkly vampire guy and the werewolf guy. Choose the suave bloodsucker or the dog? Hmm. I suspect I’d go for the dog, especially since the bloodsucker can’t even bring himself to kiss her, for fear his idea of deep kissing might not be compatible with her survival.
And then I remembered Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum, who has her Italian Stallion Joseph Morelli, and strong-dark-quiet Ranger. And Princess Leia, torn between Han Solo and Luke, until they all discover that icky incest thing. But still.
It’s probably more widespread than that, but what I’m wondering is this: are their mirror image examples? Male protags with two equally hot and lovable women vying for their attention? Would romance readers even want to go there? How about gay romance, with characters struggling to determine who to do?
I think I’ll get the birthday girl over here to comment.
From Indecision Forever, who are cool enough folks that they STILL have me on their blog roll even though I’m hardly funny anymore, here’s Sara Benincasa* doing (excuse me) Delaware Senatorial Candidate and all around blessing to comedians everywhere, Christine O’Donnell.
Hey! I’ve got jury duty on Monday! And in honor of this solemn civic responsibility, I have a question. What book should I bring, you know, to flash around, so that no lawyer in his right mind would allow me to pass voir dire?
Makes me regret that I donated 120 Days of Sodom to the local public library . . .
(Note to the local magistrates who work so hard to keep our courts clean and honest and oh so squeakily just: kidding. KIDDING! I would never try to swing things so that I’m kicked off a potential jury. Never never never! I believe in America. America has made my fortune. Often I say to my wife, “For justice, we must go to Don Corleone.” Oh — oops!)
D.
*Who I would so send mash notes to if I weren’t married.
While surfing the cable’s channel guide, Karen paused over Kung Pow Enter the Fist. We both registered the 2.5 stars someone had assigned Kung Pow, and waited with trepidation for our son’s response.
You have to understand that for Jake, Kung Pow is sacred text, quotes from which can be recontextualized to suit any comic circumstance. You wouldn’t believe how many ways he can spin (or — I admit it — how many ways I can spin) “Let me know if you see a Radio Shack,” or “That’s a lot of nuts!” No one fucks with his Kung Pow.
“The guy who gave Kung Pow two and a half stars should die in a fire,” my son declared.
Which cracked me up. My son, whom no one would ever suppose had a Jewish father — I mean, aside from his Yiddishe kopf, what’s Jewish about the kid? Oh. He likes latkes — had just come precariously close to uttering a Jewish curse. Needs a little work, mind you. Like any first attempt, it’s unrefined. Lacks that certain zing.
From this curious site, here are a few good ones that have withstood the test of time.
May they find thousands of new cures for you each year.
May you grow so rich that your widow’s second husband
never has to worry about making a living.
You should be like a chandelier — you should hang and burn.
And the similarly themed
May the sun and the spring breeze warm you and caress you like an apple as you hang from a tree.
Yeah, Jake, dying in a fire can’t hold a candle to growing beets in your stomach and peeing borscht.
One of the reasons I like my particular branch of medicine is that I occasionally get to do things which are 100% the right thing to do. If someone’s ear is full of wax, it’s never a mistake to remove it. Same goes for a kid with a bead up her nose. There are times, happily many times, when I know exactly what to do and then I do it and then I have a happy patient (or parent).
But like any doc, there are times when I don’t know what’s going on, when my best guess is probably no more accurate than a Magic Eight Ball, when my only asset is that semi-mystical laying-on-of-hands thing. When success depends upon my shine as a huckster, a salesman hawking something he really doesn’t believe in but knows that if his pitch is good, he’ll still have a happy client.
There are, for example, patients who have so many varied aches and pains and dysfunctions that I have to wonder if I’m either (A) missing something that only Dr. House could figure out (I know — it’s palladium poisoning!) or (B) dealing with a patient with a conversion disorder. That’s when the patient’s mental/emotional ailments “convert” into physical problems. Not terribly common, I’m afraid. I mean, I can remember one patient who developed a ball in the throat sensation the same week her husband died, and pointing out that “coincidence” was enough to cure her problem. But I have to think that conversion disorders are extremely uncommon.
Which leaves me in the dark, of course. If I’m not bright enough to apply Occam’s Razor and come up with the one brilliant diagnosis that knits it all together, and if I’m not willing to consider every stumper a psychological issue clad in physical symptoms, then I’m forced to admit ignorance. I do this most of the time, but I realize I’m not making anyone happy, least of all my patient. Some people want honesty. Most don’t.
Fortunately, no one else has been able to figure out my patient, either, and most of my predecessors haven’t even tried. So the first thing I discovered long ago is that trying matters. The mere fact that a doctor cares enough to want to figure things out is, pathetically, therapeutic. (Pathetically because it’s sad how often people are blown off by their other doctors.) And that’s step one of Good Hucksterism Good Doctoring. Step two is Doing Something. Doesn’t always have to be a prescription, and in fact I had one angry patient today who said his doctor “admitted he prescribed antibiotics for his patients because it made them feel better to get a prescription.” (Step three: the wizard never peeks out from behind the curtain. Never.)
Doing Something could mean framing the problem to make the patient realize that it truly is multifactorial. Your weight problem contributes to your sleep apnea, which exacerbates your nocturnal reflux (as does your smoking, by the way), which is giving you that cough (and the smoking doesn’t help your cough much either), and if you got a little more exercise you’d lose some weight and your apnea might improve and your fatigue would lessen etc. etc. Now, suddenly, all these disparate symptoms start making sense. It’s not so much that your body is falling apart and it’s not age. It’s your damned lifestyle.
Interestingly, my theory — the way I’ve framed the problem — need not be correct. It helps if I’m right, but it’s not essential. Because sometimes what people want is not so much relief of their symptoms as relief from worry. If I can exclude life-threatening illness (and yes, I can do that most of the time with imperfect certitude . . . but nothing is perfect . . .) and I can help them understand what’s going on, more often than not they’ll say they can live with their symptoms.
But getting back to the stumpers: it’s true, sometimes I play the Magic Eight Ball*. And if I make my pitch with verve and style, and if I make them think someone cares, and if I can sell them on the wisdom of this or that treatment strategy, well, the patient might get better. Often does.
And I’ll never know if I was right, or merely skilled at slinging the bull.
D.
*Mind you, I’m not so proud that I won’t send such patients to other specialists, or to other ENTs for a second opinion within the specialty. But what do I do about the patients who have seen all the other specialists and who are coming to ME for a second, third, fourth opinion? Do I tell them, “I’m as dense as everyone else you have seen,” or do I try to help, even if helping carries with it a dollop of dishonesty?
This blog is my spare memory. Can’t tell you how many times I’ve looked up one of my own recipes when I’d forgotten where I’d found the original, or if I was just too lazy to search through several dozen back issues of Cooks Illustrated. So . . . since I’ve hit upon a great recipe for sweet potato pie, I’m reprinting it here.
I think I have improved upon the original. Main differences: I believe in baking my sweet potatoes, since that leads to caramelization and greater depth of flavor. For similar reasons I prefer brown sugar to white, and to make sure we’re talking REALLY BROWN sugar, I added some molasses, too.
The result? Big hit.
1 pound of sweet potato pulp from thoroughly baked sweet potatoes*
1/2 cup butter, softened
1 cup brown sugar**
1/2 cup milk***
2 eggs
1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 tablespoon black strap molasses
1 (9 inch) pie crust****
Mine is darker. And tastier.
NOTES
*If you don’t have a kitchen scale, this is roughly equal to one very large sweet potato or two medium-sized potatoes.
**I didn’t make any effort to pack the brown sugar, just scooped it out of the bag.
***As tempting as it was to use all cream, I used a scant 1/2 cup of low fat milk that I topped off with cream.
****Marie Callendars. Guess I could have made my own, but I’ve never been too skilled at pastry.
The instructions are easy-peasy. Preheat oven to 350F (175C). Combine the sweet potato with the butter using an electric mixer. Add the rest of the ingredients and beat with the mixer until smooth. Pour into a pie shell that’s been sitting in the preheated oven for about five minutes. Bake 55 to 60 minutes.
The original recipe says to bake until a butter knife inserted into the center comes out clean. I think this would take longer than 60 min, maybe a lot longer, and I worry about overcooking my pie. I hardly ever wait until the knife comes out clean.
There you have it. Enjoy! This bugger kicks ass over pumpkin pie.
It’s all about the best bread and the best sausages. We mail-ordered some dogs once, right from the source. Calabrese, hot links, kielbasa, all from different vendors. You just know someone had made a regular study of this, buying Polish from every possible vendor, taste-testing, taste-testing again. Retesting regularly — is this one still the best? Choosing on the basis of quality, not price. They’re that good.
Heaven.
Many more pictures here at Foodhoe’s Foraging. But tandoori chicken sausage, really? Don’t know about the Top Dog on Center Street, but my Top Dog on Durant wouldn’t serve tandoori chicken sausage. Might as well serve up Tofurkey dogs.
It’s about a cloudless China blue sky and a gentle breeze and perfect 68F weather, geeks and jocks and hairy-armpitted locals and old farts like me who see this place as fair game for pilgrimage. Can I still eat one of their Kielbasas? It’s 1/3 beef, after all. Maybe I’ll settle for Calabrese, or a Brat. Maybe I’ll settle for three.
***
I went to Der Wienerschnitzel this last weekend. I was that hungry. The kid behind the counter didn’t know if their Polish was all pork or a mix, so I ordered their turkey dog instead. Would I make it a double, throw in a drink and fries? Sure.
Der Wienerschnitzel dogs have an indescribable texture. Kind of like if plastic could be beaten into a meringue, then boiled into submission. The buns are gummy and tasteless, the mustard fluorescent. Throwing on a ton of relish didn’t help.
I finished one, threw away the other. Told you I was hungry.
Why is it that I complain about the heat constantly, but love to have the shower as hot as I can stand it?
Perhaps “a dry heat” isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
***
We had a Continuing Medical Education activity tonight, a lecture on Valley Fever. Here in Kern County, we have the distinction of being a Valley Fever hot spot. It’s endemic throughout the Southwest, but here it’s big. We are the Valley in Valley Fever, after all.
What I learned tonight:
There’s no vaccine. Not even a glimmer of one on the horizon.
If you get it in your meninges (the tissue enclosing the brain), you’ve got it for life, and you’re in for a lifetime of treatment. But at least there is treatment. In the old days, most of these folks would die in the first year.
You can’t get it by working outside in your garden. Treated soil — soil that’s been watered, fertilized, etc. — does not harbor the fungus. So you’d think you’re safe as long as you don’t hang out in construction sites or go dirt-biking in the wilderness, right? Wrong. This shit can travel, wind-borne, for 35 miles or more.
You’re better off with a bad case of tuberculosis than with a bad case of Valley Fever.
As bad as the situation is with antimicrobials, what with the constant emergence of resistant organisms, the situation with antifungals is far worse. Our main fungicidal (fungus-killing) is Amphotericin B, a drug that punches holes in fungal cell membranes, allowing leakage of electrolytes and eventual death of the fungal cell. Unfortunately, it does the same thing to animal cells, hence the high toxicity of Amphotericin (AKA amphoterrible). Other anti-fungals are fungistatic, meaning they halt growth but don’t kill the organism.
Well, that’s all I can think of right now. I’m sure I learned more 🙂
My Sis was bemoaning the fact that all her new internist did was listen to her heart, look in her ears, and check her throat. Frankly, I’m surprised she did that much. My last three docs (always changing docs because we’re always MOVING, go figure) reviewed my meds, checked my BP, and asked what drugs I needed refilled. End of story. Do you think my wife, who actually has some trouble, gets a closer look? Not really. They like to tap out her reflexes.
Notwithstanding the countless texts written in the 19th and 20th centuries predicated on the value of physical diagnosis (Zachary Cope’s Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen comes to mind, for one), one could make an argument that an internist’s job nowadays breaks down to algorithms crunching raw data: patient’s age? sex? family history? smoker y/n? drinker y/n? list of medications? and so forth. Turned fifty, let me send you for a colonoscopy. Eighteen months since your last mammogram, ooh, you’re overdue for another. Same goes for that pap smear. Not taking baby aspirin, well, take a baby aspirin.
I’m not an internist. I’m a surgeon. I practice physical examination and physical diagnosis with each and every patient I see. I’d be lost without my hands and eyes. Since I’m not an internist, you could argue I have no business criticizing them. And I don’t, and I’m not. What I want is to draw attention to the perception that internists are data crunchers who no longer practice the laying on of hands.
If we notice it, others will, too. Health care administrators, health insurance executives, health care policy wonks and politicians will notice. And what happens when these folks decide that the internist’s job can be replaced by a fairly unsophisticated computer program?
I do think that internists, most of them, bring a lot more to the exam table than would a computer program. I suspect they could argue very well for the necessity of their existence. But one thing I’ve learned in medicine these past 25 years: we doctors have little control over our own destinies. Bureaucrats have done a tidy job altering our professional lives to suit their fancies.
So doesn’t it seem logical that internists should strive to win the perception war before someone without an MD or DO after his name tries to debate them out of existence?