Friends of ours were heading through from upstate New York through to the Cleveland area. Erie, as it happens, is right on I90, and there are plenty of tasty places for a quick bite in such situations. So, we scooted up with Matthew and had a wonderful little lunch at George’s restaurant.

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Located right near the intersection of W26th and State, it has almost no parking to speak of. However, it was a respectable little diner, with friendly staff and tasty food. The patty melt, fish sandwich, and chicken and gravy were all sampled, and it was agreed that they did OK. For a place that looked a bit like a dive, it was priced right and very tasty.

Matthew, in case you were wondering, had the chicken gravy. His appetite has grown tremendously in the first two months of life. :D

Now, we are off to find milk, yogurt, and other tasty treats.

4:25 Wake up five minutes before alarm. Make coffee, continue work on infrastructure challenges facing VWRR course.

6:00 Put out call to France, download virtual machine containing complete build system for robotics platform.

7:50 Shower.

8:30 Get in car, drive to campus.

8:45 Spend 15 minutes reviewing materials for Intro.

9:00 Intro. Answer one question, mini-lecture takes 45 minutes.

10:00 Fight technology more. Same story as the last two weeks.

10:55 Head into class. Eat leftover Halloween candy.

11:00 Admit massive fail to students. Technology won. Goal: do cool stuff with computing. Offer alternatives.

11:20 Bring huge tub of LEGO robots into class. Situation apparently salvaged.

12:30 Eat lunch while talking with friend about pending laptop purchase.

13:00 Student with questions about pending PL course.

13:15 Begin work on letter.

14:00 Student with questions about research. Completely fail to print copies of key papers to give to student.

14:40 Overrun into next meeting. Soda, conversation with faculty mentor.

15:30 Continue working on letter.

16:00 Conversation with new sysadmin about backups.

16:40 Continue working on letter.

17:00 Print letter on letterhead for mailing tomorrow. No envelopes left.

17:20 Talk to choir director about missing rehearsal. Obtain 35MHz oscilloscope for testing and possible rehab.

17:45 Head home. Stop by Obama HQ to see how things are going.

17:55 Home. Eat leftovers. See wife unit.

18:00 Begin testing software for LEGO Mindstorms.

18:30 Fail. Put out call to England for possible help.

19:00 Continue to fail with software.

19:15 Confirm fail with England.

19:30 Head back to OHQ. Make calls, stuff envelopes… just do stuff.

23:00 Head home. Pet neighbors cat.

23:15 Time to sleep fast.

Patience is a virtue I do not have.

By this, I don’t mean the run-of-the-mill, “When will this line move?!” kind of patience. I have that. The Bureau of Motor Vehicles does not scare me. I can wait with the best of them in a queue. I mean I have no patience for the big stuff: personal excellence, career advancement, and the like.

About three weeks into graduate school, I was ready to be a full professor. I wasn’t, but that’s how I felt. Or, in hindsight, I now see that I was impatient to get on with things. Now, I’ve learned from my first year as a member of the faculty at Olin that patience can be a good thing—that I have a lot to learn. Nor does it mean that I’ve magically found patience.

Consider:

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On August 1st, the moving truck I rented was empty.

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On August 2nd, the ceiling in our kitchen looked like this, because of a leak from the shower upstairs. It was fixed that day. (The shower, not the ceiling. The ceiling is still on the “to do” list.)

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A week later, we enjoyed two relaxing days on Lake Cayuga with friends we had not seen in too long.

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We also enjoyed ice cream.

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On our way home, we spent an hour at the Corning Museum of Glass. I hope to go back, because one hour is nowhere near enough for this amazing museum.

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We’ve spent time discovering our new hometown. Admittedly, it was a less exciting place in the past. Today, however, we can walk downtown to find locally owned stores, and are particularly excited because we can buy fresh, local milk. In glass bottles. That you return and have refilled.

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Christian and I made and bottled our own beer while he was here. Admittedly, someone else took care of a lot of the process, but we’re finding that it gets better with every tasting. It was something I had never done before, and enjoyed the brewing and process a great deal.

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With fresh tomatoes in season, I made salsa. I’ve never done this before, and it was marvelous.

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I made a lot of salsa. It’s in the freezer now. I want a chest freezer, so in the future I can make more.

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Although Christian is our first house guest (and a long-staying one at that), we also hosted friends from Olin on their way from Chicago to Boston. The evening they were here, we went to the county fair, and had ice cream and deep fried Oreos.

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Christian and I have ported the Transterpreter to a new processor and robotics platform, and have learned quite a bit about a number of things along the way. A bit intense, but a good learning experience nevertheless. We can see a possible paper and future project directions based on our experiences.

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And we have weathered the ongoing attacks of our neighbor’s cats. Apparently, the cats had friends here, because they often come by, crying to be let in. So far, our defenses are holding.

That’s month one. I’ve just finished the first week of classes. Should I be surprised when a day doesn’t go exactly as planned, because a server died in the department? No. Should I be surprised if I don’t have a perfectly smooth semester? No. I have to constantly remind myself that the past three months (and, indeed, the past year) were very intense, and very busy, and now is the time to start taking some deep breaths, settling in, and finding a groove that doesn’t involve 80-hour work weeks. Or, as the case has probably been lately, 90+ hour weeks.

I still want to take over the world. And I want everything I do to be amazing (not perfect—they’re similar, but different—amazing has more of a shazam! factor). And I want everything to be amazing right now. I don’t think this, consciously, of course. I live it. It’s subconscious, and it takes effort to step back and realize that I’m doing a pretty kick-ass job (especially with the salsa and beer), and it’s going to take some time to settle into a new home, a new job, and a new pace of life.

/me watches the clock for a few seconds…

Nope. That didn’t help. I’m still impatient. ;)

Our mailman left us a note.

Photo 1

Awesome.