Joby Juice and Grape Vodka

08032017-06

-- चार हजार एक सौ चौंतीस --

I've got a lot to tell you about today! First: the .83 (pronounced "point eighty-three)" Jello Slip-n-Slide Bike Ride. I went on this ride with Claudia and Dylan last year, and although I considered going on some of this group's other monthly rides sometime, I never did. I joined them last year quite randomly, deciding to go when Claudia mentioned it on the day itself. This year, I made the decision almost as randomly; she told me about it on Wednesday that it was happening yesterday, and I was pretty sure I would go, but did not decide for sure until yesterday morning.

When it happened last year, I joined Claudia and Dylan for dinner at food trucks a block away from work, after work, before going directly over to Westlake Park with them afterward. That's where the ride launches from. That was before I had to stop my special arrangement of work hours where I worked an extra hour of work every day so I would not have to use vacation time for trips to Los Angeles, though, and I was still working until 5:00 then. I've been leaving work at 4:30 every day now since last fall. So yesterday, I rode home first, where Shobhit had an Asian noodle dish made for dinner.

I was home for about an hour, which was enough time to finish the episode of The Golden Girls we had stopped in order to watch Game of Thrones with Ivan the night before, and then another episode as well. Shobhit insisted I put on sunscreen, which I was planning on doing anyway. That sunscreen is annoying, though -- somewhat unsurprising since it was the cheapest one on the shelf. But the spf level is fine (30, I think) so we'll be using that until the two bottles we got the last time we used a Chinook Book coupon at Bartell Drugs are gone. They keep your skin ghost white for about ten or fifteen minutes, though. And my arms continued to have slight white flakiness on them for several hours. And even now my skin feels sort of strange -- oddly damp for a while, kind of dry now.

So I then rode my bike back downtown again, stopping first at the Meridian Theatre to get movie tickets to An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power, which Shobhit and I will be seeing there after work today. When I got to Westlake Park, to my surprise, Claudia was already there; very few others were. She said it was because she had to work a little late and didn't have time to go home first. Dylan was on his way.

Let's digress briefly to discuss distances. My bike ride from home to work in the morning was 2.5 miles. My route back home after work (taking different streets for nearly half of it because it's on a route with better bike lanes and less traffic at rush hour) is 2.6 miles. The route back takes nearly 10 minutes longer because that direction is probably 80% uphill. Anyway, the ride back down to Westlake Park from home was 1.2 miles. And from there, the route to Seward Park was 7.4 miles. Once it got dark the bike ride home was still another 45 minutes according to my Google Maps app, so I opted instead to ride to the Columbia City Light Rail Station, which was 2.4 miles. Getting home from Capitol Hill Station, then, was another .7 miles. So all the riding I did for the Slip-n-Slide Ride alone totaled 11.7 miles. Had I ridden all the way home from Seward Park, that total would have been 15.7 miles. But when you add in my commute to and from work earlier in the day, my total bike riding yesterday still amounted to 16.8 miles. So there! I still win!

I might have skipped the ride had my back been worse -- it has remained sore to varying degrees all week. I did not do pushups or planks yesterday, though, and I actually skipped any planks on Wednesday night that involved my right arm. These two things clearly helped, but I was still stretching my arm and back last night, which made Shobhit say yet again that maybe I shouldn't do the ride. He wasn't naggy about it, though, and I didn't want to miss this ride. I just hoped it wouldn't make my back worse. And, miracle of miracles, it didn't -- even after doing all my pushups and planks this morning, although I do have very slight stiffness still, it actually feels better today than it has all week. Maybe the ride last night actually helped it somehow? Who knows!

Back to the event itself. This is apparently something that involves a lot more at the Seward Park destination than just the ride itself, and maybe one day I'll actually take the day off and stay later to experience some of it. (Hmm, maybe I should mark my calendar for next year?) I do it just for the ride, which I love -- being in a crowd of cyclists so huge that traffic has no choice but to wait, regardless of traffic lights, is awesome. Both times I have gone, though, I've left to go home well before the part that the event is actually named after: they set up a huge slip-n-slide for (largely drunk) people to slide down, in one of the open grassy areas. There's a lot of drinking, and a fair amount of weed smoking, and I guess last year Claudia even saw a couple fucking in the woods. (Note: Seward Park is covered in old-growth forest, 120 acres of it, the largest area of old-growth trees in Seattle.) I hear they have people hanging out as long as until 5 in the morning. There's no way in hell I would ever stay that long.

There's also something they call "Joby Juice" -- I guess Joby is the guy who is kind of the de facto leader of these events, and he brings a bunch of this drink to be passed around, which is fruit punch and Everclear. A young lady just walked up to me with a plastic red cup full of it, three pieces of pineapple floating in it, and Claudia immediately said, "Pour half of that out." Instantly I remembered her saying exactly that to me last year. So, I poured half of it out. One of the pineapple pieces fell into the grass. I wanted the pineapple! I just picked it up and ate it, which made Claudia crack up.

She may have been kind of right, though. As high a tolerance as I have for alcohol, 1) I very rarely drink Everclear; and 2) just half that cup left me with the slightest, near-perfect buzz, and doubling that might have been slightly too much. Probably still not enough to get me smashed, but whatever. I was working today and did not need to get drunk. Maybe I will next year! I chatted with another young woman for a while whose name I can't remember (I do remember she told us she's 35, and that she sees two therapists, and when I asked why two, she said, "I have a lot of anxiety"), mostly about movies -- she even asked me for the name of my website, and this was the first time I experienced how much more practical, and easy to remember, it is to just say "fruitcakeenterprises.com" rather than saying it's on LiveJournal -- and she had both a cup of Joby Juice and a beer in her hands. She was visibly tipsy before too long.

A lot of people came in, or changed into, swimming suits. At least three guys rode down in nothing but shoes and shorts, two of them in very tight briefs -- I got a photo of one of them. The first one of them I noticed was when we were still waiting to leave from Westlake Park, a slightly chubby Asian guy who I'm pretty sure is the one Claudia told me is named Wang. I wanted to comment on how apropos that was, given how truly revealing the front of his briefs were, but decided against it. Someone tell me how racist it was to think that, on a scale of 1 to 10.

I wasn't in swim trunks, but I was in shorts that could have worked fine. If I were drunk enough, I might have actually done the slip-n-slide. Okay, probably not. It would have been unlikely even in a blackout, I'm guessing, but you never know! I did talk to a lot more people this year than I did last year. Claudia even commented on that and said she was proud of me. At one point, this middle-aged guy with gray hair walked up to me and introduced himself. Then he said, "You have piercing blue eyes." I can't remember what I said exactly but it was something along the lines of, "Yep." Claudia walked up to us and told him she works with me. And the guy turned to her and said, "Doesn't he have blue eyes?" Yes. Yes, we are both aware of this. I didn't actually say that. The guy really was nice enough.

I commented with someone else about how hard it is for me to remember names. Ironically, I'm pretty sure I said that to a blonde woman named Kate. The one guy whose name I'll never forget is the guy who told Kate his name was Sean, "with a dollar sign." I said, "You're like Ke$ha!" To make the description of his name explicit, he said, "Dollar-sign; 'on.'" I guess his name is $on, then. In print, that makes no sense. It just looks like what he literally said: "dollar-sign on." I suppose it could have been Shawn, technically. I'm sticking with Sean. In any case, his description made it impossible not to forget his name.

It seems I stayed a little bit further into the festivities this year than I did last year, because I saw more of it -- or the very beginning of it -- just as it was getting dark. Claudia and I walked over to take a peek at the area where they were setting up the slip-n-slide. At this point it was just people moving around what looked like paint buckets in the grass. Claudia cautioned not to get too close or they would enlist our help. It was while we were walking back that I learned Claudia serves on the Seattle Bike Advisory Board, which I think is awesome. Apparently she's the only mom (with an under-age child) on the board, which gives her a unique perspective on the board -- she's the only one who offers up scenarios like riding with your kids to the rest of the board, who, it kind of sounds like, make general assumptions that the only people using bike lanes in the city are high-skill cyclists riding around in Spandex.

I haven't worn Spandex since 1989, and back then it was because it was literally in fashion. I never wore them to ride bikes. I did love the fabric though. Regardless, wearing Spandex as a fashion statement is idiotic. Ah, the eighties . . .

It was right when Claudia and I reached the crowd again where most people were hanging out among the trees, and getting back to where Dylan was, that the now-dark area was suddenly lit up with flying glow sticks. People were just throwing them into the air and they were landing on the ground along the path and around people's feet. It was a pretty cool sight, actually. But, it was time for me to go. I Claudia gave me a hug, and so did Dylan: "Can I give you one of these?" he said, adorably. I have historically had a hard time coming up with things to talk about when he and I are left alone together but I did better than ever before this time, particularly when we were still at Westlake Park and Claudia had gone off to say hi to some people.

I had locked my bike to their two bikes, and now, moving boxes of crushed beer cans aside, I unlocked it and took my bike out to ride to the Columbia City Light Rail Station. This was my first time testing the new headlight on my helmet -- I learned long ago not to keep one on my bike; it just gets stolen -- and it made much more of a difference than I even thought it would. I felt way more comfortable riding at night with it. The only reason I didn't ride all the way home was that it was too far and would take too long and I was by then pretty tired of riding. Getting up the hills to the Light Rail station was challenging enough.

I chugged a good bit of water when I got home, and although I didn't take any Aleve, the water alone -- which I did not bring on the ride, contrary to Shobhit's recommendation -- seemed to make a genuine difference. I woke up feeling fine today, not in the least bit hung over. I can't speak for Claudia or Dylan; I'll have to ask her. When I get a chance I'll see if she can't tell me how the rest of the night went.

I did get a lot more pictures this year: 21, versus merely 7 I took last year. Now they get their own dedicated photo sets, and their own photo collection. Clicking either of the top or middle photos in this entry will take you to this year's full photo set. The bottom one, by contrast, will take you to all of my photos tagged with "pcc."

-- चार हजार एक सौ चौंतीस --

08032017-07

-- चार हजार एक सौ चौंतीस --

As you may have noticed if you saw what I posted this morning, today I celebrate 15 years at PCC. Technically the anniversary is tomorrow -- I never forget August 5, because it's also my dad's birthday -- but tomorrow is a Saturday. I should get my 15-year pin soon, and gifts (including the water bottle with a new design), soon. I don't know when, though. Kibby got hers just last week, and her anniversary was technically at the end of April. Also they surprised her, and it would be a lot harder to surprise me, as I am always hyper-aware of these milestones. So, I could be presented with this stuff this afternoon, or next week, or sometime in the near-ish future. I have no idea.

But these things have already happened:

Scott semi-regularly brings me a sweet-filled croissant from Le Panier at Pike Place Market, as a gesture of gratitude. He mentioned it yesterday, but said he wasn't sure how it would work getting me one today since he'd be driving in instead of busing; in the latter case he walks through the Market on his way to work from the downtown bus stop. I guess he parked somewhere to get it, though, and when I got to my desk this morning, there wasn't just one croissant. There was a box of a dozen raspberry croissants! I saw that and immediately exclaimed, "Jesus!" Scott was on the phone but when he hung up he suggested I could share them. Uh, you think?

When Darrell came in, Scott said I had a "points opportunity" to offer him one. Darrell was happy to take one. Noah didn't take one until I moved the box over to the Merchandising table in the pantry area, just to get them away from me after I ate two of them.

Scott also emailed all the POS and Grocery Coordinators at the stores to ask them to send me well-wishes for my 15th anniversary. Most of them did not include his original email so at first I was like, "How did you know??" But when Kibby sent me her email, it included Scott's in the thread so I could see what he sent:

Hey All;

If you could all remember to send Matthew a BIG “thank you” tomorrow, I would appreciate it.

Matthew will be celebrating his 15th anniversary with PCC….. Yahoo!

If you could add a picture of your favorite cat that would be super cool! Matthew loves his cats haha

Matthews’s main job is to keep me out of trouble :) After that, even if you don’t realize it, he keeps a lot of plates spinning in the air that otherwise would crash and make all our days pretty miserable.

Thanks for saying “Thanks”


I have long felt appreciated by countless people at work, but few express it more openly or frequently than Scott -- historically, I'd say the only person to rival him in this department was Jennifer, before she retired a couple of years ago. I mean, consider this: my work load yesterday got so low I literally had to ask him if he needed help with anything. "Are you bored?" he said. I can't remember exactly how he phrased it but when he said something about how I got to have so little to do I said, "Over time? Automation." He said, "Are you going to be replaced by a robot?" He then mentioned maybe Kevin had some new items to send me. I emailed Kevin, and within minutes Kevin came to my desk and said the exact same thing: "Are you bored?" Kevin did have a few new items for me to enter so that took up a little time. Otherwise I got to doing something that actually doesn't need to get done for another three weeks. And I did some clean-up in an area of the item maintenance program I work in that's really needed doing for some time. I guess after a while you have to start getting a little inventive. Anyway, I was getting to a point here, what was it? Oh: that even when I told Scott directly that I had very little to do, he didn't seem to give a shit, like at all. When I was working on Kevin's new items, Scott came by and jokingly said, "Type. Real. Slow."

So I've gotten several lovely emails, a lot of them with pretty great cat pictures or cat memes -- which I used to send in my regular POS "batch emails" that a few years ago were no longer necessary, again, because of IT automating the process.

Kibby's was arguably the best. I was so touched by what she said I literally got a little misty-eyed. She wrote, in part:

Thanks for all you do here at PCC – your spreadsheet wizardry, mad organizational skills and attention to detail, brilliance at multitasking, depth of knowledge, wicked sense of humor and well, the list could go on and on and on… PCC would not be the same without you Matthew.

It truly has been a pleasure working with you. You are an amazing individual!!!

Cheers to many more years!!!


I got a little misty-eyed again re-reading that just now.

Kibby and I have had our ups and downs over the years, to say the least -- more than anyone else I've worked with, with the possible exception of Stephanie, given that she once nearly fired me. I'm really happy Kibby and I are in a good and healthy place now -- which I honestly think is largely due to my conscious choice to be less of a dipshit than I have been in the past. It really proves that it rarely matters what has gone down with friends, you can come back from it.

-- चार हजार एक सौ चौंतीस --

Scott just took Noah and me out to lunch, for my 15th anniversary celebration. We went to Little Thai, the Thai place we used to go to fairly frequently in the U District when we worked at the old office, just for old time's sake. This was Scott's idea, after initially saying I could choose where we had lunch. But I loved this idea, even though traffic was kind of a shit show both ways. The new office location is wonderful while you're here, but especially in a car, coming and going to and from it can be a little bit of a challenge.

As it happened, this was where I got my anniversary gifts. Scott had a paper sack he was carrying with him, and I figured it was for me. Noah almost pointedly got in the back seat of Scott's car, putting me in the front, but it meant he was in the back with the bag. Because it was a PCC paper grocery bag, he asked Scott if he was delivering something to one of the stores. Scott was just like, "Nope."

But he gave me the bag once we were seated in the restaurant. It had the requisite gifts: the PCC Staff 15 Years Pin; the new water bottle; the gift card. That gave me three different options, all worth $300: a PCC gift card; a Visa gift card; a contribution to the charity of my choice. Sheeeit, fuck charity! Okay, not really -- but I already contribute monthly payments of $20 each to the ACLU and Planned Parenthood (in Mike Pence's name, in the latter case). I'm going for the Visa gift card. Shobhit will want me just to put it in savings, but this is a gift intended to get myself something special. I intend to do that, in one way or another. Even Scott said that's what I should do. I have no idea what, though. I'll have to do some brainstorming.

I had the pad thai with tofu. It probably had fish sauce in it. I didn't ask. Don't tell anyone! No one has better pad thai then they do. I love their pad thai. And here I avoid marshmallows and jellybeans because they has gelatin in them. I can be inconsistent sometimes, I'm only human! Leave me alone! I mean, maybe it didn't have fish sauce in it. You don't know!

Literally while I was writing the above two paragraphs, Jeff, the Beer and Wine Merchandiser, brought me his own gift: a 750 ml bottle of Glass Vodka, distilled from grapes. Nice! I had told him months ago I'd love to have the sample bottle of vodka -- of some other brand, I forget which -- I saw on the Merchandising table, and he even promised I could have it eventually, but was very cagey about when. I never did get it. But I have this one now! I wonder if vodka distilled from grapes tastes different? I intend to find out sooner than later. I guess I'll wait until after work at least.

For now I suppose I should find some actual work to do. I have more to get done today than I did yesterday.

-- चार हजार एक सौ चौंतीस --

07112017-01

15 Photos for 15 Years at PCC

08052002-01

August 5, 2002. My very first day working at PCC, Janice Parker took my photo, at my desk. With a Polaroid camera, no less! She was the one who took these photos of all the new hires at the office at the time. I still wore all-black a lot more frequently back then – when I was still 26 years old. I also wore nicer pants than jeans the first week, until I realized after observing everyone else that it wasn’t necessary at all. I’ve seen other new hires go through that same process through all of my years here. Every day is Casual Friday at PCC!


teeth

April 16, 2003. The first of two major historic, health-related markers in my life that year: Elin took this photo of me with her cell phone, on the day I got my braces – which I’d had on for two and a half years – removed. My teeth had been seriously crooked before this, and I paid out of pocket at the time because I had no insurance in 2000: it cost me $5000, and I always regarded it as the best five grand investment I ever made. It’s my Five Thousand Dollar Smile! Also my hair was a lot longer then.

This was taken in the office Elin shared for many years with Jeff – if I remember correctly, that was a really old photo of him taped to the door. I was sitting in a chair next to Elin at her desk when she took this photo.

The second major historic health-related marker in my life that year? When a passed out at work, hitting my head on a filing cabinet as I fell, and Jennifer insisted on taking me to the emergency room. I passed out again at the office in 2016. Good times!


steinysangels6

The vast majority of the people I worked with when I started in 2002 are no longer here, including Shauna (to the right in this photo), and Stephanie, for whom the above image was made. (Kibby, by contrast, also had her 15th work anniversary this year.) The photo itself was taken just after noon on the 4th of July, 2005, with the help of George Guy from Graphics, in the parking lot behind our two-story office building. I still have all 61 photos from that photo session, but the above shot is the only one that sufficiently served the purpose I was going for: a very “Charlie’s Angels” pose, wielding produce-like weapons.

“Steiny’s Angels” was what Stephanie Steiner used to call the three of us when we sat in three cubicles in a row just outside her office. I mocked up this design as a framed 8 x 10 poster and gave it to her as a gift for her birthday that year, which means she did not see it until the following November. I made a copy for myself, though, and have had that one hanging on my bedroom wall at home ever since. In fact, Shobhit knocked it off the wall and busted it so I had to buy a new frame for it just a couple of months ago.

Fun fact! I hated how far my belly was sticking out in this photo, and I edited it back to make myself look thinner.


12102005-06

December 10, 2005. Office Holiday Party, Seattle Aquarium. I used to have long hair – Marianne used to have short hair! I felt compelled to include her in this collection because she was my very first point of contact at PCC – I never would have even known about the open position if not for her. We used to sing together in the Seattle Lesbian and Gay Chorus; that’s where I met her. And when I lost my job at the Seattle Gay Standard due to it folding in late 2001, I emailed the chorus list to ask that anyone let me know of any job opportunities. Networking, people! Marianne later emailed me a link to the PCC web page about the job. I came in for a pre-interview with Rita; had a regular interview with Jennifer and Stephanie together; the rest is history. All three of those who interviewed me no longer work here, by the way – Rita and Stephanie have long since gotten other jobs and Jennifer retired in 2013.

When it was still 2002, incidentally, I took Marianne up on her offer to give me a tour of all the PCC stores, of which there were seven at the time. Even after 15 years, of those seven, I think the Kirkland store is the only one I’ve still only been to that one time. I’ve been to the View Ridge store at least twice. That tour would have even included the old Fremont store, which moved to its current location a block away in 2003. That old Fremont store was the only familiarity I had of PCC at all at the time. I used to go in there to buy veggie jerky – a brand called Vegi-Deli that I still miss but disappeared years ago.


12132006-03

December 13, 2006. It’s too bad the late, much loved and dearly departed Gary, Director of IT, is not in this photo, because it harkens back to my fondest memory of him. The Merchandising and IT departments had a pizza lunch together (you can see Jennifer, then-Director of Merchandising, in the background), part of which was to celebrate our finally being able to use a new sign printing program and move on from that much-maligned, constantly malfunctioning Zebra printer, from which we used to print our herb and spice jar labels. I long said I wanted to smash the thing, the way the guy in Office Space smashes his printer. Gary promised me he would bring his sledgehammer from home so I could do that – and then on the day, forgot about it. So what did he do? He went to Hardwick’s Hardware Store across the street from our office and bought a new one, just so I could smash this printer!

The above photo was totally posed, but we then went to the parking lot outside and I did use that sledgehammer to smash the printer to pieces. To this day I have its front panel on my desk as a trophy.

As for Gary, he can be seen, all smiles, in the mid-distance behind me and to my right in this photo.


09292008-01

September 29, 2008. Setting a precedent: a grateful broker sends me eight boxes of one of my all-time favorite products: Late July Organic Cheddar Cheese Sandwich Crackers. This kind of thing has now happened many times over the years by several different brokers, including but not limited to regular bags of chocolate bars, and even large boxes of frozen meals by the likes of Amy’s Kitchen or naan pizzas by Tandoor Chef. I even once got an Indian food-themed gift bag because the broker knew my husband is from India.


12222008-03

December 22, 2008. Exterior of the office building I worked in for almost fourteen years exactly – our last day in this godforsaken building (which had such poorly circulated air that I caught seven colds in my first 15 months) was Friday, July 29, 2016. The above shot was taken during the longest and most intense succession of snowstorms Seattle experienced in all the years I’ve lived here – something like four systems in the space of a week and a half, snow on the ground continuously for some ten days. For Seattle, that’s unheard of. But I went to work every day! I could walk, 3.4 miles there from home, so why not?

We’ve had one snow day since moving to the new office building, incidentally, and a much prettier photo of that can be seen here.


08212010-08

August 21, 2010. Healthy Living Fair at the Edmonds store, which I went to just because I’d never gone to one before. Ricardo took this picture of me while I was there, and I’ve always loved this shot. PCC celebrates all families! *Cue fruitcake.*


04202011-01

April 20, 2011. A gift from Jenny, who also happens to be Elin’s daughter, at the Kirkland store: bulk peanut Sundrops – the natural foods equivalent to peanut m&m’s – which I had complained to Elin were not carried at the Fremont store, which was my shopping store until Greenlake Village opened in 2014. Jenny then sent me this coffee bag filled with them in the courier from her store.

There’s a bit of backstory to the “flavor” and “bin number” she wrote on the bag. Jenny used to say “Sexy Hot Pants!” first thing every time she called me at the office. I cannot for the life of me recall how that started. And then, when I asked to get my extension changed from 142 because people in the office kept accidentally paging me due to forgetting to press “outgoing” before dialing 1+425 for 425 area code phone numbers, IT changed my extension to 187. Jenny told me that was the police code for murder, so from then on every time she called me she would start by saying, “Murrrrderrr!” (Now that we use Internet-based phones at the new office location, we no longer have extensions at all but dedicated full phone numbers. No more 187s for me.)


08072012JaniceCamera-10

August 7, 2012. Ten years later: another photo taken by Janice! Here in between Elin and Scott, for my 10th anniversary celebration. (August 5 fell on a Sunday, and I didn’t work Monday the 6th because my niece was visiting.) They brought me a cake, Congratulations Matthew, 10 Years at PCC was written on it; I got the requisite anniversary pin and anniversary mug; and was even gifted a case of a new flavor of Zevia Soda I was very excited about (strawberry, which in the long run actually proved not to be one of their best).


06112013-04

June 11, 2013. PCC wedding party for Shobhit and me, three days before we finally got for-real, legally married – on the 9th anniversary of our first date. Sara Walsh took this shot of us from the opposite end of the table. Jennifer had asked me what we’d like PCC to get us as a gift, and I was like, “We don’t need any gifts. But a new set of pots and pans would be nice!” So that’s what we got! And we still use them regularly, for the record.


08022014-01

August 2, 2014. The Edmonds store is one I’ve been to several times just due to its proximity to the Edmonds-Kingston ferry, which I take every so often. Here I stopped with Shauna, who worked with me at PCC between 2002 and 2008 (when she was replaced by Jared) and then drove me to go grocery shopping every two weeks between 2011 and 2016 while Shobhit lived in Los Angeles, to get lunch before heading for a day trip to Port Townsend. In my hands, what was once my favorite item in all PCC Delis: Smoked Mozzarella Pasta. Not anymore! Someone decided the cheese should be shredded and not cubed anymore and it just isn’t the same. That’s it, I’m shopping at Whole Foods! Someone tell the PCC Deli to get their shit together.


05112015-01

May 11, 2015. My fourth and final desk at the old office, which I was moved to in March 2013 and worked at until we moved offices 16 months later: what literally was once a supply closet full of filing cabinets, now cram packed with three desks. I loved telling people I had to work in a closet, but it had its benefits: it was much quieter back in that corner of the building -- which I took to calling Narnia -- and the Accounting department was just outside the door to the room, where they often had goodies set out. (Not that it’s hard to get goodies from all corners of this place.) Also, my desk now has a line of sight to the water of Puget Sound, and it was totally worth the wait.


08042016-01

August 4, 2016. Fourth day at the new office, on the waterfront. Gathering on the patio, then not yet furnished, to observe the practicing Blue Angels. This spot quickly proved to yield many great photo opportunities.


01012017-04

January 1, 2017. Cause for celebration! This is the view of the Space Needle from our new office location, which means it’s where I intend to be every New Year’s Eve until . . . indefinitely. I was amazed no one else from the office came for this, although to be fair few other people live as close as I do (now two miles from the office). My parents came up from Olympia, and my friend Danielle joined Shobhit and me to view the fireworks show from here, for the first time observable from a dry and warm indoor location. Something tells me some more PCC employees might come for this in years to come.

. . . I went through the office staff list a couple of weeks ago, and only about a third of the people currently working in the office were here when I started! Who wants to place bets on whether I outlast the lot of you?



[Archive of older entries tagged "pcc" on LiveJournal]