How much do you like yourself? 

Let's make a poll of it. 

Please leave me a comment about what you answered and why. 

Me, I wavered before answering. On the one hand, I was tempted to say 8, because I love that I'm kind, and I'm proud of my accomplishments. 

It's that very pride though that made me want to pick 3, because I know I can be an attention whore, love the spotlight, too. So I averaged them, which came out to 6, and then laughing, gave myself another point, for accepting my own human foibles.  

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
CategoriesDaily Think
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When I was about 7 years old my Aunt L. taught me to play scrabble - by beating me at it, soundly. 

Now I know how that must sound. But you have to understand that I'm a wordy person from a family of wordy people.  My grandmother was able to do the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle in pen in under two hours.  My father, who used to be a history teacher, once helped me out of a jam by writing me a term paper on the birth of the American navy, and then reverse engineering the outline, note cards, and bibliography more or less on the fly.  We were all readers, big time.

My aunt is among other things an interior designer, a furniture designer, something of an architect, and has a LOT of specialized vocabulary.

Additionally she has a sense of physical space that grants her some special advantages. She can pack a car like no one else I've ever met, and pattern based games like hi-Q are a snap for her.  It also gives her this completely infuriating ability in scrabble to play 2-3 turns ahead of herself, and make plays that make many words at the same time. 

My aunt had learned scrabble from my grandmother and they used to play all the time.  I wanted in.  

So she showed me the basics, and we played "open rack", and she helped me out. But, she still beat me by about 200 points.  

I was hooked and immediately wanted to play her again. Did I mention I'm a masochist? 

Over the next 13 years we must have played thousands of games. I'm sure I tied with her dozens of them, and came within just a few points of outright winning often.  

Do you know how many of those games I actually won? 

Zero.  

I did mention I'm a masochist, right?

Everything changed when I went to college. I got involved with a local scrabble club in Baltimore, and they taught me competitive, tournament scrabble. I learned all the 2 letter words you can play in scrabble, got myself a copy of Everything Scrabble, and learned what Tim, the club leader called his "Jedi mind tricks".  These were ways to maximize your own efficiency, while mentally dominating and intimidating your opponent. 

They work.  

I went to visit my aunt a few months later, and was I ever ready for a god damn game of scrabble. 

I trounced her. It was a slaughter. Then I did it again.  

Did I mention I'm also a sadist? 

My aunt was thrilled. That weekend we played a lot of scrabble. I won about half the time.  

Since then, that pattern has held true. I win about half the time. 

We each have our own specialized vocabulary. She's got her spatial skills.  I have really good anagraming ones.  

I love my aunt.  My family has been through some really terrible stuff, things which most people wouldn't even believe, they're so terrible.  Throughout it all, my aunt has been there for me. She's a rock in my life.  We are really, really good to each other, in every avenue of our lives.

Except one.

In scrabble, we are total jerks to each other.

Every single time we play, it's a bloodbath. We have a shared style of play I call "Completely fuck over the other guy."

We're so aggressive when we play that many of my friends refuse to play with me, because they find it frustrating.  My friend J once angrily tossed our board aside as we played at the beach, out of frustration.  He's also a peace loving proto-Buddhist pacifist, who almost never raises his voice.  

I taught my stepson this same style of playing scrabble, and once praised him for making another boy actually cry because he beat him so soundly. 

Now that the internet and smart phones have made it possible, my aunt and I are usually in two to three games with each other all the time. And in each one, we always go for the throat.

Because we love each other. 

I'm so grateful for my aunt and this lifelong rivalry we share. It brings us close, keeps us sharp, and gives me joy.  

Now if you'll excuse me, it's my turn.  

 

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Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

I'm generally a cheery, upbeat person, and kind of chatty. 

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Ok, if talking were water, I'd be the Ocean. 

One thing I do a lot is smile at people I don't know. If it's a man, often it's a smile and a nod. I don't know why we men seem to always do that.  

Anyhow, more often than not the person I smile at will smile in return. Often it leads to a polite little conversation.  

I LOVE that. I'm fascinated by the idea that I can briefly meet a complete stranger, have a meaningful interaction with them, and then never see them again. The patterns people move in are complex and beautiful.  

I'm grateful that when I smile at those unknown to me, they tend to return the favor.  

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

My friend RS often calls his wife K, "Goldilocks", and she in turn calls him her "Bear".  Yes, that's adorable. 

They're lovely people.  They're sweet, fun, very giving age players too, who generously and tirelessly do a lot in the local scene.   

They also have done a lot for me, personally.  I'm very grateful to have them in my life.   

Case in point, this diagram.  

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That's a piece of a network diagram RS drew for me of the way he was about to improve my home network. 

We just moved into a new place, which is lovely in many ways, but  its home network isn't one of them. When I had FiOS installed it left several dead-or-slow spots in the house. 

Yesterday RS came over and a few short hours of furniture-moving, wall-jack-port updating, switch installing, and new wireless-access-point-installing later, made my home network fast like it should be. 

I'm grateful for my very technical and very generous friend.  Thanks RS! 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

Yesterday was the DC Littles Munch, and it was fantastic.  I hadn't been in 2 months because of life and stuff and things, and was very excited to see folks.

Lots of new folks came, which was awesome, as well as people I hadn't seen in a very long while, including S, who I had met back at the very first FetFest, and his girl, L, who was new to me.  

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She made these amazing Malificent cupcakes.  

I'm not kidding when I say that it was probably the single best cupcake I've ever had in my entire life.  Part of what made it good was its unique texture, which was firm, caky, and had, as I joked to them, "a unique mouthfeel".

There were other folks there who were brand new, and who I really enjoyed meeting, and old friends I hadn't seen in a very long time.  It made for a beautiful day.

That cupcake really stuck with me though.  

I've had other cupcakes before. They were lovely.  Later that day I even had a different one.  It was very nice.  It wasn't as good as that one.  I love that at any moment I can have an experience which trumps all my previous ones.  To date, that was the best cupcake I've ever had. There's no guarantee that it will not be supplanted by some future as-yet-uneaten-cupcake.

That's fantastic.  And it's not just about cupcakes.  Changes in friendships, new experiences, are all potentially delicious experiences.  I'm grateful for them.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude