The new Muppet Christmas special is on tomorrow!
Xander ,'Same Time, Same Place'
Goodbye and Good Riddance 2008: "...and the horse you rode in on."
Every year we watch the Charlie Brown special, do the Snoopy dance, wish everybody a Merry Christmukkah, and thank our Secret Santas in the good riddance thread. Which is this one, in case you were wondering. Oh, and 2008? Don't think we've forgotten about you.
So I got home this evening, and there was an unexpected box from Amazon waiting for me.
Inside: A wrapped present!
Thank you, Austin! I had forgotten about that, and I just turned it on!
...And my Secret Santa is Barb! I got a Time-Life picture book, Strange but True: The World's Weirdest Wonders.
Thanks, Barb!
I got a wonderful box of soaps from my secret santa! THANKS! They smell fantastic. What a lovely gift particularly because it supports Serrv. Super fab. Thank you.
...And my Secret Santa is Barb! I got a Time-Life picture book, Strange but True: The World's Weirdest Wonders.
::looks sheepish::
Amazon wouldn't let me send anonymously, darn them. And I'm HORRIBLE about getting to post offices. I guess I sort of suck at the Secret part of the Santaing. Ah well, the intent was definitely there and lesson learned. Next time I get my lazy ass to the post office.
The secret part is pretty optional.
And my Secret Santa is Barb! I got a Time-Life picture book, Strange but True: The World's Weirdest Wonders.
Ooh, that sounds like good Secret Santa.
I have no secret santa. I do, however, have a Wallybee, and an early Christmas pressie courtesy thereof. It's Life: The Science of Biology (http://www.amazon.com/Life-Science-Biology-David-Sadava/dp/0716799014/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229484564&sr=1-1). It's all Hec's fault! A few weeks ago he asked what uni course people would want to do, just for themselves. Got me to thinking, I love the weird and wonderful (and the Wallybee), but it's really about time I had some more rigour in my biology knowledge. Time I got beyond the popularisations and into a genuine biology textbook.
So, I do some careful research via the Uni of Melbourne and the accumulated resources of the interwebs, and a trip to the Melbourne uni bookshop for final confirmation of the book's credentials (it has a picture of an echidna). Wallybee then buys this magnificent 1,100 page tome for me. (She has since told people that in the Uni bookshop, I was like a mouse in a rice sack. I find that rather charming.)
Oh, also on the list, and unearthed by the same process: How Children Develop. [link] We're going to have one of our own shortly, after all. Won't it be awesome to watch him develop a sense of time and self and a bunch of other conceptual tools? (I think developing a sense of echidnas is a little more haphazard.)
But I digress. I now have this biology textbook, and the fun part about all this is that there is so much cool in living creatures, and I generally find that it just gets cooler, the deeper you go. Like, scientists get all excited about finding evidence of water on Mars, and that makes life possible there. And I think fair enough, but why is water so important here. I mean, obviously yes on Earth, life on this planet all needs water, but might not another hypothetical planet have another abundant molecule that can perform a similar role? And Chapter 2 gies some detail on what makes water so special, and it's really quite cool.
Now I'm in Chapter 3, the macromolecules (proteins, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids). 2008 is giving me proteins! I shall note here that Wallybee's father is a lecturer in biochemistry. She hasn't yet told them what I wanted for Christmas. Anyway, I am rapidly forming the impression that macromolecules are awesome.
I probably have the timing all backwards, I'm pretty sure that even third-year Biology students aren't supposed to be creating life, but we play the hand we're dealt, am I right?
ETA: Oh, and I get post 33! That's my user number. So that's nice.
I love whenever any of us goes off on a geektastic bent, no matter the topic, that all I can do is sit back and think, "¡mi gente!"
It's such a relief to let the geek hang out. Not that I'm that good at restraining it, but still... you get what I mean.
Hee. My brother was just finishing child development in psych when his first was born. He was a boon of info on why babies are so damned cute and helpless evolutionarily speaking. His own experiment! He hasn't stopped since. He'll happily tell you why the second is so damned pushy in evolutionary terms. Even as he squawks over the second's squawkiness.