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Monday
Jan262015

Happy birthday (to me)

I love my birthday. The date, I mean. When I was younger this wasn't always the case, but since my main frustration was that I had to contend with first semester finals every year instead of celebrating with friends, I've pretty much gotten over it. In fact, I've found that looking forward to my birthday has helped annually with post-Christmas ennui.

This year my family spoiled me with more than a week of special treatment: date nights, alone time, favorite meals, special gifts. I felt surrounded by love and admiration.

Date night my way: Calvin with my parents for the night, Jon and I hit the town for a book store crawl. We hit every book store within cold weather walking distance, then picked up pizza to eat at home on the couch, in pajamas, with a fire and a movie. (books: Sylvia Plath's Collected Poems; Wide Sargasso Sea; Alison Bechdel's graphic memoirs Fun Home and Are You My Mother; and Northern Lights, the original British printing of Pullman's Golden Compass). 

I cooked only a handful of times all week, and Jon even made our lunches before he went to work. I got flowers and I spent an afternoon shopping with my mother. The night before my birthday the three of us went to our favorite local dinner spot. My actual birthday we spent at the NAIAS, followed by another favorite dinner.

I feel appreciated, visible, loved, and, I guess, a year older.

photo by Calvin

Sunday
Jan252015

NAIAS 2015

The North American International Auto Show is a tradition for Detroit, and for our family. It descends upon Cobo Hall every January, crowding my birthday for attention and forcing car buffs, auto enthusiasts, and vaguely interested drivers in southeast Michigan to take to snowy roads for a day of fiber glass, metal, and models. Actually, in recent years the human models of the slimly dressed variety have become rarer, and so have the other elaborate displays and presentations. Now it's mainly the cars speaking for themselves, and a few modern catches. This year they printed a car on a 3D printer. Chairs, too, which we got to sit in.

New this year: pictures from Calvin, too.

by Calvin

Jon matched his surroundings pretty well

a printed car

a purple car

this one looked like a dog

by Calvin

this one looked like a rabbit

this was a scary look at the future

this one, too...a driverless car

by Calvin

Thursday
Jan222015

Week 3 in pictures

A note or two about our Capture Your 365 project. First, it will become increasing obvious that we are using the daily prompts only as suggestions. It would be quite a stretch to make this week's photos match up, although I'm sure I could come up with some rather fanciful explanations. Second, sometimes we miss a day and make it up the next...or the next. In any case, there are usually plenty of pictures to go around, but if it looks like we've been wearing the same clothes for a day or three in a row, that's probably (note I said probably) not actually true.

Jan 15: First taste
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 16: A snowflake
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 17: Powdery
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 18: Balance
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 19: Space
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 20: Trio
by Cortney

by Calvin

Plus...in the making:

 

Jan 21: Meal or play?
by Cortney

by Calvin

Friday
Jan162015

2015, week 2, in pictures

Our fun with photography continued...

Jan 8: My gear
by Cortney

by Calvin

Jan 9: Multifaceted
by Calvin

Jan 10: Habit
by Cortney

Jan 11: White
by Cortney

by Calvin

Jan 12: Frost
by Cortney

by Calvin

Jan 13: A pop of color
by Cortney

by Calvin

Jan 14: Be positive
by Calvin

Wednesday
Jan142015

Heating things up with science

From Brownian Motion to boiling points. After discussing Brownian Motion we explored the link between the measurement of temperature and the rate of atomic motion on the invisible scale. Today we demonstrated the nature of the second law of Thermodynamics, and charted the rate of temperature increase over time in water. We heated crushed ice over the stove, measuring its temperature every minute until well past the boiling point. It was fun for Calvin, but a true letdown for the dog, who was hoping we were cooking something delicious and would drop a morsel or two.