Friday, December 24, 2004

Christmas Eve in Norman----- still Friday

My roommate Charley and I played music for a service at his church earlier this evening. His guitar-picking and my cello-bowing (and occasional plucking) were a big hit. And I realised that it's been almost two and a half years since I last played in front of people. Practicing at home with other people within earshot doesn't count. Nor do lessons, where Kyle was apt to stop me at any moment to critique my phrasing or my posture. Two and a half years is a long time to go without an audience. I've really missed it.
It's also been at least six or seven months since I was last in church. I don't think I've missed that.

Charley has gone to pick up his kids from their grandparents' house, and Mark should be home soon from his gig at one of the state prisons (we're such a musical household), and then we're all going to sing and play Christmas carols and bake cookies for Santa... until the kids go to bed, which is when Charley and Mark both go into frantic-parent, Santa-still-has-a-lot-of-wrapping-to-do mode and when I get to start packing. (To my parents when you read this: Don't worry. I'm always ready somehow.) But there are also possibilities of Jaegermeister, hot chocolate with butterscotch schnapps, and a plummy merlot, so it won't be all work.

packing to move AGAIN----- Friday 24 December

Procrastination is an art not appreciated by many, including my parents. I, however, try to use this finely honed skill of mine whenever possible. And moving provides such wonderful vistas (vistae?) of opportunities.

Monday, December 20, 2004

Monday 20 December

All the thoughts in my head pile up and then the thought of posting is too overwhelming, so one or two days snowballs into nearly two weeks. Finals are over, my last day at the clinic is Wednesday, and I'm making preparations to move out of here. I'll come back to this later.

Tuesday, December 07, 2004

ARGH ----- 7 December 2004

OU computer labs are a wonderful thing.
I'm sitting here, sweating slightly from the warmth generated by 46 computers (plus various copiers and printers) and at least as many bodies, unable to complete my stats lab homework because the license for the program I need to use has expired. Oh. Wait. A computer behind that was able to access the program has just opened up. More later.

Sunday, December 05, 2004

Sunday 5 December

It's a gorgeously damp, grey Sunday in Norman, and I'm enjoying lazing around the house, doing whatever strikes my fancy, alternately cleaning my room, playing piano, reading Middlemarch, starting some laundry, cooking lunch, replying to emails.... Theoretically, I should probably be studying for finals, but in my personal reality the semester is essentially already over, and, as I told someone, I'm now merely spinning my wheels as I wait for the rest of the university to catch up with me. I do plan on taking my exams; I'm just not overly concerned about them [understatement].

Charley left the television on when he left for work, and the noise pollution of a commercial break is drifting up the stairs to my room, but I don't at the moment have the gumption to go turn it off. It's that sort of day. Next on the agenda (once I've finished this post) is probably a nap, and then I might peruse some Arabic later. I'm told there'll be a good South Park episode on tonight, and I'm contemplating munching on some of the peppermint Chex mix I made for Dead Heretics last night. Yup. That's about it. A good day, no?

Saturday, November 20, 2004

stalling ---- Saturday 20 November

I'm supposed to be writing my paper for developmental psych right now: 5-6 pages on what makes a successful marriage, comparing research published in peer-reviewed psychology journals with tips in popular magazines like Cosmopolitan. All in 5-6 pages. I couldn't even begin to define "successful marriage" in 5-6 pages. I think the very scope of the topic is delaying the start of writing. I've done my research. Just... have... to start... writing....

I'm developing a fondness for bad horror films. Last night a friend and I watched Christine, an entertainingly ineffectual horror flick about a haunted car-- based on a Stephen King novel. It was almost as good (in a bad way) as Prom Night 2, which we watched over Halloween. I can't handle watching horror movies that are actually frightening, but movies whose very attempts to scare end up being merely amusing are rapidly gaining my affection.

I'm still stalling. And now I'm making myself stop.

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

proverbs back in action ---- still Tuesday

I've corrected the source coding for the Greek and English proverbs (see box to the left). In the next few days I'll try to remember to post some links to helpful pages for you poor blokes who still can't see the Greek.

countdown again ---- Tuesday 16 November

It's that time of the semester-- when suddenly the remaining classes, labs, assignments, etc. begin to be countable on only one hand. Tonight was my next-to-the-last torturous lab in my Stats for Idiots-- whoops, I mean psych majors-- class. (Was that too harsh? I may edit that out at some point in the future when I'm less irked by the utter uselessness of this entire course.) Of course, now this countdown has extra significance, since the end of the semester is all that I'm waiting for before I shake the Norman dust off my feet (again) and move to Houston. If I didn't have classes, I'd already have given my two-weeks' at work and would be ready to leave over Thanksgiving. I'm not usually one to hang on once the decision has been made. Now I have to make a persistent and conscious effort to remember that I am in fact still here and and that I am actually still enrolled in these pre-physical therapy courses that need to be completed. Mentally, however, I'm already gone.

My friend Randy has convinced me (no, it didn't take much arm-twisting; sometimes I am fairly agreeable to suggestions) to activate the site feed for my blog, so here's the link for that: http://sar5ah.blogspot.com/atom.xml. If you have no clue what I might be talking about, don't worry-- I'm not sure I know. But here's Randy's explanation: http://www.randyhoyt.net/posts/2004/05/what.is.syndication/. I'm slowly attempting this myself. Tonight when I downloaded and installed the Wildgrape NewsDesk, however, it was unable to read either Randy's blog feed or mine. So at the moment I can't recommend Wildgrape, though it's almost certainly a problem on my end. Point to take from all of this: don't ask me for help with setting up your news aggregator.

Sunday, November 14, 2004

spinning off in a new (yet very familiar) direction ---- 14 November 2004

From 13 August to 14 November----- three months is quite a stretch, especially in my life, in which a span of a mere four days can result in drastic alterations in my school plans, my living arrangements, and my general ideas about my future.

Because yes, I have changed my major again. Or whatever such a deed might be called at this point. No more physical therapy-- and I certainly feel no regrets about that (though it was nice to think I would in the future be surrounded by people who knew how to help with my various aches and pains). If what I love is the study of languages-- any language, all languages, anything to do with languages-- and if [maybe this deserves an eiper (Romanization pending getting that into a Greek font)] I could actually make some sort of a living by engaging that love full-time, why wouldn't I do that?
Note that I did say "the study of languages", not "the study of language". So I'm leaning more in an anthropological rather than a pure linguistic direction, so that I can indulge in all things glorious about many different languages and dialects and cultural and environmental influences and effects on culture and environment and perception and the interplay and transmission of interacting languages and cultures and.... I know, I know-- perhaps at some point I'll have to narrow that down a little bit. But I hope not.

So, with my parents' blessing, as soon as this semester ends I'm moving to Houston to save some money and figure out what the next step might be-- and to immerse myself ever more in whatever about languages I can find. And Houston, whatever its other faults, will provide many opportunities for diverse language exposure. It's all in how motivated I am to find those opportunities.

So that's my current craziness. I need to be writing about sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation of the heart and about antiobiotic abuse (two different assignments)-- because, whatever my excitement about my new direction, the semester is not yet finished, and there are papers to be written and exams to be taken and textbooks to be read and pigs to be dissected. So now I'm going to try to finish some of that.

Friday, August 13, 2004

quick like a bunny --- Friday 13 August

I don't have more than a moment before I go swim, so this is mostly just a post to check in and reassure any readers that I am in fact still alive and connected to the internet. Also, in the box to the left-- the source for the daily proverbs has been moved, and as soon as I have time I'll put the new javascripts in so the proverbs reappear. I know you were all very concerned about that.

Monday, August 02, 2004

sweating in Houston ------ Monday 2 August

I hadn't intended it to be so long till my next post, but my week kept getting busier and busier. That's finished now-- in a big way, since Friday was (el-hamd-il-allah) my last day at my job in Admissions. That afternoon when I left the office I checked my cell phone and found a message from the physical therapy clinic asking if I was still interested in working there. (If?) I start there on Thursday morning. I'm in Houston right now and will be leaving Wednesday morning to be back for photography class that evening. My much-anticipated vacation is turning out to be quite a bit shorter than expected, but since starting work on Thursday means that I'll be paid for two more weeks than I had originally planned, I'm coping admirably well with the change.

Today was my lazy day here. Saturday night, after driving down from Norman, that morning and afternoon, I went to a friend's personal shower (she's getting married in September) and then also spent Sunday with some of the girls. In the afternoon we went to Kemah, which is a tourist-trap-type harbour area in southwest Houston, and I'm planning on leaving here early tomorrow morning to go back there (and possibly all the way down to Galveston Island) to take pictures-- probably more of the marina and such than of the tourists, given that I'll almost certainly beat the crowds. Sunday I didn't have the telephoto zoom lens I needed to get good shots of the boats in the harbour. By the time I've finished that, gone to pick my mother up from class and had lunch with her, located and purchased some suitable frames for a few of my photographs, it will time to figure out plans for the evening-- and then go to bed at a fairly early hour (i.e., by midnight) so that I can get up and drive back to Norman the next day... to start up my new routine there. And start getting ready to move.
Why does time off always end up being at least as busy as the daily grind of work?

Tuesday, July 27, 2004

apolitical still? ---- Tuesday 27 July

Last night I was feeling a trifle under the weather, so I ended up spending the evening on the couch, crocheting while I watched the first night of the Democratic National Convention. I wouldn't generally regard this as the best way to educate myself (at least in an efficient and unbiased-- if such a thing exists-- manner) for the upcoming presidential election, but I was flipping channels and caught a blip of Al Gore cracking a joke. I was intrigued. So I left the TV on PBS and began to listen.

I found the whole thing a rather disturbing experience. Yesterday at lunch I was reading about vegetarianism (veganism, at that) and actually considering it as a sensible lifestyle. Not that I don't enjoy foods often considered "vegetarian", but trust me-- I relish my meat. And then last night there I was finding myself agreeing with the Democratic party-- with Bill Clinton------- I was raised (whether or not anyone intended this) to be so against these things that I never even considered them options. At all. It has always been a part of my worldview that the Republican party and its leaders stand in the right (no pun intended) on any issue. (Though it is a measure of how far I've already come that to admit that frightens me. A lot.) That vegetarians are tree-hugging liberals threatening to destroy some un-named but incalculably precious element of the American way of life-- which is, of course, The Right Way of Life. I was so indoctrinated into this ideology that, changed though I thought my worldview had become, my gut reaction to many of these terms and names-- "liberal", "Bill Clinton", "Democrat", "left-wing", etc.-- is still one of unthinking self-righteous disgust. I am disturbed by this. (And rightly so, I know many of you are thinking as you read this.)

The crisis I suddenly faced last night was not so much whether I would consider myself Democrat or Republican, but rather the unsettling feeling of having my more recent convictional tendencies conflict so strongly with "beliefs" so deeply laid they seem nearly instinctive. Caught in the middle.

But I also look back at the past few years and am astounded by what I have been living through. The first presidential election in which I could vote was 2000, Bush vs. Gore, and I chose to abstain from voting, still convinced then that Gore was a "complete scumbag" but at the same time not entirely sure I was willing to vote actively for George W. I was 21 years old, struggling against and through Southern Baptistdom and a fairly typical Oklahoma-Buckle-of-the-Bible-Belt upbringing. Less than a year later, during my final semester of undergrad, the Twin Towers fell and the world changed. The country changed. The first anniversary of 9/11 found me living in Egypt-- where I was still living when the war in Iraq began the following spring. A bus accident and resulting nasty injury moved me back to the U.S. only a few days after Bush declared an (overly optimistic) end to major military conflict, and after a few months I found an office job (which did not require my college degree) and joined the ranks of working-class Americans muddling through poor health care-- a service which I sorely needed as I continued to recover from my shoulder injury. Several months later I decided to return to school to pursue a career in physical therapy, greatly influenced by own various trials and successes in rehabilitation. And here I am, just now beginning to see how profoundly these past four years have affected me-- and hopefully changed me. My life does not run in the same temporal cycles as the national government, but listening to Gore, Carter, and the Clintons speak last night highlighted this past presidential term for me. The confusion I, like so many others, felt following the 9/11 attacks as the U.S. government began its "crusade" against terrorists and "evil-doers" and then a year or so later sallied forth with its policy of pre-emptive war. The unforgettable experience of being an American living in the Middle East, living with the constant questions from my Arab friends and with the possibility of evacuation looming every day. A loss of faith and a subsequent onslaught of questions I had never before been allowed to think or ask.

I don't have a resolution for this rather long post. Just a lot of questions. Thoughts. Things to continue pondering.

Thursday, July 22, 2004

things that go sting in the night-- still Thursday

Last night my roommate Amy found our first scorpions of the summer. We'd been warned by the homeowners that they were around and sometimes found their way indoors, but so far we'd seen nothing but the usual spiders, june bugs, ants, sowbugs, and other miscellaneous, mostly harmless members of the creepy-crawley world. Scorpions, however, even to me, are an entirely different matter. The first one we saw last night was scuttling around on the back patio, and then within a few minutes Amy had discovered another one on the rug in the foyer. That one I smashed with a shoe-- scorpions are a bit messier than your average arachnid, I've now learned-- but I refused to bother the one outside, though Amy shrieked at me to kill it too. (It still lives, unless something higher on the food chain has eaten it since-- she was too jumpy to go dispatch it herself.) I twitched occasionally as I lay in bed reading, partially convinced that some eight-legged, barbed-tail beastie was crawling up my leg, but nothing was ever there.
Still, given the biting ants we've had visiting us over the past few days, it seems that we're going to have to find more effective means of preventing further invasions. I'd hate to have to give up walking around barefoot.

I'm munching on dry roasted peanuts and listening to "Free Bird" as I write this. Trying not to count the hours I have left at this desk. Contemplating plans for this weekend. Wondering if I have time to go to the grocery store tonight. In short, avoiding starting this next pile of applications.

wasting time?-- Thursday 22 July

Time is a gift, given to you, given to give you the time you need, the time you need to have the time of your life.
--Tock,
The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norton Juster

I do waste time. At least sometimes. But then I also often think that the times when I (or, more likely, others) say that I'm wasting time are perhaps, to me, the most non-wasteful times I spend. I don't consider blogging or reading or sleeping (within reason) or relaxing or thinking or any of a hundred other of my regular activities (I've left most of the nerdier ones, like studying languages, off the above list; I'll try to spare you as much as possible) a waste of time. What I do consider a waste of time is spending 8 hours a day sitting in front of a computer screen at a desk in a cubicle doing mostly-mindless data entry and evaluation of transcripts and test scores. Really, I suppose this activity is not a waste of time in that every month I receive a paycheck in compensation of all the time I've spent being mind-numbingly, stultifyingly bored during those four or so weeks, but that's small (though unfortunately necessary) justification for subjecting myself to this. This, I believe, is a waste of my time, a waste of what I've learned and done before this, a waste of all the potentialities within me. Which is why I'm quitting and going back to school in preparation to do something else-- something that I do believe is more worthwhile. And hopefully more challenging.

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

Knowing that at least a few people are actually reading my blog again makes me feel slightly bad about the Arabic dates. I know I would want to know the date of a post I'm reading. Wrapped up in my own happy world of blogging, I have a tendency to forget how incomprehensible these date headers must be to nearly everyone else. So I'll try to remember to include the date-- in English-- in the post itself. Perhaps I'll activate the Post Title option and use that. Either way, today is Wednesday, 21 July 2004. Happy reading.

Friday, July 16, 2004

My goal on Tuesday was to waste almost as much time as most other people here do. I had to include "almost" because I wasn't sure I was capable of wasting fully as much time. I'm not entirely sure that I achieved "almost" either, though that's obviously a rather subjective term. My problem is that I don't want to socialize for very long with most of my co-workers, and if I'm wasting time, I don't want to be here wasting time. I want my wasting of time to involve a couch and a book and solitude and some strawberries... possibly covered in chocolate. Still, I was reasonably effective on Tuesday, and I seem to be resuming pursuit of that lofty goal today. Partially because my entire end of office is empty except for me and the assistant director of international students-- and he hides in his office and is rarely noticeable except that he likes to sing old jazz tunes. I find it difficult to work on dull folders of final high school transcripts when I am constantly distracted by the thought that my co-workers are relaxing by the pool or setting up camp in the Wichita Mountains or even just spending a simple quiet day at home. Hence the post.

Before starting this I spent several happy minutes reading all of my January 2003 posts. [To help some of you (most of you) out there, that's the eighth link down from the top of the Archives list. There. You've learned your first Arabic word. That means "January".] That month brought some rather entertaining adventures as I was settling into my new home in Alexandria--- including that wonderful trip to the downtown post office. My life has changed so much since then. <sigh>

Still-- my last day at this job is in only two weeks, and that's a blindingly bright spot in my life. I'll have about two weeks of freedom-- some of it probably spent in Houston, a good deal of it in the darkroom as my class ends and loss of access to the darkroom looms large. And then-- insha-allah-- I'll start some training for my new job at the physical therapy clinic a week before classes begin (23 August), and after that the starter's gun will fire and the furor of the school year will begin. Three years after my last semester at OU. But-- school is something I know how to do and know how to do well, so the approaching familiarity lends a touch of serenity to my days as I prepare to make my life over again.

Thursday, July 15, 2004

Update on the weekend: The peach festival was successful in that I took a lot of pictures. I'll develop the film tomorrow evening and see what I got. But other than that, I can't report much. I went by myself and did nothing but shoot, so I was oblivious to everything except potential photos. Including the very hot sun turning the back of my neck a dark shade of red.

My photography instructor and I are occasionally butting heads-- he wants me to print for 12 seconds, I want to print for 11; he wants me to cut out my test print and make a burning tool, I want to burn using my hands; he says my lighting was too poor and that my picture is flat, I think it's one of the best pictures I've taken. I'm learning a lot, but my most precious hours in the darkroom are the ones outside of class.

A friend just emailed me about her new proverb calendars-- hence the mess in the box to the left-- which supply a Greek or an English proverb for each day with the addition of a simple line of javascript to one's page code. Unfortunately, my blog likes to display non-Latin-alphabet languages properly only in previews; once I've published the page, they come out as symbol gibberish.
And I still haven't fixed my comments issue.

Friday, July 09, 2004

I'm leaving in a few minutes (hallelujah!) and am off to a peach festival and game night in Weatherford, Texas. I may end up going to the festival by myself (though maybe not), but I'm mostly just looking forward to lots of wild and wooly photographing opportunities. Texans covered in sticky peach juice should provide the potential for at least a few good shots.

The point at the moment, however: I said I would post today, and now I have.

Thursday, July 08, 2004

I'm tired of messing with this today. Perhaps tomorrow I'll come in tomorrow and all will be fixed... magically... over night. Maybe everything just needs to marinate for a few hours.

I came into work early this morning. I'm off at 4:00 today. Yippee!

I think that I've enabled comments. So here's a small post to see if that's actually the case.
Apparently I was without anything to say for a very long time. Surely there was something during all that silence, but I can't possibly remember what it might have been.

Small baby-step goals: Add another, slightly more substantial post by the end of today.
Add another tomorrow.

Friday, February 06, 2004

It's that post-lunch lethargy time of the day. I tried working, but perusing applications quickly (within about two minutes) became difficult and unsatisfying. So I'll type and post and then try again.

I had, quite honestly, completely forgotten about my blog. Life got busy, schedules became stretched, and gradually the whole thing drifted out of sight and out of mind again. I'm not even sure what made me think of this again.



I've run out of things to say.

Tuesday, January 20, 2004

Last week I began training in the processing of transfer student applications, which keeps me away from my desk and thus my computer, leaving me little chance to email or blog. Training has continued, but we quit a little early today, and I've just finished all the other work on my desk. I'd rather do this for a few minutes before searching out more work to keep me occupied.

I did attempt to go camping over the weekend. But with all the last-minute rush on Saturday afternoon to procure a tent, we perhaps neglected a few of the details of preparation. After driving down to the Wichita Mountains (we had decided to camp at the wildlife refuge there rather go to Turner Falls) and taking our pick of the campsites (we had the place to ourselves), we fought against the rising wind and rain and cold temperatures to lay the ground tarp and spread out the tent-- only to discover that we had no stakes or poles for said tent. A bit of a problem, especially given the weather, which hadn't been pleasant all day and was rapidly getting worse, and also the darkness which inevitably ensues shortly after six o'clock during January. Really, I thought we'd been lucky to have light as long as we did. So we got back in the car, drove back to Norman, rented some movies, and had a slumber party with our sleeping bags.

But, as I told Amy, one of the reasons I love to camp (in addition to the communing-with-nature-cooking-over-an-open-fire bits) is that it's the closest thing to traveling overseas that I've found within the U.S. The unexpected can, and usually does, happen at any moment, your belongings are pared down to only the essentials, and a change in the weather almost inevitably effects a significant change in your plans.

And we did have our road trip-- about six hours of it, all told-- which is the thing we were really wanting anyhow.

Friday, January 09, 2004

The plan was a road trip to Boulder, Colorado next weekend. After the last OU hockey game before the holiday break, we realised that there wasn't another home game until the very end of January. What to do for the next nearly two months? So we decided to drive up to Boulder for the series against CU. Leave Norman Thursday evening, arrive in Boulder Friday, cheer at a hockey game that night, ski Saturday, cheer at the second game Saturday night, drive back to Norman on Sunday. One of the best parts of the plan was that the next day, Monday, is Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. So we'd have a day off to recover.

But now we've chickened out. Cost, time involved, cold, lack of sleep-- too many reasons not to go right now. Maybe in March, if we still really want to go to Colorado. Or we'll find another away series and head out for that. My mother is probably vastly relieved that I won't be going skiing. I said I'd be careful, though.

So now we're thinking maybe a camping trip in the Arbuckles next weekend. A little rock climbing, perhaps. Don't worry, Mom. I'll be careful.

I need goggles. I'm finally beginning to work on the breast stroke (all I've been able to do thus far is kicking and an elementary backstroke), and I'm getting a crick in my neck from trying to keep my eyes out of the water for the whole lap. My goal was to quit procrastinating (the usual goal) and acquire goggles before swimming again this evening. Accordingly, last night I left the warm comfort of my couch and the warmer comfort of a good book to set out on a shopping expedition. And wouldn't you know? Apparently neither Target nor Wal-mart (yes, I even tried a Wal-mart) carry swimming goggles during January. How unreasonable.
I suppose I'll actually have to venture out before 9pm and visit a sporting goods store. Such a cramp in my schedule of evening relaxation. The trials and tribulations we poor convenience-obsessed Americans must sometimes suffer.

Wednesday, January 07, 2004

CICS is down again. (Hmm... that sounds familiar.) So I've spent the time redesigning my blog template and, in doing so, experimenting with cascading style sheets. Much better programming (if HTML can be called such) technique than the old way.

Incidentally, "IT" stands for Information Technology, the oft-discussed but rarely seen blackhole of OU that is supposedly responsible for keeping the university's computer systems running smoothly. (Right. We expect that from computer geeks, let alone the computers themselves?) So no, that wasn't an allusion to the nightmarish clown of the Stephen King novel.

Tuesday, January 06, 2004

CICS is down again. (CICS = that darn all-important interface constructed by now mostly dead (in all senses) programmers in the nearly archaic language of COBOL)

Long live IT.

It's been a few days, I know, but this past weekend was anything but conducive to blogging. A couple of friends came into town-- one of them stayed with me-- and so I was unusually social from Saturday morning on, culminating in the big game on Sunday night (boomer sooner <sigh>). Though for the first half I wasn't very social at all, since I quickly became completely uninterested in the ball game (bored to the point of irritability). Thankfully, about half-way through the third quarter I convinced some of the group to walk across the parking lot with me to play some pool. Much improved. And we could still watch the game on the big screen. But occupy ourselves at the same time.

I'm at work, which is a nice place to blog between applications, since I'm already sitting here at a computer with great internet access. Our campus-wide computer interface just went down yet again, so there's not much official work I can do right now.

Unfortunately, there's also not much I can think to write right now.
end of discussion

Thursday, January 01, 2004

Okay, so actually the tower o' scratching and climbing fun for the cats (or should I say cat, since Emily has yet to touch the thing, though Edgar races up and down it and hangs off the side of it and sleeps at the top of it-- which probably greatly contributes to Emily's avoidance of it) has a far more concrete existence than my lackadaisical attempts at re-birthing my blog. But today is the first day of a new year (Happy New Year!) and, accordingly, I will endeavor to begin again. (poor old Michael Finnegan)

My warning to anyone who needs to be cautious about what words or topics they read via the Internet (and you know who you are): I'm not going to edit this for a level 3 clearance. Or even level 2. I'm just not going to edit this. Given the months that have passed since I last posted here, this shouldn't be an issue. You've all given up on me, and I'm not going to tell you I've started blogging again. But just in case.

What do these three things have in common: a snowstorm in Florida, a hula hoop with a nail in it, and the U.S.S. Adams?

Think about it. Don't read on yet. I'll give you the answer (because if I wait until a later post, then it will appear on the actual blog page above the question and that's not very fun). Think hard. It stumped me.



(blank space)



(more blank space... are you thinking?)



Given up? Figured it out? It must be one or the other, because here's the answer:
They're all navel (or naval) destroyers.
Ponder that for a while.