Wednesday, December 14, 2005

the workplace food phenomenon

i can only assume that this happens in every office environment...

at this time of year, we get a buttload of snacks, treats, sandwiches, etc. at the clinic. we are all jaded and come to expect such goodies regularly, but that is a separate issue.

the thing i notice about the sharing of munchies, not just around the holidays but all year long, is this: it appears as though no one is willing to take the last bite. last week, someone brought a half dozen krispy kreme donuts. the first five were consumed with gusto.

for the last donut (glazed, in case you are keeping score of such things), someone went to the trouble of finding a plastic knife and cut the little guy in half rather than taking the whole thing. the donut was reduced by halves throughout the remainder of the morning until there was a slice that measured about one-half inch in width. the little donut cross-section proceeded to sit there until it became stale (which, as it turns out, does not take long once you have reduced a krispy kreme donut to a few dozen molecules).

this morning, i came in to find that the tin of chocolate covered almonds one of our docs had received and then ditched in the "up for grabs" area (never set your lunch plate down on this spot while you run off the fetch a drink. anything that is found in this 2' x 2' space is fair game) had been reduced to a single morsel which also happened to be the runt of the litter. in an open display of rebellion, i ate it.

desparate times call for desparate measures.

Friday, December 09, 2005

cover tunes

i don't know what it is about covers, but i love 'em. old tunes, new tunes; it's like taking your favorite food and giving it a twist... like trying sweet potato french fries on vacation. here's a few i like...

such great heights, performed by iron & wine (was postal service)
aiko aiko, performed by anyone (i don't even know who gets the original credit)
anything by me first and the gimme gimmes

Thursday, December 08, 2005

"the reason for the season"

does anyone else see the irony of these groups who want major retailers to alter their seasonal marketing from "holiday sales" to "christmas sales"? are these not the same people who, in recent years, have lamented how christians have lost touch with the true meaning of christmas? geez!