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Hello, my name is Matthew Sievert. Welcome to a learning experience. As I learn, you will experience it.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Thank You Petty Officer Monsoor
This link is from CNN.com about the posthumous presentation of the medal of honor to Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael Monsoor, a Navy SEAL serving in Iraq.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/08/seal.medal/index.html Posted 8:54 pm
0 comments
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Good People Day - April 3rd, 2008
According to Gary Vaynerchuk Tomorrow, April 3rd is Good People Day.
I want to take a moment and recognize some of the people who I consider "Good People".
GPD08 Posted 11:22 pm
Saturday, November 4, 2006
You are a food nerd when...
You are food nerd when walking to the breakfast counter downtown and discover you picked up "Bon Appetit" rather than "Food Arts", and are very dissatisfied with the situation.
Oh yeah, you are also a complete food nerd when you use a blackberry to expound about this "issue" on your blog. Huh, huh, huh
Posted 11:13 am
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Small victoriesI have been attending spin class at the YMCA for about seven months now. I go on Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Wednesdays tend to be more physical than the other classes throughout the week. On Wedensdays besides doing drills on the stationary death machines, they jump rope, do push-ups, run stairs, lunges, and oh yeah run around the city block that the YMCA shares with the rest of downtown Springfield. Not once, but twice during the hour long class. I have always opted out of running down the three flights of stairs then out onto the sidewalk for a nice jog around downtown Springfield. I would sit up on the bike and spin away at around 65% and wait for the people to return. Tonight Ginnie told me to run around the downstairs gym once while they ran outside. I think that was sort of a dare. Tonight, on their second trip around the block, I ran with them. Well, I ran most of the way with them. I stopped a couple of times, but quickly decided that waddling around the block was worthless, so I might as well run. I ran out the front door and around the building onto Pershing street and was feeling pretty good about the whole idea, at frist. By the time I got in front of Springfield Blueprint I was breathing a bit harder and having second thoughts, maybe I could just turn around here and go back. Instead I turned the corner onto South Street. Passing by Bruno's, the little bookstore, florist, High Strung, Maria's, and the little pizza place on the corner of Walnut and South. I turned onto Walnut and made my way past the new Hyde Gallery, Emack and Bolio's, and Gailey's. By this time I was tired and was walking, and partly doing a "slow jog". I started actually running again in front of Stick it in your ear. I passed by the parking lot guy who I usually wave at while walking to the Mudhouse after my YMCA experience. Tonight he looked a little concerned as I lumbered my sweaty body past his little booth. I continued past Jimmy John's and the high priced modern furnishings store. I rounded the corner onto Jefferson. With the YMCA in sight and knowing that I was way behind everyone else. I was looking forward to a leisure walk up the three flights of stairs back to the comfort of my yellow stationary bike, its made by "Lemond", so of course it is painted yellow. As I got closer I heard a familiar voice. Ginnie, our instructor, had some how found out I was actually running outside with them. Not sure how, since she had ran down way before me. She was waiting for me outside the front door of the Y, and gave me words of encouragement as I made my way up the front stairs of the building. Once in the lobby I stopped and leaned against a wall. Ginnie reassured me that, "You can rest after you walk up the stairs, around the track once and get back on the bike." After climbing the three flights of stairs back to the workout area I took my lap and came to the conclusion that I wanted all the breatheable air in the universe. I got back on my bike and felt completley exhausted, but very fullfilled. Seven months ago I thought spin class was for bored housewives and young college girls who liked music with a good beat, and didn't wanna sweat as much as everyone else. Well, it took only one class to discover, I was completely wrong. Spin class can kick your butt. Go attend a local class, but don't try to keep up in your first try. Just watch and pedal along. Posted 10:20 pm
Monday, September 18, 2006
Thanks Andy!
Wow, what a spiffin new web blog I have. I almost feel like a real computer geek, or something like that.
Anyways, Andy Waschick of Gestalt Inc, has provided a stunning interface for me to type stuff into and then show the world. A touch of Irony. The lovely picture in the top right corner of the home page was undecided when I provided Andy with this new layout for the blog. So I figured I would upload a picture whenever I found one that wasn't copyrighted and looked like it represented me in some manner (no, I still don't have a digital camera.) Anyways my frist visit to my new blog, and up pops a lovely picture of my vast "estate" like cubicle I had at St. John's. Which I really miss all that lovely desk and shelf space. The true irony which I won't beat to death is, it is has now been a year and two days since St, John's let us go. Am I better off? I'm not sure. Posted 2:04 am
The Divine Picnic.
I was downstairs at the Bass Pro corporate cafeteria last Thursday
getting some lunch and was conversing with Aaron, who is the dude in
charge of the cafe.
Aaron wanted to know if I was going to the company picnic this weekend. I told him, "no". My obvious reasons were that I didn't really know many people socially who worked at Bass Pro, I didn't have kids, and I hadn't even thought about a way to get out to the picnic. Which like in years past has been held out East of town near Strafford, Mo. Having done a few picnics for Clary's I half-jokingly ask if they needed any help with the picnic. Aaron said yes he did and I volunteered my skills. From there things went weird. First there was the barrage of phone calls/e-mails from Bass Pro HR to Tracker HR about who was going to pay for my time out there. I am salaried, so to me it really didn't matter. My main concern in that area is who would be responsible if I fell face first into a hot grill due to heat stroke, Bass Pro, or Tracker? Once the job stuff was taken care of, then came the fun stuff. People started asking from both ends how I would be getting out to the picnic. At Clary's and other places, I would meet at a central location and ride out to the event usually with the food. I guess it worked differently at Bass Pro. They all wanted to know if I had a ride out to Strafford. I of course did not, and seeing how I wasn't going to be making a whole lot of money. I wasn't going to pay a cab to drive me all the way out there. In the end we all decided that me working the Bass Pro picnic wasn't going to happen since I didn't have reliable transportation. Oh well, I thought it might of been fun to once again work in the food service industry. Even if it was a picnic out in the middle of a field. Which from past experience is not the optimum "gig", but hey, it's the challenges that make it fun. So anyways, I spent Sunday in my cozy apartment watching T.V. and went out long enough to do my laundry. Meanwhile it rained all day in the Ozarks. In fact it rained 2.13 inches in Springfield. So it will be interesting to see how things went at the picnic. I guess God didn't want me to carry hotel pans of picnic food in the rain on a Sunday. Posted 1:39 am
Saturday, September 9, 2006
Another Movie at the Moxie!Went to the Moxie tonight. Since I had such a great time last week when I saw "WordPlay".
Posted 12:18 am
Sunday, September 3, 2006
Word Play
Went to The MOXIE
last night, which is the independent movie theatre in Springfield.
I saw the movie "Wordplay". Which is about crossword puzzles and the wide variety of people who like to sovle them. It is a very interesting movie, and well worth your time. If you are in the Springfield, Missouri area The Moxie on Walnut Street is a very nice independent movie house. The people who own and operate the facility are very nice, they have seperate receptacles for recycling, and they even sell beer. Overall a very comfortable atmosphere to watch movies that you would have to either rent, or catch in a larger city. Posted 4:50 pm
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Social Stores
I have found that when I really want a book I will order it off the Internet, specifically Amazon.com.
I have found going to the Barnes and Noble and trying to find the object harder and harder to swallow. 1. You have to physically go to the store. 2. Once there you have to FIND the item you want 3. If you don't find it. You have to go ask a not always well-infomed worker. Who might not give a crap what your looking for as long as they get to go home soon. 4. If they don't find it, or it is misplaced you don't get the opportunity to purchase the item, and your trip is wasted. 5. They of course can order it, but you have to then come back to pick it up. Of course You can call ahead and see if they have it. If they don't have it then screw it. I am ordering off the internet anyways. In fact when I do call Barnes and Noble I have already gone online to get the ISBN of book I want. So I don't have to have the people at the store go through the trouble of searching for the book. I give them the ISBN number and they tell me if they have it or not. The price you pay by actually going to the store is convenience and getting the item right away. Sometimes convenience is worth 30% and four days. Amazon.com is always 30-40% less than Barnes and Noble. Even on the big books. Plus they ship directly to where I might be located. In my case they ship directly to where I work. Or if it is a gift they can ship the heavy object anywhere in the country, so you don't have to resend it. The prime reason I go to the Barnes and Noble is to leisurely see what they have new which I have not yet discovered on my own, which may lead to a sale. Eight times out of ten when I go to Amazon.com I am buying something. That is an astounding completion rate, bordering on the completion rate of driving up to the drive-thru window of a fast food restaurant. Plus it is easier to search Amazon.com then asking the sometimes rude and always busy lady at the info desk for that one book written by that one guy. Posted 9:08 pm
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Worth an hour of your time.If you have the Travel Channel. I can highly recommend trying to catch the program "Bourdain in Beirut". This is an excellent episode produced by Anothony Bourdain who is used to sitting at restaurant tables telling crude jokes about tourists, and telling stories about the people who are REALLY cooking your $50.00 steak. Posted 11:04 pm
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