The AC was acting up, it was installed in October so that was unexpected. Two trips out so far, the guy today says he has diagnosed it as a faulty valve. Says they should be able to fix it tomorrow.
It’s under warranty so it won’t cost anything, but three service appointments is a little aggravating.
I spoke too soon. Today they managed to break the coil. So not only will this require a FOURTH visit to get my AC working, it’s not working now and won’t be until… well, I’m told tomorrow. We will see!
HVAC shop calls me at 7:40, says parts are on the truck and they are heading my way. That was now two hours ago and they aren’t here. Look, I know you have to get parts and tools and what-not, and your shop is about a half hour from me. If you’re going to be here at 10:00 or whatever just tell me, don’t call me at 7:40 and say you’re on the way if you’re not.
I follow Andrew Brandt on twitter. (former agent then asst GM for the GB packers. now a law prof.)
for some reason, his account is now listed as “not existing”. But i can find posts via google and click on them and they appear. I just lost his regular feed.
I pulled a muscle in my shoulder so I took a muscle relaxer tonight. It makes me sleepy for about an hour, but then I feel normal. Thought that also applied to my lethargy in general, but it doesn’t. I walked a mile and a half tonight (wanted to do 4-5) before I gave up. Each step was a fight with myself.
Fans reacting to the camera being on them. I’ve never been so I don’t know if the broadcast is being shown on the big display board and these people know they’re on TV - if they do, that’s maybe even worse - but aside from “let’s give some lucky schmuck 3-5 seconds of fame so they can look like a dummy,” … why do broadcasts feel compelled to do this during every stoppage?