Oh no, not again
Sep. 29th, 2006 11:44 am...and other traumas.
(First, an aside: does anyone know how to retrieve older LJ entries? LJ's built in history seems to let me to back in time about 180ish entries. Fortunately that was barely enough time to recover the link below. Unfortunately it means a lot of stuff is now inaccessible to me, unless I have another way to get it. Help, oh LJ gurus of the 'verse!)
Now, the entry I wanted to dig up was This one on yet another reason why I'm a mutant. It's from last June and it records the end of my root canal saga.
( Yes, I broke another tooth. Cut for the dentally squeamish )
As for how the rest of my life is going... well, a morning in the dentist's office at least saved me from a few hours of interminable discussions by morons in my office who are intelligent people except that they're being mule-headed GOONS who seem to think "I like it" and "It's always been that way" are good reasons for making product usability decisions. I'm trying desperately to hold onto the "it doesn't really matter to the universe" concept, but my sense of doing the right thing continues to interfere. Where the hell did I get that inconvenient set of ethics?
(First, an aside: does anyone know how to retrieve older LJ entries? LJ's built in history seems to let me to back in time about 180ish entries. Fortunately that was barely enough time to recover the link below. Unfortunately it means a lot of stuff is now inaccessible to me, unless I have another way to get it. Help, oh LJ gurus of the 'verse!)
Now, the entry I wanted to dig up was This one on yet another reason why I'm a mutant. It's from last June and it records the end of my root canal saga.
( Yes, I broke another tooth. Cut for the dentally squeamish )
As for how the rest of my life is going... well, a morning in the dentist's office at least saved me from a few hours of interminable discussions by morons in my office who are intelligent people except that they're being mule-headed GOONS who seem to think "I like it" and "It's always been that way" are good reasons for making product usability decisions. I'm trying desperately to hold onto the "it doesn't really matter to the universe" concept, but my sense of doing the right thing continues to interfere. Where the hell did I get that inconvenient set of ethics?