About A Guy

Inside My Head podcast number 127.

You may have seen the theme for this episode coming, based on the theme from the previous episode. All the songs in this episode are about a guy. I was pleasantly surprised by the music I found.

Music in this episode by:
* Cable 35, with a song called “Harry”.

* Rebel Bran, with a song called “Sonny”.

* The Subway Strippers, with a song called “Jimmy Blacksheep”.

* Eat Y’Self Pretty, with a song called “The Rise and Fall of Captain Webb”.

* The Public Good, with a song called “Hey, Solomon Grundy”.

* Intercontinental Music Lab , with a song called “Oh, My Beautiful Problem Child”.

* The Dare Dukes, with a song called “The Ballad of Darius McCollum”.

Want more history?
* Captain Matthew Webb

* Albert Hoffman and his accidental discovery

* The Solomon Grundy Nursery Rhyme

* Darius McCollum

About A Girl

Inside My Head podcast episode number 126

I’m back! You aren’t stuck listening to my computer host this episode.

Today’s theme is “About A Girl”. Ever notice how many songs are about a girl? All the songs in today’s show are named after the girl they are about.

Music in this episode by:
* Buckman Page , with a song called “Cait In Spain”.

* Vista , with a song called “Susan”.

* The Sale of Joy , with a song called “Shakira”.

* Cable 35 , with a song called “Mary”.

* Sachanovak , with a song called “For Amy”

* White Pilots , with a song called “Emily Dickenson”.

* Brigante , with a song called “Peggy Lee”.

* Mark Cashin & The Lil Hussys , with a song called “Mary Jane”.

* The Seven Deadly Sins , with a song called “Ms Parker.”

You can probally guess what the theme for the next episode will be.

Until then… enjoy this one. :D

Numbers

Inside My Head podcast number 125.

I am too sick to podcast, and am losing my voice. Fortunately, my computer offered to take over the show for me.

mac_mini

The show must go on!

All the songs in this episode have numbers in the title.

Music in this episode by:
* Amberline with a song called “1988″.

* Kristen DeHaan , with a song called “1984″.

* Unknown The Universal Element, with a song called “33 and a Third”

* Simon Bell , with a song called “Fifteen”.

* Last November , with a song called “Seventeen at Three in the Morning”.

* Showbiz Heroes, with a song called “21″.

* Dirty Proper , with a song called “1976″.

* Million Dollar Mouth , with a song called “1-4-3″.

Enjoy!

Fireworks !

Filed under: text,video — Jen July 3, 2010 @ 11:57 pm | Tags: ,

Instead of doing a “normal” Inside My Head Podcast, I decided to create a short little video instead. Happy 4th of July, to all who celebrate it!

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Enjoy!

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It has been a while

Filed under: text,video — Jen September 21, 2009 @ 6:31 pm | Tags:

Hello everyone! I am still here.

It’s been something like a month now, since the last episode of the Inside My Head podcast went up. No, I am not quitting. I’ve just been busy with:

* school starting
* being sick for about three weeks (better now. Was a sinus infection)
* lots of work involving the upgrading of the Phantom Power Media websites (some of which is still in progress)
* a variety of other projects

Things should be on a more regular schedule soon.

Instead of recording a podcast, I decided to do a video. Last year, (well, starting September 1, 2008, and ending August 31, 2009), I was involved with a project called Envisage 365. It’s a site with wonderful women from all over the world, who all decided to take and share one photo each day for an entire year. Each photo was to represent something about that particular day.

I’ve always wanted to do one of these kinds of year long photo blogs, and this was my chance to do one. It was amazing! I learned so much about myself, and the other women involved. I got to learn more about how to take good photos. I got to see everyone else’s amazing, beautiful, silly, sad, angry, and expressive photos as well. In many ways, this experience was one part friendship, one part therapy, and a whole lot of creativity thrown in. I am so glad I got involved in this!

Right now, there is a “Year Two” going on. Many of the women from Envisage Year One joined up for another round, and there are lots of brand new faces as well (Including my sister)! If you would like to see what this is all about, go here, and check out Envisage 2009 (the second year of the blog).

The first year of Envisage ended September 1, 2009. Since then, I’ve been gathering up my photographic contributions, and learning how to make a video with them that expressed what this year was like. This is it:

Play

Hazards of the Job

Filed under: text — Jen July 11, 2009 @ 8:33 pm | Tags: ,

I’m writing this while running a fever. It’s not too high of a fever, so, don’t panic. This is not my “last words” in blog format, or anything like that. No, I just have a fever, because I either have a cold, or I have what will become a raging sinus infection when it grows up. The reason I have this cold, (or soon to be sinus infection), is because I work with children. The occupational hazard of teaching is that you catch absolutely everything! Every cold, flu, virus, germ, parasite… every last damned one of them.

I just started teaching again about six months ago. I love what I do. I work with wonderful coworkers. I find the students to be fascinating, each in his or her own way. I truly feel like I have found where I am supposed to be right now. The only thing I would change, if I could, is the level of sickness I am exposed to.

Kids sneeze into the air, showering everything in their path with microscopic virus laden droplets. Younger kids simply do not see the reason why we ask them to use a tissue instead of a sleeve, why we discourage them from picking their noses, why we insist they wash their hands after they leave the bathroom. So, of course, they avoid those annoying little activities unless some adult is right there, nagging them about it. All it takes is one kid to get sent to school with a cold, and I am doomed. Germs spread like sand at the beach, and you can’t help but have a few grains attached to you that you didn’t even see.

I have been severely sick three times in the six months since I’ve gone back to teaching. Twice is from what I call “The Curse of the New Building”. Ever wonder how many strains of the “common cold” exist? Count up all the different public school building that exist. I’m convinced there is a unique strain in each and every one of them. Three weeks into my new job, I got a nasty sinus infection. It was as though the germs somehow knew that I was “fresh meat”, that I hadn’t had time to build up a natural immunity to them. They attacked.

It is no fun to be on antibiotics for a week while at a new place of employment. It’s less fun to be on antibiotics while working with Special Ed kids that can get violent, throw chairs, or “elope”. “Elope”, I learned, means running like a gazelle, in a fit of rage, tears, and emotional instability, towards wherever it is they are driven to run to. It means you must run along behind them, in short, for their own safety, if you are their teacher. Without going into TMI, let’s just say my stomach-on-antibiotics did not thank me for this extra physical activity.

Things got less fun when the first round of antibiotics failed to do it’s job. I have one that I use all the time, and it always brings me right back to health, often before I even finish the dose. Not this time! Instead, I spent a second week on the second round of antibiotics. Finally, those worked, and I got better for a while, until the resident common cold came and found me.

Of course, I happen to start teaching again right when this pandemic of “Swine Flu” (that we aren’t supposed to call “Swine Flu”), hits. I had the worst flu I’ve ever had this school year. It took me out a week, and I have never in my life been so exhausted. Not even when I worked three jobs while going to college full time.

When I first started teaching, I worked as a substitute teacher every single school day, but it didn’t pay the bills. To supplement, I was working overnights in a department store stocking shelves. Monday through Wednesday, I got up early, drove to whatever school I was assigned, worked all day and came home. Thursday, I got up early, worked at school all day, came home, caught a quick nap and grabbed a bite to eat, and then went to my overnight stocking job. I got off work with just enough time to drive home, take a shower, change clothes, and go directly back to whatever school I was assigned to on Friday. Then, Friday after school, I’d take a nap, eat if there was time, and go back to the overnight job stocking shelves. This went on for months. On the weekends, I was too exhausted to do much more than desperately try and catch up on sleep. This strain of whatever kind of flu bug I caught at school this year made me think of how tired I was back when I worked retail all night and pretended to be a teacher by day, and envy the energy my past self had at that time. This flu was that bad. I shudder to think about the possibility of catching whatever the H1N1 mutates into come Fall.

This year, when the paraeducators were asked if we would like to teach Summer School, I decided to say yes. A decision based in large part on my desire to be able to continue to pay the bills until the normal school year starts up again. I am three weeks into working in a school building I have never set foot in before, with children and coworkers who were complete strangers to me three weeks ago. The “Curse of the New Building” has found me, and decided to torment me once again. And so, here I sit, wishing the “super-human immune system” that veteran teachers have the opportunity to grow will start to at least begin to take root for me sometime soon.

It could be worse, I suppose. I could be sitting here suffering from “Hands Foot and Mouth Disease”, which I did, in fact, catch from a child who I was watching over at a day care center years ago. Story for another time, perhaps.