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Decompressing at the Stick

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After all of the planning, and then the actual event itself, we were ready to put our feet up. So we did.

The Stick with Göran, Anne, Noelie, Lisa, Rhine and April—hosted by the newly married McGraws! Late May is perfection at the beach. No people.

Oh yeah, the dogs came too. We rented a huge vehicle in Pittsburgh to cart everyone and all their stuff down.

Now back to those feet…

About the only complication was figuring out the state of the improperly-installed dishwasher. We built our own sign to signify state. It was good in theory. LOL.

As always, cooking was an important part of our beach time. Romey and Lisa made a delicious meal indeed.

The dogs felt left out.

The view from the porch leads to inner peace.

We did make a few cocktails.

Tranquility…unless you are a ball.

Just add more olives.

Starts like this…

Ends up like this. Thanks John and Joan!

5.25.25 = The Big Wedding

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What an experience! Romey and Gary got married in Pittsburgh on 5.25.25 at the Andy Warhol Museum. We hosted 100 of our dearest friends from nine countries who all stayed at the Hotel Monaco Sunday evening. Hilariously, only one guest was from Pittsburgh (though nobody who came to the wedding lives in Pittsburgh now).

The grand 5.25.25 wedding picture repository lives. We have organized our pictures into nine salient chunks as follows:
0. baseball – a Pirates game on Friday night 5.23.25
1. spacebar – quasi-spontaneous fun and cocktails in Pittsburgh
2. warhol – excellent art with excellent friends
3. ceremony – the heart of the matter
4. rooftop – pre-reception cocktails with a piper and some kilts
5. reception – dinner and dancing featuring DJ Williams
6. side quests – before and after
7. kilts – yes, there were lots of kilts
8. primary colors – post ceremony people

See the 5.25.25 button above.

A Message from Leuven: 5.25.25

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Please Standby for the Wedding: 5.25.25

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Zombie Paparazzi Roam Rio: Dave and Claudia Make Magic

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We were proud to represent Virginia, Tennessee, and West Virginia in Rio at D&C’s nupitals; not to mention zombies.  We were also proud to represent zombies.  Oh yeah, and computer science and hairdressing too; not to mention machine learning. Can zombies even experience pride?  Is a prideful feeling some kind of qualia thing?  Or some other deontic whosy-whatsis?

I guess the only thing we were unqualified to represent was Philosophy. Fortunately, D&C had that angle appropriately covered.  Or maybe it was inappropriate?  (This writing is turning out way harder than I thought.)

The event was obviously some kind of simulation, because it was just too spectacular to be real. We were there in kilt and fancy dress, representing.  Here are some pictures we snapped. Or rather, software’ed, digitized? captured?! internetified??!

At the very bottom of this post are a number of extra pictures splotted on for completion. 

Who are “we”?  Well, your resident Virginia zombies of course—Romey and Gary. Gary is the one in the kilt who is having such a difficult time writing this down.

The wedding’s setting was gorgeous.  The Pavilhão Santa Teresa sits above Rio with a view of Sugarloaf, Christ the Reedemer, and Colonial Rio.  A spectacular afternoon with sparkling sun evolved at sunset into a magical fairy-land.  Was this real life?  Only you know for sure. Actually, maybe you don’t. Perhaps nobody will ever know.

Live music? Why of course there is live music. My favorite part of the first quintet performance was the tempo warfare between the flugelhorn slacker and the flute leader guy—something that was only obvious to a musician who has played zillions of weddings.  Flute leader guy was so mad!

Dave’s proud parents.

Of course Dave’s head was in the clouds.

Turns out that we were not the only paparazzi, though it is not clear whether the ones across the aisle were zombies, vampires, or Brazilians.

The Canadians had our backs. This was only slightly worrying.

Enter Claudia, resplendent in her glory.

Together at last.

The ceremony was complex and South American—philosophical, theoretical, mathematical, self-referencial, and precise in a vaguely Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges Acevedo way. Or maybe it was Gabriel José de la Concordia García Márquez way. Hopefully you know what I mean. The vampire bit was the bomb. So very good—definitely a later run of the simulation (those North Americans have so much compute!)

It was at exactly precisely this time-slice that Dave became married.

Then it was up the hill to the reception. (Since everyone at the wedding forgot to eat lunch, this was a particularly important part of the evening.)

We started out having fun. And then more fun was had.

The Canadians had fun.

And the Australians? Yup.

There was bossa nova. It was live and very very good.

Then it was time to cut the cake? Maybe. Anyway the cake was cut. Then there was dinner. Or maybe the drinks were first. Well, we know there were drinks. Pretty much the whole time.

At some point, Dave showed me his socks. This was significant.

There were a number of toasts that were heartfelt, touching, romantic and excellent. Everyone felt the love.

Dave tried to explain the magic, but things went wrong when he just ended up making more magic.

We were still having fun.  There was dancing.  The DJ was doing his VERY LOUD thing.

And then, out of nowhere, SAMBA!

If you have never tried to Samba with actual Brazilian Samba people in a kilt, well my only recommendation is loosen those hips and move those feets!   We had SO MUCH FUN.

We danced to ABBA, Fleetwood Mac, Olivia Newton John, Men at Work, Bruno Mars, and many other bands trapped in our deepest associations. We danced even if we didn’t know the song. We danced.

Finally, it was time to depart. The simulation glows on in our hearts. Thanks Dave and Claudia for including us all in your adventure.

In the tradition of the Scot’s we leave you with this blessing:

May the best ye’ve ever seen Be the worst ye’ll ever see. May a moose ne’er leave yer girnal Wi ‘ a tear drap in his e’e. May ye aye keep hale an’ herty Till ye’re auld eneuch tae dee. May ye aye be jist as happy As we wish ye aye tae be.

 

THE EXTRA PICTURE ZONE