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#1
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Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here
in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... |
#2
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Joseph Adams:
Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... This is an easy one. No. 3, even if you know tomorrow night won't be as good (and the outlook at the Naval Academy and for Anne Arundel County is for poor skies tomorrow night -- chance of rain the next five days). Reason: career advancement means better toys, earlier retirement, more nights under the stars. Well, gotta run. Skies are great in Anne Arundel Co., too, and I made some good career choices, and was able to retire at age 49. It's back outside for me, even though I do need to be up by noon tomorrow ;-) Davoud -- usenet *at* davidillig dawt com |
#3
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You're lucky to have good skies. Chicago has been clouded for weeks. We
missed the eclipse, the Saturn transit, everything. I'd get out there...you never know when the next clear day is coming in this season. "Joseph Adams" wrote in message ... Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... |
#4
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![]() "Joseph Adams" wrote in message ... Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... Your age has much to do with your "dilemma", which should not be a dilemma in the first place. At the risk of sounding like your father (I'm sure you must get plenty of that anyway), my advice to you is to develop good habits and TAKE CARE OF BUSINESS FIRST! There will be _many_ cloudless nights in the future, but you don't get too many shots at developing a good, strong career. So I'll take number three...go to bed now. Al |
#5
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"Al" wrote in message ...
Your age has much to do with your "dilemma", which should not be a dilemma in the first place. At the risk of sounding like your father (I'm sure you must get plenty of that anyway), my advice to you is to develop good habits and TAKE CARE OF BUSINESS FIRST! There will be _many_ cloudless nights in the future, but you don't get too many shots at developing a good, strong career. So I'll take number three...go to bed now. Al Great advice Al. Except he won't sleep anyway worrying about his meeting. Secondly, there's an "earth grazing" asteroid coming right this way on Thursday! vwg I think I'd still take your advice though. Life is an endless chain of small decisions. If only we could re-take most of those we took in our early years. Before we were stuffed full of wisdom from making all the wrong choices and learning from the experience... Chris.B |
#6
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"Joseph Adams" wrote in message
... Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... First, have a few cold ones while playing Johnny Paycheck's version of "Take This Job and Shove It" over and over. Then, take course of action #5. Screw it all. Quit the damn job that makes so many demands on your time, move to DelMarVa peninsula where there are dark skies, get 20-30 hours a week at WalMart and another 20-30 at Lowe's, buy a single-wide in any number of little towns on the DelMarVa, and do what makes you happy. -- ---- JAS |
#7
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Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past....
Too late now but in your situation, I would probably just take a scope out for an hour or so and then hit the sack. jon |
#8
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"Jon Isaacs" wrote in message
... Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... Too late now but in your situation, I would probably just take a scope out for an hour or so and then hit the sack. jon For future reference... me too. Some events are worth trashing yourself over, but they are few and far between, and although it may seem so over the course of a year, a clear sky isn't really one of them, given a lifetime. I go all out once every season when the conditions are good at sometime during new moon week, and then I'm good until the next season (the reason I like having DSCs). The early spring and late summer are sublime when those conditions are met. As for the short sessions, I'll never forget how much I enjoyed one early October morning in 2001, when it was in the mid-50's F (unseasonably warm). Orion was in the southeast and Jupiter was overhead. There was a tropical feel to the air, and the seeing was excellent. All I had out was my little ST80, a barlow, one low and one high power eyepiece. M42 stood up well, and although encased in the violet fringe of the F5 achromat, Jupiter looked sweet. But more importantly was just how good it felt to be outside for the hour before sunrise in such pleasant conditions. Hobbies were invented because people need mini-vacations. If the conditions aren't right, it isn't worth it. I've forced myself out enough times to know that if it's forced, it just isn't fun. On a related note, I met my new neighbor (I'm new to the neighborhood), he's building a 1932 Ford coupe from the ground up using aftermarket parts. It's his hobby. He's currently got the frame rails, wheels and suspension in place and a 350CI Chevy small block on an engine stand. He said it was going to take him 5 years to complete. Relax. Stephen Paul Shirley, MA |
#9
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Sorry I didn't get this 'til morning. I sure hope you picked number one,
otherwise you are a definate Nancy Boy and should have all your scopes revoked. You'll be old before you know it and regret all the missed opportunities. You're out observing, not going on a bender and showing up with a hangover. If you did pick number one, you have permission to purchase a new eyepiece. Otherwise list everything on Astromart....IMMEDIATELY. Greg "Joseph Adams" wrote in message ... Tonight is the first night with clear skies and good seeing we have had here in back woods Carroll county Maryland in weeks. The sky is clear, the stars bright, and only 40some degrees with a high dew point. Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning. I know a 21 year old should be able to withstand the lack of sleep, but I put in 6 extra hours today. Should I... 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) Know all of you have had this same dilemma in the past.... |
#10
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Joseph Adams wrote in message ...
Tonight is the first night with clear skies ... in weeks ... Problem is, I have a huge meeting in the morning, should I: 1.) go out for a good long session, and suffer through the meeting (could change my career for the better) 2.) go out for a little, meaning only taking my 80mm ST refractor and get a half way decent night sleep(5 hours or so) 3.) go to bed now and hope tomorrow night is just as good 4.) say f**k it and go out all night like I should and call in sick in the morning (I mean I already have a good job, but a little more cash would help now and then) It's a little hard to take this post at face value, but I'll do so anyway. If it was me, I would probably do #2. But you have to put that in context; I can function very close to 100% efficiently on 5 hours of sleep. But you have told us only half the story, and the less relevant half at that. What is this meeting, and what does it mean to you? If the only thing that makes it important to you about it is career advancement, I suggest looking for a different job; life is too short to devote it to earning money and spending money -- not if you have any choice whatsoever. What will happen if you don't go to the meeting? Is somebody depending on you? Will you contribute something of genuine value if you do go, or will you just be a pretty face? How important is it for you to be completely awake and alert? Those seem like the real questions. - Tony Flanders |
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