Who Wants Cake?
Triptych
The Other 5% Is Coffee
I Love Homes With Atriums
Also Just Sayin’
Just Sayin’
Draw Your Own Conclusions
Spotted At DIASO Yesterday
Right?!
I’m Such A Geek
It Feels Good To Fix Stuff
As you know, a couple weeks ago I acquired a really nice vintage Yamaha CDX-930 single-disc CD player. It—like most players of the era now do—had some drawer issues. Initially I replaced the drawer belt with a slightly smaller one I had on hand. I kept the old belt “just in case,” listening to that little voice in my head for once.
It turns out using a belt that’s too small is just as bad as using one that’s too loose. This belt also proved problematic, so I set about finding the specific belt for this model, something that was easier said than done. Finally I located one from West Coast Belts (a highly recommended place in the audio repair community) and ordered it.
It arrived last week, and the moment I took it out of the package I knew it wasn’t going to work. Yeah, it was the right diameter, but it was substantially thinner than the original (probably 0.5mm vs. 1.5mm) belt. After cleaning the two pulleys in the unit (something I’d failed to do initially), I went ahead and put it in. As I suspected, it still wasn’t what was needed for proper operation. The drawer opened normally, but it still struggled to close.
I went back online and after a lot of searching, located another supplier—in Portugal, no less—who supposedly had the correct size and thickness of belt I needed. I ordered one. That belt currently seems to be visiting every major European capital before heading across the Atlantic, so I have no idea when it’s going to arrive.
I was thinking about this last night and thought I’d try an old trick often used in the YouTube CD repair videos I’ve watched: placing the original belt in boiling water for 5 minutes and then plunging it immediately into cold water to cause the rubber’s “memory” to return to its original size and shape.
Surprisingly this worked—to a degree. It didn’t return the belt to a perfect circle, but the kink in this 45 year old belt was definitely diminished. Once again I took the unit apart and this time put the “rejuvenated” old belt back in, taking care to locate the remaining “kinked” part of the belt on the large pulley vs. the small motor spindle pulley so that it would have an opportunity to spread out and relax a bit more.
Everything worked perfectly. How long this will last is anyone’s guess—just like they caution in the videos—but at least for now it’s working smoothly, and hopefully the new belt coming from Europe will be the correct configuration.
365 Days Of UNF: April 27th
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I don’t think we need to fear the robot overlords just yet.
Aspire To Greatness
Thoughts?
Sunday Morning C&C
365 Days Of UNF: April 26th
In That Alternate PITT Universe…
And This Is Why We Loved The Golden Girls
Who Had A Crush on Jim West?
Released 47 Years Ago Today
Donna Summer: Bad Girls (1979)
Japanese Jazz Late Night Soundtrack
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I confess that I’m a little lost these days.
I’ve become a restless, reluctant nomad moving through familiar places with a nagging internal dissonance.
I am a lifelong American who is profoundly disoriented trying to navigate this nation now.
I was born here and have spent most of my life here, and yet for a while now, I’ve begun to feel more and more like a stranger in my homeland.
There are dozens, sometimes hundreds of moments in a given day when I look around, and I simply don’t recognize this place anymore. It all seems terrifyingly foreign.
Waking up every morning and walking out into this version of my country is that bittersweet experience of expectantly visiting the town you grew up in as a child, feeling the rapid deflation as you note the changed landscape and strain to see the familiar places you used to know well and feel at home in.
Yes, it’s still a version of the familiar, with quick glimpses here and there to momentarily ground and reconnect you, but so much seems missing and so much feels different that you begin to grieve the alterations that have taken place because of how much appears gone for good. You realize you miss the idea of home rather than the reality of it.
I’ve found myself frantically searching for old familiar landmarks to try and ground myself again: family, neighborhood, community, church, nation—but these have all been renovated to the point of being almost completely obscured by the garish facades in their place; newly fashionable malevolence, bitterness, and cruelty.
See, that’s the thing: it isn’t that the physical landscape that has changed. There are so many people I do not recognize anymore; people whose lives I used to call home, people I once found easy affinity with, people who now make me feel newly orphaned.
I’m unsettled and distanced in their presence; estranged from them because of what I’ve discovered about their hearts, what I’ve heard out of their mouths, what I am realizing about our new (or perhaps newly revealed) moral incompatibility.
They are the America that I am most disheartened to bear witness to. They are the greatest source of my lostness. They are why I wander here.
Maybe this was never the place I thought it was. That image is likely just the selective memory or the idealized version of it all as filtered through a younger, more naive, less aware, more optimistic version of myself. Still, the sense of loss is the same.
Part of me wants to leave altogether, to go and make a new home somewhere else that might feel more aligned with this iteration of who I am, but that would feel like surrender; it would be admitting a defeat that I am still not yet ready to consent to. I still have dreams of what this place can be: not a mythical land born of ignorant nostalgia but a tangible incarnation of the best of its stated aspirations.
Right now, the best thing I know to do is to keep my eyes open for the other restless, reluctant nomads; to look for those who, too, feel lost here but who are still stumbling through increasingly unfamiliar surroundings, trying to manifest quiet goodness in the middle of the loud, sickening march toward national greatness.
I’ll keep seeking out those compassionate, generous, open-hearted sojourners who also no longer feel at home here, and together we will shepherd humanity through these days, and we will be rebuilders.
We will make an America where compassion is our greatest calling.
We’ll make an America where diversity is celebrated.
We’ll make an America where religion isn’t wielded like a weapon.
We’ll make an America where no one goes without.
We’ll make an America that is big enough for everyone who wishes to call it home.
We’ll make an America where no one has to go elsewhere to find refuge or respect.
Fashioning the nation we could be out of the nation we are seems impossible, but I still feel it’s worth trying, because I know I am not alone in my disorientation.
I am surrounded by similarly heartbroken human beings, who are also here in this thick, heavy darkness, passionately stumbling toward the light of what we might still be.
And because of them, though I am an American who is lost in America, I am not yet ready to lose America.
Where do you feel that sense of lostness I talk about? What helps you feel connected? Let me know in the comments.













































































































