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Pi Day. Yum.

March 14, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

Pi

Today is March 14. National Pi Day. Not to be confused with Pie Day which was back in January. Pi as in 3.14159265and on and on and on forever and ever with no end or at least no one has found the end yet. That pi.

Never ever will I understand Pi.

Nev-er.

All it does is make me hungry.

Let me stop right here and say to all you math fans, you may want to skip this post. My confession and confusion may frustrate and annoy you. Please don’t feel the need to educate me, I’m okay with my cluelessness. I’ve made it this far.

Of course there was a time when I was forced to face Pi head on. I did what any clever student would do. I faked it. I memorized what was needed to get through a geometry test (sorry Mrs. Meadows), the school year, high school, and so on (just like pi)… In the off chance I actually learned something about Pi during high school, I evidently forgot it because I never used it. 

Nev-er.

And just because Pi has its own day doesn’t really make it a big deal. Everything has its own day. For those of us who don’t embrace Pi, tomorrow is Everything You Think Is Wrong Day… (like Pi?)

I sought clarification and understanding from the official Pi Day dot org website which even includes a freakin count down! Like its Christmas or something. (They also sell Pi t-shirts and coffee mugs…Yes.They.Do.) Pi Day dot org offered the following explanation:

Pi (Greek letter “π”) is the symbol used in mathematics to represent a constant — the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter — which is approximately 3.14159. Pi has been calculated to over one trillion digits beyond its decimal point. As an irrational and transcendental number, it will continue infinitely without repetition or pattern. While only a handful of digits are needed for typical calculations, Pi’s infinite nature makes it a fun challenge to memorize, and to computationally calculate more and more digits.

Okay Pi Day people, the only thing I understood from this was the word irrational, and I couldn’t agree more. I got a bit lost right off the bat at the word constant. Don’t laugh, I’m being serious. I hate to disappoint, but since tenth grade I haven’t calculated the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. Do people sit around doing this? I question why anyone would calculate anything to over one trillion digits… And just so you know, after the word transcendental, I heard Charlie Brown’s teacher in my head.

I realize I’m showing my ignorance. Just being honest. Even so, I can still appreciate a day of celebration.

Pi Day

Grace Grits and Gardening

“…all numbers are by their nature correct. Well, except for Pi, of course. I can’t be doing with Pi. Gives me a headache just thinking about it, going on and on and on and on and on….”

― Neil Gaiman, Anansi Boys 

“The world isn’t just the way it is. It is how we understand it.”
― Yann Martel, Life of Pi
 

The Accidental Thief?

March 6, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

What you are about to read is the true story of a near theft, accidental theft and an alleged theft. In all three situations, I was innocent. These three incidents happened within seven days which seems odd even to me. But I’m no thief or kleptomaniac or shoplifter or anything of the sort. Never have been.

No, really.

Hear me out.

The Accidental Thief

via morgueFile Clarita

Near Theft. Last week I nearly swiped two six-packs of Smart water from Target. The bottles were underneath my shopping cart, you know in that area where oversized things like dog food and bottled water ride. I became hypnotized in the checkout line because the man ahead of me was a Dallas Maverick player (I’m convinced). He emptied his cart onto the conveyor belt—one expensive item after another—electronics, small appliances and other household things one might buy when moving into an ultra cool, downtown Dallas high-rise. He wore earbuds and never spoke yet had a certain polite air about him. He was super duper tall and seemed extremely smooth like Maverick players are. Although I tried to catch a glimpse of his name on his Platinum American Express Card, I couldn’t make it out.

Right here you should know I would normally say something crazy like—you play for the Mavs, right?—but I didn’t.

And the reason I didn’t?

If we began chatting he would most certainly notice my basket filled with embarrassing, middle-aged, boring items. Cheap wine. Dog treats. Anti-itch cream. Laundry detergent. Green onions. Lactose-free milk. Two new bras. Not the sexy, push-up, demi-cup, Victoria Secret knock offs, but real-life underwear.

Hmmmm. My life.

He silently strolled on his exciting way while the checker and I discussed whether or not he was a Mavs player. Yes, we agreed. Of course.

In the thrill of this Target checkout experience, I made it across the parking lot and to my car before realizing the Smart water was still underneath my basket. Never scanned. Never purchased. I could have easily loaded it up and driven my depressing investments home. But I went back into the store, waited in the customer service line, explained how the water was overlooked and paid what I owed.

Most people wouldn’t come back and pay, the manager said.

I wouldn’t be able to sleep, I said.

Accidental Theft. Driving from Austin to Dallas I stopped at the Dr. Pepper Museum in Waco. (Doesn’t everyone?) I wanted pictures for an upcoming freelance article, plus the Dr. Pepper floats alone are worth the stop. (Blue Bell vanilla + soda fountain Dr. Pepper…)

Dr. Pepper Float - Accidental Thief

I snapped pictures. I chatted with the lady who made my incredible Dr. Pepper float. I recommended the float to other museum patrons. I visited with the man selling tickets who went out of his way to dig up a brochure for me from the back room. After thirty minutes or so, I returned to my car aware I needed to hurry back to Dallas before rush hour.

I buzzed through Waxahachie when I realized I never paid for my float… I was horrified, yet there was no way I could return to Waco. I had dogs to pick up and rush hour to beat. I watched for blue lights in my rear view mirror certain the Texas Rangers were hot on my tail. Safe inside my home, I confessed my crime to John.

The next morning, I called the museum to turn myself in.

I accidentally forgot to pay for my Dr. Pepper float yesterday. I was there taking pictures for a blog post. I swear I’m not some scam artist. I will mail you a check. How much do I owe? Blah, blah, guilty blah. I was sure all of Waco had heard about the Dr. Pepper Museum robbery pulled off by a lunatic pretending to be a writer.

She laughed and laughed and laughed. “Oh bless your heart, don’t worry about it. No one has said a word about it.”

“Are you sure? I don’t want this in my permanent file.” (My file lives in the dusty bowels of Baylor University just across town from the museum.)

More laughing. She insisted. I said okay. It still bothers me a little.

Alleged Theft. I took the only open table. The man at the table beside me began packing up his belongings to leave. I preferred his table because there was an electrical outlet underneath. I would write at Whole Foods for several hours and eventually need to recharge my computer. He left, I scooted over, opened my journal, began writing. Five minutes later he stood over me.

I came back for my hat. I left it here.

Oh, I haven’t seen it. I looked around.

Well I left it here. You were there, now you’re here. Where is it? He stares at me with hands across his big belly.

I don’t know, maybe you dropped it? I looked underneath the table.

I can see why you’d want it. It’s cold outside. He rubbed his gloved hands together.

I promise, I don’t have your hat.

Maybe not you, but someone. Someone stole my hat.

Look, no one took your hat. I’ve been here since you left five minutes ago.

He shuffled off annoyed and convinced I was sitting on his hat.

 

There you have it. The whole week was a giant misunderstanding.

Grace Grits and Gardening

Musical Pairing:

Johnny Cash, One Piece at a Time

I attract crazy at the nail salon.

March 1, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

I attract crazy at the nail salon

It’s been some time since I’ve shared an honest to goodness nail salon adventure. It’s not that I’ve been holding back, of course not. Either things at the nail salon have evolved into oddly normal, or I’ve grown completely anesthetized to the typical shenanigans.

But last week it happened again.

I sorta brought it upon myself.

Sorta.

I felt blah with a cold/sinus/nasally thing—not to the point of being contagious (although had I been, the salon and I could have called it “even” after last year’s semi-bird-flu nastiness which you can read about HERE). Lethargic from a lingering Nyquil hangover, all I wanted to do was relax in the vibrating spa chair while my toes received some much-needed-hopefully-end-of-winter attention.

I was the only customer and had my choice of chairs. Naturally I avoided Old Sparky—the chair that nearly resulted in my electrocution last year.

The gorgeous Dallas day was idyllic and the salon experience restful. I made it to the top coat and so far no one had dressed me up in Oriental wooden shoes or anything… If only I could breathe...

“You wait here. Rest. You sick. Let toe dry,” my nail technician offered as she began gathering her pedi tools.

“Ah yes, thank you,” I agreed, restarting the massage chair and zoning out to my iPod. Just as I dozed off, it happened. The nail lady stuck some sort of peppermint essential oil swab up my stuffy nose!

It burned like hell.

I jumped.

I sneezed.

And sneezed.

And sneezed.

She smiled quite pleased to have awakened my sinuses.

And for a few minutes my head was unclogged.

Grace Grits and Gardening

P.S. You may ask why I always go back to this particular nail salon. I love it there, of course:)

Musical Pairing:

Nail Salon – Anjelah Johnson-Comedy Time

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Hi! I'm Talya Tate Boerner. Writer, Reader, Arkansas Master Naturalist / Master Gardener, Author of

THE ACCIDENTAL SALVATION OF GRACIE LEE (2016)

GENE, EVERYWHERE: a life-changing visit from my father-in-law (2020)

BERNICE RUNS AWAY (2022)

THE THIRD ACT OF THEO GRUENE (coming 2025)

Recent Ramblings:

  • Sunday Letter: 11.23.25
  • Maggie and Miss Ladybug: My New Children’s Nature Book
  • Sunday Letter: November 9, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 26, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 5, 2025

Novels:

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Backyard Phenology:

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