30 September 2006

Shameless Nabokov plug

As a far more innocuous version of literary spam (Proust-in-the-inbox), I thought I'd share, just because it tickled me so much as I read in it the car on the way to the market (wet), a passage from Ada, or Ardor. A highly-charged goat of an old man is mentally flipping through his love's diary (circa her 12-year old elf-self) and he extracts this note on a certain caterpillar (she is an entomologist of sorts):

'The retractile head and diabolical anal appendages of the garish monster that produces the modest Puss Moth belongs to a most un-caterpillarish caterpillar, with front segments shaped like bellows and a face resembling the lens of a folding camera. If you gently stroke its bloated smooth body, the sensation is quite silky and pleasant - until the irritated creature ungratefully squirts at you an acrid fluid from a slit in its throat.' (Penguin edition, p49)

Having had quite a few run-ins of our own with garish monsters, with or without retractile heads, I thought you'd enjoy this morsel. It continues in this magical naughtiness for 400 pages more: highly recommended, or perhaps Pnin if something more comic is desirable.


P.S. I particularly like the choice of 'acrid'--some of you will recognise why. ^_^

27 September 2006

'Pologies All Round

I've owed you all an update for a long time: the last month has been rather hectic, and my jet-lag-addled brain is not dealing with all of it too well.

Chavin was pretty good to me all in all. Working eight hours a day in the sun at high altitude is a humbling experience: all it has taught me is that I'm as unfit for the life of the body as I am for the life of the mind. If you don't believe me, witness, as I prove the point and take refuge with other illiterate curs in that poor-man's-paragraph, the bullet list.

Of Things Learned In Peru, and In the Multifarious Ways in which they are Entirely Inconsequential to Man and Beast Alike
  • I can find my way around a set of ordinary garden implements.
    • Useless because I only know their names in Spanish (quieres tocar mi badilejo?), because I wield them like a limp-wristed paraplegic, and because, really, when am I ever going to have the time to help my mother tend to her infernal geraniums? The only plant I've had any of luck with of late is Ballsbridge's latest acquisition, mother-in-law's tongue: strangely enough, it's a very forgiving little darling, content to survive on what few drops of water you lavish on it.
  • I can make humitas, a sweet dessert-like tamale, containing mashed oca (a sweet tuber indigenous to the high Andes) and cinnamon.
    • Useless because it's hard to find oca anywhere outside of South America for a reasonable price, except perhaps New Zealand and because they only really taste good if you've just gorged yourself on a kilogram of meat. Bonus useless fact: it was one of the first crops to be domesticated (in the New World, if not all of human history), in the very valley in which Chavin lies, the Callejon de Huaylas.
  • I am familiar with the essential principles of digital surveying, and can operate a Leica theodolite without supervision or assistance.
    • Useless because I was never trained in the use of the digital-mapping software that allows one to make sense of this data.
  • I learned how to pour beer correctly at high altitudes, where it has a tendency to end up in your glass more foam than liquid.
    • Useless because this skill only makes you drunker faster, and one drinks in the mountains to while away as much time as possible.
  • I can sing Piel Canela ("Cinammon Skin"), a Peruvian (?) love-song.
    • Useless because... well, let's just say that you'll know what I mean if you were there that awful night the good Dr. Frier made me play Karaoke Revolution.
  • I lost weight in all the right places.
    • Useless because I promptly followed that up with three weeks of Persian food, a week of Pakistani food and now a week of Turkish food. You will be relieved to know that I am restored to my former self, padded just well enough to keep the voices inside from hurting themselves.
  • All the things I've learned to identify! Soils of the high Andes by color and texture, Peruvian ceramics from 3500 B.C. to the colonial period, camelid and rodent bones, obsidian projectile-heads... oh my!
    • I think this one's pretty self-explanatory.
I'll spare you the much longer list of things I was supposed to have learned but never quite figured out. So very little accomplished, all in all, in case anyone was jealous that I was out travelling the world and learning new things.

In the aftermath of Chavin (much tears and ballyhooing all round), I had a week to explore Cusco, Macchu Pichu and Lake Titicaca. A bit rushed but the ever-anodyne presence of the old ball-and-chain saved me several times (though not from losing my wallet). A thick mist clung neurotically to Macchu Pichu the morning we made our ascent by motorcoach, but it disappeared by 10am for some stunning views of pooping llamas and goggle-eyed German tourists. I don't know if I can forget it fast enough. Lake Titicaca was a beautiful shade of blue that I've utterly failed to capture in any of my photographs. There are dozens of floating islands, made by the Uros Indians out of what appeared to be extremely buoyant reed. These days, I was told, the islands are stuffed with plastic Coke bottles and the like for flotation, and covered up with reed for the tourists' sake. The Seventh-Day Adventist Church was representin' too, with a large floating school built to turn the scruffy heathen children into slightly-less-scruffy Christian children. No word on how that's going, but I hope to see a floating Starbucks the next time I'm there, preferably with wi-fi.

Thence to Miami, humid and sticky as ever. Hurricane Ernesto never materialized (Tropical Storm Ernesto would do well to audition for Sesame Street... cuddly and Hispanic - I can't think of a better candidate for the show's first tropical cyclone), but we had to gear up for him all the same. Key West was expensive but pretty; Hemingway's cats are indeed polydactylous, the poor darlings, not to mention overfed and spoiled by the visitors. I've also become fairly familiar with TGIF's latest menu, so do ask if you want a tip (hint: stay away from the Sizzling Chicken.).

And then Dublin, where I did too much in one week with too much alcohol in my blood to form anything like real memories. My mother thrashed me at golf but bought me a new suit to make up for it afterwards. I visited the University of Limerick on the way to the city itself: their Health Sciences building is shaped like a gigantic train-engine, but no-one has been able to explain to my satisfaction why midwives and speech-therapists aren't more steamed about this. Me? I'd be railing against those who'd approved the decision, even if they tried to cover up their tracks.

On a day-trip to Belfast, I asked a shrivelled little Asian lady at a KFC on Shankill Rd. if the chickens served here had been scum-sucking baby-eating Catholics or God-fearing Queen-loving Protestants, but she was unable to give me a definitive answer. I tried to sidestep the issue by ordering some fries. Unfortunately, both the ketchup packets AND the Bar-B-Q sauce came from Catholic Portugal, and I was stuck there, staring at the gritty and grimy remains of the neighborhood, munching morosely on my salty Fritten sans salsa and pondering Papicide.

I also managed to go to Cork and get dragged in front of TV cameras with my parents, before sitting down meekly to biryani and daal with the Pakistani community in a depressing little parish recreation center. I did not get to make out with Blarney Stone, to my great chagrin, because it was too rainy (all the better to wash the slobber off, no?) nor did I see the harbor whence the great Titanic set sail. But all this for next time, yes? Especially if one of you lazy land-lubbers decides to visit me.

I arrived in Berlin last Friday, two days before my 22nd birthday (an event I would have missed entirely if not for some of your kind e-mails). I'm living in Steglitz, a small residential neighborhood, about a 25-minute commute (door-to-door, including 2 minutes on the U-Bahn) from the Villa where we study. My host-mother, Angelika, is a social-worker who hasn't been able to hold a job since she was laid off in 2003. Her son Tim is either playing World of Warcraft all day or masturbating; either way, I have no access to the Internet when I'm home. They also have a cat named Lala, an utterly detestable creature that only manages to get in the way in our little fifth-floor flat. My room is nice and large and even has a balcony attached, for candle-lit entertaining or somesuch.

I'll update more in a few months, or upon request. Until then... tscheuss!

PS: I have pictures to share (not least the ones from Senior Dinner on the Quad): they will probably end up on the Facebook unless anyone objects, so stay glued to your mini-feeds!

24 September 2006

Room Picts!

















23 September 2006

Picts!



Eulogy for a Vegetable, in the style of Shelley

Farewell, dear spinach! The invisible worm that flies in the night, through the howling transverse colon, has found out thy bed of secret joy, and pricks us—salad-eaters, weight-watchers, legions of eager vegans—with the sting of death! For you there will be no lotus-like transfiguration; you cannot repudiate your manure-immured roots (full o' th' milch of human vileness)!

Farewell, gentle leafy green! As wise Xerxes once composed an ode to his beloved Oriental plane tree, so will I memorialise you—vegetabile cara ed amabile—under whose spatulate foliage I used to seek refuge from the salivating omnivores preaching their policies of meaty doom. Whither shall I hide now? What herb must I turn to? I can see already the willowy shadows gathering opportunistically, sussurating seductively: bitter Rocket, absurd Frisée, mandarin Kale, and a whole host of phyto-phantoms—Parsley, Coriander, and Spring Onion—I quake at these odious, odorous irrelevancies!

Let me stay true to you always, fair, fatal frond! Let me purchase only empty ravioli shells in your honour, that I may remind myself of the pain of your absence! Let me, as I enter into the house of Patxi, only order pesto-pesto pizzas (and naturally be charged for two toppings) since I will not stoop to be conquered by insipid Eggplant or calamitous Kalamata! And when I die, may my remains be treated according to safety regulations set by a far more competent FDA, such that I may be used to fertilise a whole new generation of spinach, halcyon and hale, fit for the vegetarians of the future!

07 September 2006

A Testament to the Claim that Lawyers Can Do Whatever They Want

Today, at work, I went to the courthouse in San Jose to watch a criminal trial that the attorney I work for was in. The trial ends up lasting much longer than anticipated (from 2pm to about 6pm), and Tom (the attorney) decides that he does not have time to drive me back to the office due to a haircut appointment that he had. Because of this, I accompanied him to get his haircut in Mountain View.

Upon our arrival, Tom decides that he does not
feel like finding a parking spot. Oh no, that was for your average joe. Instead, he decides to DRIVE UP ONTO THE SIDEWALK RIGHT IN fRONT Of THE HAIR SALON. And, of course, he was driving a brand new 2007 Mercedes. I couldn't believe it. He was not partially on the sidewalk; he was completely on it, blocking pedestrian traffic. Gosh, lawyers are a trip.

Update - A Testament to the Claim that All Asians Can't Drive

Since our blog is in danger of becoming an ancient relic, I decided it would be a good time to give everyone an update on what was going on with me.

After bumming around at home in Wisconsin for the months of June and July, I decided to try and find a job in California. I applied to some research places, hoping to get some interviews, and I flew down to stay with Wally (my boyfriend for those of you who do not know) in his apartment while I searched.

After about a month of applying for jobs and interviewing (and running back and forth between Brian and Wally's places of residence), I got a job working at a law firm--Nolan Armstrong & Barton--in downtown Palo Alto on University Ave. It is a criminal law firm and I am a law clerk/paralegal who assists attorneys in case invesitgations, writting documents, and doing some "mini" detective work.

There should be some pretty interesting cases to talk about in the future, so I'll share some of the entertaining ones as they come in. As a teaser, one case involves a Korean woman who, upon drinking "one beer" (according to her), drives off the road and into the fence of the county sheriff's house. When the sheriff attempted to arrest her, she kicked him several times while yelling and screaming. Upon her arrival to jail, she kicked everyone else who was accompanying her while in the jail cell. Now, she not only faces a DUI, but also 4 counts of assault, including one against an officer.

Another case (not one I'm working on) involes a female professional pscyhologist who went to Whole Foods and purchased some yogurt. She decided that she bought the wrong flavor so she went back to Whole Foods and put the old yogurt back on the shelf, and exchanged it herself with the flavor she wanted. She is now charged with petty theft.

Another case involves a lesbian who stabbed someone to death, set the person on fire, and threw him out of a car in San Jose.

So, the cases range from petty to serious, and it has been interesting to work on some of them.

In any event, I hope to share with you more stories as they come!

Lastly, I found a place to live in Menlo Park that is very close to University Ave; luckily, I can walk to work in about 12 minutes.

Take care all of you and I hope all is going well!