Happy New Year!

Almost!  It’s currently 11PM my time.  I just checked The World Clock, and it’s 8AM in Paris.  [Count, count, count...] That means they’re currently nine hours ahead of PST.  Okay!  So, I have several things to get through tonight.  There is the small, eensy little matter of applying to the schools whose deadlines are while I’ll be in Paris.  I also have to pack (begin and finish).  Oh, and lastly, er…I have this eye infection.  Really, it’s plural, because both eyes are infected.  I’m eye-dropping myself every hour, and getting quite good at it, I might add.

Why am I blogging, then?  Well, I’ve got twenty minutes before I have to eye-drop again, so I figure I might make a list here of the things I need to remember, as well as include some odds and ends.  This is my first trip to Europe, and I must say, there have already been some surprises.  For instance, what does one find in the Latin Quarter of Paris?  I had images of samba, tortillas, and beans.  A Euro-Mission District, if you will.  After all, there’s a Chinatown, too, albeit not the “OG,” the way the San Francisco Chinatown has been described to me.  As it turns out (this might only be a revelation to me and Tiffany), the Latin Quarter has nothing to do with Latin America.  Okay, now that I put it in terms of Latin America, I guess I can understand why the Old World would not have one.  The Latin Quarter, in fact, is where people do Latin. Or, did Latin.  Now, it’s universities and cafes and such.  What’s more exciting, Latin food or Classicists?  I’m just sayin’…maybe they should branch out a little!

In addition, my friend told me we were staying in Rue Paul Bert, so I did a search.  11e arrondissement.  Cool.  We figured we’d stay close to home the first day if we were tired from travel and just explore around the Place de la Bastille.  Hm.  Well, tonight, I did a search for the full address.  Turns out, there’s also a Rue Paul Bert in a suburb of Paris.  We’re actually staying to the southwest of the city.  CDG is to the northeast of the city.  Yeah.  That’s ok.  Regroup.  This actually takes us closer to Versailles, which is free the first Sunday of the month.  Which brings me to the tentative itinerary…

January
1 – arrival, Bastille
2 – Eiffel Tower
3 – Normandy? Train to Rouen and back
4 – Versailles
5 – Musee Picasso
6 – Louvre, Sainte Chapelle, Jardin des Tuileries maybe
7 – Notre-Dame, Pompidou, City Hall, Pantheon, Jardin du Luxembourg maybe
8 – Arc de Triomphe, Champs-Elysee
9 – Louvre, Musee d’Orsay, Jardin des Tuileries maybe
10 – Belgium
11 – Belgium
12 – Sacre-Coeur Basilica, Montmartre, Pigalle
13 – Nothing planned
14 – Leaving

Aside from the Bastille on the first day, we should still be okay.  We’ll be getting either a Carte Orange (old school) or Navigo (new-fangled technology) for transportation, as well as a four-day museum pass (hence, that span of museum-museum-museum!).  We might just walk around with baguette/cheese/wine in hand and explore.  Oh, and can’t forget the cameras.  That being said, I should use my blogging time productively and make a list of the things to pack.

  • sweaters
  • underpinnings
  • socks
  • boots (I’ll wear my red/white shoes on the plane)
  • toiletries: toothpaste, lotion, (Tiff’s got shampoo/conditioner), toothbrush
  • SWEATERS
  • scarves
  • travel journal (write in Marie’s phone number, Uncle Tony’s phone number)
  • contacts, cases, and saline solution
  • sunglasses (carry-on)
  • SWEATERS
  • passport, money
  • backpack (as a carry-on and for the trip to Belgium?)
  • tights and leggings
  • SWEATERS
  • almost forgot: pants
  • white/black polka dot dress, LBD (definitely worn over SWEATERS)
  • purse with zipper
  • iPod, camera, and phone + chargers
  • plug converters
  • gloves and hat

That’s all I can think of right now; I emailed the list to Tiffany to see if she has any thoughts.  I also just paused in typing to eye-drop, so I really ought to get going on things.  Incidentally, I woke up this morning and really couldn’t open my eyes.  Not because they were stuck together, as can happen if there’s discharge (yeah, I found out that that can happen), but because the eyelid muscles didn’t want to pull apart and because my eyeballs were REALLY SORE!  Ouch!  When my dad and I went to the bank to exchange currency (PSA for those in the Yay Area who use Bank of America: the main branch is in Berkeley, at the Shattuck location; you can exchange currency there on the spot; otherwise, there’s a couple-days’ wait) I was squinting at the teller very ogre-ishly.  I set up an emergency eye appointment and found out this afternoon that I have a mini eye infection!

[Tiff has given me some ideas, they've been duly appended.]

I’m not sure why that warranted an exclamation point.  At any rate, on the sheet that goes in my file, there are pre-printed circles for the doctors to draw what they see on my eyeballs.  Yep!  So, on each of my circles she had three small dots.  If it were a serious infection or ulcer-like, she explained, then there would be large white patches.  As it is, she saw faint white colonies.  So, I’m proceeding with an “aggressive” course of antibiotics.  When she told me, I thought I’d have to swallow my fear of swallowing pills (ha!) and just gulp it down.  I think the general theme of this post is Cindy’s Missing Brain, though, because why would they be pills!?  Of course it’s eyedrops.  Which I’m now getting rather good at.  Tip: tilt your head back, hold your upper eyelid, position the dropper above the eyeball, then look down (just with your eye; not with your head) while squeezing.  It works!  Dab spills with a tissue.

It’s now midnight.  I should get going on the applications.  Now that I’ve made a list of what needs to be packed, I think I’ll be ok doing that while tired.  Applications, on the other hand, should be done while as alert as possible.  Yes.

Briefly Back

Hello, my loves! It’s been awhile, has it not? Quick re-cap of the goings-on that have made my life quite hectic, albeit rather boring:

  • Finals.  Yeah, it happened.  I studied hard for the microbiology class that had so discouraged me and actually walked out of the exam smiling!  It was great!  Then, I wrote the first paper of my college career.  That’s not completely true; I’ve written two-page French lit analysis assignments, but nothing serious like this.  Twenty-two pages on message boards.  Wow.
  • Laura’s holiday party.  My linguistics professor has now had a holiday party three years in a row, and there’s always something fun.  This year, I think the Steven Chu stories will hold the most memorable spot, and I will surely share…sometime soon.
  • Lounging around.  I may have lied.  It might not have been completely hectic.  But, I had to plan things.  You see, I’m dashing off to France!  I’ll (not) do the New Year’s countdown on the plane, after a small layover in Detroit.  I hear tell there’s a brand-new (ish) Northwest terminal.  Exciting!  (But, they lack Dunkin Donuts.)

In the spirit of planning, I offer here a blogging to-do list:

  • Steven Chu stories
  • latkes with Stephen (my friend from high school)’s family, and revelations thereof
  • Emerald Bowl
  • cookies
  • France!  Activities!

That about does it.  I need to sleep now, because I’ve come to the conclusion that I need to do two things to become Super Cindy: get enough sleep and only focus on the things for which I have some sort of talent.  Ha.  Right.  We’ll see how that goes.

The Brooklyn Museum

is very fun. My friend works there and got us in for free on Saturday :) . Stuff I love there includes everything by Gilbert and George, which subset includes stuff like “Life” from the series “Death Hope Life Fear”

Also, I thought “Southern Landscape” by Eldzier Cortor was beautiful:

Happy Election Day y’all!

More

By the way, the French is because TWO of my cousins are learning it!  Hurray!  Slowly, we will take over Taiwan with a dying (not from a linguist’s standpoint) language…

So, let’s see.  Oh, on VENDREDI, we also went to the hospital.  Sister 3 works in the library at MacKay Hospital in Taipei, so we stopped by her office because she took off a half-day, and then we went to visit my great-uncle in the hospital.  Kidney stones, I believe.  He is married to my grandmother’s youngest sister.  It turned into a small family reunion, as various people poured in, including my great-uncle (grandmother’s younger brother) and his wife, my mom’s cousin (daughter of the invalid), and us.  The wife of the great-uncle (see, in Chinese, there are all these terms to describe these relations–whereas in English, you end up with relatives called, “Mrs. Uncle Jimmy’s Wife”) was rather preoccupied with Steve Jobs, having just read his biography.  Or something.  I wasn’t completely paying attention.

SAMEDI, 12 juillet 2008
For lunch, we have Pizza Hut and KFC.  But it’s good, because Taiwanese versions of American fast food often smells better.  At least, I really liked the pizza crust (but beware–if you get the seafood pizza, it’ll have sweet mayonnaise, which is quite revolting!) that we had.  My mom and I also walked through the market nearby, and DEAR LORD the Taiwanese people walk slowly!  I thought that, since we were in a big city, we would be slow tortoises among ambitious hares.  NO.  They’re SLOW.  I hate slow walkers :(   I saw a man walking around holding what looked like a Hello Kitty compact, which was odd, because a) it would have been a rather large compact and b) um.  Why?  Later on, I saw someone else with the same contraption, but from a different angle, and realized it was a portable fan.  Clever!  But Hello Kitty?  Not so much.  That night, we went to a pretty famous Night Market.  I think my parents used to go on dates here, but I could be mistaken, because really, my parents?  Anyway, I had what would be translated as, “Big Bread around Little Bread.”  Maybe.  It was good.  Much better than my translation.  We also discussed my great-uncle’s wife, whose hair was rather unattractively permed in the latest fashion: cornsilk.  I asked, “Why would she wear her hair like that?”  Lee mama’s response: “She’s depressed.”

DIMANCHE, 13 juillet 2008
We pick up Jon, but he’s late.  They had gotten in at 2 in the morning, having gathered in central Taiwan for the big performance/shin-dig thing Joyce and I both went to three years ago.  (Aborigine dance!  Yeah!  Pictures later…)  We go shopping at a department store, which, to my understanding, is kind of the main event, in contrast to American malls, which include department stores, but also other (perhaps more exciting) stores.  I used to hate department stores when I was little, but Taiwanese ones are much more fun.  There are 10 stories (above which there are tens of floors of offices) with your typical department store offerings, but also usually a floor with a bookstore, several floors of food options (supermarket, food court, &c.), and ARTS & CRAFTS!  When I was younger, I always hoped we’d have time to stop and do some sort of project, but in the whirlwind of family, that never happened.  Now, I’m too old and…not creative.  Highlights?  Um.  There was a display of “California scents.”  For the home, I think.  It was rather bizarre to see all these place names from home, especially in conjunction with the scents with which they were each associated.  For instance: Los Angeles Lavender.  Don’t shoot the messenger, Mik!  That night, we had shabu-shabu, which is Japanese hot pot.  It’s named thusly because pick up a piece of meat (sliced thinly, but not so thin as carpaccio) and sweep it through the bubbling broth in one direction (shabu ) and then in the other with just a flick of the wrist (shabu ), and that’s how long it takes to cook!  There were plenty of other offerings on hand (I love Taiwanese cabbage.  It’s somehow much more flavorful than American!) to cook in the hot pot, and it was that night that I decided, I will never challenge anyone to an eating contest again.  I left alimentarily exhausted.  Um, also.  This has never happened to me before, but…I got a chopstick cramp.  Seriously.  Later, we saw one of those Japanese-inspired gameshows.  The segment we watched involved using someone’s head as a mallet…to pop balloons.  Awesome.

LUNDI, 14 2008
Hey!  Bastille Day!  Anyway, time to head to the mountains, where my dad’s family lives.  We stop by a famous dam (much more scenic than Hoover Dam, but that might be due to the greenery).  Some berries had dropped from a tree in the parking lot, and my mom made a point to say, “Hey, Cindy…look!  Pop!”  Yeah, she said pop.  It made me think of the Facebook group about going out of your way to step on a crunchy leaf.  There were many signs for restaurants selling “Live Fish,” a regional specialty, but it’s unclear to me whether you got to point to a fish that they would prepare for you, or if you would be eating something whose heart might still be beating, because we stopped at a roadside…uh…shack.  They offered us “free-range chicken [in Taiwan, this isn't as yuppie as in San Francisco], mountain boar, wild greens, and mountain rodents.”  To eat.  It wasn’t a particularly hygienic locale, but we put on a brave face because my aunt was so grossed out, and hey, at least I’m not Tony Bourdain.  Then, home.  (My grandma’s home, but it’s been drummed into me since I was little that it’s my home, because, you know, my last name is Lee.)  Peach season is in full swing, so my grandmother and her next-door neighbor were selling the fruit out back.  The neighbor, the first to see us, called out, “Really?  Is that you, Cindy?  You’ve gotten so fat I could barely recognize you!”  Thankyouverymuch.  In the mountains, it’s cooler, but there are also a lot of…insects.

MARDI, 15 juillet 2008
In the 20 hours I’ve been in this village, I have acquired 15 mosquito bites.  I keep count throughout the day.  By the night, I’ve given up, having 11 just on one arm.  Oh yes, that’s right.  My index fingers have two each.  Sounds like an exciting life, right?  This is where my father grew up, and I love my grandmother, but with her so busy with the peaches (which the aborigines drop off by the truckload), there is not much for us to do.  We do go bai-bai today, which is actually kind of late, because usually, it’s one of the first things we do when we get to Taiwan.  But, usually, we go to the mountains first thing (the Lee side takes precedence, you see), whereas this time, we were in Taipei for several days (also, we were staying with Sister 3’s family, who is Christian.  It’s odd…I’ve discovered all these Christian relatives…) before going home.  Anyway, I’ve come to realize that, if asked what my religion is, the proper answer is, “I’m Taiwanese.”  It’s not a Chinese thing–the Chinese aren’t allowed to be religious, remember?  It’s kind of a Buddhist and Daoist thing, but ultimately, it’s cultural.  Eastern religions are much more cultural, not relegated to only one day a week or two holidays a year–one of the reasons why Christianity was at first embraced in India, where worship is a daily ritual, and “God” is one more idol to whom you pay your respects.  Anyway, when you bai-bai, (and here’s a related article), you light incense and pray to the deity or your ancestor (we did both; there are particular deities whose pagodas we visit, as well as the ancestral Lee home where we honor my great-grandmother, whose favorite grandson was Lee Papa).  After telling them (silently) who you are, where you live, and whose child you are, you thank them for protecting you.  Then, you ask for things.  Like good grades and world peace.  If this sounds pedestrian rather than spiritual, it’s because I received these instructions while in elementary school, and now my family assumes I know how to do it, so I’ve never really been taught how to be um…holier in the process.  And you know, a lot of people do go to temples around the time of national exams (kind of like the guy whose grandfather hired 1,000 people in India to pray for spelling bee success day and night, but slightly less neurotic–Punal and Varsha will understand and be able to explain this reference) to pray for deliverance.  At the end of your prayer, you place the incense in special urns in front of the deity/ancestor’s portrait, which is why it’s so rude to stick your chopsticks straight up in your food–it’s reminiscent of the incense, which implies that the person dining across from you is deceased.  You also bring offerings of fruit and/or sweets, which, after the praying, you take home and eat.  It’s a bit odd to me, but don’t worry, the deities are not left without sustenance, for we also bring them money.  You also bring stacks of gold paper, and in order for the spirits to be able to use the money, you have to burn it.  It’s god-money, not mortal-money.  Speaking of spirits, temple doors tend to have these high thresholds because the spirits, they don’t walk.  They float.  We mere mortals must hurdle over them gracefully, but when my great-aunt (married to the older brother of Lee Papa’s biological father, who also had EIGHT sisters) entered, she had to hang onto the doorframe to keep from falling.  This trip has been kind of melancholic, because our older relatives are all…older.  The great-uncle (married to one of the sisters) who used to drive us around everywhere is limping around with a bad knee.  His car still smells the same.  My grandmother has a bad leg.  We don’t see them for three years, and then we see very intimately how hobbled their daily routines become.  Still, my grandmother is a businesswoman.  And her business is thriving, so it’s hard to convince her to leave it behind and move in with us.  I stay up late looking at my dad’s old pictures.

MERCREDI, 16 juillet 2008
Lee Mama and I had planned to go for a walk on this day and take pictures of the magnificent scenery.  It’s where my dad grew up.  There’s a nice new bridge, which lies next to a rickety foot-bridge my mom was always scared of crossing, for good reason; my dad knew of people who would pitch over drunkenly into the water in the dark, never to be seen again.  Oh yes, the alcoholics.  The Taiwanese aboriginal communities face many of the same problems as the American Indians, with inordinate levels of poverty and alcoholism.  Our village works closely with these “Mountain People,” especially my grandmother, and there is some hope for a much brighter future than what my dad saw in his youth, like the little boys abused by the Catholic priest to whose care they had been entrusted in the forest further in the mountains.  Yeah.  There are Catholics in the Taiwanese mountains!  And even in Lee Papa’s youth, they were already abusing little boys!  Sorry.  I didn’t mean to poke fun; it’s really quite sad.  And yet, oddly relevant to current American happenings.  Anyway, we didn’t end up strolling anywhere, because the typhoon was coming, so my great-uncle suggested we leave on Wednesday rather than our planned Thursday, so as to avoid the sogginess.  It was really hard to leave my grandmother, particularly because we could barely have a proper farewell amidst the peach sales, but it might be better that it was curtailed rather than prolonged.  This was by far my shortest trip to the mountains, but I was helpful (though fat), and folded at least 100 boxes for the peaches–very beautiful giftboxes, not like Costco cartons–and you know…fed the local mosquito hordes.  Then, there was the descent.  First, we had to visit my dad’s cousin in Taoyuan.  Her three daughters (there might have been a fourth, but I heard whispers that it had been aborted, and it’s quite ridiculous to me, because when you’re that fertile, but you don’t want more children, surely you ought to take better preventative measures!  Also, it’s always odd for me to hear the Taiwanese discuss what my mind categorizes as “liberal” procedures.  But, that’s for another time.) are very accomplished, memorizing ancient texts, winning art contests, and the like.  Actually, it’s just the oldest daughter.  She said that the second one was slightly addled, but I think she was exaggerating…and because the oldest (who’s in elementary school, by the way) is so much more advanced.  After that foray, it was onto the youngest great-aunt’s visit.  Huge seafood lunch, which we weren’t expecting, having thought we would simply be deposited at the High Speed Rail station.  Then, the great-aunt’s home (which makes her sound super old, but really, her son’s only a year older than I am), where the sisters discussed politics and family drama.  We finally made it to the station, and HECK YEAH, BRING HIGH SPEED RAIL TO CALIFORNIA!  It’s spectacular!

JEUDI, 17 juillet 2008
This revelation rightfully began the day before, but dear lord, the baby (BABY!) is THREE!  He walks, he talks…he screams.  My youngest cousin is separated from the next oldest cousin by twelve years (one full zodiac round!), the only one at home with the grandparents, and is kind of spoiled.  Not too much, as his parents (my mom’s younger brother and his wife) and grandparents (my maternal grandparents) don’t mean to, but…he is so cute.  And little!  Unfortunately, he’s going through a phase where he demands to be near his mother all the time, wants her to feed him, and SCREAMS if he doesn’t get his way.  I know, I know.  I went through this, too.  But, I was 8 months young.  Oh, and Lee Papa is calling everyday.  I think he’s kind of bored at home, as he has taken to recounting the plot of Korean dramas to Lee Mama (we left right in the middle of one, I guess) during their conversations.  Other highlight: INTERNET!  YES!  Sister 3, as stated, doesn’t want the Internet in her home for the time being, and in the mountains, it’s just these two old ladies at home who never touch the computer.  So, after eight days away, I’m back on the grid!

Next couple of days
More of the same.  I’m on the egg farm, with a three-year-old as my only companion.  It’s chill.  We look at old pictures of Lee Mama, who cringes.  Huge family luncheon on Sunday–when this happened three years ago, I was at the table with all the boy cousins.  All of them are old, now, though (the oldest is 27, I believe), and didn’t come…so I sat with the little ones this time.  There was much more food leftover this time around.

MERCREDI, 23 juillet 2008
Time to go to Hualien!  Fun fact: the eastern coast of Taiwan has rocky beaches, while the western coast of Taiwan has sandy beaches.  I hope we get to go to the beach this time around, but before we do, it’s High Speed Rail from Taichung (central Taiwan) to Taipei (northern Taiwan), followed by train to Hualien.

JEUDI, 24 juillet 2008
Now we’re back to the present.  My cousin is watching Forrest Gump behind me, so I think I’m going to keep Internetting, as I don’t like all the sad parts :(

Catch-up

Alright, let’s do this.  I am going to catch up, damnit!  Of course, this is just another way to procrastinate on studying for the GRE, but I swear I’ll spend some time on Free Rice later!

MARDI, 8 juillet 2008
And I’m leaving, on a jet plane…I don’t actually know most of this song, and the part that I do know, I sing incorrectly, so let’s not go down this path.  There was a hilarious chart at the Eva Air counter, though, of the carry-on luggage you could bring.  At the bottom was: baby.  Number of pieces: 1.  Maximum length: 15 cm (or something that makes more sense; I forget).  Jon spent much of the wait time on the phone.  With a girl!  (Can someone–Allie–please Facebook-stalk him for me?  K, thanks.)  Lee Mama and I checked out the duty-free; she perused the purses; I, the liquor.  We (read: she) decided against procuring any of either, as the former was rather expensive and the latter, kind of a vice.

MERCREDI, 9 juillet 2008
Sea of vomit.  Kind of.  Both Lee Mama and Jon are prone to motion sickness, and as I had one on each side of me, well, you get the idea.  I had some wine.  It was from a box, the kind you can get soymilk or chicken stock out of, but at least it was red.  More vomit.  Not mine, of course.  The nice man across the aisle from Lee Mama offered her (well, me, because she was hurling into a baggie) a small vial of Asian medicine.  You dab it on your temples and/or your navel, I think.  The smell reminded me of my childhood, and kind of comforted Lee Mama, as she mentioned later, although at the time, she was preoccupied with…you know, the vomit.  OH.  I almost forgot.  Thank goodness for the notes in my handy-dandy-notebook.  There was a girl behind me, probably in middle school.  When we got to our row, her friend was talking to her, but in Lee Mama’s seat.  The friend was sitting in First Class, I think, and they were talking about how they could get people to trade with them so that they could sit together.  “But if there’s a hot guy sitting next to me, sorry Linda!”  When they heard Lee Mama talking to us, they started whispering, “His name is Jonathan!”  From my personal experience as a tweener, I do believe one or both of them has some kind of semi-sordid history with someone (or multiple someones?) called Jonathan.  Jon and I were like, kill me now.  Then there was more vomit.  Again, not mine.

JEUDI, 10 juillet 2008
There are black people!  In line at customs!  (My cousin saw me write that in my planner, and was like, “Black-colored people?”  I explained.  And he queried, “But wouldn’t that be black man?”  Dearie me, I don’t mean to be racist.  That’s how the worst of stories begin, isn’t it?)  There was much business to take care of, as Jon was already three days late for his Chinese-language program.  We had unlocked our phones before leaving the country (check out my awesome–not really–voicemail message, guys!), but it appears his phone isn’t on the right frequency for Taiwan.  Mine is.  So, Jon got my phone.  I will be kind of without phone numbers when I get back to the States, for the month that I’m home before Jon gets back, but that’s ok, that’s what the noggin is for!  Sidenote: I used to be Lee Mama’s personal phonebook, because I knew all her friends’ numbers, so she didn’t have to.  We also had a family friend (who was recently released from jail, I believe; we haven’t really kept in touch, but that’s a story for another day) who memorized people’s license plate numbers.  Memorize isn’t quite the right word, as she didn’t actively try to stalk anyone, but she did know which car belonged to whom at parties!  What else?  Oh, Taipei is hot.  As we walked through a night market, I felt like I was about to keel over…but I was revived by bra-shopping!  Hurray!

VENDREDI, 11 juillet 2008
Babe, pig in the city = Cindy, pig in the city!  I’m a little fattie, soon to be big fattie!  There’s a lot of eating, for sure.  Lee Mama tries to apply for insurance (um…I think the system is kind of socialist, as far as I can tell, but it’s unclear to me how it all works), but is told that she needs to have her husband’s (Taiwanese equivalent of Social Security) card to apply.  Also, Lee Papa has been overpaying for his insurance for TWO YEARS, because if you leave the country for over six months, you don’t have to keep paying.  Something for him to take care of later.  It rains.  Hurray!  There’s baseball.  Unfortunately, it’s a Yankees game.  Ugh.  I make known my distaste for them, but am informed that all Yankees games are televised in Taiwan, as everyone is cheering for Chien-Ming Wang.  Hurray for the Taiwanese pitcher, BUT HE’S OUT UNTIL SEPTEMBER!  Give it a rest, people.  But maybe this means I’ll get to watch the All-Star Game.

Ok, that’s it for the time being, because Lee Mama has found old pictures!  Hurray!

Thank you for not being sketch

Just one more for the time being, really.

BART adventure!

I switched up my routine and changed trains at the Coliseum yesterday, rather than Lake Merritt (nighttime, inclement weather) or Bayfair (daytime, non-rush hours) on my way home.  As we were boarding the train, a gentleman with luggage asked me about how much longer it would be to get to Dublin/Pleasanton.  With logistics taken care of, we settled in for the ride.

Points of conversation:

  • His brother just graduated from Cal.  (Go Bears!)  Their family gave him a good deal of grief for that, though, as they are all Trojans.  (Ugh.)
  • When his father went to $c, he could work part-time and support himself through school.  Not so anymore.
  • When he started college, (“And now you’ll realize I’m quite a bit older than you”) a quarter was $400.  By the end of college, he was paying $1800 per quarter.
  • Sports team loyalties, intercollegiate athletics’ gossip, and the like.

Having expounded on some of my preferences, he mentioned that two people in his office are LOUD, OBNOXIOUS OSU fans.  HECK YEAH!  GO BUCKEYES!  But then, I paled a little.  Um.  He works in the Tri-Valley.  (He said the name of the company, but it was obscured by ambient BART noises.)  He’s an engineer.  The two Buckeyes in his office are probably also engineers.  Uh.  COULD THEY BE ONES I’VE MET?  COULD I KNOW (not in the Biblical sense, thank goodness) OTHERS IN THE OFFICE?  I didn’t ask for more details.  But, I have come to another conclusion…

No more effort for the time being.  Not even Amber’s three-date rule.  Either there is an instant frisson, or nuthin’.  I clearly am uncomfortable with (a) my standards, (b) the way I treat other people, and/or (c) reminders of my [recent] youth.  Friendship first, last, and always.  Anything else?  I’ll be pleasantly surprised, but it had better be one heck of a surprise, because I am not one to develop feelings simply because signals are coming in.  It’s not like I want to learn Korean or anything.

For the record?  This guy was nice and not sketch.  No undercurrents OR overtones of impropriety.  No dirty old man implications.  Good for him.

Bonus: The Elevator Train

Also known as “the El,” one of Chicago’s forms of public transportation is (a) dirtier than BART and (b) slower than the subway.  Mik is partial to it; I have fond memories of it, but public transportation-wise, it leaves something to be desired.  (Yes, other areas have public transportation.  Maybe we’ll get to them later.)

So, small anecdote.  On one of his days off, Wes took the El into the city to go shopping.  Being quite the industrious metrosexual, he was inordinately proud of himself for snagging an attractive purchase from Banana Republic.  Then, he fell asleep.  Not being blessed with super-sleeping abilities (hey, I have few talents, but this is one of them!) like I am, he missed his stop and had to double back.  Somewhere in the confusion, he lost his purchases…and proceeded to whine like a baby.  I can poke fun/not be too fastidious about details because Wes doesn’t believe in blogs and will therefore never admit to reading this.  The end.

Drink Apple Juice

…OJ will kill you. -Taken from Allie’s shirt.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t the orange juice that really threatened my health on the Spring Break trip. It was the horrendous eating habits.

Spring Break 2008 – Conclusion

We set out with baked goods: shortbread (I fully intend to bake this for my lab, as it doesn’t require eggs) and made-from-scratch brownies. I don’t normally go to the trouble of scratch brownies, not liking brownies because they get stuck in your throat (*that’s what she said*), but in the spirit of the grand adventure, I tried out Alton Brown’s recipe with some additions.

The baked goods were supplemented on this trip by…fast food.  A lot of it :(

-At least 3 McDonald’s breakfasts [I'll eat McDonald's breakfast and ice cream sundaes, but dislike the rest of it.]
-1 breakfast at Wendy’s [Yes, they're from Ohio, but it was more expensive than McDonald's and not better-tasting.]
-Burger King in Coalinga [Megabus also stops here]
-Taco Bell [They gave us an extra chalupa]
-Buffet at Rio [And upon our exit, we were offered coupons for MORE food!]

Why did we have such unhealthy eating habits on this trip?  It was a combination of lack of time and paucity of options.  Well, not for the last.  Buffets seem to be tied in to the whole idea of Las Vegas, where excess reigns supreme.  Otherwise, we were often in areas not overflowing with eats, or in a hurry and not able to eat (one of the leading causes of obesity!  Oh dear!).

Much of the Bay Area prides itself on food diversity, our so-called Mediterranean climate making it possible to grow a multitude of raw goodies, while the varieties of forebears spice up the cuisines.  Some even go so far as to adopt a rather unattractive food snobbery.  Well, it’s not that easy, okay?  I’m a fan of eating local, cautiously supportive of Slow Food, and, uh…ethnic.  I was slightly befuddled and a lot frustrated when no one would share seafood dishes with me when I worked in the Midwest last summer.  Then, I realized that it’s not so easy to get fresh seafood supplies in the MIDDLE OF THE COUNTRY.  “Mid” is in that word for a reason; “west” only appears because New England lies to the east, and that little egomaniacal pocket considers iteslf the center of the world!  (I kid.  Mostly.)  I think the ecological conditions are better now, but it would probably serve diners well to be wary of eating Lake Erie catch.  Even in the Yay, we have to be careful about the kind of seafood we eat.  Oh, and by the way, Alex had her first Japanese food experience at CTD last summer.  The first thing she tried?  Seabass sashimi.  Don’t tell me Midwesterners aren’t adventurous.  So, hurray for people who share food with me :)

Wrapping up loose ends

  • During Spring Break, I met up with some high school friends for brunch at Dean’s.  Why is this of note?  Check it.  Also, seeing Pleasantonians in Pleasanton is probably not as amazing as running into FOUR different Foothill alums at UCLA (unplanned), but there were a couple unexpected reunions, for which we should all be grateful…and marvel at how small our world is.
  • On the first leg of the roadtrip, a line was crossed in my friendship with Wes.  It had better not happen again.  Mik would definitely disapprove.  No, NOT LIKE THAT.  (Although, there was a slightly good/slightly unsuccessful April Fool’s prank that was like that.)  But no, don’t worry.  Men and women can be friends without sex getting in the way.  Sorry, Harry.  (Ooh, nice tie-in: Harry Connick Jr.’s soundtrack for When Harry Met Sally.  I do love me some Harry Connick Jr.)
  • Pictures might be posted.  If I dust off my lazy ass.

Spring Break 2008 – Part 4

The last day of the trip, but not the last day of break.  There will probably also be a post with random anecdotes/comments that didn’t make it into the corpus, but that will have to wait until tomorrow later today, because I am also supposed to tidy my room.  Right.

Day 4: On the road again

(That’s from a song.  I think.)

First order of the day, Jon is cranky, because he couldn’t sleep the night before.  Family unrest.  Soothed by brunch buffet.  Oh dear.  The little boy at the next table blows bubbles in his milk, then stabs them with his knife.  :D   When I laugh, the mom says, “Look, the lady is crying because you’re making a mess!”  And he responded, “No!  She’s laughing!”  So, I told her he was cute, and she instructed him to thank me.  Which he did.  Awww.  “It’s hard when you’re outnumbered,” she said (there was also an older brother, probably in middle school).

Today, Cindy is a driving beast.  Oh!  Made liberal use of the cruise control, which I only just discovered yesterday.  Hurray!

Spring Break 2008 – Part 3

While I doubt anyone has this on RSS feed (none of my musings are really worth it…particularly that Yahoo! 360° experiment that is probably still flying in Justin’s radar), these are really coming out fast, huh?  Chalk it up to avoidance of room-tidying.  Yes, tidying.  I maintain that my room/its contents are in disarray, not dirt.

Day 3: Vomitar

Trouble in paradise.  Lee Mama is ill.  Sadly, we must adventure without her.  So, Lee Mama stays in the car by the Shrine of the Ages, and Lee Papa, Jon, and I catch the Blue Shuttle from Yavapai Observation Point, from which we transfer to the Red Shuttle.  PS, all these shuttles run on cleaner-burning fuels.  It says so, right on the side, as well as on the map, which also served up this informative little factoid: most of Arizona does not do Daylight Savings Time, so during this part of the year, it’s on the same clock as California and Nevada.  So, although I traveled over 1,000 miles (I think.  I’ll return with more specific numbers.) and crossed two state lines twice each, I never once had to change my watch–and my phone did not reset itself (WHICH IT CAN DO!  Isn’t technology amazing?  Although it didn’t do so until about 7:00 this most recent Spring Forward event.  Oh, something else it can do…ring an alarm without being on!  CRAZY!) during the entire voyage.

We go to Hermit’s Rest.  I sit in the very chair that might have once also welcomed Theodore Roosevelt’s behind.  Maybe.  It wasn’t labeled.  So I won’t libel.  (Ha.)  Why are there no descriptions of the beautiful scenery?  Because, again, my verbosity pales in view of the Grand Canyon experience.  I hope someday to wend my way around the globe, but every now and then, there are these reminders that within our own vast borders, beauty– that knock-out-anvil-on-my-heart-wind-at-my-back kind of spectacle– is.

After sleeping in the car all morning, Lee Mama feels better.  Hurray!  I use the facilities before we set off.  Um.  The little girl in the stall before me did.  not.  flush.  And, because you asked (not), it was #2.  I’m not talking about a freakin’ pencil!

Drive back to Las Vegas.  No debauchery.  So, I make further nuisance of myself by watching “Dancing with the Stars.”  Hurray!  Successful in recognizing only a few of the stars, but that’s okay.  Am unfortunately inconsiderate of Jon’s feelings by watching The Wedding Planner late into the night.  Don’t judge.

Spring Break 2008 – Part 2

Shall we?

Day 2: Who needs the Internet when you’ve got nature?

There were free prints I wanted to use on Shutterfly.  Alas, there is no Internet.  What does the American Southwest use, then?  Who knows.  Probably pixie dust.  (While we’re linking to Sports Illustrated, here is something completely unrelated, but much more important.)

And so, onwards we drive.  Williams, AZ.  There’s a Safeway across from our lodgings.  Yes, Safeway.  Not Von’s, some of which we passed by in soCal.  Oh, and not Albertson’s, either, which has reverted to Lucky here in the Yay, but apparently not so in Santa Barbara and Las Vegas.  The Lee family chooses not to heed Cindy’s food advisements in purchasing provisions here, paving the way to further unhealthy eating (post, again, to come.  Yes, it merits its own post.  No joke.) throughout the remainder of the trip.

What can be said about the Grand Canyon?  As MTME (Marquardt-the-male, elder) pointed out, pictures are inadequate.  And because I haven’t uploaded them yet, (relax!  I got home five hours ago, and there have been other pressing issues) my even more insufficient words will have to do for now.  We drove in through the South Entrance, and serendipitously stumbled upon the perfect launching point for a foray during the half-day we had left.

We parked by Mather Point, took in the sight, then proceeded to the Visitor Center and caught the Green Shuttle to Yaki Point.  Wow.  Yes.  There was walking.  (Unfortunately, the 1 mile that was trekked in no way excuses the unhealthy eating.  Still gorgeous.)  As we left, our heads were full of plans for the next day.

Upon our return to Williams, I made a nuisance of myself and watched the latter part of Love and Basketball.  It’s love!  And basketball!  What could be better?

« Older entries Newer entries »