Svefn-g-englar

A couple of days ago I mentioned “arguably the most gorgeous ten minutes of music ever composed” — that’s a pretty bold statement, I know.

Well, if you’re curious about what that ten minutes sounds like, download the song and find out for yourself. It’s best if you listen with the lights off, and with patience; it won’t have much of an impact unless you concentrate and give it a chance. If you do give it a (metaphorical) spin, let me know what you think.

After listening to the song, you might also want to check out the video, itself quite stunning. It features members of the Perlan Theater Group, an Icelandic troupe of actors with Down Syndrome, dressed as angels and dancing in slow motion. If you’re willing to leave your cynicism at the door, it’s beautiful.

The last few days have been a blur. People have left (sadly), and more people have come in. IHouse is hopping, as school starts in three days and most people have nothing to do. Of course, I do, but I’m diligently avoiding it as usual.

Gonna hang out with Wing and Jen tomorrow. Yesssss!!!

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The usual stuff

The dining hall didn’t open until this week, and so for the first ten days of the new year I subsisted on cereal (Rice Krispies, Cinnamon Toast Crunch), some fruit, peanut butter sandwiches, loads of granola bars, and the occasional meal out.

As good as Cinnamon Toast Crunch is, I couldn’t handle the sweetness after a couple of days (even the best cereals taste bad with constant repetition, I guess) and so I engineering a switch with Kris for his Honey Bunches of Oats. Delicious.

Anyway, so I was toughing it out in the wild, waiting desperately for the dining hall to open up again. Well, it finally did, and it took me about two bites of my first meal to long instead for some oats bunched together with honey, if you get my drift. I’m a vegetarian, so I really don’t have any choice about what I can eat — I usually have to suck it up and stomach whatever singular non-meat dish with which they’ve decided to grace us. Some sample entrees from the last few days: African Curry, Valentine Vegetable Curry, Black Bean Chili, Cheesy Polenta with Mushroom Ragout, Vegetable Etouffe with Lemon Rice. They sound all exotic and tantalizing (maybe), but in truth they all look like I just vomited on my plate, and don’t taste much better.

Enough complaining. The good thing is that I’ve met a bunch of new people in the last few days — exchange students who are staying at IHouse for the spring semester only. At first I was like, blah, I’m way too lazy to learn any more names and go through the trivialities again (“Where are you from? Oh, Connecticut. Where is that? What do you study? I see, Computer Science. Hm. Can you fix my computer?” etc.) but the people have been so friendly and outgoing that it’s actually been quite easy.

International House really is an amazing place — for your mind, at least, if not your stomach.

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Some links

Dan sent me this link to an amazing dancer. You’ve got to check this guy out — he’s unreal.

Kerry sent me an appalling story about discrimination. More confirmation for my fears that racism is alive and well in the U.S., even if it isn’t as overt as it once was.

The worrying thing about discrimination: the more subconscious it becomes, the more dangerous it is and the harder it gets to convince people that it exists.

That’s why I have enormous difficulty convincing white people (even educated, intelligent friends of mine) that racism is still rampant — and, of course, at least as much difficulty convincing men that sexism is as big a problem. This article provides some ammo.

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10.0 on the Richter scale

I really was “out of it” when I wrote my last entry; I got sidetracked and totally forgot to mention that we went to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art after the DAT, courtesy of Jen (and Bain & Company). It was a mixed bag. Some pieces I “get”, and it’s fun to explore them for a while. Others I just don’t get, and it’s easy to get frustrated with them. Imagine that you’re staring at a huge, uniform gray canvas, conveniently called Untitled. What does that say to you? It doesn’t say much to me, I’ll tell you that. Another work consisted of random pen-and-pencil scribblings on a piece of wax paper. I know that a lot of art is in the eye of the beholder and blah blah, but the artist has got to get you started somehow — otherwise I could skip the trip to San Francisco, and just sit in my room with my lights off. Anyway, even the bad pieces were fun, courtesy of some wacky, hilarious “interpretations” given by my companions. And there was a stunning exhibition of Gerhard Richter paintings that made the whole trip worthwhile. Here’s what sfmoma.com has to say about him:

Richter’s body of work calls into question many widely held attitudes about the inherent importance of stylistic consistency, the “organic” evolution of individual artistic sensibility, the spontaneous nature of creativity, and the relationships of technology and mass media imagery to traditional studio methods and formats. While many contemporary Postmodernists have explored these issues by circumventing or dismissing painting as a viable artistic option, Richter has challenged painting to meet the demands posed by new forms of conceptual art, in the process confirming the vitality of painting as a mode of expression.

Um…. okay. I’m glad he likes painting, because he’s really good at it. I don’t think I can do a very good job describing his style, so I won’t try. This painting (yes, it is a painting) is one of his. If you’re intrigued by it, search on the web for more :).

The last few days have been quite pleasurable: tennis, ping pong, watching football, reading, playing guitar, hanging out with people as they drift back in from vacation, and doing a bit of work. I feel like an old man, though: I need at least one, usually two naps a day just to make it through. For instance, today I got up at 10, had a nap from 1-1:30, and then another nap from 3-4:45 (yes, nearly two hours). And I was all ready to call it a night at 10 pm! Next thing I know I’ll have to start getting some adult-sized diapers.

I’m reading this really brilliant book, Life on Earth by David Attenborough. It’s a general overview of the history of life, eminently readable, full of fascinating examples, and loaded with gorgeous full-color pictures. The good thing is that Attenborough doesn’t cut any corners; he describes everything from an evolutionary standpoint. For instance if he’s talking about a specific adaptation, he’ll delve into both the proximate and ultimate explanations for it, and will also cite exactly how scientists have arrived at those reasons — hints by design or fossils found in Madagascar or whatever. And, believe it or not, all of this is done in fluid, entertaining fashion. I’m loving it, and just ordered several of his other books on Half.com. If they’re anywhere as good I’ll be thrilled.

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Cigarettes and chocolate milk

10 juicy points to anyone who can identify the subject.

Today was, in some sense, productive. I woke up at 8:30 to go exercise with Umesh and Jean at the RSF and ran back at 10:30 just in time to take a shower, grab Kris, and head over to Union Square for San Francisco’s 2003 Dine-About-Town kickoff event with fellow LJers jcliao, wittlebc, yayu, and others.

The premise is that you pay an entrance fee of $10 that goes to charity, and the chefs of all these ass-expensive restaurants prepare hors d’oeuvres for you to eat, perhaps in an attempt to get you to actually come to their restaurants and shell out some real bucks. The event was terribly organized and they ran out of food about half way through. However, to my surprise, the stuff I did manage to try was delicious, proving that my tastes aren’t as pedestrian as I had hoped. Who knew expensive food could be so good?

See, gdogg and I have long held the theory that the worse your tastes — the less discriminating you are — the better off you’ll be. Yes, you don’t appreciate “the finer things in life”; you appreciate everything in life. For instance, Grant is an ice cream connoisseur, whereas I’m not. So he’s only happy if we get the right kind of ice cream, while I’m thrilled to scarf anything down. Conversely, I’m annoyed by low-fidelity stereo systems, while he doesn’t care, so I end up spending hundreds of bucks more than he just to be satisfied. In each case, the person who has uncultivated tastes has a better time all around. Moral of the story: lowbrow is cool.

So, yeah, expensive food is good. Luckily, I also love Taco Bell, Subway, Pizza Hut, and most other trashy fast-food places too, so I’m not too worried ;).

I’m going to indulge here. Yes, it’s my second entry, and I’m already being self-indulgent. Sick, really. Anyway… I love going to concerts. In my previous web log, I made a habit of annotating each entry with the concerts I had attended during that time period, and I’ve found it fun to glance back and remember particular shows. Too bad I didn’t write anything all of last semester. I was planning on fixing that right here, but honestly now that I’m writing this, I’m way too lazy to review each show. A simple list will have to suffice: Ani DiFranco, Joshua Redman, Ben Folds/Duncan Sheik (not as good as this past summer’s Ben show), The Strokes (horrendous), Paul Dempsey, The Music (awesome, one of the best this year), Luna/Goldenboy, Counting Crows/Toad the Wet Sprocket (new albums is great, and Toad was impressive too).

Shows I wanted to attend but couldn’t: Sigur Ros (Svefn-g-englar is arguably the most gorgeous ten minutes of music ever composed; new album is sluggish but growing on me), Tori Amos (Scarlet’s Walk is fantastic), and the killer, The Flaming Lips/Beck (who put out two of the most brilliant releases of the year — argh!).

</indulgence>

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Hawai’i

It’s amazing how I can procrastinate even my measures of procrastination. You see, I actually have work to do, and I figured, har har, I’ll start doing it … as soon as I write this long journal entry about Hawai’i. Standard procrastination technique, of course.

But then second-order procrastination kicked in, and I did everything possible today (reading web sites, emailing, listening to music, even *gasp* exercising at the RSF) to avoid starting this entry.

The funny thing is, I even had some third-order procrastination, as I took two (2) naps this afternoon while trying to do the above! Now I’m fully rested and I have no more excuses, so: Hawai’i.

We stayed for eight days in Kihei, a town on the coast of Maui. Our condo was about 100 yards from the beach, but for those too lazy to walk across the street to the real sand, the complex provided a swimming pool as well. Kihei is pretty much a tourist town, replete with restaurants, fast-food stands, a movie theater, souvenir stores galore, and tourists by the bucketload. That was a pretty big turnoff for me; of course, I’m a tourist too, but couldn’t all those people go somewhere else? ;)

For an island of its size, Maui’s geographical variety is simply astounding. Rising up from the center of the island is Haleakala, a 10,000 ft high volcano. 10,000 ft isn’t that big as far as mountains go, but you can see it all from sea level (as opposed to most mountains, which are usually situated in plateaus several thousand feet high to begin with), and it’s an awesome sight: definitely the biggest thing I’ve ever seen — and yes, I’m even considering Wing’s pecs. One day we drove up to the top. We were feeling pretty proud of ourselves, as the road to the top is one of the steepest in the country, and we made it up in a minivan. We hadn’t been at the top for more than 20 minutes, however, before I saw I a guy on a bicycle pulling into the parking lot at the summit. A bike! We talked to him for a while and found out that a) he’s on the US Postal Service national team b) yes, the team that Lance Armstrong races for c) he’s on vacation and was just doing this for fun d) not only did he bike up the entire 40-mile mountain road, but he started 60 miles away from the base (that’s 100 miles total, kids).

Well. That kind of put things in perspective: yes, we really were lame, lazy tourists, just like everyone else. Anyway, the top of the mountain was fascinating. The landscape was absolutely barren and the crater protected us against wind, so it was silent. It felt, in short, like we were on the moon. Pretty cool.

Another day we drove on the Road to Hana, on the underdeveloped eastern side of the island (not the Kihei side, of course), and took in our share of tropical waterfalls and bamboo forests. We also got to see some surfing and windsurfing from a couple of massive bluffs overlooking the ocean. The air currents were so strong up there that I could nearly lean all the way into the wind and not fall over.

Okay this is getting boring, so… the best part of the trip was when we went snorkeling. In addition to the usual host of tropical fish and eels, I got to see several schools of flying fish gliding over the water for about 15 yards at a time, their fins glistening in the sunlight — truly a jaw-dropping sight. Even better I ran into three gorgeous green sea turtles while I was in the water. It’s hard to describe in words the elegance and beauty of these turtles. This picture probably does a better job. The first turtle wasn’t so big, maybe a yard across, and I followed an arm’s length behind it as it glided through the water right below the surface, careening gracefully this way and that. Man, it’s been a while since I’ve been so deeply in love with anything ;). The second turtle was sleeping on the ocean floor; the third was huge and roaming around about 20 feet underwater. I tracked it for about 200 yards before it headed out to deeper waters.

Back to reality. I read a lot, maybe 2000 pages. Caught up on the Harry Potter books. They’re extremely entertaining, as long as you don’t think about them too much. Also read Made in America (graciously loaned to me by Beth), a rambling discourse on American English with tons of interesting historical tidbits thrown in. It’s written by Bill Bryson, one of my favorite nonfiction writers. I think my family was alternately amused and annoyed by my near-constant parroting of random facts from the book: “Did you know that Abe Lincoln thought the Gettysburg Address was a total failure?” “Did you know that by the time they are 18, American children have watched about 350,000 commercials?” etc. Good stuff.

As my family gets older, vacationing gets better, I think, and this was one of the most pleasant times I’ve had. Now my parents let us do pretty much whatever we want, and my brother and sisters and I are all old enough that we never fight, and can talk to each other about serious stuff in addition to all of our usual joking. Speaking of joking, we all found extremely annoying the unctuous and utterly pervasive use of the Hawai’ian word “mahalo” instead of “thank you”. Somehow all the tourism companies thought that by using an another Hawai’ian word besides aloha they’d suddenly appear to be legitimate, local organizations in the eyes of dumb tourists like us, or something. So we heard it all the time, everywhere, and soon were using it left and right ourselves: “Mahalo for passing the salt”, “Mahalo for opening the door for me”, “Mahalo for saying mahalo all the friggin’ time”, etc.

Okay, this entry could not be more rambling. It’s nearly 3 am and I’d better stop before I write a book. Expect more updates in the near future about my experiences in California so far.

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I’m back!

Got back from Hawaii tonight. (Oops, Hawai’i, that is.)

I had a great time and have lots to write about. Thing is, I’m leaving tomorrow morning to go to San Jose to see my aunt till Sunday. So I’ll write then, when I’ve had more time to think.

Just wanted to wish everyone a wonderful new year!

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Er… Second Post

Here I am, posting again already.

I have to write some essays by tomorrow morning for a Department of Defense fellowship to which I’m applying, so in a burst of furious procrastination, I updated my webpage (it used to say that I still worked at IBM, etc.), added some more sound clips, and changed the journal part to point here. It’s all or nothing with LiveJournal now, baby.

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First Post!!!

Okay probably no one will get the joke behind that subject line. I don’t normally use exclamation points like that, anyway.

So this is my first entry and I don’t have time to say much. I will be leaving for Hawaii in two days but I have a lot of things to write about, so perhaps when I get back I’ll address some of them.

Have a wonderful new year!

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