Tuesday, December 30, 2003

i started writing this blog because i wanted to see the patterns of my head over the course of a year. i know i was going in with structure, became more comfortable with being looser, even writing stream of consciousness, but then went back to a strict structure again before i just exploded.

some fucked up dreams i've had
1. i dreamt that Dank and some others i know were on TV. i remember thinking that it must have become really easy to get on TV. then i was in my bathroom in the apartment. the door was closed and i tried to turn the doorknob but it wouldn't budge. i kept trying and it still wouldn't budge. so i calmed myself down and thought about what i could do. then i tried again and felt myself slowly start to panic. i felt trapped, like the walls were closing in on me.
2. last night, i dreamt i was in a little black box with the walls closing in on me. i actually woke up to blackness (my bedroom is very dark) and really couldn't breathe! it was freaky. i tripped over the headboard and jumped toward the door. i was relieved to get some air. i climbed back into bed. j doesn't remember and thinks i dreamt it all, but i didn't. i know i woke up.
3. b said i should tell nr about something i told him - why can't i REMEMBER?

Sunday, December 21, 2003

i don't want to do med school i don't want to work, i don't want to do shit. i fuckin hate the expectations of them and you know what, if i want to be a fuckin irresponsible and crazy fucked up fuck then i will be. hahvid degree and all. fuckin i want to go and just throw shit out the window at the wall at you at people and laugh maniacally.
i'm going to write some more for the benefit of no one but myself. don't give a shit if you are reading anymore . i had a hidden blog once but fuck that. let's just say it all to the world. you dont' know who i am anyway. no one could know the dark shit that fills me, not even me. blocked. that's the way i take reaching for the light that i wonder more and more if it's just an unattainable piece of whatever it is, universe or god or spirit or... goodness or "fulfillment" i wish i could just grasp that but if not i can't take the gray anymore no no i want just the dark black aloneness just sitting with the chaos swirling and not having to please a fuckin' soul. no more of that. let me just be happy in my dark black aloneness, and why don't you just leave me be. if you cool you can sit with me in your own black hole and we can just be. yea.
what i feel:
ever feel just Dark. you just want to scribble on papers and scratch the walls and run into the dark street, run towards the headlights coming at you.
you wish you could just fuckin play chaotically like thelonius or someone on the keys. and your fingers feel it and you all of a sudden know what they were doing. not talking not singing but screaming. growling at the daftness of stupid ridiculous lala happiness marketed on banners on shiny phone booths with no phones actually in them. tearing their faces off, them people who are the culprits and are corrupting. you realize the truth is really a baldfaced fuckin lie and the lie is the fuckin truth and why not inject that shit, drink that shit, lie in your vomit and wait for the headlights to run over your useless skull that's thought so much of what's right and good and proper and what does this person need. fuck that. why not just lie under the headlights not giving a shit whether you'd still look tiny as your tiny body is when the cars smash your ribs and stomach and freshly built muscley sinewy mini female biceps and rip parts of your hair off your skull. man that's a really tiny woman, they'd say, who decided to just get run over. but i'm not going to do it, i just feel like it, i just feel like injecting shit in my veins like i saw someone do once, just to feel like who gives a shite. but i'm not going to do any of it, nooo, i'm just going to do nothing and worry as always but fuck if you know what's going on in my mind. this is a gift don't you know.

Friday, December 12, 2003

where i am: home, saw cuz's blog
my energy: chillin' (at home)
my plans: to quit the chic equinox gym and join the ugly purple Crunch gym. blech.
last web site remembered: cuz's sintapea blog
fun things today: seeing mommy and daddy -- they're in nyc
annoyed by: having to work
where I'm going: equinox
what i'd rather do: organize my apartment. i love that book "living large in small spaces"
last inspired by: the book living large in small spaces and thinking how lucky i am to live in this apartment.
last interesting convo: talkin' with bro about how he never saw me cry like i did last night (i was hysterical cuz i couldn't find my mommy!! LOL)

Wednesday, September 17, 2003

I saw Rachael Yamagata last night -- she opened for Damien Rice at Irving Plaza. Her voice has changed so much since high school, a lot deeper and sultrier. Her EP is coming out in October!

Wednesday, July 16, 2003

AN IMPORTANT SKILL TO LEARN: SUING IN SMALL CLAIMS COURT
How New Yorkers Who Can't Afford Lawyers Can Sue!


Just thought I'd pass on the wisdom because for some reason, I have never seen this info well-organized in one place on the internet. Be patient as I do this in parts -- here goes. If you have any suggestions, email me here (take out the word "spam")

I just finished suing a check casher and employer over a stolen, cashed paycheck incident I had in 2001 (during the Anthrax attacks). My final judgment is coming in a couple weeks.

NOTE: I AM NOT A LAWYER, just a regular New Yorker who did this all by trial & error.


HOW TO SUE IN SMALL CLAIMS COURT

I. Whether to sue

Always try to negotiate with people first. Call your nemesis and see if you can work out something.

Follow up by WRITING A LETTER stating the dispute, and that you will take them to court if it's not worked out. This is very important for some reason. See Nolo.com for more info on this (I didn't actually do this, though I should have).

If you're willing to settle, often you can get a good deal because people don't like going to court.

But don't be afraid to go to court yourself. Sometimes, this is the only way.

NOTE: You may want to write letters to a bunch of government agencies because you're pissed off. Go ahead but don't make this your only avenue. Go to court.

At first I did this, because when my check was stolen from the mail, I was told that it was not under the police jurisdiction but the postmasters' (who no longer exists, by the way).

I got the runaround with all these government bureau's "official investigations" that take months, even years. I also got TERRIBLE legal advice and ended up losing the first time in small claims court because some bozo at the Public Advocate (who also no longer exists) told me that I should go after my employer for lost wages, and then patly suggested I go to small claims court. They say stupid things like that because they just want you off their back.

I also wrote the news media at NY1.com, and they just sent me to a bunch of numbers and web sites that were semi-helpful, but more often no longer in existence. My time on TV was still to come (as you'll read later).

Little did I know what a waste of time this would be. Poor naive little me. Don't do what I did.

II. Finding a lawyer

LEGAL ADVICE IS SO IMPORTANT! I cannot stress this enough. However, lawyers are expensive. Most charge at least $200/hour to talk. This is how poor people do it.

Instead, send the message to everyone you know, "do you know a lawyer who's willing to give me some advice for cheap?"

Look for your local bar association or Legal Aid Society web sites (great for certain types of disputes). Tenant.net is great for landlord/tenant disputes.

Try to remember which of your friends actually decided to be a lawyer, and which ones are willing to help you. Even better, someone who can hook you up with Lexis-Nexis (the ultimate law research database) or a pass into their Law library. I suppose you can also go to the NY Public Library and inquire their law library - not sure if it exists. I did all my research on Lexis.com.

Check out the http://www.nolo.com site for really great, basic guidance through the system and advice.

Also, go to the bookstore for books on suing - lots of good Nolo books, and other "Law for Dummies" books there.

III. Researching the law

There are two main types of info you will be looking at:

Case law (they are published in digests called Reporters, eg North East Reporter, NY Supplement, etc.)
The actual law (eg NY Constitution)
Law Review (comments on the law and offers interpretation, explains revisions, etc -- Lexis.com)

Case law are actual cases that are written up in a summary form. In the Lexis.com, you can see not only what precedents might be set, but also the laws that pertain to each case.

For some reason Lexis make it hard for you to link directly to the law -- just look at the links in the case, eg. "commercial law (ucc) / article 3." Then go back to the main menu and look up the constitution section, and open up "commercial law" "article 3" -- there's boxes you click to open the menus.

Look for RECENT CASES that are like yours (law changes a lot, though the old cases are often interesting), then look at the law that pertains to it. Then, frame your argument around these laws -- not according to your own opinion.

In my case, I had to prove the check casher was liable. For example, there are no rules in Commercial Law regarding "how" you check ID. There are laws, however, on the fact that if a bank cashes a forged check (check cashers are held to this as well, I think -- but again, I'm not a lawyer), they are liable.

So instead of saying, "I'm suing because they didn't check ID," (I'd lose) I said, "I'm suing because they didn't authenticate my signature, which had been forged."

IV. Arbitration vs. judge

When you arrive at NY Small Claims Court in New York City (111 Centre Street), Nassau and Westchester counties, the cities of Buffalo and Rochester, you're able to choose between an arbitrator and a judge. An arbitrator is an experienced lawyer who serves without pay. Both sides agree have to agree to be tried by an arbitrator.

The hearing before an arbitrator is less formal, and you may not be as nervous as you might be before a judge. When an arbitrator determines a case, the decision is final and there is not further appeal by either the claimant or defendant. The fact is most small claims cases that are appealed hardly ever win, so this is a very reasonable option.

An arbitrator will apply the same law to your case as the judge would apply. Also, if you choose an arbitrator you will definitely be in and out -- if you choose a judge, you will have to come back, sometimes several times. This is because there usually are many arbitrators available and only one or two judges.

In my case, I went with an arbitrator. I waited around in a courtroom -- basically a big room with benches where everyone sits and waits for their name to be called, like in jury duty -- for a half hour before being called to the waiting room to wait for another hour to meet with the arbitrator. Not fun. Bring a magazine, or better, a friend. Moral support is a nice thing to have vs. biting your fingernails and eating the crap in the vending machines, next to the big sign that says, "NO SMOKING, EATING OR DRINKING IN THIS ROOM."

It was in this tiny little classroom-like room, and me and the defendant sat right next to each other. That was a little wierd. You really want to be prepared because it can be nerve-wracking. I'm not someone who gets very nervous, and even I felt a little stressed.

Be prepared... the next section is important for this.

V. Preparing your case for small claims court

DO YOUR RESEARCH! See section III.

Then read this FAQ from Nolo.com. It is extremely helpful.

Look nice and professional. Makes a BIG difference. But don't look pimped out either. In court, people Judge you -- remember that.

The Opening Remarks is very important (see above faq for guidance).

Winning a case is all about bringing EVIDENCE and WITNESSES (if you can). Be prepared for anything.

Winning is also about presentation, about what you let them see. This is why lawyers are snakes. It's part of the game. Be honest, but shrewd as well.

Also be concise. They get impatient very fast with long-winded, nervous explanation. They will sound rude and short. You have to understand that they see things through the law and are trying to filter and translate your babble into the law. Be calm, do not interrupt, be assertive but balanced. You want to seem like the mature, cool, RIGHT one.

I wish someone had told me this: when the arbitrator / judge asks you stuff, only answer their question. DO NOT VOLUNTEER STUFF IF YOU DON'T GET ASKED FOR IT.

Practice, practice, practice your opening remarks. Argue it with a friend, get someone to do devil's advocate with you.

Funny thing that could happen to you:

When I filed my first case against my employer, I got called by the People's Court (remember that TV show?). Apparently, the small claims court is public record so people can see your info.

You REALLY want to be prepared for something like this. Judge Milian will not hesitate to mock you if you give her the chance -- it's not just court, it's TV. The stagehands will pump you up to be really aggressive and entertaining. I gave them that and they gave me some back -- I told the judge that I was in grad school, and when she asked where, I did (I went to Harvard)... I was really sorry I said that, because after that Judge M seemed to have it in for me. I lost.

VI. Collecting Judgment

More on this if I win... check out NY Small Claims Court site for their advice.

Web Links on the Law
(If not linked, input these terms into Google. I'll supply it later.)

http://www.lexis.com
http://www.nolo.com
http://www.findlaw.com
http://www.courts.state.ny.us
http://www.tenant.net/Court/Howcourt/sclaim.html Official NY Small Claims Court site
http://www.housingnyc.com/resources/resources.html
http://www.rentlaw.com/smallclaims.htm
http://tenant.net
http://www.nypirg.com
ny constitution
legal aid
new york bar association
ny state banking department

Universities often have law services for students and the community. Call your local university law schools for more info.

Hope this was helpful.

Monday, June 09, 2003

Musicians...

Just found out that an old classmate of mine Rachael Yamagata -- we went to girls prep school from hell together -- has just finished a recording with RCA and opened for David Gray at Madison Square Garden this past January. She was a singer for the funky Chicago band Bumpus.

Jay, my honey bun, has also finished with his recording finally -- Norah Jones and Gregg Allmann, who he plays horn with during the year, plus others have written some things for him. A Mose Alison-meets-John Coltrane-meets Bob Dylan... hard to describe. Great socio-political lyrics as well -- not overdone at all. Check this out:

"The old world starts to crumble, and the poets speak in rhyme; the poor ones' feeling humble, and the junkie feels sublime; the young ones' starting trouble, and the old ones' got no time... but you go on and on, big business man."*

He's shopping for labels too. He goes through so much. Don't know if I could ever do the artist life. It's rough.

Another friend of Jay's, Richard Julian, is going to be opening for Norah this month. Jay has opened for Jesse Harris at the Living Room, who is also fantastic.

Money geniuses...

By the way, wanna thrill? Thought dotcom trading was dead? My brilliant younger bro, Ted has been making serious money in a bear market by tracking the waves of a stock based on elliott wave theory, which utilizes natural patterns such as fibonacci number sequences. His last profit was about $18K last Friday (THIS IS FOR REAL, I SWEAR... he's family) after selling SINA.

He explains it on his site, Gemxwave, which is basically his concise analyses of the market throughout the day, along some random maniacal ramblings (that goes along with genius, I guess). You can sign up for a 10-day trial with no credit card required -- he just gives you the password. Check it out.

*Lyrics - Big Business Man, © Jay Collins 2002

Monday, May 19, 2003

From May 2002 -- Returning to the U.S. from Manila

i have been home in nyc for 2 wks now. it's been fun living with jay. much smoother than i thought, more comfortable, more fun! freezing ass weather til today tho- i have not felt breathtaking joy for that warmth (85 degrees) since last spring. though i love the tropical weather in the Ph, what i felt was...peace. the smell of nuts and other vendor fruits in the air. the city is transformed into a green rush of spring where the concrete becomes a study of life walking, growing, and blowing through it- not sterile, but a silent quietness in the buzz and breath of us.

never thought i'd love DUMBO (down under the manhattan bridge overpass) but when i returned Last Tango In Paris and Mystery Men to the video store, i thought...
walking through the small park to the under bridge arches leading to york st via pearl, there was a peaceful pattern of passersby in colorful spring-filled busyness, freshness in their eyes. I passed under and found a way with green on one side and the clean sidewalk smooth under my feet.

I closed my eyes, still walking, and saw in my mind Bohol, the first island i visited after landing in Manila. i took a plane to cebu and a speed boat to the island, to its brown dusty streets with palm trees and turquoise beach peeking through them. i project to a possible future in my mind, walking to my wooden shanty on the beach, holding fruits from the market, coming home to my study, my papers, my writings, alone, at peace.

my neighbors gather in their houses down the street, talking, laughing, eating, pouring water on their plants, leading their dog-- brown faces and white smiles blending with my own. before me they form a sunrise of eyes, coming and going like the waves of the ocean, and familiar to me as if we'd been born together in the same room. they are my neighbors. not the cold and shut-off eyes of my neighbors here, but the curious and warm eyes of cousins i've never met, but heard of and seen in pictures.

i don't know why i feel such a deep connection to this place- of course it could be explained in that i am filipino and it's in my blood, but i was born in the U.S. and in a way it's almost ridiculous to say. is it all truly woven in my veins like this? why i love the hot weather as if i were made for it. is this my true home, the place that reflects the true me, my soul, my life strength? i got home and felt so comforted in this small, brown room of jay's. who'd have thought that'd be my final feeling today?

Thursday, May 15, 2003

My new hero. I love this kid, Michelle Wie:

"Michelle Wie isn't like most 12 year-old girls you run into. She's nearly six feet tall, hates the mall, thinks boys are annoying and can rip a golf ball nearly 300 yards."

Anyone bothered by the idea of women playing pro golf against men better get used to it.

Wednesday, May 14, 2003

NYC Scam Alerts:
Manhattan judge rules against MTA fare hike! HAH HAH!!

Have you ever thought about joining Bally Total Fitness? Or are you a member? Check out my review on Epinion.com and the Bally complaint web site.

Have you ever been approached by someone inviting you to a church service at the New York City Church of Christ? Check out ICOC News Blog to find out what these people are about. And you thought the Catholic church was bad!

Thursday, May 08, 2003

OH MY GOD!!!!

Salam is alive! His blog is back up.

http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/

Monday, April 21, 2003

prodigy
13-year-old twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize graduates from college with Cum Laude.

Thursday, April 17, 2003

the hippie side of my family
i see two polarities increasing in my extended family, mwah hah haaah... liberals taking over.

my cousin makes journals. she has a site where she sells them. they're beautiful. not only that, she has a "journaling tips" section for those of us more hesistant about reflection.

Wednesday, April 16, 2003

family
they're all coming up this weekend... and not for easter, but because of random "coincidences" that came together this weekend: my cousin for her friend's "baptism," my brother for his birthday (girlfriend got him plane tickets), mom & dad to see my bro and me for his 26th birthday, because dad happens to be in DC this month. i was just thinking last month, why does my family have to be so far away? sometimes i get jealous that some people have their families here, though i know others are jealous that mine are so far. har har. well i'm grateful.

psychic shit
i have some psychic phenomena happening lately... starting with last summer. i had an older cousins who took care of me with his wife when i was little. i hadn't thought of them in years, but in june i had a dream about them visiting me in nyc, with their new baby. they have never been able to have a baby. the very next morning, my dad emailed me to ask if i could come down to dc to be the godmother for my cousins' new baby... who was adopted that week!!

that whole summer, when i went driving, i knew when cops were going to come over the road, and somehow "knew" who was calling me even without caller ID. and a few weeks ago i dreamt that a friend (who i hadn't seen in a while) was really angry at some guys we knew. when i told her about it, she said, "HOW did you know??!" finally, i wrote bobby & j about my "emergency" info - parents' info, etc... and bobby wrote me back, "GET out of my life and mind. I was think of this right before bed last night. I was thinking also to e-mail my parents and siblings information about friends here so if something should happen they have a NYC person to be in contact with. NO WAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

wierd.

screenwriting
simone, bobby and i saw better luck tomorrow, an asian-american teen suspense film that opened this weekend. for some reason we all had such strong reactions to it. it's set in Orange County (LA), where bobby & simone grew up. simone and bobby were really hardworking asian-american high schoolers too. bobby's email: "But I was thinking about all those kids who were working so hard, and will continue to work hard, and then end up like us, people with busy lives!!! Gosh, where were the "warning sign" that life would be this busy and complicated"?? that's true!! also poor bobby has been really stressed out... but it also inspired me and simone, who went to tisch film school and became a lawyer because she wants to be able to care for her family. her friends from film school even sat her down and said, you are TALENTED, what the hell are you doing in law school?? so we decided to go out and feed ourselves creatively every week--an art gallery this week, taking pictures next weekend. it's so easy to get stuck, but you just got to do one little thing at a time. you never know where it can lead.

i've started writing ideas for a script on my private blog. my idea is staying private. but i'll tell you about j's -- j thought this would make a good a movie: the stories of four different jazz musicians in present day nyc and the shit they go through on an every day level. club managers, gigs, relationships, etc. after hanging out w/j my jazz musician honey for the past year and a half, i've found the whole culture to be really interesting. what strikes me most is how they are like a brotherhood. these guys all know each other. and, it's mostly guys. my first time at smalls, on jason's monday nights there, i remember being struck at the fountain of youth in jazz.. many of them are over 30 but don't look a day over 20. or even 15. jason's band looks like the band guys from high school, except... they're damn good!! it's funny !! the casualness in their performances, compared to classical, even rock music, is unique too. j will walk around, have a smoke, have a conversation, in the middle of his sets. i should have written down my first impressions last year (maybe i did somewhere...) when they happened, because a lot of it i take for granted now.

further thoughts on money
most new yorkers are liberal. why is that? because we see so much CRAP every day and we put up with so much CRAP with everything from noise pollution to annoying fake street bums to annoying bureaucratic assclowns. shit, social problems are real to me every single fucking day, not just some theoretical thing that i read about in suburbia from the local newspaper. i will pay money if i believe it will alleviate some of these problems i see! i get so pissed arguing with some of the military conservatives on the icc df that i won't talk to them about it anymore. call me naive but that's my world view, fucker.

another thing my coworker and i were talking about: the lame stance some people take with politics, "i'm socially liberal, fiscally conservative." in other words, "I just want what i want, but i like to sound like i give a damn about people." i prefer an outright, "rich should rule the country because we own it" POV over that lukewarm shit any day.

god can i get anymore pissed off today? maybe it's what i ate for lunch... ha ha. not. by the way, there's howard zinn updated PHOUS and included a chapter on Bush W and the "war on terrorism." saw it at barnes & noble today. i already have PHOUS and the 20th c. revise. would someone photocopy the chapter and send it to me? i would be so grateful.

piano
i gotta practice ... my roommate's out of town.

Friday, April 11, 2003

paranoia
paranoia! that .mil guy was my friend from the icc df. hi prooo. all i have to say is the icc experience has definitely damaged my head. i have a "paranoid" style, as my dear bobby would tell me. gee, thanks!

Thursday, April 10, 2003

spies...!
WHY ARE THERE PEOPLE HERE visiting here from .mil, .gov sites?! see my extreme tracker (small box at the bottom left corner of the screen). people, your tax dollars at work.

back to my happy little life -- howard zinn, views on money and life
reading howard zinn, skipped to the 20th century book which is really the People's History of the United States but with only twentieth century history, plus old man bush & clinton. i demanded that my other liberal work friend get this book. i've been reading on the labor unions, socialist ideals, the people who died, the criminal tactics some union leaders promoted, the grass roots organization, the corruption of "mis"-leaders, the inspiration of the earnest leaders, the ideals, the sacrifice. it reminds me of the icc in some ways. these people were willing to go for broke. i think most people would be in desperate circumstances. it makes you get spiritual. it's depressing to read about the militia and the government attacking these people. the desperation to protect your comfort zone at the cost of others' lives -- shocking. all based on the perception that one's life will be ruined without the huge amounts of money one commands. maybe i'm being overly simplistic, but doesn't it all come down to this? j says that the leaders who manipulated the race issue with the working class will do anything to survive, that their manipulation is not necessarily conscious. i would add that people will do anything to stay comfortable. people are afraid that if they aren't, the suburban myth will kick in: you'll be homeless! you'll starve!! you'll be in the streets!! oh please.

despite the idealistic and naive attempts to point to our forefather's constitution, we don't have a democracy. rather, an "idea" of democracy is perpetrated and used to manipulate us to follow our wealthy leaders' agendas. i would agree that to a certain extent, our very knowledge allows us to continually strive for and exercise true democracy, as the many social movements of the past have shown. j's question last night: how do you have democracy without greed? well i would rephrase the question: how do you have democracy for the greedy? not judging between people -- we all are greedy, which is why power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. unless you are aware and ready for it. which is where spirituality come in. [4/17 a correction: j said he meant to ask, "how do you have democracy with capitalism?" well that's really not a different question, IMO, but of course he really wanted to make that clear. OK!]

the tiring and unspiritual pursuit of material wealth and people's obsession with money drives people mad. when i was living with a lot of money a lot of things about life were miserable. i felt weak and powerless and saw my family suffer from the burden of debts, taxes, people stealing your money, suing you for money, the superficial social circles, the cold, self-obsessed meanness of the people hovering around you who also had money or wanted some. the only good thing is its power to comfort and distract yourself. but you don't need that much to have that, at least not in this country. and that power is based on your standard of comfort, which can always be adjusted (sure was when i had "noooo monnney!" (as char puts it) ), and your level of inspiration. however, it takes money to have hobbies... i like being able to pay for knitting needles and music/dance lessons... if i had the same amount money that allows me to do these things for the rest of my life, i'll stay happy. ah, the spiritual conflict, the body yearns for comfort! i remember when i was living all ghetto in the church, but i was fine with it because i was doing it for something i believe in.

i have always equated money with unhappiness... i suppose that's why it's hard for me to get motivated to make a lot of it. i hate being poor too, don't get me wrong--debt sucks even more when you're poor. at least when you're rich, you have a house to sit in even if you owe tons of it. when you're renting you can get kicked to the curb. good thing nyc has strong tenant laws, though these seem to be disappearing one by one like everything else.

Wednesday, April 09, 2003

i showed dinah the sweater i made. i've been getting a lot of compliments on it. that's because i totally hate all the traditional ugly sweater people make, although there's definitely a knitting trend that's transcending them. i found this great site for MAKE workshop, a knitting school here in nyc, that had a sweater i liked. i created my pattern based on the pic but without sleeves, in olive green merino wool. it looks sexy on me, if i do say so myself. which i'm siked about because i thought it'd be too small, or stretch too far.

dinah, my business inspiration (along with matt in boston) said i should design petite line of knits. i've already been playing with the idea of creating accessories. the thing is, it's a hobby to me and the idea of producing all the time is a cost i have to think about. and i know what production is like after working for cosmetics and advertising. pain in the ass! but i'm still open to the idea, especially as it would give me a chance to develop some business skills. i know a great little market on mulberry that was operating last year out of a church -- i'd like to sell my wares that way, or even do a weekend vendor thing. not sure what that involves though, and i know you have to apply for a license. it's interesting to me that the IRS allows you to claim "hobby" deductions, which makes sense if you make a "hobby income." i think that's where i'd fall, because i would certainly not want to make a living out of this--way too stressful.

j and i have been doing great. we were falling into a routine and decided to change it (caused some drama, at first i was like "I'M BORED") he thought i wanted to break up. i did too, then realized it was just over something that could be changed easily. i realized that every time we hang, i'm tired!! and that really makes me frustrated, having to hang when i'm tired. so we decided to hang on afternoons instead, and with the smoking ban lifted and my work schedule starting at 10 am, i'm finding my energy to be up more often. it changed our dynamic SO much!

j and i talked about our roles in each others' lives down at cafe figaro (we were out at 2AM, on MY request--I wasn't tired!). my role for him, he said, was that I showed him how to have real intimacy. his role for me -- i said, "you make me do what is unnatural!" in a good way. i would never eat well or exercise, or take breaks in my workaholic day, if it weren't for his gentle suggestions... LOL. he also takes care of me, i said that really his role is as someone who takes care of me but is also my partner - most people i've been with have been less or more mature than me, with no balanced dynamic. also j and are alternately extroverted or introverted with people, so there no one person who's loud or quiet. both of us are... well, both.

i love him, my honey j. he's the guy that i thought about in my head, the one i hadn't met yet and hoped existed, and finally did. i'm so lucky.

one more drama -- damn taxes. trying to figure out if it's worth it to pay an accountant. again, it's not. i thought i could contribute prior year charity contributions but you have to have given more than 50% AGI (for church contrib). i was about to go on this trek to find my old check numbers, call the bank to see if they have an archive and have them send copies to me. good thing i figured it out before going to all that trouble. i hate paying taxes, though i don't mind paying a certain amount as a citizen. but if i am paying, i should have more say in our government who's bringing our world down a scary path. i'm even thinking of not having a kid, because the world is feeling more lost every day. and then all these out-of-touch social subtle expectaions (demands) from the fam about getting married, becoming a doctor, having kids because i'm nearing "that age." fuck that. the world where i'm coming of age is not the same world where they came of age. it's time to rethink, reconfigure.

while doing my taxes, i am struck at how many deductions go towards business-related things, even deducting a home computer used partially for investment. i remember when "capitalism" was only some big word to me in history class. a MUST READ: Howard Zinn's The People's History of The United States. read the Amazon reviews too. admittedly leftist and skewed to the perspective of "the common people" but this book rings so true to my own experiences and makes complete and total sense. i suppose it also reinforces my cynical view of human nature, as well.

more knit obsession links:
RedLipstick Boutique, Brooklyn: Incredibly inspiring designs. Oh my god, and I'm not the only one. She has a blog.

I also got help on my sweater pattern from girl from auntie.

Other good ones: get crafty, readymade mag, and (love the title): not martha

Also this girl has good links. I started out my search here when I was looking for non-traditional (read: ugly) patterns.

I like this guy's philosophy: "Ranjit's ambition is to dabble in every existing form of art and craft at least once."

Monday, April 07, 2003

bobby: american and asian-american brainwashing
we were talking until 2:45 AM last night. we've agreed that people often succumb to the pressure put on people to get married and start a family, when they are not ready. i love the story of the feminist leader who refused to get married, then found the love of her life at 83 and could not help but get married. it was on her terms. i want to have that kind of strength. the same goes with my career and self-confidence in my decisions. the asian-american family pressure is all about guilt. "why do you make your family sad?" because you're refusing to go to medical school or not married to a rich husband yet. let's deconstruct that. is it really sadness? and is it really the WHOLE family? please. don't exaggerate. and why must it be about ME changing? the fact is (and how often our emotions ignore facts) -- it's the FAMILY that needs to change and get over it.

American families are happy with their kid getting a BA and a masters, why is it never enough for Asian families?

for me it's, "you're the smartest kid in the family, you went to columbia and harvard, why won't you go to medical school?" as a little kid i dreamed of helping people as a doctor. i was always good at math and science. but my aunt's continuing pressure for me to "make money," telling me i need at least "6 figures" to live -- turned me off to the whole career because now, in my mind, it's just about money. i have never been the kind of person to care about that -- no, i've been the type who hates money because of the obsessiveness, the superficiality of people who are consumed by making it.

i remember growing up in this incredibly wealthy area and being so lonely and yearning for something "more." my journey to understand the spiritual plane of life, which is so unexamined in our society, has been intense and frustrated alternately throughout my life. j and i had a great discussion on spiritual things and certain truths because of the things he's been reading. it made me realize that seeing others, and my own, lack of a spiritual perspective has a lot to do with my anxiety about my career path, anger at the church and its corruption, anger the war and the American government's obsession to dominate the world. these things will never lead to happiness. and finally the paradigm shift -- my own impatience and cynicism must meet god's surgical knife too (i don't believe in christianity on its own, but the analogy serves my point well, i think).

mono(tonous)gamy? and the urban tribe
back to my conversation with bobby: another thing we talked about is how hard long-term relationships are, and monogamy. after six months many people will ask themselves, is this the person i want to be with for the "REST" of my life? but why do we always have to project into the future? we could die tomorrow. even if not, it's working now so why freak out about the future? it will become obvious in time anyway, unless you are crazy or in denial or whatever.

bobby and i always have the same things going on in our relationships at the same time. i asked him last night, "i wonder what we're going to go through together in our next life!" joking - but he is my soulmate. it's great to have a soulmate who's not your lover, but best friend. big brother. confidante. i am so lucky to have him in my life. especially with that big confident self-esteem of his - i've learned so much from his confidence and maturity. thank you god for bobby.

mom is not going to Manila
...because of SARS. thank god for this too. i really hope i don't get SARS and die. i guess, though, you cannot escape fate. nyc has 7 "possible" cases. then there's my co-worker who was quarantined, but didn't have it. the incubation period is 3-7 days.

c'est la vie!

appendix: the urban tribe
"In My Tribe"
By ETHAN WATTERS
New York Times Sunday Magazine -- October 14, 2001

You may be like me: between the ages of 25 and 39, single, a college-educated city dweller. If so, you may have also had the unpleasant experience of discovering that you have been identified (by the U.S. Census Bureau, no less) as one of the fastest-growing groups in America -- the "never marrieds".

In less than 30 years, the number of never-marrieds has more than doubled, apparently pushing back the median age of marriage to the oldest it has been in our country's history -- about 25 years for women and 27 for men.

As if the connotation of "never married" weren't negative enough, the vilification of our group has been swift and shrill. These statistics prove a "titanic loss of family values," according to The Washington Times. An article in Time magazine asked whether "picky" women were "denying themselves and society the benefits of marriage" and in the process kicking off "an outbreak of 'Sex and the City' promiscuity." In a study on marriage conducted at Rutgers University, researchers say the "social glue" of the family is at stake, adding ominously that "crime rates....are highly correlated with a large percentage of unmarried young males."

Although I never planned it, I can tell you how I became a never-married. Thirteen years ago, I moved to San Francisco for what I assumed was a brief transition period between college and marriage. The problem was, I wasn't just looking for an appropriate spouse. To use the language of the Rutgers researchers, I was "soul-mate searching." Like 94 percent of never-marrieds from 20 to 29, I, too, agree with the statement "When you marry, you want your spouse to be your soul mate first and foremost." This über-romantic view is something new. In a 1965 survey, fully three out of four college women said they'd marry a man they didn't love if he fit their criteria in every other way. I discovered along with my friends that finding that soul mate wasn't easy. Girlfriends came and went, as did jobs and apartments. The constant in my life -- by default, not by plan --became a loose group of friends. After a few years, that group's membership and routines began to solidify. We met weekly for dinner at a neighborhood restaurant. We traveled together, moved one another's furniture, painted one another's apartments, cheered one another on at
sporting events and open-mike nights.

One day I discovered that the transition period I thought I was living wasn't a transition period at all. Something real and important had grown there. I belonged to an urban tribe. I use the word "tribe" quite literally here: this is a tight group, with unspoken roles and hierarchies, whose members think of each other as "us" and the rest of the world as "them." This bond is clearest in times of trouble. After earthquakes (or the recent terrorist strikes), my instinct to huddle with and protect my group is no different from what I'd feel for my family.

Once I identified this in my own life, I began to see tribes everywhere I looked: a house of ex-sorority women in Philadelphia, a team of ultimate-frisbee players in Boston and groups of musicians in Austin, Tex. Cities, I've come to believe, aren't emotional wastelands where fragile individuals with arrested development mope around self-indulgently searching for true love. There are rich landscapes filled with urban tribes.

So what does it mean that we've quietly added the tribe years as a developmental stage to adulthood? Because our friends in the tribe hold us responsible for our actions, I doubt it will mean a wild swing toward promiscuity or crime. Tribal behavior does not prove a loss of "family values." It is a fresh statement of them.

It is true, though, that marriage and the tribe are at odds. As many ex-girlfriends will ruefully tell you, loyalty to the tribe can wreak havoc on romantic relationships. Not surprisingly, marriage usually signals the beginning of the end of tribal membership. From inside the group, marriage can seem like a risky gambit. When members of our tribe choose to get married, the rest of us talk about them with grave concern, as if they've joined a religion that requires them to live in a guarded compound.

But we also know that the urban tribe can't exist forever. Those of us who have entered our mid-30's find ourselves feeling vaguely as if we're living in the latter episodes of "Seinfeld" or "Friends," as if the plot lines of our lives have begun to wear thin.

So, although tribe membership may delay marriage, that is where most of us are still heading. And it turns out there may be some good news when we get there. Divorce rates have leveled off. Tim Heaton, a sociologist at Brigham Young University, says he believes he knows why. In a paper to be published next year, he argues that it is because people are getting married later.

Could it be that we who have been biding our time in happy tribes are now actually grown up enough to understand what we need in a mate? What a fantastic twist -- we "never marrieds" may end up revitalizing the very institution we've supposedly been undermining.

And there's another dynamic worth considering. Those of us who find it so hard to leave our tribes will not choose marriage blithely, as if it is the inevitable next step in our lives, the way middle-class high-school kids choose college. When we go to the altar, we will be sacrificing something precious. In that sacrifice, we may begin to learn to treat our marriages with the reverence they need to survive.

Thursday, April 03, 2003

salam pax, where are you
i've been searching on the internet for salam to see if maybe he has some kind of other blog going on somewhere. but i also just read that baghdad is totally dark. when the coalition troops moved in that's what they saw--darkness. a black spot. they claim they did not target the power grid. very smart. scare the crap out of them. i wonder if salam is alive. i am worried for him.

mom is going to be in manila soon
i hope she will be okay and not get sick with that SARS going around in asia. my co-worker came back from asia and was one of the 2 new yorkers quarantined when news broke out of SARS a week ago. he had all the symptoms, we were reading about it on the site. but the hospital claims he didn't and sent him home when he got better. i hope they were right.

media fear-mongering
sometimes it gets to me despite the fact i know it's all designed to make us nice and compliant. i felt like watching Michael Jackson on that MSG show he did with his bros on VH1, after seeing the war coverage and SARS shit over and over. it takes a lot for me to watch that psychotic freak dancing around, unless it's Jackson 5 songs.

Monday, March 31, 2003

flashback

april 15 2002
(thanks for sending me this back, manang jopie!)

one of my first experiences in Manila: THE BABY LIZARD

I was lying on the big bed in mom and dad's bedroom, watching CNN Asia. my dad tells me to look up, where there's a little, 1-inch long baby lizard stuck to the ceiling! mom was freaking out, but we ignored her and it for a while and she forgot about it.

then i made a comment on how cute it was and she started freaking out again and telling us to get rid of it (eg "Kill it! kill it!"). so dad brushed it off the ceiling, and it landed on the bed!

mom's screaming by now and dad brushed it onto the floor. "kill it! kill it!" she screams, and dad goes, "i can't." (If you know my dad, you know he's not going to kill the lizard. he has a soft spot for birds, lizards, mice... JJ, remember when we caught that cute fuzzy mouse in the kitchen and we set it free in the yard?)

Ok, like father, like daughter!? well not quite... i went over and tried to stomp on the poor little baby lizard w/dad's slipper, and it ran to the edge of the wall, then under dad's chair. finally i smushed the thing. when it was dead it was like a big green booger with eyes. but still cute!

so i took a kleenex, put him in it and threw him out. Mom exclaimed: "you're so brave!" -- Whatever, mom!

NEXT: List of things Mom is afraid of, in Ph.

Friday, March 28, 2003

the young iraqi
3/22 -- "The whole city looked as if it were on fire. The only thing I could think of was
'why does this have to happen to Baghdad.' As one of the buildings I really love
went up in a huge explosion I was close to tears."

His last entry, 3/24, only said they had lost internet. i hope he's okay.

Their military is dressing up as civilians, and making the civilians fight, or be executed. Now the civilians are always in danger because the US/British can't trust that they are for real. I hate this war and Bush's policies, but Iraqi leaders are pure evil. I know that at least our military, brainwashed as they are, wouldn't ever put us in such a cold-hearted predicament. I hope.

The evil can win, but only temporarily. All is temporary... the American empire is also temporary.

p. coelho: warrior
got a very cool book a couple days ago, and read an entry from it every morning. some pertinent lessons:
--training means little against experience... and prayer.
--be grateful, remember your higher power. and your friends who have helped you. share your rewards.
--use the enemies' energy against them.

applications to come...

Tuesday, March 25, 2003

war depression
went to the protest, then the ABB gig (j was playing tenor with them), then saw the Derek Trucks band at the lions den. what a day. i got really depressed at the lions den, because bobby was watching the war live on tv and told me about the soldiers who had been captured and killed.
i haven't felt this depressed in years. i'm okay now, though. back to denial.

Friday, March 21, 2003

A new favorite word
module:an independently-operable unit that is a part of the total structure of a space vehicle. It is also a cognitive science/AI word, adapted to mean independently operable _logical_ units. In my impossible cognitive development class with Howard Gardner, he used that word ALL the damn time. In my little world, it's the perfect word to describe all the little random pursuits that add up to some larger pattern I have yet to figure out through this blog.

words that j and i laugh at
henry wadworth longfellow: obvious. think about lyndon johnson
longbaby: j was a long baby (he's tall and thin). i named my mac 'longbaby.'
longpillow: this awesome pillow i got from the philippines that j and i used to fight over. now we share.

as they're bombing the hell out of Baghdad:
i feel numb. nothing. survival mode. national guardsmen with huge rifles at the grand central shuttle and west 4th street. what if a guy accidentally drops it and it fires? the idea of a nuclear bomb dropping and blowing us all to bits, for some reason, makes me want to laugh.

post-traumatic dissociation.

i remember seeing the second WTC tower fall before my eyes as I fled to bobby's house from work. i was standing on 7th ave & 15th street. felt nothing. wanted to go home via subway. asked bobby to pray for me and left his house again. i got on the train, and prayed again not to get bombed in the subway. let off at times square, they wouldn't go any further. walked to sixth avenue. streams of office workers walking up the avenue from downtown. as if it were saturday. but they all walked in the same direction.

i got on the last bus to my neighborhood, sat in the entrance stairwell because there was no more room, and peered through the accordian doors at all the people walking, walking, walking. and the midtown electronic newsbelt at the nbc studios screamed the disaster we were living in. when i got home my neighborhood felt like a little green terrarium with people walking their small dogs along central park west. one officer with his car parked across the closed off streets was the only indication of... anything.

Thursday, March 20, 2003

It's been a while... sorry.

Damn War. Making people I care about upset and angry all day. I keep thinking about people, like friends who I don't know, who are in Iraq, hiding, waiting. It's so unfair.

A quote from someone there: (a young Iraqi's blog)

What is bringing on this rant is the question that has
been bugging for days now: how could “support
democracy in Iraq” become to mean “bomb the hell out
of Iraq”? why did it end up that democracy won’t
happen unless we go thru war? Nobody minded an
un-democratic Iraq for a very long time, now people
have decided to bomb us to democracy? Well, thank you!
how thoughtful.

Catch up: My back's been fixed more or less by my awesome PT therapy and diligent workout life I've acquired. Discovery: I love exercise and healthy food! Wow. My body's lookin' good. The "dead bored" energy has gone. Yay! Also I had a b-day. I'm 29.

Refuge from the Media: Some creative activities i've been engaging myself in for the past month.
1) Knitting. made 3 hats (one for jay, which he lost. got to make another), a knit rose for a hat, a sweater, mittens.
2) Piano lessons with jason lindner. Learning jazz, latin:
first lesson: learn the major and minor 7th chords in all keys.
second lesson: learn major and minor ninths with 7-3 voicings, and ii-V-I transitions; leads into montunos. also learn chromatic scale (1), whole tone scale (2), diminished
chords (2) in all inversions
3) Salsa lessons with j's friend. j and i are going to go to nell's
4) Working out (yes to me this is creative) at equinox. personal training's ended so now i'm doing the BLF challenge. As far as other health things go: keeping up my PT exercises, and my skin. The free facial at skinklinic was terrific - got their products. My face looks so different after only one time. Glycolic rules.
5) Cooking. goes with BLF, but i'm trying new things. my friend suzie can bake (her father's a baker, he baked for all these institutions in sweden). gonna try non-fat (and fatty!) desserts
6) Decorating and logically solving the spatial issues in my walkthrough apartment
7) Work at TPR - it's been getting crazy. lots of interesting stats projects, hard projects. makin' extra bucks freelance, too.

Next: painting with oils, sewing sweater patches/finishing my knit sweater w/patches, inventing sewn knick-knacks (key idea, for example) to sell, making an art book (re-doing the one from columbia art class), coming up with a theme for this blog including digital photos of my new york (some ideas: naked pic of j w/his sax? :) ).

flashbacks

feb 26 2003

(originally to hernan)
noon has arrived. it is only the beginning of the day. already? finally, a brief pause. completed 920 tasks in 5.5 precious hours. 6:30am awake, stumbling and I find my awake self somewhere between 6:40 and 6:50. down the flight of dim stairs of my dear old building, springing out into the sunlight and the soft grumbling of passing delivery trucks. my stride has found its bounce and now i'm getting that energetic happy buzz inside. through the door i go, happy gym greeter slides me through and now the lights and breathing and laughter are falling all around me. it is great to be awake, it is great to be here!
jose, my trainer - it's sadly our last day. he's like my big brother now. we laugh about my tai chi hands while i do swing kicks. i'm firmer in my mind now, and yesterday the yoga instructor said my body looks strong. and i know that's because my mind and my body are both strong. they grow together now, and not in opposition. jose and i shook hands goodbye, though hopefully we'll start training again. but now is time to go home and i find my notebook to write my exercises down. don't forget to read, i pick up howard zinn and read about the colonial ruler's deception in the language of liberty and freedom. hmm.
doze for 5 minutes and off i'm back to my new favorite room, the kitchen. chop chop! tomatoes, cilantro, onions. into the blender. swish. some lime juice and into the dish it goes. my own pico de gallo and my egg white omelettes, some indonesian coffee, and i'm out the door again w/my other meals for the day in a brown paper bag.
in the office i finish all the other little tasks. two hours and time warner, doctor, dentist, emails, excel chart, faxes, ... a surprise freelance project comes through on my cell!! ... they're all through.
now i'm sitting here, feeling there's another thing to do... then i think about you and write down my life.
i love that you make me do this every once in a while. m
ps hit me back with one. ok?

may 4 2002 (philippines)

(originally to hernan)
it's sunday morning here at 7:05AM (which means it's about 4PM your time) and i just got back from a 1.5 hour walk with my dad around our neighborhood, Ayala Alabang. mostly we walked in silence, admiring the huge houses (or what we could see through the cracks of the monstrous marble gates) of a singer/movie star, and of the developer family Ayala/Zobel's. toward the end he kept asking me if i wanted to rest, but i was determined to finish what i started...
last night my mom teased me, as always, about my intent to exercise that has not transpired this week (though i have been exercising the other weeks--laps in our swimming pool). i am self-conscious about my bulbous "tummy"--ako ang tiyan ko malaki! (one of the many phrases i am picking up in tagalog... still can hardly understand anyone though!) my legs hurt and i feel sticky from the mosquito repellent, sweat and humidity... my hair is starting to relax from its curled frenzy from the dripping morning air, because i'm sitting in the computer room's artificial coolness.
i just received your email--i am still thinking about and writing my response to you. for days i have been working on a lot of different writing... writing a query and proposal letter for a progressive travel magazine article, another one for a novel (always hope), and a monologue to use for an independent film audition.
i spend most of my other time hanging out with mom in the bedroom, writing/emailing/watching tv here, eating with them in the dining room with the cook and maids serving our dinner, or going out in our maroon mercedes van with our driver. We go shopping at Ayala Town Center (with its palm-studded Corte De La Palmas and incredible halo-halo at HaagenDazs Cafe) or its more common, larger competition, Festival Mall, where Mom warns me to never follow a person who talks to you in an "official" manner without a uniform (kidnappings and robbings start this way here).
Then I think about Jay. He calls me once a week... this week, twice. My mom really likes him so far and we talk about him a lot, the possible future. I think about the "crisis" I felt over him in March when I wanted to break up with him. Over time as I wait and see how my feelings are forming, I find my lust and love for him rise and fall, but ultimately moving towards an increase--I think about the future with him. Perhaps I should focus more on the presence and let it give birth to the future... this is what he always says, in one form or another. In any case, we have become increasingly close as friends and fellow artists.
Today my cousin Jopie and I are giving Mom an early mother's day lunch; Jopie is a writer and she is like my big sister. I respect her more and more as she gives me tips on writing. We went to see a play, then the Intramuros, an old fortified city within Maynila (the filipino name for Manila). I saw a shrine to Jose Rizal, the intellectual/politician/scientist/artist who died for his nationalistic views. In his thoughts and emotions about the Philippines, her nature, her beauty, her independence, I see the father and husband that I would want to have. He tells the story of a moth that kept flying towards the light, and gets burned... but how i would fly towards that light again, he proclaims. I would do it over and over again, for my people.
I have fallen in love with this country; and like all loves, feel frustration with the people, the culture as I come out of the honeymoon. But I will keep flying back to it...no words can describe the bond of blood I feel here, looking at all the brown faces and soft tagalog spoken around me. This place feels, in my reflections, like a cradle and a tomb, like a garden of Eve with unforeseen dangers and possibilities. I am enraptured, repulsed, frustrated, at peace, restless.
A few days ago my father and I met the President of some foundation and the wife of the Ambassador (to US) to plan a medical mission. I felt so nervous and restless, but finally became comfortable. They were excited that I had studied psychology and offered to introduce us to many opportunities to serve people here... in a few days we will be visiting an orphanage. I have decided in terms of my career... to take risks, to be willing to fail, to give my best effort in all of my talents... and let Fate give some lead on my decisions. I wrote NYU and said I'd like to come back Fall 2003 if possible (they asked about this coming Fall instead). I'm buying time for Fate's (God's) hand...
One last analogy... I visited Mass for the 2nd time in years. The church, built by that President of the Foundation, is made of philippine mahagony... the air breathes in and out, as the sides are open to the gardena all about. I was afraid/confused/shy to do communion, but this time I went up. When I reached the priest, I said "amen," but he didn't hear me. "AMEN" he yelled (almost) when i got the bread. When I told mom and dad they thought it was funny. "He was saying, 'AMEN, you're back!'" Mom said.
(When I think back on these 5 weeks, I have so many funny moments to share too... did I email you my lizard story?)
Take care my dear- m

Feb 15 protest pics from around the world [>]

looking for blizzard / protest nyc pics? [>] (look up feb 20 2003 on this site: incredible pics.)

Thursday, January 16, 2003

more stimulation
through avocado lite, i found a creative man's blog

stream of consciousness "i want":
comfort
salvation
inner travel
a lime

stimulation
found the avocadolite web site again. inspiration.

happy energy
there are several types of people whose energy makes me crazy happy: examples
avocado lite
sinta writing
hernan intense talk-thinking
derek obsessed doodling
bobby interpreting and analysing
j teaching craft of chord making
amber photo craft kindling
paranormal
steve filmmaking

inner feeling right now
me.... i'm so dead bored at this time--------- energy is still and waiting.

Thursday, January 09, 2003

the good life
-j and i watched "bamboozled" two nights ago, and had a 3 hour discussion.
-i've chosen equinox, what a great gym!
-i have cleaned my place and am now decorating it- trying to find a cheap carpet installer. i love living on my own right now. my roommate's moving in next friday.

Monday, January 06, 2003

love
j is coming back from his tour w/gregg allman today! yay!

Friday, January 03, 2003

convos
2 good conversations last night. one with h, one with j.

h: specific plan of action for the year. plan: bring MCAT book with me everywhere (get from work), get fit, change of perspective. see med school and academia as an "adventure," an opportunity to do something for the world; see discipline as something that gets you where you want to be though you hate it at the time...

j: being open about feeling like he didn't get where i was coming from (never talking about med school plans, for example- the process of finding out if this is something i can really do) led to other productive conversation. also a review of what our needs are and what's hindering them: topics: mothering, "feminine power," openness in all areas, numbness/repression, emotionally open unavailability, for example.

Thursday, January 02, 2003

my inner flip shown to me
i have been reading the philippine author f.sionil jose, Dusk (formerly Po-on). it's about an Ilokano family, which is where my mom's family originates in the Philippines (they're from santa maria(?) in ilocus sur). it is such a moving book for me, because jose describes the common characteristics of Ilokanos- not nec. known for intelligence, but incredibly loyal, and loving- but when stirred to anger, watch out! the characters remind me so much of mom and her family, and i see some of their qualities in myself too. i don't really think much of how a "people" have certain qualities, but i definitely see qualities passed along our family lines.