"Every moment of one's life, one is growing into more or retreating into less." - Norman Mailer

Friday, April 21, 2006

A Series of Unfortunate Coincidences


As I was driving home last night in the rain from the Latin America Fiesta sponsored by Spanish Club, it occurred to me that I've made 3 extra trips between home and school this week. Generally, I'm exceedingly good at conserving and multitasking my goings out in my car so as to save fuel, but this week meetings etc fell in such a way as to make it quite impossible to waste less than 3 gallons of gas.

And, the unfortunate coincidence of it is that of course, all this extra driving has occurred in the same week as the highest gas price spike since Katrina. I really know how to plan these things, don't I? Grrr. Ah, well. Can't be helped. I had to go to the fiesta last night (which was so much fun, by the way) because they announced the winners of Spanish Club elections, for which I ran for secretary. I won (it was an uncontested race... go figure.).

Anyhoo, in other news, I was listening to NPR this morning, and they were interviewing Sergio Mendez and Wil IM of the Black Eyed Peas about his redux of classic Sergio bossa nova songs. It didn't make me want to buy the album--although I did enjoy the interview. Instead, I pulled out the original Austin Powers soundtrack which contains one famous Sergio Mendez song (the only one i have in my collection as yet), "Mas Que Nada." Now the CD has moved on to other songs, and at the moment the 'classic' "I Touch Myself" performed by the Divinyls is playing.

...Yeah. It's that kind of a day, I guess.

Still raining in Louisville, and I'm loving it. Can't get too much rain, I say. Quizás I ought to move to Seattle? No. I don't think I'm that big a fan. In any case, the rain has blown all the blossoms on our dogwoods, just as I acquired some new prayer flags to hang from them after my others were stolen in March. Go Republican Catholic neighborhood! I do so love religious hate crimes. But, as the Buddha would say, "Whatev. Stuff happens."

Hasta luego, y'all. ¡Diviértense! Los amo a todos de ellos. :)

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

To Do List en Espanglish

I have another half hour on the clock here at the desk in the Honors House. I have managed to not start my final paper in anthropology, and instead have been emailing and researching el Barrio del Once en Buenos Aires, Argentina. It's a project for class. Me interesa mucho, no obstante. I am drinking tea of the Irish Breakfast variety (need more--lack of caffeine headache descending upon my parietal and temporal lobes..ach!) and listening to Gillian Welch.

I'm just sort of coasting till classes are over. Yo sufro una gran falta de la motivación hoy día. I have NO motivation to finish my work. I just want to be out in my yard pulling weeds, or reading the huge stack of books waiting for me as soon as the semester is over, or watching Smallville or the Simpsons or Being John Malkovich or whatever else I feel like doing!

Between me and vacation stand only a few tasks: final project in SPAN 355 (hence the barrio), final exam in 355, finish reading the book for 355, do capítulo 6 for SPAN 321, final examen oral in SPAN 321 (no worries, yo lo anticipo animadamente), write final paper (10-15 pages) for ANTHRO on "invented tradition," take final exam in linguistics, take last quiz in LING also.

See? Like nothing.

BTW, here are some of the books I plan to read veddy soon after break begins:

Veronika Decides to Die by Paulo Coelho
The Alchemist by Coelho also
Women, Fire, & Dangerous Things by George Lakoff
Moral Politics by Lakoff also
The Chomsky Reader
Communist Manifesto
Teenage Confidential (a non-fic collection of teen culture memorabilia from the 50s and 60s)
Peanuts Collections 1 & 3
Eva Luna por Isabel Allende
Ficciones por Jose Luis Borges

and many others not appearing in this film.

Wish me luck that I survive the next 10 days!

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

F*** Disney

Posting had better not become a chore for me. It is good to have incentive to keep up with semi-regular posts because a blog is online, but at the same time, there is a certain amount of pressure associated with it. I had big plans to post while I was in Florida last week, but Disney--of course--charged for their internet access, even for professionals at their convention center. In the hotel rooms, they had only dial-up access, which was quite expensive; in the convention center, there was wireless, but it was also very expensive. So, a week later, I am posting to give you this warning:

NEVER--EVER--GO TO DISNEY! Or ever go to Florida, for that matter. The whole place is just ugly: hot, muggy, bug-filled, one long, penicular range of urban sprawl and bad drivers. Disney itself is King of Commercialism and Consumption. There were literally a million people in the Magic Kingdom park where we passed Saturday afternoon after the conference, and it was so expensive, and filled with lines, and freakishly Twilight-Zone-ish in its contruction of reality. The redeeming part of the whole experience was the abundance of cute children, from 3 months all the way to 11 years, just bouncing about, meeting characters and eagerly waiting in lines for rides.

Here is a picture of Allie (co-presenter with me for one of my research projects) and me at Downtown Disney, about to eat dinner at Planet Hollywood (3 hour wait--we were finally dinig at about 9:45pm). It was fun to present research and get to know other students, but I hope never to return to Disney as long as I live. So, there you have it, for what it's worth.

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Playing a Townie in Bloomington

My trip to Bloomington over Spring Break was entirely rejuvenating. I left quite early in the morning and arrived in sleepy little Bloomington at about 7:45am. Elizabeth was up and ready for me, loyal and trusty friend that she is, and upon my arrival made me fresh espresso and we had some scones I had brought her, with fresh whipped cream and lemon curd. A perfect moment, really: scones and espresso and all things lovely and fresh, with my friend whom I miss so much and so often. Visiting with Elizabeth (no matter which one of us translocates—and I must admit, it’s usually her) is like coming home. It’s like recharging a dead battery in my mind and my heart. I love the way Elizabeth thinks; independent, kind, wonder-filled, a bit tragic. In fact, I actually sort of think of talking to Elizabeth as talking to Virginia Woolf reincarnated. Elizabeth is my Reina Elisa: she is a queen, and all that issues from her is intelligent, regal and luxurious. It’s a gift to speak to her. I know Elizabeth doesn’t view herself this way; she thinks she bumbles and trips and is quite self-conscious. She ought not to be, but it is an understandable extension of a poetically introspective life. C’est la vie en poésie.

After breakfast, we drove to town and walked around Indiana University. I had never really experienced IU’s campus on foot, so she gave me a bit of a tour. We, of course (for reasons of shared passion about all things related to books and their collections), visited the Lilly Special Collections Library and the main library on campus. The Lilly was quite elegant and well maintained, with dark wood bookshelves to the ceiling, surrounding a stone fireplace in the meeting hall, gentle sunlight streaming in from the high windows. The wallpaper in the Lincoln room was actually silk, with an embroidered pattern that made one feel one ought to be wearing gloves and an evening gown. In another room were personal letters from Ezra Pound and TS Eliot (among others), behind glass cases and soft light. It was quiet—actually sleepy—as we were first in the door at 9am on a Saturday, when all the other townies were asleep or at the Bakehouse, and the students were all on Spring Break. In fact, the Lilly is so lovely that if you wanted to take a tour yourself, you could utilize the website they have created and take an online tour of the place: http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/tour.shtml . Go!

The main library, named the Herman B. Wells, was precisely the opposite in ambiance to the Lilly. There were in fact people about despite the early hour, but the building itself housed none of the charm or elegance of the former place. From the outside it appeared more like the Ministry of Love from George Orwell’s 1984, a huge stone box that seemed to angle outward toward the top. The shape of it was almost comical in its exaggerated hugeness, as if it were meant to be some ironic, postmodern silent joke on a piece of modernist architecture, like so many constructions are these days. I believe it was not a tongue-in-cheek sort of moument, however, as it was built in the 1960s and lacking that final bit of over-exaggeration or flippancy. Instead, I decided it was meant as a paean to modernism, all geometric and pure from feeling or human touch. It was disgusting to my eyes: almost funny, but falling just short of laughing at itself, and so really rather disturbing. (I should insert here that my own university’s library is also hideous, and so I do not intend to speak with condescension, but only bafflement and architectural/artistic apprehension.) Inside was not much different, either, from my mental construction of the Ministry of Love: the 11 or 12 floors were all the same (with the exception of the ground floor): cramped, darkish, overfull, labyrinthine, deserted, overly clerical. The ground floor was the most interesting bit: a wide lobby with art-deco accents that made one feel as if one were standing in a 1930s bus or train terminal. There were shabby couches about and I could swear I noticed an ashtray or two, but perhaps that’s my mental superimposition of a train terminal upon the library lobby. (see photo below)

After IU we spent the remainder of the morning at Soma Coffee and the vintage clothing store above it, among a few other stores. Soma had a lovely T-shirt (too expensive, though, at $17) that said “Soma” on the back and on the front, “No corporate after-taste.” I loved that so much. Elizabeth and I mulled over our various love, family and career situations and futures, not really coming to any conclusions. I was relieved to simply share my emotional meanderings with someone else of like mind and spirit who neither judges nor attempts to fix; she just listens. Qué bendición.

We later visited the Monroe County Public Library where Elizabeth works. It is a beautiful place, full of light and activity, white and wood. I told her it reminded me of a children’s museum; I think that pleased her for some reason.

We lunched at Esan Thai, a new restaurant in Bloomington apparently, which I can recommend with gusto. Quite spicy and good and filling, for about $8. We returned to her house and I thumbed through her books, perused her walls filled with photos and magazine clippings, posters and other incidental information. Later, after a snack of Girl Scout cookies and Twizzlers (classic Elizabeth fare), we drove north of Bloomington to Oliver winery and took a wine tasting session, selected a few bottles for purchase and then walked about the peaceful grounds under the sun and the breeze, which at that time in March still left a chill after it.

After we felt our heads had re-grounded themselves after a stomach full of wine and Twizzlers, we returned to Elizabeth’s and climbed up to her roof, where there is a deck and some Adirondack chairs. We sat up there, looking out over Bloomington and the cemetery close-by, and we drank sweet blackberry wine and relaxed (or, as Bernie Mac would say, “chillaxed”). I don’t remember much of the conversation's particulars (heh...), but I remember Elizabeth walking right alongside me in the lane of conversation the whole time, which is not how I oftentimes feel when talking to others. It’s such a blessing to have someone to talk with who is “with you” all the time. After a while, we went to a Mexican restaurant, se llama "El Norteño," for dinner; I returned to Louisville shortly thereafter.

‘Twas a good, good day. Thanks for loving me, Elizabeth. It was the most ideal Spring Break I could’ve imagined.