Thursday, October 7, 2010

Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love.

-Albert Einstein

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

"Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes. That way, when you criticize them, you're a mile away and you have their shoes."

Thursday, September 2, 2010

bella ciao bella ciao ciao ciao

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bella_ciao

read that.


and then look it up on youtube.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

a heartbreaking work of staggering genius.

"I wanted so many times while driving to flip, to skid and flip and fall from the car and have something happen. I wanted to land on my head and lose half of it, or land on my legs and lose one or both. I wanted something to happen so my choices would be fewer, so my map would have a route straight through, in red. I wanted limitations, boundaries, to ease the burden; because the agony, Jack, when we were up there in the dark, was in the silence! All I ever wanted was to know what to do. In these last months I've had no clue, I've been paralyzed by the quiet, and for a moment something spoke to me, and we came here, or came to Africa, and intermittently there were answers, intermittently there was a chorus and they sang to us and pointing, and were watching and approving, but just as often there was silence, and we stood blinking under the sun, or under the black sky, and we had to think of what to do next."

Dave Eggers
You Shall Know Our Velocity!

Preparation

Jerusalem Road is completely packed right now. It is 10pm and the only time it was like this was after the World Cup game. People are coming from the Ramallah direction and heading towards the villages. 

I speak from behind tears right now. I was one of the few at school to fast growing up. I began in the third grade, and people pitied me. My teacher even stashed food. I had to sit in the principal's office until lunch was over.
College was the first time I was really a part of a Muslim community. But this Ramadan will somehow be different-- different because I have actual family with whom to celebrate. To visit, go to the masjid with, break fast together. Today I got to visit my grandmother during a break from work--in California, I had absolutely no one to visit.


We were on our own.


And still, the loneliness of personal struggle remains even here. 

I will be, inshAllah, putting up pictures, video, and some reflection for each day of Ramadan on my blog. This is the first time I am here for this holy month. It does not matter where you practice of course, but I am now getting a vantage point from a predominately Muslim country. And so far, people seem whatever about this time because it is coming in the thick of the summer. 

I take public transportation everyday for work, which is a blessing because it forces me to interact with complete strangers. And because I teach different classes here, I have gotten a small survey of opinions. One driver joked and said, "I heard Ramadan didn't make it past the checkpoint this year. Looks like I will not be fasting until Ramadan gets a visa." Another driver said, "Look at the streets. Yesterday it was packed because people were buying things and preparing for this month. But now, people are gorging themselves with food. No traffic--another blessing of Ramadan." Most of my students really do not want to attend class. I have had to reschedule every class to accommodate them. We never had that privilege in America.

People have flooded the city in preparation for Ramadan since it was just officially announced tonight, buying food, blinking lights, and new abbayas. But how can one seriously prepare for this month besides purifying their intentions? I pray God accepts our fasts and prayers, and that we commit for His sake and not some cultural or social implication.


I miss my family all over the globe and am imagining them in this moment, getting ready for the sacrifice ahead. I pray for those who have passed away. I miss them terribly. I wish everyone the best. I speak sporadically because emotions are flooding me as I watch this road of people coming and going, fireworks exploding along a road with one of the largest military checkpoints instituted by the Zionists. 


A road that leads directly to the third holiest site of Islam--now impossible for most to reach.




Only the heart and soul can measure how far we have come along.

Monday, August 2, 2010

So Wilde

"Experience is the name so many people give to their mistakes."

Sunday, August 1, 2010

charity

i would really like to hear what you think of this.




do we buy this (no pun intended) or do we disagree? he says charity is counterproductive--is it? should we give charity? and if so, how do we go about it?

Saturday, July 31, 2010

pablo neruda

If You Forget Me

I want you to know
one thing.

You know how this is:
if I look
at the crystal moon, at the red branch
of the slow autumn at my window,
if I touch
near the fire
the impalpable ash
or the wrinkled body of the log,
everything carries me to you,
as if everything that exists,
aromas, light, metals,
were little boats
that sail
toward those isles of yours that wait for me.

Well, now,
if little by little you stop loving me
I shall stop loving you little by little.

If suddenly
you forget me
do not look for me,
for I shall already have forgotten you.

If you think it long and mad,
the wind of banners
that passes through my life,
and you decide
to leave me at the shore
of the heart where I have roots,
remember
that on that day,
at that hour,
I shall lift my arms
and my roots will set off
to seek another land.

But
if each day,
each hour,
you feel that you are destined for me
with implacable sweetness,
if each day a flower
climbs up to your lips to seek me,
ah my love, ah my own,
in me all that fire is repeated,
in me nothing is extinguished or forgotten,
my love feeds on your love, beloved,
and as long as you live it will be in your arms
without leaving mine.


Sunday, July 25, 2010

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Priest



trying to figure out what this means

the soldier appears charming, like american diplomacy, proposing something she doesn't want, as the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are unwanted. the stated objective is to win over "hearts and minds" as he is declaring his intentions to her. the woman in the niqab has become a symbol for the middle east and the muslim world despite how few women there wear it.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

conundrum.

"What if we have never known freedom and have been taught to embrace our bondage, to fight for it, even to worship it?

What if our minds have been soaked in the brine of television, the voice of the corporate state that speaks to us for an average of more than four hours every day from cradle to grave and converts us into the great amorphous glob called the American consumer?

What if we are taught in school the state religion called capitalism, a religion that condemns as heresy all that interferes with the monied class extracting yet more money from those least able to protect themselves? What if the state's religion is the religion of the dollar, a faith based on a sort of economic Darwinism?

What if a form of subtle slavery has been taught to us, made acceptable to us, made to appear even as freedom itself? What if we are not free, but instead are taught the faith of freedom?"

Gerry Spence
Give Me Liberty: Freeing Ourselves in the Twenty-First Century

Friday, July 16, 2010

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Exiled within Skin


The hanging wired lights quivered in the summer breeze which carried with it peanut shells, the scent of cotton candy, and the shout of men stomping and dancing in century old tradition. The festivities lit the old buildings every summer, on the very street my great grandfather, grandfather, father, and brother had all walked during nights like these.

I could not help but imagine these young men becoming those images in an old photo, one you hold up and wonder at, put down, and see the same street deserted. If I left, that is what this place would become, a ghost.

The pregnant woman chomped on her peach in the dusty, unkempt office. "I said 'wait.'" She did not look at me but continued to speak Hebrew behind her desk, glaring at the screen before her, and grumbling the universal sound for anger. I went back and sat down watching all of her kind getting serviced before me, and finally she called my name in her disgustingly colonial accent. I laid out each paper that gave a reason why I deserved to be here, documents signed off by white men to justify why I should be allowed in my homeland.

The bass of the speakers pounded against my thoughts. The women chattered around me. They smiled at me, kissed me when they greeted me, and said it was nice that I had given up my American life to be here. They laughed, they chased their children. The men stomped even louder with every chanted verse of our existence. Everyone seemed happy.

I drank up tonight like a wine, and became drunk with worry and delight all at once. I felt pride in the men dancing in the middle of the circle, clapping and leading their brothers in dance and song. But would I see this again, would I one day be a bride sitting amidst the walls of my tribe and finally making that commitment to reside here with the love of my life, Palestine. I thought of exile, that horrid thing that death brings upon us all when we leave life, the reason why my father is not in the crowd standing next to his brother, dancing, crouching and jumping back up to clap.

I am facing death.

The pregnant woman in the office told me to get a renewal form. I told her I did not know where to get one, and she yelled again at me. When I  returned after looking around, I told her no one was around to help me, and she reached behind her desk and gave me one.

"Wow, it was just right there. You must have forgotten where you placed them, but then again, all you had to do was reach back."

No response. Life here is talking to the wall, the famed "security fence."

I sat down. I saw as she examined the documents and what her computer told her.

All I remember in the midst of dancing, of old women screeching like roosters in praises of the bride's beauty and her new husband's happiness; all I remember tonight is that the Dome I saw this morning could merely become a memory. All I remember tonight is the manager of the pregnant woman telling me to leave, that I should not be here. 

"What is there not to get? Leave now. Go back to wherever you came from. To Los Angeles. Go, leave. Now. Get out of my office. We are done."

"Why? Please just give me a reason why this is happening to me?"

"Because you are Arab, you have family in Ramallah. And your grandmother is Palestinian. We cannot do anything for your kind. Go back to where you came from. America."

In their large revolving circle of generational life, the men chanted songs that had tears of absolute desperation running down my cheek. They sang of living in strange lands, and what it does to the soul when you know exile has been stamped into every record book except the one angels keep of you. Tonight they sang of how no one can find peace until they return to that place where no one can say, "Go back."

Al ghurba. I am living it now, here, in my skin of olive trees, dirt roads, and echoing calls to prayers, that flesh stretching over so many shattered hopes.

I am searching for myself in the shadows of thought.The only places the soul has to go are heaven or hell.

Today, I am praying to God for forgiveness.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

to put world spending into perspective


Gibran Khalil Gibran

Your soul is oftentimes a battlefield, upon which your reason and your judgment wage war against your passion and your appetite.
Would that I could be the peacemaker in your soul, that I might turn the discord and the rivalry of your elements into oneness and melody. But how shall I, unless you yourselves be also the peacemakers, nay, the lovers of all your elements?

Your reason and your passion are the rudder and the sails of your seafaring soul. If either your sails or your rudder be broken, you can but toss and drift, or else be held at a standstill in mid-seas.
For reason, ruling alone, is a force confining; and passion, unattended, is a flame that burns to its own destruction.
Therefore let your soul exalt your reason to the height of passion, that it may sing;
And let it direct your passion with reason, that your passion may live through its own daily resurrection, and like the phoenix rise above its own ashes.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

from Dina

Granada Doaba

Everybody's free. So is this music. All the tracks on this website were produced collaboratively by artists from around the world, each living in Granada (Spain) at the time. The project came out of research for a Fulbright scholarship and was inspired by the the multicultural influences that converge in Flamenco music. Flamenco originated in Andalusia, Spain, a city fortunate enough to have been blessed with the wealth of Arab, Jewish, Indian and Afro-Latin cultures. You can download all the tracks for free, and the producers encourage people to remix the songs. It's a celebration of collaboration, each cultural influence a movement by itself, but a force when they come together :)

remix: ABC's (Gnawledge Remix)

Thursday, July 1, 2010

hope.

It has become a common feeling, I believe, as we have watched our heroes falling over the years, that our own small stone of activism, which might not seem to measure up to the rugged boulders of heroism we have so admired, is a paltry offering toward the building of an edifice of hope. Many who believe this choose to withhold their offerings out of shame.

This is the tragedy of our world.

For we can do nothing substantial toward changing our course on the planet, a destructive one, without rousing ourselves, individual by individual, and bringing our small, imperfect stones to the pile.

Sometimes our stones are, to us, misshapen, odd. Their color seems off. Presenting them, we perceive our own imperfect nakedness. But also, paradoxically, the wholeness, the rightness, of it. In the collective vulnerability of presence, we learn not to be afraid.

Even the smallest stone glistens with tears, yes, but also from the light of being seen, and loved for simply being there.

ALICE WALKER
ANYTHING WE LOVE CAN BE SAVED

Work Summary and Assessment, Jalazone Refugee Camp

My Name
July 01 2010
Addressed to the School Principal
Sponsored by UNRWA, USAID, and my employer.

English Lesson 6E
8:00-9:30am

I received my lesson books, workbooks, and audio cassettes a day before the summer camp began. This left me with limited time to plan for our lessons on this first day at Jalazon Refugee Camp. But I have come to realize that there was no planning that could predict the climate of this school.

The absolute enthusiasm of my students was outstanding at 8:00am, so much so my sleep deprived soul was awakened. I found the students approachable and enthusiastic. There was not a single student during our introduction that refused to speak. Rather I had more of an issue of giving each student enough time to speak. They had so much to say about themselves, when I was merely a stranger to them.

We talked about the World Cup and our predictions. Got to know one another and moved into the first lesson in the book, "Famous People." We began at a local level and they listed only political figures. Some particular students listed only figures from a particular political party, and the students told me it was pretty obvious where that student was from. I was pleased that they were able to speak about such things in peace and comfort with one another. When we moved to talking about famous people in the Arab world, most of those they listed were singers or presidents/kings of various nations. I then asked them about famous Europeans, and they listed more political figures or soccer players. We then moved to America, and the first names they listed were Bush, Rice, Obama, Mitchell: people they were exposed to. I expected them to talk about singers or actors, but no one listed any. All famous figures were political, if not soccer players. One student suggested our next lesson be strictly about political figures and what they have done to their homeland.

The lesson went smoothly. I appreciated my volunteer's enthusiasm and her ability to jump into an exercise when I invited her to participate and lead. For the most part the student's have a very strong command of vocabulary but do not respond in English as much as they could. I say "could" because they openly stated they feared to slur or mispronounce words while saying incoherent sentences. I found it interesting the text's passages referred to the Muppets and Sesame Street, things that are culturally irrelevant to the students, making the passages harder to understand. But they enjoyed learning about Kermit and what American kids are exposed to, I suppose.

I mean, this program is in part a way to expose them to American way of life, teach them English, and encourage them to attend American institutions of learning.



---------All the while a settlement is literally in their backyard.

Overall I have a better idea of where to head with our English lessons. I need to focus on more grammar, but I must say their skills surpass most of my adult students.


Art Lesson 6E
9:30-11:30am

I sat in Ms. Censored and Mr. Censored art class. The first project involved geometric designs and pattern making. The youth enjoyed this because they were free to create their own stencils from which their pattern would be derived.  The second project involved them tracing their hands. On their left hand they had to write things they disliked while their right hand had written on it things they enjoyed.

Many students enjoy, sports, food, and music.

"I hate Isriael."
"I hate occuppattion."
"I do not like soldiers."

Left hand.

Lunch
11:30-12:00pm

A student and I played basketball together. Before I knew it the entire class was on the court and I had students from other classrooms wanting to play. It got somewhat crowded since other boys were using the same space for a soccer game. But it was nice, especially when other teachers joined in. We decided to make it a part of camp to play a sport together during the lunch period. We will play soccer Sunday.

Drama Lesson 6E
12:00-1:30pm

We began by defining drama. The students themselves articulated that drama was not always something serious, but just entailed acting and presentation through various means. They specified that entertainment could be of various genres. After this discussion we did a bit of charades. I gave them abstract terms to present, and after much effort most of them were able to present the word to their classmates. However,their classmates mostly guessed in Arabic rather than English. After this I gave three groups of students each a scenario to expand into a story and act out.

The first group was told to be a family at the dinner table.

The second group was told to be guests at a restaurant that overcharged them.

The third group was looking for a friend's lost wallet.


The third group went first. They created guns from folded paper. Bandannas to cover their faces. One person got shot, two arrested, and two acted as cops doing the arresting. The acting was very physical and violent, and completely lost the direction of the scenario.

The second group then went up. It began rather calm, with the waiter bringing in the orders to the guests at the table. The waiter charged them four hundred dollars, and one of the guests got up from the table. He yelled at the waiter then began to beat him. The skit ended.

The first group sat at a table eating dinner. The father figure asked each of his kids questions. The father was upset with the religious performance of his son, and began to curse him. He cursed his wife and daughter. Then he beat the son. The son ran to the corner of the room crying to his mom. The dad smacked him one more time, and then skit ended.

The focus was not what I instructed. All of the skits focused on violence. That was their medium of exchange, their means of presenting: to shoot at one another, die on the classroom floor, pretend to smack each other, and curse. The first group insisted they were the best because at least they focused on religion.

Then you and my boss came into the room, handed out those colorful shirts and caps refugee children often wear for US funded corruption schemes, and that was that.

I'm a Grandma..



In Jerusalem (Mahmoud Darwish)

In Jerusalem, and I mean within the ancient walls,
I walk from one epoch to another without a memory
to guide me. The prophets over there are sharing
the history of the holy . . . ascending to heaven
and returning less discouraged and melancholy, because love
and peace are holy and are coming to town.
I was walking down a slope and thinking to myself: How
do the narrators disagree over what light said about a stone?
Is it from a dimly lit stone that wars flare up?
I walk in my sleep. I stare in my sleep. I see
no one behind me. I see no one ahead of me.
All this light is for me. I walk. I become lighter. I fly
then I become another. Transfigured. Words
sprout like grass from Isaiah’s messenger
mouth: “If you don’t believe you won’t believe.”
I walk as if I were another. And my wound a white
biblical rose. And my hands like two doves
on the cross hovering and carrying the earth.
I don’t walk, I fly, I become another,
transfigured. No place and no time. So who am I?
I am no I in ascension’s presence. But I
think to myself: Alone, the prophet Mohammad
spoke classical Arabic. “And then what?”
Then what? A woman soldier shouted:
Is that you again? Didn’t I kill you?
I said: You killed me . . . and I forgot, like you, to die.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

The Moral of this story...

"He was out chasin' cream and the American dream
Tryin' to pretend the ends justify the means
This ain't funny so don't you dare laugh
It's just what comes to pass when you sell your a**
Life is more than what your hands can grasp"

-Mos Def

i'm no expert on art...but

Format: Street art is often seen by authority figures as vandalism. Is there anything that you think street artists can do to change that perception?

Shepard Fairey: The perception of street art as vandalism has already, by someone like Banksy, been called into question because Banksy’s work has gone up in value so tremendously that some of the councils are actually protecting his work now and I think that he has forced a lot of people – not just local government – but a lot of people in general, to reassess the role of art in public spaces. Once the art world has validated the art to where it’s worth thousands of pounds or dollars, people go “Well, here it is for free on the side of this building, it’s an outdoor museum, we should protect this.” Art is subjective; some people think a tag looks beautiful and some people think it looks like crap. The way that I’ve tried to change the mentality about street art with the powers that be or the general population is by being willing to explain what I’m doing as a street artist because I think people fear what they don’t understand.

If you’re willing to be articulate and explain what you’re doing, that removes the ‘fear’ factor and that helps and additionally, where I put my art – I try to put it in places that are inoffensive as possible – if I find a boarded up building or a wall that’s already covered in graffiti or decaying in some way – unkept – that’s an appropriate place for street art. To go and put something on a pristine building that’s obviously gonna piss off the building owner, I don’t think that’s constructive. I think a lot of what street artists need to do is be a little more thoughtful about where they’re placing the art. I mean, I can be open about who I am as a street artist because I feel I can defend any of my decisions about where I’ve put my work and if everyone approached street art with that same idea, that they’re gonna be held accountable for it then there wouldn’t be as many problems. It’s like a lot of laws in general exist because people don’t use common sense. So street art – like anything else, if you use common sense, it’s easy to defend and it just makes the people that react against it look like narrow minded assholes.





--
Much like street art today, modern art was questioned in its value, especially in the early 20th century. Consider Wassily Kandinsky, whose works were confiscated by the Nazis and displayed in a "Degenerate Art" exhibition, the Nazi's overarching term for modern art. But maybe you don't like Kandisky, you don't like these lines and circles, and it all looks like scribbles...

Picasso and Dali's works were included too.

Is value dependent on how much we like the piece?

Chemical Hair Straightening Politics

Before I cut my hair and created an afro, people thought my Arabic was perfect and that I had resided here in the Occupied Territories all my life. But when I embraced my curls and the nest that rests upon my head, I suddenly became a foreigner. It just does not make sense in my mind, how it can be that when I do accept my natural hair, my natural being in my natural homeland, my new conceptual being creates me into a foreigner. This place is just full of paradoxes.

Today I visited the apartheid wall, and I realized my identity was not the drawings painted on the cement slabs. It was not the landscape that was separated by the barrier, the hills, and valleys, and villages. My identity was the space between each slab, inches deep in the massive barrier. It did not bleed, but hid between massive entities, people who spoke on my behalf, made decisions, drew boundaries. It was that tiny space that society left for me. I could speak, but it would be between two worlds. My hair would be indigenous yet at the same time alien. When the wall does come apart, and there is no space, no cement, no guns, and just freedom, when there is room for my giant hair, what would Palestine be?

what He said

from Amina:

"Had We sent down this Quran on a mountain, you would certainly have seen it falling down, splitting asunder because of the fear of Allah, and We set forth these parables to men that they may reflect. He is Allah, besides Whom there is no god. He is the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful. He is Allah, besides Whom there is no god; the King, the Holy, the Giver of peace, the Granter of security, Guardian over all, the All Mighty, the All Supreme, the Possessor of every greatness. Glory be to Allah! (High is He) above all that they associate as partners with Him. He is Allah, the Creator, the Inventor of all things, the Bestower of forms. His are the most excellent names; whatever is in the heavens and the earth declares His glory. And He is the All-Mighty, the All-Wise."
(59: 21-24)

Friday, June 25, 2010

the complexities of human nature?

". . . And then he realized why he was thinking like this.
It was because he wanted there to be conspirators. It was much better to imagine men in some smoky room somewhere, made mad and cynical by privilege and power, plotting over brandy. You had to cling to this sort of image, because if you didn't you might have to face the fact that bad things happened because ordinary people, the kind who brushed the dog and told their children bedtime stories, were capable of going out and doing horrible things to other ordinary people. It was so much easier to blame it on Them. It was bleakly depressing to think that They were Us. If it was Them, then nothing was anyone's fault. If it was Us, what did that make Me? After all, I'm one of Us. I must be. I've certainly never thought of myself as one of Them. No one ever thinks of themselves as one of Them. We're always one of Us. It's Them that do the bad things."

TERRY PRACHETT
Jingo


A. was telling us yesterday about a documentary on Obama she had watched recently. It portrayed him as a family man, wholly human, chivalric and compassionate, overcoming odds. . . someone whom you could respect and admire, maybe even love. But wasn't Bush, for all his war-mongering, an old fashioned, Texan family man too? And yet . . . it's so difficult for me to imagine -- if only for a moment -- for someone like him, someone whom I revile with all of my heart, to be capable of appreciating familial warmth, of being able to exhibit any kind of compassion...

It's so easy for us to vilify those inhumane, callous Israeli "bastards," those who exemplify "evil," as it were, who would perpetrate such catastrophic violence, inflict such acute suffering upon innocent people . . . We dehumanize them, in effect, and as such, it is almost impossible for us to imagine them in the most tender of situations -- singing a lullaby to their children before putting them to bed at night, for example, taking care of their aging mothers...

1994 in Rwanda, you had neighbors, deeply-cherished family friends -- ordinary people -- pick up machetes, break bonds, turn against each other and hack people to death. A rather unnerving paradox, which causes your heart to recoil into its depths in disbelief...

And then this lends itself to the "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter" question. The idea that the "evil" leaders of the world don't necessarily see themselves as perpetrating evil -- they see themselves as being in the right. What is base and morally corrupt, is such a malleable social construct. One of the things I hated the most about Bush's rhetoric, is how arrogantly/ignorantly he would pontificate about "us" vs. "them," "good" vs. "evil"; how easy it was for him to simplify such complicated, amorphous concepts. . . & Yet, I find myself doing the same when I judge people who are of different political leanings than I am.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

elephants

"Afterwards, of course, there were endless discussions about the shooting of the elephant. The owner was furious, but he was only an Indian and could do nothing. Besides, legally I had done the right thing, for a mad elephant has to be killed, like a mad dog, if its owner fails to control it. Among the Europeans opinion was divided. The older men said I was right, the younger men said it was a damn shame to shoot an elephant for killing a coolie, because an elephant was worth more than any damn Coringhee coolie. And afterwards I was very glad that the coolie had been killed; it put me legally in the right and it gave me a sufficient pretext for shooting the elephant. I often wondered whether any of the others grasped that I had done it solely to avoid looking a fool."
George Orwell, Shooting an Elephant (1936)


This documentary, called To Shoot an Elephant gets its name from that Orwell's short story. It an eye-witness account from Gaza...

I'm going to download it (available on the site) and watch it sometime.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uzw1QJ2--38

:)

eavesdropping

Person A to Person B: "So...do you capitalize heaven?"*



*from a conversation overheard at Bruin Cafe

the only dream worth having . . .

". . . is to dream that you will live while you are alive and die only when you are dead.

To love. To be loved. To never forget your own insignificance. To never get used to the unspeakable violence and the vulgar disparity of life around you. To seek joy in the saddest places. To pursue beauty to its lair. To never simplify what is complicated or complicate what is simple. To respect strength, never power. Above all, to watch. To try and understand. To never look away. And never, never, to forget."

ARUNDHATI ROY

I once wrote an essay on peer pressure in high school that equated succumbing to the whims of others as being dead while one is alive, and vice versa. That's how I interpreted it as at the time, anyway.

Do not be afraid of what's to come...

All life is an experiment. The more experiments you make the better.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Motivation

"Life is so unreal. I think that we seriously doubt that we exist and go about trying to prove that we do." - John Steinbeck

I sometimes catch myself doing good deeds for people just to keep myself relevant. I have to remind myself that we should help one another not for the gratitude or for the recognition, but simply because it's the right thing to do.

for amoora

"Those who do not want to imitate anything produce nothing."

Salvador Dali

china, anyone? (holler at IDS)

From Sanobar:

So this morning I was listening to the news radio (with no particular political slant...at least not a overt one). There was an interesting piece on talks about appreciating the Chinese Yuan to reduce their comparative advantage and make it easier for the Europeans and Americans to compete. I thought this was super interesting cuz we know that China is gaining both political and economic power on the world stage. But this also would imply that the U.S. and Europe are looking to beef-up their manufacturing and services sections of their economies. Why else would they want Chinese products to become more expensive??? Your thoughts please... let's have a conversation.

Interview with Fred Bergsten this past Friday on Chinese-American trading relations
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/jan-june10/chinacurrency_06-18.html


Fred's Bio:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Bergsten
http://www.iie.com/staff/author_bio.cfm?author_id=33

Wizard of Oz, 1939

Glinda
Well, I'm a little muddled. The Munchkins called me because a new witch has just dropped a house on the Wicked Witch of the East.
And there's the house, and here you are, and that's all that's left of the Wicked Witch of the East.
And so, what the Munchkins want to know is - are you a good witch or a bad witch?

Dorothy:
But I've already told you, I'm not a witch at all. Witches are old and ugly. What was that?

Glinda:
The Munchkins. They're laughing because I am a witch. I'm Glinda, the Witch of the North.

Dorothy:
You are! I beg your pardon! But I've never heard of a beautiful witch before.

Glinda:
Only bad witches are ugly.