Ramblings from a lingophile, pseudo environmentalist, former bus driver, and DC transplant.

9.27.2006

将来该做啥? El futuro no está en mis manos.

I'm at the point in me life where everyone seems to expect me to have my life all figured out. If I had a dollar for every time some has asked me about my post-graduation plans then maybe I'd have enough money so that I wouldn't have to graduate, haha (well, I probably wouldn't have that much money. Maybe if I had a thousand dollars for every time someone asked me about it...).

I wouldn't mind the friendly interrogations so much if I had a better response, but I usually just end up mumbling something along the lines of, "oh... I have no idea; maybe this, maybe that... blah blah blah..." That answer is only partially accurate though because while I don't actually have any sort of plans nailed down yet, this answer makes it sound like I haven't even started thinking about it, but I have. In fact, I think about it a lot and I have a lot of ideas floating around in my head. So here are all of the current potential post-graduation candidates (in no particular order):
  • I could stay in Boulder and bum around for awhile, find a place to move so I don't have to stay in Grandma's basement, and probably keep the job that I have now at Infoture. I like Boulder and I wouldn't mind staying here, but I probably won't end up staying here because I have other options that won't require paying rent.
  • I could try to find a "real job" somewhere, maybe move somewhere, anywhere... but I don't know how much of a rush I really want to be in to get one of those "real jobs." One potentially "real job" I'm thinking about though is to try to get a job with Google in China (Beijing, specifically). But I'm thinking that even if I decide to try to get a grown-up job, I probably won't even start applying for anything until next summer at the earliest, and maybe not even until the fall.
  • Currently the most likely plan is to move back to Mom's house and get a winter job up there. I might also be able to keep my current job at Infoture (since I work remotely anyway), but I think I want to get a different job that I enjoy a little more even if it pays less and won't help my resume even a little bit. This includes jobs like being a ski instructor, or possibly a shuttle driver either around Beaver Creek or maybe between the Vail area and Denver, or something along those lines. I think it sounds like fun.
  • There's a remote possibility that I will move into my Dad's house if he ends up getting a job that he applied for in Austraila.
  • I suppose I could try to find a scholarship or something to go somewhere to study Chinese (or any other language for that matter)... but that doesn't sound very likely.
  • If I am able to sock away enough money over the next few months, I might just take some time off to do nothing at all, maybe travel a bit. But I doubt I will really be able to save that much money, and I would just be bored after a few days with nothing to do.

Some things that I'm trying to keep in mind as I contemplate my near future:
  • I'd like to try to take the GRE's in the spring.
  • Dad and Raissa and I might try to plan a fairly long trip (like a month or two) to Europe around April or May, so I need to save up some money and keep that time slot open.
  • I should probably start looking for a good way to either start learning a new language to stay on track with my ten-languages-by-fifty goal, or to improve my Chinese before it gets too rusty. Maybe I'll look for a job in Brazil; or maybe Chile; or maybe some other interesting place.
  • I've got MINI Mania on the brain making me want to get a job, earn about $30k, and buy one of those dang minis. Other things I want to purchase include... well actually, now that I think about it, I don't really feel the need to purchase that much stuff besides the mini. Maybe some clothes. And some bicycles. And more cars. And probably a comfortable bed.
  • Whatever I do, I want it to be something that I'll look back on with fondness in 5, 10, or 30 years.
  • Is there anyway I could work a girlfriend into my life somehow? I sure would like a girlfriend...
  • I don't want to get trapped in a boring rut. Avoid ruts...
  • Maybe get an MBA? Or perhaps go to grad school for something else, like linguistics? Grad school of any kind is probably at least another year or two or three away for me though.
So that's about where I'm at. Still, that hasn't got me any closer to an intelligent answer to the, "so, whatchya doin' after graduation" question. Maybe I should just apply the Napoleon Dynamite line and answer with, "Whatever I feel like! Gosh!" Haha, yeah, that would be sweet. Really though, I am a lot more interested right now with just making it through this brutal last semester that I've signed myself up for, and I'll start thinking about my post graduation plans just as soon as I graduate.

Maybe I should just turn into this guy in this video. The song is "Desaparecido" by Manu Chao. The song has some fun lyrics about how people call him "the disappeared" and "when they look for me I'm not there and when they find me I'm not the one in front of them because I already ran off the other way." Hmm, that would be an interesting sentence for some semantic logic analysis...

9.21.2006

Viva Colorado!

Colorado is not only the nation's slimmest state, but apparently in some parts of Colorado, we also have the longest lifespans at 81.3 years! Although the state as a whole only ranks 12th for life-expectancy, 7 counties in Colorado are among the top ten counties in the USA with the longest expected lifespans, including the county where I sometimes claim to have grown up in. Go CO! Yes, Colorado is a pretty cool state. If you aren't from Colorado then you should be jealous.

In honor of that, today's video will be "Feelin' Good" by Muse. Where M.I.A. was my #1 big musical discovery of the summer, Muse was #2 only because I had actually heard of them before and so this was more of a "re-discovery". But I have been listening to them A LOT lately and I'm pretty sure they are my favorite rock-ish band ever now. They are especially good to listen to and to sing along with by yourself when you're driving in the car. Most of their videos are just as awesome as their songs and I have 9 Muse videos on youtube, all of which I would like to post here, but alas "Feelin' Good" seems so appropriate. Also, I like this video because I love the black and red colors. Someday if I ever have my own place, I think I want to decorate my room in colors like this. This song is less epic sounding than some of their other songs though, so I'll probably have to put up another Muse video or two in the future.

9.15.2006

Gasolina o Quesadilla?

I've been thinking about how great it would be if there were a version of this song "Gasolina" by Daddy Yankee where instead of "gasolina" they said something like, "quesadilla." Here's the video:



The chorus goes like this:
Daddy Yankee: A ella le gusta la gasolina (She likes that gasoline)
Girls: Dáme más gasolina (Give me more gasoline)
Daddy Yankee: Como le encanta la gasolina (Oh how she loves that gasoline)
Repeat

I think it would be a lot funnier if every "gasolina" were replaced with "quesadilla." But then I realized that there is actually a really long list of femenine nouns that would also work pretty well:
  • sopapilla: a delicious fried doughy dessert item.
  • hamburguesa: hamburger.
  • carne asada: roast beef.
  • papas fritas: french fries.
  • papas frias: cold potatos.
  • cocaína: cocaine.
  • frutas y verduras: fruits and vegetables.
  • casa blanca: white house.
  • aceituna: stuffed olive.
  • librería: bookstore.
  • salsa verde: green sauce.
  • mini-falda: mini-skirt.
  • zanahoria: carrot.
  • calabaza: pumpkin
  • and the list goes on and on and on...

What would be your preferred replacement?

In other news, I converted my bike to a fixed gear about two weeks ago and I LOVE IT! Not only does my bike look cooler/cleaner/sleeker, but it also weighs less and is in some ways actually easier to ride than before. In most situations you really don't need to use the brakes because pedal-braking is sufficient. You can really only brake as fast as you would normally be able to accelerate though (which is not very fast), so sometimes regular brakes are still necessary; so I think that anyone who has a fixie without a front brake is plain crazy. I think my favorite thing about the fixie coversion, however, is that the thing is practically silent going down the road. With no derailers to thread the chain through, it is just so quiet! It is a really neat sensation. Hopefully someday soon I'll get a picture of it post-conversion. I suppose the only downside to it is that it makes me feel more smug and superior to other cyclists when I pass them on my superior bicycle. That and steep hills are hard to get up.

What else? Well, classes are going well, work is okay... yeah, I guess that's it.

9.10.2006

Fun with Dreams

It was another night filled with strange dreams
  • In some sort of McCarthyistic anti-communist era, Amanda got arrested for spreading communist propaganda door-to-door. I think Chewbacca got arrested too. Then I was gonna go help her get out of jail, but when I got to the jail to bust her out she was mad that I hadn't brought her any coffee and so she refused to let me bust her out. I think Chewbacca was there too, and I think he was trying to help convince Amanda not to worry about the coffee for now, so maybe he wasn't arrested in the first place after all... In the end I told her that she could just stay in jail if she really wants to, but to at least lock the door so strange people won't come and bother her.
  • I was riding in the back seat of Grant's car and Jess was in the front seat and we were driving really fast down some dirt roads at night and he was doing a bunch of really insane maneuvers with the car, like spins and flips and stuff. The whole time I was talking on the phone to his dad trying to figure out if it was THIS weekend that they were going to Philly, or NEXT weekend. Then Grant got all worried that if it was THIS weekend then he would miss "Italian Weekend." This realization made him drive a little slower. We didn't crash, and I didn't get nauseous.
I have such a long list of videos that I want to eventually put on here that it's hard to choose which one to actually post. A few months ago my sister had asked me for some more reccommendations of good music in Spanish, and I forgot to get back to her. So, today's video is a song in Spanish for the movie Take the Lead. I think this looks like a stupid movie, and this video is kind of dumb too, but I like the song (especially the part from 0:54 to 1:19).

9.06.2006

Cereal Bar

After my miserable International Affairs senior seminar class (that's the last class that I had a suspicion I wouldn't like, and it turns out I was right. It sucks), I was hungry so I went up to Qdoba for a quesadilla (as if I don't make enough quesadillas myself at home). While I was there, a guy comes in and introduces himself to the manager saying that he owns the space next door and wanted to introduce himself. It turns out they're opening... are you ready for this?... a CEREAL BAR on the hill. They will offer all kinds of cereal, milk, toppings, extras, etc. and they will be open from 6am to 2am. When I heard him say this I couldn't help but turn around and listen intently. I don't eat as much cereal these days as I used to, but cereal still has a fond place in my heart.

I remember telling Amanda once a couple years ago that I thought it would be a great idea to open some sort of cereal restaurant and she told me that it was a stupid idea (actually, she probably said it was the stupidest idea she'd ever heard in her whole life). I told her that she was wrong, though. I told her that people would dig it. I would dig it.

So I'm glad to see that someone else has stollen my idea and is going to make it a reality. I hope they prove Amanda wrong. I hope they have a line out the door all day every day. And then one day I will make her go there with me for lunch or dinner or breakfast or something and she will see just how wrong she was.

For today's video, I have a video by M.I.A., who is probably my best/biggest musical discovery of the summer. I have to give my friend Natalie all the credit for turning me on to M.I.A. when I visited her in Phoenix earlier this summer. I don't think I like the video very much (too 1980's, even though it's only a couple years old), and this isn't necessarily my FAVORITE song of her's, but it will suffice. It is Bucky Done Gun.

9.04.2006

Delirium

I wish I could think of something interesting to blog about, but I can't.  I started writing this whole long blog about how busy I am and such, but here's the much more concise version: I've been busy busy busy with school and work.  There, that was easy.

Raissa and I took Dad to Cirque du Soleil: Delirium in Denver last thursday.  It was, for lack of a better word, amazing.  The last time I saw Cirque du Soleil I saw Varekai, also in Denver and it too was, for lack of a better word, amazing.  While there were some common elements to both shows, they were also quite different from each other.  They both have great music, great visual effects, and great acrobatic performances.  This one, set inside the Pepsi Center, featured a large, long stage that went the length of the arena.  It was set up in the center of the center and people sat on both sides of it.  In front of the stage on each side was a retractable semi-opaque sheer fabric curtain onto which images were projected, but you could still see through it to the performers on the stage.  It made for a real feast for the eyes.  I think that whoever works on designing these shows must have about the coolest job in the world.  Everything is just so creative and imaginative.  If you have never been to a Cirque du Soleil show, you need to go to one.  Tickets aren't cheap, but I think they are worth every penny.

And for today's video, here's Crazy by Gnarls Barkley.