From Atmospheric Disturbances:
I found that I just wanted to tell her I loved her... I felt within me those proverbial butterflies, the desire to have her think well of me, the desire to lay myself out beside her, the desire for the world to see her next to me, the flittering conviction that she in fact was the whole world, was all worlds, all those desires.
For those who have a difficult time with the definition of love, this is a simplified version perhaps, the little things that matter, the parts that summed up come to mean love in the grandest sense.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
amman
The Good:
- Rita who sat next to me on the plane giving me her number while we waited for her luggage. Come and have a cup of coffee while you're here. She lives near my aunts and uncle- in the neighborhood next door. I plan to call her and stop in if I have the car one day and am passing by.
- Eid lunch at my aunt's house. The stuffed lamb that gets put in the center of the table, the frenzy of people handing plates to those at the center of the table to have rice and lamb served to them (two pieces for Rana, they say, to welcome me back, and I happily accept). Then each person walks around the table and finishes serving themselves the yoghurt sauce on top, the mulukhiya, the salads, the olives and pickles, the meat pies, and whatever else I didn't even get to register because I was too full to make my way all the way around the table. Each person takes a seat- at the table if you are among the adults and want to sit at the table, otherwise on any of the couches in either of the salons. Aunts calling out to the younger generation- regardless of whose child- bring me a glass of water, a spoon, a fork.
- Eid visits to friends and family. Dressed up, stopping for a short visit at each house as we make our way through the ones on our list, drinking tea or coffee (Arabic for these occasions more often than Turkish- Gulfi cardamom or black Jordanian style), a Eid cookie, a piece of chocolate, and on we go.
- The hills, Mount Nebo, the Dead Sea, eating delicious food while sitting out in the beautiful breezy evening as the sun sets, with an argheelah and tea with mint.
The Bad:
- When putting my luggage on the belt to be scanned at customs on my way out of the airport, some guy walks up from another belt, puts his bag in between my first two bags, and pushes his in the way as I'm trying to lug my big bag onto the belt. When I say, what are you doing, there's a line? the guy with him says, patience, patience. That's rude, I say, it's rude, coming back to your country to have to see this, it's rude. Leaving the airport already frustrated by the special treatment that comes with some family names and some backgrounds.
The Ugly:
- Amman-style self-promotion. Nothing more needs to be said here- if you know it, you know it. If you don't, it's hard to explain because each example seems so trivial, but altogether it's hideous.
- Rita who sat next to me on the plane giving me her number while we waited for her luggage. Come and have a cup of coffee while you're here. She lives near my aunts and uncle- in the neighborhood next door. I plan to call her and stop in if I have the car one day and am passing by.
- Eid lunch at my aunt's house. The stuffed lamb that gets put in the center of the table, the frenzy of people handing plates to those at the center of the table to have rice and lamb served to them (two pieces for Rana, they say, to welcome me back, and I happily accept). Then each person walks around the table and finishes serving themselves the yoghurt sauce on top, the mulukhiya, the salads, the olives and pickles, the meat pies, and whatever else I didn't even get to register because I was too full to make my way all the way around the table. Each person takes a seat- at the table if you are among the adults and want to sit at the table, otherwise on any of the couches in either of the salons. Aunts calling out to the younger generation- regardless of whose child- bring me a glass of water, a spoon, a fork.
- Eid visits to friends and family. Dressed up, stopping for a short visit at each house as we make our way through the ones on our list, drinking tea or coffee (Arabic for these occasions more often than Turkish- Gulfi cardamom or black Jordanian style), a Eid cookie, a piece of chocolate, and on we go.
- The hills, Mount Nebo, the Dead Sea, eating delicious food while sitting out in the beautiful breezy evening as the sun sets, with an argheelah and tea with mint.
The Bad:
- When putting my luggage on the belt to be scanned at customs on my way out of the airport, some guy walks up from another belt, puts his bag in between my first two bags, and pushes his in the way as I'm trying to lug my big bag onto the belt. When I say, what are you doing, there's a line? the guy with him says, patience, patience. That's rude, I say, it's rude, coming back to your country to have to see this, it's rude. Leaving the airport already frustrated by the special treatment that comes with some family names and some backgrounds.
The Ugly:
- Amman-style self-promotion. Nothing more needs to be said here- if you know it, you know it. If you don't, it's hard to explain because each example seems so trivial, but altogether it's hideous.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
naipaul revisited
Following up on the note on A Bend in the River, I found the following information online at absoluteastronomy.com (my first stop for information):
Set in an unnamed African country after independence, the book is narrated by Salim, an ethnically Indian Muslim and a shopkeeper in a small, growing city in the country's remote interior. Though born and raised in another country in a more cosmopolitan city on the coast (likely Mombasa) during the colonial period, as neither European nor fully African, Salim observes the rapid changes in his homeland with an outsider's distance. Although Salim never identifies the country where he lives, the events closely parallel the Belgian Congo's transformation into Zaire under Mobutu Sésé Seko (the novel's "Big Man") - with the unnamed city in which the novel is set having some similarity with the Zairean river port of Kisangani. Others see a resonance with Idi Amin's Uganda - however, as Uganda is referred to multiple times in the book as being a place people go to, or hear news from, this seems unlikely.
There must be only a handful of people who have wondered about the setting of the book- how funny that they can find each other and be friends.
Monday, September 14, 2009
upsets
Federer lost the US Open? And to Del Potro??
Patrick Swayze died?
A summer dress to an evening wedding in New York?
The world has been turned upside down. Just sit back, brace yourselves, and wait for the blip in the cosmos to pass.
Patrick Swayze died?
A summer dress to an evening wedding in New York?
The world has been turned upside down. Just sit back, brace yourselves, and wait for the blip in the cosmos to pass.
Friday, September 04, 2009
americanos and summer
It seems only appropriate that I should mention coffees again on the last day of summer hours, the last half day, the last day of a summer vacation in which I did not partake.
Americanos- the answer to my coffee needs- two shots of espresso with hot water. None of the back-of-the-mouth taste, the puckering of lips and the grimace that come with drip coffee. Only the appropriate bitterness (not all is bad- pecans can be bitter, yet enjoyable, for example) that comes with good espresso. No dairy since I'm on a dairy vacation- although I do check in regularly because I love cheese! Americanos are the solution to a problem I feared would only be resolved with me leaving coffee behind completely.
These afternoons were spent walking around the city, hangin in Hoboken, drinking coffees (you know I don't mean drip), working on my projects.
Unfortunately my projects are mid-stream, and my goal of finishing before the end of summer (not official, physical summer) can no longer be met. But there will be weekends and cold long nights of winter.
Fall's almost here!! LOVE the fall feeling!!
Americanos- the answer to my coffee needs- two shots of espresso with hot water. None of the back-of-the-mouth taste, the puckering of lips and the grimace that come with drip coffee. Only the appropriate bitterness (not all is bad- pecans can be bitter, yet enjoyable, for example) that comes with good espresso. No dairy since I'm on a dairy vacation- although I do check in regularly because I love cheese! Americanos are the solution to a problem I feared would only be resolved with me leaving coffee behind completely.
These afternoons were spent walking around the city, hangin in Hoboken, drinking coffees (you know I don't mean drip), working on my projects.
Unfortunately my projects are mid-stream, and my goal of finishing before the end of summer (not official, physical summer) can no longer be met. But there will be weekends and cold long nights of winter.
Fall's almost here!! LOVE the fall feeling!!
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