Thursday, December 31, 2009

New Decade

By this time next decade, I will be 29.

Scary. *shivers* Maybe I'm shivering because the house is 64 degrees. Mom likes it cold, especially when we come back from 90 degree weather in DR.

Regardless (while I hold back on talking about the three times I was turned away from church), I am still looking back at this decade with my own memories, perhaps a little influenced by the NYT photo reel from the last 10 years that I just watched.

So, things I remember from this decade:

1) Y2K. Nothing like a some paranoia of the occult 90's to bring in the most turbulent decade I have ever seen (emphasis on the "I"), where fears were far beyond the occult and became more orientalist.

2) I turned 10. Say hello to TWO digits.

3) Believe it or not, as a 10 year old, I almost cried when I thought Al Gore won. Hey. I grew up on a farm. And I was 10. I did not vote!

4) 9/11/2001. I was in Mr. Ferra's (?) science class in 6th grade at Highlands (one of the ONLY memories I have of that place...). Our vice principal came in and turned on a television. I watched the second plane crash into the second tower. Mom came and picked me up from school and I watched army helicopters fly over the house. Where did they come from and why did they fly so low? I was afraid, but more confused. I cried for people I did not know and began to understand the meaning of patriotism.

5) I remember seeing American flags out of every car window.

6) Watching your country invade the area of the world you would soon become more fascinated with than anything... even Barbies... is often times life shaking. In my 11 year old heart, I shook with a strange feeling of righteousness and uneasiness. They deserved it? Yes? Or were we just doing this all wrong? I could not decide. I don't know if I still can will the same strong conviction so many "seem" to have. I remember the green of the night vision goggles.

7) I went to my first school dance. I still remember the smell and some large plump girl (my age, and already having sex) offering my a cigarette. I didn't smoke it. And didn't for a looooooong time.

8) Blink 182 and Greenday came into my life, like some blast from the 90s. I loved it. I think?

9) I became a teenager. I'm now finishing out my last year of that madness.

10) HARRY POTTER, the MOVIE.

11) I remember the space shuttle crumbling.

12) They caught Saddam. I wrote an article to my local newspaper about how reporters should stop talking about Saddam's favorite snacks (Cheetos) and start telling me valuable information--true article. True Story. (Later in the decade I got a blog. Much better for voicing opinions than that local Newspaper... thought I got a lot of positive feedback!)

13) WARDROBE MALFUNCTION!!!!

14) I get accepted to Ellis. I feel like I have just gotten into Yale. Up to that point in my life, best moment ever. Determined much of what my life would become.

15) Again, I cheer when Bush wins, but a little more wearily. Ellis was rocking my world.

16) Freshman year, I learn that Aztecs did bloodletting rituals by piercing their penises. Thank you Dr. Bedell.

17) I read East of Eden and suddenly the world of literature opens its arms and gives me a big hug. The world of Academia squeezes me to death for the next 6 years.

18) I get a Myspace. Gross!

19) I meet Fahima Vorgetts and suddenly I'm helping Afghan Women and Girls by raising money for a school building for them. I set up a club at Ellis that still exists today and funds the girls with computers. Something in me changes as I find a direction for myself.

20) Hurricane Katrina. Was it true that global warming did it? I worked on building a money collection at my school to send in to Hurricane victims. I felt so helpless against nature. Environmentalism was nipping at my toes, urging me to do something.

21) This was the decade of causes wasn't it? I attend anti-genocide rallies. Host teas for Afghan Girls. Raise money for Katrina victims. Go to anti-war protests. I was quite a little liberal... even before I could drive. I would say I'm a little more right now and a little more informed, but there is something inside me that yearns for those days of freedom and beauty, when a protest could ACTUALLY change my world and the answer to such problems was as simple as a rally. I have a higher calling now.

22) I run off to Spain. There are bombings in Valencia. Mom is afraid. Beginning of my life.

23) I drive. Hallelujah.

24) My grandmother dies. For the first time, death is a strong reality. My life is shut down in Junior Year Academia. I go into the role of Vivian Bearing.

25) I get a Facebook. Problem number one.

26) Gov School. No comment.

27) I discover that I must apply to college. Multiple identity crises ensue, ending with an acceptance to Yale. I hug the UPS man. I run to my Grandmother.

28) I drive cross country to an witness insane Iraq War Vet following me (I sometimes wonder if he still is... not literally), ghost towns, poor beggars in New Mexico, the blight in trees in Wyoming. America looks sicker than Steinbeck wrote, but more beautiful and kind than I had imagined. I find a sense of wonder I had left somewhere along the line. Bubby dies. I turn 18. I graduate. One week.

29) I run away to Egypt for a while to satisfy my interests in Arabic. They are never satisfied. I go to Khan el-Khalili to eat pigeon and reminisce about the bombing that had been there when I was there, 4 years ago. I meet some of the best friends of my life. I learn more about the Arab world and have a rude awakening into the horrors of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict... on both sides.

30) Yale. Freshman year. The big choice. Obama or McCain. Guess who I chose? Dad wasn't too happy. I remember Yalies streaking, drinking, dancing, and singing in a BIG circle on Old Campus. Some professors join in the celebration.

31) I play a Jew on stage and discover that I ACTUALLY have a sense of Jewish Guilt--not Catholic. It complicates my religious persuasions, which were already unscramble-able. Perhaps it was my great-grandmother's influence on the family? (She was a Jew in a sea of Ukrainian Orthodox Christians).

32) Iranian revolutions while I'm in Turkey. I jog each night watching Euro News. The Kurdish workers who served tea in Taksim explain why they want their own country. I listen to Turks who speak the opposite.

33) An attempted terror attack from a boy no older than me from Nigeria fails. My age catches up to my conscience and realize that its my generation's turn to take the reigns pretty soon.

34) A major note, to remind you all where I'm from. THE STEELERS WON TWICE THIS DECADE. ;)

So I know there are more memories (this was my "teenage" decade yo!), but its hard to sort when you are running on very little sleep and freezing the tan off....

Here is to my 20s decade. Here is to a happy and healthy world. Or as happy and healthy as it could be.


Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas Eve

Before I tell you about how I was turned away from a church three times the eve of Christmas eve, I would like to introduce you to my family at Christmas Eve, to give, shall we say, a striking image of the family eccentricity.

We go out on a tar and chip road to Aunt Tammy's house in the middle of ??? and beat off several dogs while we bring presents into the house. Inside is Uncle John, and his kids Jimmy and Lexi and then of course my cousins Rachel, John, and Alysha, who has a new baby to a solider who just came back from Iraq (we shared stories about Kurdish people and Falafel all night).

My cousin Rube brought his new Latvian girlfriend. They arrived just as my cousins broke me down to show them a picture of "The Mysterious Russian" I am seeing. My cousin Alysha tells me that she accidentally bought my cousins the wrong gifts (thinking they were still 5 and 7, when they were 12 and 10) saying she "Lives in the Past." Later, I argued with Uncle/Father Tim (the orthodox priest) about the gospels of the bible. I didn't win, but I think I just like to see him get all anxious (another family trait).

Speaking of family traits, my uncle brought boxes of photos and keepsakes from my deceased bubby. Inside, she still had kept the christmas cards we had made and sent to her, along with every clipping from when someone was in the newspaper. The pictures dated back to the 40's and had women with kankles in them. I surely hope that doesn't run in my line. The pictures were in an attempted organization scheme (like most Tomson organization efforts) and had a general chronological order, though my baby pictures were with pictures of my father at 15. I found another piece of evidence that I was Jewish--some distant relatives that looked like they were wearing skull caps and had sweaters where those tassles should be coming out, but were shoved up inside. My family thinks I am Jewish now too.

Present opening happens and I sort of stare into space at children as other people try to prevent them from dangers I should be seeing (like ice cubes???)--finally I get to talk about uncle T-Bone about the composition of salt; i bought him himalayan salt from Dean and Deluca's.

I'm asked to watch children for a while until I pass them off to my perhaps even more incompetent sister who passes them off to someone who knows that children cannot open pistachios. Meanwhile, some old man my aunt Tammy has cared for over the years sits in the corner in a sitting room that no one sits in and watches the Christmas tree as if it is going to suddenly take him back to some other time or place that was a lot friendlier to him.

I give the rest of my dad's Sam Adams Cherry Wheat six pack to my cousin Alysha and the Iraq vet, go through a lot more hugs (some tight and some pats), go through more hugs, and then go to the car and shoo off dogs. In the car, we pass up houses that flicker in sight between black and white pictures and now. Some still keep logs outside. Some look like "Home Improvement" or "Country Living" covers, most of which are out dated or from the 50s, when the area juuuuuust started to get electricity.

I pocketed a bunch of pictures that didn't belong to me (i.e. my family wasn't in them), mostly of the Hunkie men and of the women with kankles and keep them next to my bed, flattened in the "Confessions of St. Augustine," along with the pictures of my other grandmother, who is sipping on Coors and wearing pants in the 40s, when God knows women didn't wear pants--or at least good housewives. A stray away from the kankled women in Mosgrove, where electricity was just taking hold....

What a long way we've come.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Copenhagen Schmopenhagen: What happened?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/20/science/earth/20accord.html?pagewanted=1&ref=world

So Copenhagen, after months of talk and preparation finishes out its days.

Headlines:
COPENHAGEN TALKS: Climate deal faces poor nations’ fury
No joy in Copenhagen

Copenhagen climate summit stumbles across the finish line unfinished



Obama then says, "We have made a meaningful and unprecedented breakthrough."

What does that even mean though? What does "progress" mean?
Okay, so each country will index their commitments to climate change and state what they want to cut. But who is the watchdog? Who is coercing? The most powerful countries are the biggest polluters so who is going to watch them? Then, developing (and undeveloped) countries are expected to write down their emissions cuts, but is there the technical expertise in those countries to do this task?

I feel that each country is looking to the rest of the world for answers to climate change and sometimes the domestic answers are not as apparent or important. Everyone comes to Copenhagen looking for answers and the countries who they depend on answers from (China and America say) will not necessarily give them to them clearly. It results in a "step" or a "breakthrough" but to a lot of people this is not enough.

Countries pledge huge amounts of money (The US is pledging $3.6 million to 2011-2012 solutions) but what does this mean? Where does it go? Are GLOBAL POLICY and charters the answer to a scientific problem?

If we want to fix Global Warming, lets start at home America. Yes Obama says that we put a lot of money to that, but he also pledged a lot of money to help Developing countries go green. What would happen if that money were to go to domestic movements? After all, we are the biggest polluter....

I'm no expert though. Neither in policy nor science.

Maybe I should go into chemistry instead of sociology. Biology instead of English.

I still laugh at Scientific American's answer to the problem:
"Is Birth Control the Answer to Environmental Ills?" My Aunt Becky thinks so....
http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=is-birth-control-the-answer-to-envi-2009-09-23

Looks like Women and Gender studies. WOOT WOOT!

Oh Global Warming.

Friday, December 18, 2009

'Da Burgh

Back in the Burgh. Pittsburgh. Really quickly (as I need to shower and sleep!!!), things that have changed:

1) Panera has a new sandwich. Chicken Frontega.

2) Giant Eagle (Gi'an Iggle---in Pittsburghese) sells beer. BEER?

3) Route 28 is under construction. Oh wait. That is the same.

More to come.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Struggle at Yale

Yale is a struggle right now. Sights to be seen :

1) Naked run through Bass. Give some laughs to kids in a basement who haven't seen sunlight for days.

2) Camping out in Saybrook Library, beware of the porn playing on computer monitors. Some Yalies get bored and play pranks.

3) Every computer now has a tab open to Twitter.

4) You see someone in an ugly sweater Tuesday. You see that same someone in the same ugly sweater Friday.

5) Even worse, you smell a strong scent approaching. That would be your best friend.

6) Everyone's a bit chubbier.

7) Food has two flavors: bland and cold. Cold is a flavor.

8) Coffee is water. Coffee shops make so much money they close early. WTF?

9) I haven't seen my bed that much, but the couch in Misha's room has my faceplant in it.

10) You wake up in Arabic homework, in the middle of Arabic class--which you still have during reading week!?

Oy.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Feminist Fallback into the 60s?

So I'm a closeted feminist. But in times of great struggle or stress, (i.e. now, 2 finals a paper and listening exam = rape), I tend to come out. And so do other girls.

Take my friend Evin. She doesn't sleep for 2-3 days. Doesn't shower. Goes to New York to get a passport. Gets hung up on the preoccupation that the only reason she got her passport she needed in 3 days was because she got past the bitch at the counter and upstairs to the men who looked at her dress falling down to reveal her rather large breasts. The woe. She only got what she wanted because she was a pretty woman-- she thought. Not because of her impeccable bargaining skills.

Sometimes feminists hate the fact that beauty can get them what they want. Others embrace it. I tend to embrace it. Or try to. But when I'm feeling bitchy, don't try to compliment me. I will only tear you apart.

Myself, when I'm stressed, I think of an alternative life, where I don't get a job and fall into a traditional gender role that I'm not fit for. Then I freak out. Then I feel bad for all of the women out there that need to depend on men and I get really dogmatic and ROAR!

But NAW MAN! That ain't me. I'm not dogmatic. I, in fact, usually respect the choices of many women to stay at home and raise children, just as I respect men who do the same thing. Its just not for me.

So in times of stress, women get "feministy." They get preoccupied with gender and don't know why. We can't put our finger on that lurking monkey of gender that somehow still affects us. We are women traveling on a gravel (not paved) path of 2nd generation "free" or "more equal" women--especially us at Yale. So what bothers us? If we are at the top at Yale, and we have rights and such, why do we feel there is still something wrong? Feminism isn't as obvious as saying, "Don't say c**t" or "We want equal pay" or "We want abortions" like it was in the 60s.

But we know something is wrong. So what is it? And how do you explain that to a man who doesn't see it?

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Baby Lucy Born?

"If the anti-abortion movement took a tenth of the energy they put into noisy theatrics and devoted it to improving the lives of children who have been born into lives of poverty, violence, and neglect, they could make a world shine." --Michael Jay Tucker.

So "Baby Lucy Week 12" has another poster above it with the quote I posted above. I am sitting in LC Hall procrasturbating over Arabic and this caught my attention .

The defense that a lot of Pro-Life advocates make is that, despite the adversities a zygote may face if born, once it develops into a child and then is born, this child can be a "Mozart" or something like that. Yet, how many Mozarts do I see in the ghetto in Natrona Heights? Not quite sure. There are a lot of hungry kids, kids without healthcare, kids with fetal alcohol syndrome....

I'm not going to go into this, but it did get me thinking.... who is looking out for those kids who are born? If someone reads this and can educate me, what do anti-abortion groups do for these kids they are saving?

So "Reproductive Rights Action League at Yale" (RALY) or "Choose Life at Yale," what are you actively doing to prevent zygotes from becoming miserable children or what are you doing to help these saved children become less underprivileged.