Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Snow monkeys!

David Weber of Japundit has an informative piece about snow monkeys today. Here's a hilarious snippet:

Although the snow monkeys possess such wonderful and thoughtful eyes, visitors should NOT stare directly into them. Staring is seen as an act of an aggression and a visitor looking to commune with the spirits of nature may suddenly find their nose communing with the sharp teeth of an enraged snow monkey.
Beware!

There's a great story about monkeys and jellyfish, too. And check out all the great pictures!

It's apparently quite a trip to make it to Jigokudani ("Hell's Valley"), a monkey hot spring park near Nagano, but it sounds like it would be worth it. (Yes, even worth a 30 minute hike through snow! I mean, you get to take a bath with monkeys!)

"Not even the force of two suns could do a thing to change who was allowed to exist in the universe."

This is a wonderful and poignant essay about the inherent racism of science fiction and fantasy. (via BoingBoing)

You think we're being racist, my Mom said so many times as I was growing up, when we went round and round about these weird books and movies. I heard an accusation. But what she and my Dad were trying to make me hear was their question: Why do you love a thing that won't even let you exist within their made up worlds?

Monday, January 30, 2006

I love my Brookie

Brooke and I have been spending a lot of time together lately, and it has been awesome. We try to go walking as often as we can; it usually happens on Tuesdays and Thursdays and sometimes the weekends. We also have been watching Kyou Kara Maou; we finished episode 44 the other day (she slept through it actually, but that doesn't particularly matter given that it's the worst episode of all), and I'm looking forward to seeing her reaction to my favorite stand-alone episode, number 45. (「許嫁?!」)

This past Thursday we walked at the Greeneway (I took these pics of the Augusta skyline before we met up), and on Saturday morning we went to the Canal. We had a sleepover at her house on Saturday night, complete with brownies and ice cream, and the next morning we went to Waffle House without showering (you know, so we'd fit in. Hahahahaha!). It was cool :) We're going walking again tomorrow :)

I'm really glad that I'm able to spend so much time with my best friend.

He's so mean to me! ;>

Sean was getting the table ready for dinner--we eat at a little table in the kitchen that has to be cleared off and pulled out in order to seat two people--and I said to him, "Make sure there's room for me."

"What if I don't want to?" he said.

"Well then, I guess I won't eat with you. You'll be all alone."

"You act like that's a bad thing."

I made to smack him in the head with my plate, and he blocked. He was grinning as he moved from the stove to the table with his food. I made a disapproving noise, something like an exasperated growl. It's the noise I make when I want to be mad but can't quite pull it off. Sean has the best smile in the world. Whenever he grins I want to grab his face and either squeeze his dimples or kiss him. (Or both!) It's hard to be cross with him when he's grinning.

"If you weren't so cute I wouldn't put up with you," I scolded him, spooning my own dinner onto my plate. "The woman on MSN says to get rid of people like you."

This sent Sean into fits of laughter. "I'll take that as a compliment!" And he couldn't stop laughing. "That's so absurd," he managed, "that I can't even come up with a smart-ass remark!"

Zero tolerance policy

I just read an article on MSN Dating & Personals that kind of...scared me.

The question:

My boyfriend is addicted to video games. He comes home from work everyday and sits in front of his computer from the time he gets home until 2 AM, sometimes 3 AM.

The game is an online interactive game, so once he engages in projects with his team-mates, he is stuck playing for hours.
The answer:

Given his predilection, it's unclear, honestly, why he wanted you to move in in the first place. Or maybe it went this way: When you moved in, the commitment freaked him out. Result: He escapes into EverQuest. Whatever the case, it's clear that -- right now, anyway -- he's better at bonding with avatars than with actual humans.

[...]

I have to admit, from what you've told me -- and from the fact that he has been honing his virtual sword-fighting rather than his relationship skills -- I'm guessing you won't get far. And that suggests to me that this -- his "addiction," his need to escape, his frankly asocial behavior -- is a bigger problem than you alone can solve with schedules or ultimatums. So don't blame yourself if you can't "make" him change. Instead, start packing. There's a guy out there who, when he flies off to faraway places, will take you with him.
Lynn Harris is pretty harsh. (There's also a tendency in these advice columns to remark about how there are "other fish in the sea", which drives me crazy. Is it supposed to be reverse psychology? Are you supposed to think, "Well, I could always leave him. ...no! No, I don't want to leave him! Hmm, this problem isn't really so bad when I think about it that way." If so...that's ridiculous :> I imagine the reality is that advice columnists are presenting all possibilities without thinking about how it looks to continually suggest ditching the relationship.)

In any case, this whole "bonding with avatars rather than actual humans" is BS. Hello, have you heard of Ventrilo? The fact is, the reason Sean likes gaming is because of the teamwork and community. He is invested it in because of the relationships he makes there. I don't see his gaming as running away from reality; I see it as Sean spending time with his friends.

I don't know if the situation is the same for the writer's boyfriend or not. If he won't even stop gaming to eat a meal with her, then there might be a problem. People do get addicted to MMOs, there's no question about that. But I think that Ms. Harris is being hyper-judgmental. She's over the top because she can be, because that makes for more interesting reading than "social relationships are different now than they were in the 1800s".

If I'd been writing that advice column, I would have suggested the girlfriend try playing the game with her boyfriend before I casually remarked that "oh well, he's probably not the one for you".

D'oh

Reuters: Priceless vases smashed in museum accident

The incident happened last week at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, which for decades has displayed a group of Qing dynasty Chinese vases on a window sill.

A hapless visitor tripped on his shoelace, tumbled down a flight of stairs and crashed into the vases, smashing them into smithereens.
That sucks. I bet the guy felt terrible.

The museum didn't overreact. They won't release the guy's name, and they said that this won't cause them to lock their artifacts away where no one can get close to them.

For now, they're busy trying to glue the vases back together.

Koizumi moving to simplify Internet broadcast of television

Asahi: Government plans to simplify copyright issues to promote TV programs over the Internet

Under the current Copyright Law, broadcasters need only to pay fees to all copyright holders in a TV program, such as record companies and singers and other copyright holders, after the program is aired.

But broadcasters and ISPs must receive permission from all actors, performers, singers and copyright holders for other items, before the TV program is shown on the Internet.
The idea seems to be to redefine Internet broadcasting so that it and "terrestrial broadcasts" can be released simultaneously. It appears to only apply to digital broadcasts, as analog will be phased out by 2011.

Racism upon racism

An Osaka court has rejected a discrimination suit against the owner of an eyeglass shop.

The case stems from an incident in Osaka Prefecture in September 2004. [Designer and U.S. National Steve] McGowan was talking with his friend while looking at a poster in front of the shop when the owner came out and asked the two to leave, according to the ruling.

The next day, McGowan and his Japanese wife appeared at the shop, and she asked the owner what had happed the day before.

The owner explained that he had asked the two to leave after he was contacted by a customer who claimed to have had trouble entering the store because there were people in front of it.

The business owner added that he had a bad impression of black people during a stay in Germany.

McGowan, who lives in Kyoto Prefecture, maintained in the suit that the owner said he hated black people and refused him entry to the shop.

The court, however, rejected the allegation.

"The plaintiff should have said that he was made to leave the shop against his will," the judge said. "I have doubts about the plaintiff's level of comprehension of the Japanese language. I cannot trust his accusation over the use of discriminatory remarks."

The judge concluded that the plaintiff had merely assumed the owner made offensive remarks when he mentioned his experience in Germany.
The court's ruling is effectively: "He's a foreigner; he's not fluent in Japanese; obviously he misheard; a Japanese person would not be so rude."

And nobody seems to notice that it is racist to say you have a "bad impression of black people" based on a single experience!

We have two forms of discrimination going on here: the shopowner's specific prejudice against black people, and the general Japanese prejudice against non-Japanese.

McGowan didn't stand a chance.

Horrible accident on I-520 kills four

Apparently some guys got drunk and decided it would be fun to race each other on the interstate. One of them lost control, and his pickup barrelled through the median and smashed head-on into a car. The pickup driver and his female passenger were killed, as were two of the occupants of the car. Two other vehicles were also involved in the accident, but the condition of their drivers and passengers hasn't been released.

The driver of a Chevrolet Monte Carlo told police that he and the pickup's driver were racing in the eastbound lanes when the truck flipped over the median into westbound lanes and struck the Kia head-on, [Richmond County Coroner] Mr. [Grover] Tuten said.

The pickup's driver died after an hourlong emergency extrication procedure, Mr. Tuten said.

"His body reeked of alcohol as we unloaded him," he said.

A female passenger in the pickup was killed when she was ejected from the truck and run over by another vehicle, Mr. Tuten said.

He said the pickup's driver is at fault.

Mr. Tuten said the Monte Carlo's driver helped police piece together how the accident occurred. Still, the unidentified Monte Carlo driver could face charges, Mr. Tuten said.
One of the passengers killed in the Kia was a twelve year old girl.

More Fancy Food

Michael Chu of Cooking for Engineers also went to the Fancy Food Show in San Francisco. His roundup features some things not mentioned by 101 Cookbooks, and he's got some great photos and descriptions. I was pleased to find that they sell GuS at Fresh Market...I think I'll try it! I'm also interested in Dagobah Chocolate, more because of Chu's description than because it shares its name with Yoda's exile planet of choice :> Too bad most of the stuff I want to try is out of stock right now!

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Cute

Sean's guild took over a castle today in Lineage II. But that's not why I'm writing this post.

Just now, he said to a guildmate on Ventrilo, "Marcus, you need to--You need to come to the throne room, Marcus, so you can be buffed."

He sounded just like somebody's dad ;>

The Horse

Xen Dolev mentions the Chinese New Year and links to a site explaining all the zodiac signs. I found the description of my sign, the Horse, pretty interesting:

Horses are very appealing people. They are warm and friendly and dearly love social atherings with plenty of people. They are perceptive and enjoy talking. They have a high spirited nature and are changeable. This makes them hot-tempered, rash, and headstrong. They are always falling in and out of love. Quick to warm to someone, they are just as quick to lose interest. Here today and gone tomorrow-these are the Horses. Then when you decide not to see them again, here they come ready to pick up where they left off!

Horses are adventurers at heart, but they do have sharp minds and good abilities for managing money. They are self-reliant and energetic. They love exercise, both mental and physical. Their movements are rapid, yet graceful; their speech is quick, yet elegant. Horses want things their way and they will become aggressive when all else fails. They value their freedom above all else. They are not possessive or jealous of others. Being moody creatures, Horses depend on the feel of things. They possess the ability to improvise while events are in motion and can handle several things at once. Horses find it difficult to unwind. They keep strange hours and suffer from insomnia. When they stop, it is usually from exhaustion. It is hard for them to follow a schedule for they have no respect for routine.They need to keep busy but do best when given a free hand.

Horses are full of new ideas to solve tricky problems. When they have an idea, they want to get right to it. They work around the clock until they finish. Horses want you to come to the point quickly since they don't have time to spare. They will not care if you are blunt, just don't waste their time.

Horses must be allowed to show their emotions. They are hot-blooded, hot-tempered, and impatient,and they will gladly demonstrate. In love, Horses are quite vulnerable. They give up everything for the object of their affections. This causes them trouble since they are such impulsive creatures! They must learn to use caution. If one has a Horse in their house, you can bet the Horse receives most of the attention. Horses like being the hub and have everything revolving about them. In return, they work hard and share with everyone.

Horses don't mind starting over. They maintain their determination and enjoy new successes. They belong in careers where they are surrounded by people. They sway crowds and love being flattered. The willful Horses get into countless predicaments but they bail themselves out. They enjoy fighting their own battles. Colorful and lively, they make many friends. If they could be in several places at once,they would be delighted! Their spirit is restless and searching. Creativity is part of their being.They are talented writers and performers.
I'm not entirely sure about the whole "people person" aspect of the horse, but the impatience, the desire to get a project done in one sitting, the loving being flattered, the wanting to be in several places at once, the impulsiveness, the difficulty in following a schedule...lots of this stuff sounds familiar :> Check out what they have to say about Geminis, too:

Element: Air--View the world through thought.

Stone: Citrine, Amber, Tourmaline

Colors: yellow; light green.

Attractions: Virgo, Libra, Sagittarius

Motto: I Communicate

Notable people born under the sign of Gemini: Queen Victoria, John Wayne, Anne Frank, Henry Kissinger, Marilyn Monroe, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, ; Judy Garland, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Personality:

These people usually have nervous energy to burn.

Many forms of travel appeal to Gemini people.

Faced with demands of the long haul they may just give up or change direction.

They prefer to be part of a large group. They tend to liven up any social situation.

They are often accused of being fickle and/or superficial--their view is that it is not a crime to change ones mind.

They put great stock in non-attachment.

"Bush, Clinton, Bush, Clinton"

Apparently Bill Clinton and George Bush Sr. have become quite good friends.

"That's a good relationship. It's a fun relationship to watch," [George W.] Bush said in an interview with CBS News broadcast on Sunday.

While attending Pope John Paul's funeral, Bush said, "It was fun to see the interplay between dad and Clinton. One of these days, I'll be a member of the ex-president's club. ... I'll be looking for something to do."

He said ex-presidents share rare experiences that others cannot understand. "And so I can understand why ex-presidents are able to put aside old differences," he said.

Erg

I only got around to watching the Kyou Kara Maou episode 60 preview today (I forgot about it yesterday!). This has given me much more information! Highlight for spoilers and speculation:

Now it seems like there was more than one reason for the Shinou to send the fourth box to Earth. It looks like he's planned more training for Yuuri by sending Dr. Rodriguez to fight him. A new thought occurred to me today: what if the Shinou isn't evil? What if he's actually trying to piss Yuuri off enough with these tests and dangers and cruel tricks to finally go against the Shinou's will? Maybe he's tired of sitting around in the temple dictating for his country; maybe he (like Bob) wants to finally be able to rest. But he knows that his country is too dependent on him for him to just disappear on them...so he found the perfect Maou to set the country on a new course of independence, and is now just trying to get things to the point where there is no longer any need for the Shinou. Putting the Great Sage there, someone he doesn't need to spoonfeed, would further that goal.

That would be cool ;> Although it seems kind of mean to do that to Murata, doesn't it?

Historical perspective

The Japan Times has an interesting historical roundup of Japan-China relations, with a smattering of Korea. (Via Japundit.) I thought the article ended rather abruptly, and would have liked to have continued the story into present day, but on the whole it's pretty informative. Having taken two Japanese culture/history courses in college, I had heard most of this stuff before, but it was nice to get a refresher. I'd really like to know more from China and Korea's perspective.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Wings on DVD this year?

So sayeth TVShowsonDVD.com and SitcomsOnline. (Old news, apparently, but hey.) I've signed up to be informed by Amazon when the DVDs are available.

In other news, Steven Weber will be in a new series with Matthew Perry this year.

Kyou Kara Maou 59

Big reveal episode! Lots of reveals! Lots of laughs! Very funny! And some drama too!

I'd like to see the next episode right now, please.

Smallville

Well, now we're caught up on Smallville.

Thanks to that spoiler I read earlier today, I knew what was going to happen, and I sat and waited through three episodes for it. As I waited I speculated about how it would happen, and it turned out I was right.

Not that it matters. There's really nothing about this to be happy about.

Story-wise, it makes sense. It couldn't have been the obvious choice, because it's too obvious. They're going to draw that out, milk it for everything it's worth, I'm sure. And it couldn't have been the one it should have been, because that would tinge Clark and Lois' relationship with regret.

So yeah, it makes sense.

But it also sucks.

Friday, January 27, 2006

Sushicam v. 1.2

Jeff has switched Sushicam over to WordPress. There are still a few kinks to be worked out, but the site is live and ready to go.

The new site is going to be collaborative. Here's what Jeff said when he first revealed his plans:

I have always said that one of the things that keeps me going is the feedback and sense of community that has developed here over the past 6 years. So in order to enhance that even further I have decided to expand upon the model that Sushicam currently operates under.

I'm grinding my way through the setup of a content management system (Drupal) now, having particular trouble with setting up the image management portion, but as soon as I get the kinks worked out I will be ready to start inviting select individuals to start posting to their own personal blogs here at Sushicam.

The idea behind this new direction is simple.

Over the years there has been tons of great material posted by viewers, both in the form of comments as well as forum postings, and I think it is only fair that this site officially become the community blog that it has been slowly been evolving into over the years.
I, your humble horribly egotistical host here at pixelscribbles, have been invited to be a contributor.

*insert happy dance here*

This is actually just the motivation I need to get my Japan memories out of my head and into text format. I lost my notes from both trips, and most of the photos from the honeymoon. But I still remember visiting Japan. And now I have reason besides personal gratification to bring those memories out and mold them into stories.

I mentioned yesterday that I tend to fail in either concept or execution whenever I write. Now I've got plenty of concept.

It's time for some good execution practice.

I just read a Smallville spoiler without meaning to

And I am very unhappy!

Defining "hooah"

The AP has a cool article today about "hooah".

They shout hooah to get motivated, and they whisper it when they concur with something someone just said. Hooah means you understood something, or is the proper reply when someone says "thank you." On the other hand, it may also be used to say "thank you."

Hooah is a catchall phrase that will get you out of any situation, particularly when receiving a scolding from a higher-ranking officer.

"You use it when you've got a flame on your butt and you're just trying to extinguish it," said Capt. Brian Buckner, 30, of Sumter, S.C.

Take this conversation, overheard recently outside the mess hall at Camp Rustamiyah, on Baghdad's eastern outskirts:

Soldier 1: How you doing?

Soldier 2: Fine. How you doing?

Soldier 1: Hooah.
This is one of those words where you just kind of know what it means, and you can't quite define it :>

Human error

Slashdot links to this article by James Oberg about the myths surrounding the Challenger disaster.

  1. Few people actually saw the Challenger tragedy unfold live on television.
  2. The shuttle did not explode in the common definition of that word.
    The flight, and the astronauts' lives, did not end at that point, 73 seconds after launch.
  3. The design of the booster, while possessing flaws subject to improvement, was neither especially dangerous if operated properly, nor the result of political interference.
  4. Replacement of the original asbestos-bearing putty in the booster seals was unrelated to the failure.
  5. There were pressures on the flight schedule, but none of any recognizable political origin.
  6. Claims that the disaster was the unavoidable price to be paid for pioneering a new frontier were self-serving rationalizations on the part of those responsible for incompetent engineering management -- the disaster should have been avoidable.
It's a really interesting read, especially to me, because I never saw anything about Challenger on TV at the time that it happened. The only memory I have from my youth about Challenger is from sixth grade. I had finally been put into some gifted classes. Most gifted students had been funneled over to Warner Elementary for special programs in fourth and fifth grade, but I had just transferred to public school in fourth grade, and no one suggested me for Warner's program in fifth grade. I felt as though I had really missed out, especially since that year AJ entered fifth grade at Warner, but also because my classmates had so many shared experiences. I felt like an outsider.

One day, one of them said, "Remember when Challenger exploded?" And I had no idea what they were talking about.

Since then I've learned generally what happened, but I have never seen the footage or heard a thorough retelling, so this article was a good one for me to read.

At the end of the article there's a link to this one: Deadly space lessons go unheeded. In it, Oberg draws parallels among Apollo 1, Challenger, and Columbia.

At the end of January, NASA faces a triple anniversary of space catastrophes: the three times that astronauts have been killed aboard space vehicles.

On Jan. 27, 1967, during a pre-launch test, an unexpectedly ferocious fire suffocated Grissom, White, and Chaffee. On Jan. 28, 1986, an unexpectedly brittle booster seal destroyed shuttle Challenger and killed Scobee, Smith, Resnik, Onizuka, McNair, Jarvis, and McAuliffe. And on Feb. 1, 2003, unexpectedly severe heat shield damage destroyed the shuttle Columbia and killed Husband, McCool, Chawla, Clark, Anderson, Brown, and Ramon.

As with the disasters themselves, this calendric coincidence was created by the confluence of independent trends and conditions that conspired to set the stage for disaster. But in each space case, these impersonal forces were merely backdrop to the human decisions that through their flaws were the immediate causes.

It was at this stage -- the choices made or not made by human beings -- that each of these three disasters could have been averted. That the NASA space team failed to do so not once or even twice but three times is the true disaster. None of these people needed to die; their deaths taught NASA nothing that it shouldn't already have known. And that's the true tragedy of these three events.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Our honeymoon

I would like to take a moment to totally pimp JapaneseGuestHouses.com, through whom Sean and I booked our ryokans for our honeymoon back in March of 2003. I wrote to them today and asked if they had any records of our reservations, so I could piece together the actual dates of our honeymoon, and they very kindly forwarded me our original reservation emails! With those and with the pictures I had on PhotoWorks (which, by the way, I was able to recover in full size today and upload to smugmug), I have been able to reconstruct our itinerary as follows:

March 6: Arrived in Japan, checked in at Narita U-City Hotel (not booked through JapaneseGuestHouses)
March 7: Got up early and explored Narita City; checked out of Narita U-City Hotel and took a train into Tokyo; hopped a shinkansen to Kyoto; checked into Heianbo Ryokan.
March 8: I woke up before Sean did and headed out to the lobby. A man was coming in from outside and I saw that it was snowing. "Yuki desu ka?" I said to the man. "Taihen!" We had a delicious breakfast in the ryokan, which prides itself on its tofu. Then we headed to Kyoto Station to get started on exploring Kyoto. First we took the bus to a shrine/temple complex and wandered from there to other shrine/temple complexes--we were really looking for Kiyomizu-dera, and we actually did get to the complex, but we never found the main building! It snowed while we were out there, which I thought was awesome and Sean hated. That afternoon we spent a lot of time trying and failing to find Gion, until we finally stumbled upon it. We also walked past Minamiza Theater twice before we realized where it was. Once we did find it, we reserved seats for the next day's production of "Tale of Genji", which I was hoping would be in a traditional theatrical style. In the evening I took a bath and then sat in the lobby in my yukata writing in my journal.
March 9: Explored Kyoto some more...I think this is the day we rode the bus around until it came to the end of the line and the driver yelled at us to get off. That afternoon we attended "Tale of Genji", which lasted for hours and hours and was in a fairly Western theatrical style. There were two intermissions. During the first one we went to a cafe in the building and had keiki and soda. Ginger ale is green! It was 11 at night when we got out of there, so we stopped at McDonald's (I think) for dinner and headed back to the ryokan.
March 10: Took a day trip from Kyoto to Nara to see the Daibutsu (Great Buddha). It took us awhile of wandering back alleys to find the place. After we saw the buddha, I bought a good luck charm for gaining knowledge, which I tied to my backpack. Sean bought a cute little purple cat sitting on a cushion that he kept next to his computer. Those souvenirs are unfortunately gone, so the next time we go to Nara we'll have to replace them. We left Todaiji and headed out and around it, only to get lost again. We asked some security guards for help and they called someone to drive us to the train station.
March 11: Left Kyoto and headed west, stopping in Himeji to explore the castle on our way to Hiroshima and Miyajima. Sean enjoyed reading all the history plaques, but did not enjoy having to take his shoes off at every castle building. We rode the ferry from Hiroshima to Miyajima and checked into Momijiso Ryokan that night, where we enjoyed a huge traditional Japanese feast (and satellite TV!).
March 12: Got up to a large Western style breakfast with huge pieces of toast. Walked down the hill, through the woods and away from the ryokan to the beach to catch a ferry to Hiroshima. Explored Hiroshima's Peace Park and museum. Went through a shopping street on our way back to the ryokan. Stopped and ate at Cafe de Crie (soup and sandwiches) because we were starving. It was dark by the time we made it back to Miyajima--we were late, so we called the ryokan and someone picked us up in a van. On the way we stopped by the huge torii gates, all lit up beautifully in the dark, and like an idiot I didn't get out to take a picture! :P Back at Momijiso, we had trouble eating the huge delicious meal prepared for us due to having eaten so recently :( Sean managed a few bites; I forced most of mine down :> It was really cold that night, so the Mama-san turned on the heating pad under our futons.
March 13: Got up to another huge delicious breakfast and then checked out of Momijiso. I really didn't want to leave. I took pictures of the island from the ferry as we sailed away. Once we got back to the train station, we hopped the shinkansen back to Tokyo. We arrived that evening. Our taxi driver had trouble finding Yamanaka Ryokan, and when we finally got there our room was tiny and there were hardly any luxuries. I was so depressed! We got hungry at one point and headed off down the street to see if we could find food. We came across a Chinese place whose name ended with -hanten. I took a picture (which of course no longer exists) of the menu.
March 14: Explored Tokyo. We had no idea what to do so we went to Tokyo Station by subway and headed for the Imperial Palace. It was closed! We explored the area around the palace, looking at ducks and koi, and found a big statue of a general on a horse. Then we spotted Tokyo Tower in the distance, so we decided to walk there. After enjoying the view from both levels of the tower, we had lunch in the basement and then walked around a little more before finding a train station. At this point we went to Akihabara, which didn't impress Sean at all (though to be fair we didn't see much of the cool stuff). I was extraordinarily tired by the time we were through. We stopped at KFC for dinner but I couldn't even eat. My feet were killing me. We went back to the ryokan and I fell unhappily into my futon.
March 15: I had planned for us to go to Nikko on this day, but we were both way too tired. We slept in and watched Japanese TV for a long time (including some weird TV movie about some parents who killed their son because he was violent, then met his girlfriend in prison and repented for their actions). When we finally ventured out, all we did was check out Ueno, have lunch at McDonald's (where I had my very first ever Big Mac) and go to an Internet cafe. Dinner was a seafood pizza with white sauce, which was delicious.
March 16: We spent the morning in Ueno Park and the Tokyo National Museum, then hung out in the room and in the Internet cafe. Had Indian food (curry) for dinner, which I've decided has to be my tradition on the last night in Japan :)
March 17: Checked out of Yamanaka, rode trains to Narita Airport, and left Japan.
And that's it, to the best of my memory. If I remember more, I'll edit this post ;>

o_o

Did Cingular win a patent on emoticons? (via Slashdot)

O_o;;;;

:>

dish Network has stupid commercials

How, in today's world, can you claim that "Nothing's worse than paying too much for TV"?

Ken Watanabe on Geisha

MSN-Mainichi: Ken Watanabe defends casting choices in 'Memoirs of a Geisha'

Critics say the sight of Chinese actresses playing subservient geishas insults the memory of Chinese victims of Japanese atrocities during World War II.

But Watanabe, who plays a businessman in "Memoirs," said the art of being a geisha should be universal.

"I thought a lot about the meaning of geisha in Japanese society, and during shooting it occurred to me that geisha has always been like opera -- beautiful costumes and beautiful music and amazing dancing and maybe some love," Watanabe said in an interview published in the February edition of the magazine Prestige Hong Kong.

"Opera is totally Italian. But sometimes German or English or Chinese or Japanese people play in the opera," he said.

"The same thing with this movie. Talent is the most important thing. A beautiful soprano. A wonderful tenor. Not your nationality," Watanabe argued.
It's a pretty argument. Too bad it doesn't make any sense!

Real reasons for the Geisha casting choices:

  1. They wanted someone American audiences would recognize from other movies.
  2. They figured American audiences wouldn't know the difference anyway.
And they're probably right. :>

I previously discussed this movie here and here.

Dude

Avalon's back! o_o

I didn't know this happened to anyone else

Nanasawa cries to music

(From yesterday's Megatokyo. Yes, I did read it yesterday. Meant to comment on it, too, but here we are.)

When I read this comic I was sort of surprised. You see, for the longest time--I first remember commenting about it when I was working at Willis Music (horrible website here) in Lexington--I have had a thing where I cry when I sing along to music. I don't remember it happening when I sang karaoke in Japan. Really, it seems to happen when I'm by myself and really enjoying the music. And it does happen when I just listen to music, too. I've cried to Battlecry songs.

Nikki, one of my co-workers at Willis, told me that it was probably the vibration of the sound in my nasal passages causing me to tear up.

I ran with this idea later in college in a story that blew chunks. It was never posted online because it was so horrible. I was reacting to the pressure to produce art by writing about different artists and their reactions to the pressure to produce art. I had a painter who killed himself, and his final work was his apartment, bathed in his own blood. I had his lover, who I think was a musician. I don't remember what happened to him. There was a writer, too, and she became a journalist. And then there was the singer. She cried whenever she sang and became famous for it, but one day her nose was broken in an accident, and after the reconstructive surgery she didn't cry when she sang anymore. The illusion was broken and she fell from favor.

The story doesn't really sound all that bad in paraphrase, but trust me when I tell you that I wrote it horribly. It sucked. Stories are half about concept and half about execution. Whenever I have one, I seem to always half-ass the other.

Someday, when I get them both right, I might actually publish something.

Ah, MacGyver

Watching MacGyver on TV Land ("Legend of the Holy Rose": "Help me find the Holy Grail!" "Indiana Jones already did that! I saw the movie!"). During the commercials they had a hilarious haiku:

Duct tape miracles
Sweet Swiss Army Knife escapes
Murdoc never dies
XD

(Someone else noticed this, um, last year. And from that site, I found this!)

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Blarg

I don't feel like going to bellydance class today, so I'm going to be lame and not go.

Here are a couple of pictures:

reflected sunset

Reflected sunset as seen from the golf course parking lot at the Greeneway yesterday. I actually saw an even better shot when I was riding along the river, but I forced myself not to stop and take it. It was gorgeous, too; the Augusta skyline bathed in a rich glow, framed by the similarly sun-washed brick of the 13th Street bridge. Will I regret not taking this picture forever? ;> (Actually no, because I'm glad I didn't stop.)

Seoul Oriental Food Market

Seoul Oriental Food Market on Belair Road. They sell Golden Curry!!! I went to an oriental market on Columbia Road the other day and they didn't have any, but this one is even closer to Cheryl and Reid's house and it has all kinds of good stuff :D Mostly Korean food, but hey! Also, they had the biggest bag of Nishiki rice I have ever seen.

Marshmallow Fudge Bars

The Marshmallow Fudge Bars I made today. Note that I let the icing cook too long (or something) and it got too hard to spread. Oh well. It tastes just fine.

Home early today

And I'm making these! They promise to be pretty damn delicious...

Retail plastic bags becoming an environmental hazard in Japan

Retailers will receive warnings or have their names publicized if they fail to reduce the number of plastic shopping bags through such measures as charging customers for the service, according to the government's final draft report on the issue.

Under the government's plan to revise the Containers and Packaging Recycling Law, retailers, such as supermarket operators, will be required to submit a report on their efforts to reduce the number of shopping bags, which are increasingly becoming an environmental hazard, according to officials.

Companies will not be required to charge fees for the bags, but the measure will be included in guidelines for retailers on how to reduce the estimated 30 billion plastic bags circulating for free annually.

[...]

Municipal governments have been asking the central government to reduce their financial burden in sorting and collecting discarded containers and packaging materials, saying the total cost for such efforts reaches 300 billion yen a year.

Currently, business operators, including retail store operators and food makers, pay fees to recycle plastic materials they have used. Any money left over after the recycling process is paid back to the business operators.

But the draft report says that the half of the money now returned to business operators should go to the municipal governments, the officials said.
It's interesting to see this problem tackled by a country with a decent recycling infrastructure.

JR East commuter trains to have old-style windows

You know, ones that can actually open.

Calling it a "renovation of unprecedented scale," East Japan Railway Co. (JR East) has decided to switch from its slick, wide-view windows, which cannot be opened, to good old-fashioned retractable windows that allow natural ventilation.

[...]

The 209 series was touted as a "next-generation commuter train" when it debuted in 1993 and was the first train developed by JR East following privatization of JNR in 1987.

The windows were considered especially cutting-edge. Special heat-absorbing glass makes curtains unnecessary, while the window itself provides an excellent view, twice as wide as the traditional style. Automatic air conditioners control ventilation, and two small windows at the end of the carriages can be opened about 60 centimeters for natural ventilation.

The fixed windows lower the noise level inside the trains, and because of their simpler structure, they even cost about 100,000 yen less than the retractable type.

As a JR official said, the windows were supposedly "a two-birds-with-one-stone tech- nology that made both passengers and JR happy."

Then it all came crashing down.

In March 2005, a 209-series train carrying about 1,000 passengers was hit with an electrical problem and stalled between Omori and Kamata stations on the Keihin Tohoku Line. The air conditioning cut out. Over the course of the next two and a half hours, the motionless train became a steaming sauna.

Sixteen passengers had to be taken away in ambulances.

The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport states that train windows "must allow for necessary ventilation." So JR East decided to renovate.
It's too bad they can't figure out some way to open those wide windows. The view is rather nice.

Want to see something totally freaking bizarre?

Here you go.

A middle-aged Tokyo man found to be living with 10 younger women said he attracted them by reciting an incantation that came to him in a dream.

[...]

"I had a dream that told me I would become attractive to women if I recited a particular incantation," it quoted the man as saying.

A rapid series of weddings and divorces left the man with a large group of ex-wives, mostly in their 20s and 30s, who shared his surname and continued to live with him.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

OMG...Yakitate!! Japan 53

Or should I say, Takitate!! Gohan 1...

Wow.

Just...wow.

I laughed so hard I almost cried :>

Biking madness

Today I got off work a little early (ran out of things to do), so when I got home I quickly planned dinner, then changed my shirt and carted my bike out to the car. The weather was beautiful--cool but not cold--and I had to ride.

I decided to go to the Greeneway. I don't really know why, but I just wasn't in a Canal mood. I parked at the golf course, taking the very last available space. (There would have been one more if some idiot hadn't parked across two spots.) Then I headed up the old Greeneway, through the tunnel, and over the new bridge that looks out over the Hammond's Ferry construction. Still no buildings (that I can see).

I kept up a good pace (well, about 10 mph) the whole way up to Pisgah Road. Better yet, I didn't stop until I got there. Even better still, once I got to Pisgah Road, I lingered for maybe 15 seconds to stretch and take a drink of water, and then I turned right back around and headed back. On my way back I averaged 15 mph (it's more downhill, so I was able to go into third gear).

And here's the kicker: I didn't stop all the way back!

The ride was 52 minutes total, for 10.5 miles. I didn't realize how tired my legs were until I got into my car. The maneuver almost deposited me on the ground. ;>

One degree of separation away from a published blogger

I'm working in Robert's office on my projects (the one I was working on yesterday is done, after a cool 96 hours). Today Robert was searching for check acceptance services on Google and found this. He was so shocked and awed that he emailed Seth Godin, and Seth blogged it.

Kinda nifty.

Monday, January 23, 2006

It's only 9:30?!

Damn, why am I so tired?

Ah well. Sean's already asleep; I may as well join him :D

Well, I've hit that point.

The sucky point of a project. The point where I'm So Tired of It but It's Not Quite Done and Actually There Are Issues I Really Need To Resolve but I'm Just So Bored.

Joy.

Pushing through this and completing the project will prove that I am a mature adult who can function properly in the workplace!

D'oh

Horiemon's been arrested.

What with the email and everything else, it's really looking like he's guilty, which is a huge shame. When I first heard about Horie, I thought he was so cool. I was trying to explain who he was to Robert the other day, and finally Robert said, "So he's Japan's Michael Dell." I guess that's a pretty good description.

I sincerely hope he's innocent, but it's looking more and more like his company is successful solely due to unethical and illegal business practices :/

MSNBC has a good roundup of events.

Cool Lexington lamp company celebrates 50 years of business

And apparently they can make a lamp out of anything!

Customers frequently ask the store to make lamps from sentimental items such as jockey boots, football helmets and law or medical books.

One customer had a lamp made out of the antique cast iron water pump from the family farm.

Melanie Turner said she had David Shannon turn a piece of handblown purple glass into an electric lamp that resembles an old-style oil lamp.

"They provide good, old-fashioned service," said Turner, who lives in Millersburg but works in Lexington. "Things are done one at a time, and in today's world that means a good deal to me."

Kinda reminds me of that Hanshin Tigers fan from Densha Otoko

Apparently there has been a huge recent trend of middle-aged Japanese men falling in love with Filipino hostesses and following them back to the Phillippines, only to be unable to thrive in the workforce, to run out of money, and to have their new wives leave them. These "desperate Japanese" end up appealing to the Japanese embassy for help.

The lower cost of living in the Philippines allows them to enjoy a good life initially, but unable to speak English or the local language, the men, mostly in their 50s, cannot find work and use up all of their money in a year or two, he said.

[...]

The consular official said the embassy had dealt with less than 50 "Desperate Japanese" until 2000, arranging their return to Japan, but the cases had risen in the last five years with the number rising to around 180.

[...]

He said "Desperate Japanese" as a phenomenon was almost exclusive to the Philippines, adding that the "Philippine pubs", found even in rural Japan, provided comfort to the men facing a midlife crisis.

"These men, they may have been victims of their company's restructuring and may have felt isolated at home," he said.

"So they may have been heartened by a young Filipina at the local hostess bar and decided: 'what the heck, I'll go to the Philippines.'"

Mmm

I subscribed to 101 Cookbooks because it showed up in my Gmail Web Clips and sounded interesting. Since then I've really enjoyed the recipes and the insight into food culture.

Today they've got a Best of Show post by Heidi Swanson, founder of the site:

This time each year the NASFT Winter Fancy Food ambles into San Francisco and takes over both massive halls of the Moscone Center. I kid you not - there is mile after mile of artisan cheeses, chocolates, teas, crackers, cookies, jams, jellies, spices, juices, wines, beers, wound tightly up and down a hive of aisles. This is all the stuff you will eventually see in places like Dean & Deluca, Whole Foods Markets, and Williams-Sonoma. I walked and talked my way from 10 a.m. this morning until 5 p.m. and still had an aisle or two to go when they flashed the lights for last call.
How awesome would it be to go to a food convention for work? :D

Sunday, January 22, 2006

You know what irritates me?

This.

I've got mail!  Or not!

See that AOL email address? Yeah, that doesn't exist. It's an advertisement in AIM. When I click on it, a browser opens and takes me to the signup page for AOL Mail.

What's really annoying is that sometimes this will pop up by itself, when I don't even have mail in my actual email account.

I have always used AIM's mail alert feature, so I wouldn't have to leave Outlook open, but if this stupidity keeps up I guess I'll have to turn it off. My OCD won't put up with it. It's like a blinking AIM window; it'll drive me nuts until I can make it go away somehow.

My imstar* avatar

So I thought I'd try out imstar* and see how close to my actual appearance I could get an avatar.

Here are the results.

My faceAvatar's face
My bodyAvatar's body

It's hard to make one of these avatars overweight. They have great options for changing the shape of the body, but the options only go so far in terms of girth. I guess they figure nobody would want a fat avatar.

The face is hilarious. I was limited by the software: you have to purchase hair and eyebrows, and I couldn't find the right styles. That hair is totally ugly, but it's the closest I could find.

As for the general face, there are face shape, eyes, nose, mouth, and cheeks and chin adjustment options. I messed with them until I got them as close as I possibly could to my own face, but it still doesn't look a thing like me.

And they only have four pairs of glasses in the shop!

Oh well, that was a fun waste of two hours. Now to get down to what I'm supposed to be doing...

Living out your life online

There's a new IM client called imstar* that boasts 3D, moving avatars. It's supposed to add realism to your interactions. What really gets me is the fact that you can change your avatar's outfits by going to an online store and buying new clothes.

You want your Avatar to look her best right? Ergo, you must shop! Welcome to the starpoint Galleria where shop after shop is jam-packed with all the coolest, latest looks no matter what your style. This is yet another place where you can express yourself at imstar*- your Avatar can dress any way you want.

You'll find all the best jeans at "Denim Daze" and make-up at "Glamourstar*." Need a new coif? Hit the "Head Shop", and if athletic wear is your thing, try "Sportster." There are contacts (at the "Eye Pod" shop) and shoes galore at "Shoe Fetish." There are more stores, more styles, more stuff than you'd ever dream of. You can even shop for more animations and more moves--can you do that at your local mall? The whole mall is searchable, just type in what you're looking for and bam.

Are you afraid to commit? You can try before you buy. Don't be caught with your pants down--after twenty minutes, if you don't pay, the clothes will simply be returned to the store. Oh, and a little hint- if tons of people buy an item in the store, it could sell out, just like at the real mall. So get the goods while you can, they won't always be there for the buying.
Is that scary, or what? I guess with stuff like this there's no point in living in the real world, is there?

Players of MMOs are already familiar with this concept. :>

The power of the sun in the palm of my hand

So, China's going to build the sun! And apparently other scientists around the world are building "similar devices". (via Slashdot)

Scientists believe that deuterium can be extracted from the sea and an enormous amount of energy can be obtained from a deuterium-tritium fusion reaction under huge temperatures of 100 million degrees Celsius. After nuclear fusion, the deuterium extracted from one liter of sea water will produce energy equivalent to 300 liters of gasoline.

If a device is developed that can withstand temperatures as high as 100 million Celsius degrees and control a deuterium-tritium reaction, it will be as though an "artificial sun" had been created able to supply infinite, clean energy for human beings.
I guess we didn't learn anything from Spider-Man 2.

I just realized something funny.

Take a look at this picture, the largest size. See that kind of white oval thing on the shelf?

That's my wedding dress :>

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Regret

The day after the fire (technically the day of the fire, since it happened at 2 am), Brooke and I went to the apartments so I could take pictures.

As we were leaving, we saw a fireman standing in my apartment. He was trying to put out a small fire that was still burning. He picked up an object and it fell open, and papers fell out and fluttered down to the ground next to the pond.

I recognized that he was holding my medical records mini-file, that all my documentation about my cancer treatments was still there...albeit some of the pages were slightly burned, and some of them likely went into the pond. I regret not trying to go over there and pick some of them up.

But what I really regret is not yelling up to the fireman and asking him if he could toss my computer down.

I think back to that event every now and then, and every time I berate myself for being so stupid as to think that someone would retrieve my hard drive for me "later".

Chopstick practice

Asahi: Weekend Beat: Wooden toy maker starts from scratch, carves out new niche

"Did you know that picking up beans with chopsticks is a good rehabilitation exercise?" one family member said.

"It'd be good practice for children, too," another added.

And thus "Ohashi de Dozo" (With chopsticks, please)--a game in which players pile up cylindrical wooden pieces with chopsticks--was born. The toy, which has proved popular at kindergartens and day-care facilities for the elderly, is a product of [Harumasa] Ono's firm Heiwa Co., a wooden toy maker based in Nagoya's Showa Ward.
It would also be good practice for people who don't use chopsticks daily. I wonder where I could get a copy of this game?

Honeymoon photos

The picture in my last post came from our honeymoon photos, which I have uploaded here. Bear in mind that they have not been preserved in their original size, but I think the quality is okay for viewing at least. [I was able to pull the full size photos from PhotoWorks! Yay!] I spent a few hours captioning and tagging them and wishing desperately that I had the rest of them. I took so many pictures on that trip; these 52 are just the ones I uploaded to PhotoWorks because I wanted to make prints to put in an album. I'm glad I was at least able to recover that much, but it still hurts to think of pictures I know I took and have lost forever. I can still see a lot of them in my mind...

Anyway, I originally selected these for prints because I was proud of how they turned out, so you might enjoy them as well. This was of course back in my "point and shoot" era, so don't expect anything fancy like yesterday's shots ;>

Sean at Himeji Castle

Akihabara

plum blossoms

It gets cold in a Japanese house

Japanese houses don't have central heating and air, as many Japan blogs have been noting recently (here's Amy Nakazawa's take from last year; it's nice and thorough). Today, Simon points to an article by Amy Chavez about how gaijin can survive this:

The first thing you'll need is a wall-mounted heater and air conditioner, which the Japanese refer to as "aircon." This will keep the average person warm enough, but not the average gaijin. Therefore, supplement the "aircon" with a "kotatsu," a small table with a heat lamp under it, to keep your legs warm. If you turn up the kotatsu high enough, it's almost like sitting around a bonfire. You'll find that almost all of your body is warm now, except your fingers. Therefore, sit on your hands. Now don't move until springtime.
Read the whole thing; the ending is funny (and scary).

I haven't actually experienced much of a Japanese winter. Our honeymoon took place in March, and when we were in Kyoto it snowed (boy was that neat).

snowy shopping street near Kiyomizu-dera

However, our ryokans were warm and cozy for the most part. In the ryokan on Miyajima, which was the coldest, we had a heating mat under our futon. The bathroom was freezing in the morning.

As my experience is limited, I've never had the opportunity to try a kotatsu, though I've always wanted to. I imagine that if Sean and I ever move to Japan for any length of time, he'll spend the winter sitting at the kotatsu with his computer.

Friday, January 20, 2006

BTW

TGIF!

Well, hello.

I'm kind of shocked that I haven't posted yet today. I was pretty busy at work, and during my breaks all I did was chat and websurf, and I didn't really take long breaks anyway...and after work I went straight to the Greeneway with Brooke, and we walked until it was dark, just like yesterday. When I got home I settled in and did some reading and ran some errands and made dinner, and we just ate, and now here I am.

Of course, I also uploaded pictures: yesterday's and today's.

frost on the roof of my car

power lines

lichens

lichens

power pole detail

tower of power

stately home

streaking headlights--hey, everybody's doing it

Those last two aren't very good, but I felt bad for the last few pages in today's gallery, as they weren't getting much exposure ;> I am really happy with the lichen photos, though.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Did you know that Japan has a Minister of State for Gender Equality and Social Affairs?

Well, they do:

Kuniko Inoguchi, the recently named minister for gender equality, said companies need to respond more to the needs of working mothers by granting child leave for fathers and not encouraging pregnant women to quit.

"If you decide to have a family, and eventually you decide to go back into society, you're never fully employed and never fully paid," Inoguchi told a small group of reporters.

"So the opportunity cost for many women is very high," she added. "My suggestion is that we have better policies for a work and life balance."
This isn't just an ethical concern:

Japan's population of 127 million began to fall for the first time on record last year, fanning worries that future generations of workers won't generate enough tax revenue to care for the growing legions of elderly.

At the center of the population debate is the question of how to encourage women to have more babies. Japan's average fertility rate of 1.29 babies per woman is one of the lowest in the world.

Noguchi commits suicide

Asahi: Key figure in Livedoor scandal kills self as prosecutors start questioning officials

Noguchi's death came as prosecutors started questioning officials in the Livedoor conglomerate over the suspected stock-price manipulation of an affiliate, Livedoor Marketing Co.

They also plan to question Livedoor President Takafumi Horie not only about the affiliate's actions, but also about suspected window-dressing of accounts at Livedoor group companies.

Noguchi would have likely been one of those questioned.
Meanwhile, the plot thickens:

Mainichi: Livedoor repeatedly made false takeover announcements of firms it already controlled

Mainichi: Tokyo Stock Exchange looks to de-list scandal-tainted Livedoor

I previously mentioned the Livedoor scandal here.

I don't think my waking hours match the world's

Yesterday I got up freakishly early and came in an hour early to work.

Today I got up freakishly late and came in an hour late to work.

("Early" and "late" are just based on my usual time, 8:00, because technically I can work whenever I want. Earlier is better because that means I have more daylight hours to do things I want to do, but it also means if I want to stay up late like a normal person I end up overtiring myself.)

I'd like to see what hours I'd keep if I could go to sleep when I was tired and get up when I wasn't tired anymore. I'm guessing there would be patterns, but I'm also thinking that I would be awake longer on some days than on others.

And I don't mean I don't want to have work, just that I'd like to see how my life would go if I didn't use clocks to determine my sleeping patterns. So I'd get up when I got up, and wake up and go to work when I was ready to work.

Theoretically I could try it out now, but I'm afraid I'd sleep in too long :>

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Upside-down rest

Mom sent me this picture today in an email forward:

lovely pink upside-down building

The original sender of the email (Mom's cousin) wrote alongside it, "Can someone interpret the Chinese? Japanese?" (Actually, who knows who the original sender of the mail was. But I digress.)

I took this as a personal challenge!

First of all, for the record, it's Japanese. We have lovely examples of hiragana, katakana, and kanji.

Here's the text right-side up:

Japanese text on building: さかさレスト とんちん館

The text is:

さかさレスト
とんちん館

sakasaresuto
tonchinkan

and it apparently means:

Upside-Down Hotel
Absurdity

The kanji is a pun. They use 館, which is pronounced "kan" and means hotel or guesthouse. But the word 頓珍漢--same pronunciation as とんちん館, different kanji--means "absurdity" or "contradiction".

You will find many such puns in the Japanese language. :>

[Here is what seems to be the original image. Here's a tour of the place, and here's another one. According to this, they serve meals of fish curry and rice omelets. It also lists their address, 長野県松本市島内5030 (Nagano prefecture, Matsumoto City, Shimauchi[?] 5030). I may have to stay there someday if they have their own restaurant and karaoke...]

Navel oranges sweeter this year

HappyNews.com/PRNewsWire: New year promises to be sweet for orange lovers

This season in particular, California navel oranges will be tastier than ever, as a beneficial delay in the Central Valley harvest has boosted the fruit's sweetness. "The oranges were slower to acquire the rich color associated with our fruits this year, so we picked them a few weeks later than normal," noted grower and CEO of the California Citrus Growers Association, Mike George. "By allowing the oranges extra time to mature on the trees, the fruit took on a sweeter taste that families are already enjoying."
Reid has been buying navel oranges like they were stock in Microsoft. I have one in my lunch today :)

A pill to minimize traumatic memories

Scientists are working on a medication to suppress the hormones that go wild after a traumatic experience. Though Slashdot spun this theoretical pill as a way to immediately forget painful memories like Hurricane Katrina, the real purpose of this work is to eliminate Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. (There is a distinction there; one of the scientists, Pitman, says, "The important thing to know about this drug is it doesn't put a hole in their memory. It doesn't create amnesia.")

Memories, painful or sweet, don't form instantly after an event but congeal over time. Like slowly hardening cement, there is a window of opportunity when they are shapable.

During stress, the body pours out adrenaline and other "fight or flight" hormones that help write memories into the "hard drive" of the brain, McGaugh and Cahill showed.

Propranolol can blunt this. It is in a class of drugs called beta blockers and is the one most able to cross the blood-brain barrier and get to where stress hormones are wreaking havoc. It already is widely used to treat high blood pressure and is being tested for stage fright.
The only thing I'm concerned about is what might happen when the formula is perfected. After all, we are an extraordinarily over-medicated country. I could easily see us going nuts with this, trying to "erase" even the smallest things that happen to us. I'm also concerned about how you would know when to give someone the pill.

For example, I don't think I needed to take this medicine after the fire. It was very traumatic to lose everything, but I have not developed PTSD. I am still upset about it, and there are definitely things I need to work through, but I am still able to function, and I don't have horrible flashbacks or anything of that nature.

I'm interested to know what the purpose of the elevated hormone levels might be. Is this an evolved trait meant to help us avoid danger? Or is this something that just happened to come along for the ride in our genes? Regardless, would it be detrimental to suppress these hormones when it's unnecessary?

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

I FEEL FINE, DAMMIT

>:(

A new outlook

In 2005, I spent a great deal of time cataloguing my health issues and general feeling of wellness (or lack thereof). I was hoping to be able to chart patterns, or later have a record of my conception. (Even when I give up hope, I don't give up hope!)

I don't think it's bad to have a good record of how I feel, but I do think that making note of things like that ended up causing me to be overly sensitive to discomfort. That, in turn, has affected my working life.

Yesterday I realized that if I keep getting so concerned about every little thing, I won't be able to work properly. I'll keep thinking that there must be something wrong, that I need to rest, that my "symptoms" mean something. It's distracting. It causes me to lose my focus.

Last week, I felt a little ill, and went home early one day.

Yesterday, I felt run down, but I changed my attitude. Instead of concentrating on how I felt so I could analyze it, I thought, "I feel fine." And I was amazingly productive yesterday.

So, even though I just had a sudden twinge of pain in my abdomen (on a scale from 1 to 10, I'd rate it maybe a 2), I'm not going to obsess about it. I'm going to just get on with things.

After all, that's what normal people do, and I want to live a normal life too.

(By the way, after my freakish 99.whatever temperature spike and freakish 96.whatever temperature drop, I'm back in the 97s, which is my average temperature. I have no idea if this means I'm ovulating or not, but I haven't had a period yet.)

Bad news for Horiemon

I was unhappy to hear about this.

Asahi.com: Horie denies immediate resignation

"From around 7 p.m. last night, my company underwent searches of the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office and the Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission," Horie said. "They seized some of our documents. I continued to observe the searches. All of the searches were completed a little while ago."

The searches were conducted over allegations that a Livedoor affiliate, Livedoor Marketing Co., illegally pushed up its stock price through an announcement in 2004 that it planned to take over a publisher. The affiliate did not mention that Livedoor Co. had already bought the publisher through an investment fund.

Livedoor Marketing's share prices immediately soared.

[...]

As for his possible resignation as Livedoor president, Horie said: "It would be irresponsible for me to say whether I will resign or not now because I have not yet grasped the entire situation. I will make a judgment on the issue after cooperating in the investigation."

At the end of the news conference, Horie had words for investors in Livedoor: "I apologize to them for causing so much anxiety. But our businesses have no particular problems. I will continue to make efforts to expand my businesses, as I have been doing so far."
Mainichi: Horie, two other Livedoor execs played key role in share scandal

Horie, 33, Miyauchi and Okamoto planned to take over the publishing firm Money Life in 2004. Under the plan, an investment fund controlled by Livedoor reportedly bought all shares in the publisher in June that year.

The three executives agreed to hide the fact that the fund had already bought Money Life and had Livedoor Marketing, whose name was Value Click Japan at the time, announce it would buy Money Life in October 2004, investigative sources said.

In November that year, the three wrongly said that Livedoor Marketing was in the black, although the affiliate hadn't made any profits at that time, the sources said.
You have to kind of wonder who Mainichi's "investigative sources" are.

(I mentioned Horie previously here.)

MLK's "I Have a Dream" speech is not in the public domain

But you can buy a copy of it here.

Seems like a good investment to me. I watched part of it in college, in my American Government class, but I don't think I was receptive enough. (I was a total slacker in that class, and I hardly remember anything about it...:/)

(Click trail: BoingBoing, the Washington Post, Google, The King Center website)

Sunday, January 15, 2006

2005

I've been wanting to do a retrospective post for awhile. I actually meant to do it on December 31, but you know how that goes ;> And now all of a sudden it's the middle of January and I still haven't talked about The Year That Was. So here are some posts from last year; things that meant a lot to me, things that affected me, things I don't want to forget.

On January 1, 2005, I wrote the infamous Harry Potter and the Horror of the Ellipsis post, which is still one of my favorites...I think because it's so snarky.

On January 7, I discussed the Graniteville train wreck that released poisonous chlorine into the air.

On January 11, I got my first indication that Gaila wasn't long for this world. (I also started a habit that lasted for quite some time, and of which I am still very proud: biking to work. If only I could still be doing that.)

On January 14, I titled a blog post "Ariel Sharon is stupid". A year later, he's probably dying.

On January 22, I made that Naruto post that people are still up in arms about.

On January 25, I wrote a post I really liked. Nobody commented.

On January 26, I experienced the first of very, very many nauseated moments in which I would think to myself--privately, of course, because blogging it would "jinx" it--that I might, just maybe, be pregnant.

I also applied for a job I really, really wanted. A job I didn't end up getting...but a job I would still like to have someday. And, of course, I got the best rejection ever.

On January 29, I started talking about shifting my blog to WordPress. A year later...it still hasn't happened.

On February 1, I came up with my idea for starting a "distributed subbing" anime distribution company (you know, when I'm rich and don't need to make a profit off it).

On February 15, I ranted about how children are not pets, and pets are not children. (In retrospect, I think my underlying premise was that some people are too lenient with both.)

In early 2005, I was working on uploading the rest of my full-size images from the 2001 Japan trip to smugmug. In doing so I discovered the name of a ryokan I'd taken a picture of in Takayama.

On February 26, I discovered who Hunter S. Thompson was. A "twisted, egomaniacal piece of shit".

On February 28, T Campbell posted on my blog!

On March 8, Sean and I got Aeron chairs. God, we miss them.

On March 12, I got on my high horse concerning my "right" to blog.

On April 1, I kicked off an interesting race discussion, one that I think is worth revisiting.

On April 14, I went to town about privacy issues. It's kind of neat when I actually argue a point!

On April 20, Eric Burns commented on my blog! (He came back later, too!)

On May 11, I committed some of Brooke's nicknames for me to history.

On May 19, I responded emotionally to Revenge of the Sith.

May 23 saw the beginning of my back-and-forth about Elf Life.

On May 29, I mentioned the collaborative writing website (aka the "e-coterie") I've been wanting to create. Except I didn't say that I was going to create one, I just remarked that I dreamed about it. This is because I hate getting people's hopes up about stuff and not following through. Ross has been waiting like a year for me to actually form a writing circle.

On the day after my birthday, I started to realize how valuable this blog has become to me.

On June 4, I participated in the "4 Questions" "meme". Sam was rather surprised that I answered his question so quickly, and with such detail. I really wanted to answer more questions, but only two people asked, and they each only asked one. I may revisit this "meme" (ugh) someday.

On June 5, after pondering the nature of marriage, I posted the vows from our wedding. I am so glad I did this, that I have this record.

Gaila died on June 21.

On July 1, I wrote the cockroach post.

On July 5, I discovered the real reason I married Sean. ;)

On July 8, I truly enjoyed doing some page design, and started to think that I had a future in the field.

Here's an example of my OCD geekery from July 14.

On August 5, I posted my last batch of pictures before the fire.

On August 10, I tried to start a Japanese study group.

On August 12, I uploaded the Yatsushiro pictures from my 2001 Japan trip, just in time.

On August 22, I went to Columbia, SC, and learned about the printing process. It was an awesome trip--I still think about how cool it would be to work at a printer's.

On August 23, I got a job. (I lost it three weeks later, but I did enjoy it--sort of--while it lasted.)

Our apartment burned down on August 28, destroying literally everything we owned except our cars, our cell phones, the clothes we were wearing, and ourselves. (Oh, and a Quaker Chewy Granola Bar.)

The experience of the fire still hurts, and I think of things I lost and wish I still had pretty much every day. But this experience also showed me how amazing people can be and how wonderful our friends and family are. And, as usual, I've found humor in the situation where I could.

On September 19, a very good friend told me, "Most people are happy just to consume life, but you have a strong desire to give it meaning and to contextualize it. I don't know how you will eventually develop the organizing lens that will eventually project the fullness of your creativity and ability, but I have little doubt you'll eventually succeed in developing it."

On September 21, I went to Cumberland Falls for the first time since I was a teenager. It was beautiful.

David came to visit us in Augusta for the first time on September 24, and on the 28th he and I went to Savannah.

On October 6 I made a parody post about terrorist-funded design jobs that had been advertised in newspapers in the Middle East and then discovered by a global news outlet, but no one commented to say how funny it was.

On October 14, something pooped on my head!

On October 21, the Brazilian Saga began.

I got a new bike, which I named Yuuri (but which I refer to as "the Maou" in my head) on October 26. I took him to the Canal for the first time on the 31st.

On November 1, Connor's birthday, I decided to take a look at where our apartment used to be.

November saw Sean and I go back and forth about buying a house, ultimately deciding not to. I also made a realization about my bellydance avoidance in November.

Brooke fell in love with David in November (or thereabouts, though it may have started as early as September), and I felt very self-piteous about it (and still do to an extent), because the man she loves lives in England, which means she might move away from me.

On December 18, Mari generously shared her kitchen with me, so that I was able to bake all the Christmas cookies I wanted. It was such a wonderful day.

On the 21st, Sean's car was totaled. This fortunately didn't stop us from going to Kentucky for Christmas to be with my family.

And on the 29th, I accepted some full-time contract Web design work, which is how I've been spending my days ever since. David came back into town the same dayweek, this time to visit Brooke.

In 2005, I railed a lot against stupid parents, but this was of course because I was dealing with my infertility. (More here, here, and here.)

I also spent a lot of time last year spinning my wheels, and thinking about how I was spinning my wheels.

General themes for 2005: loss, struggle, pain, fear, determination, love, hope.

So many things hurt me in 2005. I want 2006 to be better. I want to make it better.

And I will.

Things every woman should know

MSN-Mainichi has an interesting article: Helping women explore the 'myths' surrounding the female genitalia. The last two paragraphs are kind of cute :> The article reminds me a little of Dr. Gardos' stuff. (If you don't know who Dr. Gardos is, google him. He's cool.) Basically, it's a frank discussion that encourages women to be knowledgeable about and in control of their own bodies.

It's interesting to me that such an article is needed in modern society. But I suppose it's true that not everyone spent their teenage years surfing the Internet...

Saturday, January 14, 2006

I just realized something

Technically, I fulfilled my New Years' "resolution" for 2005.

Charting things satisfies my OCD

temperature chartSo because I love to share just about every excruciating detail of my life with perfect strangers, here's my basal body temperature chart so far.

Today's temp is a little high. Am I getting sick, or is that normal?

It actually might be wrong, because my sleeping pattern has been a little screwy lately. The first time I took the temperature, I got up and went into the bathroom to do it. The second time, I did it lying in bed. The third time, I was up really late. I woke up about half an hour before I was going to actually get up and went potty, and then thought, "Crap, I'm supposed to not do anything before taking the temperature, and it's supposed to be after a long chunk of sleep. Will an hour or so be enough?" So I decided to sleep in for another three hours, and I went in to the office later than usual.

And last night I was also up really late. I woke up a few times and thought that I should take my temperature, but I wasn't ready to get up yet. I did want to go potty, but I didn't want to screw up the temperature, so I forced myself to stay in bed. I dozed for a long while, and then my phone rang and without thinking I got up and took the phone in the other room and answered it, pacing around and talking. After the conversation I realized what I'd done, so I went back to bed for another few hours hoping that would make it okay.

So who knows how accurate this all is. It's really annoying to destroy the scientific process like this.

Anyway, according to the charts I've seen at FertilityFriend.com, with which I created the chart to the right (thanks Will!), you're not normally supposed to go up in temperature two days in a row; you're supposed to spike once, and that's the sign of ovulation. So it's one of the following:

  1. I'm getting sick, which is throwing it off.
  2. I haven't been consistent enough with my temperature taking, which is throwing it off.
  3. I'm pregnant!
  4. This thing isn't going to work like a normal cycle chart because my ovaries were damaged by chemotherapy.
  5. It's too early to tell anything. I mean geez, it's only been four days...get over yourself, Heather Meadows.

Friday, January 13, 2006

A nifty Kyou Kara Maou detail

I just noticed that the leader of the pirates from episode 5 is fighting off the monsters in episode 57.

It's a small world :D

Productivity takes a hit

I ended up leaving work a little early yesterday, and I slept in today, all due to not feeling very well. Yesterday I was really nauseated, so I didn't eat dinner. This morning I'm feeling better, I think, but not perfect. I don't know if I'm sick (I don't have a temperature, at least), or if I just ate too much for lunch yesterday (do the effects of that run over to the next day, though?).

Either way, I hope I can finish what I need to get done...

Kyou Kara Maou conspiracy theory

Okay, so since this is going to get deep into plot stuff, and since Brooke is still way back at the beginning of the hakou stuff (we just watched Conrad's Arm the other day), I'm going to hide all my discussion with white text. Highlight to read:

Lots of weird stuff has happened in the latest episodes. Someone appeared out of the dust and started to cause all sorts of trouble. A beggar/thief/scrounger (possibly one of Adelbert's people?) was possessed by the powers of this figure, causing him to mindlessly seek power and wreak havoc in the villages along a highway. King Belal has been possessed by a cloaked figure wearing a big red cat's eye emblem, who we can probably assume is the same figure. Conrad's arm and Gwendal's left eye have been hurting, and they and Wolfram have been unconsciously drawn towards Shinou's temple. The seal on the three boxes in Shin Makoku is weakening. During the goodwill party for the countries allied with Shin Makoku, Wolfram was spirited away by puppets/dolls. A mysterious figure attacked Adelbert's fortress when Wolfram and Yuuri were there, using maryoku to create huge fire creatures. And this same figure was able to use mind control on Yuuri's men when they came to confront him.

Some of these things smack of tests for Yuuri, such as the matter of the possessed man who got a hold of Alford's holy sword. But others seem to be something else, and a rather disturbing thought occurred to me.

Since this story arc began, I've assumed that the figure who rose from the dust and took human form was the Shinou. The holy sword incident was a test/training for Yuuri, to get him to learn how to properly wield Morgif. Shinou withdraws once Yuuri has displayed his power/expelled him from the man's body. When Shinou sends fire creatures to attack Adelbert's fortress, Yuuri expends a great deal of power to stop him, and it is only at this point that Shinou backs down and leaves. Similarly, when Yuuri confronts Belal and discovers the mind control, the mysterious figure withdraws only after Yuuri has demonstrated the power to break that control (without even going into Maou mode).

This all makes sense for a king who wants to train his successor, and while it's ominous and cruel (people do die because of these little games), what could be happening alongside this training is even worse.

Yuuri's goal is to heal and unite all people, everywhere. But what if that isn't Shinou's goal?

We know that Shinou picked Yuuri--Julia's soul--precisely because of his/her convictions. But we also know that Shinou has no qualms about being cruel to Yuuri and the people around him. Conrad was manipulated, and if not for Murata's intervention would have been exiled from Shin Makoku. And it is inordinately sadistic to plant the keys to the boxes in two (or three?) of the children of one woman.

Side note: It's been shown that Wolfram looks a lot like the Shinou. While he may not actually hold a key, it would seem that Shinou wants him for something. My guess would be that the Shinou wants a new body. Maybe the form he created for himself is difficult to maintain, or maybe he has to possess people in order to remain corporeal. (This would explain why he wears a mask: When he first reappeared he looked like himself [from what I could tell]. Assuming he is so vain as to want to keep his original appearance, he's probably hiding whatever body he's possessing until he can get a hold of Wolfram's.)

It would seem that Shinou is preparing for the boxes to be used. He's gathering them all up, and he's caused the keys to appear (we know he approved of Cheri's marriage to Conrad's father just so that key could be created). What if his real goal is...the destruction of all humans?

Picture this. The humans get a hold of the boxes and keys. This means that the people closest to Yuuri are killed/manipulated in order to control the boxes. Yuuri has to use the power of the Maou to stop the boxes. But in his rage at the loss of his friends, will he go even further? Without those very friends to keep him in check, will he unleash his full destructive power on the human race?

Is Shinou's true goal to orchestrate absolute genocide?


Well, that's a lot of stuff. Enjoy the whitespace, non-spoiler-reading people.