Thursday, April 28, 2011
Summer jobs
What are you guys planning to do this summer for writerly work? Perhaps we can share resources--I definitely have interesting places to recommend.
(dis)taste
"For some reason, I thought you didn't like coconut." I had already assumed I was thinking of the wrong friend. I mean, clearly, here she was, eating it by choice.
"I didn't used to."
I knew it! She spent all of junior high, high school, and the vast majority of college crinkling her nose at the very mention of coconut. Part of me always suspected it was an intentionally ironic gimmick--a Hawaii resident disliking a signature tropical fruit (nut?), much like our vegetarian classmate whose favorite food was steak. Go figure.
But the formerly anti-coconut friend said she forced herself to get used to the flavor and has now decided that she likes it. I'm not sure it works that way, which makes me that much more suspicious of her initial distaste. She used to hate coconut as much as I hate blueberries, and I puked blueberries out my nose when I was five, so that's saying something.
I don't know why it bothers me so much that my friend apparently willed her taste to change. Maybe because I lost a partner in despising a random fruit. Maybe because it makes me wonder if she was lying about coconut all along. Or maybe because it implies that she, a squealing fan of Taylor Swift, is more mature than me.
Did I say any of this to her? Of course not. If it makes her happy, let her eat (coconut) cake.
Death By Coconut

One of the things I love about the internet is that it provides outlets to people with a lot of free time on their hands. Some create you tube videos, others constantly twitter. Most of the effort is wasted on making useless data, but occasionally something pops up that took someone hours upon hours to make that is actually really worthwhile which would have never been read by millions had the internet not been invented? discovered? created?
A while back, ABC news reported that you are more likely to die from a falling coconut then get eaten by a shark. They claimed 150 people a year die from falling coconuts. SPF lathered tourists around the world stepped more cautiously. Someone with a lot of time on their hands didn't believe it and did some pretty extensive research to show the public how ABC arrived at this ridiculous claim.
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2405/are-150-people-killed-each-year-by-falling-coconuts
I'm still impressed at the fact that I can benefit from their hours of time spent on a relatively meaningless (but due to Gazelle's post, now poignant) topic, free of cost. My personal favorite "wayyyy to much time" internet creation is a analysis of what really happened during the Soprano's finale. If your not a fan of the show, you might still be able to appreciate the rediculous amount of time that went into this breakdown. Enjoy
http://masterofsopranos.wordpress.com/the-sopranos-definitive-explanation-of-the-end/
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Food Safety

You're not really supposed to eat in foreign countries. At least not in 'real' foreign countries where there aren't any product labels or FDAs or USDAs or recall alerts. You're told to be pretty wary anytime you're in a place where they don't require the health inspector's grade to be prominently displayed in the window.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Cracking the Coconut
One of my students had her mother bring me back a coconut from El Salvador.
She told me that they are the sweetest coconuts, that they bring her back to her childhood.
I awoke Monday morning dreaming of coconuts, a craving deep in my psyche, spreading to my stomach. I wanted sweet coconut milk!
I had my coconut ready to open, but when I took it out of the bag, I noticed it was a bit moist and cracked from when I dropped it on the ground Friday as I was leaving school.
But this crack could work in my favor. I had tried to get my student to open it for me. She had talked me through opening the coconut when she first told me she had ordered her mother to bring me back a coconut. I had tried to convince her to bring it to me straw ready. No such luck. Apparently, she didn’t have time that morning.
So there I sat, cracked coconut and knife in hand. But try as I might, I could not cut that coconut. They are harder than they look. I brought out the hammer and screwdriver. I admit, I worried about rust diseases, so I sterilized the metal with alcohol and told myself penicillin is made from mold, so a little mold never hurt anyone.
My neighbors must have thought construction was going on next door because I was hammering away for quite some time. Appreciative and loved as I felt that my student had brought me a coconut, I wondered why she didn’t bring a single, white woman the coconut already cut in Tupperware. Where were my native roots? I remember eating coconuts as a child, but it seemed like we had special tools to open them with and that Grandpa did the dirty work. Determined not to need a man, I was determined to open this coconut on my own. If I could close escrow as a single woman, I should be able to crack a coconut open.
Those coconuts have a lot of milk. I filled up two mugs with that sweet juice. I kept at it with the hammer, prying at the crack until at long last I had split the coconut in two.
The juice was all the sweeter, being from El Salvador, a gift from one of my top students, traveling all this way. I felt like Ginger from Gilligan’s Island. As I was telling the story to a friend that night, she said there were probably coconut opening instructions on YouTube. Next time.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
The Writing Life
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Writing Spirals Down
Why write? Why spend all this time formulating thoughts, shaping them into a whole, editing it, taking out even the parts I like because they don't work or don't fit, rewriting the whole thing then hating it because it's not as good as it could be.
I'll publish it - if I'm lucky - or just post it on Facebook or maybe one of the websites that pays you a penny when someone reads it... like that's what a real writer does.
Eventually, someone might read it. They probably won't like it. (That's my first thought). Ok, they might like it but then what? It's not like they're going to print it and keep it. All this work for, what, a couple minutes of distraction for someone I don't know?
Even good writers, they slave their whole lives to produce one or two works that might be read for 100 or so years after they die... unless you're Shakespeare or something.
The joy is the process, right? Yeah, that sounds like fun. Writing's really hard! The "process" sucks. I agonize over everything, wondering if it even makes sense. Even this "stream-of-consciousness" blog post... I'm working it over, tweaking things, making things sound better - more writerly - than when I first puke-typed them out.
I like photography because at the very least you have a finished product every time. But that's too easy, I feel like I'm not a real artist - is that even the right word? - um, a real creative person when I take photos. It's all already there, all I'm doing is putting it all on a digital sensor. Whatever I've written is always incomplete in my mind, even if it's good, it's still that far from being something perfect. Besides, I'm sure someone else out there can write the same thing way better.
This tweet just popped up on my desktop:
@Quotes4Writers: “You don’t need confidence. Just write.” Paula Fox (Born 1923) Novelist
Whatever, Paula, you may not need confidence but you do need talent. "Just write?" Yeah, sure, sounds like a plan.
I mean, why even write this? So 6 people can skim it? No offense, of course, guys. But really what's the point?
It goes on like that...I'd better stop.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Chicago vs. L.A. (A Personal Account)
Filling Up

During the middle of the week, I received an email that a classmate’s mother had died. We all wrote blogs together a year ago in class, so I knew about her family, even though I didn’t know her family. She wrote about her father’s death, growing up and living by the beach. Sending a message over Facebook seemed too impersonal. Even when people were sending flowers, it just didn’t feel right. Yet, going to the funeral almost seemed too intimate. My mind came up with the most fucked up excuses, including the price of gas. I was paralyzed what to do, and my death trigger was in full force.
When my sister died in college, I was full of anger and grief. I was angry at the people who didn’t acknowledge it and the grief was so intense I don’t remember much of my undergraduate education. What kept coming up this week though was how Cindy showed up at the funeral home. Cindy and I had language arts class together in high school. We never hung out outside of class, but when she showed up three years later to show her support, I remember sitting next to her in the funeral home feeling her Catholic, Latina heart. Just her being there meant a lot and fifteen years later, I still remember. I was blathering this all through tears to my ex-priest friend while deciding whether or not to drive to the service.
I ran into my neighbor from where I used to live a year ago at Whole Foods on Friday. It’s been almost two years since his domestic partner was killed by a bus. They were together sixteen years. He said it wasn’t getting better. I understood.
I called my Aunt Chris Saturday morning because I wrote about my bee sting when I was little this past week, which happened at her house. She was painting and went to move a desk which was bolted down. She had forgotten that my Uncle Thom had bolted it down years ago so it wouldn’t tip over. It hasn’t yet been a year since he died of cancer.
Sarah, my friend growing up, posted this article when her check was missing money. She works for the military as a mid-wife. Her mom, who worked as a waitress, never lived to see Sarah’s children. The working class aren’t getting paid and can’t afford gas to drive to work. Meanwhile, the people in Congress never have a missing paycheck and I’m going to bet they always have gas in their SUV.
After the service, when I was looking at the collage of pictures of my classmate’s mother, the wash of grief came. There are no words of comfort for death, I have found.
On the way home, I should have filled up my gas tank, but I was too exhausted emotionally and politically to do so. I came home and took a nap, filling up. Then on my walk I imagined myself doused in gasoline rising up like the Sinead O’Connor song “The Phoenix from the Flame” and had a good laugh for my dead sister and best friend.
SMS and Parenthesis
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Kafka was a Bureaucrat
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Shrugged

It was a particularly stressful Wednesday. Work was hard. The strange thing about my job is that my performance is constantly quantified by a dollar amount in a little box at the bottom of my computer screen. It’s called a “profit and loss” box. Every time I make a trade, the box updates the number, either adding to it or subtracting from it, depending on whether it was a good trade or bad trade. I try not to attach any emotion to the box (or even look at it for that matter), but at the end of the day it’s nice when the number is large and positive. That day the number was large, but not positive.
I was a tad flustered in traffic, late to night class again, when I realized my gasoline gauge was at a dire level. I pulled into the station. The conversation went something like:
ME:
How much?
GAS PUMP:
Large round number!
ME:
Shit, seriously?
GAS PUMP:
Blame Gaddafi man, I’m just the messenger.
ME:
Yeah, but still. Maybe you made a mistake.
GAS PUMP:
Nope machines don’t make mistakes or talk to people for that matter so you should probably get going because you’re late.
And late to class I was. We had a Hollywood agent come in and tell us about the fruitless years of toiling you have to go through before you can even think about making money as a writer. She advised us to "carefully consider things" before entering the industry. I exited the room feeling like Atlas holding the weight of the world on my shoulders. Things were grim.
As I walked out of the building I felt a surprising warm breeze. It was the first time in months I didn’t need a jacket, or even sleeves. There was a sweetness to the air. I could smell the trees and the budding foliage. Electricity ran through the sidewalks of campus. A buzz. People were loud. It was a happy, enjoyable, loud.
With every breath of warm night air my muscles relaxed, and a thought hit me across the face like a playful slap from a long lost lover.
SUMMER IS COMING!
Oh my God, it’s almost here. The beach, and the girls, and the sun, and the concerts, and the long days, and the tan, and the freedom, and the girls. Everything good was ahead of me. Suddenly I had nothing to worry about. I've decided to take the world off of my shoulders and slip into some sandals.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Locked Up
Viewing the show made me want to participate in an inmate education program. I know our very own MPW funds internships teaching through Homeboy Industries, which is a program that helps rehabilitated prisoners out in the real world. Sadly, because of scheduling issues, I was unable to apply, but now as I search for post-MPW teaching jobs, I would consider teaching inmates, should a position be made available. I could not think of anything more rewarding than helping people who have a genuine desire to turn their lives around.
The High Cost of the Death Penalty

1. The death penalty reduces the prison population, thus lowering the burden to taxpayers.
Most proponents of the death penalty concede that it costs much more to keep an inmate in prison for life than the cost of the legal process and maintenance of a separate prison - "death row" - for those sentenced to death. In a 2009 Los Angeles Times article, John Van de Kamp - former California Attorney General - cites a study that put the cost of maintaining the death penalty at $125 million a year more than sentencing prisoners to life in prison. In a state that is struggling to make ends meet, it's difficult to justify the practice merely from a financial standpoint.
2. The death penalty is a deterrent.
Opinion differs more on this point but it's hard to argue with the following simple statistic: states that do not have the death penalty have lower murder rates than states that do and, similarly, countries that have outlawed the practice have lower rates than the U.S. To say that it is a deterrent is to assume that murderers, often in the grip of rage or under the influence of drugs or alcohol, is fully conscious of the consequences of their actions. Most think they'll never be caught.
3. No innocent prisoner has been ever been executed.
Proponents of the death penalty have argued that no innocent man has ever been executed. Other studies have suggested that of the 200 prisoners later cleared by DNA evidence, 14 were on death row. It's hard to argue that if even one prisoner is wrongly executed, that the practice should be continued.
Is vengeance a viable excuse for a society to maintain a practice that many other countries have relegated to a barbaric past of slavery, debtors' prisons, and corporal punishment? Our Constitution not only protects against "cruel and unusual punishment" but is in place to protect the individual against the tyranny of the many. Our court system is engineered not to mete out revenge for the victims but to protect society from future harm.
Rejecting the death penalty will not excuse the atrocities of those sentenced to death but it will show that, as a society, we've moved one step closer to a utopia where the state will never abridge the right to live of any of its citizens.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Open Season

As a currency trader for a fund who’s two main offices are in the Chicago and London time zones, my working life occurs in the early hours of the west coast morning. My first trades usually occur around 5 a.m. which means 4 am wake up times. Despite rising before the average person’s alarm clock even thinks about chirping, I usually get to jump in the ocean, thus ending my responsibilities, around 11 a.m.
I’ve chosen this lifestyle because nothing in the world makes me happier than surfing. I’m allowed to do what most people dream of, and that’s doing what I love almost everyday. One funny aspect of surfing in the middle of the week day is that I get the typically busy Manhattan beaches to myself. Being in the ocean alone frightens most, but I relish in the opportunity for solitude in busy Los Angeles.
Without thousands of tourists plaguing the water during the week, the local wildlife has a chance to peak their head above water. I get to see some incredible animals on a daily basis; dolphins, seals, all kinds of fish, although my favorites are still the hunting pelicans. If you know what to look for it’s not as spooky as it seems. Dolphins have a curved dorsal fin and bob up and down whereas sharks have a straight triangular fin and swim in a straight line.
Recently the dolphins have entered mating season. The males are ultra aggressive. They flash their tails and leap out of the water. I watched two compete the other day for a female’s attention by seeing which one could slap the water the hardest. It’s incredible how drastic their behavior changes when sex is involved. The normally docile animals become feverishly active.
After going out to the bars in Venice last weekend after the first warm Friday of spring I can safely say that human males still undergo this same transformation. I also thought it was really interesting that babies were the subject of the first official spring time blog entries. We are decedents of animals and despite our best efforts towards sophistication, we remain animals.
Maybe It Was a Bad Time to Bring It Up
Monday, April 4, 2011
Look Don't Touch
I want to show her how to turn her hips when she throws a punch
so she'll never have to worry on the playground,
though she may spend some time with the principal.
I want to show her the original Star Wars
while she's young enough to overlook the thin story, stiff acting,
and incest-that-almost-was between Luke and Leia.
I want to show her where to smudge her eyeliner
to look like she's exhausted
so her teachers will take pity and allow late work.
I want to show her old pictures of her father
because even though he's always had those crow's feet,
the light behind them only came after she was born.
I want to show her covers from Cosmopolitan
and tell her that, under no illusion or circumstance,
should she ever believe the articles inside.
I want to show her that tattoos are forever--
even laser removal leaves scars--
but henna will panic her parents just as much.
I want to show her the difference between sunset and sunrise
and fill the night between with inebriated hours that
we'll never disclose to her father.
I want to show her that love isn't like the movies,
but with the right one and a little luck,
it'll feel like it.
I want to show her all my mistakes
so she won't see me as the model her parents want,
but know that the decisions are hers to make.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Bringing Down The Walls
The other week, I went to a panel against the death penalty, and Mark Clements spoke about being falsely accused of arson as an adolescent, tortured into a confession, and spending 27 years in prison until finally granted freedom. What really resonated with me, though, was the lack of education in prison…how prisoners don’t have access to the internet, not training them to be prepared to work in the world when they get out, how the grants for college have been discontinued, how in some states, they can’t even receive letters—only postcards.
When I went to the University of Michigan, I thought higher education was “the answer.” What I found was a lot of students who knew how to work a system, but didn’t necessarily care about the betterment of society. I sought out study with Buzz Alexander and started working in the prisons. We videotaped Detroit at-risk inner-city youth at their high school and brought it back to the prisons where the men responded in taped dialogue to the boys. Here, was my first experience with service learning.
A year later when I was a senior at Michigan walking across the diag, I ran into Nate, one of the prisoners. Out of prison, he told me he was on a grant going to the University. On a sunny Spring day in Michigan, I gave him a hug. He had tears in his eyes.
By examining the literacy levels of fourth grade students and determining how many students read “below basic,” state departments of corrections use student literacy levels as “penitentiary forecasters” to allow them to project how many prison beds they will need over the course of the subsequent decade. I haven’t even touched upon prisons for profits, the ratio of minorities in prison, or the price of a prisoner in comparison to the price of education/mental health services. I’m sure you already know this and the work of The Innocence Project.
We have no computer lab at the inner-city public high school where I work for the students to use whenever they want. I think this is criminal. When I started writing blogs with the students using the laptop carts, some students didn’t even know how to type a word document because they didn’t have the money for their own personal computers.
While I was working with my mentor teacher on my National Board Certification, she spoke about bringing down the walls of the classroom—how my field trips to The Getty, to The Museum of Tolerance, and to USC have brought the learning into the real world for the students.
When I told my college boyfriend (who was much older) about how I saw Nate in the diag, he kind of freaked out and lectured me about how I had to be careful about an ex-con…how I shouldn’t be such a naive college student. After seeing Mark Clements speak at the panel, I thought about that moment meeting Nate in the diag—how the walls had come down for him, how I saw him as a peer, and that was why he had tears in his eyes. I saw him not as a prisoner, but as human.