It’s
shaping up to be a busy week, in fact, probably a busy month as well, with all
of the different work projects I’ve taken on. In addition I’ve decided to write
a novel, and am contemplating joining the project that WordPress is sponsoring
during the month of November, called National
Novel Writing Month. This is a project that entails working toward completing a
50,000-word novel by November 30th, which means writing 1667 words per day. Who knows,
maybe I will manage to do it. And then again, maybe not. One thing is for sure.
I know what I want to write about and that goes a long way toward getting me
started. I’ve been tossing ideas around for the past few years, but there hasn’t
been much that has held my focus as long as this idea has done. I’m not going
to talk about the idea; I will rather say that it will fall into the
sci-fi/horror genre. I’ve started researching it and I’ll keep you posted on my
progression (or lack thereof).
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Cartoon time
I have been
meaning to write a short post about one of my favorite American animation
series—’Courage, the Cowardly Dog’, a brilliant effort by John R. Dilworth and
team, which originally ran on Cartoon Network from November 1999 until November
2002 (four seasons), with a total of 52 episodes produced. At present, it is
running on Cartoon Network here in Oslo each night at around 8:15 pm and again shortly
after midnight (on weeknights). I’ve seen most of the episodes, some of them
several times, especially my favorites. I really cannot find enough
superlatives to describe the show. I love everything about it—from the clever
storylines, excellent animation, attention to detail, interesting backgrounds
and overall creepiness at times. It is not really suitable for small children,
since it is a fairly graphic horror cartoon of sorts, although there are a few
sweet episodes as well. The star of the show, the pink dog Courage, must deal
with all sorts of challenges in the form of freaky people, were-moles, dragons,
murderous vegetables, mysterious CIA types, evil snowmen, evil magicians—the
list goes on and on. He overcomes his initial fear and cowardice and protects
his family—Muriel and Eustace Bagge—from all of the monsters and assorted creatures
who want to do them harm. They all live out in the middle of Nowhere, Kansas in
a farmhouse. Eustace, a cranky old man, is supposed to be a farmer, but nothing
grows for him and the land around the house is pretty barren. Muriel, a
housewife, is his direct opposite, a cheerful, helpful, sprightly older woman.
Eustace is greedy and always looking to make a quick buck; Muriel keeps him in
line and is definitely Courage’s supporter and protector. Courage loves Muriel,
not Eustace. Whenever she gets into trouble, he loses his cool completely and
freaks out, but he always comes around to ‘I’ll save you, Muriel’. And then he
goes about the business of saving her. I’m including a list of some of my
favorite episodes here.
The Last of
the Starmakers
The Magic
Tree of Nowhere
Food of the
Dragon
Dome of
Doom
The Snowman
Cometh
Snowman’s Revenge
The Sandman
Sleeps
The Night
of the Weremoles and Mother’s Day
The Quilt
Club
A Beaver’s
Tale
Friday, September 30, 2011
Some wise words about good intentions
I looked up
these quotes about good intentions today because today was one of those days
when I realized that having the best of intentions in certain situations is no
guarantee of a happy outcome. I realized that no matter how good one's motives
and intentions might be, they can be misconstrued by others who have their own
personal agendas and vulnerabilities. Good communication is the way to deal
with such misunderstandings, but it is so difficult to achieve that sometimes.
It is sorely dependent upon both parties meeting each other at the negotiating
table as peers, and that does not often occur. Sometimes the offended party
would rather judge, lecture, and otherwise dominate the situation in order to
make the other party feel small. And it works--the purported offender does feel
small. But feeling small is not an
apology or an admission of wrongdoing. It is merely one way of dealing with judgmental controlling people and letting
them have their say before one offers up a reply. The problem is that the reply
can often lead to more problems, because by pointing out that one's intentions
were good, one is defending oneself and the act of defending oneself for some
people is a big no-no, because if you do that, you are guilty as charged. And I
don't agree with this. I think that people who always give in or act like
doormats, no matter the criticism, are the ones who are guilty. If you are
innocent, you will try to defend yourself against an attack on your motives or
character. I have experienced this at times in my workplace, and it is not easy
to wage a counterattack. But it is necessary for your identity and self-value.
And if you are wrong and know it, then an apology is in order. But if you are
not wrong, then it’s just foolish to play the part of the offender. You hand
over more power to the offended person, who may enjoy the power game that has
ensued. In any case, I am not interested in the power or the game. I’m
simply interested in the truth, in the reality of each situation that arises.
·
It
is not good enough for things to be planned - they still have to be done; for
the intention to become a reality, energy has to be launched into operation.”
Walt Kelly
·
Let
your intentions be good - embodied in good thoughts, cheerful words, and
unselfish deeds - and the world will be to you a bright and happy place in which
to work and play and serve.
Grenville Kleiser
·
Before
the throne of the Almighty, man will be judged not by his acts but by his
intentions. For God alone reads our hearts.
Mohandas Gandhi
·
Plans
are only good intentions unless they immediately degenerate into hard work.
Peter Drucker
·
I
don't know anyone in the public eye who has not made a mistake and said
something in a manner that does not truly reflect their intentions.
Jim Jeffords
·
Hell
isn't merely paved with good intentions; it's walled and roofed with them. Yes,
and furnished too.
Aldous Huxley
·
The
road to hell is paved with good intentions.
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux
·
The
evil that is in the world almost always comes of ignorance, and good intentions
may do as much harm as malevolence if they lack understanding.
Albert Camus
·
Our
intentions may be very good, but, because the intelligence is limited, the
action may turn out to be a mistake - a mistake, but not necessarily a sin, for
sin comes out of a wrong intention.
E. Stanley Jones
·
A
gentleman is one who never hurts anyone's feelings unintentionally.
Oscar Wilde
·
I
may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I
intended to be.
Douglas Adams
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Until you value yourself
Until you
value yourself, you won't value your time. Until you value your time, you will
not do anything with it. (M. Scott Peck)
I posted some little pearls of wisdom
from the psychiatrist M. Scott Peck recently, but it is this particular quote
that has stayed with me since then, so I know that it struck a chord in me. I
have been preoccupied with this very thing since I started my blog in May of
2010—the idea that my time is valuable, that it is worth something and that it
is important to use it well. Some of you may be thinking that this sounds
strange. Didn’t I value myself and my time before then? The answer is yes, I
did, but I often lived in an unaware state, perhaps thinking that I had all the
time in the world to do this or that, to change my life, to pursue this or that
hobby, or to get involved in this or that cause. But now I know better. Life is
short. And my saying this is not about my being unduly or morbidly focused on
mortality and a certain end, although that would be a good enough reason in and
of itself to get up and get moving on the things I want to do and accomplish
before I leave this life. It’s about being focused on living, on being a part of life, in all ways possible. It’s
about living now and giving and getting as much out of life as is humanly
possible. It’s about getting up off the couch and not watching too much TV or
sitting in front of the computer for too long, it’s about not buying into
everything that is written in the newspapers or in magazines, it’s about
thinking for yourself and valuing your own ideas and creativity. It’s about not
letting work take over your life to the exclusion of your family or your
creativity. It’s not necessarily about parachute jumping or extreme sports
(unless you really want to do that!—I don’t). But I do want to step up to my
own plate—be present in my own life, be aware of the opportunities and freedoms
that have been given to me. Because they are not few, I have realized that. We
are given so many opportunities each day to be present to ourselves and to others.
The question is whether we stay aware during our daily lives, or if we just end
up doing things by rote, living according to worn-out routines, and not doing
anything about it. There is comfort in old routines, that must be said, and I am
not for discarding all of them just for the sake of doing so. But it’s
important to figure out when to let go of things that don’t work for us anymore
or when to let go of certain people who drag us down because they don’t want
you to rise because it means that they might have to. And by letting go I mean,
putting things and people in their rightful places and rising above their petty
concerns, envy and negativity, not necessarily pushing them out of our lives
completely. And that takes a change of mindset. It may not mean quitting your
demoralizing job if you cannot for economic reasons, but it may mean separating
yourself mentally from that job and rising above it in order to survive
mentally and emotionally. It may mean a radical change in how you look at that
job. It may mean a radical change in how you look at the people in your life as
well. There are always some few people who are naysayers no matter what you do
and say; instead of letting them get the better of you, just let go of their words. Don’t give their words any power
over you. It is amazing how easily that can happen, almost as though there is a
little person who lives inside each of us just waiting to be fed the negative
words. We suck up the validation of ourselves as ‘not good enough’; we suck up
the negativity and feel as though we deserve it--deserve the derision, negative
comments, hostility, aggression or envy. We think that if we rise, it has to be
at the cost of the happiness of others. It’s not true. This is negativity at
work—this is what happens when we do not value ourselves. Because if we do not
value ourselves and if we let the negativity in ourselves and from others win
over us, we will not think about our time as something to be valued, and we will
remain passive observers in our own lives because it will be easier not to rock
our own boats or the boats of others.
Monday, September 26, 2011
The turbulent Akerselva River---25 September 2011
We usually take a long walk up along the Akerselva river on Sunday afternoons. This is something we often do during the different seasons, but it is an especially lovely trip during the autumn months when the foliage is starting to turn colors. Oslo has had a record amount of rainfall during late August and most of September, and the Akerselva water levels are quite high now. The river is quite turbulent, especially in the areas where there are waterfalls. One of them is located near the Hønse Lovisa house which is in the vicinity of where we live, and this is where I took a lot of photos and video footage. It was so exhilarating to watch the water churning and bouncing along on its way to the Oslo fjord, creating a spray that reached all the way up to where I was standing with my camera. Normally the river is not as turbulent as seen in these videos, so it was exciting to witness it and to capture it on film. I did a lot of filming yesterday afternoon and evening, and I thought I'd share some of videos with you. This river has become very special to me, and I film it during all seasons. Enjoy the videos, and if you have any comments or feedback, let me know. I am new to the video game, but will probably be making more of them, because it's fun.......
Sunday, September 25, 2011
All About Plums
Each year
during the late summer and early autumn my husband and I take some time to make
preserves or jams as they’re usually called. He usually makes a big batch of strawberry jam,
which can last for several years unless we give it away as gifts. A few years
ago we made a big batch of cherry preserves, along with a cherry pie and cherry
liqueur. It is both a challenge and a pleasure to make all of these things
yourself, and the work involved makes you appreciate what our grandparents and
great grandparents’ generations did for themselves; they had to, since there
were no giant supermarkets offering nearly everything you could think of. We
never made jams and jellies at home when we were growing up; my parents did
make pies and Italian desserts together at the holidays, and my mother made
some great pies and cakes otherwise, but we never as far as I can remember made
our own jams and jellies. Of course we didn’t have to—they were readily
available in the supermarkets. But the fun aspect is invaluable—it really is
fun to ‘make it’ yourself. And after some years I have learned to make apple
butter and my own applesauce with cinnamon, as well as different kinds of
marmalades. But this post is about plums.
I have been
making plum preserves the past few years; they are easy to make and the jam is
superb—mostly sweet but with a hint of tartness. No matter how much I make
though, it is never enough. I have made preserves from several different types
of plums, from the dark purple plums called Damsons to the more reddish plums
that are the most common types of plums available. One of the women who used to
work at my hospital had a lot of plum trees in her backyard, and she would
bring in bags of plums for us—just gave them away, that’s how many plums the
trees produced. I took them gladly. Besides the plum preserves, I also make
plums in rum, a dessert that is heavenly and pretty simple to make—all you need
are plums, rum, sugar and a big canning jar (if you have a kilo of plums then
you will need a kilo of sugar and half a bottle of rum). You cut the plums in
half, remove the pits, put them into the jar, cover them with sugar, add more
plums, then more sugar, and when the jar is 75% full, you pour the rum over it
all, close the lid, mix carefully, and then let the jar stand at room
temperature for a few days until the sugar is dissolved. This is a great
dessert, and when the plums are gone, the rum-sugar liquid is great as an
accompaniment to vanilla ice cream. I made a jar of plums in rum today as well
as a couple of jars of plum preserves. And I’m not finished yet; I still want
to make more preserves. This is the kind of housework that is immensely
gratifying; you see the finished results, it tastes good and the people you serve
it to will be happy to eat what you made—what more could you ask for? And all
of these food items make great Christmas gifts. Since it seems to be getting
more and more difficult to buy Christmas gifts for friends and family
(everybody has pretty much what they need), I have a feeling that I am going to
opt for making food gifts for people—preserves, liqueurs, cookies, cakes and
breads. They’re appreciated, they’re fun to make, and they come from the heart.
Plum preserves |
Plum preserves |
Plums in rum |
City Gardeners
During the
last ten years or so, my husband and I became city gardeners, despite the fact
that we live in a co-op apartment building without a balcony or terrace on which
to set out plants and flowers. Of course we wish we had one, because we love to
experiment with growing different plants from seeds as well as buying new
plants at the local plant store or at Plantasjen, the larger garden center. Our
kitchen, living room and dining room window sills are filled with different
kinds of plants. My husband loves to nurture his orchids, and has about six
orchid plants at home and about as many in his office at work. He is the only
person I know who manages to get orchids to bloom more than once, and he has
his weekly routines for spritzing them with water and keeping them happy. I
prefer nurturing food plants; that is to say, plants that produce fruit or vegetables.
I have grown tomato, pepper, orange and fig trees in our apartment, with some
success. Right now I am the proud parent of an orange tree that is very
fruitful, as well as a fig tree that manages to produce about three to four
figs per season. My husband brought home a small cherry tomato plant at the
beginning of the summer, and it has grown to some height and has produced (so
far) about five cherry tomatoes. We also have a small coffee plant in the
kitchen; the leaves smell good but we don’t expect to find coffee beans on the
stems one day. But it looks nice in the window and one can of course dream.
The first
vegetable plant I ever purchased was a small pepper plant; the peppers looked
like small chili peppers but I don’t remember if we ever got more than the five
or so peppers that hung on the plant when I bought it. In the summer of 2005 I
grew tomato plants from seeds; only one seedling plant really took off though
and I did my best to keep it happy. It even joined us on vacation that year; we
rented a cottage on the sea, not so far from where we live, and I took it with
us in the car and let it stand out on the large terrace that overlooked the
ocean. It was there in the morning that it got a lot of sunshine. I think we
may have gotten several tomatoes that year; the problem is that the plants don’t
always get enough sun, or get it long enough. Summers are short in Oslo and it
amazes me that my orange tree produces the numbers of oranges it produces. We
got about twenty-three oranges off the tree the first year we had it; the
second year saw only a yield of about four oranges, whereas the third and
fourth years have been very fruitful—with yields of about twenty-five and
thirty-five oranges (this year) respectively. The oranges are not large and sweet, they are
small and sour, but they are beautiful to look at and during the flowering
season before the oranges begin to grow, the smell in the room is wonderful.
The white flowers that will produce the oranges produce an intense sweet smell
that dominates the room. I use the oranges in the smoothies that we make from
fresh or fresh-frozen fruit each morning, and I have used them in marmalades to
add a kind of ‘bite’ to the sweetness. Last year I made pear/ginger/pineapple
marmalade and added a few small oranges to the mix—it was a heavenly result and
the marmalade disappeared rather quickly. I’ll probably do the same thing this
year.
We often
debate the advantages and disadvantages of moving into our own home; one of the
advantages would be that we could have our own garden. We know for sure that we
would fill the backyard with fruit trees and plant a garden, both flower and vegetable.
So why haven’t we moved by now? That’s a good question. Part of the answer lies
in the fact that we don’t have the time we would need to tend a large garden,
at least not in the way that would be required. Also, we would like to live in
Oslo and not commute into the city each morning; traffic is horrendous and we
would like to avoid that. But to buy a house in Oslo is not really a viable
option—houses cost a fortune; we’re talking upwards of 800,000 USD for a
decent-sized house (two bedrooms, two baths, kitchen, living room). It seems a
tad unrealistic to want a house in order to have a garden. There are so many
hidden costs attached to owning a home. The garden has to supersede all the
problems of owning a home in the city. Time will tell. In the meantime, we have
our gardens in the different rooms of our apartment. I’m waiting for the day
when there won’t be room for any more plants or any more room for us. I believe that day is coming
soon.
Ripe oranges |
My orange tree |
Our tomato plant |
My husband's orchid plant |
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Times Square at night
Times Square in New York City has really changed during the past twenty years or so. It used to be a seedy, dirty, and unattractive area of Manhattan, but no longer. I was there for a few days in April 2009 when I visited New York for my high school reunion and I stayed in Manhattan for a few nights. I was together with a good friend and we walked around Times Square one evening--a particularly clear and lovely night. I took a lot of photos (as always). The medley of sights, sounds, colors, and shapes appeals to the eye. If it is possible to say that advertising can be beautiful in its own way, then that is definitely the case for Times Square. I love the light shows that advertise everything from candy to electronics to beer. I am sure that advertising agencies have understood the power of color and lights to sell their products against the backdrop of the dark sky. In any case, it all makes for some really cool photos. And I can again say (like the famous commercial)--"I love New York--there is no place like it." Enjoy!
Sunday, September 18, 2011
What M.Scott Peck Said
M. Scott Peck (1936-2005)
was a psychiatrist and the best-selling author of a terrific book called The Road Less Traveled. I read it during
the 1980s and it had a profound effect upon my life in terms of helping me deal
with my life at that time and in making some necessary changes. I recommend it because it contains some real wisdom and advice on how to deal with life and its trials and joys.While Peck
himself didn’t always live up to the high ideals he espoused for others (he
didn’t always practice what he preached), he was an inspiration and a man of
wisdom, perhaps all the more so for his failings and weaknesses, and he shared his wisdom and thoughts in his writings.
·
“Until you
value yourself, you won't value your time. Until you value your time, you will
not do anything with it. ”
·
“The truth is
that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply
uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments,
propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and
start searching for different ways or truer answers.”
·
“Love is the
will to extend one's self for the purpose of nurturing one's own or another's
spiritual growth... Love is as love does. Love is an act of will -- namely,
both an intention and an action. Will also implies choice. We do not have to
love. We choose to love.”
·
“Love is the
free exercise of choice. Two people love each other only when they are quite
capable of living without each other but choose to live with each other.”
·
“Genuine love
is volitional rather than emotional. The person who truly loves does so because
of a decision to love. This person has made a commitment to be loving whether
or not the loving feeling is present. ...Conversely, it is not only possible
but necessary for a loving person to avoid acting on feelings of love.”
·
“We must be
willing to fail and to appreciate the truth that often "Life is not a
problem to be solved, but a mystery to be lived.”
·
Each one of us
must make his own path through life. There are no self-help manuals, no
formulas, no easy answers. The right road for one is the wrong road for
another...The journey of life is not paved in blacktop; it is not brightly lit,
and it has no road signs. It is a rocky path through the wilderness. ”
·
“The difficulty we have in accepting
responsibility for our behavior lies in the desire to avoid the pain of the
consequences of that behavior. ”
·
“Whenever we
seek to avoid the responsibility for our own behavior, we do so by attempting
to give that responsibility to some other individual or organization or entity.
But this means we then give away our power to that entity. ”
·
“You cannot truly listen to anyone and do
anything else at the same time. ”
·
“It is only
because of problems that we grow mentally and spiritually. ”
·
“If we know exactly where we're going, exactly
how to get there, and exactly what we'll see along the way, we won't learn
anything. ”
·
“Human beings
are poor examiners, subject to superstition, bias, prejudice, and a PROFOUND
tendency to see what they want to see rather than what is really there.”
·
“Life is
difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. It is a great
truth because once we truly see this truth, we transcend it. Once we truly know
that life is difficult-once we truly understand and accept it-then life is no
longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult
no longer matters.”
·
“There is no
worse bitterness than to reach the end of your life and realized you have not
lived.”
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Vincent and Theo Van Gogh
I have been
meaning to write a short post about the Vincent Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam (Van Gogh Museum - The Museum about Vincent van Gogh in Amsterdam - The Netherlands). My husband and I toured the
museum in August; I found it to be one of the most interesting and
emotionally-engaging art museums I have ever visited. I cannot remember that I have
ever been moved to tears by an art exhibition, but this one had that effect on
me. Van Gogh’s life lends itself to this type of reaction—he suffered from
epilepsy, depression, and lack of self-confidence, and at the age of 37 shot
himself in a wheat field in Auvers, France and died two days later. He was very
close to his brother Theo who supported him at different times during his life;
Theo died six months after Vincent and the two of them are buried side by side
in Auvers. After Vincent’s death, Theo’s wife saw to it that Vincent’s
paintings received the recognition they deserved; she came across in the
exhibition as a generous and compassionate woman who had great understanding
for her husband Theo and his close relationship with Vincent.
I think the
museum did a great job in depicting the emotional depth of the relationship
between Vincent and Theo—you really felt and understood the empathy and love
that Theo had for Vincent, and the utter humanity and frailty in their individual
lives. I found myself thinking—‘there but for the grace of God go I’ as the
expression goes. Because we all suffer from lack of self-confidence or from
depression at times; and if you have experienced these then you have empathy
for others who are weighed down or destroyed by them. By the time I got to the
section that showed a photo of the gravesite where both brothers are buried, I was
quite sad. I have never seen the Robert Altman film from 1990 about the Van
Gogh brothers—Vincent & Theo—but I
want to get a hold of it so that I can. It received very good reviews when it
came out; I don’t know how I missed it--perhaps because I had just moved to
Oslo and was not paying attention, or perhaps because the movie never opened in
Oslo at all.
It is not
easy to watch people you know and love sink into depression or mental illness. I
have seen that happen in my own family and in friends’ families as well. It is
terrifying to watch the descent into severe mental illness like schizophrenia; daunting
to witness what chronic depression can do to a person’s overall health. It
makes you realize that the brain is the last great frontier in a research sense—how
the brain works, why do certain aspects of normal brain function go awry, what
are emotions really and where are they based? There are so many questions that
remain unanswered to date, and one can only hope that some of them get answered
in our lifetime.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
A Decade of Mourning
Ten years
ago today, around 3pm Norwegian time, I was at work and one of my colleagues
met me in the hallway of our research institute and told me that the World Trade
Center had been hit by a plane. I remember standing there in the hallway
looking at her for a few moments in disbelief, and then I quickly ran into my
office to check the internet for news. And then I called my husband and asked
him to pick me up earlier than usual so that we could go home and watch the TV
news. That was the beginning of a long period of nearly uninterrupted TV
watching—where the news became something to dread rather than to look forward
to in the evenings after work. But I sat there glued to the TV anyway—my connection
to my home state and to the country of my birth. No matter where I turned, 9/11
was there. After the disbelief came shock, then tears, more tears, an explosion
of emotions I never thought I had, grief, and then more shock when I talked to
those people I know in New York who had lost someone or who knew of someone who
had lost someone or many people. My sister knew a man who had lost most of his
employees who worked at the restaurant at the top of the World Trade Center. My
brother knew several people who had witnessed people jumping from the Towers
and who were forever haunted by that sight and by the sounds of bodies hitting
the pavement. Besides the sheer tragedy of horrific deaths that smashed into us
that day and destroyed whatever feeble walls of defense we had, the sight of
the Towers themselves crashing down is a sight I will never forget. To this
day, I cannot watch this footage without becoming emotional. I guess this was
how it was for our parents’ generation when Pearl Harbor was bombed. All I know
is that the unthinkable became reality on 9/11. It changed me forever, and I was
thousands of miles away from the tragedy that unfolded. So I can imagine how it
must have been for those who experienced it firsthand or who lived in the area
around the Towers or who lost friends and family on that day. My first instinct
was to want to take the first plane back to the States to help, in any way
possible. But I couldn't do that for economic reasons--that was the same year
my mother passed away (in March) and I had already flown back and forth to New
York several times in connection with her illness and death. I remember my
sister and me talking after 9/11 and saying that it was best that my mother had
passed before the events of 9/11. She was spared that atrocity. I still feel
that way.
The
American Embassy here in Oslo had a small memorial celebration today to honor
the tenth anniversary of the events of 9/11 and to pay homage to the dead. I
wanted to go and then I didn’t want to go, was very ambivalent right up until
it happened, and ended up not going. I am not sure how I would have reacted to being
there, and I was not sure that I wanted to feel again all the feelings of that
day and the time afterwards. I feel sometimes like we have been in mourning for
ten years, as a country and as individuals. I know that I feel that way
personally. That day had a momentous impact on me, in part because I was not
there when it happened, and that made it all the more poignant and intense. It
was also the year that my mother died, and the grief of that year will stay
with me for always, indelibly imprinted on my mind and soul. Although the news
coverage of 9/11 faded in Europe sooner than in the USA, it was intense enough so
that my feelings were always right on edge. It was impossible to get distance
from the happenings, and that’s a good thing. But now that a decade has passed,
it is a good thing to have some distance, without having become blasé. It would be impossible for me to become blasé because
I am very much wrapped up in what happened that day in New York and in what
happens in the USA generally. I may live abroad but I never think of myself as anything
other than a citizen of the USA, for better or for worse. And now that Norway
has experienced its own 9/11 (the terrorist attacks of July 22nd), I
understand even more how it must have been for those I know who witnessed the
events of 9/11 firsthand. The past decade in the USA appears to have been
characterized by a focus inward—trying to figure out the whys and the meanings
of that fateful day in September 2001. For my own part, I don’t know if the
whys will ever be answered. There is evil in the world, and each generation has
seen it—seen the atrocities resulting from the specific evil, be it world wars,
or the Holocaust, or the destruction caused by the atomic bomb. Every time I
think that evil does not really exist, I need only think of these events, and then
I know that it does. After ten years of trying to come to some understanding of
evil, it is time to move toward the light again, to focus outward. Because too
much focus on trying to understand evil will not lead to much good. It is the
same in Oslo after 7/22—there is no point in trying to understand the terrorist
Anders Behring Breivik’s twisted views about immigration and the world—they will
only drag us deeper into despair about what is happening in the world, and
despair can immobilize us. That is why it is heartening to read the stories of
9/11 heroes like Jeff Parness who reached outward—starting an organization like
‘New York Says Thank You’, which sends volunteers from New York City to
disaster-stricken communities every year (http://edition.cnn.com/2011/US/04/21/cnnheroes.parness.new.york/index.html), or which has gathered volunteers
to help sew back together the tattered American flag that flew at the site of
the Towers (http://national911flag.org/?page_id=37). These are positive and uplifting
endeavors that move us toward the light—for those actually working in these organizations
but also for those reading about them. As I read about these efforts across the
ocean here in Oslo, I am filled with hope, hope that the decade of mourning
will evolve into quite something else—a new spirit of empathy and activism and
a real desire to eradicate hate and pain in the world. It is, as the old
Chinese proverb says, ‘better to light one candle than to curse the darkness’.
Friday, September 9, 2011
Musings about science and scientists, and the weather
I’ve been
at a scientific conference (dealing with the cell cycle and regulators of cell
proliferation) most of the week; it started on Monday night and ended this
morning. I wasn’t able to attend all the sessions each day, but I managed to be
present for some really top-notch lectures delivered by Nobel prize winners and
international experts in their respective fields. That’s always an encouraging
and inspiring experience; it reminds me of why I chose this profession—a scientific
research career, when I hear top speakers talk about their work. Many of the
top speakers were older men who more or less summed up their research careers
in their lectures. I have more appreciation for that type of lecture now—maybe because
I’ve been in research a long time myself. I know the ins and outs and ups and
downs of this business, and I appreciate hearing the opinions advanced by these
speakers, because they know what they’re talking about. So when a few of them
talk about the importance of small research groups as opposed to large ones, I’m
suddenly all ears. I agree with them. Small groups are the places where
innovative ideas are born. We should not be getting rid of small research
groups. We should not be discouraging younger people from pursuing academic
careers. But the granting powers that be are doing so. By not funding
scientists who lead small research groups, they ensure that younger
scientists cannot continue because they will never get the chance to start their own small groups. By not encouraging younger scientists to fly free
rather than clipping their wings which happens all the time now, we are
eliminating the pool of future scientists that each society so absolutely requires. Younger scientists are
leaving academia. There is no place for most of them. There are no jobs for
them and there is no real future for them. This is confirmed for me at most
conferences. Younger scientists in this country (post-doc level and above) are
little more than slaves for their group leaders. They are doing two and three
post-doc periods and finding themselves without any prospects after they
finish. They are not being offered staff scientist positions or group leader
status. They’re rather told that they’re too aggressive or too independent. And
they are, of course. Who wouldn’t be after three post-doc periods? That’s the
point of post-doc periods—to create independence and self-sufficiency in
intelligent and enthusiastic scientists. But their wings are being clipped in
huge numbers, and the granting situation for the future will ensure that there
will eventually be no post-doc or staff scientist positions at all. But there
will be a lot of PhD student positions. God knows what this country will do
with all the new PhD recipients. There aren’t jobs for them. And little is
being done to create new jobs for them. Many of them will end up as salespeople
or will leave the profession for greener pastures. The only reason there are currently
so many PhD positions is because the principal investigators who run research groups
need slaves and lots of hands to do their work for them while they are busy
writing grants and networking with their fellow group leaders. They know there
is no real research future for the PhDs they’re turning out, either in academia
or in industry. And industry is not really stepping up to the plate to meet the
future needs either.
The meeting
was held at the Holmenkollen Park Rica Hotel at the top of the city of Oslo,
literally. On a clear day, there is an amazing view of the fjord and of the
city from this vantage point. But of course, the weather this past week was not
cooperative, so the hilltop and hotel were mostly shrouded in fog, and when
there wasn’t fog, it was raining. I cannot remember a summer like this one—it has
rained steadily, if not daily, at least several times per week. The
non-Norwegians at the meeting were asking me if the weather was always like
this. It isn’t. Today was a perfect example. The last day of the meeting is of
course when the sun chose to reappear and blue skies took over--just perfect
for walking. So I walked to work from the top of the city to my hospital. It
took me about an hour door to door. Relaxing and enjoyable to walk downhill for
the most part, take in the nature around me, and just enjoy being outdoors in
the sunshine. It was a sharp contrast to Tuesday night, when the entire meeting
was treated to a boat trip on the fjord. It happened to take place on exactly
the one night of the summer when a storm (remnants of Hurricane Irene in fact)
blew into Oslo, causing flooding and all sorts of other problems. We did sail out
on the fjord though—the trip was not cancelled. We stayed more or less on the inner
fjord, so the waves were not very high. The boat was quite large so it was
actually not a problem to be out on the water. But the wind whipped the sails
about and the rain was unrelenting, so we were forced into the boat’s innards
where dinner awaited, and that was cozy. People had a good time and that was
the most important thing. I know that the foreigners at the meeting will
remember this particular trip. It’s not often you get to sail on a boat during
a fairly intense storm.
It was heartening
to meet a lot of the scientists who were at this conference. For some reason,
most of the top scientists who attended were actually quite down-to-earth
people—friendly, interested in others, and interesting to talk to. It made me
wonder about the correlation between real intelligence and humility. If you are
really intelligent, perhaps you don’t need to flaunt it or to treat other
people poorly. So perhaps this is one explanation for what I see in my
workplace—several rude people who think they are intelligent (but who really
are not), and who need to be arrogant and rude to others because they are
insecure about their intelligence. They need to make others feel inferior in
order for them to feel superior. Kind of makes sense to me now. This has been
reinforced for me by some of the lecturers I have had the privilege of listening
to at the Science library at the University of Oslo. They have been given by
some really incredible human beings, people you’d be proud to know. This gives
me hope for the future of science generally.
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Crazy summer skies in Oslo
It's been a rainy summer here in Oslo. Accordingly, there have been some interesting skies to look at. I usually photograph most sky views from my kitchen window, and have been doing this for many years and during all the seasons. This summer there have been some really interesting cloud formations in connection with thunderstorms and regular rainstorms. Many of these are followed by beautiful rainbows. I don't think I have ever seen so many rainbows in my life as I have just during the past several summers. Some of the cloud formations shown here look so ominous, a portent of dark things to come. I often wonder as I watch the clouds swirl and move and shift and gather--how does the start of a tornado or hurricane look? Sometimes it seems as though the clouds will form a tornado. But they never do. We are not in a tornado alley. Oslo doesn't really even have hurricanes, although it can have some severe thunderstorms, especially during the past few years. But you cannot beat New York for lightning and thunderstorms. They are intense there. I've tried capturing lightning here with my camera, but it's difficult. I've gotten a few good shots but not close-up enough. I'll keep working on it. In the meantime, enjoy the shots............
The 'homework' cloud
It occurred
to me recently that certain aspects of my work life remind me very much of how
I felt in grammar school. I live with what I call the ‘homework’ cloud over me.
I cannot seem to shake the nagging feeling that I have homework to do after a full day
at my job (and how many years have I been working?), and that when I get home I
need to be focusing on some work-related project in addition to everything else
that awaits me when I come home—shopping for dinner, making dinner, cleaning up.
The reality is that I don’t have homework and that there is no one waiting for
me at work the next day to evaluate what I did last night for work. It’s just
that the habit of homework became a lifelong affair along the road of my life,
and I don’t really think it is a good thing, because it also occurred to me
that this is one of the reasons I never feel completely relaxed at home. It
hasn’t helped that we have taken our work home with us throughout the 1990s and
even into the new century. I stopped doing this about four or five years ago,
but the guilt about not doing so still rides me. So that when I do find myself
relaxing at home, reading a book or article for pure pleasure or puttering
around my kitchen, the thought suddenly strikes me—do I have something to do
for work that I have forgotten about? The answer is usually no these days, but
it jars me nonetheless. I never feel like this when I am on vacation. I manage
to put work in a box and store it away someplace until I’m ready to open the
box again. I don’t know if other people my age feel this way. Do more women
than men feel this way about their jobs? Are we overly-driven, and if so, why?
Is it because we were the homework generation? We should be able to leave work
at the door. We should be able to relax at home. And yet, how many people
really do? I know many people who work the whole weekend long. The teachers I
know have to work on the weekends—it’s the only time they have to prepare their
lesson plans. Academicians don’t have to work on the weekends, but they often
do because that is the time they use to read articles and update themselves on
what is going on in their respective fields. My husband and I have done this
for years; he still does occasionally, but I no longer do.
You would
think that weekends would be like little mini-vacations for most people,
vacations from work. Indeed they should be. My parents’ generation was better
at relaxing on the weekends, better at leaving work at the door. Sometimes I manage
to make my weekends feel like mini-vacations; other times I just feel like I have
a list of things that need to get done. The list includes housework and other
house-related things that are also ‘work’. Perhaps that is when I stop relaxing—when
I am living my life according to my list and not according to what would be
most relaxing. We should also be able to free ourselves from a chore-driven
life so that we don’t continually berate ourselves for not doing this or
that chore or project. I think the problem is that we work too much and have
worked too much, and that carries over into the home environment. My generation
grew up with a strong work ethic, and it stuck. And that’s fine, except that
somewhere along the way it turned into this—that too many hours of our lives went
to our jobs, and not enough hours to our homes and families. I don’t believe in
the concept of quality time. I just want enough time to live in harmony with myself
and the people around me. Five days a week, ten or more hours a day devoted to
work is too much, and it detracts from a harmonious life. And yet it’s expected
of us. So why then do I feel guilty for not giving my workplace my nights and
weekends too? I think it’s part of our generation too—to feel that we would
like to do it all, have time for everything, but we know deep down that we will
never achieve that. It’s not possible. If we use fifty or more hours a week at
work, then we don’t have a lot of extra time to do everything else we would
like to or have to do. That’s life. Perhaps the best thing would be to start
letting go of ‘having’ to do something every weekend—letting go of the lists
that make us feel guilty when we don’t achieve the tasks listed there. I don’t know
the answer; I only know that I would like to reach a state of harmony inside
myself—where I can truly enjoy living in the present without worrying about
what I have to do, either at work or at home. And I want the guilt to
disappear.
Friday, September 2, 2011
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The Spinners--It's a Shame
I saw the movie The Holiday again recently, and one of the main characters had this song as his cell phone ringtone. I grew up with this mu...