I fell in love with this song when it was released in 2008. The lyrics are somewhat cryptic, but when I hear the song, I am transported to another realm, helped by the dreamlike video. I am reminded of what's important in life when I hear it--love and personal relationships, but also that life does not last forever and that we must face losing those we love, as reflected in the words 'I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me, but I know I try'. The leaving could be the end of a relationship, or it could be death. I think it is the latter. The imagery in the music video was inspired by the ancient Mexican festival Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos) according to online sources. But to each his or her own interpretation. In any case, the song is beautiful and I'm including the YouTube video at the end of this post.
We Are the People
We can remember swimming in December,
Heading for the city lights in 1975,
We share in each other,
Nearer than farther,
The scent of a lemon drips from your eyes
We are the people that rule the world
A force running in every boy and girl
All rejoicing in the world
Take me now' we can try
We lived an adventure
Love in the Summer
Followed the sun till night
Reminiscing other times of life
For each every other
The feeling was stronger
The shock hit eleven' Got lost in your eyes
I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me
But I know I try
Are you gonna leave me now
Can't you be believing now
I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me
But I know I try
Are you gonna leave me now
Can't you be believing now
Can you remember and humanize
It was still where we'd energized
Lie in the sand and visualize
Like it's 75 again
We are the people that rule the world
A force running in every boy and girl
All rejoicing in the world
Take me now' we can try
I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me
But I know I try
Are you gonna leave me now
Can't you be believing now
I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me
But I know I try
Are you gonna leave me now
Can't you be believing now
I know everything about you
You know everything about me
Know everything about us
I know everything about you
You know everything about me
Know everything about us
I can't do well when I think you're gonna leave me
But I know I try
Are you gonna leave me now
Can't you be believing now
(repeat 2X)
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Monday, September 16, 2013
A teensy weensy second in a universe of seconds
I was
witness to an older woman’s attempt at conversation in the hospital cafeteria the
other day. She was trying to talk to the younger man at the checkout counter
while she was paying for her meal, whereas he was just in a hurry to get done with her. There were no long lines of people waiting behind her to pay, so he could
have taken the very short amount of time she seemed to need, to listen and
perhaps to say a few kind words. Acknowledge her, in other words. She seemed
like a nice older woman who perhaps had family members that were sick, or perhaps
she herself was sick. It was hard to tell. What was clear to me was that she
needed some warmth from others. It would have been a kind gesture to have tried
to give some warmth. My heart goes out to people like that. She ended up apologizing for taking up his time, which then softened his attitude toward her a bit. Of course, there
are always multiple ways to look at a situation. So I will try to reinterpret
the above situation in several other ways:
- Perhaps the young man at the checkout counter was having a bad day and did not have the extra energy to extend himself.
- Perhaps he had been told by his superiors not to waste too much time talking to customers as it would hold up the line of people waiting to pay. This was a problem in one other hospital cafeteria and was solved by removing the person who talked too much to the customers.
- Perhaps the older woman had been a bit pushy with him before I got in line behind her. But I have to admit by looking at her, that she didn’t seem the type. She rather seemed worried, weary and a bit defeated, like life had worn her down.
Whatever
the explanation, I wonder if it isn’t simpler to just opt for extending oneself
for one teensy weensy second out of a universe of seconds. To expand one’s heart
‘three sizes’, as what
happened to the Grinch in How the Grinch
Stole Christmas, and to err on the side of compassion and friendliness. To
light one candle in the darkness of someone else’s life. God knows we may need
the same one day—and how nice it would be if someone’s kindness was the light
we needed to get through yet another tough day.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Let’s talk about me (me, me, me)
It strikes
me more and more how society is becoming increasingly self-preoccupied. There
have been countless articles written about this, so I won’t launch another tome
on the subject. But I’ve begun to experiment a bit in conversation (if you can
call it that these days) with colleagues, acquaintances and even strangers. I’ve
reflected on it, and come to the conclusion that I ask questions of others—how was
your day, how was your summer vacation, where are you from, do you like it here, what was this or that like, what are
your interests, what books do you like—out of genuine interest and curiosity,
not merely politeness, but that the interest is seldom reciprocal. This is not
true of my conversations with good friends and family, so I know that it should not
irritate me as much as it does. But it does irritate me, because it is symptomatic
of much of what is wrong with our society. Showing interest in others' lives and in what others have
to say is not nosy or intrusive; in fact it’s quite the opposite, it’s a kind
and civilized gesture that makes people feel included. Asking others how they are
or about their lives is a friendly gesture, and I am appreciative of that gesture
when people ask me how I am or how my summer was, and really listen to my response. What I have
experienced, just in the space of the few weeks I have been back at work, is
the following:
- The ignorers--those colleagues who never or barely (grudgingly) acknowledge their co-workers in the hallway—no smile, no greeting, complete disinterest. But if you stop them and ask how they are, they will hold an extensive speech on how things are going with them. This makes me wonder if academia is a uniquely self-preoccupied profession. Well, I guess I know the answer—it is.
- The interrupters--people who ask you how you are or how your summer was, only to give you exactly thirty seconds to reply before they launch into their own stories about their own lives. Or the ones who interrupt nearly every sentence you utter with some comment that diverts the conversation back to them. I would find it amusing if I didn’t find it so irritating. They’re like children clamoring for attention from their parents. Me, me, me…….
- The self-promoters—those who use any and all conversational attempts as an excuse to tell you how wonderful and great they are. Similar to the interrupters except that you rarely even get the chance to say a word. It’s as though they’re on promotional tours to tell you about a new book, and of course that ‘book’ is their life. My world and welcome to it……
- The besserwissers--people who don’t really listen to what you are telling them, and who are just waiting for an opening to jump in and insert their own comments about your situation. They’re champing at the bit. These are the aggressive people who always know better than you. In fact, they know it all, or they know best. Who can always tell you how you should have done something or how they did it and how you too can achieve or experience the same as they did, if only you do so-and-so.
The experience of actually being listened to, or of listening to others, is transforming. If you’ve ever wondered how to make someone’s day, try putting yourself aside and really listening to what another person has to say. Acknowledging others is important in conversation, and I don’t see much of this anymore. It can be as simple as a nod of the head, eye contact, or a smile from the person who asked you a question and is now listening to your answer.
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Reconceptualization and revitalization
Everywhere
I turn in Oslo, whether I walk down a (once) quiet side street or a noisy major
thoroughfare, there is a building project underway. Some of them are quite
extensive, involving roads that have been ripped up in order to install new
water pipes. Others are renovation projects—store facades that need sprucing
up, brick buildings that need sanding, or co-op apartment complexes that are adding
balconies or new windows to individual apartments. Still others are major new construction
projects—new apartment complexes being built (the Akerselva river is riddled with large new complexes--not a trend I like very much, because they will end up choking the life out of the river), new parking houses, new ‘super’
malls. It doesn’t matter what kind of project is involved. All of them are
indicative of how wealthy this country has become. This country has so much
money that its communities can design and build local neighborhood shopping
centers, only to reconceptualize them eight or so years later, which involves
extensive renovations to the existing structure. It’s all about ‘concept’ these
days--finding the new concept that replaces the old. The turnaround time for
concepts is very short now. A good case in point—the St. Hanshaugen shopping
center that opened perhaps eight or nine years ago. When it opened, there was a
good bakery, a bookstore, a flower store, a women’s clothes boutique, a liquor
store, a Nille (like the Dollar store in the USA), a supermarket, a dry cleaning
store, a home design store, a pharmacy, to name a few. What’s left of the
original stores in the center? The supermarket and the dry cleaning store. We
hardly get a chance to get to know a local shopping center, and poof, it’s
gone or changed several years later, reconceptualized and replaced by a ‘new and better
shopping center’ that will likely be replaced yet again in several years. This
is the way it’s done now, and the locals have no say in the matter. I do know
that I don’t like the constant change because it destroys the continuity that is
necessary to build a loyal customer base in a city neighborhood. And it's the creation of small
neighborhoods with their own stores, local cafés and restaurants that makes cities feel a bit less impersonal and overwhelming. The old
center had bakery with a little café where the retired and elderly would
sometimes meet for coffee and cake. I
enjoyed seeing that—the locals gathering to sit and chat for a while as part of
their daily routine.
The
Kjellands Hus shopping center is the closest local shopping center to our co-op
complex, and is no more than about two city blocks from the St. Hanshaugen
shopping center. It started out (in 2006, if I recall correctly) with a
supermarket, bookstore, a very large computer/electronics store, sports
boutique, a flower store, and a couple of restaurants. The computer/electronics
store closed about a year ago, and the space has been converted into three new
stores—a liquor shop, a pharmacy, and a Nille. Guess where they moved from? The
St. Hanshaugen shopping center. It doesn’t make much sense to me. I’m not sure
which shopping center did better business or attracted more customers, but it
seems to me that the St. Hanshaugen shopping center is on its way out, even
though the changes are presented as a kind of revitalization. Time will tell.
Friday, September 6, 2013
Quotes about infidelity
I suppose I will not be able to post these quotes today
without someone wondering what triggered the desire to post them. I would
answer that there is a psychology column written in the weekly magazine section
of Aftenposten, the Norwegian
newspaper. Sometimes I read it, most weeks I skip it. Today however, the column
had to do with infidelity, a topic I have some personal and painful experience with from several
decades ago (an unfaithful partner in a short-lived marriage). The writer, a ‘married-with-two kids’ young woman
in her thirties, had written to the psychologist to tell him about her
experience with infidelity. She had seduced a married colleague and according
to her, they had experienced a wonderful time together. For reasons that she
did not elaborate on, their affair ended. She had no regrets about having
seduced this man, who let himself be seduced so he is not off the hook by any
means, or about having betrayed her husband, whom she had not told about the
affair and with whom she was still having sex. She missed her former lover and
essentially stated that she would go to bed with him again in a minute. That
was how much she missed him. I read this, and then thought, rather than writing
a post and commenting on such a loaded topic, suppose I just go online and see
what others have written about infidelity. I can tell you that in my online
research, I came upon a book by Suzanne Finnamore, called Split: A Memoir of Divorce. I thought many of the quotes from her
book were rather apt. So here are some of her quotes and pithy quotes from others
about infidelity.
- I was steeped in denial, but my body knew. ― Suzanne Finnamore, Split: A Memoir of Divorce
- I know one thing about men," Bunny says with finality, leaving the room to check on A. They never die when you want them to. ― Suzanne Finnamore
- Bushwhacked, I examine my hands. Same hands. Rings still there but no longer valid. ― Suzanne Finnamore
- Someday I will have revenge. I know in advance to keep this to myself, and everyone will be happier. I do understand that I am expected to forgive N and his girlfriend in a timely fashion, and move on to a life of vegetarian cooking and difficult yoga positions and self-realization, and make this so much easier and more pleasant for all concerned. ― Suzanne Finnamore
- Fuck you for cheating on me. Fuck you for reducing it to the word cheating. As if this were a card game, and you sneaked a look at my hand. Who came up with the term cheating, anyway? A cheater, I imagine. Someone who thought liar was too harsh. Someone who thought devastator was too emotional. The same person who thought, oops, he’d gotten caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Fuck you. This isn’t about slipping yourself an extra twenty dollars of Monopoly money. These are our lives. You went and broke our lives. You are so much worse than a cheater. You killed something. And you killed it when its back was turned. ― David Levithan, The Lover's Dictionary
- Someone told me the delightful story of the crusader who put a chastity belt on his wife and gave the key to his best friend for safekeeping, in case of his death. He had ridden only a few miles away when his friend, riding hard, caught up with him, saying 'You gave me the wrong key! ― Anaïs Nin
- When your lover is a liar, you and he have a lot in common, you're both lying to you! ― Susan Forward, When Your Lover Is a Liar: Healing the Wounds of Deception and Betrayal
- Touch. It is touch that is the deadliest enemy of chastity, loyalty, monogamy, gentility with its codes and conventions and restraints. By touch we are betrayed and betray others ... an accidental brushing of shoulders or touching of hands ... hands laid on shoulders in a gesture of comfort that lies like a thief, that takes, not gives, that wants, not offers, that awakes, not pacifies. When one flesh is waiting, there is electricity in the merest contact. ― Wallace Stegner, Angle of Repose
- ...there was only one thing that interested her and that was getting into bed with men whenever she'd the chance. And I warned her straight. 'You'll be sorry one day, my girl, and wish you'd got me back'. ― Albert Camus, The Stranger
- It is a pity he did not write in pencil. As you have no doubt frequently observed, the impression usually goes through -- a fact which has dissolved many a happy marriage. ― Arthur Conan Doyle, The Return of Sherlock Holmes
- Affairs are like a seventh day. They are a break from all duties and obligations and responsibilities. I'm not saying this is right and I'm not saying it lightly. This is just how they are. You can't be responsible when you're with your lover. And since you already know you're way out of line, you go the extra distance. You throw yourself in headfirst. You become the very personification of irresponsible. You are way alive. Every detail sings. It would be a great way to live if it weren't so ruinous. ― Wendy Plump
- I told my wife the truth. I told her I was seeing a psychiatrist. Then she told me the truth: that she was seeing a psychiatrist, two plumbers, and a bartender. ― Rodney Dangerfield
- It had been years since she questioned his fidelity, but he'd stepped on to the old fame track again, and that was where the road had taken them before. Infidelity could be forgiven, but forgetting it was impossible. Strangely, that wasn't what bothered her the most. What bothered her was that she didn't really care. ― Kristin Hannah, Distant Shores
- Most women think cheating is 'disgusting' … until they fall for a man that likes them back; but isn’t willing to leave his lover for them. ― Mokokoma Mokhonoana
- So the great affair is over but whoever would have guessed, It would leave us all so vacant and so deeply unimpressed, It's like our visit to the moon or to that other star, I guess you go for nothing if you really want to go that far. ― Leonard Cohen
Thursday, September 5, 2013
A beautiful poem by the Irish poet Seamus Heaney
The Blackbird of Glanmore
On the grass when I arrive,
Filling the stillness with
life,
But ready to scare off
At the very first wrong
move,
In the ivy when I leave,
It's you, blackbird, I love.
I park, pause, take heed.
Breathe. Just breathe and
sit
And lines I once translated
Come back: 'I want away
To the house of death, to my
father
Under the low clay roof.'
And I think of one gone to
him,
A little stillness dancer -
Haunter-son, lost brother -
Cavorting through the yard,
So glad to see me home,
My homesick first term over.
And think of a neighbour's
words
Long after the accident;
'Yon bird on the shed roof,
Up on the ridge for weeks -
I said nothing at the time
But I never liked yon bird'
The automatic lock
Clunks shut, the blackbird's
panic
Is shortlived, for a second
I've a bird's eye view of
myself,
A shadow on raked gravel
In front of my house of
life.
Hedge-hop, I am absolute
For you, your ready
talkback,
Your each stand-offish comeback,
Your picky, nervy goldbeak -
On the grass when I arrive,
In the ivy when I leave.
---------------------------------------
Saturday, August 31, 2013
‘Fake it until you make it’ (then what?)
I subscribe
to a number of email publications having to do with the business world and its
ever-fascinating opinions, buzzwords, mantras and current trends. Nothing too
complicated; most articles debate the following types of issues: qualities of
good leaders, how to break through the glass ceiling, is there a glass ceiling
for women, have we achieved gender equality, how women should act in a
male-dominated profession, and so on. The new mantra for women on the way up is
apparently ‘Fake it until you make it’; this is proffered as a way for women to
feel ok about the fact that there are a number of men in top-level positions
who are not qualified for them, but since they act as though they are (they
fake their competence and/or readiness), they get promoted whereas women don’t.
So if men do it, it’s ok for women to do it too. This expression makes me
cringe whenever I hear it uttered, at least in the way it’s currently used. It
conflicts with nearly every moral principle I was taught since I was a young
child. We were taught to be honest, forthright and not to lie. We were
certainly not taught to ‘fake’ anything. Fakers were frowned upon; if you look
up the word ‘faker’, some of the synonyms are liar, pretender, fraud, phony,
pretender, and impostor. Sorry, but these are not the type of personality
descriptions you want attached to you, not in the business world, and
definitely not in the academic research world. We were taught to work hard at
whatever course of study we chose to pursue, and in that way, we would achieve
success in our chosen profession. And if our eventual goals were to be the boss
or leader of a department, for example, we accepted that we had to earn that position; that it would not be
handed to us in our twenties or early thirties without having earned it. And by
earning it, I mean, working your way up from being a project and/or team leader
with responsibility for one or two people, to a larger project with responsibility
for a few more people, and so on. Slow but steady progress up over. In this
way, you gained the necessary emotional intelligence as well as the
professional qualifications necessary to assume a leadership position. So that
perhaps after ten or fifteen years in the workforce (closer to thirty-five or forty
years old), you could be considered qualified to lead a large team of people or
even a department. At this point, there would be no doubt that you were
qualified for the leadership position; there would be no need to ‘fake’
anything.
Nothing is
worse than ‘feeling/knowing’ that you don’t measure up or don’t fit the
criteria necessary to do a good job; I have felt that way once in my life, when
I was elected student council president in my senior year of high school. I was
totally unprepared for the job, naive, not a spontaneous idea-maker, and not
particularly social. But I was the smartest student in my class, and that was
enough to get me nominated. Enough people had faith in my abilities such that
they voted for me. But I lacked faith in myself and my abilities, and I could
not fake my way through that year. I cannot say that I failed at the job, but I
did not succeed at it either. I walked around with a constant knot in my
stomach, worrying about how lousy a job I was doing, about my lack of
spontaneous creativity and ability to pull a team together with inspiring words.
I do not remember that time as enjoyable; it was a stress I could have done
without. I should have said no to the nomination, but I did not, and I don’t
know why. Part of saying yes was out of a sense of duty. Many years later, I
understand that this type of position was simply not a good fit for me; I did
it, but found no joy in the job. Nothing is worse than feeling that the eyes of those you lead or those who look up to you
are constantly upon you, waiting for you to slip up so they can say ‘I told you
that you weren't good enough, smart enough, confident enough, etc.’ This is how
you feel; the reality may be quite another story. Most people probably wish you
well and don’t think much more about it. They’re certainly not
overly-preoccupied with whether you succeed or fail; they have enough to do in
their own lives. Nevertheless, the fact remains that I was not qualified for the
job. Several years later, I experienced the opposite. I got a summer job that I
mastered with ease; I was hired to ease the backlog of returned orders of pens
and pencils whose logos were misspelled or wrong. We were a group of about ten women, working in
the returned-goods department; our jobs were to tackle the returns, figure out
the mistakes, and send the orders on for re-processing. I loved this summer job.
I got to work mostly alone (my preference in most jobs) on the tasks at hand—dealing
with the processing of returned orders and the requisite associated paperwork.
Once I learned the rudiments of the job (which forms to file and where they
should get sent), it was clear sailing from thereon. It was a simple job, but
one that instilled confidence because you knew what to do and when to do it,
and you got the necessary feedback (good work, or work harder). The department
head took notice of me when I managed to clear my desk of the hundreds of
returns assigned to me within a few weeks as well as to motivate the ladies in
my department to plow through the backlog and get it done. We hung up posters
with the numbers of ‘how many returns down and how many to go’; that sort of
thing. We made it and helped the company out of a real tight spot. At the end
of the summer, I was offered a full-time job as leader of that department; I
was nineteen years old. I would have reported to the man who noticed my work,
and would have replaced the woman (in her mid-thirties) who had the position
(they would have fired her and instated me). The job would have been a
springboard to a career in business. But I did not feel that I was at all ready
to lead a department at nineteen years of age; I had no real people skills in
the sense of knowing how to deal with different personalities in the workplace.
I was ‘book-smart’ but not ‘people-smart’. I am fairly sure that I would have
been an unprepared and nervous leader, in short, not a good leader at that time.
I chose rather to fulfill my degree in science, and ultimately chose research
science as a profession. I did not feel like an impostor in my little summer
job, but I might have felt like one had I said yes to taking on department
leadership at that age. I don’t feel like an impostor in research either. My
view is that you have to like the work involved, but also feel that you can
master it. Additionally, you have to have bosses/leaders who give feedback and
constructive advice, and who are honest with you about your chances of
succeeding in that profession. You have to be able to trust their motives where
your future is concerned. These types of people seem to be at a premium these
days.
I know that
this phrase arose as a way for employees, mostly women, to deal with and
overcome feeling like impostors in their positions. The impostor syndrome seems
to be widespread among highly-educated intelligent women from what I read;
something that strikes me as quite irrational. But does faking feeling
successful make you feel better about yourself when you feel like an impostor? Does
it make you do a better job? And just because a number of men do this, do women
need to do it? What I guess I am saying is that if you feel like an impostor in
your job 100% of the time, perhaps your brain and heart are telling you
something important that you should listen to—that maybe you’re in the wrong
job or wrong profession. Nevertheless, I think we need to reevaluate this
expression and stop using it to falsely bolster confidence, especially where women
are concerned. Perhaps a better way to phrase it would be: ‘Visualize mastering
what you work so hard at. Visualize succeeding at it. Visualize yourself doing
it in your mind’s eye. Visualize your impact on those around you’. And if your
mind’s eye cannot ‘see’ you doing it with a fairly high degree of confidence,
rethink your goals. If you feel only dread and fear about being at the top or
doing what it is you think is expected of you, is it worth it? There’s nothing
worse than ‘arriving’, only to wonder, ‘what do I do now that I've arrived?’ ‘Making
it’ is not a goal in and of itself, no matter how much ‘faking’ is involved;
there has to be more substance to the goal. What do you want to do with the top
position, and why? Do you want to help your company and your employees, or just
promote yourself and your career? I think those questions are worth exploring
and answering, and will go a long way toward making you feel like you have the
right to be where you are, that you've earned that right, and that you go
forward with confidence and the smarts necessary to do a good job. Because
there are too many men in top positions who have no business being there; who
are miserable leaders and who do not know how to listen or to communicate with
their employees. These men have risen to the level of their incompetence, which
in some cases is quite high within an organization. I don’t think we need more
bad leaders in the form of women who are just like these men. I’m looking for
real leadership, inspiring and competent leadership; I’ll take a
truly-qualified, honest, humble man or woman over a faker any day.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Summer memories
As promised, photos of my recent trip to New York, Maryland and Virginia. As I was going through my photos, I realized once again how lovely my country is. The order of the photos follows the timeline in my previous post, Summer Moments in New York, Maryland and Virginia. Enjoy.
one of two reflecting pools at the Memorial site |
The Survivor Pear Tree |
The new One World Trade Center |
New Jersey skyline |
The North Cove Marina in NYC |
view of surrounding area in Gambrill State Park, Maryland |
Hunting Creek Lake in Catoctin Mountain Park, Maryland |
Hunting Creek Lake |
A marsh in north Virginia--photo taken through train window |
approaching New York City---photo taken through train window |
New York City--photo taken from train |
Garrison, New York, on the Hudson River |
Garrison, NY |
Guinan's Pub (the subject of Gwendolyn Bounds wonderful book 'Little Chapel on the River') in Garrison |
Jim Guinan, owner of the pub, passed away in 2009 |
view of West Point across the river from Guinan's pub |
the lovely Hudson River, facing north from the walkway |
view of the Hudson River facing south from the walkway |
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Summer moments in New York, Maryland and Virginia
I returned
to Oslo last week after a wonderful vacation in the USA, where I visited the
states of New York, Maryland and Virginia. As always, my trip was full of
wonderful moments, all a part of my visits with my good friends and family. I
did a lot of traveling on this trip; I arrived in Newark New Jersey by plane on
a Thursday afternoon and spent Thursday and Friday with my friend Gisele in
Manhattan. We visited the National September 11 Memorial, located at the sites of the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers. It was a very moving
experience. On our way out of the site, we stopped in the gift store and I
bought a book called ‘The Survivor Tree’,
about the callery pear tree that survived the 9/11 attacks despite suffering extensive
damage and burns, and was replanted at the Memorial site in December 2010. We
got a chance to see this tree on the site; it has branched and grown quite high.
One of the tourist guides told us that it is the only tree in which the birds
will nest. I bought the book because it will be a positive reminder of a tree
that symbolizes strength, hope and survival; something sorely needed in the
midst of the sorrow and personal tragedies that the memorial site honors and
asks us to remember. Afterward, we walked through Battery Park and up along the
Esplanade (west side of Manhattan), where we had lunch at the Merchants River
House restaurant. We then walked north as far as Vesey Street and then took a
subway back to the Hilton Hotel in midtown. It was a beautiful day in
Manhattan, and I shot some lovely photos of the boats sailing on the Hudson
River, as well as some night photos of the hotel and the surrounding area. New
York City at night is always a photographic adventure—the colors, the lighting,
the digital effects.
On
Saturday, I took the Vamoose bus from Penn Station to Bethesda Maryland to
visit my cousin Karen and her husband Naj who live in Potomac. The Vamoose bus is the cheapest way
to get to the Washington DC area and I recommend it; the wi-fi on board worked
very well and the bus made one pit stop during the four hour trip. Karen, Naj
and I spent Saturday talking and catching up; on Sunday, we decided to hike in
Gambrill State Park, a lovely mountain park located on the ridge of the
Catoctin Mountains in Frederick County. After hiking we ate a delicious brunch buffet
at The Cozy Inn & Restaurant in Thurmont Maryland, not far from the presidential
retreat Camp David. The inn has an interesting history, having been visited by
a number of presidents through the years, understandably a source of pride for its
owners. Maryland is a beautiful state, with lush green forests and meadows;
this was reinforced for me when I took the Amtrak train further south (from Washington
DC) to Williamsburg Virginia to visit my sister Renata and her husband Tim (from
Monday until Wednesday). The train passed through some amazingly beautiful rural
areas and marshes in Maryland and Virginia on its way to Williamsburg. My
sister picked me up there and we drove to their home in Poquoson (not far from
the ocean), where they were living up until this past week. We had a very nice
time hanging out, watching movies, talking, eating and laughing. Their dog Dale
ended up with his head in my lap while we were watching movies; this kind of
trust from a dog that has been reasonably skeptical to having me around on
previous visits. I also had an early morning visitor in the form of their cat
Sugar, who spent one hour with her head in my armpit, sleeping and purring. I
have not spent much time in Virginia; I remember that we may have visited
Virginia on a family vacation long ago when we were children, but details of
that trip are mostly forgotten. In any case, it too is a lovely state from the
little of it I got to see.
I returned to
Manhattan by Amtrak train (an eight hour trip) from Williamsburg on Wednesday;
I thought I might go stir crazy sitting all that time but the trip went
surprisingly well. Of course I had my iPad with my Kindle books, music and
Candy Crush game to keep me occupied. Again, the onboard wi-fi worked well and
I was able to write and send some emails as well. So time passed fairly
quickly. I was however quite tired by the time the train arrived at Penn
Station in Manhattan, and I still had to get to Grand Central Station, where I
boarded yet another train to take me to Peekskill. My friend Jean picked me up
there, and from then on I was in upstate New York, in Cortland Manor where she
lives and where I love being, until I left to return to Oslo the following Monday. Thursday found us in Sleepy Hollow, first to have lunch with my brother Ray and his children (my niece Tamar and nephew Eli), and then to visit the cemetery where our parents are buried. Our friend Maria
joined us on Friday, and we hung around, talked, laughed, ate, watched a movie,
went to see Menopause the Musical
(quite funny), went to her nieces’ birthday party for cake and coffee, then to
hear her brother Jim and his three sons play good ol’ rock and roll in their
band Crucible (the youngest son, Dean, is fourteen years old and an unbelievable
drummer). We also managed a trip to the Garrison train station so that I could
see Guinan’s Pub (now closed) which is situated right behind the train platform on the river side. It was the subject of Gwendolyn Bounds
wonderful book Little Chapel on the River
(I wrote about this book in a March 2013 post---http://paulamdeangelis.blogspot.no/2013/03/reading-about-and-remembering-hudson.html). Someone had written on the pub’s green
door—R.I.P., referring to the owner Jim Guinan who passed away in 2009. I took
some photos of the pub, and took a long look inside through the dusty windows. The bar has long since been emptied of inventory
and furniture, but I could ‘see’ how it must have looked in its heyday. If you walk down to the Hudson River from the pub and look across to the other side of the river, you can see West Point; it reminded me of the parts of the book about the West Point cadets who sneaked across the river in order to visit the pub and have a beer or two.
On Sunday,
another sunny blue-sky summer day, we drove to Poughkeepsie and walked across
the Hudson River on the old Poughkeepsie-Highland Railroad Bridge that was converted
to a pedestrian footbridge and opened in 2009 as The Walkway over the Hudson (http://www.walkway.org/, and http://nysparks.com/parks/178/details.aspx). It is the longest footbridge in
the world, according to Wikipedia, about 1.28 miles long. A very nice walk,
with signs hung up along the bridge with interesting information about its history,
the turbidity and pH of the Hudson River at different locations, the bird life
in the area, and so on. As we stood on the bridge facing north, we could see
and hear the freight trains passing on the Highland side of the river, but we
were not sure where they ended up. Each time I am in the vicinity of the Hudson
River, it hooks me, and I want to explore it more, hopefully with them. I decided then and there
that on future visits to New York, I want to do the Hudson River Walk as well
as to take a boat ride up along the Hudson River. This river is in my blood, I
grew up in a small town on its banks, and its history continues to fascinate me.
My friends and I always manage to do a lot of interesting things in the time we have together, and it's always enjoyable because we are doing those things together. And the same goes for my family too. I only wish I could spend more time with everyone. That will come to pass next summer, God willing. I will be posting some photos of this trip in my next post.
My friends and I always manage to do a lot of interesting things in the time we have together, and it's always enjoyable because we are doing those things together. And the same goes for my family too. I only wish I could spend more time with everyone. That will come to pass next summer, God willing. I will be posting some photos of this trip in my next post.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
A new poem
Reflections on an August morning
On the train again
Hiking my way onward
To those places that grab my heart
Pulling me in a million small ways
The sound of cicadas; mosquitoes swarm in
Lying on my back in bed, remembering
Watching sunlight play on the trees
Green and leafy outside my window
Dusty panes reflected in the sunlight
I am no stranger to reflections
I have the time, I am on the train
Watching the greenery and life go by
Staring out onto the land
I never knew how green my country was
Or how beautiful, but now I know
Part of it is the wanting it to be so
Dream-like state, this passage
Through the trees and surrounding lakes and marshes
Leading through one state
On my way to yet another
copyright 2013 Paula M De Angelis
I wrote this poem while I was on the train from Washington DC to Williamsburg Virginia. The train passed through some beautiful countryside and landscapes in both Maryland and Virginia, and I reflected on how lucky I was to be able to experience the tranquil beauty of my country in this way.
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Back in a 'New York State of Mind'
Back in my home state on my annual trip to visit family and friends. Just thought I'd celebrate New York with the lyrics to a beautiful song called 'New York State of Mind' by Billy Joel.
------------------------------------
Some folks like to get away
Take a holiday from the neighbourhood
Hop a flight to Miami Beach
Or to Hollywood
But I'm taking a Greyhound
On the Hudson River Line
I'm in a New York state of mind
I've seen all the movie stars
In their fancy cars and their limousines
Been high in the Rockies under the evergreens
But I know what I'm needing
And I don't want to waste more time
I'm in a New York state of mind
It was so easy living day by day
Out of touch with the rhythm and blues
But now I need a little give and take
The New York Times, The Daily News
It comes down to reality
And it's fine with me 'cause I've let it slide
Don't care if it's Chinatown or on Riverside
I don't have any reasons
I've left them all behind
I'm in a New York state of mind
It was so easy living day by day
Out of touch with the rhythm and blues
But now I need a little give and take
The New York Times, The Daily News
It comes down to reality
And it's fine with me 'cause I've let it slide
Don't care if it's Chinatown or on Riverside
I don't have any reasons
I've left them all behind
I'm in a New York state of mind
I'm just taking a Greyhound on the Hudson River Line
'Cause I'm in a New York state of mind
------------------------------------
Some folks like to get away
Take a holiday from the neighbourhood
Hop a flight to Miami Beach
Or to Hollywood
But I'm taking a Greyhound
On the Hudson River Line
I'm in a New York state of mind
I've seen all the movie stars
In their fancy cars and their limousines
Been high in the Rockies under the evergreens
But I know what I'm needing
And I don't want to waste more time
I'm in a New York state of mind
It was so easy living day by day
Out of touch with the rhythm and blues
But now I need a little give and take
The New York Times, The Daily News
It comes down to reality
And it's fine with me 'cause I've let it slide
Don't care if it's Chinatown or on Riverside
I don't have any reasons
I've left them all behind
I'm in a New York state of mind
It was so easy living day by day
Out of touch with the rhythm and blues
But now I need a little give and take
The New York Times, The Daily News
It comes down to reality
And it's fine with me 'cause I've let it slide
Don't care if it's Chinatown or on Riverside
I don't have any reasons
I've left them all behind
I'm in a New York state of mind
I'm just taking a Greyhound on the Hudson River Line
'Cause I'm in a New York state of mind
Friday, August 2, 2013
Bicycle bullies
- There are too many of them in this city, and most of them are men in their thirties and forties.
- They travel as fast as cars do in the middle of the city, but ignore traffic lights and do just as they please. They are traffic hazards. You never know where you have them.
- They are supposed to get off their bikes and walk them across the pedestrian crosswalks; this almost never happens.
- They travel too fast on footpaths that are designed for both pedestrians and cyclists. They act annoyed when you don’t move out of their way fast enough.
- That there haven’t been more serious accidents in Oslo involving them and pedestrians surprises me.
- Apropos my last post about the baby hedgehog; I’m sure the majority of the bicycle bullies would just drive right over one in their path, crush it and move on. Perhaps that’s mean of me to say, but I don’t get the impression that these people care too much about anyone or anything except themselves, and about getting to where they’re going as fast as possible, obstacles be damned.
- The most stupid thing I’ve seen so far is those of them who are steering the bike with one hand and talking on a cell phone with the other. Honestly, what is so important that you need the dangerous distraction of a cell phone? Who do you think you’re impressing? And if it’s really a serious matter, pull over to the roadside, stop and take the call.
- They act as though they are competing in the Tour de France, and they dress accordingly.
- In Amsterdam--bicycle city deluxe--the bicyclists know how to behave in traffic and don’t all look as though they are Tour de France competitors. They dress in ordinary clothing and are far more relaxed. The same is true for another bicycle city—Copenhagen. Why does Oslo have to stand out in this way? It impresses no one.
- Isn’t it possible to bike anymore without having to ‘dress the part’ from head to toe?
- Isn’t it possible to enjoy being out in nature, to stop along the way and admire a lake or a flower, without having to speed your way through all that is beautiful around you?
- Get over yourselves. The rest of us are not impressed.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
How a baby hedgehog stole my heart
Who would
have thought that I could lose my heart to a little baby hedgehog? To be
honest, I had never seen a hedgehog before last Thursday evening. I had heard
of them, but they were mostly small creatures who populated children’s books; The
Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle in the book by Beatrix Potter comes to mind. Beatrix
Potter used her pet hedgehog Tiggy-Winkle as inspiration for her story. It is
so coincidental that we were just in Beatrix Potter country—England’s Lake
District--on vacation. Last Thursday evening we found an adorable baby hedgehog
(pinnsvin in Norwegian) on our way home from the boat, either abandoned by its
mother or perhaps mother and baby got separated by accident. It was struggling
to survive, so we took her home, washed her and fed her with some sugar water,
after talking to the hedgehog experts at Pinnsvinhjelpen.no. They suggested we feed
her cat food, egg yolk mixed with sugar water, and lactose-free heavy cream,
and emphasized that she needed to be kept warm during the night. So we
followed their advice and the following morning (Friday) she was awake and
hungry. A visit to Jette at Pinnsvinhjelpen in Ski on Saturday afternoon was
very productive; she gave us dry cat food (among other useful items) that she told us to mix with hot
water so that it got mushy. She was certain that Hedgie (the name we gave the
little hedgehog) would love this mix, and she was so right. Hedgie not only
liked to eat this, but she ‘anointed’ herself with small bits of it;
self-anointing is a hedgehog behavior that is not well understood. Hedgehogs
will place small bits of chewed food on their backs; possible explanations are
that this is a way of perfuming themselves, or that they like the taste of something
new and this is a way of acknowledging that. Whatever the reason, it is
humorous to watch them do this, and I filmed her doing this while she ate her
cat food mush (http://youtu.be/kPgHYgTCdwA).
I wasn’t
prepared for how attached I got to this little creature. She stole my heart
with her wobbly gait, desire to be held, desire to snuggle and to burrow into
the crook of your arm, how she would fall asleep in your hand, her cute little
face, her trusting nature, her sweetness, her wild scent. Mealtimes were a
treat—just to watch her tramp around in the cat food mush and then afterwards
to dip her in lukewarm water to wash off most of what was stuck to her. She was
with us until Sunday afternoon, at which time we drove her to her new home, a
farm in southwest Norway, where her new family lives. Here there will be a
garden for Hedgie to wander around in eventually, and possibly there will be
other hedgehogs to join her at some point. Perhaps Hedgie will become a mother herself
one day. That would be a good thing, since these little creatures are on the
endangered species list here in Norway, and are now protected by law. It is
possible to keep them as indoor pets, but it would not be fair to them. In our
case, we would not be able to offer her a garden or even a terrace, and that
would not be best for her. But how I wanted to keep her.
It’s not
surprising that I’d never seen a hedgehog before; they are not native to the
Americas. And even though hedgehogs have thousands of spines on their backs
like porcupines, they are not related to them at all. They have more in common
with shrews according to what I’ve read online. Hedgehogs are omnivorous,
meaning that they will eat berries and melon as well as insects, snails (e.g. the brown snails that infest many of the gardens in east Norway) and frogs. They can live for up to
seven years. They are nocturnal animals; born blind, their eyes will open fully
at around four weeks. Hedgie was about three weeks old when we found her, so
she would open her eyes briefly from time to time. She weighed 100 grams last
Thursday; her new family just informed me that her weight is up to 105 grams, a
good sign. She is eating and she is happy. And that makes me happy, even though
yesterday when we came home to an empty apartment—without Hedgie—I was not at
all happy. I missed her incredibly. I’m posting some photos of her; it won’t
take you long to figure out why I lost my heart to her.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
In memory of a good man
Do not stand at my grave and weep
Do not stand at my grave and weep
I am not there. I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow.
I am the diamond glints on snow.
I am the sunlight on ripened grain.
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry;
I am not there. I did not die.
by Mary Elizabeth Frye
Do not stand at my grave and weep
I am not there. I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow.
I am the diamond glints on snow.
I am the sunlight on ripened grain.
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry;
I am not there. I did not die.
--------------------------------
In memory of my friend Jean's father, Jim, who passed away at 97 this past Wednesday. May he rest in peace. I know he is together now with his wife. Sometimes Jean and I would comment, when we visit Sleepy Hollow cemetery, that her parents' grave is right near my parents' grave, and that perhaps they have all met each other now and are together in heaven, happy and at peace. I hope so.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Watching the zombie world war unfold
World War
Z. I saw this film the night it had its premiere in Oslo (July 11th)
at the Colosseum in Oslo. Packed theater. Lights go down. The film starts. Normal
family life for the first ten minutes, with Brad Pitt as Gerry Lane, who used
to work as an investigator for the United Nations, and who now seems to be a
stay-at-home dad, making his kids pancakes for breakfast. And then they’re in
their car, he and his wife and two children, stuck in traffic on a Philadelphia
city street. Normal life ends right here. All hell breaks loose in Philadelphia
in a scene that is guaranteed to make you feel like you’re climbing endlessly
to the top of a roller coaster hill followed by an unpleasant ride down, only
to start on the next climb. That’s how the film continues for almost two hours.
An intense, relentless, horrific ride to the finish. The final five minutes of
the film resemble the first ten minutes—family togetherness, in this case, a
reunion. In between, you’ve got to be made of stone not to be affected by some
of the scenes that pop out at you (literally, thanks to the 3-D): the
stewardess-turned-zombie moving on from economy class to the front of the plane
on the plane ride from and to hell after having been bitten by a stowaway
zombie, as well as the scene in the WHO facility in Cardiff Wales, where the former
head of the lab, now a zombie, tries to ‘understand’ what happened to his prey
(Gerry) who has injected himself with a deadly pathogen in order to camouflage
himself from the zombies. This zombie won’t attack Gerry because the pathogen
makes the prey sick and the zombies can smell sickness which they avoid.
The film has some similarities to other films/TV series in this genre: 28 Days Later (the fast-moving zombies, how
quickly people ‘turn’ after having been bitten, and the apartment hallway scene
where they climb the stairs to flee the zombies), Resident Evil (the suspenseful
lab/facility scenes), The Walking Dead (the dimly-lit corridor scenes with zombies
waiting to attack just around the corner), and a few others. But it’s on its
own when it comes to some specific scenes: zombies swarming and piling up on
each other like insects in order to scale the huge wall in Israel erected to
keep them out, and the unbelievable plane scene come to mind. I think what sets
this film apart is the relentlessness of the zombie hordes and the sheer
numbers of zombies. Cities are overrun in minutes. There is nowhere to
run, nowhere to hide. There is no time to hatch a plot, to follow it through.
Panic ensues immediately among the crowds of people trying to flee. You’ve got
to think on your feet, and if you don’t keep moving, as Gerry points out,
you’re dead. Meaning you’re a zombie.
There are
some implausible scenarios. One of them is when the plane crashes in the
mountains of Wales and Gerry awakens and finds himself wounded and dripping
blood. The female Israeli soldier he’s traveling with, Segen (played by
Daniella Kertesz), who has had her arm hacked off by Gerry after having been
bit by a zombie, has also survived. For a brief second, it looks as though she
may transform. But she doesn’t. They both walk the distance it takes for them
to reach the WHO research facility in Cardiff that is their intended
destination. But my question is--why wasn’t there a horde of zombies attracted
to the site of the plane crash? The zombies are apparently attracted by noise, and
wouldn’t a crashing plane make a lot of noise? The other is when Gerry and
Segen are walking very slowly through town on their way to the WHO facility,
her supporting him since he is having problems walking. Where are the zombies?
Or is Cardiff a zombie-free zone? It’s not made clear, or if it was, I missed
it. They had ample time to reach the facility, something that seems rather out
of tune with the rest of the film. Additionally, Gerry is losing blood fast,
something the zombies would definitely register.
Once inside
the facility though, they meet a team of scientists who are very skeptical to
their presence; they want to know why they’ve come. Gerry explains his theory about
using pathogens to camouflage the living from the ‘undead’, and they agree that
his theory is worth testing. However, there are zombies wandering the halls of the
wing of the lab building where the pathogens are stored; they are rather
sluggish due to the lack of prey. They became zombies because the lead
researcher accidentally infected himself with the blood of a zombie. And that
led to his attacking other staff members; the uninfected managed to seal off
this wing to keep the undead out.
I’m halfway
through the book of the same name by Max Brooks. I’d have to describe the tone
of the book in much the same way—relentless and creepy, but the relentlessness and
creepiness are spread out over many pages and the story unfolds gradually
through the voices of the different people interviewed, who inform about what
they have witnessed in a matter-of-fact tone. The book and the film are very
different in this respect, as there is no ‘main’ character like Gerry in the
book. But the ever-increasing paranoia and the shocking events are similar; the
paranoia is perhaps more pronounced in the book than in the film. And at least
with the book, I can put it down when I’ve had enough for an evening. Unless
you close your eyes in the theater, it’s hard to escape what’s going on. At
certain points, I had to remind myself that it was a film, to breathe normally.
It occurred to me that World War Z is not a film for the kiddies or the weak of
heart (just like roller coaster rides generally). I know I needed a few days to
calm down after having seen it. I wonder if Brad Pitt let his kids watch this
one?
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