Friday, November 23, 2012

whoop! whoop! here i go!

from Humans of New York
I discovered this man in a crowded subway car. When he reached his stop, he pressed himself against the wall, and with a wave of his hand, politely allowed everyone else to exit before him, saying: “Off you go! Off you go!” When it was his turn to exit, he said: “Whoop Whoop! Here I go!”

Thursday, November 22, 2012

autumn reflections












These pictures are just some views from around here the second week of October. I was in the midst of exams and just stopped to breathe. It's my perpetual downfall, this looking around taking it all in thing. November was a good month for me. Lots of time spent with kids (at home and in clinics), knitting, tea, movies, and reading (Mansfield Park by Jane Austen). There was cooking and trying new places to eat, and friends. We are still working out some things, but doing so happily and feeling lucky for the opportunity.

I saw a lot of movies in October and November. Because I traditionally haven't been good at really sitting down and committing a few hours to a movie, I'm really proud of my list:

Boondock Saints
Fargo
Argo
Looper
The Tourist
How Do You Know
Slumdog Millionaire

Sunday, November 11, 2012

in which i type all the lyrics


come up to meet you, tell you i'm sorry
you don't know how lovely you are
i had to find you, tell you i need you
tell you i set you apart

so tell me your secrets and ask me your questions
and oh, let's go back to the start
running in circles, chasing our tails

heads on a silence apart

nobody said it was easy
no one ever said it would be so hard
i am going back to the start

i was just guessing at numbers and figures
pulling your puzzles apart

questions of science
science and progress
do not speak as loud as my heart

so tell me you love me
oh, come back and haunt me
when i rush to the start

running in circles, chasing our tails
coming back as we are.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

election day 2012


This year's election has been so much important to me than his first election. Perhaps because I'm older now. Perhaps because I've learned more. Perhaps because I've seen more of the world and the country. In his first election, his hope to change healthcare was my (and perhaps one of his) primary concern. He had relatively neutral stances toward abortion, gay rights, and social issues that could alienate him. I think he stepped up and he spoke up, so perhaps it's things like this that convince me that there really is a lot at stake here. There are people who are fed up with the emotional appeals of the candidates, but I think that's because a lot of people see their lives and their rights at a crossroads. And as a woman, I have the same sense. And then, how can it not be emotional? And the there's this and I can't even:

"I was so moved and inspired by Michelle Obama’s speech. Brian and I watched it with the kids. While Michelle talked our daughter asked “Can a woman be president?” YES! I replied emphatically. And then I got tears in my eyes thinking about how furious I am that we still live in a world where a little girl isn’t sure about that."

Monday, November 5, 2012

please advise

Some things to smile about on a gloomy Monday morning involving searching for holiday plane tickets (incredibly depressing if you don't have endless funds) and picornaviruses (somewhat depressing except for the fact that polio has been nearly eradicated worldwide, which is, actually, a very bright spot in the history of public health). The sun hasn't shone in a couple days but it's weird, I love this weather.

miles davis and bitches brew

Saturday, November 3, 2012

november goals


1. Eat vegetables, 4-5 servings a day (fruit comes easily to me).
2. Read (from a book).
3. Do something creative.
4. Read a research article.
5. Print pictures.
6. Get to routinely exercising three times a week.
7. Start getting projects settled.
8. Try beer at Map Room. 

I am working on a variety of projects his month and this year in general involving pediatrics, surgery, and other general medicine-related interests. I've been working a lot on testing out what works and what doesn't for me when trying to get things done. Goals are helpful, especially for longevity and consistency, when it's easy to forget what the long-term benefits to monotonous daily tasks are. Hummus is helpful for eating vegetables. Coffee is helpful. Inspiration is helpful, which I get from listening to music, talking to people, and reading.

#1-3 are things I want to do every day. Hummus has been helpful for #1. #4 and #6 is something I'm trying to do nearly every day. And #8 is something I'm going to avoid doing every day.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

on sufficiency and continuing on


The first thing you should know about Poland is that on their street signs that list where a road is taking you, you will often find orange tape crossing out cities. On some signs, every single city has been crossed out by orange tape. These signs were built for more permanence than roads were. When I first saw this, I burst out laughing. I didn’t quite know what it meant, but at the same time I knew exactly what it meant: these roads don’t go there anymore. (And we will indicate this with tape because we can’t be bothered to make new signs reflecting our new paths and our new directions.) When I asked Mateusz about this, he smiled, but didn’t quite understand the hilarity with which I viewed the seemingly unofficial treatment given to rather important roads. He told me that they are constantly trying to change (and theoretically, improve) the roads that cross the city, but that they weren’t really able to keep up with themselves.

Didn’t people get mad that one morning they could wake up and the road leading to their workplace, the grocery store, their grandmother’s house, had just been eliminated with no further explanation than a piece of tape? Furthermore, I have tape. I have time on my hands. Could I just go out there and really mess something up? I know that where I’m from, people take their commutes to work seriously. They have them planned to the minute. But Mateusz didn’t seem to think this was an issue. So it takes longer to get somewhere than you expect. So a strip of orange tape has now changed the course of your day. Figure it out. Move on. Get where you’re going.

By this point, I had already grown accustomed to this way of continuing on. Sometimes, you’re walking down the street and it just ends with no warning, not even an orange tape. It’s not a big deal, you see, as you walk back from where you came and start again. You simply continue on. This sort of adaptability was one of the most important lessons I learned from traveling in eastern Europe. Buses and trains were on a time schedule, so they say, but I was the only one who ever seemed surprised if they didn’t come for a half hour. In the sometimes mind-numbing waits, images of home would hurtle across my memory: jumping off the bus and running through the train station only to miss the train by 30 seconds. There would be less of that here.

I still remember my first moments in Warsaw. I stepped out of the plane and panicked. Instantly. I think that was one of the more terrifying moments of my life, including the time that a fake patient I interviewed for practice started crying when telling me that her husband left her. Including that. For the journey to Warsaw, I had put on a USA shirt with the five Olympic rings because it is one of my most comfortable shirts, but had a few moments of regret over it. Like, great job assimilating with the global community, self. But as the plane landed and I speed-walked to the exit of the airport, I was glad I was wearing it. I knew nothing about Milena, but she knew I was from the United States. I made strange eye contact with everyone walking into the airport hoping they would come save me from a month of destitution in the streets of Warsaw, languageless, until I could fly home 6 weeks later. I couldn’t find anybody. I decided to try and find another exit. Although I turned the corner and eventually saw a crowd of people waiting where I assume was the official exit after landing. Being in the right place didn’t help me much with my problem of not being able to recognize Milena, but I decided to let my shirt do the talking. Sure enough, a guy with an Italian accent came up to me and said Milena was getting coffee and would be right back. I know, this is probably somewhere in the plotline of the movie Taken, but it turned out that Kamil was not Italian, but Polish, which was shocking, and his girlfriend, Milena, really had gone to get a few cups of coffee. 
From that point forward, every day for the rest of the month was about being completely open to making adjustments and really learning how to go with the flow. Streets ending, trains stalling, waiting for people. Actually going with the flow, not just pretending to. Every now and then I’m caught up in being a control freak. Every now and then meaning all the time. Every now and then I’ll go to the gym and look out the window from the third floor. Every now and then meaning, just yesterday. My gym overlooks the city skyline and expressway. I saw that there were some large green signs that appeared to have fallen over. I looked closer, thinking those signs should have been built to withstand more. Then I realized, they were packed up in carts. The new signs directing the highway had already been put up. I couldn’t help but think, what a waste. Wouldn’t a simple piece of tape crossing out the old sign have been sufficient?

Friday, October 5, 2012

early bird of the summer you'll fly south just as the fall begins

Today is the chilliest day we've had so far. I know it'll get colder and it won't be enjoyable anymore, but I don't miss summer or being hot all the time. I do miss popsicles, road trips, bare legs, getting to play with kids and babies, trains and buses that we're not entirely sure are going to make it to where we're trying to go, and football on the beach. My life dream would be to travel during the fall. Hot drinks from every town.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

the advent of the seasons

This morning: some white tea with rosebuds. Even though it was hard to wake up this morning, I can't wait to start the day now. In return for single-handedly fixing my sleeping habits (it's a process) and making me love the idea of staying put and being home with groceries, I am excited to show you the seasons, how we change with each one and anticipate the next. In a way, something you've been missing out on for a long, long time.

The ways we prepare ourselves and take it in stride. It's industrial, in touch with reality, and full of life as we hold on and try to squeeze every last drop from our favorite times. I love that about the people here. And I love easy brunches, morning walks, a stop by the coffeeshop to get some work done, pumpkin gelato, and grocery shopping. Let's end our days with tea and a hot shower more often.

And then start again.

Friday, September 21, 2012

just because i adore this photo and the people in it...


...and it was taken on the perfect indian summer day. It was the first time we woke up and it felt like autumn was ready to take over, but in the end summer prevailed and the day became a little too warm for this flannel shirt that I wear like an over-spirited miscreant on camping trips and chilly mornings. The day involved morning college football (I'm not interested in college football, but in the beginning of the season, I'm interested in any football), pie from my favorite little pie shop that everybody now knows about but still won't get air conditioning despite blazing ovens, a street fair involving this age-undetermined kid named Marty who dissed all who played his game, and tacos. The evening was rainy and spent quietly with tea and homework. Perfect.

Monday, September 17, 2012

continuations

It sucks that we live in a world where not being rapey or hateful towards women makes you a good guy and not just a guy.
 via christopherlindstrom

two videos for a sunday night and monday morning

"And I say to the grownups, if you want to deny evolution and live in your world, in your world that’s completely inconsistent with everything we observe in the universe, that’s fine, but don’t make your kids do it because we need them. We need scientifically literate voters and taxpayers for the future. We need people that can—we need engineers that can build stuff, solve problems."

-Bill Nye

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

words from dad

dad: i told him that's white gown syndrome
me: what's that?
dad: when you are surrounded by doctors so you have high blood pressure
me: white coat syndrome?
dad: yeah
me: did you make that up?
dad: what, you've never heard of it? i should go patent it

The other day, I found this note I jotted. I think one of the best parts of our trip was probably the confirmation of my dad's funny ways all over the world. He has a friend whose wife and son are both doctors and I guess this friend is constantly stressed out by different diseases he hears about and trying to be healthy. My dad, on the other hand, was in awe of all the crazy mushrooms we saw by the mountainside.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

the importance of the view from above

Secretly, I’ve always wanted to be one of those people who walk around school with nothing. No backpack, notebook, pencils, highlighters. Instead, I am the person walking around with clothes and shoes for the gym, books, my laptop, a charger for everything I’m too irresponsible to remember to charge at home, and food. Half of the time, I don’t know who these people are who can either attend class and absorb everything a professor says or don’t care that they can’t. The other half of the time, I remember that I am dating one of those people. And he was the one who helped me pack for my 6-week journey abroad. I’ve always been a light packer, but the two of us together are a disaster waiting to happen. I know that the answer to “Do I need this?” will be met with a self-assured, “No. I can’t think of any situation that you would need that, except for a disaster.” Exactly the words I will think about throughout my imminent downward spiral of panic.
 
My mom and Jenn try to intervene with Alex’s and my indomitable packing confidence. We pack for the best possible scenario and decide that I don’t need back-up anythings because, should I drop my toothbrush on the ground, I will simply figure out a way to get a new one. Mom and Jenn, on the other hand, try to convince me to bring double the quantity of everything I think I’ll need. I am not worried. I know what I’m doing. I’ve done this before. Until they leave and I’m laying in bed , suddenly wide-eyed, with my tiny suitcase sitting at the door of my room like a neat package of Reminders of Things Left Behind.

I can’t sleep. Not because of the usual excitement the night before a trip, but because Mom and Jenn were obviously right! I do need to bring enough shampoo to last me nine months, just in case! You never know what will happen! But I do know that whatever happens, I don’t want to be caught with unwashed hair. Mom and Jenn are girls, and girly people would never find themselves in the predicament I’m putting myself in, with just enough toiletries to last the time for which I need them. “Alex I don’t want to grow up!” This is relevant. “I’m clearly not mature enough to be prepared for a trip of this magnitude. Also, hug me!” Eventually, post-hug, he rolls over and murmurs, “You’re going to be fine. You’re going to have the time of your life.” Easy words to say when you are asleep and not a very hygienic person to start out with. Of course, these were unfair thoughts, as Alex washes his hair daily.
As I get off the train at the airport, I am extremely early so I look around to see the people around me who have packed in various forms of preparedness, which I can’t help but view as, candidly, various forms of overpacking. I have regained my calm. I no longer need massive amounts of toiletries. I can still occasionally feel bouts of panic overcoming me as I start mentally checking off things that I forgot or didn’t absolutely need to pack, but may become problematic later: an extra memory card or camera cord; my Kindle, not quite forgotten but also not quite purposely left behind. Suddenly, as a storm looms outside near the airplanes and I imagine disaster scenarios of flight cancellations (I am not one to imagine disaster scenarios of plane crashes), the man who has arrived at the airport with only an umbrella seems levels more prepared than I am. 
This would continue throughout my nine-hour flight to Frankfurt, Germany. And then some more during my short layover. All the way through Warsaw, where I hoped to be delivered to someone who would take me in and show me where to buy extra shampoo.
[Pictures from the flight from Zurich, Switzerland to Warsaw, Poland. I sat on the right side of the plane. Also the correct side.]

Monday, September 10, 2012

mornings in between peace and sheets

I like waking up slowly, mornings spent in bed reading about far-away places and far-away times. In travel magazines I've been meaning to read and in the bedside table book containing letters I've been reading, a few at a time, for years, there's no pressure to respond to e-mails immediately or else face the guilt of my inefficiency.

I like it when there's a chill outside. It doesn't matter to me if it's sunny or cloudy, I want to wear a cozy sweater and be warm through the woven fibers and cold when the air touches my skin.

Mornings that start out with a "Don't worry" and murmurs under rumpled sheets. A half-asleep kiss, and then some more, with a "Thanks, my keys were on the counter, like you said. See you tonight." Red-mug-mornings. They're different from big yellow mug mornings, which require more tea than the red mug can hold. Gulping hot tea is simply strange and uncalled for on a red mug morning.

I like mornings with space to reminisce back to the spring, when planning this summer, we thought, This is going to be the best summer ever. And then in the summer, when we lived between the raindrops and the oppressive heat. We were at the mercy of whims of weather, the buffer zone of guaranteed air conditioning indoors nonexistent. It made me miss my own city most. It's a city that will leave you standing at the bus stop in tortuous heat and unbearable cold, but will grant you a careless breeze every now and then. And sweeping across sweat, that breeze is significant.

Now, this summer a distant memory, everybody looks at pictures of places they left their hearts. Personally, I question the distance between the mountains and the Holocaust. Could such unfathomable beauty and terror really have become intertwined in the same place? Not in the same place, of course, but to me, both felt ubiquitous and pervasive. But isn't that the way it always is? Beauty and terror. Next-door neighbors. Beauty and terror. Simultaneously parasitic to one another- in science, we describe a parasitic organism as one that cannot live without the resources of another. Beauty and terror. One in the same.

Looking forward, as though we have some semblance of organized thought. As though chronology has any sort of meaning when, really, we look back on moments, without context. We are unforgiving of ourselves when we forget the sequence of events that led us to where we are now, but at the time, we had our reasoning. And so we should never forget, but we do and will continue. Forgetting. People think it is specific moments that define them, and will even go so far as to pinpoint examples, as though each of those moments did not involve many others before them. As though years' worth of habits can be broken in a single moment. As though context doesn't matter. As though context isn't the only thing that matters.
 I like to think that in the cool, in the nonchalance, of the Messy-Hair Morning, it's okay to breathe despite the fact that terrible things happen. It's okay to believe that there are moments that can stand separate of all other time around it. In these mornings, refusing to reflect upon anything at all that is happening around me is still lazy; but for now, that's okay. I like to believe that the morning can handle these things, for this is the time of day that "I'll try" is still accompanied by "of course."

[I took these pictures at the Fotoplastikon Museum in Warsaw, Poland]

Sunday, August 12, 2012

on saying everything

Whenever I get back from traveling, I feel this overwhelming sense of panic. It's a combination of wanting to write down everything that happened and not really feeling like I can discuss anything adequately. In the past year and a half, I've been to Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Switzerland, Peru, and various American cities: Miami (four times), Boston, New Orleans, Georgia (Savannah, Atlanta, Dahlonega), Alabama, Tennessee (Nashville, Memphis, Chattanooga), the Great Smoky Mountains, and South Carolina (Charleston). And I've only written about Miami, once.

Not to mention, I forgot what my blog even looked like until I just checked. That's the first problem. The second problem is that when a lot of things happen to me, I can't process it all. I can't look through all my pictures. I'm glad they're there. But I don't even know where to begin picking out the ones I really like. This is simply a lack of discipline. Third of all, my thought process goes something like this (numbered for clarity purposes):
  1. Wow, it's crazy that none of the countries we went to (or even passed through- i.e., Slovakia) use the Euro. As a result, we got to buy chocolate at the airport with the leftover Czech koruna. (Sidenote: Chocolate with leftover currency is not just a policy, it's a ritual). 
  2. I should eat some of that chocolate.
  3. Wow, even though I can get Toblerone in America, it tastes super delicious! This seems like it's really bad for my teeth though (as the "almond nougat" is getting stuck in my teeth).
  4. Perhaps this chocolate is what contributed to my gums hurting in Prague.
  5. No, wait. I bought this chocolate at the airport on the way home from Prague. That can't be it.
  6. I probably shouldn't have ignored this gum issue. Aren't there super horrifying gum diseases?
  7. All I have to do is touch my face and see if it still hurts my gums.
  8. It was pretty smart of me to realize that it was my gums, and not my face, that hurt when I was touching my cheek.
  9. No, it took me like a whole day to figure that out. That seems not too smart.
  10. Cool, my gums don't hurt too much anymore. Note to self: It appears to be okay to ignore any physical pain in hopes that it will go away.
  11. Note to self again: Scratch that last note. That was not good advice.
  12. I'm pretty sure my improved gum health means I should be rewarded with a burrito tomorrow. Deal.
And that's how it goes. So you know, there are some thoughts about Prague, but I mean, I could have this sort of cycle of thoughts about pretty much anything. All this to say that I'm going to be doing a better job from now on writing about my past two months. I have about 8 days before school starts and plenty of reflections, so I'm hoping to get the thoughts and pictures together.

[Here I have a picture from almost all the cities I visited. Missing: Kutná Hora. Pictured in order: Warsaw (at Resort Cafe), Zurich, Gdańsk, Poznań, Zakopane, Krakow, Prague, Budapest]

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

i wish it were warmer and i hope you're the same

I am so close to what I plan to make the most amazing summer ever. One more exam. Unfortunately, it's my least favorite class. Fortunately, I am trying to be a tougher student who likes all classes. Since I had another exam I was working on today, I only have tonight and tomorrow to study for this exam, so it should be interesting.

I've been inadvertently dreaming about all the things I want to do when school gets out. I have about a month and a half before Poland. I want to go on a road trip. I want to babysit to alleviate the mind-staggering student debt ("Why are you stealing high schoolers' jobs?" -Dad). I already have a few jobs lined up for the day after exams are over. And I think I will spend some downtime in the library, finding books for fun and travel guides. One of my favorite things to do is go to the travel section and find some cool random travel idea books mixed in with the usual travel guides.

I like Johnny Cash's to-do list which is apparently on this auction site.

Monday, April 23, 2012

the handwritten letter

I grew up with a few pen pals as a kid. My first one was a girl I found through American Girl magazine's pen pal exchange. You were to send them an index card with some information about yourself on it and they paired you up with someone else. She wrote me before I got a chance to send her anything and included one of those things that you can pull a string and confetti pops out. I had never seen one before. I never used it, but I think I saved it.

We kept in touch for quite a long time and I had the best time ever checking mail. I also got the opportunity to use my cat stationary, which was huge, obviously.

A few years after that, a childhood friend and I began writing to each other. I think we were 11 at the time we started being pen pals. She used Bugs Bunny postage stamps. I smile thinking back on those days because we were so far away from knowing all the things that would begin happening to us in the next 10 years. Our brothers also began writing letters to each other and plotting evil schemes and such against us. None ever came to fruition.

The point is, I think there is something special about letters. I wrote these about a month and a half ago and decided to decorate these kraft envelopes I had gotten when I went to NYC a few years ago:
I'm still waiting to hear back. Shocking, I know.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

I got the fun pass.

 
Caine's Arcade from Nirvan Mullick on Vimeo.

I think this is the most amazing video and the most amazing kid. Sometimes you meet kids and you get this instinctive reaction, "I should definitely never have kids." And then sometimes you see kids like this and realize that you could solicit out your cute kid to achieve fame and fortune in ways that you, as an adult, have failed to do in your own life. Kidding. 

Honestly though, so many things about this video kill me, from the 500-play fun pass to the calculator fun pass security to the fact that he only wanted one customer. And mostly, the fact that he did all of this out of cardboard boxes.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Dessert: Bake Chicago

This is one of my favorite bakeries, admittedly for the extremely adorable vibe. I have to be honest about that. This is what I think my house should look like. The treats are also delicious, but I usually can't eat as much I see in the counter and I think that adds an element of (very temporary) sadness. This is Bake. It even has an awesome name and logo. I know, unrelated to taste. They had run out of most treats by the time we got there, which was too bad because I really wanted a chocolate chip-involved cookie. 
 I did end up getting a Bailey's chocolate cupcake. There was a little too much frosting for me, but that is a problem easily solved by scooping it off my cupcake and giving it to Nitin. The cupcake part was perfect though.

I like the horrifying awkwardness of this picture. My effort to take more pictures, especially of people, is being exhibitioned in a very forced manner. But somehow I like it. We look strange and the positions are awkward but it's very us. And technically it was taken on a table with no one looking through the lens, so I think I will choose to interpret it as having come out shockingly well.