05 February 2009

Dark was the Night

Good cause
Good price ($13.99 on Amazon for a double-disc CD - 31 awesome songs for $13.99!)
Great music (31+ great great artists)

Red Hot Organization has been in my awareness since the Red Hot + Blue album came out in 1990.  That album was fabulous and the liner notes were extensive and a great read (one booklet about Cole Porter's life and one about AIDS).  Plus lyrics and all that great stuff.  I actually think I cited it for a report on AIDS when I was in high school.

Well, the most recent release, Dark was the Night, comes out on February 17th.  I've had the opportunity to hear an advance copy, and it is amazing.  So fabulous.  The advance copy was provided free of charge, but I want to know if this will come with great info in the liner notes, so I will likely pick up a copy of the CD as well.  Plus, it benefits the Red Hot Organization, providing awareness about HIV and AIDS.  

I feel like AIDS had its media peak in the 80s and 90s and then was sort of abandoned.  It's still out there, folks.  People still contract it on a daily basis.  Some of them are people you may know and love.  There is still a huge stigma associated with it, too, which makes it harder for people to be open and honest about their status.  This needs to change.

31 January 2009

Theft

A number of things have been going through my mind since I learned yesterday that someone had broken into my home.  It started with the anger about how the thief will likely erase/ditch the digital photos on my laptop that she stole, yet I care more about those than the laptop itself.  In fact, most of my thoughts have been about the sentimental and personal loss rather than the money.  The most current one is pretty ridiculous in the grand scheme of things, but it's there.  I have had the same checking account since I was 16 years old.  The bank I bank with had been open not too long, so my bank account was this simple 6 digit number.  Six easy numbers to remember in a pattern that was so nice and just flowed well.  Today I had to close that account and open a new one because of the loss of checkbooks that contain account information.  The new account number is this ridiculously long number that is nearly impossible to memorize.  And that criminal stole that from me.  She probably never even realized that she was taking an easy to remember account number from me.

Note: I say "she" because the thief came through a very small window.  So unless we had child burglars, I feel fairly certain there was at least one female involved.  That and the fact that I have make-up missing (new in the box make-up, not used make-up).

Ugh, I'm exhausted.  More than physical loss of stuff, this has taken a toll on my ability to rest well.  Four hours last night.  I'm hoping for a bit more tonight.

22 January 2009

At Last

I have been taking the last couple of days, away from the internet, to sort through my thoughts from last Tuesday.  I was going to narrate my experience of going to DC to witness Obama take the oath of office, and I will still do that, but I also feel the need to comment on the emotion that came with it.  Today, rejoining the internet world, I caught up on blogs I typically read daily.  Many of them had Obama-related posts from Tuesday and Wednesday.  And each one made me choke up with emotion yet again.  Each one filled with hope and excitement.  Each one, even the ones with a bit of reservation and nervousness for the size of the shoes we are expecting Obama to fill, maintained at least a piece of hope and joy.  I watched video of Barack and Michelle dancing to Beyonce sing "At Last" and found myself choked up yet again.  Something as simple as two people dancing to a song - and I was choked up.  That is why I have hope.  For this to create so much emotion in so many people means there is potential for change.  When Obama calls on the country to sacrifice and to work for each other and to support each other - when he points out that we are the ones who can make this change happen - when he directs attention to what we have already accomplished, electing a person of color into the highest office in our country (and some might say world) - it's that emotion that makes it possible.

And so then I go back to Tuesday morning...no, to Monday evening.  I was on a bus from Philadelphia to DC with 50-some odd people also making their way to our nation's capital to witness history.  Three women from Africa, two men from Eastern Europe, one man talking on the phone about the Kennedy's and whether Jeb Bush will run for Senate, an African-American woman and her granddaughter, and the woman sitting next to me: a woman wearing layers and layers of clothes to keep warm, but with her Obama t-shirt worn on top of all of them, and a hat that said, "I *heart* Jesus."  She told me that she wasn't sure what her plans were once she got to DC, but she was going on faith that she was meant to be there and see Barack Obama become our nation's president.  She also showed us the sequined gown she was bringing in case she went to a ball.  These people took time out of their work-week to go and be a part of the inauguration.  Just as Obama would talk the next day about a sort of call to action, they were already taking action of some sort in order to witness history.  They were ecstatic and the bus was filled with this excitement.

The excitement continued the next day.  My friend Ryan and I left the apartment at 6:30am in order to get through security checkpoints.  We walked to avoid the packed Metro stations, and then waited for 2 hours at 7th and E to go through security.  Everyone around us was jovial and laughing, despite being crammed with little space and no apparent movement.  I did not see anyone angry or upset.  These people woke up early and waited in the cold crowds for hours and could not be happier about it.  People were shivering, fingers and toes frozen, but everyone was smiling - some were singing.  After a couple of hours, we were told that a water main had broken, so we could not enter through that checkpoint and were redirected down the street.  Again, people were friendly and simply made their way through the crowds.  This diverse crowd of mixed race, age, SES - all waiting happily through discomfort was yet more evidence of what this day meant to people.  Obama talked about equality and unity in his inaugural address, and as cheesy as it sounds, I felt that in the crowd.

One difference between Obama and past presidents is the degree to which he has become a brand.  On one level it is disturbing, since I would like him to be notable for making great political change, but on another level, it is further evidence of what he signifies to people.  He gives people hope, and they want to cherish that....by buying crap with his name on it.  Ryan and I started giggling when we heard "Obama air fresheners" as we were walking down the street.  What do they smell like?  "Smells like change" so said a vendor.  We promptly bought two.  They actually smell like Jasmine.  Apparently someone was selling binoculars and calling them "Barackulars."  Obama was certainly stimulating the economy of the street vendors on Tuesday.

One t-shirt on the inauguration website store reads, "I *heart* my president."  That is what kept coming up for me during the inaugural address.  I actually like my president.  I look at him with his family and feel good.  During the address, I was motivated to actually do something to help change happen, to help the economy, to help make equality and unity happen.  And I don't think I was the only one.  Eyes were wet with tears throughout the room where I watched the address (within the security perimeter at 601 Pennsylvania Ave.).  The cheers in the room throughout and again when his car went down the street in front of the building just added to the excitement.  

I have spent the last three weeks in Chicago, NYC, San Diego, LA, Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, DC, and as of today, Pittsburgh - a handful the biggest cities of our nation.  And somehow seeing the inauguration of our president was a great way to bridge all of this chaotic traveling.  No matter where I am or have been, this excitement is there.  This idea of unity and equality sort of bridges my travels.  People across the country are excited and hopeful, and excited and hopeful people are motivated.  If people believe their efforts will do something, they're more likely to do it.  I am hoping that Obama can capitalize on the feeling and emotion that was present among the millions of people in DC and watching from afar.  I'm not going to assume that huge changes are going to happen soon, but the potential is here.  The hope is definitely here.  At last.

10 January 2009

Pacific Beach

Ever wondered how the shower turns on when you pull up the little thing on the tub faucet? I hadn't either, but I know now. Thursday morning, I woke up at 6am in order to shower and leave my hotel in Pacific Beach to get to an interview at the San Diego VA hospital. I turned on the water, and everything was fine. I went to pull up on the lever to turn on the shower, and apparently this just blocks the faucet to force the water backwards, up to the shower head. However, when the tub faucet is not securely connected to the wall, the forced water instead just shoots the faucet across the tub. This is what happened to me. I reattached the faucet again, and the same thing happened.


So I called the front desk, explained the situation. Remember that is is 6am. The front desk man informed me that maintenance comes at 8am, so could I just wait until then to shower. I think to myself, "who wakes up to shower at 6am, if they could really be sleeping until 8?" Um, no, actually, I can't wait until 8am to shower. I have to leave by 7am. So he ended up giving me the key to another (much nicer) room.

On the good side, I did wake up to ocean sounds and this view.



03 January 2009

Best of 2008 - Music/Tracks

Some people do best album lists.  I do best track lists.  I think it's probably because the list ends up as a radio show and mix-CD, so I can't really do full albums.  And probably because there is always that boring song on an album that makes me feel weird about making it one of the "best" of the year.  But tracks - that is totally doable.  So here is my best tracks of 2008, in alphabetical order by artist.

Alias - Well Water Black (Featuring Why?)
Beach House - Heart of Chambers
Beck - Gamma Ray
Blind Pilot - Poor Boy
Bon Iver - Skinny Love
Department of Eagles - No One Does it Like You
Girl Talk - No Pause
Horse Feathers - Albina
Lykke Li - I'm Good, I'm Gone
M83 - You, Appearing
Margot & The Nuclear So-and-Sos - Broadripple is Burning
Mates of State - Get Better
MGMT - The Youth
of Montreal - Wicked Wisdom
Passion Pit - Sleepyhead
School of Seven Bells - Iamundernodisguise
Sigur Ros - Gobbledigook
Thao With the Get Down Stay Down - Bag of Hammers
TV on the Radio - Family Tree
Why? - The Vowels Pt. 2

29 December 2008

Random Thoughts

I just went for a walk with my dog around my mom's suburban neighborhood and saw a potato at the curb of one of her neighbor's houses. Just one potato. All by itself. No trash around. No other food. It did not appear to have been cooked - just one raw potato hanging out by the curb. And that's all the excitement that happened on our walk.

In other news, I have been organizing and packing for a month long trip around the country where I will be (a) interviewing for internships, (b) visiting friends I have not seen in far too long, and (c) going to experience the inauguration festivities in D.C. I have no idea how to pack for this trip - especially when trying to fit everything into a suitcase that can easily travel on subways and trains. I have to have casual clothes, interview clothes, party clothes (for New Year's Eve parties in Chicago), shoes to go with all of those clothes, and the usual traveling necessities like books and an iPod. And my computer since I am both addicted to the internet and attempting to get some dissertation work done while traveling. Grr. Maybe I need some Space Bags.

And I just realized the other day how much I'm going to miss my dog. I know this is pathetic, but the longest I have left her is 6 days, so 4 weeks of not seeing her is rough. I know, I know. She's a dog. But still...

27 December 2008

More Thoughts on the Weather

I have lived in a number of cities in various regions of the United States. Hartford, Kansas City, Nashville, Austin, Eugene... I have known people in each of those cities who have lived in cities/regions where I have not lived. In each of these cities, the ones in which I have lived or the ones where I have known people from, the weather can change dramatically in a matter of a single day. For example, this past week in Kansas City, it went from below freezing temperatures, with snow and ice on the ground, on Christmas, to 68 degrees the day after. Everyone responded with the typical, "gotta love Kansas City weather. it can change on you in no time at all." But the thing is - it is not at all specific to Kansas City. A friend who is home in Ohio right now said the same thing this past week about Cincinnati. My favorite movie of all time, Waiting For Guffman, describes the fictional town of Blaine, Missouri, as a town where, "...if you don't like the weather, just wait 5 minutes..." Everyone thinks that quickly changing weather is something specific to their city/town/state, but it's not. It happens all over.