TU Cent Thoughts, 12-26-05
Dec. 26th, 2005 11:58 amWelcome
Welcome new readers
samroswell and
thedigitalkuri!
Administration
On New Year's Eve, I will cull my reading list. Have no fear, I will not cull people who have already friended me. It's just that if I feel like your part in my quest has ended, it is time to part ways.
One hundred icons
I'm now up to 43. It's getting harder and harder to choose which one to use. This one here is from the anime Eyeshield 21. It's a Japanese take on American football.
Convos of the Day (or why living with me would be a pain in the you know what)
Dad: [In Vietnamese] You have to understand how important you are to this family.
Mom: [Viet] You are the one and only golden son.
Dad: [Viet] We rise and fall with you.
Mom: [Viet] We are sad and happy when you are sad and happy.
Dad: [Viet] I believe you can do great things.
Mom: [Viet] I believe you are the key of our family.
Sis: That's a lot pressure!
Me: Yeah, but it takes a lot of pressure to turn a lump of coal into a diamond.
Mom: [Viet] Why can't you do things one step a time? You'd be more organized that way.
Me: I have to see the big picture. I'm like a painter who can't start on his work until he sees the entire thing in his head.
Mom: [Viet] Normal people don't do that!
Me: I'm not a normal person.
Mom: [Viet] How confident are you in being a teacher now?
Me: I will make a 4.0 for the next three semesters.
Sis: Don't say that! You're going to fail if you think like that!
Me: Well, you asked how confident I was...
Dad: [Viet] I read in this one article that Vietnamese food is the most healthy in the world.
Me: Oh, where did you read that?
Dad: [Viet] Well see there's the food pyramid...
Mom: [Viet] No, honey, he's asking what newspaper or magazine you read that from.
Sis: He's asking where's the proof.
Me: Actually, I'm just curious and I want to read this article for myself.
Dad: [Viet] Uh, I...uh...think I threw it away.
Me: Well, that's awfully inconvenient.
Sis: You're a stuck up smarty pants, aren't you? You always have to be right.
Me: Yes, and?
Sis: Sheesh, who would want to be your friend?
Me: People who want to know the truth.
Quote of the Day
"The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means."
~Miss Prism, Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest (courtesy of
scarletdemon)
Link of the Day
It sort of perturbs me that no one commented on my explanation of why I am heretic. Was it so profound that no words can do it justice?
Steelers Watch
The Pittsburgh Steelers control their own destiny. When they beat the Detroit Lions this Sunday, they will clinch a wild card spot.
You're fired!
In-freaking-excusable.
Reading queue
C.S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters and Mere Christianity
Blogging queue
-Depression article for Collegian
-Two Schools of Blogging
-Why I am a social conservative but an economic liberal
-Lunch with the red headed Brigid
Movie queue
Kong
Syriana
Memoirs of a Geisha
Anime queue
Ayashi no Ceres
Elfen Lied
RahXephon
Eggrolls
I know how to make my mom's awesome eggrolls now. But I can't tell you how because it's a family secret.
Random Question
Do you have any good Christmas shopping stories? Comment if you do...
Welcome new readers
Administration
On New Year's Eve, I will cull my reading list. Have no fear, I will not cull people who have already friended me. It's just that if I feel like your part in my quest has ended, it is time to part ways.
One hundred icons
I'm now up to 43. It's getting harder and harder to choose which one to use. This one here is from the anime Eyeshield 21. It's a Japanese take on American football.
Convos of the Day (or why living with me would be a pain in the you know what)
Dad: [In Vietnamese] You have to understand how important you are to this family.
Mom: [Viet] You are the one and only golden son.
Dad: [Viet] We rise and fall with you.
Mom: [Viet] We are sad and happy when you are sad and happy.
Dad: [Viet] I believe you can do great things.
Mom: [Viet] I believe you are the key of our family.
Sis: That's a lot pressure!
Me: Yeah, but it takes a lot of pressure to turn a lump of coal into a diamond.
Mom: [Viet] Why can't you do things one step a time? You'd be more organized that way.
Me: I have to see the big picture. I'm like a painter who can't start on his work until he sees the entire thing in his head.
Mom: [Viet] Normal people don't do that!
Me: I'm not a normal person.
Mom: [Viet] How confident are you in being a teacher now?
Me: I will make a 4.0 for the next three semesters.
Sis: Don't say that! You're going to fail if you think like that!
Me: Well, you asked how confident I was...
Dad: [Viet] I read in this one article that Vietnamese food is the most healthy in the world.
Me: Oh, where did you read that?
Dad: [Viet] Well see there's the food pyramid...
Mom: [Viet] No, honey, he's asking what newspaper or magazine you read that from.
Sis: He's asking where's the proof.
Me: Actually, I'm just curious and I want to read this article for myself.
Dad: [Viet] Uh, I...uh...think I threw it away.
Me: Well, that's awfully inconvenient.
Sis: You're a stuck up smarty pants, aren't you? You always have to be right.
Me: Yes, and?
Sis: Sheesh, who would want to be your friend?
Me: People who want to know the truth.
Quote of the Day
"The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means."
~Miss Prism, Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest (courtesy of
Link of the Day
It sort of perturbs me that no one commented on my explanation of why I am heretic. Was it so profound that no words can do it justice?
Steelers Watch
The Pittsburgh Steelers control their own destiny. When they beat the Detroit Lions this Sunday, they will clinch a wild card spot.
You're fired!
In-freaking-excusable.
Reading queue
C.S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters and Mere Christianity
Blogging queue
-Depression article for Collegian
-Two Schools of Blogging
-Why I am a social conservative but an economic liberal
-Lunch with the red headed Brigid
Movie queue
Kong
Syriana
Memoirs of a Geisha
Anime queue
Ayashi no Ceres
Elfen Lied
RahXephon
Eggrolls
I know how to make my mom's awesome eggrolls now. But I can't tell you how because it's a family secret.
Random Question
Do you have any good Christmas shopping stories? Comment if you do...
no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 06:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 06:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 07:22 pm (UTC)This is the Rule of LiveJournal. You can make profound posts, and no one will comment on them. If you make a post about something like your favorite gum, or Centaur Sex Romance Novels, or liver cheese, anything completely insignificant, you WILL get 459,832 comments.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 07:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 07:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 09:24 pm (UTC)I found you through mutual friended persons. You're over on both
That's why.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 09:39 pm (UTC)Okie dokie. But you should know that once you've friended me, you must help me on my quest to improve my writing in both content and style.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 09:43 pm (UTC)Stylistically, I don't have much to offer. However, I'll try to pipe up and give you what I can. XD
no subject
Date: 2005-12-26 10:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-27 01:17 am (UTC)What's it like to have your family rely on you in this way?
Nothing too interesting. I do almost all my Christmas shopping online these days. I had one more gift to get on Christmas Eve, so I did actually go out shopping around 3pm. However, I make it a point to stay out of malls, so I went down to our "Elmwood Strip" a funky, artsy part of town, grabbed a delicious panini for a late lunch at a coffee spot, and then walked the "strip" looking for inspiration. I did run into a veteran pan-handling for money. He was so polite, even when I initially said no that I decided to give him some. Right after that I saw a craft collective, went in there and found the perfect gift for my friend.
See, not much of an adventure!
no subject
Date: 2005-12-27 01:27 am (UTC)Quite normal if that's what you've been told all of your life.
Not quite an adventure, but an amusing story nonetheless.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-27 10:01 am (UTC)Did you like Fushigi Yuugi? Did you like the endless drivel between Miaka and Tamahome? If so, then Ayashi no Ceres is right up your street...
Yuu Watase is in serious need of an editor. Her series lack any sort of narrative thrust.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-27 11:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 04:03 am (UTC)Some people might find it difficult to sort out the difference between what they want for their lives and what their family wants for their lives. But maybe that doesn't feel true in your situation? perhaps for cultural reasons?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 01:06 pm (UTC)Sons are supposed to be doctors, pharmacists, or engineers. Daughters are supposed to be teachers.
I want to be a teacher.
Not exactly jiving with my culture, am I?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 06:06 pm (UTC)I wouldn't presume to know what is respected or not in Vietnamese culture, since I have little to no knowledge about it. I have some familiarity with some other Asian cultures (primarily Korean and Japanese--based on the faculty and students I've known from these cultures) where a job of teacher carries quite a bit of respect with it (although nothing carries the respect of a doctor!).
However, I think that how much respect "teacher" carries even in American culture depends partly on who the teacher is teaching. Generally, the younger the students taught, the less respect, I'm afraid.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 06:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 06:21 pm (UTC)Alas, not too many people seem to place as high a respect on American government as a topic area as math and science carry, probably reflecting people's opinions about government as a whole. It should be highly valued, because it's the one topic area that can most influence the type of citizens that students will grow into being.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 06:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 06:53 pm (UTC)I wake up every day because I want to teach.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-29 12:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-29 01:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-29 03:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-29 05:25 am (UTC)Do you have any good Christmas shopping stories?
Back when I was about 7 or 8ish, I asked Santa for a Barbie ice cream stand playset (y'know, the one where you could make real ice cream. I only really wanted it because, DUDE, It made REAL ICE CREAM!). Anyway, one day my mom and I went out shopping and my mom told me that she had heard from Santa and he was having a hard time finding that toy. Not 5 minutes after my mom had told me that, I spotted the playset in a "returns" cart in the isle. The box was unopened looked like it was in good condition. I pointed it out to my mom and she got it. On Christmas morning, The playset ws under the tree, not wrapped (which was fine by me. I knew I was getting it anyway) & Santa had written "thanks mom & dad!" on it. I know now that My mom was trying to prepare me for disappointment because I wasn't getting the biggest thing on my list. I beleve she even asked me if I wanted something else instead.
This year, my step-dad wanted a VEX robotics set from Radio Shack. On Friday, my mom and I went out shopping and we stopped at the Radio Shack in Claremore before we headed on to Tulsa for the rest of the stuff we needed. While we were at Radio Shack, we picked up the last VEX set and batery pack the store had. Later on, my step-dad went to Radio Shack himself to get another cell phone. After he got it set up, he called us to let us know the new number. While he was talking to my mom, he told her that while he was at Radio Shack, he asked about the VEX set and the guy at the store told him that they had just sold their last one that morning. My mom said that she'd remember that and that she guessed that she would look at another store for it. After she had hung up with my step-dad, she told me what he had said and we both started giggling.