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Sup world.

I was driving through Hilo this afternoon, and I suddenly had this insanely strong I’m done with Hawaii feeling. Don’t know why… I think it’s just the fact that nothing has changed whatsoever. I know when most people go back home, they have the same resentment towards their hometown… usually. college life makes you feel all elitist and crap.

I also feel really crappy for my bro. He’s got it way harder than I did in high school.

I wanted to write an article about my return and make it all about how “things change, but everything remains the same” for the Tribune Herald and try to get myself a guest-column job… but I can’t bring myself to write anything nice about hilo. I wish I loved this place like I used to. Flying in, I used to almost cry because I missed it here so much…

Last time I was here, I got all sentimental and happy to be here. All this spiritual stuff came back to me, but there’s nothing like that now. It might be because of the move. The house I grew up in is being sold. the rock I used to sit on is completely covered by an autograph tree and you can’t even see it anymore. The Dinosaur house is being sold and possibly rebuilt. The tree I used to talk to got cut down. I can’t see the ocean from the new house, yadda yadda.

This might all just be because I’ve been sick. I’ll probably really regret it when I leave. I love my friends and my family and I’ll hate it if this turns out to be my last time here… but…

I dunno. it’s all complex and silly. And I can’t write right now either.

This entry makes it sound like I’m miserable! shit! no really, it’s nice and relaxing. 56k teaches me much patience. I can watch an entire episode of Family Guy while my friends list loads. :) I even met a few new people and didn’t freak out and clam up around the girl I met. yay. :)

Party tomorrow. birthday the next day. isn’t that neat? :)

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birthday

I love Maiki. I love Yuu.

And I love everyone who really tried to give me long distance hugs on my livejournal in my last friends-only entry.

If I wrote about it, you wouldn’t read it. I’m ok now. because I’ve got friends and a reasonable mind. although it’s stupid-painful.

By the way. Today is my brother’s birthday. he’s 15 today.

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Reflections on (the middle-eastern side of) this mote of dust

My brother’s back in Texas from Iraq for a while, and I finally got to talk to him today. We talked about the family, thanksgiving, and I found that we now have something in common… we both see the world in a more global way. Me because I’ve been to another country and seen other realities through school/friends etc… him because he’s seen other realities and other lifestyles through the military. Two very different colored/textured paths, but it results in the same sense of self, and the same sense of humility, and the same sense of where you’d like to be and who you’d like to be and what you are most grateful for. We both agree that most people have this unfortunate tunnel vision, and they can’t imagine that there are other realities, and then… that Other becomes something very threatening and frightening if they are ever faced with it.

I’d argue that this kind of national isolation is related to how people come to support something, or come to hate something without really knowing what it is they are judging. they didn’t come to those positions on their own, or after experiencing a broader global picture. Some people jump in to the “I support X!” or “Say no to X!” camps with out thinking. They do it because their family does, or because that’s the pervading atmosphere at their school, or because of a romantic sense of false glory, or a fear of something they don’t understand. If citizens of the world were able to see beyond their national borders more, or their neighbor’s borders even… and see reality through someone completely alien to them, I think the world would be more whole. And, i genuinely think my brother, with whom I probably disagree on a lot of other things, and with whom I don’t always share the same reality, would agree with this.

he sent me two videos he’d made out of photos and some video footage in Iraq. They are collages of images, mostly of his unit, some photos of signs of destruction or the aftermath of something. Some twisted vehicles, some holes in the ground. lots of bombs and metal things that I really wish were just nerf footballs, (which they do resemble). There are also lots and lots and lots of pictures of Iraqi kids. And lots of pictures of the landscape. Sunsets, sunrises. A boy pouring water on an empty dusty field.

I refrained from crying through most of it. But then, there’s this shot of one of the soldiers reading a letter from home. Cried and cried and cried and cried and cried. Couldn’t stop. couldn’t even keep watching after that.

I can’t completely understand why I cry. There are two voices in my head when I’m watching the videos. One is the voice of the message I’m hearing from my brother: that things are vivid and real out there, and that it is a job they are doing… and especially “don’t be afraid. We’re all ok.” The soldiers still smile when they have their pictures taken. They still pose and make silly faces at the camera. They’re still us. The other voice in my head is the one I can’t really understand. It’s the one that makes me sob. It sees the pictures and just feels pure unchecked fear. Fear and pain. Because that boy right there waving at the camera might not be alive right now while I’m typing this. Or those kids studying in that new school room that I’m guessing someone like my brother helped build might not be alive right now.

That water the boy is pouring on the dusty ground is already dried up and long forgotten.

I love that my brother is able to find meaning in all of this, and I love that he is able to share it through his “video poetry”. It’s powerful and I will treasure it always. And I will never forget that these are real waking lives in these photos. That must be why I cry. Because all of it is real. There are no hollywood special effects, and no explicitly evil arch enemy to defeat. It was never like that, and all those who say there is an “evil” to defeat are… dangerous.

There’s just this organic and confusing and complex world, full of contradictions of reality and opposing viewpoints. It’s mixing up the salt of all our dreams and fears into a kind of patchwork quilt stretching around the globe. And sometimes that quilt only makes us colder. Sometimes that quilt keeps us warm.

And all of this is taking place on a tiny speck of blue/green dust.

We succeeded in taking that picture [from deep space], and, if you look at it, you see a dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever lived, lived out their lives. The aggregate of all our joys and sufferings, thousands of confident religions, ideologies and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilizations, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every hopeful child, every mother and father, every inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every superstar, every supreme leader, every saint and sinner in the history of our species, lived there on a mote of dust, suspended in a sunbeam. — Carl Sagan “Reflections on a Mote of Dust”

The fact that we are at once big and small, powerful and powerless, that we are all the same, and that we’re all 6 billion of us alone and together all at once… it’s a simple and huge system of paradoxes that can’t be undone. They make up the fabric of our everything I think. And each time someone tries to sort it out into categories of “good” “bad” “evil” “useful” “clean” “dirty” “expendible”, it all crumbles into something painful. Our hands have to grow bigger so we can hold more complex and conflicting thoughts and more real people in them.

*sigh*

I love my brother. And I’m glad I could talk to him. Glad that he’s home.

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so scary…

Ok…. I’m beginning to think someone is trying to tell me or my family something… I know this doesn’t have anything to do with me… and it’s not saying “you’re next!” or anything but… still. it’s more than creepy.

My apartment was broken into just a week before it happened… (dirty dirty man) She goes to school with my cousin. She’s (apparently) exactly my height and weight. Without knowing what happened, I went apartment-hunting at that complex right after it happened. And now, just 3 hours ago, this article was released saying they arrested “someone of interest” who had previously been busted for burglery at OSU and at George Fox College… in Newberg.

In Newberg.

I don’t like this world, and how small it has become… small, but still… all the people in it are essentially powerless… it’s sick.

God, I hope she’s found safe.

My heart and all kinds of other fears and hopes go out to her, and her family… I don’t know what else to say. It’s just so overwhelming.

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Party and stuff

So, my day at home was pretty fun. I hung out with my brother, and stole one of his shirts, a necklace and his gameboy SP. (muahahahah!) I’m such an evil sister. I got him addicted to Jay Chou too. *wiggles* Like I said yesterday, next will be Dragon Ash.

My dad’s party was a surprise. a big surprise with about 35 people crammed into one of the party rooms at Izzy’s. This morning, I played suave and dragged my dad with me so I could go buy myself some clothes. Tried to make it seem like nothing was going on except for a “small lunch with Bonnie and us kids.” We came home and I put on some music, and we just talked (I was really waiting for the phone call from Bonnie to say that they were ready). Finally, the call came and I said “Oh! They want to just meet us there for lunch. let’s go.”

As we pulled into the parking lot, dad started to squirm. We stepped outside and he muttered “I’m seeing cars. I’m seeing lots of cars.” We enter the room. Lots of laughing, lots of people, beer, wine, cake, pizza, presents, photos, fun.

Oh, and I got carded by one of the waiters too. Ha ha. that was funny.

Later, Bonnie tells me to go get wine from someone named “Chris”. She was already drinking, so I thought “um… ok. I’ll go get more wine,” thinking that was what she really meant. Turns out that Bonnie had already told this “Chris” guy to look for me when I came in with my dad… said I was cute, single, 21… and she apparently thought he was cute, and decided I should hook up with him.

I guess Chris also came back and talked to Bonnie and convinced her to convince me to go talk to him… or something. (Wow, I feel like I’m in high school!)

So Bonnie empties another wine container and hands it to me again and says to go find Chris. So I did. And he says “I don’t usually do this kind of thing but… ” and promptly asks me out. So yeah. I’m apparently going on a date with one of Izzy’s assistant managers on Monday.

Who knows. Maybe he’ll be cool, even though he lives about an hour away. I’m evil for already judging him as lame just because he’s 21 and apparently not going to school. I’m such a bad person. (He was kinda cute I guess.)

In Other News: I want my cell phone. Really really bad. I hate how Amazon.com still says that its expected delivery date is November 21. LIARS!

I’m hoping it will be delivered Monday. Because I sure as hell won’t be driving all the way back to Newberg just for a date. (Besides… I’ve still got my stoopid crush that just won’t go away! to keep me all fuzzy and happy miserable inside.)

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It’s beginning to look a lot like birthdays. Everywhere you go.

Don’t let me forget:

Next weekend is my dad’s 50th birthday. I think I will be going home for this one. Thanks to my stepmom for calling me this morning. :)

It’s rediculous how often I almost miss my parents’ birthdays. All have always fallen really near to each other. Mom’s and stepmom’s are a few days apart in November. Dad’s is in late November, and ex-stepdad was in December. It’s just “parental birthday season”. It’s amazing that I don’t see November coming and automatically think “oh. go buy presents.” I’ve been missing their birthdays pretty consistently for about 21 years now.

In Other News: I’ve decided Warcraft (RoC) is fun. It’s a totally different style of gaming from anything I’ve ever been addicted to before (this is your cue to say, “where the fuck have you been?!”). At this point, I suck at it, but yeah. Gotta start somewhere. I’m doing all the one-player campaigns so I can learn how to work with all the races, etc etc. (plus it’s kinda engaging. Fucking Arthas. I hated him for his cheesy goody-goody pious “character”. but Ha ha. Frostmourne, or whatever the hell his new sword is called, stole his soul and now he’s all evil and working for the undead. badass. Contrary to popular belief, bad writers can sometimes entertain a Starla.)

Anyway… I’m stuck on Chapter 4 in the Undead campaign. It’s the one where you have to hire those stupid troll balloon pilots to transport your troops across rivers to slaughter the elves. But your gold-mine only has about half the gold a normal gold mine has, so you can’t build your army up, or defend your base much. And the elves are fucking strong. Their “hero” is like, level 4 or 5, and mine is apparently not allowed to level up more than what the story line allows in each chapter. grrr. So I’m still a wussie level 3 and I keep getting my ass owned by the elves because my entire upgraded army gets slaughtered the first time I attack, and/or my hero dies and I run out of gold (and expendable buildings for liquidation) before I can build his temple revive him. Fack.

I’m going to try again before I go do laundry this morning. (sure. yeah right. like I’ll make it to the laundromat if I start playing warcraft now)

Soo not going to let those pansy-ass elves own me. I’m undead. I should win.

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Brought to you by 1am fatigue and Sleep-Aid commercials

Last night, I was watching tv, and this commercial for something fluffy came on… these twin girls ran into a bedroom to wake up “daddy” by whacking him with pillows and climbing all over him. It made me think of children, and the whole phenomenon of human reproduction for some reason. I started thinking about how I do remember a time when my brother did not exist, but how he does not remember a time when I did not exist.

In my half-asleep philosophical haze, (it was at least 1am) I suddenly realized that while I could conceptually understand how a human body is created, I had no idea where the actual person came from. “My Brother” the body came from our parents’ DNA plus the miracle of cell division, but the person that my brother is… where the fuck did he come from? (you know, the personality, the soul, whatever) This realization had me feeling all hot and dizzy for a while.

Honestly, I didn’t realize until this morning after I’d had my coffee that this is probably what is known as “the miracle of life”, and that just about every human being (and maybe even cats) with any sense of intellect has contemplated it. It’s part of why religion was invented. It’s one of the questions religion tends to answer.

It probably sounds really stupid now, and you, my lovely reader, are thinking “duh. she just figured this out last night? *pfft* dummie.” Well, you can just shutup, ok? :) I just think it’s funny how a realization like this will force me to try to define my own feelings or beliefs about it, no matter how late of a bloomer I am.

Some thoughts I had last night: I believe that the person inside the body doesn’t really “grow” and develop in the same sense that the body does. Sure, it learns to talk, cross the street safely, etc etc, but that’s all just mortal “program your neurons” kinds of learning. There’s a part of every person that is unique and was not created by environmental influences or the way he/she was raised. Forgive the synaesthesia, but each person’s “smell” or “color” is inherent. You can see it sometimes in certain kinds of moral-beliefs, interests a person has, favorite colors, favorite animals, personality types (introverted/extroverted etc), sexual orientation… those things I attribute to the person inside the DNA, and those things don’t really “grow” so much as find ways to “come out” and be expressed as the body grows to accommodate the person inside.

I still don’t know where my brother came from. (Neptune maybe?) To complicate things, I’m pretty much 100% sure of where I came from… (Not telling. You’d think I was a freak.) but my beliefs don’t specifically encompass every soul on the planet.

Or, maybe they do now… or at least will once I’m done thinking in a more caffinated kind of way.

Amazing what frying your brain in front of a flickering tv all night long can do for your philosophy-muscles.

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Memories of BABBLE!

I just got this little fun mental (spiritual?) rush. I’ve made it a habit to read for an hour or so in the morning while it’s still relatively quiet, and well, that’s what I was doing this morning when I got this… woooo! in my tummy.

A Bit of Back Story: My mom claims that before I began talking in English, I would talk in what she called “babble-talk”. I’d converse with cats, walls, windows and other people for hours on end, apparently oblivious to the fact that no one understood what I was saying. She didn’t know this was strange (I was her first child) until a few surprising incidents with baby-sitters alerted her to the fact that this was pretty odd. She claims that the day she decided to try to record some of it, I abruptly stopped, and began speaking English. I never uttered another babble-phrase again. My mom used to joke that the “babble-talk” was the language of my “real” parents, who were actually aliens from another solar system, and the day I stopped, it was because they had sent me a message saying “quit talking in Centaurian! You’ll give our plot away!”. (Yeah, my mom’s a funny lady.)

Anyway, in The Power of Babel (which is what I was reading this morning) the author attempts to trace human language from it’s original single source, probably originating in Africa, and probably a syllabolic and sometimes described by linguists to have sounded like “babbling”. Nothing of the language can be recreated now, simply because of the vast amount of time and language drift that has come since people even began to write their languages. But all linguists agree that it existed.

In (the fictional book) Snow Crash, that original language is a kind of code that deep inside the oldest areas of the human brain, people still have the potential to understand. A kind of universal language, like the binary code computers from Japan, US, or Russia can all read. (ok, so that’s the benign, un-scary description of what it is.)

So… what if, what if that babble talk I “communicated in” when I was little was that first language? What if, when a child is still young, before the nearly empty neurons have been written on with verbs, adjectives, pronouns and the grammar of their parents’ tongue, there is a few months when a child might revert to the original inherent language of our first ancestors, before language drift, or the event known in biblical circles as the “Tower of Babel.” Woooooo.

It’s so ridiculously unlikely, and stupidly absurd, and probably absolutely unfounded in any kind of science, but… wouldn’t it be cool? I probably thought of this because of the lack of any time between finishing Snow Crash and starting Power of Babel. That plus my desire to have something mystical in my life again…

So, that was the rush I got this morning while reading. Now I want to google up some stuff about “toddler babble talk” and see what other people think it really is.

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Shade and sweet water…

Late Breaking News:

At this very second, my brother is reading my Elfquest books. I think that fucking rocks. :)

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Here she comes to save the day!!

I love my mom. :)

And I think it’s really funny how she still says goodbye over AIM as if she’s signing a letter. “love, mom”. Tee hee.

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