If I were a swan,I'd be gone.
ikilledlennon
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Visit ikilledlennon's Xanga Site!

Name: Molly
State: Massachusetts


Interests: Hurling sarcastic remarks, indie/foreign films, urban enthusiasms, idiosyncracies, wine, & the gaping hole in Donald Trump's soul.
Expertise: I like to philosophize and expand my mind as well as destroy it through substances (dichotomies play a large role in my life).


Message: message me
AIM: Starstealer07


Member Since: 8/18/2003

SubscriptionsSites I Read

Blogrings
The Theory of Preference-Utilitarianism
previous - random - next

The Art-Flick Crowd
previous - random - next

George Harrison
previous - random - next

Wine Lovers
previous - random - next


Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site

Monday, June 12, 2006

How do I spend my summer days?  Well, I'm lucky to have only night classes to teach, so I don't have mornings unless I have to, wake up around noon, then bum around until it's time to go in.  And why do I wake up so late?  Little does anyone know that I stay up until the wee hours of morning listening to Compay Segundo's Cuban melodies and study my own reflection in the mirror while I dance to them.  None of this is due to vanity or boredom but an intense desire to enjoy the music to its fullest potential, and you honestly can't enjoy this music sitting still.  It requires a sort of secret reveling.  I only wish there was someone I could share this silly urge with, who wouldn't mind pretending with me that there was nothing more appropriate to do at 2 a.m. than this.  I'm so addicted . . .

I know I need to make some minor adjustments to my schedule.  I know I can't just waste my daylight hours the way so blatantly.  I will.  I'll go out and look for more Latin jazz CDs tomorrow.  And don't tell me that you think it's sad that I'm not taking advantage of my time in Beijing by "exploring."  I have been doing that for the last four months or so.  If anything, I've been living more like a local--feeling perfectly content with just staying in when I can.


Tuesday, May 30, 2006

THIS JUST IN...

I've decided to start writing in this Xanga again, and no, I never abandoned it for another secret journal, which was the case for several occasions in the past, even though I never told you about it. 

I'm embarassed to admit that my ability to write for an online audience has sort of evaded me after such a long absence and a gradual deterioration of the English language, but I'm afraid that if I don't start up again almost immediately, this Xanga will officially become yet another ground for virtual decay.  So . . . I'm back, I suppose, well . . . until this sudden motivation secedes from my consciousness, which hopefully won't happen within the next two months I'll be here. 

Yes, I'm staying for the summer.  Last Friday was the last day of the semester, but I've decided to remain in Beijing until August.  I'll be working at Modern English, an English oral language training company.  If your mom watches Chinese satellite like my mom does during the day, you may have caught a segment of their TV program.  I've been told that learning to speak English is not only still the number one fad in China, but knowing English is now probably the most valuable skill, maybe even an essential life skill.  For instance, this company's most popular advertisement presents you with this provocative message:

"Good English = Good Career! 
Good Career = Good Life!
Good English = Good Life!"

And it's perfectly grounded in logic . . . hah.

As much as I want to recount the last five months, I have so much to write, and I'm really at loss . . . I don't know how or where to start.  So much time has passed since the moment I arrived in Beijing that I hardly remember the bus ride back from the airport, except that I sat at the front of it, staring out the window at the dark, foggy Beijing night and trying hard to ignore my reflection, which looked surreal.  I continually transitioned from staring out the window to glancing around the bus at so many strange faces, listening to strange voices from strange mouths.  I felt so fucking overwhelmed.  Eventually, we pulled up into a narrow street, which I at first mistook for a hutong, and then I remember nearly dying from the weight of the two suitcases I struggled to carry to my new room.  Upon entering, I threw them on the floor (I never throw things, especially personal belongings).  Then, I collapsed in a bitter and sticky coma after I failed to take a shower because in China, sometimes, you just don't get hot water. 

What afterwards?  Well, without delay or hesitation, the semester began, and classes consumed my life.  God, so, I thought I could take it easy during my semester abroad, and some people can (isn't that what studying abroad is designed for?  Isn't that the incentive for students to go?), but not the Clark China program, no no no no no no.  For the first part of the semester, classes ran from Monday to Thursday, everyday from about 8:25 to 11:30, then from 12:30 to 1:30, with an hour lunch break inbetween.  AND THE WORK LOAD!  Quizzes--dictations--everyday.  A new lesson everyday whereas back at Clark, it was a lesson every week.  For a month, I suffered from sleep deprivation, the usual stress, and not to mention, the Beijing winter air that seriously sucks all the moisture out of your skin like the way absinthe sucks all the water out of your mouth.  I've never known and could never even imagine a cold like that.  During the second part of the semester, we had one hour less of class, but I'm confident to say that even if my schedule had remained unchanged, I wouldn't have found it so difficult to live by the same routine.  Either I had adapted and grown stronger or . . . I had simply become numb to the blows. 

But enough about academics.  As for the people, the city, and the culture, I've experienced nasty, wonderful, and everything inbetween.  For that, I consider myself extremely lucky.  I know I'll walk away with a three-dimensional perception of my time here, when there are some who chose to see only the cultural differences that annoyed them and then blaming those differences on the backwardness of China, or refused to alter their American college lifestyles and then blaming Beijing for not being able to fully accommodate their American habits.  It takes no effort singling them out, as they are the ones constantly pining for the day of departure and have color finally return to their cheeks on the last day.  I felt a little sorry for them. 

By now, I've formed several substantial friendships, had some rather close encounters with natives, and, at one point, became a victim of shitty public service.  I also had the opportunity to visit the Beijing countryside twice, and I'm talking about the very rural peasant villages buried deep in the mountains.  There, the peasants have never seen a foreigner before.  While we visited, I felt conflictingly curious and excited to see the lives of real Chinese peasants in motion but also torn and powerless at the brutal circumstances they must confront on a daily basis, but . . . since many of them have never known greater luxuries or even ventured outside their tiny village, they pass time together in isolation, the way they're used to.  Of course, luxury is relative in modern society, everyone knows that.  A luxury that one very rarely has the chance to enjoy may be to another something that's often enjoyed, where it'd no longer make sense to call it enjoyment, but it'd still be a smaller, simpler luxury.  But we can all objectively agree on a stable list consisting of material life essentials that's basic to any modernized society.  Yes, we take these things for granted, such as the fundamental flushing toilet and running water.  While they are available to us everyday that we expect to have them (because we need them) everywhere we go, at moments not even registering their existence, they are luxuries to some, not all, of the peasants.  Whenever someone truly understands the relativity of luxury, I think that's when they'll either start to truly to appreciate living or tumble into despair from the injustice.

Sigh.  There's so much more to be said, but my insomnia miraculously vanished with the sunrise.


Friday, October 28, 2005

MY LIFE HAS BEEN SO ENGAGING I DON'T HAVE THE TIME TO WRITE ABOUT IT.  THE END. 


Thursday, October 06, 2005

I'm starting to love my housemates (for those of you who don't already know, I live in a themed house--Vegetarian/Vegan Cooking) and only got to know these people this year.  What a wild bunch of smelly hippie boys.  The other day they went dumpster diving at Panera, lugging back a colossal bag of assorted breads. 

Nobody kisses like the way he does, and he says the same about me.  Flattered.  I tried Long Island Iced Tea for the first time today, which he mixed.  It tasted shitty, but it was most likely due to his shitty mixing job. 

I'm going to New York City this weekend for mid-term break, well, at least I'm hoping everything will work out.  I don't make plans anymore.  I've forgotten how to make plans even. 

I'm doing mediocre in my classes.  Lacking motivation in general.  I'm allowing myself plenty of room for fucking up and zero productivity until mid-term break, then kick me if I don't pull my act together. 

Half-assed entry.  Sorry.  Meanwhile, this book and vegan chocolate chip cookies await me. 


Monday, September 19, 2005

I try to understand him through the songs that he listens to over and over, the psychoanalyses of him by his friends, the subjects he chooses in his photography (landscapes, even other girls), the tone of his voice he takes on only when he talks about wine or Prague, and most of all, everything that has transpired between us over the duration of a year, which isn't much at all, off and on, hot and cold, but after all this time, I'm starting to wonder if this is it . . . and why is it that, even while I saw other people, he has remained, fixed and unforgettable, in the background.

To quote Miss Vivian, "Stuff doesn't go away."

Perhaps I've subconsciously hung onto him, while consciously attempting to forget him, and now . . .



Next 5 >>