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In My Backpack

  • Hemmingway, Chiam Potok and most Russian authors:
    These are my "go-to" books.
  • Azar Nafisi: Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books

    Azar Nafisi: Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books
    This is the one I last finished.... If you're interested in the Middle East/Islamic cultures, women's rights and/or the power of literature, you'd probably be a fan. I'm into all three of those, so, yeah, I liked it.

  • Jasper Fforde: The Eyre Affair: A Thursday Next Novel

    Jasper Fforde: The Eyre Affair: A Thursday Next Novel
    My sister is a big fan, so I've decided to check it out. A little more fantastical than my usual fare, but...pretty interesting. I am supplementing it with another book about a childhood spent in Africa so as not to feel too shallow. Not that fun books are "shallow." I just gravitate toward realistic (and, for some reason, usually dark) stuff. So this is different for me. But different might be ok. We'll see....

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February 25, 2008

From Ice to Pyramids?

Un_africa Ok, my friend JD sent me this link ( http://failblog.wordpress.com), and I just felt this picture needed to be shared.  Classic.

In other news, the weekend was good.  With these two back-to-back trips going on, I felt that I was neglecting my new adopted state a little.  Sure, SE Asia is exotic, & Egypt, Jordan & Israel have that whole "historic" thing going on...and, yes, there's lots more I can say about Thailand and Malaysia and pictures to describe...and, of course, I'm pretty hopped up about my upcoming first trip to the Middle-East-type area, but...that doesn't mean there's not life to be lived right in my backyard, right?  Right.  At least for one more weekend before peacing out again.  : )  We_have_great_shoes

And, really, what better way to embrace the culture around me than to take in a professional sporting event?  Root, root, root for the home team and all that.  And though I'm by no means a hockey fan (my limited exposure to hockey includes one minor-league game in Portland [go Winterhawks?], one college game (not mine) & another minor-league game in Florida [the fierce, fierce Everblades] - and to all of these, I should mention, I was given free tickets)...still, when my friends expressed interest in a Ducks game, I was all over it.  I mean, come on - they're the Mighty Ducks!  They're named after a movie!  What's more SoCal than that?

Debris_from_goalie_fight Funny thing is: I guess they're pretty good.  Stanley Cup winners even.  And although there seemed to be an awful lot of Chicago fans in the crowd, the Blackhawks just were no match.  Six-three, Ducks' victory.  One Anaheim player had a hat trick (to which people responded by throwing hats on to the ice), and there were two decent fights (one of which was started by the Chicago goalie).  All in all, 'twas a good game.  Of course, I still prefer watching baseball & football (and even futball), but...I guess a sport involving ice in SoCal just makes more sense.  : )   Jon_bri_me_hockey_time

And here's the crew I went with: JD & B.  They're a couple of my co-workers who are pretty cool.  B won the Predict-the-Final-Score game, and JD is the Fastest-Milkshake-Drinker champ.  I, per usual, excelled at nothing.  Except maybe fun-having.  I'll give myself that.  : )

If I don't write again before my next trip, maybe my next post will have a few pyramid shots for ya.  Coolio.

Jon_the_milkshakedrinking_champ            

February 23, 2008

Picture this: Thailand & Malaysia

So, I just got my photo album up of the SE Asia trip.  I'm still jetlagging a little, but I figured I should get these up before I go on the next trip (in a week).  Some of my favorites from Thailand...riding elephants, orchid farm, and street crepes: 

Img_2135   Img_2145

Img_2170

Maybe I'll highlight more later, but now...must sleep.  (P.S., though: those street crepes might just have to make it into one of my top ten foods.  Chocolate & Vanilla filling is particularly excellent.)

February 19, 2008

Feels like...home

Img_2292 Again, this post is long overdue.  Sorry.  But, lest any of you feared that I had been stuck in a brothel in Malaysia this whole time (which we never did have to resort to, thankfully), I thought I should drop a line mentioning that I am now back in the comforts of my own apartment.  Home sweet studio-above-the-coffee-shop home, as they say.

My first night back from the month-long trip, I awoke in the middle of the night without any clue as to my whereabouts, how I got there or what day or time it was.  At first I thought that perhaps I had gone unconscious (I had fallen asleep reading & was jetlagging pretty hard) and that I had woken up in some strange new hostel.  I sat up and had to look around for several minutes before I was able to piece it together (my friend, K, says it reminds her of Jason Bourne - when you look around and your first instinct is to wonder where your pack and passport are, I guess you do kind of question your identity a little)...but after a bit, I was able to return to sleep...and not wake up until 2:30 in the afternoon.  Considering that I went to bed at 10pm, I'd say that's bordering on comatose.  And, again, I woke up confused.  My watch was still on Malaysia time, but the other two clocks said 2:30.  And my first thought was, But if it's 2:30 in the morning, how could the sun be shining so brightly?  Such was the functionality of my logic.  Notice I didn't think: wow, I slept a long time - it's 2:30PM.  No, no - instead I try to fathom how amazing the sun is that it can be so strong at 2:30AM.  Such is the joy of jetlag.  : )

But, despite the jetlag, I am home and trying to get back in the swing of things.  I returned to work yesterday, and I have to admit that that's a bit of an adjustment.  With all the goings-on and personal interaction that takes place at a conference, it's quite a change of pace to try to sit in a relatively quiet office at a computer for eight hours again.  Not that I mind it, though, really.  I have a lot to catch up on, so I certainly won't be bored during the next two weeks.  Why two weeks, you ask?  Well, that's all the longer I have until my next trip.  This one's not a working one, though.  Unless you count sight-seeing as work (which one could probably make an argument for).  This is the one with my parents and grandmother.  As my mom recently described it: it's the trip in which I get to see my almost-94-year old grandma see the Egyptian pyramids.  Pretty amazing, huh?  So, yeah, that's what's up in a couple of weeks.

But before I start gearing up for that, I have photos & snippets to share of SE Asia.  Time to get crackin'!  Unfortunately, with the whole aforementioned jetlag thing, I'm in no shape to do it tonight.  I will, however, try to pick away at it over the next couple of weeks.  I know, I know - but it's the best I've got. 

I will leave you with two pictures, though.  The one at the beginning of this post is actually the last picture of the trip - at an Irish restaurant in Bangkok, the night before my flight back to the States and N & K's back to China.  'Cause sometimes you've got to start at the end to get to the beginning?Img_2118_2   Hmm...  And this other one I'll leave you with is actually more reflective of how three of the four weeks were spent: working in a hotel office.  Of course, that hotel was in northern Thailand, so, you know, it was still pretty cool.  And I got to work with some really great people, so all in all, 'twas another great time to be where I was.

Ok, that's it for now.  More to come....   

February 10, 2008

Feels like here: Penang & Langkawi, Malaysia

So, I've clearly not been the best about posting during the last several weeks...sorry 'bout that.  But I can kind of sum up the last three weeks thus: working.  The conference went well, but it was definitely work.  Of course, if you have to be working in an office, you might as well be doing it in northern Thailand around friends, ay?  : )  So, yeah, I can't complain.

But on Thursday, work was over, and N & K & I were making our way here, to Malaysia.  We flew from Chiang Mai (northern Thailand) to Bangkok and stayed overnight in a place near the airport.  The next morning (Thursday?), we flew from Bangkok to Penang (and island), Malaysia, which is where we are currently.  Tomorrow we head up to another island - Langkawi.

And, per usual, there's lots to write about, but...once again, time at the internet cafe is out.  So, let me just say this for now: Malaysia is great.  Great people, great food.  Also, a very, very popular place during the Chinese new year.  So popular, in fact, that we were nearly had to stay in a brothel our first night here.  Luckily, though, we found another place.  So...all is well.  Never a dull moment, though.  : )

More later....

  • All that is gold does not glitter; not all those that wander are lost.

Backstory

  • *WHERE*
    Pasadena, California
  • *WHO*
    Well, I'm Andrea, and this is my blog. Other people's names will pop up now and then, too, but I'll try to explain those as I go.
  • *WHAT*
    I'm still working for the same organization with which I went to China...except now I'm in southern California, assisting OTHER teachers in China (and elsewhere in Asia).
  • *WHEN*
    After graduating college in the summer of 2001, I moved to China and taught English for a year. Then I returned to the States - first to the Northwest, then to Florida - until returning to China (Tibet) in the spring of 2005. After teaching there for three months, I returned to Florida (where I lived a total of almost two years)...then to the Northwest...then back to China in February 2006. I stayed there until July 2007. Then, after a couple of months with my family in the Northwest, I moved to California (September 2007)...which brings us to now. Simple, yeah?
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