Friday, December 31, 2010

New Year's Resolutions

- Learn to control temper. Stop fighting with mother. Just drop it, don’t escalate the conflict.

- Waste less time => get more sleep.

- Socialize! Go into the city, explore! Have fun! Expand social group, do not only hang out with the same people and their accompanying aggravations.

- Stop being so down on yourself. Remember the spotlight effect. Remember the nubile young women.

- On that note, stop overcompensating. Chill. You do not have to be the most shocking or the most self aggrandizing or the most whatever in the room. It is ok to be quiet sometimes.

- It is also ok to put yourself out there. MAKE FRIENDS IN COLLEGE. Do this. It will make you much happier.

- Read.

- Do those projects you’ve been meaning to do.

- Clean your room.

- Stop being late to everything.

- Be healthier. Eat better, exercise more. Go outside more.

- Write.

- Be an activist. Make a difference. Care.

- If you’re not happy make a change.

- Make your own life.

Monday, December 27, 2010

I'M SEXY LET ME INTO YOUR SCHOOL PLSKTHX

College apps are finally over. This is both awesome and terrifying. It would be nice, in a way, to live somewhere like England, where your applications are based so much more on your test scores, and you don’t have to spend so much time worrying over whether the phrasing of one sentence conveys exactly what kind of a person you are, and your sterling extra-curriculars, and your perfect personality to boot. But I’m actually grateful for having the experience of American college apps. I’ve learned a lot about myself. Enough that I’m not sure if the colleges I’m applying to are the ones I’d choose to apply to today. It doesn’t really matter; I’m sure I’ll be happy wherever I end up, but I do wish I could go back and add a few other places to my list (nb: I’m only applying to 6 colleges, so ‘adding a few’ does not mean moving to 24 from 20 or some such ridiculous number).

I wish I could write a college essay about that. I wish I could write a college essay about a lot of things. Or rather, whenever I notice something interesting, or am troubled about something, my brain lights up, saying “oh ho! college essay topic!” when really, I guess, it means “oh ho! blog post idea!” Because that’s the point of this thing. I’m supposed to pour myself into it, like a diary only with less tmi and hearts dotting my ‘i’s. I guess. So hopefully you’ll be seeing more of that from me, now that I’m essentially in second semester. Well, I hope so, at any rate. You may not. I suppose we’ll see.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Remember that time we went to the zoo and spent hours looking for the platypuses?

Yesterday was my and The Boy’s one year anniversary. I was going to write some sappy teen relationship note that would have been simultaneously adorable and nauseating, and probably would have haunted me for years to come. Then other things happened: we had homecoming and an after-party and also I overslept so I was late to everything. End result: no mushy love notes from me. Sorry dude.

Instead, despite the fact that I have neither met your grandmother nor ever been to Denny’s, here’s the song I listened to repeatedly for the week after our first date:

And just because you hate it, here’s the song I listen to every time I bake stuff:

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Terrible Terrible Worse Than Before

So I hate the current layout of my blog. I also have no time to learn html well enough to edit it to make it better. I don't know if I can bear to post anything on a place this ugly, but I might. In the meantime I have work so I probably wouldn't be posting anything anyway. Yeah basically I'm lazy or something.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Late Night Musings Are Never A Good Idea

I am afraid of the future. I am afraid that I will not succeed in life, that I will be trapped in a boring job that I hate, that I won’t accomplish anything interesting or significant or helpful to others with my life. I am afraid that I will disappoint my parents, my siblings, myself. I am afraid that I will squander the opportunities I have been given. I am afraid I will make the wrong decision about which college to attend, which subject to study, which career path to pursue, and ruin everything. My sisters are brilliant. My parents are brilliant. I don’t think I am brilliant. I don’t know if I can live up to them. I don’t know if I can achieve as much as they have, let alone surpass them—which I must do (for myself) in order to feel as good, as worthy, as lovable. I don’t know if they’ll be proud of me. I don’t know if I’ll be proud of me. I am so afraid.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

An Abbreviated List

Things I will miss about Livermore

- the people
- the CAUTION! OPEN DOORS SLOWLY signs on the bathrooms
- having a government email address
- my dosimeter
- my enormous spreadsheets
- the overabundance of tampons and sanitary napkins everywhere you looked in the bathrooms
- the bike system
- my badge
- free ice cream
- lack of homework
- the town
- Pleasanton, which is very pleasant
- my mentor’s office and the candy therein
- LASERS
- my sweet office supplies
- almost literally covering my entire cubicle with post it notes
- the cafeteria’s utensil dispensers
- California drivers and California road markings/signage
- freedom from any responsibility other than work
- having webcomics update at 9:00 pm instead of midnight for me


Things I will not miss about Livermore

- the climate control
- having email blocked at work
- waiting days and weeks in order to get relatively simple computer permissions
- being treated like a 4-year old by the interns only a few years older than me
- people forgetting that I'm on meeting maker and consequently never letting me know when there's a meeting I'm expected to attend
- filling out my enormous spreadsheets
- constantly having my badge checked by suspicious employees
- having to move offices every other week because whoever’s room it really was had returned from vacation
- waiting for the visualization software to load, or dealing with it when it was broken
- sizing pictures pixel by pixel
- not being allowed to take pictures on site
- having to deal with grown-ups all the time
- explaining that I’m still in high school and being told what a great opportunity I’m getting
- talking about my high school and its surprisingly demanding course load
- explaining that I’m leaving early so I can get my driver’s license and having to listen to various
stories about driving
- the isolation and homesickness
- the achingly slow internet connection

Another Country Heard From

So I haven’t written anything on here in a while. I could excuse myself by explaining that work has finally started being interesting as well as very demanding and tiring, and that I’ve also been really homesick and thus disinclined to write. BUT this is my blog so I don’t need to make excuses: you may be interested in my drivel but you probably aren’t anxiously awaiting it, staring at your rss feed salivating at the thought of my incoherent ideas and moaning.

This post therefore is serving as a catch-up, to let you know what you missed and to motivate me to actually get around to writing posts about the following when I get around to it. In the last few weeks, my mother, sister, and I went to Monterey Aquarium, Stanford, and Muir Woods. We played Wii at my mentor’s house and wandered around San Francisco. My sister flew home on her own for field hockey tryouts, and my mother and I visited our cousins. We went shopping and bought spiffy new clothes and bento boxes. We had pedicures. I learned how to drive (sort of). We learned Dutch (Hoe gaat het met u?). I brainstormed plans and schedules for the next school year. In short, we lived and loved California. And now it’s almost time to go home. I’m happy, my mother less so, although I’m sure she’ll feel different when she sees how pretty our new windows are, and I’ll probably miss the cooler weather.

Goodbye Livermore. Je bent adembenemend mooi and dat was geveldig, but I’m looking forward to my flight back.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Grandma is Obaasan, Grandpa is Ojiisan...

(that is what we learn to say...in Japanese!)

I don’t know my grandfather (Ojiisan, Grandpa, Tita, Peter). I never really knew him. Yes, he’s still alive. But my memories of visiting my paternal grandparents’ house when I was little consist mostly of remembering running up and down the stairs with the hole in the wall, playing with my aunt's old dolls, and watching The Swan Princess while the grown-ups played hearts after dinner.

I don’t know what he was like before he got older. I only have one really clear memory of my grandfather before he moved in with us, and it’s short and not very illuminating:

I’m about three, and reading one of those Disney read-along books with my grandmother. My grandfather comes in, says something funny, we both laugh, and my grandmother says something along the lines of ‘Grandpa is a very silly man isn’t he?’ He leaves, and we go back to our book.

That’s the only thing I remember of what I think of as my ‘real’ Grandpa. Not that he isn’t real now. But my day-to-day interactions with him in the here-and-now consist mostly of reminding him of where he is, who I am, and why he’s living in Virginia instead of New Jersey or California. That’s tiring, emotionally and physically. It’s harder on my father of course, but I feel bad that I can’t do anything to make it better, that I can’t remember who he was, that I so often feel frustrated and irritated instead of sympathetic.

I wasn’t interested in my grand-parents when I was younger. Sure, I did a project on my grand-father’s experiences in Poston during WWII, but other than that, I never asked questions about him or his family or their history. Now, it’s almost too late. My grandfather’s 95, and I only found out a week or two ago that he used to work at selling the types of gadgets you normally see advertised in infomercials. Who knows what other stories I’m missing out on? Will I have the patience and the energy to try and learn more when I get home? Or will I be too distracted by the mundane demands of school and clubs to pay attention to my Ojiisan, too tired to struggle through the repeated sentences and lost trains of thought? Is the short term gain of reading a book or watching a tv show worth losing the personal history?

Monday, July 12, 2010

Pop Quiz!

Q: What’s worse than spending two and a half hours copy/pasting information from a website into a spreadsheet?

A: Spending two hours formatting said spreadsheet.

FIFTEEEEEEEEEEN

Yeah, clearly being a grown-up is fun! Seriously though, despite the monotony of my task, I’m enjoying my internship, and I don’t spend the whole time wishing I could go home anymore. Some of that’s simply because I’ve become more comfortable with the adults, because I don’t have to meet so many more new people, and because my mentor’s out of town for a week so I don’t have to deal with her. But mostly it’s because I have my own little office and I get to listen to iTunesU while copying and pasting. Having finished my MIT intro psych class, I started a Yale one. I’ve also got courses on Ancient Greece, France, the Structure of English Words, and the Representation of Time in Memory. Exciting!

I’ve finished my first project (in about 36 hours, rather than the two weeks that they thought it would take), so I’m moving on to the second, which basically involves taking lots and lots of data, graphing it, and fitting a curve to it. I don’t know if it’s because I’m a high school-er in a program for college students, or because I’m working for the government, or what, but they do seem to overestimate the difficulty of what they assign me. Seriously, it does not take anywhere near three hours to graph a data set; I really need more assignments than that to take up my work-day after lunch. Thankfully, I’ve now got plenty to do, pain-staking and boring though it may be.

I also have summer reading! I’d forgotten how much I like to read. Well, I didn’t forget exactly, but I’m actually getting to do it, instead of just remembering that it was nice. Since I can’t read under the desk or during recess anymore in school, and I actually have friends to socialize with at lunch and between classes now, most of my reading time has disappeared. Here though, I get to do it at lunch and occasionally while I’m waiting for IT to set up some computer things for me (i.e. about half of last week). So here’s what’s on my night table right now:

Obasan, by Joy Kogawa

I’m about half-way through, and it’s so sad. It’s the story of the Japanese-Canadians during WWII. Growing up in America, and as a Yonsei, I know quite a lot about the internment of the Japanese-Americans, but I didn’t even realize, I’m ashamed to say, that the Canadians (and other countries!) did the same. So I’m learning a lot. I haven’t cried yet, but it looks like I might soon.

The Inheritance of Loss, by Kiran Desai

Also SO sad. Everyone in it is so unhappy. But it’s really really good too. I love the writing–it switches perspectives subtly, so you don’t notice at first, but then you do and it’s AWESOME. It’s also making me want to look up Indian history, so I guess wikipedia is also on my night table? WHO KNOWS. Either way I just want Biju to get his green card.

The Mabinogion, compiled/edited/translated by Jeffery Gantz

I am basically done with this, I just haven’t quite finished “Peredur,” which is basically the Welsh equivalent of “Percival.” Essentially, mythology is cool, Welsh mythology is sexy, and beautiful Penguin Classics translations of Welsh mythology are so awesome they make me want to pee my pants in joy.

The Fall of the Kings, by Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherman

This is the sequel to Swordspoint, and our library at home doesn’t have it, so I am so so so happy to have gotten it here! Regency England-esque magical fantasy world with scholarly research and political intrigue (and sexual scandal!) is like my favorite type of book EVER. What a win.

Parisians, by Graham Robb

A birthday gift from a pretty cool dude of a friend, I’ve only just started this, but any book that starts with Napoléon losing his virginity has got to be good. Also it’s about PARIS which is you know basically a win.

YAY for books. What’s in your bookshelf?

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Opening a Vein

"There's nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a vein." –Walter Wellesly "Red" Smith
This is something I wrote a long time ago. I'd like some feedback. If I'm the only one interested in my probable garbage, then I'll stop posting it. But if you know, you happen to be fascinated by it then maybe I'll put more up later. Maybe not. I might get self-conscious–I mean it's not like I'm a teenage girl writing bad poetry or anything, but–wait. That's right, I am. Yeah, anyway, feedback plskthx?

(This was written based on the criteria given by a friend of "write a 1500 word piece without using the word 'I.' You have to include eggs and sunshine in it, but you can't make the eggs sunny side up")

There are some who will say that we were wrong. That we set ourselves above the gods, to aspire as we did. But you know better. You know that what happened was just, was right, was indeed the only way. There is nothing else we could have done. True, we could have faced the consequences, and perhaps we would have been better people. But between you and me, we know that such thinking is fallacious. At best, it is a dangerous misapplication of the discipline of Logic. At worst, it is the cause of all our suffering, all the hate and destruction, all the reasons we had to make a choice in the first place. The Choice, as it has come to be termed. The Choice, just as it was The War, and we are The Fellowship. Twenty of us, bound together by our conviction that we could undo the devastation, by our loss of our families, and, of course, our shared blood, commingled upon the sand at the beach where we met.

That day is of course now recorded in all the histories. It is written in the books at the Library of Saldina, and every child will learn of it in the schools of Torniz. But here we will remind you of it, so that you do not forget. For you must not forget. It is not that we are vain, that we enjoy sharing this story, enjoy hearing our names on others’ lips. It is because on that day, when the Wraiths were first encountered, and the movement against the destruction and devastation first took form, our planet first began to be saved. And that salvation was the ultimate goal of the People, for which reason its beginning (and its end) must forever be remembered. If not for the reason that we must never repeat such mistakes, our History must be remembered for the fact that it is History and we are the History-keepers and History-makers.

That day at the beach we were all gathered for different reasons. Some, like myself, were there because we had received a summons in our dreams. We wandered, anxious and curious, looking around, perhaps wading a bit. Others were simply there, looking for relaxation, escape, or simply fresh air. None of us talked to each other. We simply stood, or sat, or walked, and waited. It was a gloomy day, dark and overcast, with barely a ray of sunshine. None of us thought that the weather was an omen. That sort of thing happens in stories and old wives’ tales, but never in real life.

That perhaps is why it happened. Why the Wraiths picked that day. Because they knew we were unsuspecting. We were unarmed. Perhaps Nerna had a bow, as he is wont to. But as for the rest… well we did what we could, and miraculously it was enough. Somehow, whether from Mola’s ear-shattering shrieks or Sifal’s mind-numbing droning, the Wraiths were eventually wounded enough, or tired enough, or bored enough to leave us alone. And there, on the lonely, windswept beach, bespattered with dark drops of our blood, we looked at each other and swore our vow.

If we break faith with you, may the green earth gape and swallow us, may the grey seas roll in and overwhelm us, may the sky of stars fall on us and crush us out of life forever.

It has kept us these long years. And when we lost some of our comrades, after we wept and burnt the funeral sacrifices, we set out to replace them, to find new bodies, new hearts, and new minds willing to take up the burden. Willing to sacrifice all in the name of a cause they might never see accomplished. As the years went on, and we gained a measure of notoriety, these replacements were both easier and harder to find. There were more applicants, more people aware of us, more volunteers. But it became harder to winnow the chaff from the grain, harder to find who really wanted, who was really willing to sacrifice, and who just wanted the fame and imagined glory.

We had our victories in those beginning years. Small at first, and insignificant next to the endless defeats, but slowly as we accumulated support, as others, not within the Fellowship heard of us and began their own small defiances, our triumphs accumulated, and the Wraiths weakened. It was a slight weakening, like a single grain dropping off an enormous boulder, but it was there.

When we discovered the effects of sound on the Wraiths, how despite their lack of ears, they couldn’t bear dissonance, loud noises, or steady monotones; how even the simplest melody put them into a trance, and the most glorious symphony stopped them dead and overwhelmed their hearts, we pressed our advantage. Everywhere, signs and advertisements went up, calling for musicians, for colicky babies, for used pots and pans. And everywhere, the response was enormous. Workers came pouring in. We had started something.

There are enough tales told of how The War ended. How the Wraiths were destroyed (for they had not the minds to surrender, and thus were simply wiped out), and our planet saved. How later we discovered that music had healing properties as well as destructive, and began to rebuild our planet. How we decided to go beyond restorative measures, and create a vision of beauty as a testament to the powers of the People. There are enough records of the arguments, the fights that broke out, whilst all along, quietly, in the background, the Composers began their work.

Now we are older, wiser perhaps. And we live in a world that has fallen into ruin as, tempted by better offers from other worlds, the Composers left us and let the People to their fate. Still, we have had our brief moment of glory. When visitors came to marvel at our gardens and our buildings, we were proud and triumphant. We have learned humility now, wandering among the broken stones of former cities, fighting the tangled weeds that were once magnificent lawns.

The Choice, the decision whether to allow the departure of the Composers, allow the loss of the Music, and so condemn our home was not an easy one. But ultimately, the Fellowship, and later the People, came to decide that there was nothing else we could do. The Wraiths were first allowed into our home because of our carelessness, our callousness, our utter disregard for the well-being of our citizens, of the People. Such a thing could not be allowed once more. We had sworn never again, and we were bound to our home, and we could not choose otherwise. What must be done must be done, and naught could be changed.

This did not mean there were not arguments. Oh, there were dissenters aplenty, but they were silenced when the Oracles were called. After the sacrifices and incense, and observing the patterns made by the white and yolk of an egg, there was only one answer Bildani could give. And when he gave it there was nothing for it. We must submit, like it or no. And the protestors were silenced.

So we gave up our planet. Gave up our History, our cities, our centuries of memories. The Composers departed for other, richer worlds, and our planet and the People went into decline. We are a proud race, those few of us who are left. A dying culture and a dying people but we have our self-respect, we know our worth. It is for that, perhaps, that the Music has not abandoned us completely. True, we no longer hum and produce royal gardens, nor can a symphony build a palace any longer, but there still remain some small vestiges of power within us. The Composers have left, and in their place we have the Singers. The Singers cannot create, they cannot move mountains as we were once accustomed to, but they have their own small power. It is because of the Singers that we have lasted as long as we have. Because of the Singers that the Library at Saldina has not yet crumbled away into the sea, and that the few, remaining children have their schools in Torniz. For the Singers have a staying power. They support this creaking ship of a civilization, act as braces and supports. With their help, we will last a little longer. With their help, we can send out our colony: those individuals selected for their intelligence and fitness, for their breeding strength and compatibility, for their ability to continue the History, to pass it on to future generations. Thanks to the Singers, none of whom can go, the People may yet survive to record the scrolls of another generation.

Was it the right choice? That is not for me to say. Only time will tell. But was it a Good Choice, was it the best choice? Yes, that much is certain.

The Best Laid Plans

Some of my goals for this summer:

- grow up a little and/or become more confident/less self-conscious

- learn how to put on make-up: specifically eye stuff

- rejuvenate my wardrobe

- join Daring Bakers once I have baking equipment again

- actually exercise

- gain enough weight to donate blood

- get my driver’s license

- dye my hair myself

- write at least once a week

- eat a tomato

- challenge myself

- do things on my own/become less dependent on friends/family/boyfriend/sociability

- do ≥ 0.5 of college apps

- read every day

Some questions (further posts to follow if I feel like it)

Who are you? More importantly, why are you? Not in the sense of where you created by a god, or a chaotic universe or whatever, but in the sense of what shaped you and your personality. Why do you like marshmallows and hate tomatoes? Why do you love to run but hate reading Camus? Why are you different from your siblings, and why are you similar to your friends?

Is it nature, is it nurture? Is it your cultural surroundings, your race, your ethnicity, your religion? Does it matter what you look like, does it matter what other people look like? Do you care what they think? Why do you care what you think? What do you think?

What is beauty? Why does it matter? What makes you human? Does it matter? Are zoos ethical? Is eating meat ethical? Is eating ethical? What are ethics and why do they matter? Are they all purely arbitrary, is everything relative, or are there some absolute truths, some absolute wrongs, some absolute imperatives?

Why?

Monday, July 5, 2010

Seven Things I Like (or Love?)

1. Group story-telling that turns out well

What I Did On My Summer Vacation

I’ve been thinking about what I’ve been posting recently. Caer Paravel is starting to turn into a bit of a vacation blog, which was not really my intention. Sure, there are reasons for it, but we do have a (private) family blog that I could just post my vacation stuff on, and leave this one for other, more personal/interesting/fun stuff. On the other hand, it always irritates me on other people’s blogs where they say “I’m going to use this blog as a record of xyz” and then only make one post about xyz. So I don’t want to do that. I suppose I should just ask you, my (non-existent) readership, what you’d prefer. Should I continue my California posts with plenty of pictures, or should I move on to more interesting things?

Saturday, July 3, 2010

My First Corndog

A Summer Vacation Essay, With Pictures.

Since I last wrote, not much has happened at the lab (although my boss did take me to see Del Valle park, which was beautiful). However, my family has been having lots of adventures at home.

They went to the zoo, and saw lots of animals.

They even rode in the SkyRide, which for my mother is quite an achievement.

They rode the BART into San Francisco, and walked along the Embarcadero.

Yesterday, we went to the county fair. It was my first real fair, and although I didn’t go on any of the rides, I still had lots of fun.

There was soft serve ice cream

and a pirate

and a container of corks––luckily I had my handy-dandy TI-83 to calculate exactly how many were in there...

Then we went into the exhibition hall, where people were selling hats, and purses, and Shamwow!s––excuse me, Shamtastic!s.

Oh, also bathtubs and Sillybandz––we bought some pirate ones. Because we’re bad-ass like that.

There was also a competition hall, with the various entries and prizes of contests like baking (including this ‘decorated potato’?),

quilting,

calligraphy,

and... table setting?

It was actually really cool; they had settings for holidays like Cinco de Mayo, as well as various books and bands. I neglected to photograph the Jonas Brothers one, but I did manage to document one of the multiple Twilight ones.

We also went to see the small animals exhibit. Chickens interest me a lot more than bunnies, so that’s what my pictures are of, but rest assured there were plenty of floppy-eared Peter Cottontails.

These chickens are called ‘Silkies,’ and they really do look like they have fur.

I neglected to take pictures of the vendor who, while selling my mother a hat, refused to believe her (Japanese) last name, and upon being presented with me as ‘proof,’ asked me “日本語を話しますか” (Do you speak Japanese?), to which my mother proudly replied “Kanoko-wa Cottia des” (That baby’s name is Cottia––for proof of exactly how ‘Japanese’ I am, just think about the fact that I don’t know the kanji/hiragana/whatever for either of those sentences, and had to resort to Google), but rest assured that the incident occured.

Today, we’re relaxing and recovering from the travails of Friday. We'll be going to see the fireworks later today (CA laws concerning fireworks are much stricter than back home, in a large part due to fire hazards, but we're going to go see the big ones), but that's about it in terms of exertion. Hope you have a good 4th.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Not quite as bad as Amelia Bedelia



Today was my first day of work. Tuesday was orientation: I had lots of safety lectures and filled out forms, but today I actually got badged and started doing things. Unfortunately, the people at Livermore care about keeping national secrets away from terrorists, so I don’t have any pictures of my new boss or my office (my office!) to show you, so instead here’s a picture of me eating at In-N-Out on Monday.


Anyway, the lab is very exciting, but it is also very tiring trying to be an adult all day, so when I come home I have to collapse and act like a silly girl with Little Sis again. Both of my mentors are really nice, though I’m a little (a lot) worried about whether or not I’ll be able to handle what they’re expecting me to do. I’m worried about a lot of my job actually. It’s just hard, because I’m so much younger and less experienced than everyone else. One of the most difficult things for me is just calling adults by their first names. But I will overcome or whatever. And there’s a supply closet! Beautiful beautiful supplies! (no, I’m not pilfering any. I just like looking at them).


Anyway, I’m working with NIF, in the Optical Inspection area. Basically I’m helping analyze flaws in the lenses etc that they use to focus and shape the lasers, and trying to make the computer better at doing the same thing. It’s interesting, if confusing. I have to learn new programming languages, which is...good I guess. I always wanted to be multilingual...


Not much else has happened in the way of life. Most of the exciting incidents here revolve around food––I’ve discovered the deliciousness of Caesar salads (well, my mother says that they’re what used to be called ‘chef’s salads,’ and aren’t ‘true’ Casesar salads), we’ve bought sugar cubes, and I have a new water bottle. not so exciting, but fun all the same.


This was a boring post, but I want to keep a record of what I do this summer, so you’re just going to have to deal. To make up for it, here are some pictures my family took while hiking yesterday.





Sunday, June 27, 2010

California Gurls

(that is, my mother, my sister, and I–though we don't wear Daisy Dukes with bikinis on top)

So here we are in sunny California. We’re staying about an hour outside of San Francisco, and it’s pretty awesome. I neglected to take pictures of the plane, so here’s a generic one for you:

During our five hour flight, I amused myself with knitting

(Three hour sweater, with some kind of wool-alpaca mix that I have lost the ball band to)

and Yale iTunesU lectures––I’m not quite sure what my family did, except that it involved a lot of rolling of dice.

Once we got off the plane (and were spoiled for the results of the Germany-England soccer game), I remembered to take pictures: mostly because waiting at the car rental place took forever.

Although there was a woman with cool hair,

Little Sis and I were bored. So we played Slide and took pictures of ourselves being fabulous.

Our new car is SO CUTE that I want to eat it with a spoon. Or change its diaper. Or just feel really cool and hip driving around in it (despite how long it took us to find the trip meter reset button).

One thing about California is that they’re way more intense about rules and regulations, so we had to be very careful not to break some rules that were ‘photo-enforced.’

The extra precaution-taking was more than made up for, however, by our excitement at being in a place with LETTERS written on HILLS. And for me, seeing the completely different vegetation was a personally awesome experience.

Of course, being in California, the first thing we did was go to an In-N-Out.

I’ve (obviously) never been to one before, but I liked that the menu was very basic.

It made choices easy and also in this case, meant that the food was very good. Well, the burgers were. The fries, not so much (we still ate them all).

Overall, Elevation Burger is still better––their shakes are more drinkable and bigger, as well as having a spoon for when your straw gets clogged, and while their burgers are smaller, their fries are far superior.

After lunch, we were pretty tuckered out, so we headed to the hotel. Livermore is about a 45 minute drive from San Francisco, but with the amazing scenery, it felt more like ten minutes.

Although there was some confusion.... We thought this was the San Mateo Bridge.

No. It was this.

Unfortunately, my camera skills aren’t great, so I couldn’t capture exactly how pretty everything was, but I did my best.

There was some interesting algae growth––the result of eutrophication? in the part of the bay we were driving over, as well as some white stuff that we assumed was salt.

Eventually we reached our long term residency hotel. It matches our car in its adorableness, and we couldn’t wait to get settled in. Our new home is small, but cozy, and I think there’s enough space that we won’t all be biting each other’s heads off. At least let’s hope so.

It may be only 5:00 here, but for me it feels like the end of the day, despite the heat of over 100˚F weather. At least there aren’t many mosquitoes. So here we are, in California, eating samosas and excited for the summer. How are you? Where are you? I bet it's not as cool as here.