kimchi43
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Name: Hello
Country: United States
State: Hawaii
Metro: Honolulu
Gender: Male


Interests: hanging clothes
Expertise: washing dishes
Occupation: Other
Industry: Other


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AIM: kimchi43


Member Since: 6/2/2002

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Sunday, May 04, 2008

Currently Watching
Persepolis [Blu-ray]
By Danielle Darrieux, Catherine Deneuve, Iggy Pop, Gena Rowlands, Sean Penn
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Rice is our barometer of worry

I thought this article in the Honolulu Advertiser on Friday was hilarious:

Rice is our barometer of worry

Tell people in Hawai'i there's a water shortage and they shrug and keep hosing down the driveway.
Tell them there could be a rice shortage and they run screaming for the nearest grocery store and clean out the shelves.

Hawai'i loves rice. We don't just love it in the way we love chicken katsu or li hing mui or guava chiffon cake. We love rice like family.

It's more than food staple, more than habit. It is more than a carb addiction. Rice is an emotional touchstone.

It is our measure of an orderly world. It is our answer to every emergency, our tie to security and normalcy. If there's rice at dinner, we can believe everything is going to be all right. If we're having stew with bread or chili with crackers, there is no pretending we're not in dire circumstances.

Hurricane coming? Buy rice. Big rains predicted? Pick up another 25-pound bag. They're talking dock strike? Let's head to Costco. Somebody lost their house? Poor things, give them couple bags rice to help out. Aloha Airlines not flying? Take some Calrose on the Superferry for the cousins in Maui.

There doesn't need to be an actual rice shortage to cause a run on rice. Just the potential of a limited supply will cause a panic. People see that there's suddenly more shelves than rice in the rice aisle and pretty soon they're pushing aside the 24-pack of toilet paper in the cart to make room for a couple of large bags of Diamond G. If you're in the checkout line buying batteries and bottled water, the clerk might prod you with the "Why, what? You not buying rice? You get enough already? Lucky, eh?"

Put the groceries back in the cart and head back to the rice aisle. Shucks, she's got a point.

The older generations have emotional scars from rice shortages in their youth, be it wartime rationing, the 1949 Hawai'i dock strike or the 1971 West Coast dock strike that had every family hoarding closets full of toilet paper (and those were the days before bathroom tissue came in 24-roll packs). It doesn't take much for them to get nervous about being without again.

But there is more than enough to make folks nervous these days, from worldwide food shortages to interisland shipping troubles. The local economy is ebbing. There have been mass layoffs. The travel industry in turmoil. The real estate market is no longer red hot.

Where all of that comes home to roost is on the rice aisle of your grocery store where the few little 5-pound bags seem to say, "Uh oh."

Reach Lee Cataluna at lcataluna@honoluluadvertiser.com

---

C and I got to get out of town today to Ko Olina, enjoying the afternoon at the nicest manmade lagoon i've ever been to.  shade and a wonderful breeze = perfect conditions for a lazy sunday afternoon nap.



---

Persepolis: excellent foreign film.  the animation was very refreshing!


Tuesday, April 29, 2008

i love my mac and macs in general.  but this is...




Thursday, April 24, 2008

Currently Reading
Wooden
By John Wooden
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a more personal piece with a broad question for everyone:

it's said that people should be passionate about the career choice they make.  i've been a proponent of that philosophy for years, and why shouldn't you be if you'll be doing it for years to come?  now that I'm a state worker, I can't say that I'm passionate about being a harbor agent.  i LOVE the work i do.  some days more than others (i.e., i was in the humid sunshine for over 3 hours today and it just sapped the energy out of me).  i love it, but am i passionate about it?  not sure.  realistically speaking, i'll probably have to get a real desk job in a real office eventually. 

is it possible to just be passionate about life?  to passionately love life and all that's involved in life?  people can be passionate about their careers and have a super sucky social and private life.  i want my life to be passionate.  i want to love work.  i want to love family.  i want to love friends.  i want to love others.  i want to love activities.  i want to love whatever. 

the only issue with the above that i see is that i don't have a definite goal career wise.  now that I'm a State employee, I have no intentions whatsoever of leaving it.  i can jump around, trying to find the best job for me within the same department or not.  thus, i don't have any goal to attain "X" title in "X" division in "X" department for the State of Hawaii.  But whatever it is, I want to enjoy it and do the best at it.

thus, instead of being passionate about a career, be passionate about life.  what do you guys think? 

p.s. this book is great.  i love john wooden. 


Thursday, April 17, 2008

thanks for the support, folks.  i wasn't completely bummed (i called and found out why i was rejected, and their reasoning makes sense).  that's life.  but i plan on taking a class or two this fall, which should help my application next year, and if i get accepted and the courses i take in the fall work towards my elective courses, they will be credited.  which'll help make a two-year, part-time program go even faster.  w00t.

so, i haven't seen the kid i mentor for the past two wednesdays.  to refresh your mind, it's this kid:



why?  well, i was told last week that he had a bloody nose and didn't come to school.  i found out yesterday why he had a bloody nose: he stuck a rock up his nose and it got stuck.  hahahaha.  poor kid.

aloha friends.


Monday, April 14, 2008

well, rejected from grad school.  better luck tomorrow, or rather, next year.

they said i don't have enough job experience.  which is bunk since my friend is graduating from the same program and he went into the program right after undergrad.  eh, c'est la vie.  better luck tomorrow, or rather, next year.

maybe i'll try to get a p/t job at the apple store or something to save up some bucks.



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