Solitary and suburban

November 7, 2007

It is national blog posting month. I should be more diligent. But I have had many embarassing urges lately to discuss the various stages of my (our) existential crises here. I suppose it is okay in my E.Y.N.I. (Embrace Your Net Identity) quest. I had a weird weekend, in which I got really emo for Brooklyn for the first time since I’ve been away. Good things: fooding with Lisa + Karl, deep cleanse deep hill bike ride after awful climate change rally, Parts & Labor in SF, deep early morning soundtracked drives. OH and the “I BELIEVE IN YOU YOUR MAGIC IS REAL” sign we saw on the street Saturday morning after a lot of magical doubt.

SOME PICTURES WILL GO HERE AFTER I FIND CAMERA BATTERY CHARGER AND/OR FLASH DRIVE.

Did you guys see the Sarko drunky video? It’s not worthy of an embed, but http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa2X-mxhs4k&NR=1.


Earthquake, CA

October 31, 2007

We just had an earthquake. I didn’t feel it because I was on BART in the East Bay. I did get stuck on the train for 20 extra minutes.

I hope no one got hurt, but I really wish I wasn’t on BART for the earthquake, because it’s been a while since I’ve felt what an earthquake feels like. Do YOU know what an earthquake feels like? Maybe I will go to Cal Academy of Sciences tomorrow to experience the earthquake simulator.


The color of climate change

October 8, 2007

My computer was fried for a couple of weeks and it felt grossly anachronistic to attempt to connect with the blogosphere from my mother’s dinosaur computer.

I return now, after many funny phone conversations with the caretakers over at Apple. (Me: “The cord is black, like there was a trip, maybe it’s been burned” Apple: “It’s burning? Do you see smoke?” Me: “No, but it appears as if there could have been smoke at some point” Apple: “Well, this is a safety issue. Please do not attempt to use your computer before we send you a replacement” Me: “I don’t think I can use it, seeing as how I haven’t been able to turn on my computer for the last two weeks” Apple: “Oh, right, just making sure”)

Northern Lights, ripped from Cape Farewell

While I was sleeping, my dear friend Ben Jervey has been in the arctic experiencing things never experienced by (hu)man. And! seeing the Northern Lights and REAL LIVE POLAR BEARS. He is up there with the Cape Farewell project, a rad climate change art project that takes artists on sailing voyages to the front lines of climate change aka the starry arctic, where ice is melting, polar bears are dying, and lands are being discovered. I got to meet David Buckland, artist and CF founder a few months back at an NYU Washinghton Mews luncheon. He gave a presentation on climate change that was far more digestable and compelling than any others on the subject I’ve seen (James Hansen and Al Gore among them). I think he wins in his emphasis on speaking about the “human scale” — there is something way more intimate in engaging someone about climate change through melting ice sculptures and ephemeral digital projections than hifalutin numbers and diagrams (don’t get me wrong, I am not discounting these important figures). Lots of people are talking about climate change and art.

Here is Ben talking about Cape Farewell. He looks handsome! Video by other ex-roomie/NY homie Blake.
EDIT: I WAS UNAWARE OF WORDPRESS/VIMEO weirdness — please follow links below.

Ben Farewell from Blake Whitman on Vimeo.
Read/see more here and here.

I was searching the Step It Up 2007 website to see what actions are being organized in and around the Bay for Step It Up pt. 2 rallies on November 3. I found one in SF hosted by the 1Sky Campaign that is asking all participants to come wearing blue! For Step It Up pt. 1, we organized a rally in NY and asked everyone to wear blue to appropriate “water” (potential future sea levels). Is blue the official color of climate change?

blue

A blue song:
Etta James – I’d Rather Be Blind
I found it in the dollar 7″ bin yesterday.


When you are bleeding inside, burn your hair.

September 10, 2007

I asked my mom this morning, somewhat rhetorically, if she liked my new haircut. Not having seen me in over 6 months means she’s not the best gauge of how my hair looks now relative to my ‘do a few weeks ago, but predictably she said, “you should cut off a little more, go a little shorter.”

She went on to tell me about one of her longtime patients, Genevieve, who is “just like my daughter, strong and independent” (mom’s words, not mine) and has long hair. “She always refuses to cut her hair, even when it gets unhealthy — so stubborn, just like you! I started treating her for healthier hair, easier to grow and maintain.” My mom is an acupuncturist — treating means needles, herbs and occasional suction cups and meditative bird noises. Sometimes Genevieve would relent and trim off a few inches of her hair and give it to my mom as a gift. “I burn it until it turns into a charcoal-like substance and I add it into herb formulas.”

Catherine cutting my hair in Medanos, Argentina //photo by Carolina Pellejero

I asked my mom, “Are you sure that’s healthy? I mean, when you burn hair, it’s sort of like burning rubber. You form sulfur compounds in the air…kind of gross, right?”

“What are you talking about! It’s really good for you, good for stopping internal bleeding problems, especially if you use your own hair.” When my sister was sick (a cyst on her pituitary gland) a couple of years ago, my mom took some of her hair, burned it, and added it to a concoction, “devised uniquely for xiao mei [little sister]“.

“I also took the placenta from when I gave birth to her — I’d saved it for all these years just in case we would need it — and added it to the formula.” I remember when we were kids, my mom would come home from her clinic once every few months with a slimy and disproportionately-shaped plastic bag. She would take it and make a run for the laundry room where there was a giant tub sink. We would follow her and watch her as she emptied the contents of the plastic bag into the sink and massage an astronomical and gory something-or-other under the running water as if she was trying to revive a bleeding heart. “What are you doing, Ma?” we would scream, to which my mom, the dragonlady, would answer, “I’m just cleaning someone’s placenta.” We’d watch in awed silence for a couple of minutes, get bored and then let my mom get on with her cleansing ritual.

human placenta

My mom told me this morning that it saddened her a great deal when my sister refused to drink the personalized herbs, hair and placenta and all. “She said it was too gross, such a loss.”

A Chinese artist, Wenda Gu, recently created a rad installation for Dartmouth College, on view through the end of October, made completely out of more than 430 pounds of human hair — the latest in his 15-plus years work with hair as a medium.

Wenda Gu's united nations: united colors installation //photo ripped from NY Times

Wenda Gu has also previously created works with placenta, apparenty met with some controversy.

Wenda Gu placenta installation

Artwork of hair raising curiosity (Deseret Morning News)
A United Nations of Hair: Straight, Curly, Flaxen, Waxen and 80 Feet Long (New York Times)

More on life at home, especially Mom’s funny isms // wisdoms in coming days.