"Do not neglect medical treatment when it is necessary, but leave it off when health has been restored...Treat disease through diet, by preference, refraining from the use of drugs." - Bahá'u'lláh

Friday, September 23, 2005

Small World Coffee Hour

Today I went to check out the above-named event here on campus. It was pretty cool. Basically it is a place to eat free food and talk to people from all over the world (mostly international students go). There were so many people from so many places. I met some Chinese, a Norwegian, a South Korean, some Minnesotans, a Peruvian, some Iranians, and some Japanese. There were also people from many more places that I didn't get a chance to talk to. Everyone was very nice. I spoke a bit of Farsi with the Persians and I was complemented on my pronunciation.

I now have something to do every other Friday afternoon. Sweet.

Another Friday Night

There's a guy on my floor yelling out into the hallway: "Hey Charlie! Starcraft! UDP! I'll make it, you join!"

I love it.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

What I learned in college today

Today in my honors seminar there was a guest lecturer from Ghana. She taught us about her research about Ghanian children's singing games and how they relate to education. She also told us that Ghanians get their names based on the day of the week they were born and their place in relation to their siblings. Hence, Kofi Annan's name signifies that he was born on a Friday, and that he is the fourth child in his family.

Other random notes:

Wikipedia is the bomb.

The heating plant next door is on fire.

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

From Wonderful to Awful In Almost an Instant

Tonight I experienced possibly the most extreme emotional swing I have ever experienced.

Around dinner time I rode my bike to Everett's place for Pasta Night. That turned out to be a truly awesome event. The food was simple and excellent, and the company was great. Met some really cool people, played some dominoes, listened to many and even participated in a few conversations. It was just what I needed after almost a week of overwhelming loneliness.

Everett came out, showed me a shortcut to get back to campus. I thanked him, said goodbye. After he re-entered the building, I pulled my newly purchased flashing red light out of my pocket and bent over to attach it to my (also new) bike, when I realized that the fucking seat was missing. Man that sucked. I was tired, and expected and wanted a relaxing ride back, and I got this. I was now not only pissed off (injustice is something that perturbs me, most especially when I am the victim of it), but slightly afraid, knowing that I would be riding alone, in the dark, in an unfamiliar city, without a seat in the presence of thieves.

The ride home was unpleasant as could be. I was sad and angry, wanting to cry, and I couldn't sit down to ease the burning in my legs and back. I took some wrong turns and was further devastated. When I finally got back, all the bike racks were nearly full, and it took me some time to find a place to lock up. When I found one, it took me at least five minutes to get the damned lock on.

I arrived in my room, sweating, hurting, weakened, and tired.

I breathed deeply, walked to the bathroom, washed my face, and said some prayers.

Is there any Remover of difficulties save God? Say: Praised be God. He is God. All are His servants, and all abide by His bidding.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

No, it's Dan

I officially have a speech impediment that makes me unable to pronounce my own name. Here is a very typical conversation:

Someone: Hey, what's your name?
Me: Dan.
Someone: Den?
Me: Dan.
Someone: Huh? Den?
Me: No, it's Dan.
Someone: Oh, Dan. Nice to meet you.

A variant of this is that I will briefly meet someone, and hours or days later they will see me and say "Hey Ben", trying to rationalize what they heard as "Den". This has happened multiple times in the past few days.

I think the solution is introducing myself as Daniel, rather than Dan. (Danny will surely evoke "Denny?"). I've tried this a few times and it seems to work. It also has the side effect of making me sound more classy.