Al Fin del Mundo

Entries tagged as ‘Music’

My Separate Life

Saturday September 13, 2008 · 4 Comments

It is 6pm Saturday afternoon, San Francisco standard time, seventy-five degrees, sun just beginning to set behind the hills, city trading day life for night.

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My brother begins college in Atlanta next week, and my sister will study abroad in Spain this spring. My father’s parents will drive cross-country again this summer for another set of graduations, even though my grandfather broke his collarbone driving on Minnesota ice last winter. My mother’s father has been gone almost ten years, and I don’t think we spoke on the phone even once, the year he died.

We live very separate lives.

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My father once told me that while he envies me the San Francisco sun, he doesn’t think he and my mother will ever move out west. Once you put roots down, he said, it’s hard to move. Your community becomes more important than anything else. It takes care of you, it gives you context, it makes you happier than anything else.

This seems obvious, but at 25, I still can’t see myself staying in one place for long. I get itchy feet. I get tired of speaking only English. Once I know a place, I start wanting to meet another. For me, the novel has always trumped the known.

But the more people I meet, and the more places I know, the more unhealthy this nomadic lifestyle seems, as a cultural theme – even if it is a central tenet of US culture. We go away to college, and meet and make new friends – then start a job and do it all again. We change cities and friends when we change jobs, when we change careers, when it suits us, when we have to. We keep up with perhaps one in ten or fifty of the people we know well from each phase of our lives.

It seems we only find community through our children; family life forces us to ’settle down,’ to participate in the PTA, become soccer and scouting parents, grow away from distant friends with time. Children pull us together as a community in the US (“it takes a village”) and childhood is the time when individuals are most plugged into a community – until we have our own children, and unless our parents continued moving when we were young.

No surprise, then, that childhood and youth are idealized in the US; like it or not, that kind of closeness matters to us, as human beings. More than money, more than achievement, more than anything else – we need intimate, subtle, long-lasting relationships in our lives, and not (only) romantic relationships; we need the give-and-take of long-term friendships, the annoyances that come with keeping up with the Joneses (or being the Joneses), the comfort of knowing our place in a community, advice and sympathy from people who’ve seen our lives evolve. We’re tribal by nature (just think about the way your office is organized…), and we need desperately to belong to some group, somewhere.

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So we need community, but in order to have it, we must give up advancement – or experiences – that we might otherwise obtain. So we promise ourselves we’ll get back to community, or we create it as we go along.

I think TV fills in, for some; if you watch Colbert often enough, he’ll start to seem real, a friend. The internet lets you can connect across time zones, country boundaries, whatever. But it’s still not enough. Working from home doesn’t replace a physical office, phone sex does no justice to the real thing, and virtual relationships are just that.

Although they can help.

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San Francisco is a city of nomads, digital and otherwise. Most of the people I know now will be gone in a few years, if I don’t leave first, myself. Nearly everyone I know acts within fluid groups of friends. We shift in and out of each others’ lives with barely a ripple. We stand in for the friends we’ve had in highschool and in college, we stand in for family, we create context, even if that context has no depth, no background.

We seek meaning in activities, in our careers, in our romantic relationships.

And perhaps there’s nothing wrong with that. All I know is that I’m coming to believe roots matter, even if we don’t like it much – coming to believe healthy people are part of healthy communities, and that those communities are almost impossible to maintain if we keep changing location. And that the opportunities and experiences we want most are almost impossible to attain if we don’t.

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I don’t know what the answer is; I don’t know if there is one. Use your technology to maintain your community! sounds great, but I can only call my sisters so many times a week; it’s not the same as cooking dinner together on a Friday night. And phone time takes away from the real, the now.

My siblings and I want to live in the same city some day; it’s a plan, the best we’ve come up with so far. Now all we have to do is pick a city to grow roots in. I hope it will be somewhere with long, slow sunsets…

Categories: My Life · San Francisco · Sociology · Technology · United States
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Music added

Tuesday December 4, 2007 · Leave a Comment

I’ve been adding to the music page: http://lningram.wordpress.com/media/music/

Categories: Blog Notes
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The Author has gone to Istanbul

Monday November 12, 2007 · Leave a Comment

I am leaving Wednesday, November 14th, and will return on the 20th.

DJ Tiesto is playing in Istanbul on Friday.

In the meantime, I’ve a couple other posts in the works. I’ll try and add one more before leave :) … Wish me luck :)

Categories: Music · My Life · Travel
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Second Language Navigation – a few thoughts

Sunday February 18, 2007 · 1 Comment

Kylie (below) was talking about this yesterday, and I just had to share:

When you’re navigating in a second language (she said), one tends to focus so much on what is being said, that it’s hard to say much about who is saying it, or why – i.e., if someone’s really sarcastic (or funny, or self-conscious, or whatever), it can take a lot longer to pick up on it. In other words, it’s harder to know the *person* because language gets in the way.

So… I’ve been trying to pay attention to *who* people are, and it’s totally adding another dimension to everything down here. Very interesting. (My opinion of Kylie’s gone up another notch, too. Someday she’s going to find this and have some kind of dry comment about behind-the-back compliments… hi kylie. ; )

Kylie and Steve Irwin

Kylie and random Steve Irwin artwork, San Telmo, Bs. As.

I’ve also noticed that people tend to respond to foreigners at the level of their language, their speaking. As my Spanish gets better, people are treating me differently. I remember that in Pittsburgh, a year or two back, there was this German exchange student who didn’t have a lot of English – I flirted with him a bit, just on principle, and I remember noticing that he reacted almost more with relief than anything else; like someone was treating him as an adult, not as a 10-year-old (language level). …. I get that on a much more visceral level now.

For those interested:

  • the redhead appears to be more interested in a having a makeout buddy than a girlfriend, and i’m more interested in a novio (boyfriend) at this stage than a party buddy…. so perhaps i’ll move on.
    • On the other hand, he’s damn cute. So we’ll see.
  • This guy I met while buying perfume asked me out. I haven’t decided if I should go or not. he’s 32, which puts him at the top end of my dating range. Guess we’ll see. I’ll keep you posted.
    • Actually, for the CMU-types out there, there’s some formula to calculate your dating range. It’s something like … divide the older person’s age by two and add 7, and that’s the youngest they ’should’ date (so 20/2+7=17, 32/2+7=23, etc…) So yeah, I subtact 7, and then multiply by two. 24-7=17, *2=34. Huh. 34 seems so very middle age to me somehow… ; )
  • Pittsburgh is VERY COLD RIGHT NOW. Here are some pictures uploaded by my Very Good Friend Jeremy (who i miss very much, hi :)

cathedral-of-learning-lawn.jpg

hallway-window.jpg

  • Gustavo at work sent me this link in honor of Valentine’s day. It’s a rather lovely song, although something about the guy with the candle bothers me just a bit ;) The lyrics in French are to the right if you click on “More”. I couldn’t find a translated page, but there’s a very good French/English dictionary here: http://www.wordreference.com
  • Tonight I saw Perfume with my friend Rodrigo (un Brasileno, who was in my language school in January) – and (forgive my French)… this movie is totally worth seeing, but it’s a mindfuck - don’t know how else to say it. This completely disturbing film starts off slowly, but ends… wow. The last movie that made me just sit in utter shock like this was Apocalypse Now (Redux version). Also, just like Apocalypse Now, Perfume really Really Really isn’t for kids… It’s very French, it’s very much worth seeing, just … you’ve been warned ; )

Alright, that’s it for now. I’ll post more pictures of Patagonia (and hopefully of the apartment!) tomorrow, if I get the chance…

Categories: Music · Philosophy
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