Alter Ego

April 18, 2008

Sometimes I think about what it would be like to have a secret alter ego. Especially musically. When I’m home alone and cooking (and by cooking I mean heating up chicken nuggets in the toaster oven), I tend to make up bizarre songs, using different voices and styles. At times I’m silly about it, and try singing random songs in the style of Bjork, because that’s just plain hilarious. But frequently I’ve been coming up with these strange, Peaches-like techno songs. And it’s fun. A lot of fun, actually. And if I wanted to record them, I have all sorts of kick-ass effects that my traditionally singer-songwriter style songs have never merited using. But that urge to compartmentalize creeps back in, and I feel like I would have to set-up an entirely different space to experiment with those sounds, instead of allowing them to simply be a continuation of my thoughts and creative inclinations.

I’m puzzled by this tendency of mine; why don’t I ever feel like I can present myself as a whole? When I am involved in activities or interests that have specific, receptive communities–like, say, knitting, or fandom–and I write about those interests outside of those communities–like, say, here–I feel like I’m infringing them upon everyone else who might not give two craps about them. Ideally, I’d like to be able to confidently say, “Hey, that’s cool if you’re not interested, but it’s part of my life, it’s what I’m interested in, and it’s my blog, so suck it up.”

And what makes these feelings particularly ridiculous is that I don’t exactly have a huge following of readers (if any), let alone readers that are complaining. Yet the feeling lingers. Sigh.

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Posted by admin at 1:49 pm

Gems of Pravda

April 4, 2008

So I’m back in school. It looks like I’m taking 4 classes: Global Climate Change (booo), US History: Gender and Sexuality from 1630-1850 (yaaay), Spanish 3 (booo), and Intro to Russian Culture (yaaay).

I love my Russian professor. She actually taught my brother Russian, so it’s pretty cool to finally have a teacher in common with him. I am quickly falling in love with Russian culture, and here are two paraphrases from my professor that indicate why (please read with a heavy Russian accent for full enjoyment):

“Russians have very different sense of time. For them, history is very close to them still. They say, ‘Of course we’re behind all the other countries, we were under the Mongolian yoke for two centuries!’ That was in 1240, get over it already! Or do you know of any country that is still mad about Napoleon’s invasion? They see a man in the street with mismatched clothes who is very cold, and they say, ‘Ah, must be a Frenchman!’”

“In Russian Pravda [early set of Russian laws], the fine for severing a man’s arm is not that much more than it is for damaging his moustache. Russian men love their beards. Peter the Great wanted Russian men to look more like the French, so he demanded that they shaved their beards. Oh, the men wept. They were so sad, it was the worst thing for them. Afterward they would keep their beards with them so they could be buried with them. If they did not have their beards, they thought, how would they be recognized in Heaven?”

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Posted by admin at 7:25 am