Monday, November 28, 2005

Thanksgiving 2005



We spent a delightful Thanksgiving with our friends Ryan and Jackie and their son Charlie this year. I also dragged along my Taiwanese language partner, Ned, who insisted on helping cook. He made a delicious fried tofu dish, which ended up being more popular than the traditional food. Even Nate liked it. I don't know if I've mentioned it before, but Nate doesn't eat tofu.




I have to say that I have never seen so much food in one place in all my life.
After dinner we all watched a kung fu movie - the only thing we could be sure that Ned would understand - and Amy chased the 1-year-old Charlie around the house. Not a traditional Thanksgiving, I'll grant you, but one of the best holidays I've ever had. I am so blessed to have such amazing friends and such a wonderful family.

Thursday, November 24, 2005

The Munch Man

And you thought you liked your computer....

And now for something completely different: John Michael, who has always had a bit of a reputation for being a sleep walker/talker, always goes to bed before me because he has to work so early in the morning. Consequently, he was asleep when I went in to bed one night earlier this week, but it didn't stop him from having a conversation with me.

"Munch man has to pee," he said matter-of-factly.

"Oh," I said. "Who is Munch Man?"

"It's me," he said. "Because I'm carrying munch food."

"What is munch food?"

He gave me a look of utter disdain, completely repulsed by my obvious ignorance. "You know!" he said. "It's the food you eat to regain your health after you fight the bandits!"

I should add a little background knowledge here. We have a game for our XBox called Fable - really a fantastic game; even I'm hooked on it - in which you have to fight bandits in a mideval fantasy world. Throughout the game you find bits of food like apples and tofu, which you can eat later to make yourself feel better after the bandits have beaten you senseless.

"Oh," I said. I was trying to sound apologetic without outright laughing, even though I knew he wouldn't remember any of this the next day. "I didn't know it was called munch food."

"Well that's what I call it, anyway."

And then he went back to sleep.

After that I tried to ground him from video games, but when I came home from school yeseterday he was playing again. I'm afraid I'm suffering from the plight of the common wife: complete impotence as far as any influence over her husband's entertainment habits.

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Chinese and the City

Somewhere in the madness of the past few weeks, I've found time to finish a precious little gem of a book called Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress. It absolutely stole my heart. If you have any interest at all in the Chinese Cultural Revolution, pick up this book. It'll be well worth your time.

During the week, during breaks between classes, I've been meeting with my good friends and fellow Chinese majors Lindsey and Leslie for lunch. I think the regular meetings were originally intended to be pseudo-study sessions (we all have classical Chinese together), but lately has morphed into more of a girl talk - slash - complain about the professors and compare homework session. It was a little odd to me in the beginning, since under the kung-fu influence most of my good friends in the past decade have been male, but I'm starting to settle into it. It's kind of like Sex and the City, if the girls in that show ate vegetarian soup instead of drank coffee and talked about academics and politics instead of men. I mean, we talk about men, but not that often. Smart girls have more important things to think about, I guess. Like how to save the world.

So the other day we were sitting in the campus lounge eating our vegetarian soup (Lindsey's a fellow vegan, and I think Leslie feels left out when she's eating meat), and a woman came in and sat down at the table next to us with two very small kids. The smallest one was maybe a year old at the most, and he was making all kinds of cute little-kid noises and banging his plastic spoon on the tabletop. And Lindsey said:

"Oh, look at the baby...."

I have to mention here that babies couldn't be a more foreign topic for the three of us to discuss, but we did find ourselves staring a little bit longer than I think any of us would have liked to admit afterward.

The thing of it is, all three of us have close friends with small kids. And all three of us, it turns out, have at some point wished that we were that kind of person. Not that we had kids, mind you, just that we were the kinds of people who could be content with that kind of a life. These women are women who have direction in their lives without having to scramble to find their self-worths in the pages of a book or between the double-spaced lines of an honors thesis. And the three of us - especially myself and Lindsey, who both plan on pursuing careers as college professors - are looking forward at another decade of school, followed by several more years of establishing our names in academic fields that still remarkably favor men over women. Do the experiences I've had and the people I've met make the sacrifice seem worth it? Yes, of course. But sometimes only marginally.

It's just that it's really freaking hard to be an American woman in the 21st century. It's not that I'm complaining - I'd rather be a woman now than at any other time previous to now; can you picture me cooking and cleaning? Pshaw! - but there's just so much pressure. If you want to be independent and have a career, people think you should be having a family. If you decide to devote your life to a family, people think you are wasting your potential. And of course you have no idea who to listen to, so you end up doing both, just to be on the safe side. And on top of it all, there's still some strange social stigma that keeps men feeling like pansies if they help with the housework. You can't win.

Monday, November 14, 2005

Growing Pains

It's difficult to believe that it's been so long since I last posted. The quarter is absolutely flying by. I actually had to register for next quarter's classes last week, which always kind of throws me a little. It's one of those interesting little quirks associated with the quarter system: you register for the next term's classes just as you're starting midterms, and then as soon as you finish midterms you have to start studying for finals. I think it's more shocking this quarter than it has been in the past, too, because it's starting to hit me that this is my last year at the UW. Only two more quarters to go, and then I have to *gasp* start thinking about my future. So every study session I go to, every conversation I have with a friend, starts to take on the quality of being one conversation closer to the last conversation I will have with them. With as terrible as I am with goodbyes, this could turn out to be a very long year.

But by the same token, I'm definitely ready to get on with my life. College, while it's a great place to find yourself, starts to feel like a rut all its own after a while. Preparations loom for the trip to Taiwan, which means more scholarship applications and school applications and - in the grand Chinese tradition - miles and miles of proverbial and not-so-proverbial red tape. Am I crazy for applying to study Chinese literature in a Chinese-speaking country? Um, yes. But no one ever said I was compltely sane.....