Sunday, September 05, 2010

Canadian hyperbole

Several times since I got back this summer, I was surprised at the use of English in Canada.

In Vancouver, High Occupancy Vehicle lanes continue to be developed.

"HIGH OCCUPANCY" = 2 people.

TWO PEOPLE???? Most cars have seats for at least four, so how does TWO equal high occupancy. Now admittedly, two people in a car that used to have only one is one less car off the road; however, two is NOT high occupancy.
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At my bank, I was encouraged to put money in a high interest e-savings account. The person encouraging me to do this really seemed excited. How much is HIGH interest you might ask? ONE PERCENT!!! 1%. One percent is certainly better than nothing, but I don't see how anyone can say that 1% is HIGH. When they charge you 4% to borrow, shouldn't that then be called an incredibly high interest rate? No, in fact, they are lending you the money at the low rate of 4%.

I think the word "high" should be banned from use until we come to our senses.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Counterfeit currency

I've never been in any country before where EVERY bill is carefully scrutinized by EVERYONE. This leads me to believe that counterfeit currency is a big problem here. Everything from a RM20 (US$3) to a RM100 (US$15) is checked.

I've only changed money at two banks in China. Yesterday, a taxi driver refused to take a RM100 bill because he said it was fake. I didn't think too much of it. I gave him another bill and pocketed the rejected bill and forgot all about it. Then I went to The Bund Brewery and got the same bill returned. The bill is a little lighter in colour. I should have suspected something because there is a little smiley face stamped in the lower left corner. When I checked all of the bills that I got from the banks, I found a second bill with the same smiley face in the lower left corner, so I guess that makes two fakes. This is a little irritating because I find it hard to believe that the banks didn't catch this, but it's only US$30 so I'm not going to do anything but save them. At any rate, I'm not sure which bank gave them to me, so there isn't anything that I can do.
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Update: I was looking at all of the bills in my wallet (different denominations) and about half of them have a little smiley face (actually, on closer inspection, a smiley face with no eyes). So...I actually have no way of telling except by looking at the color, but, some of the older bills are so dirty and faded, I don't know how anyone can tell. The whole thing is quite perplexing. I'm going to keep the bill no one wants separate and hope that the second bill is fine. Hmmm.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Leaving on a jet plane

I have left Wudang Mountain. After a 20-hour train ride in a soft-sleeper berth (an oxymoron if there ever was one - with crying babies, no one gets much sleep), I arrived in Shanghai, planning to change my plane ticket and head out to Canada in a day or two only to find that it is Saturday and the Air Canada office is closed until Monday morning. I'll be at their door at 8am when they open on Monday, hoping to get a flight out on Monday afternoon.

The trains that I have taken in China have been quite nice (except for the crying babies).

When I arrived at the Bund Hotel, I found a scale in the bathroom, and I lost 13 kilograms in the past two and a half months. I am down to 83 kilograms now. That's the lightest I've been in years. I'm not sure that I like it. I've lost a lot of upper body strength, and, even though my legs are kind of wiry and strong, they are kind of skinny. As a result, I had thought a trip to The Bund Brewery for a hamburger and a couple of beers were in order this evening.

I think I'll go to the Shanghai Museum tomorrow. I've read that it has a large, impressive collection - and it's free.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Film crews

In the last few weeks, we have had a number of film crews filming at the temple. I suspect that there is a sudden interest in Wudang because of the movie, The Kung Fu Kid (The Karate Kid in North America). Yesterday, one crew had a somewhat hot American (Canadian???) woman talking about Taoism, but having a really hard time with the script because I don't think she really knew much about it, and there was one small crew that asked me for an interview, and I, being the reasonable sort that I am, said okay. I think that they were kind of disappointed. They really seemed to want me to be a voracious meat eater who was transformed by the power of Chinese taiji and Taoism. They weren't so happy that I have been a somewhat lazy lacto-ovo vegetarian for twenty years or so. They really wanted me to believe that becoming a vegan would help save the world from global warming, but I wasn't buying this as the most effective thing that I could do. I would place vegetarianism way down on my list of things that I could do - after stuff like driving a small car (or a hybrid), using public transit, riding a bike, turning off lights when I leave a room, not wasting water, buying less toys, wearing cotton.

It turned out the film crew was from Formosa (I hadn't even heard that name for Taiwan in 40 years or so). They were with Supreme Master TV. Oooookaaaay. I checked them out on Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ching_Hai). Can you spell 'CULT'? I'm kind of hoping that they lose my footage.

I will become a more serious vegetarian and probably mostly vegan in the near future; however, I think that the ethical issues regarding eating meat are far better reasons for eschewing meat. Factory farming is quite repugnant. Wherever possible, I eat free-range chicken eggs. The dairy products are a more serious issue. I have been to a dairy farm and it practically brought me to tears, and I will NEVER eat veal. Unfortunately, I've never heard of free-range dairy cows. I already drink soy lattes at Starbucks, but soy cheese really sucks.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Temple happenings

I have been at Wudang Mountain for 5 weeks now. I have learned the 18-form (which still needs a lot of polishing). I starting learning an older longer form called the 13-form. I like it a lot although it involves a lot of turning that is putting pressure on my knees.

I have been a little down. No matter what I do, the teacher never does anything but criticize and correct me (I know that this is the old way, but it's getting a bit tiring). When he does the form, he is smooth and powerful. I sometimes feel like a real klutz. - Then out the the blue, two Chinese students whom I am training with said that I have a real Taiji spirit and they like the way I move. I think that I've always been harder on myself that I need to be.

I stopped the one-hour morning kicking sessions because my knees were acting up. However, just so it doesn't look like I'm slacking off, I do horse stance for several minutes, then calf raises (sets of 40), and some hard stretching. Then I start the circuit again and try to keep it up for an hour. My legs are getting stronger and my knees are okay (which is all that I am asking for at this time).

I think I've also lost a bit of weight. I notice it in my face. That's okay. I'd like to keep my weight under 90kgs.

For the last two days, a group of young Taoists from the Wudang Taoist Kungfu Mission, which is a part of our organization, have been rehearsing and videotaping a performance that they will be doing 3 times a day for 3 months at the Shanghai Expo. The young people are quite amazing and I hope that they will be successful. They will be doing some sort of co-presentation with the Shaolin monks (who have had years of practice with this kind of show).

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/m/eduonline/2009-12/01/content_9095530.htm

I took a few pictures and a bit of video.

I can't seem to embed the video. However, there is a video of the Wudang women performing a fan form at the URL below.

http://s972.photobucket.com/albums/ae209/Restless_Wanderer/?action=view¤t=WudangFanForm.mp4

Friday, June 18, 2010

Purple Heaven Temple

We usually train in the large open courtyard in the Purple Heaven Temple 4 picture. The temple is quite beautiful and the mountain at that back of the temple is incredibly beautiful. It also has a good "feel" if one believes in such things as the spiritual nature of mountains.

These pictures don't show the hordes of tourists that often descend on the temple. Saturdays and Sundays can be horrendous. I'll take my camera tomorrow to try to capture the "essence" of the temple on a weekend. Most of the tourists are okay. I'm sure that I've had my picture taken a thousand times. I don't mind that. I don't mind the stares. HOWEVER, some of the tourists, usually a group of kindred spirits, are totally thoughtless, clueless...and a lot of other things that I don't want to say in writing. They run right up beside us to have their pictures taken while we are doing a form or exercise. I have, on a number of occasions, turned to move in a certain direction only to find some dolt pretending to do a kungfu stance exactly where I want to step next. If it weren't for my Taoist spirit, I'd lash out and pummel the little buggers. Of course, I'd be recorded by a thousand cameras, and, I'm sure it would end up on the internet.

Wudang Taoist Kungfu Academy 2010

Since this seems to be working for photos, I'll add some pictures of the accommodation. I'll add some pictures of the Purple Heaven Temple later today. I'm looking at online photo storage sites. I've used Flickr before but don't particularly like it. I'm looking at Photobucket and Fotki. Once I decide, I'll just upload everything there and put a link here.

At any rate, while the setting is pleasant and the room is adequate, this room isn't 3 stars (as advertised online) by any stretch of the imagination.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

China's Great Firewall

I can access my blog using Vtunnel (a proxy server) that isn't or can't be blocked, but I can't seem to use all of the features. For example, I can't edit the Slide show on the left side. I'm going to try to put some pictures that I took in the center column, but, when I look at my blog, it says the slideshow is empty. Is that true? If someone comments and says that they can see the pictures, I'll add some from the temple.

Shanghai 2010


Summer in China

May 17
As I get ready to leave Shanghai, this seems like a good time to take stock. I’m sitting at the top of a long set of stairs in the Shanghai Railway Station. It’s a lot like an airport. I entered and went through an x-ray scanner and then up a long escalator. There, at the top are a half dozen police officers, checking tickets and selecting a lot of people for detailed document scrutiny. I was really early for my train because I just can’t seem to figure out my tickets. At any rate, I couldn’t go through because my train’s boarding platform hadn’t been listed, so I waited at the top of the stairs and watched. It was interesting trying to guess who would be chosen for extra attention by the police. The “victims” seemed to fall into two groups: the dark skinned guys in ill-fitting clothes (migrant workers???) and the hip young people (guys with fringed hair – and who wouldn’t want to harass them – and girls in slinky outfits). No one seemed to get taken away, but their documents were given a good going over and all of their details were written down.

Unfortunately, Shanghai reminded me a lot of Seoul – and not in a good way. The air pollution is eye-stinging and throat-burning. I don’t think I could live there for long and I was really looking forward to getting into the mountains.

Most people in Shanghai seemed pleasant and helpful in dealing with me, but the vast majority of people on the street look dour and stressed – again reminding me of Seoul. The big difference here is that people don’t jostle you and they do seem to see you and step aside to avoid you. This was a pleasant surprise.

The city, like so many others, is an interesting mix of old and new buildings. Shanghai’s Bund has some very impressive and beautiful old buildings as well as some weird and quite beautiful new architecture. It actually blends together quite well. There are a number of neighborhoods that have been given heritage status and are being protected and fixed up. Bravo.

Unfortunately, there is one area in the Bund, one street off the main riverfront street that is clearly being gentrified – and I say that in the most negative way. A number of real-estate companies were showing homes to incredibly well-dressed westerners and Chinese. That was actually kind of depressing. I’m pretty sure that all of the original inhabitants were shifted out of the area and I’m pretty sure that none of them could afford to live in the new homes. This happens in every big city, including Vancouver, so I guess I shouldn’t be surprised.

Not surprisingly, there is no Facebook or Blogspot. It’s not a big deal. I’m not even sure I want to continue with Facebook anyway because of privacy issues.

May 18
I’m up after a restless night in a sleeper car. The night was constantly broken by noisy children. At any rate, I woke up to bright daylight at 6am. I had breakfast: a hard-boiled egg, a plain bun, some sour vegetable, a handful of peanuts, and a bowl of rice porridge (jook). I am pleasantly full.

It’s hard to get angry at children who cry and run around making a lot of noise, but it is tiring. The berth next to mine had two children who cried (sometimes together and sometimes solo) for 20 hours and the woman in the bunk below mine talked to her precocious child through most of the evening. I have nothing but sympathy for these parents. Some children don’t travel well (I’m pretty sure that my own mother would agree with that.), and I’m sure that most parents just don’t know what to do to quiet their children. However, every plane, train, and bus that I’ve taken in the last 20 years has had a number of noisy children. I’d be willing to pay a good deal extra for an adult-only train, plane, or bus.

May 19
The long train ride from Shanghai traveled on flat land for 15 hours and I was becoming concerned. I was supposed to be in the mountains. However, the train finally headed into the foothills and climbed to Wudang Station town for the next 6 hours. I was met at the station, as promised, by someone from the academy. Because the Wudang Special Administrative Region closes in the evening I had to stay overnight in a rather uninspiring 2-star hotel. The young woman, Coco, who met me with a driver from the hotel and they dropped me off and arranged to meet me the next morning and take me to the academy. We didn’t get very far by car because vehicle traffic was restricted during the visit of Deng Xiaoping’s daughter’s visit. We went by tourist bus to the Purple Heaven Temple, of which my school is a part. The dormitory is a short walk from the temple. The room is reasonably neat and comfortable. I have had reservations about being here, but I met a number of foreigners who were here studying, and they have inspired me.

The temple and academy are set in some beautiful mountains. This first evening, the overcast sky cleared and the moon and stars are dazzling. There are no lessons tomorrow, so I will probably go for a long walk.

May 20
I woke up early and walked about 3 and a half kms up the road from the academy to Nan Yan, a town at the end of the road. I walked around a number of temples and took a lot of pictures. Many of the sites were crowded with loud, silly tourists, but it was an enjoyable day and the morning weather was great. The afternoon clouded over and it started to drizzle.

May 21
This was the first day that there was supposed to be training, but, because it was raining, nothing really started until 8:30 am. We had a lecture on Taoism that was disjointed and hard to follow. After lunch, the tables in the cafeteria were pushed to one side and I got my first introduction to taiji. I spent two hours doing taiji walking and holding a leg forward as though in a kick. It seems pretty simple but it was a good introduction and I’m sure my legs are going to hurt tomorrow – and probably for the next month.

It’s still raining hard and the forecast is for rain for a couple of days. There was a lot of grumbling about the fact that there was no place to practice. Fortunately, they decided to use the cafeteria and the walkways around the courtyard for people to practice, the mood has improved.

I’ve lost track of the days. So, this will just be a jumble of stuff as I think of it. The room that I was put in when I first arrived was under a staircase, facing the rock wall of the mountain which was about a meter away – not much of a view. Because it was raining, water was running down the rock wall. That might have added to the fact that after two days in the room, the entire floor was not just damp – it was wet. The internet in the room didn’t work, so I was glad to be shifted to another room. I am much more comfortable now than before.

The school used to have an indoor training area (it still says so on their website), but a few weeks before I arrived, the government/local authorities confiscated the building and forced the school to move so that a hotel could be put up on the original location. The student housing area we are in does not have an indoor training area, although we move the tables to the side in the cafeteria and use the meditation room upstairs as well as the walkways around the courtyard of the student housing area. Although not ideal, it is better than nothing.

Tomorrow, I will have been here for four and a half weeks. We train five and a half days per week. Most mornings we start off at 8:30am with an hour of kicking, which I rather enjoyed until the kicks that created a turning motion on my knee started to cause me knee problems which then interfered with my taiji lessons. Now I just stretch and review the form I am learning (the straight kicks don’t seem to be a problem so I may just do some kicking on my own). The form that I have “learned” is the Wudang Taiji 18-form. It took about two and a half weeks to learn all of the moves. When I do it fairly slowly from beginning to end, it takes about 4 minutes. It really seems like it should take longer. I know the basic moves fairly well now, but it will take a long time before all of the moves feel natural. I have little hitches from one move to the next and my rhythm is sometimes uneven. If I keep on doing it every day, I hope that I will be okay in a year or two.

There are 10 to 15 foreign students and an equal number of Chinese students studying here at any given time. The foreign students are from Norway, Italy, France, Germany, Russia, and a few other places. There is a core group that has been here for quite a few months. They still remember when there was snow on the ground and the rooms were like iceboxes (no heaters).

Originally, when I decided to come here, I was expecting to have some serious Taoism lessons and some Chinese classes. Those have ranged from sporadic to non-existent. Fortunately, a lot of the guys here have books, DVDs, and other material that is shared around. We do a lot of independent study. I have the Fluenz Mandarin software to work on my Mandarin, and I have some stuff I am working on for work next fall. I also have a lot of audio material from John Kabat-Zinn (mindfulness meditation) and Eckhart Tolled to work on my meditation and adjust my attitude. So, while some things are not as advertised, I have enough material to work on and enough free time to work on it.

Life here is kind of like summer camp. We have a fairly regimented routine and we tend to be pretty scruffy – unshaven and using the smell test to see whether we can get another day or two out our clothes. I’m already a little tired of washing my clothes in my bathroom sink. The food is plentiful and fairly good. I’ve also gotten into the habit of going down the mountain into town on Wednesday afternoons to buy yoghurt, nuts, and fruit just to make sure my diet is reasonably complete.

I’m learning a whole new way of moving. The circular motions of the taiji are beginning to feel a little more comfortable. The hour of taiji walking that we do in the afternoon is starting to feel relaxing – although that’s still going to take a lot of walking.

The one thing that I would like is better explanations of what to be thinking as I do movements or what I should be focusing on when I am doing standing meditation. The instructors don’t speak much English, so I can see the physical part but I’m missing out on a very important part of taiji by not understanding the flow of energy and how to develop it. The foreign guys I practice with are quite helpful, but I would like to hear it from the top guys.

I have 6 more weeks to go starting tomorrow. I know that the 18-form that I have been learning is not perfect, but I’m really hoping that the master will let me learn a new form. If I don’t start it tomorrow, I don’t think I’ll have enough time to learn another one before I leave. I’m really hoping that I can start on an old form called the 13-form. I’ll have to see. I don’t feel comfortable demanding that I move on to another form.

Friday, May 14, 2010

The complexities of life

Because I live on campus and don't go into town much, my social life is quite limited. There is an advantage to being able to walk to work in ten minutes and not suffer through traffic. However, it means that the people I work with are all around all the time.

As you know from previous rants, there are a number of colleagues I find it difficult to work with. However, outside of work, I rather like them. I went out for a school year-end dinner a few days ago, and I rather enjoyed myself. Many of these colleagues that I find unpleasant to work with are actually pleasant and rather charming -- outside of work. They are interesting and funny.

Unfortunately, the largest part of my interaction with them is at work. I wish that I didn't have to work with them; their professional behaviour (or misbehaviour) wouldn't bother me. But, I find it hard to separate my work and social relationships because of my living conditions.

I think I need to get out and meet more people in Dubai more often. I'll mark that down as a goal for next September.

Sunday, May 09, 2010

Greener pastures

I've been teaching ESL or EFL pretty much full-time since 1983 (except for a few years when I was getting my Masters degree in TESOL - I worked part-time then) - 27 years in total. Wow. It seems like a long time when I write it down. I've taught at middle school and high school, in university credit and non-credit courses, and at language institutes. I've taught in 4 countries: Canada, Korea, Brunei, and the UAE.

In all that time, I can honestly say that I've never ever worked with a lazier, nastier, less professional group than I've been working with for the last two years - not everyone of course - just the six or so senior teachers who have been here the longest and who seem to dominate every meeting. It has not been very pleasant. I really haven't had a good time.

Some of the teachers in the department have been really enjoyable to know and to work with, but I'm moving on.

I've applied for and been accepted in the Department of Writing Studies - same university but a different department. For 27 years, I've been teaching English as a second or foreign language. And, while I will continue to teach non-native speakers of English, I will be teaching "serious" writing - not English as a language (at least in theory). It will be interesting. I've been teaching writing for years, but this will feel different. As the new guy, I'm sure that I will get a fair number of the lowest level writing classes, but I may actually get some classes where the focus is really on content not form. Woohoo!

I feel sad that I've been forced out of a field that I am comfortable in, and I feel like I'm abandoning several of my really nice colleagues - leaving them with less strength to fight a number of teachers who should have been kicked to the curb years ago. But, I have to do what is best for me in the long run. I hope that I will be able to leave a ton of negative emotion on the floor when I head off for a couple of months in a Taoist martial arts academy. If all goes according to plan, I will spend 10 weeks meditating and getting my chi flowing smoothly.

I'm not sure if I'll be able to keep up the blog. I know that Facebook is blocked in China and my sense from a number of forums is that China intermittently blocks Blogger as well. It might be good for me to unplug for a couple of months.

I'll be in Shanghai on the 15th, so, if I don't post anything for a while, it may be because I'm becoming a hermit...or just being blocked by the Chinese government.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

The Burj Khalifa

I went up the Burj Dubai Khalifa last Friday morning. I have pictures of the outside of the building in earlier posts. For Dh100, it was worthwhile. I can't imagine paying Dh400 for it though. You enter through Dubai Mall (near the More restaurant). The elevator was amazing. I've been in speedy elevators before that make you dip your knees because of the acceleration. However, we got on two floors underground and zoomed to the 124th floor in about 30 seconds with absolutely no sensation of moving. Some engineer did an amazing job figuring that out.


When you get near the building, you can look up through a "sight" at the observation deck. I didn't quite get centered when I took my picture. I'll have to try again some time.

I have, on occasion, had a touch of vertigo. However, I felt no nervousness on the 124th floor of the Burj Khalifa. You get high enough in the building that you can walk 360 degrees about the building looking out over the entire expanse of Dubai. The day that I went up, the sky was quite clear.







The Burj Khalifa has a lot of information about the construction and the whole project at the ground level. It was nicely done and well worth a casual stroll through looking at the various exhibits.














This picture was taken to the south - toward the Burj Al Arab (the sail hotel).















This picture shows Dubai Mall on the left and The Address at the top of the picture.










The next picture shows The World project. There was no construction going on and I hope that it because they have decided to give it time to settle (something that I heard was a problem on The Palm).














I got a good shot of the Burj shadow beside the Dubai Metro station.















This shot is Sheikh Zayed Road looking northeast towards downtown Dubai.














And, of course, a gratuitous picture of me.



Amazon

Okay, I'm getting really upset. A friend lent me her Kindle and now I want one for myself. I'm hooked. UNFORTUNATELY, you can't get one in the UAE. GRRR!!!!! So I'm thinking I'll get one in Canada when I go back for the summer. Right! I can do that. But I can't buy books with a UAE credit card. If I get a Canadian credit card, I can use that (even though it will screw up my non-residency). Then I'll have to transfer money to the account to cover that card. This stinks. When I'm in the UAE, I could buy a gift certificate and give it to myself and then I can use that gift certificate to buy books. Really? Maybe!

I can't tell you how much I want a Kindle DX. I have the money. I have emailed Amazon and explained the situation and begged them to suggest something. No response. I tried Amazon Canada. No response. I would love to be able to travel with lots of books on my Kindle. Rumors that the UAE will be getting Kindle have been around for years. I want a Kindle, but I'm almost at the point of buying a Sony Reader Daily Edition or an iPad.

I'm perfectly willing to patronize Amazon. Amazon - please sell me a Kindle DX; however, my feeling is that the iPad is going to kill Amazon if they don't come out with a color screen and expandable memory. I don't need most of the stuff that the iPad does. I have a MacBook Air. I'd use that but I can't download the Kindle for Mac software in the UAE. Most of the books I read are fine in black and white, but the color screen on the iPad is cool. I don't need all the internet features that the iPad has. I just want to read books. If Amazon doesn't get their sh** in order by August, when I get back to Canada, I am going to go with the iPad. I've patronized Amazon for years. I've ordered thousands of dollars of books and DVDs from Amazon. I'd like to stay with them, but I'm really getting pissed. What happened to globalization? Whatever happened to trying to be competitive and offering what the customers want?

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Dubai Mall

It has taken me awhile to figure out the video feature on my camera (and as you can tell, I still need to learn a little more). It didn't help that the software that came with the camera can't find the video on my camera, but iMovie on my Mac did.

The hockey video was taken a couple of weeks ago and I posted some still shots below. They were taken on the same day that I watched the hockey tournament. I stop by the aquarium at Dubai Mall almost every week for a little while just to watch the fish. It's close to my favorite coffee shop - Caribou Coffee.





Saturday, March 27, 2010

Foggy morning

Thursday morning was a beautiful, cool foggy morning. I like the fog a lot. However, in the UAE, many people just turn on their hazard lights and drive as fast as they normally do. I prefer not to be on the road when it is foggy.

Hockey Night in Dubai











I went down to my favorite mall this morning for a good western-style breakfast at the Dome. When I walked into the mall at 8:30am, there was a hockey championship game going on complete with an announcer. I watched the game while I had breakfast, and I was surprised at how well the skaters played. I'm not sure about the age of the kids but I think they were middle school aged. The teams had well-dressed coaches and well-behaved parents.

Of the hundreds of malls in Dubai, the Dubai Mall is my favorite. There's always something going on. It's bright and airy. It has a bookstore that I could quite happily live in. The Caribou Coffee Shop is my favorite in Dubai, and the Noodle Factory makes the best noodles in town. It also has a beautiful aquarium.



Thursday, March 25, 2010

Testosterone spill in Aisle 5

I was over at the Rotten Tomatoes website looking for a movie review when I felt a major shift in cosmic energy. Way down at the bottom was a reference to a movie in production that brings pretty much all of Hollywood's manly men together in what promises to be a major smack down.

Imagine Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Randy Couture (of MMA fame), Mickey Rourke, Bruce Willis, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Steve Austin (of WWF fame) all in one film (OK, so this movie's been done before - who cares.). Woo hoo!!! I'm thinking a lot of punching, kicking, shooting, and blowin stuff up. (Okay, my nonviolent Taoist side is troubled, but I'm sure that there won't be any gratuitous violence. I'm sure that everyone who get smacked will deserve it.)

How do they even get all those manly men to work together in one place at one time? I'm going to be waiting with baited breath for this movie to hit the big screen at the end of August.

About the only notables missing are Jean-Claude Van Damme (who reportedly turned down the role because there was no substance to the character - and we all know that substance is a must for all his roles) and Steven Seagal (who reportedly doesn't get along with the producer. How could he let petty personal differences rob us of his acting?).

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Urbanization of Dubai

This page from NASA's Earth Observatory is very cool. If you go to the "The Ubanization of Dubai" you can click through the dates at the bottom of the picture and see how Dubai has changed. It's worth clicking on the 'play', 'show all', and 'view large' buttons at the lower right corner of the picture.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Purple Sunbird

In the last week and a half, I've noticed hundreds of butterflies and beetles. The temperatures have risen to about 30C and, if I remember correctly, as the seasons change, a lot of migratory birds and insects pass through in the spring and fall.

Although the purple sunbird is not migratory, I had not seen one although a number of colleagues have. Then, last Friday, I was looking at all the butterflies and I saw two purple sunbirds. They are a little shy and I will need to go out looking for them again this week in the morning. Their color is beautiful.

Burj Khalifa

This is a really awesome building. I try not to be too impressed by these ostentatious displays, but the Petrona Towers in Kuala Lumpur were breathtaking, and the Burj Khalifa is even more so. I can't wait until they open up the public viewing platform again. I know that it's an optical illusion, but when you stand close to it and look straight up, it seems to extend right over top of you. It really truly is big. And, when you think of all the steel and glass and other stuff that went into building it, it is amazing.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Bird life

I was driving from Sharjah to Dubai and saw a large open space that is usually an impromptu cricket pitch but it was flooded and had become a bit of a bird sanctuary. There are a couple of Grey Herons and a number of other birds that I think are Armenian Gulls, Yellow-Legged Gulls, Great Black-headed Gulls, and a few Black-winged Stilts. They are all wintering here because the weather is just so great - about 30C during the day.














I took these with my new camera, and only later realized that I had a digital zoom that would have been incredibly useful but not so much when I was sitting in Dubai Mall having a cup of coffee and reading the camera manual.

Friday, March 05, 2010

Tony Parsons

I just finished My Favorite Wife by Tony Parsons, and I highly recommend it. I've liked his previous work (Man and Boy, Man and Wife). His characters are always basically good people who screw up (usually by screwing someone that they shouldn't have) and end up hurting themselves and their loved ones. They often manage to stumble through to a somewhat uplifting ending. I generally read his books with alternating feelings of anger and sadness. I almost always get a little teary (although no tears actually fell). I think the fact that I feel strong emotions when I read his books says a lot about how realistic and well-written his books are.

I was checking out his other books at Amazon and found out that he has written a book with an English teacher as the main character. I'll have to pick that one up for my next read.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Rain, rain, go away, come again another day...

Actually, I like the rain and I wish it would rain during the day so I could enjoy it rather than all night when I'm trying to sleep.
There are some interesting pictures at The National, The Gulf News, the Khaleej Times.

We've had a couple of days of heavy rain, lightning, and thunder - always a strange pleasure in the desert.

It's very strange. Rain days here are like snow days in Vancouver. Nobody knows how to drive. Some drivers, mostly in big SUVs with dark tinted window (read 'local') drive as though nothing has changed. They will drive at 100km per hour through knee-deep water, sending up a 'bow wave' that washes like a tsunami over slower cars or pedestrians, swerving in and out of traffic with total oblivion. Others drive with trepidation through a thin skiff of water that no Vancouverite would even slow down for. Overall, a somewhat unnerving experience.

Today it was beautiful and sunny and about 25C. I went for a drive to Ras Al Khaimah and there were no large puddles anywhere. The traffic was light and the drive pleasant. It was a beautiful day - and getting out of the office on a 'road trip' was excellent.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Quilting

Today a friend suggested that we check out a quilting exhibit. It was interesting, but I'm sure that I was not able to appreciate the art because I don't really understand all the hard work that undoubtedly went into each piece.

For me, quilting was always just about using pieces of scrap to make blankets. I had a quilt that my grandmother made that I used until it wore out. I loved that quilt. The quilts that were on exhibit were really impressive but they were a little too high class for my taste. I can't imagine using them on my bed.

University Club Day

Our university had a Club Day. Oddly enough, the clubs were mostly ethnic (i.e. Palestinian Club, Saudi Club, Somali Club). Still most of the students seemed to have a good time and a little cross-cultural mixing is always good.

Makkoli

A couple of weeks ago, I went to the Barracuda to pick up some alcohol. By chance, I came across a little Korean alcohol. I've always liked makkoli, especially the rough homemade variety, so I thought I would give it a try. At Dh25 or about Won 7,800, it was a little expensive. It was okay but a little too refined.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Dubai

Last week, I went to a musical in Dubai at the Madinat Jumeirah. I'm not sure what I expected, perhaps a lot of laughter, some singing, and dancing. Well...Blood Brothers was interesting and I'm glad that I saw it, but it was very sad. At the end, both I and my friend thought, "Oh." The actors (I'm not sure if that's the correct term) had incredibly beautiful voices. They were awesome. It's always nice to dress up a little and sit with somewhat cultured people, but perhaps something a little more uplifting next time.

The Madinat Jumeirah was a place that I had never been, but it was very pleasant to sit outside in cool but pleasant temperatures and eat a nice Italian dinner, drink a glass of Italian wine, and watch abras (well, touristy abras) putt by. The wind towers and the traditional setting was worth the visit. The whole complex is nicely done.






The next day, I was at the Dubai Mall, and I always regret not taking a proper camera. One weekend, they had a young man trying to break the Guinness Book of Records for keeping a football in the air (I don't know how that ended.). Another time they had foosball tables set up for some kind of tournament. Last weekend, they had a judo tournament in one area, and, in another area, they had the most opulent car display (Ferrari, Mercedes, BMW) I've ever seen - including a car I've dreamed about for years. I had mixed feelings. The cars were awesome. I would have loved to sit in one, or, better yet, take one for a spin. Yet...to spend so much money on what is essentially just a car seems unconscionable when the world is full of people who are suffering. By strange coincidence, after drooling over the cars for a bit, I went up to the 3rd floor and sat in Caribou Coffee, had a soy latte, and read a book called Insight Meditation: The Practice of Freedom by Joseph Goldstein. One of the first lines I came across was "If a practice does not cool the fires of greed, aversion, and ignorance, it is worthless." I could have cried. This is such a strange place.