Archive for the ‘random’ Category

notes from visa exile to bangkok

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Lil Wayne – Lollipop (Nasty Ways Remix)

I’m currently attempting to organize the ridiculous number of sketchbooks and notebooks I got floating all over the place; came across this stuff I wrote down in Bangkok last year, when I was sorting out a new china visa during the whole olympic visa shitshow.

Notes from the Side of the Soi

looks like johnny depp
looks like johnny depp

There is a massage parlor opposite my hostel. (Of course there’s a massage parlor.) The sign reads “Come get yourself beautiful!!! Special promotion!!!” 7/11’s everywhere. Yesterday I bought a pack of smokes at the “Amazing Minimart.”

As I’m writing this there’s a chubby adolescent boy shuffling by sipping from a straw stuck in a transparent plastic bag filled with ice and what looks like coca-cola. Like a very small grocery bag. He’s wearing a headset with large oval earphones and a bent microphone jutting out one side. I really want to reach out and grab him and demand to know what he’s listening to.

There are large yellow dogs sleeping everywhere. They are huge and most of them female, big saggy nipples hang from massive bellies. The dogs are similar to the dogs in India, although those were more animated and angry, generally much thinner. Fat Bangkok bitches. (more…)

The Only Way to Be Decadent

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

It’s 9 p.m. on a Sunday night. I’m behind the kitchen bar, cutting parsley and tapping my foot to a reggae tune by The Groove Armada. Ayesha is next to me watching over the couscous and dal on the stove. The smell of boiling chickpeas floods the kitchen – warm and sweet like freshly baked bread. A whiff of parsley – cool and slightly bitter – arrives at my nostrils as I slice up the brilliant green herb.

Tonight’s stir-fry: tomatoes, carrots, radishes, sweet peas, yellow bell peppers, eggplant, coriander, and a little bit of every spice and sauce in the house. Another day it might have been red cabbage, cucumber, squash, mushrooms, broccoli, and lemon juice. The combination is different every day.

We take time to wash and cut all of the fresh vegetables carefully, make certain everything is just so. Procrastination meets efficiency. We’ve perfected our cooking routine: dal cooks the longest, therefore it’s the first on the stove; next is couscous or rice; finally we cut up the stir-fry and sauté the vegetables in the biggest pan. While everything simmers to perfection, we lay bread, cheese, carrots, and hummus out on a plate, set the table, and pour wine.

Few things bring such thorough satisfaction as cooking a first class meal and consuming it in a cozy atmosphere. We eat unhurriedly in silence, savoring every bite, thinking about the music.

I dip a piece of bread into the bright yellow dal in a half-circle motion and take a bite. I lick my fingers. Then I sink my fork into the colorful mound of vegetables on my plate. The spice is heady and makes me reach over for the wine glass. The couscous and dal together are like a warm hug. Ayesha and I exchange smiles and little moans of pleasure across the table. Expensive hummus. Expensive bread. Expensive cheese. This is the only way to be decadent.

We finish eating, clean the table and wash the dishes. We take several minutes on the couch to enjoy the food-coma-afterglow. If we hadn’t quit last week, we’d be smoking.

It is now after 10 p.m. Both of us have colossal backlogs of homework to take care of. We could have wolfed down a sandwich and maximized study time, but instead we chose to spend the precious hours making food. But who really gives a fuck about what Philip H. Pollock III has to say on Bivariate Regression? Time enjoyed is never time wasted.

Davidson kids, you know the feeling

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Last week I got a minor paper back, but didn’t look at the grade right away, since I was having a good day. So I shoved the thing in my bag and forgot about it. I’ve just now re-discovered it to discover that I, in fact, got an A- on the small, insignificant paper. So it’s 6 a.m., I’m still up translating 50 pages of block Chinese for a class – this is what Davidson does to one’s sleeping patterns – and I just did a victory dance to no one in particular and reread the miserly paper 3 times in delirious joy. This is what Davidson does to one’s sense of self-worth.