Gigging Amateur turned Nomadic Amateur

music.travel.life.mostly babbling.oh and “art”

My life is not p.c. June 23, 2009

Filed under: Chile, travel — iggystarbucks @ 5:35 pm

I am now settled (temporarily) in Coquimbo, in northern Chile where I am volunteering at a local art school(score!) until the end of August.

I had a concert thrown in my honor yesterday haha and was introduced on stage in front of the entire school as the band was setting up.

of course, being me, I´ve had very awkward/offensive/non-p.c. moments already such as when my co-teacher hosted a little Q and A session in front of the class and asked me,

¨Can you tell us why you are Asiatic?¨

or today when another student teacher had a picture of feather and asked

Q: ¨Who wore this?¨

A: ¨Indians!¨

oh and one student went ¨ching chong¨ as I walked by. damn.

but other than that most are really friendly and I´ll be taking art/piano + guitar lessons(and maybe dance lessons) when my cast comes off next Monday(is it normal to hurt even when the cast is coming off in less than a week?)

 

Attention Whore June 8, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — iggystarbucks @ 6:10 pm

IMG_4999

(holding ¨Rafaela Hau¨´s  X-Ray, whoever that is)

I managed to beautifully snap a metacarpal bone and fracture another a few days ago.
I fell down a (embarrassingly short) ladder and for once my non-existing reflex decided to kick in and somehow,
I injured myself in the process.

Initially I thought I have sprained my fingers(I could move them) so I sat there writhing and giggling in pain
while the lodging owner lady sat there with me,
offering her medical wisdom to relieve my pain: massaging her saliva on the back of my hand and advising me to pull my fingers(when I couldn´t, she offered to do it herself but I declined), and crack my knuckles.

I was still in pain when I saw this in the radiography room but I couldn´t miss the photo-op (it´s almost as culturally-confusing as the time I saw an Iranian film dubbed in French)
IMG_4980

The general practician-ok, so I know I´m brain-washed/biased by my family of medical professions but I HATE GPs, I have no respect for their ¨broad, general medical knowledge¨-initially missed the clearly broken bone and only saw it when I informed him of the major source of the pain.

anyways,
at this point it´s more of a discomfort/inconvenience( I still have to make 4 stops before staying for the volunteer program) than pain.
Although I was about to scream my head off at the frustrating experience of packing this morning,
I´m still amazed as its my first bone-breaking experience(not counting my nasal septum).
3 weeks left…

 

Riffraph Rapture-010609 June 1, 2009

Filed under: dance, music, riffraff rapture, riffraph rapture, world music — iggystarbucks @ 9:29 pm
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The latest(well actually it´s been around for awhile) trend in K-Pop(that´s Korean Pop for you non-Asianphiles) is catchy dance songs with relatively easy, cute, if not somewhat silly choregraphy. Guilty pleasure, silly fun whatever you may call it, it´s incredibly successful in Korea.

I remember growing up in Korea,
it was popular to memorize the choreography to the latest hit song and dance in front of people during the school outings or events(dear god)

I think starting late 2007 it became massively popular to dance along to the hit songs and one of the most successful group has been Wonder Girls, thanks to JYP management´s genius choreography team(and catchy beats to accompany them´); there are numerous parodies of fans ranging from High School boys to Kindergarten teacher, dancing to their hit singles, ¨Tell Me,¨ ¨So Hot¨ and ¨Nobody¨

Youtube is featuring this insanely cute ukele version of Nobody. The singers/players are sooo adorable in their full dorky glory haha:

the original:

(lol I can´t believe I used to dance to JYP´s Honey in the beginning of the video)
(more…)

 

Not Without My Daughter June 1, 2009

Filed under: book — iggystarbucks @ 8:46 pm
Tags: ,

Not_without_my_daughter

I´ve been complaining about the lack of electronics, (or rather working electronics-my mp3/video player and laptop broke down in addition to the brief breakdown of my DSLR),

but fortunately I´ve been lucky to have books(thanks to Bolivia´s abundant book exchange places) to keep me entertained during the long awful bus rides(too bad they turn off lights around 8 pm) and lonely nights in my rooms. 

I´ve always been an avid reader,

in fact my sight got ruined because I kept on reading in dark with dim lights after my parents had turned off the lights in my room to put me to sleep.

While I was living in New York, I had to read a lot mainly due to my Literature in Translation minor but I enjoyed every bit and also read 1-2 books on my own.

The truth is,

even nowadays, I´d rather be reading alone in my room than have empty conversations with the fellow travelers(there´s only so much of ¨where are you from?/Where have you been to?¨ chat one can take)

During the last month and a half, I´ve been especially productive in terms of reading(6 books of 300-650 page-length) and most have been excellent.

The one book that had me quite enraged (a rare occassion) was ¨Not Without My Daughter¨ by Betty Mahmoody which is a non-fiction about an American woman and her daughter being kept captive against their will in Iran by her Iranian husband and his family. Her husband physically abuses her and her daughter and takes away their freedom. She finally succeeds in escaping to Turkey and to the U.S.A. ultimately.

The reason I picked up the book from an exchange place was because I remembered seeing the movie based on the book a long time ago when I was a kid. Although I didn´t remember the entire movie, I remembered thinking that Iran was an awful place to live and that I was glad to be a Christian. That was a very long time ago.

While I do sympathize the author and her daughter-what they had to go through was truly awful-she had a very close-minded attitude against Iranian culture from the beginning.  The way she describes it is ignorant, condescending and just offensive. The Persian culture belongs to one of the ancient civilizations of the world yet she writes about it only in negative light, making people seem barbaric, uneducated and unjust. The book has such an unbalanced view of Iran, it´s down right repulsive.

Apparently there´s a Finnish documentary made in 2002 called ¨Without My Daughter¨ getting the husband, Dr. Mahmoody´s side of the story. I´ll try to watch it once I get back to the states or if I ever get to fix my computer before then. It would be interesting to know both sides of the story.

Right now I´m currently reading Isabel Allende´s De Amor y  De Sombra (Of Love and Shadow) which is about two young people in the midst of oppressive military dictatorship(if I´m not mistaking, I´m quite sure it´s set in Buenos Aires/Argentina during the Dirty War but it also might be set in Chile during the dictatorship of Pinochet mainly due to the author´s connection to Salvador Allende). I´m only have less than 50 pages to go and it´s pretty good so far. ::edit:: the description fits with the Chilean dictatorship.

Any books to recommend me? I´m on goodreads in case you want to know my preference.