peace be upon you

Wednesday, September 19th, 2012 11:38 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
I've been too busy to feel like posting anything.

This evening, I made Chi-Chi's Sweet Corn Cake. It was simple to make using the mix and a can of creamed corn, and tasted quite good.

I heard the song Cry Me a River (unbeknownst to me, by Justin Timberlake) on the radio, and near the very end, the hauntingly sweet voice sounded so much like Michael Jackson, I thought he must have contributed to the song. But apparently not; that must have been Justin's voice.

While browsing related music on Amazon, I came across a song "Sister Suki" (the one from the "Listen Vision III" album). Then I did a little digging and found the other original version. For some reason that song, especially the title, is sticking in my mind.* I read the liner notes of the original 1959 recording, which also includes a transcription of all the song lyrics.
Intro:
The sounds on this record were made by six 11 to 12 year old Negro boys from the streets, tenements, and housing projects of New York City. Most are members of street gangs and all have passed through social agencies and the juvenile court to the residential training school. ..."

The liner notes, along with some of the transcribed lyrics, were vaguely disturbing to me. 11 and 12 year old gang members. 1959.


*Another strange phrase "...laikum" has been popping up in my head during the last few days, and I couldn't remember where it came from or what it meant. Yesterday, I thought maybe it was the Lyekka character in Lexx. But no, I thought, the phrase in my head was Lai*KUM*, not Lai*KA*. Just now I realized it is from the phrase Salaam Alaikum.
darkoshi: (Default)
Comparing YouTube's automatic captioning/transcriptions to what I hear spoken in the videos impresses upon me how intelligent our brains are - to be able to decipher spoken words and phrases, even when the speech is not clear.

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moon big
moon round

.

Still reading the 2nd book in the dragon tattoo girl series. It is engrossing.

.

EarthFare had black garlic for sale. This particular brand is a product of the U.S.A; $5 for a packet of 2 bulbs. I tossed a packet into my shopping cart, thinking, "I've been wanting to try that!" (remembering being intrigued by what I had read about it). I haven't yet opened the packet.

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Why people eat tofu when they get out of prison in Korea.
darkoshi: (Default)
I used Google Translate to check what the Swedish title (Män som hatar kvinnor) of "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" means. As I typed the words, I seemed to recall that kvinnor means "women". But the translation displayed as "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo". In fact, even "hatar kvinnor" by itself was translated as "Dragon Tattoo". Not-Very-Helpful, oh ye translating tool! I quite doubt that is how one says Dragon Tattoo in Swedish. Only by entering each word separately did it give me the presumably correct translation "Men who hate women".

The title of the 2nd book "Flickan Som Lekte Med Elden", does literally translate to "The Girl Who Played with Fire".

The title of the 3rd book "Luftslottet Som Sprängdes" (The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest) seems to mean "The Air Castle that was Blown (Up?)". No weirdness with that translation.

I finished reading the first book today. I'm not planning to watch any of the movies until I finish the books.

Spoilers... )
darkoshi: (Default)
I was walking along, lost in thought. And I realized that I wasn't paying any attention to the world around me. And I thought, squirrels don't do that, scampering around lost in their thoughts, do they? My thoughts are in words - I hear words in my head. What would it be like, if I had never learned a language - if I had never heard any words? Would I still be able to think? What kinds of thoughts would I have? What would word-less thoughts be like? Is that how it is like, to be a squirrel?

I can stop thinking words for a while, while walking, and still *know* where I'm walking towards... a part of my brain is still directing me in which direction to walk, even if I don't consciously think words while doing it. When I drive home, I don't consciously think of which streets to turn on... it is automatic, while my mind thinks other thoughts. Whereas if I'm driving somewhere unfamiliar, then I do think words, like "I need to turn right on so-and-so street".

But what would it be like, to not have words in one's brain? What is it like for deaf people, who speak via sign-language, and who have never heard words? Do they think in sign? Do they see hands moving in their mind? Is their thought image-based as opposed to sound-based?

If my thoughts are sound-based, why is it easier for me to understand things when I read them, than when I hear them? And yet, when I read them, I hear the words in my head.

What is it like to be a squirrel, to not have words which let you plan for the future and think other abstract, distant thoughts? What is it like, to live in the present, all the time, only reacting to the things you see, hear, smell, feel?

My memories are not word-based, for the most part. I remember images, emotions, smells, not words.

Do squirrels sometimes sit around lost in thought... remembering experiences they have had? Day-dreaming about the perfect acorn?

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