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travel
Yeeaih, GenCon!
Submitted by Ai Meilian on Tue, 2010-08-03 06:16GenCon is coming up! I leave for Indianapolis tomorrow afternoon.
I'll probably be fairly absent online until next week and will likely miss things. I'm already getting into that pre-travel semi-panic "Ack, gotta do X Y Z Alpha Omega Zayin Qoppa OMG" mode. Laundry and packing tonight; planning to overnight w/ Pazi & Tess, so effectively I'm "on the road" as of latish this evening.
If I can figure out and comply with TSA rules and the like, I'll be bringing my laptop -- but GenCon is always packed and friends abound, and from past experience I don't get much "down time." If anyone has something they'd like to communicate or share with me, jot me an email -- that way I won't miss it in the information overload that is blogs, facebook, and Twitter.
I'll be wishing everyone I know well in the meantime, and most likely enjoying myself whilst letting several background processes do their thing :)
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Native Foreigner
I always feel disconnected and surreal whenever I return to the US after an international assignment.
The first thing I notice is the change in sound. After three weeks in Germany, the sound and rhythm of American English sounds oddly foreign. I found this welcome on my previous trips, but this time I found myself missing the distinctive pattern of German before boarding my first flight home. Even the sound of my own voice seems oddly out of place.
The second thing I notice is that my phone works. When abroad, I have three phones with me at all times. I have my personal blackberry, my work blackberry, and often I have a standard mobile native to the country. It didn't occur to me until the last week that I could pop out the SIM card from my native phone, and pop it into my work blackberry to reduce my technological baggage. My personal blackberry typically has the mobile network switched off for cost reasons. It only becomes a useful network device when entering into the range of an open Wifi access point. Once connected, it furiously downloads a backlog of emails, tweets, facebook status posts, and podcasts.
The third thing is money. When I landed state-side, I stopped by a Starbucks and ordered a blended coffee drink. I baulked when I first saw the price -- 5.30 -- which I had assumed as in Euros for the moment. The cognitive dissonance was even more pronounced when I realised I could use my bank card to pay instead of putting down a pale blue five Euro note.
My fingers still entangle themselves on special characters when typing on an American keyboard, expecting the needed keys to be in a different configuration.
I can't say that this isn't unexpected. When I first heard I would be working on this assignment, I made the decision to open myself to the experience. Instead of fighting against the language -- or analysing it mercilessly -- I chose not to think about it. Instead of trying to translate what I heard, I would listen and pick up what I could. This unconscious method has little in the way of control, but oddly, seems to work better than anything I've tried previously.
The net affect was the creation of a new headspace in which German sounded normal -- even if I didn't understand everything. Likewise, cultural artifacts like money also seemed normal. When I return to the US, this headspace persists, making my own native culture seems oddly foreign.
Eventually, it'll wear off. Green money will seem the norm. The flat, monotone of an American voice will seem customary. The only problem is that I don't want to let go...
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Roses are Red?
Submitted by tess on Sun, 2007-09-09 19:47UK Trip 2007
Submitted by tess on Wed, 2007-04-18 19:53National Museum of the Media in Bradford
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Red Dalek
A sad fate for a once powerful mutant soldier in a traveling machine... This Red Dalek was found in a empty balcony overlooking the food court of the Bradford Museum of Film and Photography (now called the National Media Museum). My guide too all things British informed me -- despite the lack of any signs -- that this one was from the Dalek Invasion of Earth. I tried to watch the film later, but it's cheesy humor offset me. I never finished the film. |
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Gray Dalek
A Dalek traveling machine from the first series of Dr. Who (1963). This was found in the "TV Heaven" section of the National Museum of the Media in Bradford, UK. |
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Wallace and Gromit on Motorbike
A resin model of Wallace and Gromit from the film, A Close Shave. Taken from the "TV Heaven" section of the National Museum of the Media, Bradford, UK. |
British Museum of History
London
Manchester
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Maneki Neko
Submitted by tess on Sun, 2007-04-15 23:01One of my favorite sushi bars, the Maneki Neko in Carmel, Indiana. It's run by a small Japanese family.
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