Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts

Monday, January 04, 2010

2010 Resolutions

The following are my New Years Resolutions for 2010:



  • Read more. Turn off the computer at night and read a book or magazine before going to sleep.



  • Write more. Update my blog on a more regular basis. Even if I have nothing to say and it's piss poorly written.



  • See more live music. The second half of '09 I feel like I saw the most live music I've seen in the past decade. Continue that. Music is my church, and Lord knows I need to be saved.



  • Cook. I wanna to say, "cook more," but the honest truth is that I don't cook at all, and I need to learn or at least try. I wanna spend time in the kitchen preparing my own meals with more veggies and less meat.



  • Travel more. I wanna go camping in Yosemite, visit family in San Diego, and generally familiarize myself with the great state of California.



  • Take more pictures. I work in a school with amazing, international students. Unfortunately they are only in the States for a limited time, and I want to do a better job documenting my time with them.



  • Use social networks & media. As with the previously stated resolution, I've been building an unbelievable global network of friends for the past decade, and I want to do a better job maintaining those friendships and connections.



  • Call my mom & both my grandmothers more often.



  • Remain positive. No matter what, and don't let the bastards drag me down.





Please wish me luck in this year!


Thursday, April 23, 2009

Bumped for Boston

So, I've been living out of a backpack for the past nine months and waiting for an opportunity to return to Boston and gather my personal belongings and get them to San Francisco.
Last weekend coming back from New Orleans, I voluntarily got bumped from my connecting flight in return for a free round trip ticket to anywhere in the continental US. Single.
While I waited languidly in LAX for six hours, I started calling around to friends. Turns out one good friend was planning on going to Boston the end of May for a Phish show at Fenway Park. Call it fate, but he had an extra ticket. Double off the Monster.
Talked to my boss; got the time off work. Contacted a couple friends in Beantown; got a place to stay and the green light to get my things out of storage. Triple down the line.
Booked my free flight. Grand-f*ckin-slam over Williamsburg into the Ted seat.
Sweet Caroline here I come.
So good! So good! So good!

Monday, April 13, 2009

Easter


I won the egg hunt.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Spring Revival



I sit by the water
Breathing sun illuminated sky
The waves are cresting on the shores of my mind

Wharf water shimmering
reflects spring

Cherry blossoms bloom
Summer soon

My heart soars high
My soul delves deep
My happiness is unmatched




written by Matthew, Heyward, and Soo

Sunday, January 27, 2008

CoExisT



“So, when was the last time you saw a 3D movie?” I asked them trying to make some light conversation.

A little puzzled by the question, “Never,” Humaid answered in a thick Middle Eastern accent.

“Really? Howwa ‘bout an IMAX movie? Are you familiar with IMAX?” I asked them.

“Uh?.... What is IMAX meaning?” Saeed asked in a sheepish, somewhat broken, naïve tone.

“Ah, man! It’s a really, big, huge screen,” I tried to explain while making sweeping hand gestures and accidentally nudged the fella next to me. “I’m really, sorry,” I grinned at him, unable to contain my excitement.

“It’s ah-right,” the New Englander smiled back as his wife chimed in, “Yeah, ‘dis is like ah concert. Some lady ah-ready yelled at us for breaking in line.”

“I saw people scalping tickets out front.”

“Da only thing missin’ is beeah.”

“They have beer,” I quickly interjected and motioned to the concession stand.

Without hesitation, the husband scurried through the packed lobby to the popcorn line like an overeager teenager to pick up two Buds in a bottle.

“This is really crazy, uh.” I said to the wife while her husband was paying for the beer. “I teach English at Northeastern, and I’m here with a few of my students. They’ve never even heard of U2.”

The woman looked a little befuddled and then, clearly as excited as I was, peered over my shoulder to my students and blurted out, “Ya guys are gonna love it! I heaah the Edge’s guitar comes off da screen and ya can almost touch it!”

Blank stares.

Just then, the happy husband came back and handed his honey a beer.

I seized the chance to ask my students another question, “Do ya’ll drink beer?”

“No… never,” Humaid said stoically.

“Ah… only wine,” I joked, which drew a couple nervous smiles and shifty glances from them just as the theater doors opened and the line started to snake through the lobby.

“Say,” the happy husband began, “ where are you guys from?”

Saeed and Humaid replied almost in unison, “We’re from Dubai.”

“Oh… I know where that is. It’s…. ahhhh….. ummmm…. United ….. Emirates…..” his unassured voice trailed off as the orderly cue crept forward. “That’s a rich country.”

“Yes… we have oil,” Humaid said dubiously.

I was happy to see my students engage in a spontaneous conversation, but as soon as we crossed the threshold of the theater doors, my focus shifted to the scamble for seats as close to center as we could get.

Not long after getting situated in front of the 65-foot screen, we got two big thumbs up from the beer drinking couple two rows behind us.

The lights went down, the screen popped out, and the surround sound cranked up.

After a couple songs, the leather clad Bono began sporting a CoExisT headband while banging a snare drum to the opening march of Sunday Bloody Sunday. As he began to ask the question, “How long must we sing this song?” water droplets came flying off the screen and the oceans of 3D people in the crowd waved and melded into the theater audience almost seamlessly.

Humaid leaned over to me and whispered, “It’s like truth.”

I grinned ear to ear.

In Humaid's limited English ability, he just said a whole lot.

I sat back in my chair and thought to myself, "Peace be with Bono and you too."

Monday, December 17, 2007

Harlem Lanes

Chinatown bus ticket from Boston to New York to celebrate a friend’s birthday: $15

Six subway rides around the city: $10

Cover charge to get into Harlem Lanes bowling alley: $20

Watching the Mayweather/Hatton prize fight and being the only seven Caucasians in the packed bowling alley under our party’s name of “Hazzard” while drinking White Russians: Priceless


Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Rafting in Gifu



This is a leap of faith, and I'm hoping for a soft landing.

Entering my last days in Japan, I feel like I'm being drawn and quartered. Trying to get my bags packed, ship boxes home, finish my grad school application process, get my financial aid application in, negotiate the hand over of my school, train Brian to take my place, and say goodbye to everyone!

I wish I had time to properly write about my last weekend trip, but it's not gonna happen at the moment. Anyway, please check out these pictures. They're worth a thousand words each.

Rafting in Gifu Gallery

Thanks to everyone for making the trip happen.

Enjoy.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Tiff's Slideshow

My good friend Tiffany recently returned to Japan from France. She made a surprise appearance at the Heiwa Matsuri last week by sneaking up behind me and giving me a big hug.

Amidst all the party people, she managed to snap quite a few funny pictures; including some of embarrassing shots of me trying to cut the rug.

Click here to check out some of Tiff's pics from the past few weeks back in the land of the rising sun: Tiff's Olympus Slideshow

Saturday, May 06, 2006

04.282930.06 平和


The cold of winter is officially over and the warmth of spring is emitting energies and emotions straight through the stratosphere.

My old hometown friend Brian arrived in Japan last week to move into my Heiwa-cho house and assume my English teaching responsibilities. He’s settling in really well; he even started a blog called The Fire That's In Me to write about his first impressions, and I think he’s got a great attitude towards living in Japan. He’ll do well.

At the same time, my good friend Cem left to begin a job writing for the Japan Times. He will be in Casablanca, Morocco for the next three and half months interviewing businessmen before departing for his next worldly destination. He will be deeply missed.

To celebrate this emotional changing of the guard, so to speak, we pooled our efforts to host a three-day squat party in Heiwa-cho. We had live didgeridoo performances in the living room, multiple DJs spinning dance music, fire dancers, a pot of curry to feed 50 people, a BBQ outside, a full bar that included three kegs of Tokyo Ale, another fridge full of bottled beer, and Brian’s very own liquor carousel shot dispenser. Hell, we even printed T-shirts!

Check out some of my pictures from this Peace Town blowout, please click here:
04.282930.06 Heiwa Picture Gallery

To all my friends,

We is were are Rolling Stones. Somebody call Keiff!

Friday, April 14, 2006

花見


BOOZE!!!











Lessons learned:
  1. Flight, fight, or Jesus
  2. Aaahhhh... comfortable
  3. Scooters are bad

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Rolling Stones: Bigger Bang Tour


HOLY MUTHA F$@!K!ER!

The only way I can describe the Rolling Stones Bigger Bang concert in Nagoya Dome is with a string of expletives unfit to print here. To say I'm still buzzing or walking without touching the ground would be a mild understatement.

Before the show, I met my friend Toku, his girlfriend Nami, his colleague Motoshi, and a local promoter that goes by the name Go-Low. The night before, Toku and Go-Low went drinking with some of the Stones roadies and received an offer to come backstage. I got to tag along!

Check out the photo gallery here: Rolling Stones: Bigger Bang

We met Pierre, the Stones chief sound technician, who escorted us backstage and gave us a tour of the area. He took us past Mick's dressing room, all the guitars, and up on the stage. I actually walked around on the Rolling Stones' stage!

Eventually, Pierre passed us off to Mike, Charlie's drum tech. Mike told us to bust out our cameras and he started talking pictures for us. He gave Motoshi a set of drumsticks and everyone else got guitar picks.

Check out this video of Mike showing us the drums:



The show itself was fun, but the Japanese audience was a little too conservative. Believe it or not, they didn't even serve beer in the place. Totally mind-boggling.

It took a little while for the audience to really get into it, but the latter half of the show was really fun.

Here's a short video of Honky Tonk Women:



After the show, we all went to a restaurant to chill out, get something to eat, and finally drink a beer. While we were eating, Bernard, one of the back-up singers came and sat down near us.

The whole night was surreal, as it should have been.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Almost Spring


Spring is slowly setting in, but the cherry blossoms look like they’re gonna take another week.

For April Fool’s Day, I went to Inuyama with my friends Cem, Yuki, Ethan, and Alexis for a festival. We spent the afternoon walking around casually eating all the usual matsuri snacks: choco bananas, yaki-mochi, squid, various meat sticks, butter potatoes, etc.

Check out the photo gallery here: Inuyama Matsuri

Here’s a video of Ethan demonstrating how to give a kancho:



If you don’t know what a kancho is, I suggest you read Wikipedia’s explanation here: Kancho

The following day I had plans to go to a cherry blossom party in Okazaki, but the rainy weather forced the party inside. Regardless, we still had a good time, and a couple from Okinawa brought a shamisen and performed a few songs.

I put a few pictures on my Flickr account that you can scroll through here: Okazaki Pics

Friday, March 17, 2006

Asama 2000



Last weekend I went with my friends Jason and Mark to a ski resort in Nagano Prefecture called Asama 2000, due to its two thousand meter elevation.

Check out the photo gallery here: Asama 2000 Gallery

We stayed in a Japanese style, onsen hotel called Takemine, located on the top of the ski resort. The only way to get there was to take a snow-cat from the parking lot or ski in. After we arrived, everyone changed into the comfortable yukatta's provided for us, and we went to eat dinner in the dining hall.

The hotel served Japanese carp in a variety of different ways. I'd never eaten carp before, and I was shocked at how good it was.

After dinner, we returned to our room for a three-dimensional sound experiment. We played the Flaming Lips' Zaireeka album using two iPods, each connected to an iFusion speaker setup, and two iBooks, each connected to an external speaker set-up. For one night, we had the best stereo on the planet!

The next day we woke up, put our iPods in our pockets, walked out into a blizzard, and went cross-country skiing across a 3km cat track. At the end of the cat track, we strapped on a pair of snowshoes and went trooping through the woods like the March of the Rotten Vegetables.

Eventually, we decided to dig a snow cave. We managed to hollow out a deep snowdrift that provided us shelter for lunch. After eating, we went back outside and noticed all our tracks were snowed over. It took us some time to find our way back to the cat track, but we did it.

On the way back to the hotel, we stopped off in front of a mirror to have some fun with our cameras.



Pure silliness. Believe it or not, that was the music I was listening to at the time.

All jokes aside, that night I ate one of the best meals of my life; carp sashimi, carp in a kind of sweet miso soup, nabe, tsukemono, fish paste served with a shiso leaf, and a few bottles of atsukan.

Our last day, we woke up to beautiful sunshine and went snowboarding all morning before catching a 3pm snow-cat back down the mountain.

At the end, I concluded that any time Jason, Mark, and I get together hilarity ensues.