Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts

Sunday, August 20, 2023

Plane, Ubahn, and Rail 07/20

One of my supervisors had mentioned a phenomenology exercise she was assigned while completing her degree: to describe coffee for a week without using the word coffee. The dark liquid on the flight from Chicago to Paris felt well captured by this quote for 1984: “It gave off a sickly, oily smell, as of Chinese rice-spirit. Winston poured out nearly a teacupful, nerved himself for a shock, and gulped it down like a dose of medicine.” 

On the flight, the woman next to me had some sort of therapy-level psychology degree, but was on her way to see her long-distance husband in...Algeria, maybe? I can't remember, a North African country? They had met through his brother who worked as a lawyer in the U.S., she had initially tried law school but dropped it. Her husband had a large farm and so she only did a bit of consulting now as he could support her fully, but I still struggled to understand what it would mean to study to be a therapist and then not want to be a therapist. For the better though, if that's not what she wants to do, that she doesn't do it. If I remembered her name I would look her up, but a month on and her name escapes me. 

I was pleased that though Yosef arrived earlier than me, he needed to go through customs, resulting in him only waiting for me for only half an hour before we met. I had already gone through customs at my layover in Paris, then gone to brush my teeth and reapply deodorant - a travel tip from my mother (our? does mentioning my brother necessitate using our mother here?) After that, in desperation, I had eaten sushi at the counter while I waited for the second flight. Sushi that came with sweet soy sauce packets, much to my dismay and bewilderment. When I did land in Berlin, I was glad to see my brother’s face, even though he snipped at me before we had even made it to the Ubahn, likely in response to me telling him what to do. Older-sister habit I am trying to kick. Yosef pointed out the cloth-towels at the airport restrooms, a seemingly endless single roll of reusable towel.

We made our way to Zimt and Zucker, a cafĂ© recommended by my friend Bianca’s sister. I asked if we could sit outside since otherwise our suitcases would be in the way, but the hostess responded there are no more spaces outdoors, and that our suitcases will be in the way regardless. She seated us at the same table as a couple who arrived shortly before us and had ordered what seemed like chocolate with milk poured over it. They stirred it and it broke up the chocolate a bit but never really transformed into chocolate milk and they left without quite finishing it. Yosef got a Berliner Weisse, a drink I had almost forgotten existed: beer with sweet, flavored syrup mixed in. I drank a cappuccino and we both got crepes. The cappuccino was the first in a series of disappointing drinking experiences. It turns out the American way of defaulting to a double shot for a larger quantity of milk is not the standard elsewhere. A few frothy milky mistakes finally caused me to reconsider my drink order.

We sat around awhile after figuring out how to get to Dresden, using the 1euro bathrooms that take place of the free public restrooms we have in the US. We had meant to use Deutsche Bahn, which includes regional rail, but we were far too tired to navigate another transfer and ended up opting for a more expensive direct train. A Muslim woman asked me how to use one of the other ticketing machines and I gestured at our suitcases to explain that I don’t know my head to tail here. A large Russian-speaking family sat on the bench next to us. Finally, we got on the train and found seats, and Yosef and I took turns sleeping on the train as the countryside pulled past us. Our Airbnb was a short walk from the train stop and thus concluded a full day of travel.




Friday, February 13, 2015

free chocolate

That same day I met up with Karen in the evening. It was my Monday off (I'd worked the weekend of the play) so I wanted to make the most of it, and for once everyone else had a Monday off too. Full weekends become a very exciting event when you only get every other one - a marked switch from the three-day weekends typical of my college experience.

Tuesday, Wednesday were normal work days: up before the sunrise, done by 3:30. Thursday I got mandated to do a double shift for the first time. I still had work Friday morning and had woken up at 4am for no reason. I was so loopy (and also it was my fourth unit in three days, which meant yet another set of names and rapport to establish) but it went well, though I'm sure the other MHW, who had never worked with me before, thought I was crazy. I told him that during my break my eyes welled up with tears after watching a Cheerios commercial.

I met with Cat and Alana after work that day, and watched The Wolf of Wallstreet once I got back to the apartment (2013, USA, Scorsese, not worth your time). Beer and a movie; classic American way to end the day. Totaling being up for 22 hours for no reason at all.


Saturday morning I got up and Therese (roommate) and I joined her friends at Harvard Sq. where a chocolate festival was going on. Lots of free samples, also lots of people lined up, patiently. We were not patient. We ate the samples we got before a couple hundred people swarmed the square, at which point we left to get afternoon margaritas. This is what classy ladies do - drink margaritas in the middle of the day. And the cherry on top was my parents coming to drop my bike off, and then falling asleep, finally, after they left. (There ain't no rest for the wicked.)





after my parents left and I fell napped, I woke up in time for wine & sparklers


Saturday, April 27, 2013

Second Symphony

I’ve been doing ‘movie screenings’ in my room; we drink tea and eat chocolate and watch movies. I started two weeks before spring break.
So far we have watched:
  1. The Crying Game
  2. En Kongelig Affære (A Royal Affair, Danish)
  3. Les Enfants du Paradis (Children of Paradise, French) – Garance! Eloosha, you were right, this movie is amazing.
  4. Beginners
  5. The Big Labowski – Over lunch, I told Kelsey that I keep seeing boys walking in twos, confiding in each other in their girl problems. “it’s spring” she said. She did yoga on my dorm that night, and tried to read Plato’s Ions out loud while I cleaned my room but we got sidetracked by synesthesia and Spanish poetry.
    At lunch the next day, Dean and I met a graduate student who works for a non-profit specializing in doomsday prevention. From Blithewood I could watch rain fall over the Catskills, and clouds streamed with tails overhead; rivets flowing into each other made me know that I was breathing underwater, looking up towards where the liquid meets the air.
  6. An Education--Tonight I sang Mahler’s Second Symphony, yesterday we did too. Hannah came the first time and liked it so much she tried to come again. I missed the last TBL episode of the season but here are last episodes recording and photos. Today I made my first U.S. alcohol purchase (wine and rum for sangria). The lady gave me a tootsie roll pop; they keep them for people who just had their 21st birthday. The man in line behind me stank of drink. 
    Mama sent me roses and other gifts in the mail


 

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Almost Done, What I've Done

more me being self-centered about Margaret's tumblr;
[link redacted} 

Margaret and I also made a brown sugar pound cake yesterday for Jack's birthday! Rosette and Margaret got him a book called Grossman’s Guide to Wines, Beers, and Spirits signed by the author to a guy name Maury, and it also had an article fro the NYTimes folded in, with chemistry on the back.
Tea as well :)
and the choclates Mama sent me (yes, my back feels better Mama, thank you for the heating pad <3)

I'm almost done with finals week. I still have to present my photo project tomorrow, and I might still do the extra credit assignment for stats, but everything else is done, I just handed in a final paper for stats. I took photos last Saturday for the Caribbean Student Union party (it was like, a semi-formal thing, nothing crazy)

also:
Hi All, Since I didn't get a chance to approve you before
registration closed, we need to use the regular add/drop forms. If
you're still interested in being in this class, please email me to
set up a time this week when I can sign your form. Best, Cole

I already finished with all the add/drop form stuff so I'm in the class! woot! Susa is too :)
She's the professor that someone said that if she taught knitting they would take it.


Lily Jack Rosette Margaret and I went to this 'Chinese' place in Rhinebeck. It was like a a fake-gold-guilded hole-in-the-wall which we still enjoyed, partially because we had a little adventure getting there and partially because it isn't kline. The same day it was Alana's birthday (the 2nd) so we celebrated by watching the last two harry potter films and eating icecream and brownie-cake. but we gave her the present a couple days ago (fancy flask)
in the photo shes looking at the preliminary gifts we gave her; random things in little plastic balls. i think two of them added up to a necklace.
She's driving me home. So soon!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Pending, round two

12142
LIT 2064   Other Romanticisms
Cole Heinowitz
M . W . .
11:50 -1:10 pm
OLIN 301
ELIT/DIFF
Cross-listed: Victorian Studies It is only in recent decades that studies of Romantic poetry have begun to look beyond the “Big Six”: Blake, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and Byron. Yet between the 1780s and the 1830s, Britain witnessed an explosion of writing by figures generally excluded from the canon, including women, proletarians, people of color, peasants, and those deemed insane. In this course, we will explore the works of this “other” Romantic tradition while taking into account the ways in which political issues and social mores shape a body of literature and mediate its status in the marketplace. We will also question conventional understandings of British Romanticism itself, challenging assumptions about its historical, aesthetic, political, and philosophical characteristics. Readings to include works by George Crabbe, Robert Burns, Anna Barbauld, Mary Prince, John Clare, Thomas Beddoes, Laetitia Elizabeth Landon, Isaac d’Israeli, and William Hazlitt. Some previous exposure to Romantic literature is required.  Class size: 18



things that are bitter:
tonic water (quinine)
the top part of a really large carrot
grapefruit
strong tea
coffee
beer
cough syrup
citrus peel
burnt things
poisonous berries
soap
dark chocolate
cilantro
some olives
that strip that they make you taste in science classes that has PTC on it
turnip

I like some of these things.
Emma and I were talking today and she said vinegar was bitter (nope-def. sour) and then I tried to come up with things that were biter but it seems that she dislikes or hasn't interacted with most of them. no cough syrup, no grapefruit. plus a lot of bitter things have an acidic after taste-like some coffees.


Monday, December 5, 2011

Wound-Up Whine

I'm just going to dump, so my head stops spinning:
 
Brain wound up like a coil in a...wind up toy I guess. I can't really think of anything good at the moment. I know I sound chirpy. And I know that even though I feel energetic, I didn't get much sleep, since I woke up because of my back last night. I pulled it during thanksgiving and had to scrounge around for pain killers and wait for them to kick in.


Thursday I went to a lecture, Friday I went to the Hessel Museum Library (new found work space: clean, quite, and a walk away so it makes me stay there) I wrote a page and half summer/response of extra credit and read some. Saturday night went to Manor for an ISO masquerade party I was asked to shoot. It was too much, maybe with the stress of everything else I have to do, for me to handle.
Yesterday I finished reading The Center Cannot Hold, which I was supposed to read before thanksgiving. I also caught up on my Soc. reading, and then realized at the end of class today that it was our last class ever (read: Marx, Weber, Durkheim, Simmel)
Also chose and read a study for Adult Psych, since I have to write a summery and response on it for tomorrow. The article I chose is"Cognitive Responses to Failure and Success Relate Uniquely to Bipolar Depression Versus Mania"
tea with Jack and ate toblerone
tea with Rosette and Hannah and had chocolate.


Today I woke up, went to Soc, ate lunch, went to a mandatory-but-fairly-open hours to talk about my final photo assembly, went to stats.

plan for the rest of the day involves: Amanda and Lila (to the right of me in stast) and Maximilian and Lucas (to my left) and me all meeting up to do stats at 8. Chapter 1-6. 
So I'm doing my adult psych write up before then.

I have a chamber singing dress rehearsal for Haydn on Tuesday, the concert is at Sosnoff at 8pm on Wednesday. My written final for stats is on Saturday 1-4. 
Next week:
Monday my final paper for History of Soc is due.
Tuesday I have an exam (Schizophrenia, Mood Disorders, Substance Abuse) and a lab exam for stats
I think my final photo project is due Wed.


but first I need to eat and rest a little because otherwise I might crash and that would be, in so many words, not good.

breath. deep breaths.


I have to admit though, I kinda like the stress, I always feel a lot more productive. 
I enjoy being productive.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Lavender Chocolate

Sogroutes. licorice. Hardscrabble. Smog.
Rosette has a car. Which means we can go places.
It's a four-seater with two doors but of course that doesn't stop us.
First: Sogroutes (I thought it was spelled Socrates). We were going to the garlic festival there but it had a 10$ entrance so that didn't happen. So we walked around, looked at the thrift stores and candy shop (I got some licorice, because I've only eaten it once before, a long time ago. others got raspberry chocolate and lavender chocolate, chocolate covered orange peal...) and feta spinach croissant and almost got a cute tie. but didn't, I'm not sure I'm a tie-wearing person yet (i would like to be ^_^)
2nd: Hardscrabble Fair, in Redhook. We only caught the tail end, got some food at a GiGi's van (mm...fries boiled with sage and rosemary)
3rd: Hannaford. bread and all that jazz.
 and later we went to smog. everyone else left after a minute-there were Bard bands playing and the first one was okay but then the one after that was...well, just the singer with a guitar and the rest of his band couldn't make it. listing to music and watching very drunk people dance and stand around and sway. got a very sweaty hug and "are you drunk" "no" "why not?"
(really though, two nights in a row is too much. that's what happened last weekend and nobody felt like doing that again. granted the night before I ended up finishing my book for adult psych "the boy who couldn't stop washing" while everyone else was being silly and loud)


 work....two short papers this week, three exams next week. early midterms combined with classes that have three tests in a semester.

Friday, July 29, 2011

hot in the water.

Hannah and I went to the supermarket to get food for our trip to the lake with two of her high school friends. Even there, it was incredibly hot, but it gave us something to do (like swim...at gawk at small children, and look at the fish.)

(I don't remember quite the order of the rest of the events, because I guess sometimes I have an incredibly short memory.  maybe. maybe its all in place.also at some point we watched an animated film The Illusionist and Le combat dans l'ile)

I think it was Sunday that we went to the nature center where Hannah had been organizing archives and the such. We saw a white egret and a couple of blue herons. We were absolutely wiped after that (at least I was), so we went and ate and then went to a Vietnamese restaurant. It had finally started to drizzle, but not enough to break the heat spell and humidity. There was also a street fair, but it broke up at the first hint of rain, and it was very small.

Monday we intended to go to the pool, but instead danced in the sprinklers in front of the library, stared at the sky in the park, ate an an ice cream parlor, and then went to her grandparents house. Her grandparents are lovely. We talked for a spell and then went to the garden, were we collected some corn and bell pepper and jalapenos and basil from the garden for dinner.
We made some sort of middle ground between green salsa and guacamole, it was really good. :

2 cloves garlic
2 jalapeno peppers (it can defiantly hold more)
lemon juice
cilantro (we had Asian cilantro from the garden)
1 avocado
1 small green bell pepper
1/2 tomato
1 scallion
salt


Dinner was the fresh picked corn, burgers (my first ever-yes, yes, I know, it's strange), and smores for desert. (mmm...caramelized fluffed corn-syrup and melted dark chocolate, so good)

The next day we snuck me into a Columbia library (twice) so Hannah could do some work for her class. Lunch was for some reason fantastic-I guess I was a lot hungrier than I thought I was when we came around to it, but that bagel with olive cream cheese and orange juice and mochi was delicious.



And then I bought a ticket to Sloutsberg to visit the Kuznetsovi. Misha and Diniska and I played tennis-in the rain, with dead balls. Which made it so much easier because everything was so much slower, I felt like a beast. And then the next day we went swimming with , and somehow eating ice cream while Sasha and Misha and I waited for the bus was perfect.

Also I had a dream I was an art teacher at my high school.


And today Osya came back from Israel! He has a tan (well...a tan to the extent him and I get tans) and he's happy :)

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Rain Reins

So much happened considering I did
nothing. I have to write about listening for creative nonfiction. I've been doing so with time stamps.

("5:40pm

The way the water lands on the outside windowsill it sounds like tennis balls, exploding.
There is a click click click as I type. On occasion my nail will make a sound as it slips against the plastic of the key. The heater, is, as usual, humming. It’s not very pleasant. It feels like the buzzing is inside my head, paired with the stomach-grumble of the refrigerator. The wind beats the rain against the trees, the cars swoosh through the puddles, making waves fall. People walk past. Their footsteps are silent, but sometimes they talk loudly, and I can hear them up here.

Last night, at about 4am I noticed flashes of light landing on my closet, coming through the window. There was no ambulance, no air raid siren, just white light sparking off; no thunder either. I joined Will at the window, in time to see one of the streakers covering her butt, the laughter of freedom escaping her lips, the paparazzi flashes silent.

Someone just yawned really loudly below. And again, this time it ends almost like a human howl, from the depths of his lungs.")

Sam and I went off into the fog today. The snow that is shown in the first photo is now gone, given in to March showers. It's weird to see the green grass underneath. Also, it is very muddy.


And the ceiling in the bathroom is leaking. Rosette put a tupperware to catch the water, I put in a service request.

("11:11

The water drips from the ceiling into the Tupperware four times a minute. It makes a hard noise, hitting the plastic after accelerating for seven feet.")


Rosette's bff Colin came down to visit so I ran around with my camera a lot. We made gnocchi from scratch on...friday? And I think the only reason I got up in the morning on Saturday was because Margaret made me an omelet. And then Rosette and Colin made banana chocolate pancakes.

So we showed him around; Blithewood, the waterfall, some of the buildings, the Root Cellar (which I hadn't been in before, and which is dirty), and the free store, where Adrienne found a large yellow dress, which I went back with Susa and Hannah to get (and try on pants). It has 10 layers, and we plan on making a play called "The Princess of the Peeps", staring Susa, and the rest of us will dress up as peeps. Somehow. The size is made for a person that's a 20 DD, not for a human. A bag with extra sequins was still attached, so it probably had been worn once or twice, most likely as drag. She was eating frosting leftover from birthday cake. Susa thinks there should be a destruction scene in the play, where she twirls around like a hurricane.

Also went to Redhook with Margaret, Cat and Hannah. Got the most mundane things; cotton balls, toothpaste, thumbtacks. Went to Tastebuds, drank Hannah's refill of coffee, mooched on Margaret's giant cookie. Colin and Rosette arrived on the shuttle as we were leaving. And then he left around 9 this morning. After I had already showered, before I went back to sleep again.

watched the first four episodes of "Bored to Death" on the projector Marty, who sprained his ankle playing Frisbee, brought. Jennifer came over too, this was before Colin left, this was last night.

sorry that the colors are so off on some of the photos.


Okay, now I really need to go read Nietzsche