Wednesday July 18, 2001
Sunny day. Hot outside. Cicadas are buzzing away outside creating a lot of racket. I went down for a nap this afternoon.
Ongoing Letter - Allan's Place
Allan's journal to the world. (Sounds important, doesn't it?)
Wednesday July 18, 2001
Sunny day. Hot outside. Cicadas are buzzing away outside creating a lot of racket. I went down for a nap this afternoon.
Tuesday July 17, 2001
Day off today. Only two hours to put in, then the rest to play with.
later
I understand now why people smoke, drink beer and such, and watch TV. All these things are addictive. Why? People just don’t have enough time to develop what they really enjoy – drawing, swimming, gardening, going to singing rooms, having barbecues, doing jigsaw puzzles, doing water sports, dancing, going to the cinema, even keeping a diary. It’s easier, drawing from Hanmee’s habits, to lay down on the couch for a rest than to pull the kitchen table up to the window and start sketching something. She really enjoys it and has oodles of talent, but she just doesn’t because she’s tired from work. Not all people are like that here, i think, but most are. Most people in my culture set aside some time at least to do their thing, whatever their thing may be. Mine were cycling, morning coffees with friends, and movies. I have morning coffee now and cycle every now and then, but that’s about it.
So i wonder what today will bring.
Hanmee spent the night on the couch last night. She listed off some reasons – wanted to brush her teeth but couldn’t wake up, depressed, couldn’t sleep in the bed – but the long and short of it is that she’s not too crazy about the setup here.
Jen, a Canadian friend of mine whom i met here in Seoul, like Starbucks coffee as much as i do. Or rather, real coffee (rather than instant coffee, Korean style flavoured coffees, or cheap brands like Rogers & Nabob).
Saturday July 14, 2001
Hold on whilst i go get my morning coffee.
Okay. Now i’m ready. It’s Saturday today, and therefor a good time to head out to the Han river park for a throw of the frisbie. Hanmee wants to take the cats out there to see just what they’d do and to show them that there’s a world out there they’re missing. Good or bad? I dunno. Probably more good than bad.
I just got the “Solar Times” from Real Goods, the environmentalist retail store. They send out this newsletter every month. Just reading about the US president Bush’s refusal to sign this Kyoto greenhouse gas thing. What a nerd. Russian roulette with future lives. What strikes me as odd is that the Kyoto Protocol only plans to lower greenhouse causing gas by 5.2% in 22 years. Doesn’t seem very substantial to me. And Bush can’t even commit to that! Then he says that, after faulting the Kyoto thing for excluding developing nations from its requirements, he wants to cut US aid for helping third world countries fight their global warming problem.
On the home front; nothing new, really. I moved a lot of plants from the living room into the balcony to get a bit of humidity. The living room is kind of dry now with the balcony windows shut and the air conditioning on.
On the computer scene; I’ve got my little tiny network happening with the P3 as the server & every day use machine (kind of like a client), and the P1 hooked up to the scanner. They’re connected with a cute little tiny 4-port hub i picked up at Youngsan market. It works well.
Something up with the coffee. I drink Seattle’s Best, good. I drink Starbucks, i get a stuffy nose. Anybody out there know what kind of chemicals they put in coffee? Or what they spray coffee plantations with? Just curious.
Saturday July 14, 2001
My brother’s-in-law wife’s grandmother died five days ago. Yah, i know. It’s pretty far removed from me. Nonetheless, it’s a family thing. She was 93, widowed before.
Big news here – rain. And more rain. Massive flooding here in Seoul and south of here.
Friday July 13, 2001
Hey. This is Friday The Thirteenth. Cool. Not sure if this is a good luck thing or a bad luck thing. Anyone out there superstitious?
Thursday July 12, 2001
Funny how a person can stop mid-sentence when writing in a diary. Just what came over me that i had to stop with “Then “? Hell if i know.
Anyway, as some of you were watching today, i put all my windows separating the balcony from living room and office back up this afternoon. Now we have a cool living room and cool office, and the plants are left with the heat and humidity of a Korean mid-summer. Better them than me! Not only that, but i can now take the hose to them all without fear of flooding the rest of the apartment. He he.
Wednesday July 11, 2001
I asked Hanmee the other day if she missed the birds. She replied, simply enough, with a “No.” Oh. Then
Tuesday July 10, 2001
The following week. Hanmee cooked some pork for us today, and i’m just eating the last of it now. Pretty good. It’s 9pm now, and there’s nothing left to do but relax and kick the cats.
Notice:
No harm has come to any cats being kicked this evening. All cat kicking has been done under supervision of trained cat kicking technicians. All cats were wearing proper cat kicking apparel.
Having said that, i think i’ll torture everyone around me by playing my guitar.
Thursday, July 5, 2001
Another muggy day. Hmm. Didn’t i say that before? Must be true then.
The photos in allan’s family are all done now. Take a look if you so choose.
Monday, July 2, 2001
Another muggy day. That’s okay. We’ve had our air conditioners running most of today. However, one of them decided to sweat a little and dripped onto our couch. Caught it in time, and now it’s dripping elsewhere – like out the “out” tube. I put the drip hose into a plant that demands a lot of water. How is that for being an ecologist, eh? Ha ha! Yah, i know. I’m using electricity. But these air conditioners are supposed to be pretty efficient. I’d like to take them to Canada whenever we end up moving there, but they run off of 220 VAC rather than 110 VAC. Not sure if i could wire it up properly without singing my hair!
Something else in the news. Not necessarily today, but news of recent nonetheless. Hanmee & i went down to Kyobo book store, the largest bookstore in South Korea, to poke around and see what we could see. I had in mind to pick up some reference books on Windows 2000. Turns out, there are books from Microsoft that cover the entire core-four MCSE courses. They call it the MCSE Training Kit. It covers, in a four book & 2 CD package, Windows 2000 Professional, W2K Server, W2K Network Infrastructure Administration, and W2K Active Directory Services. These are the four core subjects of study needed to get the MCSE ticket – Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer. Along with these core, 2 to 3 electives are also needed. So this gives me a solid base to start on this road to tech stuff. More later.