Major breakthrough

Bella: Mom, when we go to Laguna can we spend one day shopping?

Me (nonchalantly): Sure, but you know we’re going to Laguna over spring break to go house shopping, right? (pause) Do you want to come around and see all the fancy half-million dollar condos I’m going to be looking at?

Bella: Yeah okay.

Me (completely shocked, but staying cool): I heard that the Aliso Viejo High School is really good – lots of things they offer… That’s the area we’ll be looking.

Bella: what school? That sounds like the school my friend goes to. Maybe it’s the same one!

Me: Hey, if we find a house I want to take you and Dawkins to Seaworld – and we’ll get our hair cut too.

Bella (doing a little dance): Hurray, hurray, hurrray!

This – after six months of slammed doors and telling me, NO WAY AM I GOING TO MOVE. She had almost convinced me that she was going to go live with her dad…Of course now Dawkins’ mom wants to know if Dawkins can move in with us and go to what ever high school I find for Bella (!!!)

Posted in says bella | 2 Comments

What American accent do you have?

If you are interested in the answer to this question, take this short quiz here. (Thanks for sharing this one, Al.) Apparently, I have virtually no accent.

This was what I got at the end of my quiz:

“Your accent is the lowest common denominator of American speech. Unless you’re a SoCal surfer, no one thinks you have an accent. And really, you may not even be from the West at all, you could easily be from Florida or one of those big Southern cities like Dallas or Atlanta.”

Interestingly, when I was still taking classes at Art Center, a Korean guy told me that I have the slightest twinges of a Korean-American accent. My fiance thinks it’s hokey-balokey; I think it’s probably true. In third grade I was even pulled out of class for speech testing because I had such a strange sense of pronunciation.

As an adult, it finally dawned on me that English was not my first language – in fact, my mom says that I didn’t start speaking English regularly until I went to preschool at four! It also explains why I say strange things like, “Don’t pass the bug” instead of “Don’t pass the buck.”

Posted in korea | 8 Comments

Nauman's Green Corridor

I had really wanted to post this pic of Bella in Bruce Nauman’s Green Corridor when I posted about the Nauman show in Berkeley (great thinker, but he doesn’t give you much to look at), but I couldn’t find the image file at the time.

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Perineal Massage

If you are a boy and get uncomfortable around vagina talk, better avert your eyes now.

Somebody asked me recently how to do a perineal massage (because she wants to avoid an episiotomy, which is literally cutting the vagina with scissors during labor….) I explained what I remembered the midwife doing, but this paragraph from the September 2006 issue of Health (page 82) explains it better.

The blurb is titled, “The DIY trick that makes giving birth easier.”

“…A new research review says [perineal] massage can reduce the need for [an episiotomy] by 15 percent. The technique also reduces tearing during birth and pelvic pain for 3 months afterward. Here’s how to do it: Put a water-based lubricant on your thumbs and insert them into your vagina. Press downward, toward your butt, and then stretch the sides, moving in a U shape. It may hurt a little at first, but it gets easier as the tissues expand. Do it for 10 minutes a day, at bedtime or in the tub, for the last 4 weeks of pregnancy.”

For the record, I did not have an episiotomy and I did not tear – or only very tiny lateral tears that did not need stitches. And this is after a doctor told me point blank, “All Asian women have to have an episiotomy.” As if.

(and an interesting factoid from the same magazine: ” 71 percent of people in a British study were willing to trade their office-computer password for a candy bar.”)

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300 and Tsotsi

I got an email or two over the weekend wondering about my lack of posting – and speculating that I was working on my thesis. Just so that things are clear, it’s when I am working on my thesis that I post the most!

I’ll probably stop blogging altogether once the thesis is turned in. just kidding.

On the thesis front, I re-enrolled at Art Center today, because you have to be enrolled the term you graduate. I feel pretty good about my first 28 pages – thank you Tiff! and thank you Ellen! I hope to have the thing turned in to the printer on Monday (!!!)

Instead, I was doing things like watching movies, hanging with my honey, and having dinner with friends and family, oh and cooking up a storm with Maya (more on that later…)

We watched 300, which was pretty dang good for a violent war movie based on a graphic novel. Chad says it is doing crazy well at the box office (although all those numbers sound huge to me); it’s already made 70 million. Chad says that might be a record for highest-grossing R-rated movie on it’s first weekend. It is also getting very high ratings at imdb: 8.3/10.0. Chad gives it an A-, but I give it a B+, simply there were so many decapitations and severed limbs. (Plus I was very angry and distracted by the idiotic parents who brought their seven and eight-year-old kids in the theater. Good grief!)

If this movie continues to do so well, the director Zack Synder will really have his way with his next major comic book-to-screen adaptation. The art direction was terrific – the entire movie was filmed against a green backdrop – which means that there was a surreal and wildly dramatic feel to the cinematography (is that the right word?)

It is the story of 300 of Sparta’s finest warriors under the leadership of King Leonidas going to battle against the enormous battalion of Xerxes. I found the pre-story of how Spartans trained young Leonidas with brutal and unrelenting challenges fascinating. I’m not saying that I believe in knocking Bella around physically, but I do think some mental (and physical) toughening up is an important part of adolescence. (I’m talking about getting her to ride the school bus, not throwing her out in the desert to kill her first wolf…)

We also watched Tsotsi on DVD, the one that won Best Foreign Picture last year. I gave it a B+ as well (imdb 7.5/10.0). This film was slightly violent as it followed a gang leader in Johannesburg over the course of a week, but the pace was mellow and there is a very sweet baby involved!

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STUDY ON FRIENDSHIP AMONG WOMEN

Here’s a great article confirms what we already intuitively know: our friendships keep us sane and happy! Thanks for sharing this, Ellen.

By Gale Berkowitz
University of California, Los Angeles

A landmark UCLA study suggests friendships between women are special. They shape who we are and who we are yet to be. They soothe our tumultuous inner world, fill the emotional gaps in our marriages, and help us remember who we really are. By the way, they may do even more.  Scientists now suspect that hanging out with our friends can actually counteract the kind of stomach-quivering stress most of us experience on a daily basis.

A landmark UCLA study suggests that women respond to stress with a cascade of brain chemicals that cause us to make and maintain friendships with other women. It’s a stunning find that has turned five decades of stress research—most of it on men—upside down.

“Until this study was published, scientists generally believed that when people experienced stress, the condition triggered a hormonal cascade that prepared the body to either stand and fight or flee as fast as possible,” explains Laura Cousino Klein, Ph.D., now an Assistant Professor of Biobehavioral Health at Penn State University and one of the study’s authors. “It’s an ancient survival mechanism left over from the time we were chased across the planet by saber-toothed tigers.”

Now the researchers suspect that women have a larger behavioral repertoire than just “fight or flight.” “In fact,” says Dr. Klein, “it seems that when the hormone oxytocin is released as part of the stress responses in a woman, it buffers the ‘fight or flight’ response and encourages her to tend children and gather with other women instead. When she actually engages in this tending or befriending, studies suggest that more oxytocin is released, which further counters stress and produces a calming effect. This calming response does not occur in men”, says Dr. Klein, “because testosterone —which men produce in high levels when they’re under stress—seems to reduce the effects of oxytocin. Estrogen”, she adds, “seems to enhance it.”

The discovery that women respond to stress differently than men was made in a classic “aha!” moment shared by two women scientists who were talking one day in a lab at UCLA. “There was this joke that when the women who worked in the lab were stressed, they came in, cleaned the lab, had coffee, and bonded,” says Dr. Klein. “When the men were stressed, they holed up somewhere on their own. I commented one day to fellow researcher Shelley Taylor that nearly 90% of the stress research is on males. I showed her the data from my lab, and the two of us knew instantly that we were onto something.”

The women cleared their schedules and started meeting with one scientist after another from various research specialties. Very quickly, Drs. Klein and Taylor discovered that by not including women in stress research, scientists had made a huge mistake: The fact that women respond to stress differently than men has significant implications for our health.

It may take some time for new studies to reveal all the ways that oxytocin encourages us to care for children and hang out with other women, but the “tend and befriend” notion  developed by Drs. Klein and Taylor may explain why women consistently outlive men. Study after study has found that social ties reduce our risk of disease by lowering blood pressure, heart rate, and cholesterol.

“There’s no doubt,” says Dr. Klein, “that friends are helping us live.” In one study, for example, researchers found that people who had no friends increased their risk of death over a 6-month period. In another study, those who had the most friends over a 9-year period cut their risk of death by more than 60%.

Friends are also helping us live better. The famed Nurses’ Health Study from Harvard Medical School found that the more friends women had, the less likely they were to develop physical impairments as they aged, and the more likely they were to be leading a joyful life.

In fact, the results were so significant, the researchers concluded, that not having close friends or confidantes was as detrimental to your health as smoking or carrying extra weight!

And that’s not all! When the researchers looked at how well the women functioned after the death of their spouse, they found that even in the face of this biggest stressor of all, those women who had a close friend and confidante were more likely to survive the experience without any new physical impairment or permanent loss of vitality. Those without friends were not always so fortunate.

Yet if friends counter the stress that seems to swallow up so much of our life these days, if they keep us healthy and even add years to our life, why is it so hard to find time to be with them? That’s a question that also troubles researcher Ruthellen Josselson, Ph.D., co-author of Best Friends: The Pleasures and Perils of Girls’ and Women’s Friendships/ (Three Rivers Press, 1998). “Every time we get overly busy with work and family, the first thing we do is let go of friendships with other women,” explains Dr. Josselson. “We push them right to the back burner. That’s really a mistake because women are such a source of strength to each other. We nurture one another. And we need to have unpressured space in which we can do the special kind of talk that women do when they’re with other women. It’s a very healing experience.”

Sources: Taylor, S. E., Klein, L.C., Lewis, B. P., Gruenewald, T. L.,
Gurung, R.A.R., & Updegraff, J. A. (2000).

“Female Responses to Stress: Tend and Befriend, Not Fight or Flight”,
Psychological Review, 107(3), 41-429.”

Posted in relationships | 3 Comments

Puppy Food 101

Yikes – I don’t post for a couple days and suddenly I’ve lost my flow; where on earth did I find the time? Damn shame too, because my stats were going great last week. Maybe the blog stats were pressuring me…

Giselle is what happened to my time. I am spending all my time taking care of this little dog! And in my free time I post about her.

The great thing about little dogs is that everything about them is little, and I’m not just talking about their poops either. (She makes about three of those a day.) It takes her a week to go through one can of dog food and I’m guessing it will be six months before she finishes the 4.5 pound (2 kg) bag of puppy chow. With that kind of consumption, what do I care how much a can of dog food costs? I say, Bring on the fancy stuff!

Especially with Bella coming home with gruesome stories about how they boil up dead dogs for dog food. Bleh. I thought it was an (sub)urban legend until I mentioned that to a friend, and she opened up her eyes wide and said, Yeah! I know, isn’t it awful? I didn’t fact check it or anything, but it was enough confirmation to send me scurrying over to the human-grade puppy food.

Human-grade dog food means that it was processed in a plant with standards as high as for food processed for human consumption. And while I don’t want to know the specifics of how many insect or rat parts are allowed in human food, human-grade sounds a sight better than dog-grade, especially if her dishes are going in my sink.

So, I bought, not the fanciest of fancy stuff, but the stuff that is supposedly just as fancy, but costs slightly less. Not only that, but it is also what the girl working there feeds her own dogs and there is a frequent buyer plan. (Buy ten and get the eleventh bag or case free.) It is Nutro’s top-of-the-line and it’s called “Ultra.” Bought one can ($1.75) and one bag of puppy chow ($8.99). But darn it if I could barely get Giselle to eat the canned “Ultra.” So then I went back to the Cowboy Corral in Yucca Valley and basically bought one of everything – by Wellness (the top brand) and by Nutro. Both brands are human-grade and holistic. Turns out that this feed store does not carry Science Diet; the girl there told me that it has lots of corn filler and that vets get a kickback for selling the stuff in their offices.

Of course, Giselle likes the mini pouches best. How could she not, with names like “Yankee Pot Roast” and “Chicken and Cheese Casserole” (pictured above)?! This is not perhaps the healthiest Nutro line, but definitely the tastiest and most expensive ($.99/ 4.5 ounce pouch). But is it going to spoil her and make her unable to abide regular dog food? Is it like eating caviar everyday? I’m thinking I’ll save it for her morning meals (mixed with tiny bit of dry food), because I don’t have time for her to be fussy about her food in the wee hours. And she seems to like the Wellness can ($1.69/12 ounce can) too, so I’m feeding her that in the evening. Even though Wellness is supposedly the top of the heap, the feedstore girl cautioned me that it is a one-meat food, versus the three-meat “Ultra.”

I’m holding out to see if Giselle likes the Nutro “Max” ($1.25) or Nutro “Natural Choice” ($1.45). I know I said to hang the expense, but do I want to be that person who feeds gourmet POUCHES to her dog everyday? That just seems silly.

And I got her a “Bully Stick” too. Know what it is? A dried bull’s penis… Can you believe it? You know the concept – use every part of the buffalo… So this is my life with a dog.

Posted in poochie | 4 Comments

Say No To Plastic Bags

While I have long been an advocate of bringing my own grocery bags to the market, I decided to take on Tiffany’s March challenge and really count how many plastic bags I was letting creep into my life in one month’s time.

So far, just one. But I find that it’s not the grocery store that gets me; it’s when I go to the mall that I end up with enormous amounts of plastic packaging. I have not yet found a way to deal with my mall habit…

And yesterday I politely refused a plastic bag at the market and the sales clerk promptly stuffed the unused bag in the garbage! What a waste. At that point I wanted to ask for the plastic bag back, but I didn’t think it was worth the public ruckus.

If you already have an overpopulation problem with plastic bags, all the local thrift stores in the Morongo Valley happily accept plastic bag donations.

Posted in modernday hippiness | 3 Comments

How to Improve Your Child's Test Scores

For those of you with children in the public school system in California, state testing is just around the corner (end of April for us). These days, at the middle school where I work, a student’s CST scores pretty much determines his/her classes for the upcoming year (low, average, or advanced!) – so an involved parent might want to know how to help their child succeed.

Every year CST releases 20% of their questions and publishes them cumulatively on the California Department of Education (CDE) website from kindergarten to twelve grade in all subject areas. I think these questions are invaluable for state testing preparation. The latest batch of questions were released just last month.

This is one of those times when Bella really, really wishes her mom weren’t a teacher – because we are going through all the 8th grade released test questions (Algebra, English Language Arts, science and history) together at home. And not to brag or anything, but she kicked butt on the Algebra! Still dragging her through the ELA questions though.

If you are interested in downloading these released test questions, they are available here. Remember, these tests are specifically testing for mastery of California Content Standards; you can see California’s English Language Arts standards (for all grade levels) here.

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Here It Goes Again Music Video

Very entertaining choreography on exercise machines.  Chad says this video has supposedly had over 12 million hits.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5OODfMo_0Y]

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