Monday, December 27, 2004

Back on track

[ORIGINAL POST]

Now that the hustle and bustle of Christmas is over, I figured I'd get back to writing about the little things that make up my otherwise uneventful life. Some are probably more interesting than others.


CSULA Fall Quarter Grades

ANTH 335: B+. Can't complain, really. I did well on the one quiz and the one test we had in the class, so I was coming into the final with a 90% in the class. I don't think I did so hot on the final (scantron only), but I was confident I knew at least half of the answers. There was also the paper I turned in, and let me tell you... it was the lousiest paper I've ever written! It wasn't late since the professor extended the deadline to after the break, but long story short, I had to cough up a dollar to pay for shipping for the paper. She said she does take the time to read them and grade them, and it's only fair that we get them back instead of just tossing them. All said, it was a good class; lazy guys like me could sidestep the required 'service learning' option (where you spend time with old folks, or something) and the 5-page paper for library research and a 7-8 page paper. We were supposed to have more quizzes and tests, and we were also supposed to get 'fill in' questions, but it was all scantron. If you're looking for an anthropology class to take, look for Saul. Just don't be late for her classes.

JAPN 200A: A. It's hard to find fault with this class, though compared to Hirai-sensei's classes at PCC, kanji isn't really stressed, and that's a shame. I didn't care much for the required language lab attendence (those headsets hurt), but it did help me to the point where I didn't really need to study at home... and of course Winnie was there so that's a huge plus... I just had to time my visits. Looking forward to seeing Yokota-sensei again.

JAPN 320: B. I completely bombed my first quiz and first test (enough to make me consider dropping Japanese in general!)... but I got an A on the next quiz (Japanese prefixes) and B on the next test, which was higher than most. The two required oral presentations and the fact that I smashed the hell out my final certainly helped. How was the class, you ask? It was small (I'd say there were about 15 people, or whatever the minimum was), and all of the people were pretty cool. About half of the classwas made up of native speakers, but this time I didn't mind, because this being an "Intro to Japanese Linguistics" class, they didn't know all the answers either. Learning about topics such as aspect, tense, auxilliary verbs, helping verbs, and inflection was all very interesting. I'm sure I'll have Riggs-sensei in the future.

ML 150: Credit. The class was "Building a Modern Language Portfolio". I showed up on that one day and got my 1 credit. Easiest class ever, though I may have to build some sort of portfolio... luckily I save everything.

UNIV 400: Credit. This was the dreaded university requirement, the Writing Proficiency Exam (WPE), and I'm happy to have passed it in one go. I don't consider myself to be any sort of writer, and I didn't enjoy spending my Saturday morning writing on a topic I couldn't care less about (it was something like "Who would you choose to honor on a postage stamp and why?"), but now that I know I passed it, I'm far less bitter about it than I was before. I'll say this, though: 1) I spent the entire time (about two hours) writing trying to come up with something to fill up those three pages (I even managed to write some kanji in there...); 2) that dictionary I brought didn't really help; 3) proofreading goes a long way, and luckily I proofread to a fault.

CSULA GPA: 3.622. Pretty good, I'd say. With those university requirement classes ("Intro to CSULA" and the WPE) out of the way, all I have left in addition to Japanese is 1 more class from my G.E. Upper Addition Theme and... classes for my minor. I'll have to check with my advisor to learn exactly what it's called again... whoops. I'll suppose you'll know my grades slip when you notice I don't ever talk about them again...


Organizing Internet Bookmarks

Much like in real life, I have all the desire in the world to be perfectly organized, but I put off the actual organizing until later. It dawned on me only recently that I actually have the time to do it, so I thought up new folder names, such as:

Buying Stuff
Depressing Real Life Stuff
Fun But I'll Look At Later
Sites I Probably Should Refer To
Useful Web Services
Wow That's Pretty Neat


New Gackt Stuff

My new Gackt stuff came in, and it took more than two weeks (can't blame them though). Some thoughts:

DVD: Gackt Live Tour 2003: 上弦の月~最終章~完全版 (Crescent Moon ~ Final Chapter ~ Perfect Edition) - Incredible! Gackt's live concert DVDs have been getting better with each release, and considering how great his last one was, I was wondering if he could pull it off again. Well, any doubts were quickly laid to rest. This tour combines songs from his (then-latest) album, "Moon", and his (then-unreleased) album "Crescent", under the theme of the movie "Moon Child"! I always get chills thinking about how good his songs are live. The ending was too good... and the bonus tracks were great! If you know me (and I like you), I'll probably make you see it.

CD: The Seventh Night - Following "The Sixth Day", which was a singles collection album (with some of songs slightly remixed), this album has more (old) songs, all completely redone "unplugged". Well... I don't know about you, but as a die-hard Gackt fan, I think I was only able to appreciate this remix album having heard the original songs, and to tell you the truth, I prefer the original songs. I'm not saying these remixed songs are less than good (it's just that the original songs are really good!)... but this album probably won't win over any potential fans. I can't remember how any of these remixed songs go, but Last Song on the piano is just so great, my faith in Gackt remains unshaken.


Scary Chairs

It's always something with my chair. I had an old red chair that's been around for as long as I can remember, but the cushion was so worn-out, the spikes and nails were coming out! That gave me more than a few cuts on my legs and eventually ripped my pajamas to the point where they were unwearable. Sometime this year I got a newer chair, but now the cushion seems to be pushed to the front (cracking the leather or whatever the material is), and the seat isn't very comfortable at all - I might as well be sitting on a log! I also don't have complete faith in the "lock" mechanism. I usually keep the chair straight, but sometimes when I lean back, the lock fails and I fall back pretty far and unexpectedly, to the point where I could easily lose my balance and fall off! The next time I lean back could be my last...


Peace Maker Kurogane

I just finished this 24-episode anime series (thanks Pearl!), and I am a richer person because of it. Don't let the surprisingly cute characters fool you - this is some really gritty stuff. I was never bored because the story wasn't predictable in the least. And I'm still thinking about those characters... just don't ask me to name all of them.

And only a kanji geek such as myself could truly appreciate some of the finer things in the anime!Kurogane is an old (or, at least, rare) reading for the character 鉄, meaning "iron", usually pronouncedtetsu. That should also explain why Tetsunosuke (鉄之助) was referred to as "Iron Boy". His brother, Tatsunosuke (辰之助) was called "Dragon Boy", since tatsu means "dragon", though the character 辰 means "the dragon", as in the Chinese Zodiac. I don't see why 龍 or 竜 couldn't be used in his name (the latter being a simplifed version of the former), though typing in "tatunosuke" in the Japanese IME only gives me 辰之助. The anime also uses the traditional ("business style") numbers in naming the episodes: 壱 for 一 (one); 弐 for 二 (two); 参 for 三 (three), and 拾 for 十 (ten). Finally, the kanji used in the title, 鐵, is just the traditional form of the very first kanji I mentioned: 鉄 (iron). It was seen again as the title for the final episode, but it's a bit of a stretch to translate it as "Peace Maker".

Next up: Azumanga Daioh. I still have to see several seasons of Ranma 1/2, and Panda Genma's signs and other things keep me learning Japanese... you never know when I'll use such gems as 「早乙女流究極奥義!」 ("Saotome-style Ultimate Technique!") and 「支払いは天道道場へ」 ("Send the bill to Tendo Dojo")...


And if you if you read all that, give yourself a pat on the back! It took a couple of hours to write, so itshould take a couple of hours to read, right?

Sunday, December 19, 2004

Karaoke!

[ORIGINAL POST]

Last Tuesday I went to a Korean karaoke place with some of the guys from my Japanese class. 好了好了好了・・・ (Why am I posting this late Sunday night instead of early Wednesday on the 15th? I suggest you take a look at one of my other entries!)


The ride there

I was picked up by Terry at around 8:30, and it took us another 10 minutes or so to pick up Winnie. I already forgot the way there, but at least now I know that her place isn't within "walking distance" (although I have walked some crazy distances before). That effectively eliminates the possibilty of a da- ...uh, "day-event". Anyway, I almost regretted not bringing along my pack of Gackt CDs, but Terry had a great mix of Utada Hikaru songs (also gave us something to talk about). For some reason she kept changing the songs - and skipping traveling in favor of Final Distance? Craziness!


Parking adventures

None of us could find the place (having the place's name changed probably didn't help) so we ended up parking pretty high up at some at some nearby building. Four dollars and a scary elevator ride later, we found Bertha and a place where we probably could have parked for free.

Ok, I'll admit it was nice escorting two lovely ladies. Sure, you can bring up the fact that I'm a guy, it was dark, and it was unfamiliar territory, pretty much making it my responsibility... but I prefer my phrasing.


Not nearly as nerve-shattering as I thought

Karaoke was pretty interesting. We discovered (the hard way) that you have to be a little careful entering songs or the previous songs will get erased. At least, that's my understanding. We got to sing songs in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (oh yeah... there were English songs too). Pearl was nice enough to bring print-outs of the romaji lyrics of j-pop songs we should all be familiar with - that alone made her cuter than... I dunno... 100 Pokémon (...not that I watch that show, of course)! She was also the only one smart enough to bring a pen, because not only was finding the songs really hard, but we'd lose track of the numbers.

How did I fare? Maybe it was the fact that there was one "good" microphone and one "bad" microphone, or the fact that I have a low, hard-to-hear, and generally unpleasant voice, but (luckily!) my performance was pretty forgettable. I was only prepared to sing Malice Mizer's Le ciel (I have that pretty much memorized), but I couldn't find that, so I looked around for some Gackt stuff. I saw a lot of familiar songs, but those weren't the songs where I really tried to memorize the words or learn the kanji (hiragana was only available sometimes), so I tried 12月のLove song with varying success. Looking back, I probably should have tried 君のためにできること instead. Next up was Malice Mizer's Au revoir, and once again I found I could only handle the refrain. I could "read" the Japanese, just not at any decent speed. At least people liked the music. The strangest part of it all is that I sound great in the shower! I don't know what's going on...

I just wish I didn't have to go at it alone. Gackt's Last Song wasn't there, and that was the only Gackt song Pearl had in romaji. Also, I only knew the first three words of the Hotman theme song; after "きっと Shining Days...", I'm lost.

Other than the "good / bad" microphones and the fact that our song selection got erased, the only things that dampened the mood were other technical oddities such as the background videos (imagine slow, depressing songs being sung to colorful, exciting images like racecars and people waterskiing), the scoring device that didn't score (either that or we were all worse than we thought), and the surprisingly expensive room (we weren't serviced at all... and no, that one time some guy came in describing a car didn't count).

Quote of the day: "What does that mean??" (--Fioré, after hearing V6's Feel your breeze)


So hungry and cold I could puke

We paid the $80 or so (about $12 per person I think), and after a good 10 or 15 minutes deciding what we could and should do this late at night (considering it was a Tuesday), it came down to a boba / coffee shop thing. The mango smoothie I had was easily the best I had, although I only had one before, and that was over a year ago. After some pics, we decided to go back, and we were all too tired to pay attention to the "gentleman's club" billboard or the "adult videos" store.


The ride home

I don't know why I was so tired, especially when I've been going to bed well past 2:00am in preparation for this. It was probably depression, too; I realized there's still a lot I need to do - not just for school, but life in general. It makes me want to jam my mouse into my brain to embrace the satisfying sweetness of death... but hey, there's always next year. Winter break couldn't come fast enough, but now I can't wait to get into a rut again at school so I can at least pretend I'm busy.


Other stuff:

My new website is at http://www.underactive.net/justin. My brother's "rustedmind.net" domain expired so now I'm using underactive.net. That means re-uploading my sites and re-linking my pics and avatars on forums... joy.

I've never been one to list the "currently listening to" or "my mood" details (both change too frequently), but I think I should mention the Ireland OST, which you should be able to get here.Ireland is a Korean drama that recently ended here in SoCal, although like in Korea it was beaten out by the more popular KBS dramas airing at the same time. Still, the soundtrack is all great stuff. I haven't enjoyed a soundtrack this much since the OST for the k-drama Stairway to Heaven.

I'm also getting around to looking at my "Stuff from Pearl" DVDs. Three episodes of Peace Maker Kurogane a day is the plan, but tomorrow I think I'll just go for Korean movie 100 Days With Mr. Arrogant. Very, very curious about that one.

It's about 1:00am now and I promised myself I'd start waking up at 6:00am so I'd better end this.

Friday, December 10, 2004

Finally over...

[ORIGINAL POST]

That's right people, finals are over with!


Tuesday:

Japanese 200A final. The final was at 4:30 so I came at about 4:00, but everyone was already in some big discussion over where to go as a group during the break, so I felt left out... =( Fortunately the final was easy - even the listening section. (I actually got one listening question wrong on the last test, making it my only mistake on all of the tests!) Everyone finished at around 6:00 so we hung out for a bit in the cold (for some reason). Pearl was the only one smart enough to bring a camera, so she took all the pics (which I guess also means she wasn't in any of them)... I wonder if she's actually planning on sharing them or if they're just for her. I would have snuck in a few pics with my phone except it had to be low on battery! I didn't charge it since I had those long talks with Jason over the dialogue! Argh!

Japanese 320 final. It was supposed to start at 7:30, but for some reason it started at around 7:10. Good thing I came around 7:00 anyway. Since it was test time, we all had to sit one whole seat apart... which means I didn't get a seat at the table! I sat near the wall. This being final day, I didn'tbring my clipboard when I totally needed it, so I had to write on my Japanese 200A book - good thing I brought that, at least. The final was actually pretty easy, as Riggs先生 said. I was able to answer everything, and relatively quickly as well (I think I was the third person to finish). Going through the test with virtually no problems was great, but I also had no feelings of "over-studying," which made it perfect. I finished at around 7:45. Had I known it was going to be that short, I would've had dinner at my house! Riggs先生 asked me if I signed the paper that was passed around, and I said "no" since I couldn't take the class. I hope it really was about some class and not a "I recommend this teacher" thing... eek...


Thursday:

Anthropology 335 final. Ok... not so confident about this one. I read the chapters and all and got the gist of it, but even if I read them carefully, I'm still not sure I could have answered the questions any better. On the bright side, some people didn't get their papers back, including me. That's because if you did, you would get "verbal feedback," and I personally didn't want to stick around any longer than I had to while the professor tells me "liek d00d this paper $µx0r$". That meant I got to go earlier, also in part to me sitting on the side of the class she started on... and there were over 100 people in the class!

Meh, I'll take it.


I'm looking forward to all this free time, of course - I still have several DVDs worth of stuff from Pearl that I probably should look at. Anime, manga, movies, music...

I'm also looking forward to the Gackt stuff I bought at CDJapan. It should come in by next Friday, because it usually takes them a week to get the international money order, a day or two for them to send it, and another day or two for me to get it.

Monday, November 29, 2004

8-page paper due tomorrow WOO-HOO!!!

[ORIGINAL POST]

Gather sources: Check!

Have a general idea of what to do: Well, I'm halfway there...


I'm mainly writing this as a way to motivate myself, because I know I'll just be wasting away my time and I'll eventually come back here. Believe me folks, I tried to do it over the break...

Friday: "Hm... well 2 pages a day shouldn't be too bad..." Then I rediscovered MAME.

Saturday: "3 pages a day. I can do that." Then I'm told I have to go to my mom's friend's surprise birthday party. After that I wasn't really in the mood for any writing.

Sunday: "4 pages a day... still better than doing it all on Monday, at least..." Then my cousin comes over and I'm obligated to entertain him and stuff. Still, it wasn't all bad; I spent a lot of time at this sitelearning questionably useful things such as the location of states (and learning all of them again) and increasing my vocabulary...

Today (Monday): Well I woke up 30 minutes before my alarm went off (7:00)... that has to be a good thing, right?


Notable "last-minute paper" successes:

Sociology: I wrote a 5-page paper on the movie Chicken Run (a very fun movie, by the way), finishing at around 3:00 am. I got a "B". And I have to admit that I got some twisted satisfaction learning that some people didn't even do it... *grin* Still, the teacher was cool and extended the deadline, or something...

English 1C: All three of my papers were last-minute jobs, finishing well past midnight. At least here I learned that it takes me about an hour per page when I have absolutely nothing to go on. All "A"s, with special marks, even. I can't claim all the credit, though... either he was a really good teacher or I took surprisingly good notes.


I'm happy to say that I've never plagiarized. It's just not worth it, people!


Other "last-minute paper" stories are welcome.

(Winnie! You'll say something encouraging, won't you? )

Tuesday, November 16, 2004

Could've been worse...

[ORIGINAL POST]

Ouch. Today it hit me like a punch in the face... way too many things due in these last few weeks. There's a paper I have yet to start (not my fault), and some surprisingly hard Japanese assignment (two, actually). Quizzes, tests, finals - don't worry, there's plenty of that too.

Before Japanese class, Sam ended up teaching me some Chinese - just some written words, of course... luckily, I'm already halfway there! Then there was some kanji quiz. We never learned 鶏(にわとり), but 鶏肉 was on there. It was supposed to be 鳥肉(とりにく)... I knew it already, of course. Heh.

Boy, I wish there was a kanji quiz everyday, or that kanji was 90% of your grade. Why? Well... here's (part of) the reason why I cram so much kanji in a short time: kanji = women!

1) It takes a long, long time to understand them...

2) You can't live with them, you can't live without them...

3) They're beautiful... *nervous laugh*

Later on I had to see some old (b&w) movie. I already forgot what it was called. It wasn't entertaining in the least, but I think I still have to write something good about it anyway if I want points. That ending, my goodness... when I said "I'm still waiting for the second part," I didn't mean "WOW! I can't wait for more!", I meant "ok what the heck was that". At least it's memorable, because it's still stuck in my mind. Not because it was "profound" (well, maybe it was), but because I'm still trying to make sense of it. (well maybe that means it's profound...)

Coming home, I got a ride from Terry! I felt bad suddenly springing this extra responsibilty on her (I didn't expect it either), but my house was apparently on her way, and at least we didn't get lost driving in the dark! The ride home wasn't as awkward as I thought it would be - it turned out to be pretty fun. There was actually a lot to talk about (at least for this one time... and how about that - I have the same birthday as her brother!), though I'm sure she probably thinks less of me now. Suggestions for me making up for this are welcome.

And now that not one but two people from my class know where I live... er, that can only be a good thing, right? *nervous laugh*