Monday, September 29, 2008

latest project

I have wanted to hang curtains in the kitchen for over two years, and I finally got around to making them about a week ago. I felt quite housewifey with my little home-improvement project, and I feel even more housewifey by posting a picture of the curtains on my blog (!). However, since I've wanted these curtains for so long (long before I was a housewife, mind you), I feel quite justified in giving them their own laudatory post. Huzzah for a colorful kitchen!

Friday, September 26, 2008

Thursday, September 18, 2008

happy boy

Even though it's too early to tell, we think that Sam might end up being a blonde baby with brown eyes. I tried to take some pictures this morning to capture his hair and eye colors, but I don't think you can really tell (partially because of my poor photography skills). He was a very smiley boy for many of the pictures, though, so I thought I'd post them anyways. He's growing - can you tell?



He's starting to figure out how to lift toys with his hands.

And starting this week he likes to sit up with pillows propped around him. Often when I try to lie him down, he strains and tries to sit up himself. He likes to see what's going on around him...


Wednesday, September 17, 2008

george washington and george bailey

I wanted to write down some thoughts about two books that I read earlier this summer, 1776 by David McCullough and Jimmy Stewart: A Biography by Marc Eliot.

1776 - As a historian, I thought that I would naturally be pleased with this book. And in many ways, I was. I enjoyed reading about lesser-known individuals that were involved with the Revolutionary War, such as Henry Knox and Nathanael Greene.

However, my main motivation for reading this book was to learn more about George Washington's character and personality, and I was disappointed to not find more information in McCullough's book (I guess I should have read a biography on Washington if I wanted to learn more about him, eh?). Earlier this spring, on a visit to Mount Vernon, I realized that George Washington is kind of an enigma to me. In fact, I could sum up my knowledge of him in a short list:
  1. Didn't chop down cherry tree, cannot tell a lie
  2. Likes to remodel Mount Vernon
  3. Owned slaves
  4. Married a rich widow
  5. Was a general
  6. Liked liberty
  7. Crossed the Delaware
  8. Wore dentures
  9. Didn't want to be president
Does anyone have anything else that they could immediately add to this list? If I made lists about the other founding fathers, such as Benjamin Franklin or Thomas Jefferson, I think they would be considerably longer. I could chat with Ben Franklin about bifocals or electricity, and it would be easy to talk to Jefferson about Neoclassical architecture or his work as an ambassador in France. But what would one chat about with George Washington?

Anyhow, it seems like McCullough also found George Washington's feelings and character a little hard to analyze; he used words like "imperturbable" to describe the general. It seems like the austere Washington didn't want to get too close to his men or associates for fear of losing respect and authority as general. Or, who knows - maybe Washington was an introvert?*

Aside from my Washington disappointment, I felt like the book was moderately engaging. It got rather dull in the middle when the troops kept losing battles in New York. But I guess McCullough wasn't at liberty (hee hee! And neither were the colonists!) to change history and spice things up a bit. I found myself hoping that Washington would cross the Delaware soon so that something exciting would happen...and so that the book would end and I could start this one:

Jimmy Stewart: A Biography - For anyone who likes reading about actors from the silver screen, this is quite an entertaining book. Not only do you follow Stewart's career in Hollywood, but you also learn more about the actors and actresses with whom he worked (e.g. Katherine Hepburn, Kim Novak, June Allyson, Cary Grant, Henry Fonda, etc.). I was also impressed to find out that Stewart appeared in about eighty films, not to mention his appearances in other short films and television shows.

Eliot does a good job of describing the plot, virtues, and shortcomings of many of Stewart's films. His discussions were so interesting that I immediately went out and rented Vertigo after finishing the book, partly to see if I agreed with his discussion of the film. (This is a great film, by the way. I highly recommend it.)

The thing that bothered me most about this book were all of the Freudian references and analyses. Call me crazy, but when I picked up this biography on Stewart, I thought that I would be reading about what it was like to play Jefferson Smith, George Bailey, and Elwood P. Dowd. I wasn't expecting to read someone's Freudian analysis on why and how Jimmy Stewart's wife Gloria looks like Jimmy's mother (they look nothing alike, by the way). It seemed like in the sections where Eliot was not able to gather a lot of historical information or evidence, he tried to flesh out the missing sections with psychoanalysis. Unconvincing psychoanalysis. Downright silly psychoanalysis. Don't get me wrong, I think that Freud's theories have plenty of value. But I feel like his theories were misapplied in this biography, and I think that Eliot is a little bit too concerned with sex in this book. Perhaps he felt like making the book "sexier" would have it sell better? Hmm.

One interesting thing I learned: Jimmy Stewart became increasingly deaf as he got older, which was said to have resulted from the filming of It's a Wonderful Life, when Stewart's character George Bailey jumps into the icy river to save Clarence. Isn't it ironic that Stewart began to lose his hearing after this scene, when in the film George Bailey regains hearing in his "sore ear" after saving Clarence and receiving his wish to have never been born? The character regains hearing when the actor really loses hearing.

And my final interesting discovery: Jimmy Stewart wore a toupee.

All in all, an entertaining book. Take out all of the Freudian blah, and this is a fun read.

*It really is a pity that Martha Washington destroyed all of George's letters to her (except for three letters which survived by accident). Although I can respect Martha's wishes to have her relationship with her husband kept private, as a historian I cannot help but lament. The loss of those letters makes the melancholic work of recreating a lost time period (a recreation that already only can happen with fragments of remaining historical evidence) even more melancholy.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

please keep on voting!

Please keep on voting for Good Morning Maxfield! The polls close this Friday, and the band is close to being kicked out of the Top 5! Remember, you can vote every day until Friday.

The band needs you! Vote here.

Monday, September 8, 2008

food aversions and conversions

Do you have an aversion to foods that you were force-fed (or fed all the time) as a child? Or, conversely, to you have a food that you eat all-the-time as an adult, partly because you were never/rarely fed it as a child?

I know that few people grew up with a mother as healthy-food-conscious as my own, and I'm sure what I was fed/denied as a child has largely affected my adult palate.

Some of my aversions: Herbal teas (especially red zinger tea)
Most nuts and seeds (particularly almonds, pine nuts, hazelnuts, and safflower seeds)
Figs
Dates
Matzo crackers

Most of these aversions were items that were placed in my lunches when I was in elementary school (except for the herbal teas, which my mom made at home in 2 or 3 gallon-sized jars). My sister V and I would always try and trade away our almonds to the Korean girls at school (Ixoj, if you asked your Korean students what their favorite nut or seed is, I wonder if many would say almonds). If we were lucky, we could barter our seeds away for a Twinkie.

Given my unusual lunches as a child, I guess it's no wonder that as an adult I love peanut butter sandwiches. I guess I'm making up for lost time.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

please vote

J's band is in the top 20 bands chosen to compete for a spot at a music festival in Austin, Texas. Please vote for them here. They need to get into the top 5 in order to move onto the next round. You can vote once a day. The voting process requires you to enter your email address, but it is only to ensure that you vote once a day. I haven't received any other email from Dell Lounge besides those for the vote confirmation.

You can also see the band website here. I don't know how much longer they are going to be called Good Morning Maxfield. Apparently, the band wants to change its name (again).

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Sam the vacationer

We just got back from visiting with J's family in Seattle. It was a really relaxing vacation. We (predictably) didn't take many photos of ourselves, but (predictably) took several of Sam. Here are a couple:

As you can see, Sam didn't think much of Snoqualmie Falls. We think he liked the roaring sound of the water, though - it sounds like his beloved white noise.

Since we wouldn't let him eat a hot dog during the Mariner's game, he opted to suck on his fingers instead. He watched the field very intently while snacking on his fingers.

Snoozing between innings with Papa

Sittin' in the bouncy chair at Gram and Papa's house


Sam absolutely loved the foot toy that attached to Gram's bouncy chair - he would kick and kick with a big smile on his face. When we got home we hooked up a foot toy to his own chair, but it just isn't the same. He gave the toy a couple of apathetic kicks yesterday and immediately lost interest. I guess toys are just more exciting at Grandma's place...