Month: June 2006

  • Untitled, totally random and disconnected


    I'm listening to some pre-release tracks fo Vienna Teng's new album and man do they rock. You can find them on her myspace page. There is always a song that has that piano music that first attracted me to her music. Can't wait till July 25th when it comes out





     Random browsing through the CSU, Chico's website this caught my attention



    2005 CSU, Chico Commencement Address


    Paul J. Zingg


    Now—and I know the ice is melting and your future is awaiting—but let me share just a few thoughts with you as we conclude this ceremony.


    Hopefully, as much as anything during your studies and time in our company, you have acquired a sense of serious daring in your lives and found joy in that discovery. That you have come to realize that the essence of education is self-discovery and that cannot be a passive journey. People do not just find themselves. Rather, they create themselves through their actions and accepting the consequences of them. Women and men achieve personal identities only by making decisions that require forethought and, at times, courage. You must look beyond what is known and tried to what is, as yet, unknown and untried. You must search out alternatives, consider their consequences, and then confront these choices.


    To arrive at these choices, I urge you always to seek the truth. Think. Study. Judge. To do otherwise may mean that you will become enslaved to falsehoods. And those who know the least are the most willing to obey shallow and dangerous falsehoods.


    I urge you to continue to seek greater meaning in your life. This may require an act of faith when faced with the chaos and complexity and even the insane brutality that exist in parts of our world today. But hew close to your family and friends, find solace in nature, be kind to one another, and recognize that your spirit, no less than your body, requires nourishment.


    I urge you as well to strive to make sure that justice informs all your actions. Practice charity and forbearance in your daily life. And know that you and I, and all peoples, even the weakest and least advantaged among us, share a common humanity.


    I urge you to understand the dignity of human aspirations. The ability to hope, to dream of a brighter future, underscores what it means to be human. We cherish this quality in ourselves. You must see to it, then, that the dreams of others are not destroyed by prejudice and discrimination, by poverty and ignorance.


    And finally I urge you to think kindly of this place – this university, this community of extraordinary people – which equipped you and encouraged you for the daring journeys – be they occasional forays or deep commitments – across borders, whether intellectual or attitudinal, spatial or spiritual. We hope you leave us more autonomous, more tolerant, more curious than when you first joined us. And we hope these qualities will always characterize you – and define us.


    We are better because you have been with us. We will become even better as you stay in touch with us as an active member of a growing and enthusiastic CSU, Chico Alumni Association and that you will share with us your journeys and decisions always, we hope, on the side of the true, the beautiful, and the virtuous.


    Congratulations and best wishes. And may the force be with you!





    Can't wait till Thursday!!!!!


    I am leaving for Chicago until the 14th and can't wait to get the hell out of town.

  • The New York Times






    Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By





    NYT June 25, 2006

    Modern Love

    What Shamu Taught Me About a Happy Marriage




    AS I wash dishes at the kitchen sink, my husband paces behind me, irritated. "Have you seen my keys?" he snarls, then huffs out a loud sigh and stomps from the room with our dog, Dixie, at his heels, anxious over her favorite human's upset.


    In the past I would have been right behind Dixie. I would have turned off the faucet and joined the hunt while trying to soothe my husband with bromides like, "Don't worry, they'll turn up." But that only made him angrier, and a simple case of missing keys soon would become a full-blown angst-ridden drama starring the two of us and our poor nervous dog.


    Now, I focus on the wet dish in my hands. I don't turn around. I don't say a word. I'm using a technique I learned from a dolphin trainer.


    I love my husband. He's well read, adventurous and does a hysterical rendition of a northern Vermont accent that still cracks me up after 12 years of marriage.


    But he also tends to be forgetful, and is often tardy and mercurial. He hovers around me in the kitchen asking if I read this or that piece in The New Yorker when I'm trying to concentrate on the simmering pans. He leaves wadded tissues in his wake. He suffers from serious bouts of spousal deafness but never fails to hear me when I mutter to myself on the other side of the house. "What did you say?" he'll shout.


    These minor annoyances are not the stuff of separation and divorce, but in sum they began to dull my love for Scott. I wanted — needed — to nudge him a little closer to perfect, to make him into a mate who might annoy me a little less, who wouldn't keep me waiting at restaurants, a mate who would be easier to love.


    So, like many wives before me, I ignored a library of advice books and set about improving him. By nagging, of course, which only made his behavior worse: he'd drive faster instead of slower; shave less frequently, not more; and leave his reeking bike garb on the bedroom floor longer than ever.


    We went to a counselor to smooth the edges off our marriage. She didn't understand what we were doing there and complimented us repeatedly on how well we communicated. I gave up. I guessed she was right — our union was better than most — and resigned myself to stretches of slow-boil resentment and occasional sarcasm.


    Then something magical happened. For a book I was writing about a school for exotic animal trainers, I started commuting from Maine to California, where I spent my days watching students do the seemingly impossible: teaching hyenas to pirouette on command, cougars to offer their paws for a nail clipping, and baboons to skateboard.


    I listened, rapt, as professional trainers explained how they taught dolphins to flip and elephants to paint. Eventually it hit me that the same techniques might work on that stubborn but lovable species, the American husband.


    The central lesson I learned from exotic animal trainers is that I should reward behavior I like and ignore behavior I don't. After all, you don't get a sea lion to balance a ball on the end of its nose by nagging. The same goes for the American husband.


    Back in Maine, I began thanking Scott if he threw one dirty shirt into the hamper. If he threw in two, I'd kiss him. Meanwhile, I would step over any soiled clothes on the floor without one sharp word, though I did sometimes kick them under the bed. But as he basked in my appreciation, the piles became smaller.


    I was using what trainers call "approximations," rewarding the small steps toward learning a whole new behavior. You can't expect a baboon to learn to flip on command in one session, just as you can't expect an American husband to begin regularly picking up his dirty socks by praising him once for picking up a single sock. With the baboon you first reward a hop, then a bigger hop, then an even bigger hop. With Scott the husband, I began to praise every small act every time: if he drove just a mile an hour slower, tossed one pair of shorts into the hamper, or was on time for anything.


    I also began to analyze my husband the way a trainer considers an exotic animal. Enlightened trainers learn all they can about a species, from anatomy to social structure, to understand how it thinks, what it likes and dislikes, what comes easily to it and what doesn't. For example, an elephant is a herd animal, so it responds to hierarchy. It cannot jump, but can stand on its head. It is a vegetarian.


    The exotic animal known as Scott is a loner, but an alpha male. So hierarchy matters, but being in a group doesn't so much. He has the balance of a gymnast, but moves slowly, especially when getting dressed. Skiing comes naturally, but being on time does not. He's an omnivore, and what a trainer would call food-driven.


    Once I started thinking this way, I couldn't stop. At the school in California, I'd be scribbling notes on how to walk an emu or have a wolf accept you as a pack member, but I'd be thinking, "I can't wait to try this on Scott."


    On a field trip with the students, I listened to a professional trainer describe how he had taught African crested cranes to stop landing on his head and shoulders. He did this by training the leggy birds to land on mats on the ground. This, he explained, is what is called an "incompatible behavior," a simple but brilliant concept.


    Rather than teach the cranes to stop landing on him, the trainer taught the birds something else, a behavior that would make the undesirable behavior impossible. The birds couldn't alight on the mats and his head simultaneously.


    At home, I came up with incompatible behaviors for Scott to keep him from crowding me while I cooked. To lure him away from the stove, I piled up parsley for him to chop or cheese for him to grate at the other end of the kitchen island. Or I'd set out a bowl of chips and salsa across the room. Soon I'd done it: no more Scott hovering around me while I cooked.


    I followed the students to SeaWorld San Diego, where a dolphin trainer introduced me to least reinforcing syndrome (L. R. S.). When a dolphin does something wrong, the trainer doesn't respond in any way. He stands still for a few beats, careful not to look at the dolphin, and then returns to work. The idea is that any response, positive or negative, fuels a behavior. If a behavior provokes no response, it typically dies away.


    In the margins of my notes I wrote, "Try on Scott!"


    It was only a matter of time before he was again tearing around the house searching for his keys, at which point I said nothing and kept at what I was doing. It took a lot of discipline to maintain my calm, but results were immediate and stunning. His temper fell far shy of its usual pitch and then waned like a fast-moving storm. I felt as if I should throw him a mackerel.


    Now he's at it again; I hear him banging a closet door shut, rustling through papers on a chest in the front hall and thumping upstairs. At the sink, I hold steady. Then, sure enough, all goes quiet. A moment later, he walks into the kitchen, keys in hand, and says calmly, "Found them."


    Without turning, I call out, "Great, see you later."


    Off he goes with our much-calmed pup.


    After two years of exotic animal training, my marriage is far smoother, my husband much easier to love. I used to take his faults personally; his dirty clothes on the floor were an affront, a symbol of how he didn't care enough about me. But thinking of my husband as an exotic species gave me the distance I needed to consider our differences more objectively.


    I adopted the trainers' motto: "It's never the animal's fault." When my training attempts failed, I didn't blame Scott. Rather, I brainstormed new strategies, thought up more incompatible behaviors and used smaller approximations. I dissected my own behavior, considered how my actions might inadvertently fuel his. I also accepted that some behaviors were too entrenched, too instinctive to train away. You can't stop a badger from digging, and you can't stop my husband from losing his wallet and keys.


    PROFESSIONALS talk of animals that understand training so well they eventually use it back on the trainer. My animal did the same. When the training techniques worked so beautifully, I couldn't resist telling my husband what I was up to. He wasn't offended, just amused. As I explained the techniques and terminology, he soaked it up. Far more than I realized.


    Last fall, firmly in middle age, I learned that I needed braces. They were not only humiliating, but also excruciating. For weeks my gums, teeth, jaw and sinuses throbbed. I complained frequently and loudly. Scott assured me that I would become used to all the metal in my mouth. I did not.


    One morning, as I launched into yet another tirade about how uncomfortable I was, Scott just looked at me blankly. He didn't say a word or acknowledge my rant in any way, not even with a nod.


    I quickly ran out of steam and started to walk away. Then I realized what was happening, and I turned and asked, "Are you giving me an L. R. S.?" Silence. "You are, aren't you?"


    He finally smiled, but his L. R. S. has already done the trick. He'd begun to train me, the American wife.





    Amy Sutherland is the author of "Kicked, Bitten and Scratched: Life and Lessons at the Premier School for Exotic Animal Trainers" (Viking, June 2006). She lives in Boston and in Portland, Me.

  • I learned a lot about myself this week


    Sunny Days
    Jars of Clay


    Sunny days keepin' the clouds away
    I think we're coming to a clearing and a brighter day

    So far away. Still I think they say
    The wait will make the heart grow stronger or fonder
    I can't quite remember anyway

    So if you're waitin' for love
    Well it's a promise I'll keep
    If you don't mind believing that it changes everything
    Then time will never matter

    Winter, Spring... is what love can truly bring
    Ice turns to water, water flows to everything
    You can lose your mind, maybe then your heart you'll find
    I hope you won't give up what's moving you inside

    If the car won't start, when you turn the key
    When the music comes on, all your cold, cold heart can do is skip a beat

    It's a promise I'll keep
    When you're waitin' for love
    If you don't mind believing that it changes everything
    Then time will never matter


    This past week has made me think a lot of about interpersonal relations, how much crap you're ready and willing to take from people and whether you want to stay somewhere or not. I know, I know I've been thinking about PhD grad school for ages but I've never seriously done anything to actually pursue it.


    Last week was just brutal and from unexpected quarters too. Both because people around here tend to transfer their stress onto people who want to help and who are doing t heir best to help and not be a PITA™.


    SO here's the deal... I'm taking the GRE in October... you're authorized to kick my ass all  ways to next year if I don't. I want to have that option open and go to grad school again.

  • The Ballad of San Francisco
    Caedmon's Call


    So I'm walking down the street somewhere outside of San Francisco
    But, I don't really know my way around
    And I'd love to stay a day or two and get into some trouble
    But tomorrow I'll be in another town
    There's at least one coffee bar for every single couple
    And there's at least a couple in this place
    Strange the things you notice when the walls are closing in
    And the walls are closing in on me today

    So where, oh where, can I find someone, anyone
    'Cause there's no way outta here
    Well, here is where I live and so I guess that means
    The carrot's gonna dangle for at least another year

    I love anonymity and I love being noticed
    Just the same as anybody else
    Years ago I told you how I loved to be alone
    These days I'd be perjuring myself

    It's like you gave me up like I gave up drinking coffee
    So I guess I would have done the same
    Now I know I'm lost somewhere outside of San Francisco
    But I'm still glad that I came

  • Just Like Heave
    Katie Melua


    show me, show me, show me
    how you do that trick
    "the one that makes me scream" she said
    "the one that makes me laugh" she said
    and threw her arms around my neck
    show me how you do it,
    and i promise you, i promise that
    i'll run away with you
    i'll run away with you

    were spinning on that dizzy edge
    i kiss your face and kiss your head
    i dreamed of all the different ways
    i had to let her go
    scream "why are you so far away?" she said
    won't you ever know
    that i'm in love with you,
    that i'm in love with you

    you
    soft and lonely
    you
    lost and only
    you
    strange as angels
    dancing in the deepest oceans
    exsisting in the world
    you're just like a dream
    you're just like a dream

    well daylight whipped me into shape
    i must have been asleep for days
    and moving lips could breathe her name
    i opened up my eyes
    and found myself alone, alone
    alone upon a raging sea
    that stole the only girl i loved
    and drowned her deep inside of me

    you
    lost and lonely
    you
    soft and only
    you
    just like heaven

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Categories