Monday, July 25, 2011

Epicness I


Epicness I

Thanks to Khan Academy,

I. Just. Learned. Logarithms. In. Under. Five. Minutes.

My mind is still recovering from the pure wow factor. I found logarithms as something I needed to learn for HS chemistry, and started freaking out. Logarithms? Wha? Luckily, Khan Academy had a video, and after watching to 4:36, I was like, I know Kung-Fu.

Of course, Logarithms aren't the most complicated concept in the world, but then again, with Khan Academy I learned Algebra I in, oh, around 2 months? And I'm not even the sharpest knife in the drawer (math wise. Actually, looking at my track record, I must be impaired in that side of my brain that takes care of all things mathy).

Power! Prestige! Hahaha! The world is within my grasp! If only Khan Academy had a video for world domination...

But seriously, guys, Khan is a genius.

I mean, if anyone can teach me algebra, they're a genius.

And if they can make it fun, wow, they deserve like, a nobel prize or something.

Algebra is fun.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Freak-out I

What is This Strange Thing You Call School?

I admit it, I am scared. I mean, it's not really the academics that I worry about, its functioning in a building full of people I don't know with these foreign elements called lockers. Say what?

Homeschooling is simple. You study what you have to study, you eat when there's food on the table, if you get up late, you stay up late, if you get hungry, you grab a snack, and you don't have to ask anyone permission to use the restroom (not like their personal opinion on that matter is going to stop you or not, now that you think about it).

But what goes on within the walls of that mysterious institution? What's the whole deal with a bus? How are classes organized? Does anyone (like that Calvin and Hobbes cartoon) tell you when it's time for lunch? How do you find your way around this place without a GPS, a map, and a compass (and a mirror, for signaling SOS)? And quietly, very quietly, I wonder about the jerks.

Top ten tips for surviving in High School, anyone?

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Rant I

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II*


Coincidentally, I received an emailed blog post from a good friend on above topic, 5 minutes before we left for the movie theater. Alongside an account of said friend's opinions on the movie, it also contained a detailed description of...I can't say it, the most feared thing in the wizarding world.....you know what....

Alright, spoilers. RRrrrgh! After reading the first sentence I felt the strong urge to gouge out my eyes in an attempt to atone for the iniquitous sin that my treacherous eyes had unknowingly stumbled upon! Seriously, even though I know that Harry dies (just kidding. Well, only partly. That is, he dies/has a concussion, I mean, he kind of dies, then he comes back alive with a new imunity to the cruciatus curse. And, everyone says he dies, but he's alive again, but.....

It's complicated.

Anyways...) and I also have the bad habit of reading the end of a book/ wiki'ing the plot summary before I finish the book, this is Harry Potter and some part of me wanted to keep this pristine. Another part was urging me to cheat like the wind, but it was too late because by the time that part won over, we were already heading to the movie theater.

What can I say? (Besides woooooaaaahhhh. And oooooohhhh...) Deathly Hallows Part 2 was neither here nor there. Very good for the book purist, it stuck pretty well to the plot, film effects were really cool, dragon in Gringots was really cool (Oh yeah. If you haven't read or watched deathly hallows, wait until then to continue reading. No explicit spoilers ahead, but I do reference a few things which I believe could be improved) and I think I got a little more of the thought behind Deathly Hallows. That is to say, watching the movie brought out a lot of thematic revolutions that questioned death, mortality, good and evil, etc.

There's no fun, however, in sticking smiley faces and A+'s to a movie review, however. It's time to break out the heavy artillery...

While the film stuck nicely to the big details (in fact, I say it excelled in this area), however, it missed a few things that I found slightly disturbing as they cast darker shadows on more obscure issues. Like Griphook, for instance. In the book, he wasn't really nasty he was just following his nature as a goblin when he took Gryffindor's sword from Harry. It was an interesting perspective on genetically predetermined natures (Like Smaug from the Hobbit. He isn't really evil, that is, even though he is an evil character. We ask, can we really label him as evil, since he's just following his nature as a dragon?), really, the diversity between two different races. Where something taboo to one culture may not exactly be so to the other. The movie, however, added his parting remark, which, for me, totally negitated Harry's intention to double cross Griphook. Did they even mention his intention to double-cross Griphook? It polished over a minor issue in the books, that is, the tension between Goblins and Wizards, almost putting a Pro-wizarding propoganda spin on that scene. It also made the character of Griphook a little shallower (what were his motives? Why did he want to keep Harry locked up in Lestrange's vault?), 2-D, and over simplified/generalized Goblins. While the book gave a delightful mini-example as to the conflict between wizards and Goblins (neither side is exactly right, and both sides are bending- not breaking, just bending- the rules a little-- although in this scenario, I am inclined to believe Griphook entirely in the right) the movie's addition of that parting remark really negitated Harry's own flaw in trying to double cross Griphook as well as changed Griphook's character from it's orignial form, into a more malevolent, malicious, evil for the sake of evil stereotype.

The storytelling, as well brought up a few problems. The dialog, in some places seemed to be one huge excerise to see how many meaningful/thoughtful/mystic lines they could pack into one conversation (i.e. Dumbledore and Harry at 'King's Cross' and Mr.& Mrs. Potter, Sirius, and Lupin right before Harry was killed) All those lines were really great, they showed a new side to the questions Harry was asking and a new face on old issues, and they really would have popped by themselves, but crammed together in one scene, it really looked like the Potters and Black were either trying to show how smart and clever they could be, or reading from a hallmark card/dictionary of corny lines. Not to say the lines themselves were corny, but crammed together they all sounded so canned. Whereas Dumbledore came across as a mystic, purposely confusing, even slightly antagonistic/ unconcerned man in the King's Cross Scene from the movie, the scenario as played out in the book really portrayed him using the mystic dialogue to enhance Harry's pursuit of the questions, to encourage Harry to seek out the answers himself. The book left readers with a sense of confirmed faith in the answers, the movie, baffled seeking and confusion.

Plus, the Ron/Hermione kiss was just really, what the heck? The way Emma Watson was going on during the premier about how they were carefully building this all up made me think that they were carefully stucturing the Ron-Hermione relationship for this perfect moment where the audience goes 'ahhhhh' because it was just flawless. Instead, they're staring at the camera, then each other, then trying to eat each other's face off, and I was just, "wow. That was seriously random". It has none of that perfect mixture of solidity and spontaneousness (actually, it was really spontaneous. As spontaneous as if I suddenly said spontaneously combusting alpaca's in this post) that the book did, or the aknowledgement of the total randomness that we get from Harry (Harry is just priceless at that moment, btw).

It also made no attempt to fill in the audience of the backstory, and I'd hate to think what novice to the world of Harry Potter would be pondering as they left the movie theater. Without the crucial knowledge of the complex relationships between the characters, the backstory about Voldermort and his gang, heck, don't even mention the freakin' prophecy, it must look like one huge blur of random events, shallow characters and what the heck moments. Of course, filling in backstory would have been a tremendous task for the filmakers, and in fact, I think the movie wouldn't be half as good for the die-hard HP fans with it, but for the people who only know Harry, Ron and Hermionie (and....you know. who.) a bit of backstory would have been nice. Or at least a warning!

Then they mangled one of my favorite parts in the book. It's that introspective lull in the chaos of battle, that poignant moment where everything comes together and you just close your eyes and really fall into Harry's world. It's the part where you realize how your viewpoint of this book has been so integrated with Harry's, where you unknowingly assumed this one-sided frame of mind, where, just like Harry, you realize how you've fallen into all these cliche's of judging a book by it's covers and....argh, I'm mangling it too. Let me just say, discovering Snape is priceless. And you know, what's great is that he's still a jerk! He's prejudiced and a jerk and an bleep bleep censored bleep; he's not even one of those jerks who turn out not to be such a jerk (like Luke from the Lightning Theif, or Gollum and Boromir from LotR), he's still a huge jerk, but you see a human side to him. He's not just this one-sided force of greasy-haired antagonism, he's still a slimeball, but he's a slimeball with humanity.

Which is why it makes me so mad when the Snape memories were played out as this string of incomprehensible flashbacks. They really put his complex relationship with the Potters on the back burner, instead, as manifested by their reiteration of this point and how it monopolized time, focusing on how Harry had to die. I know, I know, there's limited time here. But I really think they didn't give enough justice to Snape. Sure, the part where his Patronus appeared as a doe was good, but by rushing through his childhood moments with Lily, they really missed that kind of obsessive devotion that lends a whole new side to Snape. It's this great part where you realize he can actually be nice (heart attack!), where he displays forgivable human flaws such as hating James Potter and obsessively over-protecting Lily. There's also a tender side too where he tries to protect her from You Know Who and a tragic part where he cries over her picture. We really lose this part of Snape, even though the movie gives us the feeling of, 'well, maybe he's not such a bad guy'. It's those crucial memories of various emotions that move us, like the books invariably do, from a childlike, black and white perspective to a realization that maybe, yes, everyone is human.

Ok, rounding up....my last bash targets....Neville.

Seriously, Neville is one of my favorite characters. You see how he progressess in the books from this incompetent annoying lump of aaarrgh to this leader who isn't afraid to stick up to....you know. The Dark Lord. But what is going on at the end? I mean, first of all, you have all these people runing around with Basilisk fangs trying to off Nagini, and it's like, "woah, if Neville doesn't have his moment, I am seriously going to throw a fit". And then Neville has his moment and Harry loses his!

Did anyone else notice that? How Nagini kicks the bucket and Voldermort follows suit? Ok, ok, let's give them the benefit of doubt and say they made it unclear exactly who killed Volder-uh, I mean, the Dark Lord (You know what, he needs a make over. From now on, he's Psycho Powerhungry Obsessive dude. Or Snake Boy. Maybe pasty-face? You know, 'cause he's so pale?). But they really took away Harry's moment! It's this point in the book where all the dulers stop and they just watch Harry lay everything out bit by bit, that dawning realization of Pasty-face's that even though he killed every one off, Harry's method of disarming everyone made Harry the master of the elder wand, that perfect moment where he's offered salvation, the chance to try to put his soul back together, that moment when he turns down the offer, shouts a spell and dies. That really brought together all the themes that had been weaving around Snake Boy, the idea of redemption, forgiveness, punishment, remorse, everything is just so "wooooaaaahhhh". Instead, he disintegrates. Hooray. Good for Neville, I mean. But I really hope the movie directors weren't trying to be clever by tying in the prophecy, etc, bouncing back to how Neville or Harry could have been 'The One' (wait- that's HP, right? Not Matix?), but I mean, really? That seriously, seriously, sucked. You really can't do that at the end of eight (yes, let's call it eight. They seriously jeeped us off by spliting Deathly Hallows into two parts) movies after building up this guy for like, forever. I mean, in one movie, it would have been cool. In a book, cool. Two books, even. But with 7 books? That just takes the oomph off the end! It creates this wobbly ending that lacks a big bang. Sure, he's dead. Great. But what about Harry? Why was he even here? Why did we even bother with him?

Ooops, I lied. There's just one more thing I wanted to mention. The saga of growth. There's more to Harry Potter than just spells, wands, and smart girls who kick serious butt (Hermione Granger forever!) there's the story of personal growth. And they really skim over that in the movies, perhaps not intentionally, but all the action and time constraints (plus the love of dark, moody, task-oriented, OCD heroes) really served to obscure the growth that Harry has. I don't have any examples to cite specifically, but maybe it was the lack of narrative, the lack of time spent on those personal, introspective moments (such as Snape's memories) and the lack of reverence during those times that really made Harry Potter into less of a thoughtful film and more of an action one. Plus, you have Daniel Radcliffe delivering all the snappy, straight to the point lines, that, while they make him seem really, really into his current task of destroying horocruxes and offing Pasty-Face, they really lose that inner struggle, those doubts, those hopes, and the anguish that Harry feels somewhere in the urge to captivate the audience.

It's the humanity of Harry that calls so strongly to the readers. It's those moments of doubt, of cluelessness, of pure luck; those times of inner struggle, hatred, jealousy and jerkiness; the times when his heart swells with love and happiness, and the times when it simply breaks; it's when Harry is no longer an airbrushed hero with the perfect flaws that really aren't flaws at all, but full to the brim of raw, pure, poignant emotion. And the best thing is, out of this base of emotion that we all identify with, he rises to those levels that few of us have felt. That by the end of the books, through a battleground of emotion, he truly does rise above it all and becomes a real hero. Perhaps it offers some hope for our humanity as well.


This is Quiet Girl, signing off.

Not really. Did I offend anyone? I mean, I really, really loved seeing Deathly Hallows. It was a great movie, it stuck close to the books, and the blast shield around Hogwarts was seriously cool. But I mean, small things, like McGonagall's "I've always wanted to use that spell" (animation of the statues) really split the tension and darkness that was present in the last book and sort of cheapened the effect. It really was supposed to change from a child's fantasy world, to this dark, war torn, desperate race that really stands no chance of succeeding. Ooops. I slipped into criticism again. But honestly, I'm a book purist (aaahh! I admit it!) and any book compared to the movie is bound to raise differences, even if it stuck completely to every last OCD detail. Because simply, movies and books are different mediums, they used different techniques (and similar ones, but they also use different techniques), and have different standards that create 'canon'. Which is why it seriously ticks me off when people plead watching the movie as a substitute to reading Pride and Prejudice! It's soooo....oops. We're never going to wrap this up, are we? Let's just say, the movie was good. Compared to the book, it was interesting. The book trumps the movie, any day.

So anyways, this is Quiet Girl, who is now trying to keep very, very , very. QUIET


-Shhhhhhh....the rats are coming......kidding.......ok.......goodnight.... .


*Roman Numerals are cooler than regular numbers. And as an added bonus, they also confuse anyone who reads them as x's and i's.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Our Life in Reno

Life in Reno, or Murphy's Law is Proven in Full

Life started to look up, after we left Oklahoma. With low expectations, our lovely apartment with a mountain view seemed to be a pretty decent slice of cake. The weather was a dream, and we arrived safely in relatively sound mental health. But hey, all things considered, we're lucky we didn't come out as twisted, psychologically scarred sociopaths.

Twenty four hours later, life started to look down. As our U-box hadn't arrived yet, we ate from plastic bowls. Which doesn't sound too bad unless you also use them as utensils for boiling hot soup. Which, in turn doesn't sound too bad, when you consider that trying to boil soup in a plastic bowl often results in melted plastic over the stoves burned hands as a result of trying to take the molten plastic bowl off the stove, acidic smoke permeating every last corner of the apartment, and a lovely visit from the local fire department. The canned soup was finally cooked in Ian's water bottle, and though we've scrubbed and scrubbed, the stain still hasn't come out.
After our lovely dinner, we put on our hiking shoes and headed outside for a walk. The mountains were lovely and really quite peaceful. In fact, Dad was moved to tears- although I was moved the most. That is to be exact, Dad was so moved, he threw out his hand to give me a 'Look at this' squeeze, but missed and knocked me slightly off balance, which caused me to stumble slightly and trip over a rock, which in turn caused me to step awkwardly on a ledge which crumbled under my foot, which in turn caused me to break into a stumbling run, pinwheeling my arms down a steep slope, which in turn caused me to snag my foot in a root sticking out of the ground, which in turn caused me to get a twisted ankle, fractured shin, and various assorted cuts, scrapes and bruises over my person. What was that about not turning into a twisted, psychologically scarred sociopath?

Angry, tired and stressed to perfection, we rolled out our sleeping bags to try and get a good night's sleep. A much needed item, which apparently, wasn't on our itinerary for the night. 30 minutes into the night, Ian and I were still awake, listening to the drip, drip, drip of our leaky bathroom faucet, and trying to keep from smothering as we pressed cloths to our face to try and block out the smell emanating from the carpet. Then, just to reassure us that yes, someone was there! Dad snuck quietly into the room and,(right when the drip, drip, drip was beginning to become soothing) and whispered, quite close to our ears: "Are you guys awake? Did you hear that?" Needless to say, we awoke very suddenly (In fact, I believe Ian nearly had a seizure), and, to be sure, our screams must have wakened the neighbors as well. Grumbling, moaning and crabby to the bone, we headed inside his room and waited as he hushed us. And waited. And waited. Then we heard the unmistakable scritch-scritch-scratch of the beloved tenant up above, who apparently, was just warming up for a busy night's work ahead. He serenaded us to sleep that night with his chatters and scratching as he scurried to and fro. Did I mention that Dad is mortally afraid of rodents?

Although maybe his total lack of sleep was due to his room's ceiling's pregnancy, which is strange, even for Nevada. That is to say- a strange bump resembling, well, you know, was located right above his head. But I digress-

As Ian rolled out of bed to take an early shower, he noticed, to his surprise, that he appeared to be taking a bath, which, though the floor was free of objects, seemed to result from the shower drain being obstructed by an unidentified freakin' object. As that bathroom in particular didn't happen to have a tub, or a functional shower seal, he soon found that the wood floor, and most of the carpet around the door was taking an unanticipated deep-cleaning. And the one bar of hotel soap that was to be shared among us was looking awfully small.

Of course, that shower was all for naught, because and hour and a half later, our U-Box arrived.

I'm not quite sure where they get the drivers for those things, but I can say with absolute certainty, we're not paying for the damage the dear lady did to our fellow tenants' cars. I can just hope she has one heck of an insurance, because how she managed to total 3 cars in under two hours is beyond me. Opening the U-box was a joyous event. Seeing what was in it, was not. Our stuffed-to-perfection U-box, apparently, wasn't able to close correctly, and the rain shield, apparently, didn't shield the rain at all. The first 1/3 of our possessions that we removed from the U-box had obtained significant water damage (Of course, they were all the important documents and favorite books that we packed last, just to be safe). Trying to be optimistic, under those conditions, was just a tad difficult, especially when you took a good look around and saw the flight of stairs that we would have to take to get to the sidewalk, the three flights of stairs we would have to take to get up to the apartment complex, and the two flights of stairs we would have to take to get to the flight of stairs that would bring us to our apartment door.

Frankly, the mountain view isn't worth it.

Wait. Let's pause and give it up for the boys! Due to my fractured shin and the second degree burns on Mom's hands, we were AWOL for the moment (the new shoes, by the way, were from Colorado. Did you really think we would go shopping while you unpacked the U-box? Actually don't answer that, Dad. Um, oooh, my leg hurts. Oooh, owie. I hope you feel bad.). Although personally, of the two, I would take moving any day. But hey- I wasn't completely useless during the five hours and twenty six minutes it took to unload the U-box. Actually, I distinctly remember helping Dad assemble the parents' bed and remarking on how the ceiling's pregnancy seemed to be progressing at an unusual rate. But Dad was too busy worrying about how the curves of the mattress between the slats on his bed made Mount Everest look like a gently sloping hill-- he probably didn't hear me.

After a refreshing shower, we set out to meet our neighbors. All were very nice. There was a family of three below, a widowed Granny next door, a family with twelve children (five of them teenagers), a balding bachelor (Mr. Cher Lukel Omnes) and his mustachioed roomie, and a graduate student who specialized in raising what she called Culiseta Longiareolata, but what I called 'blood-sucking-vampire bugs' (aka mosquitoes) for scientific research at UNR. All in all, very nice people, although Mr. Omnes appeared to have all sorts of riffraff showing up at his door. Maybe that's where all the strange noises at night came from. If I didn't know better, I would have sworn those were gunshots, but no, we live in a good neighborhood.

That night we slept upon real mattresses, which was a relief, because our neighbor above appeared to have multiplied, and our sleeping bags, at this point, were needed to help shut out the noise. Talk about a literal party animal. I'm not sure if those were mini-rodent-raves or communist rantings about how the tenants below (us) were enemies to the people. Either way, it was loud.

Again, the next day, we woke up to the sound of screaming sirens, and, got to witness, first hand, a car chase through our neighborhood. It appeared to be Mr. Omnes' mustachioed friend who was in a car chasing the car that was chasing the car, but I couldn't quite be sure. Breakfast was a sordid affair, but tolerable, and I am certainly glad that the toilet broke down after our partially thawed waffles with syrup, then during it where it may have triggered that interesting physiological reaction termed 'regurgitation'. Although, between you and me, I'm still avoiding that particular bathroom because, as the strong smell clearly evidences, we have not succeeded in clearing out all of the, well, you know. Refuse. There's a handy little thicket out by the fence a short walk away from the apartment, when nature calls. You know, one of those poignant life-skills you learn while vacationing in the Rockies.

Although I can personally say, that even after viewing a whole multitude of different types of flora in the Rockies, I have never seen that particular kind of mold which we discovered in the kitchen cabinets that day. It must have been, I deduced, relatively new in the evolutionary time-line, because, after scrubbing at it with lysol, scraping at it with a spatula, spraying it with air freshener, and having Mom talk to it in Chinese about how lovely Mr. Omne's apartment was and how much nicer it would be for the invinci-mold there, it still hadn't budged.

We called up the leasing office and they kindly called a pest exterminating company, who arrived promptly and quarantined the area. I didn't know exterminators wore such nice, black, two-piece suits or used exterminating jargon such as 'code-red' or 'operation parasite51'. Although they advised us to check out to a hotel somewhere in Salt Lake City, we told them we'd prefer to remain here and they left without much commotion. Although I distinctly remember the smiling men in white lab coats talking amongst themselves about human test subjects.

While on the topic of government conspiracies and alien invasions, that brings me to our very recent experience at the Washoe county library. The library is located in the intersection between Fair Wren Street and Height Avenue. It's building 451. As libraries go, it's a pretty nice place, although very unconventional in some aspects. Mom wanted us to meet the librarians, so we dutifully introduced ourselves to the man at the front desk, whose name was Mr. Bic Brudder. He, in turn, dutifully took us on a tour of the library, and showed us the room where the library's summer camps were held, where the bulletin board was located, how the books in the adult section were organized chronologically by the author's year of death, the books in the children's section by the last letter of the main character's middle name, and how the fiction books were organized by color. He also issued us library cards and put our names down for a session on the 21st where we would get bar codes tattooed on our wrists, while explaining that every day a book was overdue would result in half an hour in the torture rack. I really think that he was joking, but I guess we'll find out soon because Ian has a book that's been 3 days overdue and we're returning it tomorrow.

At lunch, I decided to attempt to cook a something. It was a bit of a cross between fried eggs, hash browns, and escargo. Although upon looking at it, Ian promptly engaged in that interesting physiological reaction and threw up, in the sink. I didn't even try to show it Mom, or Dad. Instead, I opted to send it down the same route that Ian's interesting physiological reaction took.

Partially thawed waffles and syrup were on the menu for lunch.

And after lunch, things were about to get interesting. You see, only five minutes after we had finished our partially thawed waffles, we had a visit from the graduate student. Instead of the cookies, grape jelly, and vanadinite (we took it out of it's nice glass box and put it on our dinner table, as the tenant below advised us to) that our other neighbors gave us, Ms. Smith gave us some of her best Culiseta Longiareolata/mosquito larvae. It didn't seem to be too much of a bother, because with the faulty shower, clogged toilet and malfunctioning garbage grinder, we were sure to have a place to raise them.

After that, the afternoon became very mundane. We lay around, did stuff on our computers, and, in my case, speculated as to the nature of the ceiling's pregnancy, which, looked about due now. Oh, and we tried to stay far away from the walls, which felt really spongy to the touch, and which bore the unmistakable noises of our neighbor above, who had, at this point, multiplied into an infestation. It was like the very walls themselves were alive. The yellow wallpaper only added to the grotesque effect. Night and rest seemed to be a much needed relief from the surreal world we had landed in.

Although it didn't quite deliver, because instead of doing what most pregnant bellies do, the ceiling's pregnancy decided to defy convention and explode. It had been, at that point dangerously sagging, and sure enough, a half hour before midnight, we heard a pop, a crash, a scream, and the unmistakable chatter of our neighbor above, now amongst us.

Ian and I hesitated for a second between rushing heroically toward's the parents' room, and seeking higher ground, but the end result was a compromised walk towards the source of all the commotion. As we cautiously entered the room, we saw, to our surprise, a mass of writhing, screeching mixture of plaster, old hair, sludge, paper, shiny metal objects and maggots where our parents used to be. We rushed to the rescue-- that is to say, Ian rushed to the rescue and I stood at the door and uttered a bunch of girl-freak-out noises-- and succeeded in peeling back the slimy, soggy sheet and hustling mom out of the bed and to the shower. It was at that point we noticed the strange absence of Dad and hear the shrieks coming from outside.

Throwing open the door, we ran outside, only to see Dad being borne on the backs of an abnormally swift rodent mob that rushed towards the library. He writhed and screamed and clawed at the rodent horde, but to no avail. They swarmed over and under him, transforming him into a living brown column of furry brown rodents that moved at a rapid pace towards the library. He was never heard from again.

We came back in and spent a sleepless night in the middle of the living room, huddling together, because, after completing their nefarious task, our neighbors above had returned and were now seeking another victim among us. It was hard to tell from the pale light shed by the moon, but as our neighbors above scurried to and fro across the floor, they seemed to have oddly fuzzy backs, as if they had cross-breeded with the mold fungus.

Daylight came, though at that point I rather wished it hadn't. Though its presence had chased away the rodent-fungus hybrids, it soon ushered in the horrors of the inanimate. We opened our eyes only to realize that the strangely soggy walls had only been the incubators of the fungus' spores, and by the time morning had arrived, the fungus mold had spread all the way from the kitchen, to encompass the house itself. Worse still, the sogginess that we had felt under us the whole night seemed to be seeping from the toilet, and it had only needed one absentminded flush to start spewing a never ending geyser of sewage into the air. The faulty shower, meanwhile, started to ooze goo, which, upon later inspection appeared to be moving, and when Mom prodded it tentatively with her finger, released a small, leech-like creature that latched onto Mom's arm and wouldn't let go.

And then, right when we thought it couldn't get worse, a new disaster struck. In the clogged-up sink full with green water with floating white foam and an oily surface....

The mosquitoes hatched.

Let me cut a long story short-- we left the apartment. By that point, it was a stinky, mold-ridden, sewage spilling, rat-infested mosquito breeding ground. But slowly, and surely, one by one we got picked off from the sidelines. The first to go was Dad, carried away by the astonishingly fast mold-rat hybrids. Then Mom got taken in by the men in black for questioning (she later sent us a text message saying that she was OK, but the caller ID didn't show her cellphone, instead it came from Area 51). Next, Ian took to the Peavine mountains, in a last, desperate attempt to try and thwart the librarians of Washoe County Library system, who were, at this point, holding a massive man-hunt in search for him (he left taking a water bottle, a bag of beef jerky, his Chrome OS's motherboard-- in his words, his most precious possession-- and his Nerf gun. For protection). So you see, at the end, I was the only Hong left standing.

Naturally, with limited funds (approximately 2 dollars and 35 cents-- the mold had by that point invaded my room and reduced all my cash to brown sludge) I had nowhere to go but back to the apartment. I sat--no, am sitting right now in the middle of the living room, typing furiously on my computer in a last attempt to tell my story before night falls and the rodents inexorably return. As dusk comes, there is the ominous, inevitable scratching that heralds that angel of fate, and the very walls seethe and groan with the sheer mass of rodents within. All I can say is that, if you ever cared two cents for me, absent thee from felicity awhile, and in this harsh world draw thy breath in pain to tell my story...'cause it's about to get real nasty in a few more minutes












Alright, so when did you stop buying the story? Lemme just say, Nevada is great. The apartment is pretty fair, as those things do, and the U-box unpacking went off without a hitch. The librarians...well, as librarians go, they are pretty run of the mill. Let's leave it at that.

So why would I go ahead and waste five hours of my life making up a fictional history of the last two weeks, that is at best, tolerable? I guess I do have a lot of time on my hands. But really, sometimes it's just plain entertaining to spin a yarn that progresses from ironic coincidence to evil omen, and just to see at what point in said yarn does the reader's gullibility fail (by the way, gullible is written on the ceiling). Did I mention I also have a bad sense of humor?

Anyways, thanks for all your concern and prayers. We've arrived safely, and aside from the mold (just kidding) things are really nice here. The weather is a dream, and so far, none of us have been picked off by angry rodent mobs. But really, I'll be sure to make a real blog post about life in Reno sometime, and to include pictures.


So until then, this is Quiet Girl, signing off.

-Shhh...hahahaha

Oh, I forgot to mention credits:
The Wednesday Wars, for the idea of a bulge in the ceiling
Calvin and Hobbes, for opening my eyes to the fact that yes, Librarians do give you dirty looks when you return a book that has been overdue for two weeks.

Allusions, anyone? Did anyone pick up on...

Mr. Cher Lukel Homes = Mr. Sherlock Holmes (naturally, his mustachioed roomie= .....)

The library's location, Fair Wren Height 451= Fahrenheit 451, a dystopian novel about a time where firefighters start fires to burn books. Yes, I realize I just mangled it into pieces, but I'm not that great at summaries.

Mr. Bic Brudder= Big Brother from 1984. Hopefully no explanation needed.


Saturday, July 2, 2011

Salman Khan: Let's use video to reinvent education | Video on TED.com


Salman Khan: Let's use video to reinvent education | Video on TED.com

Fruitcake Rave III


I Know Kung Fu

So we (finally) watch The Matrix and now I get all these allusions* that have been popping up in the most random, and quite frankly, pointless places.
Although, truth to be told, that's not really the only thing I've been suddenly getting lately (yes, including weird looks, and acne)
Lemme just say, Sal Khan is my hero now! Not only does he understand algebra (which, in my mind, is of significant merit itself) but he can explain it. Let's give him a hand, folks! And even more amazing: he can explain it-- and I can understand it! (Shouts, cheers, much applause. Mothers break down weeping and throngs flood the street.)

This is Sal on TED:
http://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education.html

And if you watched the video, now you'll get what I mean when I say 'I know kung-fu'. But seriously, guys, if you're math-impaired like me, give him a chance. After about 3 years of trying to learn Algebra (wow, that sounds really bad. Ok- how about this, I started algebra early and hit a brick wall early as well) I am now halfway through it in after 1 and a half months.

You see, I really, really, really, really^106 detest Algebra textbooks that try to fool me into learning algebra. No way, I'm not swallowing that murder mystery gunk, I'm too smart for that. When you run through a textbook a semester without anything sticking past six weeks, reading another book that talks about how much fun we'll have going on an algebra adventure while rescuing the Princess of Perennially tedious Polynomials and finding advice from the Wizard of !$#@%^&% it's enough to make you put up a mental block against algebra so thick it's probably breaking some law of Quantum Physics.

Finally! A textbook that cut to the bone and stated every principle in one sentence, or less: The Algebra Survival Guide. I ran through it fairly quickly, understood the concepts, completed the exercises...and forgot everything. There were problems, like, what if this number was a negative? How would that work out? Or what if the equation looked like this? How would I deal with it? The textbook never strayed into that territory, and naturally, I grew worried. The worst part, however, was that the book didn't come up with enough exercises, or offered options to review. Consequently, by the time we were settled in Nevada, all my knowledge of Algebra had been wiped from my brain. Yep, they made me learn, but I still found a way out!

Of course, that soon became a problem, not that I was worried about being perennially stuck in 8th grade, but that Ian would soon be in there with me as well. Which of course, was absolutely, completely, totally, unequivocally, unquestionably, without a shade of a doubt unacceptable. Being the big sister, it is my natural sacred duty to be superior in all things. And to have the most ice cream for dessert-- but I digress on my just desserts.

We came here in June, which left me about two and a half months to learn algebra and make it stick. Needless to say, I didn't get that much sleep.

But, between bouts of hyperventilating, horror-filled shock (every time I inadvertently conjured up a mental image), and, though I'll never admit it, sabotage**, enter Sal Khan. Khan Academy was my salvation (it's also a data-freak's dream, but I'll get to that later). If you watched the TED video, you'd understand how it works to 'humanize the classroom' alongside providing extensive data for the teachers to work with. For me, the best thing about Khan Academy were the videos.

The videos were mostly around three to five minutes, explaining every concept quickly and simply. The algebra videos also have a counterpart: worked algebra 1 examples, so one could switch back and forth between videos if a topic was not understood.

The exercise dashboard works by naming topics you choose proficient, not proficient, or pending (you need to answer 10 questions correctly in a row to become proficient). Personally, the things I like best about the Khan Academy exercise dashboard is the way all topics are interconnected, so after you become proficient at one, it imediately gives you a bunch of different recomended options. Also, even after you've become proficient at an exercise, if some time has passed since the last time you've done one, it will have this really awful neon orange color until you do another exercise on that topic to prove you still remember it. Oh, and the best part....

The badges.

There's nothing more fun than flashing my twenty meteorite badges, eight moon badges, two earth badges, one sun badge, two challenge patches, and my 222, 876 energy points at my brother during yet another epic duel of sibling rivalry.

Nothing says "I pwn you" like a sun badge.

But really, go ahead and check out Khan Academy right now! It's a great learning curriculum, and it's free, covering topics from the humanities, sciences, history, economics, and more!

THANK YOU KHAN!

This is Quiet Girl, who will not be that quiet tonight as she is holding a one-girl party to celebrate the defeat of algebra I.

-Shhh...



*I was considering substituting 'allusions' for 'Easter egg' (wiki it if you don't know what I'm talking about)...but...luckily, unlike creators of said allusions, I don't use obscure jargon that makes like, no sense out of context. Most of the time. Kinda. How about, when I'm in a merciful mood, and--uh, moving on. So instead, you get not-so-obscure English major jargon. But if you don't know what I mean even then, I highly suggest... well, what do you do if you don't know what an allusion is? Besides cry out hopelessly at the cruelty of fate, I mean.

**No, not literal sabotage. Just trying to keep my horror from Ian so he didn't get the bright idea of trying to get into Algebra II and making my existence absolutely miserable.