Thursday, June 23, 2011

Tunes for this week~ ♫☆♪

Click on the links if you dare.... dun dun dun....

No really, if you'd like to check out some great tunes — that I happen to be listening to this week — then look no further! Or actually, DO look further!


First, we have some loooooovely French/English music:

  

And LOVE these songs by Zazie


 

Melanie Pain: Ignore Moi & Girls and Boys


 
  

La Fille De La Bande:
   
Pauline:
   

Now for some English songs:  
Big Jet Plane:

  



  
I LOVE this song from Two Door Cinema Club!!!

And then we have Julian Perretta: Stitch Me Up
  

And Radar Detector by Darwin Deez

  

Adelle Set Fire to the Rain remix :)


  

Micheal Buble: Mack the Knife
 
Ok that is probably enough for now - I could go on and on! :) Hope you enjoyed this week's showcase of tunes and found a few that you enjoyed! Cheers! :D

Saturday, June 18, 2011

PARADE!

So this morning as I puttering around my apartment with my full-blown cold trying to clean I heard the not-so-unusal barrrage of fireworks somewhere nearby that sounded like a volley of machine gun fire... Or not so much but anyway, it always makes me think of that old ebaumsworld video of the end of the world with the line, "fire zee missiiiiles," when they are going off at any hour and in any weather... You hear them so much though for all sorts of things that you don't really think anything of it after a while. So on my way back from a nearby breakfast shop you can imagine my surprise when I discovered there was a full blown parade going on outside - I had run through the parade at one point just to get back to my house — traffic was a mess, there were cops on scooters everywhere, and fireworks being shot off in the street. About 20 minutes later I went out to take my laundry to the laundromat and the parade was still going on outside so I ran back up and got my camera, snapped some photos and got a few videos because the music and the different vehicles were just too interesting to miss. Enjoy!


The first one is just a short video of one of the trucks that made me think of a Fire Engine that had been attacked by the Rio Carnival...

 

Now compare the music of that one to this one:


and here are a few more videos :) i liked the children with the dragon...on roller blades <3

Sunday, June 5, 2011

A wow moment....

Tomorrow is Dragon Boat Festival. Yesterday I went to Juifen with my friends and got to experience a really beautiful vintage town on the side of a mountain facing out to sea. And today my neighbors from down the hall GAVE me four free tickets to the movie theater down the block...

I always say hello to the lady and her son when I see them but I'm rarely ever able to communicate anything beyond that, but she always remembers my name... I'm embarrassed to admit that I've never learned their names — and they only know mine because a nice lady on the 7th floor who has impeccable English talks to me sometimes and has apparently told people my name....

Earlier in the week I was passing the bank on the corner of our building when my neighbor came rushing out and tried to tell me about some free ticket deal at the theater. I got about 60% percent of what she was saying but I was missing the critical bits so it was pretty hopeless. I felt really bad because I could tell she was trying to do me a favor, but I thought she wanted to take me somewhere or get me to buy some product or something. We couldn't communicate and we finally had to awkwardly give up — with both of us feeling a bit frustrated. I thought it was really sweet of her to try though.

Then today on my way back from the convenient store (with yet another meal of salad and yogurt) I ran into her and her son. He speaks some English so she really excitedly told him to start telling me about the tickets.

"We put the movie tickets in your mailbox so please feel free to use them," he said.

I was floored to say the least. I went inside, found them in my box with a nice note in English explaining what they were and I was so touched... I immediately wrote a thank you card and went down to the local dessert shop and bought an assortment of fancy cakes and took it over. I tried to leave really quickly but the mom insisted that the son give me two cans of some drink from Germany...turns out it was a dark malt of some kind... I think I drank a beer tonight.... Hell has frozen over. Ha ha. It was actually ok though, so I'm not sure if it really was beer or not... But it was very sweet of them so I gave it a try and will actually be happy to drink the second can later. A few minutes after I took over the cake I was sitting in my apartment with...very few articles of clothing on because it was hot and I was saving electricity... when I heard a knock on my door. I ran around frantically trying to get clothes on as I heard another knock and then my dying-duck-doorbell went off before I could get a shirt on. When I finally got dressed and to the door the boy and his sister — who I've never seen — were standing outside to tell me that when I wanted to use the tickets I needed to go reserve the seats first.

Today was definitely one of those days where my lack of Chinese broke my heart, but it was really a special thing to have happen. They are definitely some of the nicest neighbors I've ever had — certainly far better than the psychotic, axe-murderer, screamer kings that live right next door that call security on me for talking on the phone... in a normal voice... urk...

So here's to the neighbors that made my day and warmed my heart *cheers!*

Some negatives....

1.) The fact that every time I commute back and forth between work and home I constantly have heart-in-mouth-lungs-stuttering near death experiences...
found at: http://livingintaiwan.wordpress.com/2009/06/20/motor-scootering-in-taiwan/

 Traffic in Taiwan looks a little like a chaotic sea of smoke and metal and shimmering plastic smudged with soot, crowded with people wearing a variety of helmets (from the "pudding bowl" helmets, and the ones reminiscent of World War II fighters, to the full-protection motor cycle helmets — or my favorite: the construction worker hardhats) blue trucks, taxi drivers, cars, fork-lifts, large trucks and buses.  


All of which drive with what appears to be, at first glance, very little rhyme nor reason. Rules don't seem to apply, people force their way across on left turns — regularly cutting off traffic with reckless abandon. Red lights are run and people simply lay on their horns as if this makes the fact that they are zipping across a large intersection on a red perfectly safe. Driving carefully and cautiously seems to only get you in trouble — a lesson that I learned after I got the lovely scar on my right arm when a taxi bowled me over and I wiped out through a large intersection in front of several oncoming vehicles. After a while you start to pick up on the method to the madness. Basically it's this: Expect any vehicle of any kind and size to come out of anywhere (whether you think there is a roadway there or not) at any moment (whether you have so-called "right of way" or not) and expect that any of the vehicles around could pull a harebrained/illegal/questionable move at any minute. Remember this and you'll fare a little better. Also: BEWARE of the blue trucks.

found at: http://blog.greenlaker.com/2009/03/taiwan-little-blue-trucks.html

They drive like erratic bats out of hell with no care or consideration for any other vehicles on the road. The number of times those blue beasts have almost killed me or tried to kill me — I swear — is something I lost track of months ago. They are the spawn of hell. Haha. 

Since moving to Taiwan I am sad to admit that my easy-going, patient, careful driving personality has been replaced by traffic-weaving, impatient, road-rage prone aggressive tendencies.... I think it has something to do with the fact that every day I drive it's like I'm in a horde of drivers that seem intent on one thing: to get me killed or seriously maimed — the faster I can get away from the crowded traffic, the better. In order to do that, one has to go faster than the masses and get to the FRONT and STAY there. 

It may have something to do with the fact that I love the sound of the revving engine too, though. (^_~)v



 2) The sidewalks are almost never made of concrete (and that's when they even exist in time and space!)...


Well now, why is that a problem, you ask? That's because they are usually made of some slick, polished marble-like surface...

Pretty? Certainly. Looks posh and classy? Most definitely.

So, the problem?

Taiwan's average annual precipitation is approximately 2,471 millimeters. In American, that's about 97 inches of rain on average... some areas get up to 6,000mm or 236 inches of rain. So my friends: heavy rains + slick stone surface + no grippy surface = back-wrenching, neck-twisting, dangerously-close near-wipeouts. The number of times I have almost biffed it and fallen backwards — let's just say that if I had a dollar for every time it's happened I'd have a nice wad of cash in my pockets.... It's as bad as the sheets of ice in winter, except maybe worse...because it was actually DESIGNED that way. Haha.


3)POLLUTION

I've been told that the pollution is MUCH worse in mainland China. And I believe it. That doesn't change the fact that it is still absolutely repulsive here. I wish I had a photo of one of the many vehicles coughing out thick, billowy clouds of blue smoke — I've been hear about 9 months and I still can't believe it when I see one...Which is all the time. You know that there is something wrong when you are outside for a few minutes and you scrape your skin with a nail and you get a line of black soot that rolls off. It doesn't even matter if I'm in my apartment with the windows closed and have showered. By morning when I wake up I'll be able to remove some amount of soot from my skin. To say that my complexion has suffered would be an understatement....

Not to mention my lungs and my general health.

Most days the humidity and the barometric pressure of the area keeps the pollution down in a fuzzy grey cloud of smog that coats everything and makes the rare non-cloudy days not so blue... Days where the sun is shining down out of a clear blue sky not marred by smoke are so rare that I become absolutely stir-crazy when they do occur... And I thought Iowa was cloudy and dreary at times... I guess it's all about perspective, huh?

Welcome to life in one of the so-called armpits of Taiwan — whoot whoot. A smoggy, choking, sooty armpit.


On a closing note: if I sound like a bitter, angry person that is not my intention. I like Taiwan. I really do. It's just like any place though, there are things that can drive you nuts and sometimes it's good to get it off your chest. Mostly though, I thought I'd share some of the things that make daily life different from home, har har. 



Like the fact that if I want to avoid severe sinus infections I actually have to wear a mask anytime I walk around outside for longer than three minutes or so..

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The V.R.O. - Ian Somerhalder - 2011 05/31 by The VRO | Blog Talk Radio

The V.R.O. - Ian Somerhalder - 2011 05/31 by The VRO | Blog Talk Radio

Ian Somerhalder talking about ISF (the environmental foundation he's started).
Very interesting - really hope that we can get more information out there for people to see... need to start doing something — that's for sure...
Thank you to all the people that are out there making a difference and are helping us all move toward a more positive future environmentally...