Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Home for a rest
Monday, December 27, 2010
Quick Update
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Leftover Thoughts: Wittgenstein
There was once a story of a young man who dreamed about reducing the world to pure logic. Because he was a very clever young man, he actually managed to do it. When he finished his work, he stood back and admired it. It was beautiful, a perfect world purged of imperfections and indeterminacy. Countless acres of gleaming ice stretching into the horizon. So the clever young man looked around the world and decided to explore it. He took one step forwards, and fell flat on his back. You see, he had forgotten about friction. The ice was smooth and level and stainless, but you couldn’t walk there. So the clever young man sat down and wept bitter tears. But as he grew into a wise old man, he came to understand that roughness and ambiguity are not imperfections, they are what make the world turn. He wanted to run and dance, and the words scattered on the ground were all battered and tarnished and ambiguous. The wise old man saw that that was the way things were. Yet something in him was still homesick for the ice, where everything was radiant and absolute and relentless. Though he had grown used to the idea of the rough ground, he could not bring himself to live there. So now he was marooned between earth and ice, at home in neither. And this was the cause of all his grief.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Last night out in Guelph
Almost GONE!
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Crazy Weekend: part 2
So, I decide that any exit towards Guelph is just as good as any other exit towards Guelph, and I moved into the right lane. I started to scrub a bit of speed, coasting towards the off ramp. Right at the beginning of the turn, I needed to scrub off abit more speed, so I start to lightly hit the brake. Ends up, we were driving on a sheet of ice. This is an artistic interpretation of what followed:
Although I consider my self to be a dedicated cyclist (in heart and in practice) with a healthy aversion to automobiles, I couldn't help but start to feel some nostalgia for the other four wheeled vehicles of my past. During High school, I had the use of a wicked awesome car, a midnight blue 1991 Mercury Cougar (RIP 2009). My first memory of this car: Within the first 3 minutes of taking command of the wheel, I had spun it out and crashed into a snow bank just outside my grandparents home. My uncle had to come over in a Jeep to pull the cougar out of the icy trap....I could tell that this was going to be the beginning of something special.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Crazy Weekend: part 1
Monday, December 6, 2010
Almost Done!
I'll be done on the 8th! With just over 50 pages of papers, one midterm and two finals...this semester hasn't been too bad.
I also realize that this is pretty much the end of 'The Undergrad'. Although there will be academics abroad, I can only imagine how fast the months in Guatemala are going to seem to pass.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Letting go of the Room...
From now on, when subletting...one person at a time, first-come first-served. Its the only way to do it.
On the gear front...the choice of camera has narrowed...to ONE! The Canon S95, one of the most powerful 'point and shoot' cameras of its size.
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Photo Spread
The Royal City
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Trapped in a Cliché
I usually try to avoid clichés like the plague, but they seem almost unavoidable...on so many levels.
As a twenty something university student about to head on a semester abroad, having just decided to keep a travel-blog...I, myself, seem trapped in a cliché! Consider that the idiom "Onwards and Upwards" has been a cliché since the 1800's. I found the irony of this whole student travel-blog situation quite alarming. Naturally, I started to over-analyze it.
I had forgotten how many useful quips qualify as cliché: "what goes around, comes around"..."too little, too late"..."two wrongs don't make a right"..."it takes two to tango"..."never say never"..."so the plot thickens"..."only time will tell" ...
The list is huge!
Maybe I'm just channeling grade 12 English, but I have a knee-jerk aversion to clichés. Overuse seems to devalue the thought, meaning and significance of idioms and acts. But on further reflection, what's so terrible about a cliché? Although over-used and abused, the cliché remains a useful device in conversations. As Terry Pratchett puts it in Guards! Guards!, “Clichés are the spanners and the screwdrivers in the toolbox of language." What's the difference between something insightful and something idiotic?
I think it all comes down to the subject and the context:
If there was a movie in which a tidal wave was bearing down on a populated beach, and the character yelled "Head for the Hills!", it would be a cliché. If this was 'real-life', and I was actually on a beach, and there was actually a tidal wave, yelling "Head for the Hills!" would be a great suggestion.
It seems that when the subject and context are genuine and sincere, there is no cliché. However, when the subject and context are contrived, and presented as stroke of originality or creativity, it become cliché. The wiki entry for 'cliché' has a great quote from Salvador Dali: "The first man to compare the cheeks of a young woman to a rose was obviously a poet; the first to repeat it was possibly an idiot."
Although it seems like spoken clichés are unavoidable, people are much less prone to be caught living a cliché. By my reckoning, as long as I'm aware that everything I do has been done before, and thus lacks innovation or invention, and do not pretend otherwise... This blog, as well as myself, should be in the clear.
So...Here's to creativity without the pretense of innovation! AYHSMB!