Sunday, February 25, 2007

100 Things You Probably Didn't Know

Taken from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4566526.stm (some stuff only applies to the UK)

1. The UK's first mobile phone call was made 20 years ago this year, when Ernie Wise rang the Vodafone head office, which was then above a curry shop in Newbury.

2. Mohammed is now one of the 20 most popular names for boys born in England and Wales.

3. While it's an offence to drop litter on the pavement, it's not an offence to throw it over someone's garden wall.

4. An average record shop needs to sell at least two copies of a CD per year to make it worth stocking, according to Wired magazine.

5. Nicole Kidman is scared of butterflies. "I jump out of planes, I could be covered in cockroaches, I do all sorts of things, but I just don't like the feel of butterflies' bodies," she says.

6. WD-40 dissolves cocaine - it has been used by a pub landlord to prevent drug-taking in his pub's toilets.

7. Baboons can tell the difference between English and French. Zoo keepers at Port Lympne wild animal park in Kent are having to learn French to communicate with the baboons which had been transferred from Paris zoo.

8. Devout Orthodox Jews are three times as likely to jaywalk as other people, according to an Israeli survey reported in the New Scientist. The researchers say it's possibly because religious people have less fear of death.

9. The energy used to build an average Victorian terrace house would be enough to send a car round the Earth five times, says English Heritage.

10. Humans can be born suffering from a rare condition known as "sirenomelia" or "mermaid syndrome", in which the legs are fused together to resemble the tail of a fish.

11. One in 10 Europeans is allegedly conceived in an Ikea bed.

12. Until the 1940s rhubarb was considered a vegetable. It became a fruit when US customs officials, baffled by the foreign food, decided it should be classified according to the way it was eaten.

13. Prince Charles broke with an 80-year tradition by giving Camilla Parker Bowles a wedding ring fashioned from Cornish gold, instead of the nugget of Welsh gold that has provided rings for all royal brides and grooms since 1923.

14. It's possible for a human to blow up balloons via the ear. A 55-year-old factory worker from China reportedly discovered 20 years ago that air leaked from his ears, and he can now inflate balloons and blow out candles.

15. Lionesses like their males to be deep brunettes.

16. The London borough of Westminster has an average of 20 pieces of chewing gum for every square metre of pavement.

17. Bosses at Madame Tussauds spent £10,000 separating the models of Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston when they separated. It was the first time the museum had two people's waxworks joined together.

18. If all the Smarties eaten in one year were laid end to end it would equal almost 63,380 miles, more than two-and-a-half times around the Earth's equator.

19. The = sign was invented by 16th Century Welsh mathematician Robert Recorde, who was fed up with writing "is equal to" in his equations. He chose the two lines because "noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle".

20. The Queen has never been on a computer, she told Bill Gates as she awarded him an honorary knighthood.

21. One person in four has had their identity stolen or knows someone who has.

22. The length of a man's fingers can reveal how physically aggressive he is, scientists say.

23. In America it's possible to subpoena a dog.

24. The 71m packets of biscuits sold annually by United Biscuits, owner of McVitie's, generate 127.8 tonnes of crumbs.

25. Nelson probably had a broad Norfolk accent.

26. One in four people does not know 192, the old number for directory inquiries in the UK, has been abolished.

27. Only in France and California are under 18s banned from using sunbeds.

28. The British buy the most compact discs in the world - an average of 3.2 per year, compared to 2.8 in the US and 2.1 in France.

29. When faced with danger, the octopus can wrap six of its legs around its head to disguise itself as a fallen coconut shell and escape by walking backwards on the other two legs, scientists discovered.

30. There are an estimated 1,000 people in the UK in a persistent vegetative state.

31. Train passengers in the UK waited a total of 11.5m minutes in 2004 for delayed services.

32. "Restaurant" is the most mis-spelled word in search engines.

33. Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has only been in an English pub once, to buy his wife cigarettes.

34. The Little Britain wheelchair sketch with Lou and Andy was inspired by Lou Reed and Andy Warhol.

35. The name Lego came from two Danish words "leg godt", meaning "play well". It also means "I put together" in Latin.

36. The average employee spends 14 working days a year on personal e-mails, phone calls and web browsing, outside official breaks, according to employment analysts Captor.

37. Cyclist Lance Armstrong's heart is almost a third larger than the average man's.

38. Nasa boss Michael Griffin has seven university degrees: a bachelor's degree, a PhD, and five masters degrees.

39. Australians host barbecues at polling stations on general election days.

40. An average Briton will spend £1,537,380 during his or her lifetime, a survey from insurer Prudential suggests.

41. Tactically, the best Monopoly properties to buy are the orange ones: Vine Street, Marlborough Street and Bow Street.

42. Britain's smallest church, near Malmesbury, Wiltshire, opens just once a year. It measures 4m by 3.6m and has one pew.

43. The spiciness of sauces is measured in Scoville Units.

44. Rubber gloves could save you from lightning.

45. C3PO and R2D2 do not speak to each other off-camera because the actors don't get on.

46. Driving at 159mph - reached by the police driver cleared of speeding - it would take nearly a third of a mile to stop.

47. Liverpool has 42 cranes redeveloping the city centre.

48. A quarter of the world's clematis come from one Guernsey nursery, where production will top 4.5m plants this year alone.

49. Tim Henman has a tennis court at his new home in Oxfordshire which he has never used.

50. Only 36% of the world's newspapers are tabloid.

51. Parking wardens walk about 15 miles a day.

52. You're 10 times more likely to be bitten by a human than a rat.

53. It takes 75kg of raw materials to make a mobile phone.

54. Deep Throat is reportedly the most profitable film ever. It was made for $25,000 (£13,700) and has grossed more than $600m.

55. Antony Worrall-Thompson swam the English Channel in his youth.

56. The Pyruvate Scale measures pungency in onions and garlic. It's named after the acid in onions which makes cooks cry when cutting them.

57. The man who was the voice of one of the original Daleks, Roy Skelton, also did the voices for George and Zippy in Rainbow.

58. The average guest at a Buckingham Palace garden party scoffs 14 cakes, sandwiches, scones and ice-cream, according to royal accounts.

59. Oliver Twist is very popular in China, where its title is translated as Foggy City Orphan.

60. Newborn dolphins and killer whales don't sleep for a month, according to research carried out by University of California.

61. You can bet on your own death.

62. MPs use communal hairbrushes in the washrooms of the Houses of Parliament.

63. It takes less energy to import a tomato from Spain than to grow them in this country because of the artificial heat needed, according to Defra.

64. New York mayor Michael Bloomberg's home number is listed by directory inquiries.

65. Actor James Doohan, who played Scotty, had a hand in creating the Klingon language that was used in the movies, and which Shakespeare plays were subsequently translated into.

66. The hotter it is, the more difficult it is for aeroplanes to take off. Air passengers in Nevada, where temperatures have reached 120F, have been told they can't fly.

67. Giant squid eat each other - especially during sex.

68. The Very Hungry Caterpillar has sold one copy every minute since its 1969 publication.

69. First-born children are less creative but more stable, while last-born are more promiscuous, says US research.

70. Reebok, which is being bought by Adidas, traces its history back more than 100 years to Bolton.

71. Jimi Hendrix pretended to be gay to be discharged from the US Army.

72. A towel doesn't legally reserve a sun lounger - and there is nothing in German or Spanish law to stop other holidaymakers removing those left on vacant seats.

73. One in six children think that broccoli is a baby tree.

74. It takes a gallon of oil to make three fake fur coats.

75. Each successive monarch faces in a different direction on British coins.

76. The day when most suicides occurred in the UK between 1993 and 2002 was 1 January, 2000.

77. The only day in that time when no-one killed themselves was 16 March, 2001, the day Comic Relief viewers saw Jack Dee win Celebrity Big Brother.

78. One in 18 people has a third nipple.

79. The section of coast around Cleethorpes has the highest concentration of caravans in Europe.

80. Fifty-seven Bic Biros are sold every second - amounting to 100bn since 1950.

81. George Bernard Shaw named his shed after the UK capital so that when visitors called they could be told he was away in London.

82. Former Labour MP Oona King's aunt is agony aunt Miriam Stoppard.

83. Britain produces 700 regional cheeses, more even than France.

84. The actor who plays Mike Tucker in BBC Radio 4's The Archers is the father of the actor who plays Will Grundy.

85. Japanese knotweed can grow from a piece of root the size of pea. And it can flourish anew if disturbed after lying dormant for more than 20 years.

86. Hecklers are so-called because of militant textile workers in Dundee.

87. Pulling your foot out of quicksand takes a force equivalent to that needed to lift a medium-sized car.

88. A single "mother" spud from southern Peru gave rise to all the varieties of potato eaten today, scientists have learned.

89. Spanish Flu, the epidemic that killed 50 million people in 1918/9, was known as French Flu in Spain.

90. Ordinary - not avian - flu kills about 12,000 people in the UK every winter.

91. Croydon has more CCTV cameras than New York.

92. You are 176 times more likely to be murdered than to win the National Lottery.

93. Koalas have fingerprints exactly like humans (although obviously smaller).

94. Bill Gates does not have an iPod.

95. The first traffic cones were used in building Preston bypass in the late 1950s, replacing red lantern paraffin burners.

96. Britons buy about one million pumpkins for Halloween, 99% of which are used for lanterns rather than for eating.

97. The mother of stocky cricketer - and this year's Strictly Come Dancing champion - Darren Gough was a ballet dancer. She helped him with his pivots.

98. Nettles growing on land where bodies are buried will reach a foot higher than those growing elsewhere.

99. The Japanese word "chokuegambo" describes the wish that there were more designer-brand shops on a given street.

100. Musical instrument shops must pay an annual royalty to cover shoppers who perform a recognisable riff before they buy, thereby making a "public performance".

Friday, February 23, 2007

I Want That


Wednesday, February 21, 2007

A Samurai's Death Poem: Hippie vs Yuppie

I hate this transition in life. When you're young you tend to have left wing inclinations, everything is either black or white, and almost imperceptively, with every passing year, you become jaded. People that admired the Che or that fought against corporations and merciless capitalism start to see the advantages of a market economy. It's not so bad to have lower unemployment rates, and a higher GDP per capita and it doesn't hurt to have a Starbucks around or get to shop at Zara.

But it sucks too. I mean, we're still stuck in the preconcieved westernized view of what constitutes happiness. Does this higher GDP per capita make us happier now that we have a higher purchasing power? Anyways, who told economists that the more options you have, the more products available to you, the happier you are? I mean, this is the cornerstone of modern microeconomics, and everyone accepts it, but why should we? Are we really happier by having 190,000 permutations of Starbucks coffee? Does it cater to everyone's needs? Why do we need this endless array of products and services? Do we really need the white picket fence with 2,3 children, a labrador and two volvos?

These thoughts start surfacing when I'm walking in my callus-inducing black leather shoes towards work, instead of my lovely brown adidas that have been falling apart for the past 2 years. I've joined the ranks of the employed, after almost 24 years of avoiding from getting my employment cheery popped.

I hate myself. I was supposed to join greenpeace and become a vegan... what the hell happened? I don't know.... life happened, advertising and pop culture in general kept bombarding my impressionable mind. Now I get excited when I see the iPhone (lets ignore for a second that 75kgs of raw materials are needed to produce a normal 200 gram cellphone, ridiculous). But I'm not the only one that gets excited over small gadgets, and as we all know, gadgets are the yuppie's samurai sword. So there I am, drewling over my weapon of corporate domination.... or maybe I should just perform hara-kiri (seppuku) while I still have my pride.

But lets not be so drastic, I guess I can always donate some money to some NGO, or "adopt" a kid by sending him 25cents every week, or maybe go to a Live 8 concert, you know, cos it's the right thing to do (nevermind that debt relief in developing countries as a final solution is like perfuming a turd). But this is bullshit, seriously, throwing money at a problem will not solve it, especially when there is no such thing as fair trade. This is bullshit being fed to third world countries by France, Sweden, Germany and many others. Believe me, the only people that are buying into this lie are your own citizens. Also, a lot of NGOs, though well intentioned make mistakes when distributing their resources. But alas, the latter is still the lesser of two evils when it comes to international cooperation.

Back at the office, after that internal debate, I think how my fucking tie is choking me, but I kinda like how it looks. It's weird how when you wear certain clothes or accesories, you automatically adopt the mannerisms and movements that you're used to observing in others. I see myself putting my tie over my shoulder when I eat, the way you take out your cellphone from your jacket pocket, or how you pull down your pant legs when you sit down cos they're riding up. I can see how the assimilation has started, it's creeping in.

I don't like to think that I'm gonna turn into a yuppie.... I don't think it fits my definition of "happiness", I don't want to be "successful" or "make it", I don't know where I'm gonna find happiness, all I know is that it'll never be complete unless I have significant other to share "it" with. Whatever "it" is.

I sometimes think that my music and my photography are but futile whimpers before the inevitable death of the hippie inside me. So is this it, am I being asimilated and I've already crossed the event horizon? No hope of fighting back? I wish my 17 year old self could go and visit the 35 year old version of me, and slap him around, scolding him for having learned how to play golf and having bought a time share vacation condo in Aruba. There isn't much advice I can give to my future self that won't fall on deaf ears, but please, whatever you do 35 year old Alfonso, never tie your pastel colored sweater around your neck like some Hilfiger yacht owning wannabe.

Resistance is futile....



General Akashi Gidayu preparing to commit Seppuku after losing a battle for his master in 1582. He had just written his death poem.

Slap Fest

That has got to hurt. What the hell is wrong with these women. The one on the left has a very good arm, wouldn't want her slapping me around.

Questionnaire

I added the last two questions, and question 26:

1. WERE YOU NAMED AFTER ANYONE?
Yup, my grandpa
2. WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU CRIED?
Hmm, I can’t remember. Less than a month ago. Alfie can't cope with the single life very well, lol.
3. DO YOU LIKE YOUR HANDWRITING?
No
4. WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE LUNCH MEAT?
Beef
5. DO YOU HAVE KIDS?
Nope
6. IF YOU WERE ANOTHER PERSON WOULD YOU BE FRIENDS WITH YOU?
Totally, I’m the shizzle. hahaha. Actually, if I started bragging too much, I wouldn't stand myself.
7. DO YOU USE SARCASM A LOT?
Nah, who’d find such a pretentious thing appealing? (apply sarcasm here)
8. DO YOU STILL HAVE YOUR TONSILS?
Yeah
9. WOULD YOU BUNGEE JUMP?
Sure
10. WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE CEREAL?
Frosties 4-Ever yo!
11. DO YOU UNTIE YOUR SHOES WHEN YOU TAKE THEM OFF?
Never
12. DO YOU THINK YOU ARE STRONG?
Physically, no. Mentally and emotionally, yeah.
13. WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE ICE CREAM?
Brownie and “Arequipe”
14. WHAT IS THE FIRST THING YOU NOTICE ABOUT PEOPLE?
Face, then nails.
15. RED OR PINK?
Red
16. WHAT IS THE LEAST FAVOURITE THING ABOUT YOURSELF?
Looks, face.
17. WHO DO YOU MISS THE MOST?
Someone that touched my heart.
18. DO YOU WANT EVERYONE TO SEND THIS BACK TO YOU?
Could be interesting if they did.
19. WHAT COLOUR PANTS AND SHOES ARE YOU WEARING?
Black shoes, dark brown pants, business attire.
20. WHAT WAS THE LAST THING YOU ATE?
Spaguetti a la bolognesa
21. WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO RIGHT NOW?
Waiting for the 7.18, Bloc Party.
22. IF YOU WERE A CRAYON, WHAT COLOUR WOULD YOU BE?
I think I’d be brown or black if I didn't get to choose. But I’d like to be Blue or Purple.
23. FAVOURITE SMELLS?
Freshly Baked Bread, New Car, Air Conditioning.
24. WHO WAS THE LAST PERSON YOU TALKED TO ON THE PHONE?
My boss patricia.
25. DO YOU LIKE THE PERSON WHO SENT THIS TO YOU?
Yeah, one of my best buddies.
26. WHAT HAPPENED TO QUESTION 26?
I have no clue, it wasn't there when I got the questionnaire.
27. FAVOURITE SPORTS TO WATCH?
None.
28. HAIR COLOUR?
Jet Black
29. EYE COLOUR?
Very Dark Brown/Black
30. DO YOU WEAR CONTACTS?
No
31. FAVOURITE FOOD?
Bandeja Paisa.
32. SCARY MOVIES OR HAPPY ENDINGS?
Excrutiatingly Sad Endings
34. WHAT COLOUR SHIRT ARE YOU WEARING?
white
35. SUMMER OR WINTER?
Summer hands down.
36. HUGS OR KISSES?
Kisses.
37. FAVOURITE DESSERT?
Don’t really care for dessert.
38. MOST LIKELY TO RESPOND?
No one.
39. LEAST LIKELY TO RESPOND?
Everyone.
40. WHAT BOOK ARE YOU READING?
Freakenomics (really good)
41. WHAT IS ON YOUR MOUSE PAD?
It’s completely black.
43. WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE SOUND?
A fridge opening, or a girl moaning.
44. ROLLING STONES OR BEATLES?
Beatles.
45. WHAT IS THE FURTHEST YOU HAVE BEEN FROM HOME?
First I’d have to figure out where home is.
46. DO YOU HAVE A SPECIAL TALENT?
Oh yeah, but a gentleman never tells ;-) And I kinda play guitar, and do photography, and I can hold my breath like nobody’s business.
47. WHERE WERE YOU BORN?
Viena, Austria.
48. WHO'S ANSWERS ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO GETTING BACK?
Everyone.
49. DO YOU THINK THESE QUESTIONS ARE LAME?
Yes.
50. WOULD YOU SAY YOU JUST WASTED 10 MINS OF YOUR LIFE?
Definetly.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Sari


Monday, February 19, 2007

Caricature Version of Me Courtesy of Claudio

A mexican dude did a caricature of me, it's awesome, thanks man. Hopefully some people will recognize some of the stuff in it. Click on it for a larger version.

Emma B-day Girl


Sunday, February 18, 2007

Last Damn Photo of the Day


It's me!

Super Awesome Eddie came to the rescue and took a picture where I don't actually look like roadkill that's been shat on.

Hani, Jepe and Cece (I'm not sure how to spell her name)


Jepe begged me to take a picture of him. Can't you see those eyes filled with love?

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Helena and Jepe


Daniel


Emma's B-Day Party






Hani and Helena





BLOW DAMMIT BLOW!


Friday, February 16, 2007

The Poser Syndrome

This is what happens when people stop being polite, and start getting unreal.

Just kidding, but some people think they're on some photoshoot or something, haha.


It's still much better than the first try though:

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Happy 25th Anniversary

A friend of mine, Rodolfo Antonio Mora (CC:91513161 Bucaramanga) found an article about my dad in a newspaper in Colombia.

My dad, 25 years ago, was kidnapped by a left wing guerrilla group. He was held captive for 4 days, but was able to escape when he figured out how to undo the knot, and jump off a bridge into a river at 1am in pitch black conditions, with men firing AK-47s at him. Then he ran barefoot for 25 kilometers. I wish I was kidding, but that's how close he was of dying and of me never having been born.

I look up to this guy for a lot of reasons, and most people know what I'm talking about. He's done so much with his life, and this is just one infinetly small fraction of that.

original article in spanish
http://www.eltiempo.com/vidadehoy/2007-02-14/ARTICULO-WEB-NOTA_INTERIOR-3438261.html

Oh yeah, and he just totally saved this girl's life by doing a pulmonar vessel angioplasty:
http://www.vanguardia.com/2007/2/15/buc2.htm

Dad, you rock and I love you. I'm proud to be your son.

Katri


Valentine's Day Sucks

I'm sorry, but Valentine's day is LAME. REALLY LAME. Why do we need a holiday that reminds us to be romantic? I mean seriously, isn't part of being romantic the spontenaeity of it all? Yeah, jotting down february 14 to go buy a dozen roses and a box of chocolates isn't exactly original, or overwhelmingly romantic.

I mean, I'm all up for being romantic, in fact, I strive to be as dedicated and spontenous and more importantly, I do romantic stuff that's tailor made for that girl. You know, stuff that only she can identify with and find touching. But Valentine's is as generic as it gets.

And on the flipside, for those that are single, it's just another day which reminds them of their single status, andd how they don't have a valentine. So it can be really depressing...

So all in all, you really don't make a lot of people happy, but you do manage to depress a large part of the population.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Monday, February 12, 2007

Unspoken, Unheard & Unreciprocated

"You posses every trait that I lack, by coincidence or by design [...] You're always ahead of the pack, while I drag behind [...] I just have get off my chest, that I think you're divine"

We're getting old

That's Lana and Karita, looking in the mirror.... and yeah, we're all turning 24 this year, and that's just not cool, we're getting old.


You can see that horrified look on their faces and all... haha, although they look great. But it still sucks to get old. sigh....

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Big in China

Apparently I'm pretty big in China. Four hits today! So here's a shout out to all my peeps in Guangdong province, keep it real ;-)


My Year in Germany - First Semester

I'm sitting in front of my computer, trying to make a balance of the year that went by. It's 15 degrees below freezing, and my life has changed radically once again. I'm in my "beloved" Sweden, a place that would haunt me in my dreams. I would have these awful nightmares in Colombia where I had only a few minutes to say hi to everyone I left behind in Stockholm knowing that I would wake up at any moment. I'm here now, and it's great, but I miss some people..... and at the same time I know I belong here, somewhere, but not in Colombia, I just haven't found "home" yet.

Wormatia somehow feels like something that happened to someone else, or a 15 minute dream I just had. The people I met, the stuff that I experienced, and I'm trying to make sense out of it all. Did I change as a person? If I did, was it for the better? I don't know, I do feel like I have changed quite a bit, and some things have definetly changed for the worse, but all in all I think it's been for the better. It's funny though, I'm a very different person to people depending on the country, I can't explain it, it just happens.

"My Year in Germany" is quite an ambitious title for such an extensive subject, even if you split it into two semesters. I could write several blogs worth of rambling about my last year. But I must say, that although worms sucks cos it's a small depressing town, the people that I met there, locals or exchange students, really changed my life. It has been the best year of my life, and the most eventful. I don't think so much shit happened to me in my previous 5 college years as it did in 2006.

So where do I start? It's hard, to mention people and events, cos it's bound to make some people happy and piss others off, but what the hell, I like some drama in my life every now and then. So if I leave someone out, sorry, I'm definetly not your best friend, I might still think you're cool, so don't get hung up about it.

Anywho.... so, how did the year start?

It started something like that, hahaha, I know, totally gay. I hung out with Lina, Male and Jackie, most of the time.


Yeah, I know, what the hell is with the hats? Well, it was Rosenmontag so we had to dress up and shit. So anyways, these three girls were my support system when I first got to worms. Mis niñas divinas.

Soon after I started meeting other erasmus like Emir, Ugur, Maria, Agata, Sarah, Fernando, Diego, Gonzalo, Deniz, Sergio, Kata, Charles, Anneli. Kata was awesome, and it's really weird to find someone that is an fan of 3EB like I am. Charles is just Charles, nobody can hate that guy, he's really great, and great if you wanna have a conversation. Anneli, well, she's just a really good person and somehow I felt like I'd known her before, like I got her. All in all, good people.

I was still pretty much alone in my apartment. But then one day, a french girl from Paris came to my apartment, apparently she was my flatmate. I thought she was cute, and she was über nice to me. Emeline with time started to grow on me, cos there's nothing like a girl that you can have conversations with, and emeline is just perfect for that. Some weeks into the semester, I realised I had genuine feelings for her. But who wouldn't? I mean, she's a really cultured, amazingly cultured actually, and well, she was just über mega crazy nice to me. Em, I love you, and you'll always be in my heart in one way or another, but she knows that cos I say it to her like every day, even now.



Anywho, that was the posse. The four of us lived in the same apartment. From left to right Riikka, Emeline, me and Rodolfo. Riikka is a great girl, and rodolfo is still with her, and even though he's in mexico and she's in finland they're making it word. We're all rooting for you!

Also, I met a very unique german girl. Very different from the rest of the species. Her name is Suzie and she's a hippie chick, which in my book is always cool. Great to talk to. The kind of person you want to be friends with cos you think they're really cool, but you just don't seem to run into that person too often and it never materializes into friendship.

But of course, there's a lot of other stuff that happened that semester. We did showabend, the world cup was really cool, picnics, trip to Paris, Berlin, Rock am Ring with Deniz, all in all, really cool.



Lot of cool memories: talking to Deniz about life while on a train running parallel to the Rhine, having dinner with Emeline's family, discussing the french welfare system with Charles and how we should just take over the world (I know it would be terrible, and I have no egomaniacal intentions so don't worry), doing my shitty cooking with Emeline, going to a building full of ex squatter artists in Berlin with Em, Charles, Deniz, Vanessa and Sarah, seeing Emeline lying next to me on a spring morning. Those types of memories will stay until the end of my days.

I left in July for Sweden, ending my relationship with Emeline... and leaving many friends behind. It was hard, and I miss her the most, but others are also missed. I thank you guys. And it will never be the same, no matter how much we would like to freeze time, or capture a moment, it's gone forever, and it's now part of history.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Lana & Chris


Conversation