Monday, June 13, 2005

Weekend at Home

Weekly to bi-weekly telephone conversations with my parents usually consist of questions from the following list:

1. where are you?
2. have you eaten [insert nearest meal here] ?
3. what did you eat?
4. how did you cook it?
5. why did you fry it?
6. you know that baking it tastes just as good and it’s better for you. less work, also.

oh wait, that isn’t a question.

6. how’s work?
7. are you learning something?
8. it’s important to learn something new every day.

sorry.

8. what did you do yesterday?
9. what are you doing today?
10. shopping again?
11. don’t buy anything full price. wait until it’s 40 or 50 percent off. (pause for my argument) It’s ok if it’s a little bit ugly. You said you don’t want to get married anyway, so who cares?

It’s a rhetorical question, but a question nonetheless.

A weekend at home with the parents in person is not much different. On hearing that I was traveling home for the weekend, someone asked me, “So what do you do when you hang out with your parents?” And I said, “Do? What do we do?” And he said, “Yeah. Like, what kind of stuff do you guys do together?” And I said, “uhhhhhhhhh. hmm, good question. umm. eeeehhhhhhhhh.”

After some careful thought and consideration (and live examples), I am pleased to announce that I was able to make a short list of things that I do when I’m hanging with the parents. Notice that this is a list of things that “I” do, not necessarily that “we” do.

a) make small talk (refer to questions above).

b) watch my dad cook.

this usually includes a mini-cooking lecture about something incredibly useful, such as the Most Efficient Way to Unpeel Garlic.

c) read one of the magazines scattered messily on the coffee table.

These are usually very recent National Geographics or TIME magazines from the late 90s. I have no idea how this happens.

d) go grocery shopping.

Grocery shopping with my mother is one of the most inefficient processes I have ever witnessed, but this is her passion, so I’m not passing judgment. An inextraordinary shopping expedition with mom will be fun and painless, spent browsing around the asian snack and candy aisles, until she informs me that we must now relocate to the grocery down the street because they have the best Obscure Green Vegetable. This is fine. I’m all about quality.

Around 25 minutes into the second grocery, I am remembering that all asian snacks and candies are pretty much the same, and I start thinking about how much plastic is used to wrap such a small quantity of sugar bombs. After I hunt down mom, I find her removing her glasses to meticulously inspect the minute differences between these fifteen different bags of dried shrimp. I whine, and she says, “OK! Almost done. Now we just need tomatoes.”

This gigantic grocery store has ginger flavored gummi bears, tanks of giant lobster, coffee flavored jello, but no tomatoes. I grumpily drive her to the third grocery store and am thoroughly annoyed by the time we are driving home. For a minute I think about the fact that maybe I should work on developing more finesse in distinguishing the finer qualities in fresh produce and fine foods in general and how I should appreciate that my mother is good at this and also at mechanical physics until I decide that developing finesse for food and/or physics is too much work and that we must be fundamentally wired differently and will never be able to fully relate, and it is around this time that we get home and I

e) play the piano.

It’s always nice to have this fallback when I start to exaggerate very minor interactions with the parents into grave and overwhelmingly large life issues. It’s not always the fallback...I’ve always liked playing the piano, although it’s more frustrating because I suck now. But it’s a nice reminder of my career as a wannabe prodigy, and I think the Rachmaninoff makes my parents feel a tiny bit better about spending mad cash on a gorgeous, neglected Steinway grand that spends most of the year as a matte lacquered coaster with excellent tone.

f) eat dinner and then salty snacks afterwards.

Dinner is always delicious and tasty. My dad has been cooking for the past few years because he finds it theraputic, which is fabulous because my mother and I despise cooking. My mother because she cooked dinner every day for 25 years and I because I am lazy.

Conversation is filled by my parents, who talk about friends and work (they work together) in Taiwanese. I sit there and eat and space out, because I don’t speak Taiwanese, and understand only very basic sentences such as “Come eat dinner,” and “Go vacuum your room.” I didn’t realize that it was slightly strange and very rude to be blatantly excluded from a dinner conversation until a good friend from college pointed this out.

g) watching a two-hour program on pbs

first because we are asian and fancy ourselves educated and erudite, and second because our local reception is so shitty that the only other stations that come in are showing programs featuring either the food dehydrator or people speaking spanish. There is a wide range of possibilities for the actual content of the program, but, as always, there are popular recidivists, classifiable in the following three categories.

a: Historical. I don’t know exactly why my dad enjoys watching these, because he knows all of this information already. He preempts the narrator with accurate dates, involved parties, and geographic migratory patterns when applicable (nomadic populations).

b: Natural. We watch these to completion. They’re very interesting. Did you know that when sea anemones are broken apart by rocks, that each new piece becomes a new sea anemone? Gross! Fascinating!

c: Celtic. My parents are obssessed with anything that has to do with Ireland, or the UK in general. They used to be focused purely on anything produced by the BBC, but they have since branched out, and this past Saturday we watched a two-hour special featuring women from Ireland singing random pretty songs. Not sure when sharing a fairly common talent with other women that also live in your country of 4 million became so special such that a PBS pledge drive feature was in order, but whatever.

It may not sound like the most riveting weekend, but it’s always nice and relaxing to go back to a familiar and contained situation.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

WELCOME

to my tiny apartment.



hello! good to see you. you need to borrow two eggs?

yup--i’m so glad you were home when i called. i didn’t feel like running to the store.

what are you making?

i’m trying to make lemon bars.

how gourmet!

yea i think so, but we’ll see.

I can’t believe that you’ve never seen my apartment and you live so close. Would you like a beverage?

sure

I have Red Stripe, Harp, ice water, cold water, and warm water.

red stripe, please.

excellent choice. be right back.










whistling






here we are.

thank you!



cheers (clink). here, let me give you a quick tour of zee apartment. my room is right there behind you. go ahead.

aaah. great bay windows. love the clock.


why thank you. the clock was my first real voluntary home decor purchase.

looking around
it’s...umm...minimal. post-modern. sparse. essential.

mmm yes...i don’t have passion for home decor. whatever. i save money that way. i sort of wish i wanted to chase after a blonde oak end table with angled glass accents...it seems so romantic and sophisticated to be in hot pursuit of expensive pieces of furniture.

do you have nice furniture?

uhhh...ikea? i guess i know what i like when i see it, and i can envision things in different parts of my room when i see them in a store. i want everything, but can’t afford anything. ikea and i have a love/hate relationship.


i classify ikea in a similar functional category as forever 21. there can be good finds here and there, but you have to be en guard, lest you get attacked by immense amounts of crap when you walk in the door. isn’t ikea swedish for crap?

probably. i’ll consult my babelfish later.


roaming eyes
nice shoes.

uhh thanks.

you don’t like them?

no, it’s not that. i LOVE them. mm. my lust for shoes is both inspiring and embarrasing.

why?

look at them. they’re ridiculous.

they’re hot.

why thank you. i’d like to think so. but look:
12 pairs.
all pointy toed, except for two.


it’s so excessive. i have two feet.

the sheer volume is ridiculous. this is why it’s good that i don’t lust after furniture--a pair of shoes is much less expensive than a sofa. but still expensive enough.

i like the canary yellow ones.

ooooooooooooh thank you. i love those. they’re the latest addition. 80s kitsch is back with a vengance.

seriously. speaking of which, do you have the new new order album?

naah. heard good things about it, though. i figured i made my contribution by buying the new tears for fears.

fair enough.



let me show you the kitchen. it looks like you need another drink anyway...you have all day for lemon bars.

walking

oh, here’s the split bath--

pausing for a brief inspection

more walking


here’s the kitchen.

adorable!

microscopic!

aww, it’s so sweet. i like these big comfy chairs you have here.

yea, since it’s the only common space we try to make it living room-ish in this 3 by 7 foot area at the end. harp?

yes, please.


pop
pop



i like all the plants, too.

ah yes. i contributed almost nothing to the communal areas of the apartment. it’s all my roommates--they’re good about decorating and making it warm and welcoming...i’m not so much of a gardener/botanist. i sort of wish i was.

come now. i’m sure you contribute a lot.

yes, i brought a really nice can opener. works like a dream--smooth and perfect. i think it’s german.

oh! a patio!

yea! also small and cute, in keeping with the general theme of the apartment. we’re growing strawberries.

do you guys sit out here often?

mmm not really. occasionally i’ll sit out there and talk on the phone, but mainly i just check in on the strawberries and avoid the obnoxious old man that lives across the way, in the other building.

obnoxious old man?

mm yes. he’s a nice guy--but he’s always sitting on his tiny square of a patio and smoking and reading shit mystery novels. when i first moved in, i thought about how friendly and chatty he was when we first started talking...but then the conversation never ended. i think that we were talking about the pigeons. he complained about pigeons and how filthy they were for at least ten minutes, which is a long-ass time to be having a substanceless conversation with your old-man-neighbor-across-the-way.

i figure, inspect the strawberries and avoid eye contact. i leave him to his singular talent of rotting his lungs and his brain at the same time.


what a reductive statement.

yea. that’s my talent.

did you want your eggs?

sure, that’d be fab! thanks again. love the apartment.


why thank you! here you are. i want a lemon bar when you’re done.