open pasture

“Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down.” ~ Buffalo Springfield

Subject: “Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down.” ~ Buffalo Springfield

Date: Sunday 10/8/06 5:19:00 AM

Music: For What It’s Worth-Buffalo Springfield

As I get rid of things in my life, these material possesions which while some may hold sentimental value are, by and large, totally worthless…I prepare myself to live the life that I’ve always wanted to.

The only thing I’ve wanted in life is happiness and love and to be true to who and what I am and to be a part of the Tikun Olam since I learned what it was and while money makes things easier, the cold hard fact is that it can never bring someone back (believe me if it could, Lyn, Ben and TJ would be here with me now) and it can postpone, but never prevent death and it can never buy happiness because if you think it can buy happiness than you don’t really know what happiness is.

People keep asking me “but what if you move there and you find you don’t like it?”

And I just shake my head because I’m stunned that it hasn’t occured to them, what I’d do if I wasn’t happy:

If I’m not happy, I put on my backpack, say my goodbyes and I move to another part of the globe. Who knows where I’ll land, maybe I’ll flip a coin.

Bali, Ireland, Mexico, Africa, Korea, Brazil, Rome, London…

I’m 22 and the world is laid out at my feet, all my doors and windows are open and I won’t allow myself to become the man who has a house, a mortage, with a white picket fence having meaningless dinner conversations at meaningless dinner parties with meaningless shallow people, being the token gay couple calling each other honey and baby, having some bland sex and in bed by nine and at the office in twelve hours for another bland, pointless, meaningless day.

I won’t lie, I was profoundly effected by Fight Club.

And people say “but you’re Gay, it’s dangerous to travel”

I could be shot just as easily for being Gay in numerous states (both North and South, East and West) as I can halfway around the globe. And the frat boys whom I’ve met (in more than one frat) and the straight guys who I’ve hung out with, and my former coworkers, and a few marines who weren’t cool with Gays at all, had something amazing happen: they met one who had no fear, never backed down from a challenge, said exactly what he thought, took no bullshit, held no prisoners and made his reputation by being a ballbuster and now when their kid, yet unborn, comes out to one of them, one day in the future…they’re gunna go “no, it’s okay…let me tell you about this guy I met once” and that means I did my job.

Xenophobia is a transgression in the Jewish Faith.

The world’s a dangerous place to live, you tell me – congratulations…you haven’t discovered anything new.

THE WORLD HAS NEVER BEEN A SAFE PLACE TO LIVE: GET OVER IT.

Adam and Eve had a snake, my people were slaves in Egypt, the Greeks had bloody wars, and then came the crusades and then the ciivl war which was disgusting and bloody and the World Wars and countless more that go unmentioned here (and, sometimes, in the history books too)- here’s a wakeup call:

The worlds been a crazy place since it’s inception, we’ve only just had this myth of the ‘world used to be a kinder, gentler, more innocent place a generation ago’ thrust on us by the media and the older generation who fears change.

If a four year old child is brave enough to struggle to survive in a war torn country then I’m brave enough to visit that child, to put on a tool belt and say let us work together and rebuild, as I learn how to speak with that childs people and they learn to speak with me, and we learn to speak each others tongues than we learn to work together and I’m paid in a language and maybe a meal or a ride to the next village instead of money. And what money I make I send home to get some interest as I keep moving.

Life is about building houses, tearing down walls and remembering what it really means to be alive.

And then comes the follow up question “what if you meet someone?”

Well what if I do? If I meet someone so godly, so good, so beautiful, loving and attractive than I’ll go where my heart takes me. I can’t answer for the future, but if I finally find someone that I’m so enamored with them than I’ll take it as a sign from the divine that I’ve found my home.

I’m 22 and right now and so long as I have enough money to feed myself (or there’s a viable food source near by) and I have shelter (in whatever form I can get it), and enough money in the bank to afford a get out of dodge ticket then I’m happy and I know that no matter how bad things have gotten with my parents (and we’ve had our rocky times) that there’s always a light above my parents house leading me home if I get lost, and I know that the Ark at my temple has an eternal flame in front of it guiding me through the darkest nights no matter where in the world I travel, and when I land in my next destination – wherever it is – I know that I have enough skills (Construction, Paralegal, Pharmacy Tech, Photographer – for 14 years by the way – English Teacher, Linguist, Oranizer) that I know I’ll be able to earn enough cash to get on that next train…and I’ve said this countless times, there’s nothing wrong with flipping burgers or dancing in drag if you need cash – you do what you have to do to get what you want, and everything, no matter how ‘low’ the job is, is opportunity as long as you’ve got a plan.

And if a week after I land in Tel Aviv I manage (through the grace of God) to land a killer job that makes people green with envy, get myself a hot man who actually loves me in the deepest sense of the term than maybe I’ll choose to settle down…maybe I’ll say “eh, I can do better for myself” and maybe I’ll be right or maybe I’ll be wrong: isn’t exciting, not knowing, accepting life as it comes.

But that’s it. I have that choice and thats the wonderful thing about being young and footloose and free.

I’ve made friends everywhere I’ve gone and when I’ve given them the invintation to stay in my house, and when I’ve told them that wherever I have a roof over my head they too have a home, I meant it (and some wonderful people have taken me up on those offers). There’s a mezzuzah on my door for a reason…it’s because it grants safe voyage to those who most need it, and I’m a big fan of returning the favor, ‘passing it on,’ ‘paying it forward’ or whatever you want to call it.

And I know of no synagogue who will turn away a traveler for prayer, and sometimes it’s that prayer that gets you by and reminds you why you walked in that door in the first place.

I don’t plan on writing a great novel. I plan on living it, and letting the novel write itself, because I only write begginings. There’s only one ending and that’s Death. If you’re writing that, then you’ve got too many problems and too much weight on your shoulders…and if you’ve strayed that far from the path or you’re in that much pain or you’re planning to do something that horrible to others and to yourself in the process, then you’re the person I pray for most, hardest because you’ve lost that light inside of you and I’m praying really hard that you’ll find it before you do something you can never take back.

There’s a few things I believe in:

Basic human kindness.

When I was travelling up and down the East Coast and was running out of cash, people would feed me. When I was organizing demonstrations and I needed money, business men who were sympathetic to my cause(s) would fork over some cash so I could make placards. When I was on a bus and I started to cry because I missed one of my friends who died, people had the courtesy not to stare or to whisper and to let me have my privacy.

Love.

Yes, it exists. It’s just unfortunate that most people don’t actually know what it is.

Beauty.

Not a day goes by when I don’t see someone stunning, whether in heart or in form and amazingly at times, people who have both…and if some days I’m lacking in seeing someone beautiful, I’ll stand infront of a mirror for a second, nod my head and then I’ve got my fill for the day.

You can live your life in fear…and great, you may not die an ‘unfortunate’ death (though all death is unfortunate, and the one’s who are hurt the most are the one’s left alive)…but then those who are against civil liberties, civil rights, progress, equality and who are for terrorism have won.

Congratulations. You’ve succumbed to fear instead of conquering it.

However, you can make a choice – life is about choices – you can choose to go outside, travel the earth, talk to people and stay in a land until you can speak their tongue, learn something new and just forget everything you’ve been taught in books or schools and join humanity and begin to think for yourself.

And when you’ve found your home, sometimes you’ll look down and you’ll recognize your footprints there from years before, or maybe you’ll return to where you started in the beggining or maybe it’ll be in the last place you stopped and never knew existed…but you’ll never know if you don’t put on your shoes and start to walk.

“Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down…” ~ Buffalo Springfield

“All the leaves are brown and the sky is grey…”

But I know what won’t make me happy…and what wont make me happy is standing in a office building or sitting in a graduate class, looking out of the window saying “What if…what could have been…”

It’s better to do things the hard way, it makes them much more meaningful.

People walk in and out of your life, some stay, some cross your path through chance, others through divine intervention, some leave forever by choice or by death, some come back, some come back and then go away again but you’ll never meet them until you leave your apartment, your basement, your house, your city, town, village, state, country and begin to open yourself up to new and amazing and different ways of life.

If you’ve read through all of that, Thank you, and Goodnight.

“Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down.” ~ Buffalo Spri

Subject: “Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down.” ~ Buffalo Springfield

Date: Sunday 10/8/06 5:19:00 AM

Music: For What It’s Worth-Buffalo Springfield

As I get rid of things in my life, these material possesions which while some may hold sentimental value are, by and large, totally worthless…I prepare myself to live the life that I’ve always wanted to.

The only thing I’ve wanted in life is happiness and love and to be true to who and what I am and to be a part of the Tikun Olam since I learned what it was and while money makes things easier, the cold hard fact is that it can never bring someone back (believe me if it could, Lyn, Ben and TJ would be here with me now) and it can postpone, but never prevent death and it can never buy happiness because if you think it can buy happiness than you don’t really know what happiness is.

People keep asking me “but what if you move there and you find you don’t like it?”

And I just shake my head because I’m stunned that it hasn’t occured to them, what I’d do if I wasn’t happy:

If I’m not happy, I put on my backpack, say my goodbyes and I move to another part of the globe. Who knows where I’ll land, maybe I’ll flip a coin.

Bali, Ireland, Mexico, Africa, Korea, Brazil, Rome, London…

I’m 22 and the world is laid out at my feet, all my doors and windows are open and I won’t allow myself to become the man who has a house, a mortage, with a white picket fence having meaningless dinner conversations at meaningless dinner parties with meaningless shallow people, being the token gay couple calling each other honey and baby, having some bland sex and in bed by nine and at the office in twelve hours for another bland, pointless, meaningless day.

I won’t lie, I was profoundly effected by Fight Club.

And people say “but you’re Gay, it’s dangerous to travel”

I could be shot just as easily for being Gay in numerous states (both North and South, East and West) as I can halfway around the globe. And the frat boys whom I’ve met (in more than one frat) and the straight guys who I’ve hung out with, and my former coworkers, and a few marines who weren’t cool with Gays at all, had something amazing happen: they met one who had no fear, never backed down from a challenge, said exactly what he thought, took no bullshit, held no prisoners and made his reputation by being a ballbuster and now when their kid, yet unborn, comes out to one of them, one day in the future…they’re gunna go “no, it’s okay…let me tell you about this guy I met once” and that means I did my job.

Xenophobia is a transgression in the Jewish Faith.

The world’s a dangerous place to live, you tell me – congratulations…you haven’t discovered anything new.

THE WORLD HAS NEVER BEEN A SAFE PLACE TO LIVE: GET OVER IT.

Adam and Eve had a snake, my people were slaves in Egypt, the Greeks had bloody wars, and then came the crusades and then the ciivl war which was disgusting and bloody and the World Wars and countless more that go unmentioned here (and, sometimes, in the history books too)- here’s a wakeup call:

The worlds been a crazy place since it’s inception, we’ve only just had this myth of the ‘world used to be a kinder, gentler, more innocent place a generation ago’ thrust on us by the media and the older generation who fears change.

If a four year old child is brave enough to struggle to survive in a war torn country then I’m brave enough to visit that child, to put on a tool belt and say let us work together and rebuild, as I learn how to speak with that childs people and they learn to speak with me, and we learn to speak each others tongues than we learn to work together and I’m paid in a language and maybe a meal or a ride to the next village instead of money. And what money I make I send home to get some interest as I keep moving.

Life is about building houses, tearing down walls and remembering what it really means to be alive.

And then comes the follow up question “what if you meet someone?”

Well what if I do? If I meet someone so godly, so good, so beautiful, loving and attractive than I’ll go where my heart takes me. I can’t answer for the future, but if I finally find someone that I’m so enamored with them than I’ll take it as a sign from the divine that I’ve found my home.

I’m 22 and right now and so long as I have enough money to feed myself (or there’s a viable food source near by) and I have shelter (in whatever form I can get it), and enough money in the bank to afford a get out of dodge ticket then I’m happy and I know that no matter how bad things have gotten with my parents (and we’ve had our rocky times) that there’s always a light above my parents house leading me home if I get lost, and I know that the Ark at my temple has an eternal flame in front of it guiding me through the darkest nights no matter where in the world I travel, and when I land in my next destination – wherever it is – I know that I have enough skills (Construction, Paralegal, Pharmacy Tech, Photographer – for 14 years by the way – English Teacher, Linguist, Oranizer) that I know I’ll be able to earn enough cash to get on that next train…and I’ve said this countless times, there’s nothing wrong with flipping burgers or dancing in drag if you need cash – you do what you have to do to get what you want, and everything, no matter how ‘low’ the job is, is opportunity as long as you’ve got a plan.

And if a week after I land in Tel Aviv I manage (through the grace of God) to land a killer job that makes people green with envy, get myself a hot man who actually loves me in the deepest sense of the term than maybe I’ll choose to settle down…maybe I’ll say “eh, I can do better for myself” and maybe I’ll be right or maybe I’ll be wrong: isn’t exciting, not knowing, accepting life as it comes.

But that’s it. I have that choice and thats the wonderful thing about being young and footloose and free.

I’ve made friends everywhere I’ve gone and when I’ve given them the invintation to stay in my house, and when I’ve told them that wherever I have a roof over my head they too have a home, I meant it (and some wonderful people have taken me up on those offers). There’s a mezzuzah on my door for a reason…it’s because it grants safe voyage to those who most need it, and I’m a big fan of returning the favor, ‘passing it on,’ ‘paying it forward’ or whatever you want to call it.

And I know of no synagogue who will turn away a traveler for prayer, and sometimes it’s that prayer that gets you by and reminds you why you walked in that door in the first place.

I don’t plan on writing a great novel. I plan on living it, and letting the novel write itself, because I only write begginings. There’s only one ending and that’s Death. If you’re writing that, then you’ve got too many problems and too much weight on your shoulders…and if you’ve strayed that far from the path or you’re in that much pain or you’re planning to do something that horrible to others and to yourself in the process, then you’re the person I pray for most, hardest because you’ve lost that light inside of you and I’m praying really hard that you’ll find it before you do something you can never take back.

There’s a few things I believe in:

Basic human kindness.

When I was travelling up and down the East Coast and was running out of cash, people would feed me. When I was organizing demonstrations and I needed money, business men who were sympathetic to my cause(s) would fork over some cash so I could make placards. When I was on a bus and I started to cry because I missed one of my friends who died, people had the courtesy not to stare or to whisper and to let me have my privacy.

Love.

Yes, it exists. It’s just unfortunate that most people don’t actually know what it is.

Beauty.

Not a day goes by when I don’t see someone stunning, whether in heart or in form and amazingly at times, people who have both…and if some days I’m lacking in seeing someone beautiful, I’ll stand infront of a mirror for a second, nod my head and then I’ve got my fill for the day.

You can live your life in fear…and great, you may not die an ‘unfortunate’ death (though all death is unfortunate, and the one’s who are hurt the most are the one’s left alive)…but then those who are against civil liberties, civil rights, progress, equality and who are for terrorism have won.

Congratulations. You’ve succumbed to fear instead of conquering it.

However, you can make a choice – life is about choices – you can choose to go outside, travel the earth, talk to people and stay in a land until you can speak their tongue, learn something new and just forget everything you’ve been taught in books or schools and join humanity and begin to think for yourself.

And when you’ve found your home, sometimes you’ll look down and you’ll recognize your footprints there from years before, or maybe you’ll return to where you started in the beggining or maybe it’ll be in the last place you stopped and never knew existed…but you’ll never know if you don’t put on your shoes and start to walk.

“Stop, hey, what’s that sound, everybody look what’s going down…” ~ Buffalo Springfield

“All the leaves are brown and the sky is grey…”

But I know what won’t make me happy…and what wont make me happy is standing in a office building or sitting in a graduate class, looking out of the window saying “What if…what could have been…”

It’s better to do things the hard way, it makes them much more meaningful.

People walk in and out of your life, some stay, some cross your path through chance, others through divine intervention, some leave forever by choice or by death, some come back, some come back and then go away again but you’ll never meet them until you leave your apartment, your basement, your house, your city, town, village, state, country and begin to open yourself up to new and amazing and different ways of life.

If you’ve read through all of that, Thank you, and Goodnight.

Some Linguistics Humor…then…bed.

Subject: Some Linguistics Humor…then…bed.

Date: Saturday 10/7/06 12:54:00 AM

Music: Bloodhound Gang – Discovery Channel

How do linguists know that all odd numbers (n>2) are prime?

The Historical Linguist

“It is clear that the whole paradigm of odd numbers was originally prime (see, for example, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13). However, certain composite numbers, including 9, have been introduced into the paradigm, probably through borrowing.”

The Structuralist

“While 3 is prime, 5 is prime, and 7 is prime, 9 is not prime; therefore odd and prime are in contrastive distribution and can be used to distinguish morphemes.”

The Corpus Linguist

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime, and 9 is not prime. Thus, in our corpus, odd numbers are prime at a probability of 0.75”

The Lab Phonetician

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime. 9 is not prime (due to an aberration that will disappear after we run more subjects). 11 is prime, 13 is prime…”

The Phonologist

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, and 7 is prime. While 9 does not appear to be prime, if we said it is not prime, we would be missing an important underlying generalization.”

The Autosegmental Phonologist

“Like the other odd numbers, 9 is not underlying specified for the feature [prime], but 9 surfaces as composite because of an [even] feature spread from 8.”

The MIT Linguist

“The assertion that 9 is not prime is not explanatory. It is, at best, descriptive.”

The Minimalist Syntactician

“3 is prime, therefore, by induction, all odd numbers are prime.”

The Functionalist Syntactician

“How can you say that all odd numbers are prime when we have a clear counterexample in the case of 6?”

The Formal Semanticist

“Let the universe of discourse be the natural numbers less than 8…”

Some Linguistics Humor…then…bed.

Subject: Some Linguistics Humor…then…bed.

Date: Saturday 10/7/06 12:54:00 AM

Music: Bloodhound Gang – Discovery Channel

How do linguists know that all odd numbers (n>2) are prime?

The Historical Linguist

“It is clear that the whole paradigm of odd numbers was originally prime (see, for example, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13). However, certain composite numbers, including 9, have been introduced into the paradigm, probably through borrowing.”

The Structuralist

“While 3 is prime, 5 is prime, and 7 is prime, 9 is not prime; therefore odd and prime are in contrastive distribution and can be used to distinguish morphemes.”

The Corpus Linguist

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime, and 9 is not prime. Thus, in our corpus, odd numbers are prime at a probability of 0.75”

The Lab Phonetician

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime. 9 is not prime (due to an aberration that will disappear after we run more subjects). 11 is prime, 13 is prime…”

The Phonologist

“3 is prime, 5 is prime, and 7 is prime. While 9 does not appear to be prime, if we said it is not prime, we would be missing an important underlying generalization.”

The Autosegmental Phonologist

“Like the other odd numbers, 9 is not underlying specified for the feature [prime], but 9 surfaces as composite because of an [even] feature spread from 8.”

The MIT Linguist

“The assertion that 9 is not prime is not explanatory. It is, at best, descriptive.”

The Minimalist Syntactician

“3 is prime, therefore, by induction, all odd numbers are prime.”

The Functionalist Syntactician

“How can you say that all odd numbers are prime when we have a clear counterexample in the case of 6?”

The Formal Semanticist

“Let the universe of discourse be the natural numbers less than 8…”

Fridays

Subject: Fridays

Date: Friday 10/6/06 4:36:00 PM

Location: Hillel of Buffalo, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York

Class this morning was fun; however, there’s certainly a problem holding the course in the basement of Clemens (which is always over heated) as students (myself included) are wearing warmer clothes (with the decrease in temperature and in preperation of the Buffalo Winter), in a classroom that isn’t terribly well lit to begin with, and where the lights are shut off so the powerpoint slideshow can be show: it just knocks everyone out.

I noticed myself drifting today, and the problem is, that I’m the only one in this class who talks…EVER (don’t get me wrong, the instructor is amazing) but unlike my other courses where people speak up, exchange ideas…no one talks in this course but me. This is difficult when the class is (like it was today) heavily based on just powerpoint because it doesn’t really engage anyone and in that kind of atmosphere, if I’m not engaged, I’m drifting because there’s no input…I’m just staring at a screen, taking notes, notes that I could take out of a book on my own…in a quiet, dark, incredibly warm room, wearing a hoodie which then feels, like a nice warm blanket and my brain wants to shut down (and attempts to do so).

I finally just started asking semi-random questions (which, did pertain to the topics at hand but at the same time, were random enough to envoke some kind of discussion) to keep my mind active, so I wouldn’t drift off again (which I noticed I was doing). I’m writing a letter to the Buildings Dept. asking them to lower the heat there, for the sake of our GPAs, maybe they’ll listen.

I then met with Dr. Jaeger to plan out my last few classes here at UB before I begin the emigration and dual citizenship process (greekcub I have no idea how you managed to be patient, I’m chomping at the bit).

I really want to take a course from Dr. Wolfgang Wolck (I’ve heard only wonderful, and incredible things about him) before I graduate and he only teaches in the spring, so this is pretty much my only chance. Not only that, this spring he’s teaching Advanced Sociolinguistics which sounds fantastic (I’m having a great time in Paauw’s Sociolinguistics class and I’d like to continue with it). I’m hoping to get into that course (and since I’m a Super Senior, my registration window should allow me to register before anyone else as it is). I also want to take Dr. Jaeger’s Phonetics course next fall before I graduate. If I can’t get into Wolck’s course I’ll take the 400 level Linguistic Anthropology course which would also be fun, just (I don’t think) anywhere near as cool as taking a course from Prof. Wolck.

This is certainly an exciting time, it’s crunch time…and it’s almost over. A lot of hard work, over a lot of years, is about to pay off…and it’s going to pay off big time.

I finish classes in December (I already have my final exam dates, which UB was sure to remind me are subject to change); I’m in the Middle East for 10 Days over December-January, then I’m back to start Spring Semester where I’ll have four classes…all on Tuesdays/Thursdays with Monday, Wednesday and Fridays off.

I think one of the best parts about my schedule for next semester is that all of my classes are either in Baldy or Norton (which is almost next to Baldy…you just walk through a cat walk). Which would mean I would come in through the bust stop at Flint Loop, in the morning, go to the Linguistic Lounge, Go to Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge and then home, with four day weekends every week (which would allow ample time for language study and of course, fieldwork).

Then this Summer I have to take CSE111 (for my math GenEd) and finish my Nutrition GenEd which I’ll do…because I have to…not because I want to…But I’ll make the best out of it and maybe I can pick up some useful tidbits. I plan on scehduleing those for the same Summer Session this Summer (if the system will allow me, they only allow a weird number of credits per session) and when that’s done (well, either before or after, depending on scheduling) I’ll be spending a month in Tel Aviv getting used to it, finding my way around, and re-affirming that this is what I want to do (sort of just reconfirming what my heart and my mind are telling me). I’ll also be working my last Yaoi North convention for awhile, and it’s at that convention where I’ll be announcing who I’ve selected (with Chris gryvon‘s approval) as my successor to run Gay Sex: 101.

Then I come back from Tel Aviv and start the Fall Semester where I’ll be taking two Linguistics Courses and – rumor is – they’ll be adding an Arabic V (I’ve taken Arabic I, II, III and I’m taking Arabic IV this Spring Semester) which I’ll glady take, so I can have a course with Prof. Roustum one last time before I graduate.

I finish out these courses in December, take the Finals, Say my goodbyes (probably cry…a lot) and one week after I graduate, I make the big move. It doesn’t seem so far away, my heart just aches because I’m not there now. It’s a hard feeling to explain and I know a few (maybe more) of my friends are upset…but I just can’t base my life around what will make other people happy. I have to follow my heart.

I have my first Mid-Term on Tuesday for Paauw’s class which I’m sure I’ll do well on (actually, I think the entire class is going to do well on it, it’s a pleasure to study with everyone in LIN315…there’s this great vibe the class has). I’ll be studying for that this weekend. I have to start studying for my Arabic Mid-Term for Prof. Roustum this weekend as well. I’m doing well in Arabic, but I missed two classes because I wasn’t feeling well (as Prof. Roustum says, “you’re health comes first…this is not an important class…if you are tired, sleep!”) so now I feel slightly behind (but I’ll catch myself up over the weekend…I plan on flash carding my entire vocabulary, so I can at least see what I know and how far I’ve progressed).

Linguistic Analysis I & II don’t have Mid-Terms, they just have papers, assignments and a three hour open note book/open book final exams (one of which is from 7:00pm to 10:00pm). Sociolinguistics also has a three hour exam as well as a semester long research project, papers, quizes and other fun things.

Grade Wise (based on assignments) my estimates are that:

(just finding the average of the grades I’ve received. Not taking into account which grades count for more)

In Paauw’s class I have a 107%

In Kang’s Class (at present) I think I have a 95%

In Shin-Wei’s class I think I have an A (I’m not sure, but I think the paper I wrote for her today – which I had her correct this morning and I made the neccessary changes before I turned it in) was at least a B+, probably an A (I hope) which means it will then cancel out the C I got on the first assignment (best 5 out of 6 counts…I’m still semi-annoyed with myself). If not, it’s still okay because I now understand – fully – the Maximum Onset Principle and some other issues with syllabification which were alluding me. I’m having a little difficulty doing some of the Allophone/Phoneme Analysis, but Dr. Jaeger said that can take a few tries to get and it’s on my list to study this weekend so I should have it down and memorized by Monday with little to no problem.

I have no idea what I’m getting in Prof. Roustum’s class…I’ve had him for three semesters and I can’t figure out how he grades exams (at all), what points count for what, or anything…but I can tell you that there’s a Mid-Term, a Final and that they’re both held in class. That’s your entire grade right there, just two exams…but, no stress…(yeah…right). I need to seriously impress him on the Mid-Term, I’m going for an A- (at the least) so I can do an independent study with him next semester (providing I can block it in to my schedule).

Today’s been a very blase day, not a lot of people around for some reason (I guess people are going home for the weekend?) a bunch of people were out from class, and in all, the campus just has this very quite tone to it today, a relaxed tenor. I was supposed to go out with Nikki tonight but our plans fell through so I’m sort of just hanging out around campus hoping to run into some people so I can get a little rest and entertainment on Shabbat. I may go to Sarah’s and just read poetry with her or something.

Tonight’s the first night of Sukkot and Hillel isn’t doing anything (had I known in advance Jordan was going away for the weekend I would have tried to organize something but it’s also possible he told me and it didn’t click) so I’m feeling sort of lonely and I really don’t feel like going out to a gay club or bar tonight (to what end?) I don’t really have any friends here in the Queer Community anymore, not through animosity just people take different paths in life.

I’m going to head over to Sarah’s…peace all.

~ Matan

Fridays

Subject: Fridays

Date: Friday 10/6/06 4:36:00 PM

Location: Hillel of Buffalo, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York

Class this morning was fun; however, there’s certainly a problem holding the course in the basement of Clemens (which is always over heated) as students (myself included) are wearing warmer clothes (with the decrease in temperature and in preperation of the Buffalo Winter), in a classroom that isn’t terribly well lit to begin with, and where the lights are shut off so the powerpoint slideshow can be show: it just knocks everyone out.

I noticed myself drifting today, and the problem is, that I’m the only one in this class who talks…EVER (don’t get me wrong, the instructor is amazing) but unlike my other courses where people speak up, exchange ideas…no one talks in this course but me. This is difficult when the class is (like it was today) heavily based on just powerpoint because it doesn’t really engage anyone and in that kind of atmosphere, if I’m not engaged, I’m drifting because there’s no input…I’m just staring at a screen, taking notes, notes that I could take out of a book on my own…in a quiet, dark, incredibly warm room, wearing a hoodie which then feels, like a nice warm blanket and my brain wants to shut down (and attempts to do so).

I finally just started asking semi-random questions (which, did pertain to the topics at hand but at the same time, were random enough to envoke some kind of discussion) to keep my mind active, so I wouldn’t drift off again (which I noticed I was doing). I’m writing a letter to the Buildings Dept. asking them to lower the heat there, for the sake of our GPAs, maybe they’ll listen.

I then met with Dr. Jaeger to plan out my last few classes here at UB before I begin the emigration and dual citizenship process (greekcub I have no idea how you managed to be patient, I’m chomping at the bit).

I really want to take a course from Dr. Wolfgang Wolck (I’ve heard only wonderful, and incredible things about him) before I graduate and he only teaches in the spring, so this is pretty much my only chance. Not only that, this spring he’s teaching Advanced Sociolinguistics which sounds fantastic (I’m having a great time in Paauw’s Sociolinguistics class and I’d like to continue with it). I’m hoping to get into that course (and since I’m a Super Senior, my registration window should allow me to register before anyone else as it is). I also want to take Dr. Jaeger’s Phonetics course next fall before I graduate. If I can’t get into Wolck’s course I’ll take the 400 level Linguistic Anthropology course which would also be fun, just (I don’t think) anywhere near as cool as taking a course from Prof. Wolck.

This is certainly an exciting time, it’s crunch time…and it’s almost over. A lot of hard work, over a lot of years, is about to pay off…and it’s going to pay off big time.

I finish classes in December (I already have my final exam dates, which UB was sure to remind me are subject to change); I’m in the Middle East for 10 Days over December-January, then I’m back to start Spring Semester where I’ll have four classes…all on Tuesdays/Thursdays with Monday, Wednesday and Fridays off.

I think one of the best parts about my schedule for next semester is that all of my classes are either in Baldy or Norton (which is almost next to Baldy…you just walk through a cat walk). Which would mean I would come in through the bust stop at Flint Loop, in the morning, go to the Linguistic Lounge, Go to Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge, Class, Lounge and then home, with four day weekends every week (which would allow ample time for language study and of course, fieldwork).

Then this Summer I have to take CSE111 (for my math GenEd) and finish my Nutrition GenEd which I’ll do…because I have to…not because I want to…But I’ll make the best out of it and maybe I can pick up some useful tidbits. I plan on scehduleing those for the same Summer Session this Summer (if the system will allow me, they only allow a weird number of credits per session) and when that’s done (well, either before or after, depending on scheduling) I’ll be spending a month in Tel Aviv getting used to it, finding my way around, and re-affirming that this is what I want to do (sort of just reconfirming what my heart and my mind are telling me). I’ll also be working my last Yaoi North convention for awhile, and it’s at that convention where I’ll be announcing who I’ve selected (with Chris gryvon‘s approval) as my successor to run Gay Sex: 101.

Then I come back from Tel Aviv and start the Fall Semester where I’ll be taking two Linguistics Courses and – rumor is – they’ll be adding an Arabic V (I’ve taken Arabic I, II, III and I’m taking Arabic IV this Spring Semester) which I’ll glady take, so I can have a course with Prof. Roustum one last time before I graduate.

I finish out these courses in December, take the Finals, Say my goodbyes (probably cry…a lot) and one week after I graduate, I make the big move. It doesn’t seem so far away, my heart just aches because I’m not there now. It’s a hard feeling to explain and I know a few (maybe more) of my friends are upset…but I just can’t base my life around what will make other people happy. I have to follow my heart.

I have my first Mid-Term on Tuesday for Paauw’s class which I’m sure I’ll do well on (actually, I think the entire class is going to do well on it, it’s a pleasure to study with everyone in LIN315…there’s this great vibe the class has). I’ll be studying for that this weekend. I have to start studying for my Arabic Mid-Term for Prof. Roustum this weekend as well. I’m doing well in Arabic, but I missed two classes because I wasn’t feeling well (as Prof. Roustum says, “you’re health comes first…this is not an important class…if you are tired, sleep!”) so now I feel slightly behind (but I’ll catch myself up over the weekend…I plan on flash carding my entire vocabulary, so I can at least see what I know and how far I’ve progressed).

Linguistic Analysis I & II don’t have Mid-Terms, they just have papers, assignments and a three hour open note book/open book final exams (one of which is from 7:00pm to 10:00pm). Sociolinguistics also has a three hour exam as well as a semester long research project, papers, quizes and other fun things.

Grade Wise (based on assignments) my estimates are that:

(just finding the average of the grades I’ve received. Not taking into account which grades count for more)

In Paauw’s class I have a 107%

In Kang’s Class (at present) I think I have a 95%

In Shin-Wei’s class I think I have an A (I’m not sure, but I think the paper I wrote for her today – which I had her correct this morning and I made the neccessary changes before I turned it in) was at least a B+, probably an A (I hope) which means it will then cancel out the C I got on the first assignment (best 5 out of 6 counts…I’m still semi-annoyed with myself). If not, it’s still okay because I now understand – fully – the Maximum Onset Principle and some other issues with syllabification which were alluding me. I’m having a little difficulty doing some of the Allophone/Phoneme Analysis, but Dr. Jaeger said that can take a few tries to get and it’s on my list to study this weekend so I should have it down and memorized by Monday with little to no problem.

I have no idea what I’m getting in Prof. Roustum’s class…I’ve had him for three semesters and I can’t figure out how he grades exams (at all), what points count for what, or anything…but I can tell you that there’s a Mid-Term, a Final and that they’re both held in class. That’s your entire grade right there, just two exams…but, no stress…(yeah…right). I need to seriously impress him on the Mid-Term, I’m going for an A- (at the least) so I can do an independent study with him next semester (providing I can block it in to my schedule).

Today’s been a very blase day, not a lot of people around for some reason (I guess people are going home for the weekend?) a bunch of people were out from class, and in all, the campus just has this very quite tone to it today, a relaxed tenor. I was supposed to go out with Nikki tonight but our plans fell through so I’m sort of just hanging out around campus hoping to run into some people so I can get a little rest and entertainment on Shabbat. I may go to Sarah’s and just read poetry with her or something.

Tonight’s the first night of Sukkot and Hillel isn’t doing anything (had I known in advance Jordan was going away for the weekend I would have tried to organize something but it’s also possible he told me and it didn’t click) so I’m feeling sort of lonely and I really don’t feel like going out to a gay club or bar tonight (to what end?) I don’t really have any friends here in the Queer Community anymore, not through animosity just people take different paths in life.

I’m going to head over to Sarah’s…peace all.

~ Matan

You know what would be wonderful?

Subject: You know what would be wonderful?

Date: Thursday 10/5/06 3:01:00 AM

Mood: haiku-ish

If chickensoncrack would add me back on LJ. considering that the icon is of my second husband in my polygamous marriage (Christie, Rubber Chicken, Iwan, Cyclops, and there’s a few more in there).

Yes, I’m married to a rubber chicken.

He has a deep throat.

Maybe you would understand

If you read potter.

…Then again, maybe you won’t.

You know what would be wonderful?

Subject: You know what would be wonderful?

Date: Thursday 10/5/06 3:01:00 AM

Mood: haiku-ish

If chickensoncrack would add me back on LJ. considering that the icon is of my second husband in my polygamous marriage (Christie, Rubber Chicken, Iwan, Cyclops, and there’s a few more in there).

Yes, I’m married to a rubber chicken.

He has a deep throat.

Maybe you would understand

If you read potter.

…Then again, maybe you won’t.

Theme Song

Subject: Theme Song

Date: Sunday 10/1/06 6:53:00 PM

Artist: Joanna Pacitti Lyrics

Song: Watch Me Shine Lyrics

Ooh.. I’m not

You average type Of girl

I’m gonna show the world the strength in me

That sometimes they can’t see

I’m about to switch my style

And soon things may get wild

But I will prove that I can conquer anything

So from my head to toe I’m taking full control

I’ll make it on my own

This time

(Better watch me shine)

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

So Get ready

Here I come

Until the job is done

No time to waste

There’s nothing stopping me

Oh

But you don’t hear me though

So now it’s time to show

And prove I’m gonna be the best I can be

So from my head to toe

My mind body and soul

I’m taking full control

This time

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

BRIDGE:

Bet you don’t think I can take it

But my mind and body are strong

Bet you don’t think I can make it

It won’t take long

Bet you don’t think I can take it

But my mind and body are strong

Bet you don’t think I can make it

It won’t take long

Now watch me shine…

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

Now watch me shine…

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

(Until I get what’s mine…)

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

Watch me…

Watch me shine…

Watch me

It’s time to start fasting for those in New York City/Long Island; an easy fast to those who fast.

This week starts training, more on that later.

Theme Song

Subject: Theme Song

Date: Sunday 10/1/06 6:53:00 PM

Artist: Joanna Pacitti Lyrics

Song: Watch Me Shine Lyrics

Ooh.. I’m not

You average type Of girl

I’m gonna show the world the strength in me

That sometimes they can’t see

I’m about to switch my style

And soon things may get wild

But I will prove that I can conquer anything

So from my head to toe I’m taking full control

I’ll make it on my own

This time

(Better watch me shine)

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

So Get ready

Here I come

Until the job is done

No time to waste

There’s nothing stopping me

Oh

But you don’t hear me though

So now it’s time to show

And prove I’m gonna be the best I can be

So from my head to toe

My mind body and soul

I’m taking full control

This time

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

BRIDGE:

Bet you don’t think I can take it

But my mind and body are strong

Bet you don’t think I can make it

It won’t take long

Bet you don’t think I can take it

But my mind and body are strong

Bet you don’t think I can make it

It won’t take long

Now watch me shine…

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

Now watch me shine…

CHORUS:

Better watch out

Going for the knockout

And I won’t stop

Till I’m on top now

Not gonna give up

Until I get what’s mine

(Until I get what’s mine…)

Better check that I’m about to upset

And I’m hot now

So you better step back

I’m taking over

So watch me shine

Watch me…

Watch me shine…

Watch me

It’s time to start fasting for those in New York City/Long Island; an easy fast to those who fast.

This week starts training, more on that later.