Monday, February 23, 2015

Two Homes

I had one of the best birthdays that I have had in a long time, possibly all time. Although I suppose I stretched it a bit, since this time I counted the entire week from 13 February to 20 February as my birthday. 

It started on the 13th, with some good friends in New York. I'm not sure what it was about this year, but it was particularly good. My best friend came to town, and organized a surprise for me. She told me an acquaintance wanted to come for my birthday, a girl who I had met a few times. I had felt very honored that she would fly from DC for my birthday, since I did not know her very well. It turned out, when we went to the airport, that my other close friend from college, one of my best friends, was there! 

Despite the blizzard, the three of us drove to Boston, where we went to school. The highway was all right, but once we passed this toll booth, it was like we entered Narnia. Flakes began to fall, and snow was piled high on the side of the road. It was like some phantom toll booth that opened up to WINTER, the type of winter that Ned Stark kept warning was coming, except without the living dead. The snowfall had gone on for most of the day, but ended as we drove through. It had piled up though, and the road crunched beneath us. 

Through a dirty windshield, Boston University!
Cars were buried and the mounds of snow were over my head. As we pulled up to my friend's old apartment, we found her parking spot covered with over a foot of snow. As a Bostonian however, I didn't freak out, and I shoveled out our spot in less than 10 minutes. I was very proud of that, though I suppose I might have gotten rusty from living in NY--maybe a true Bostonian could have done it in 5. As we drove out however, we got stuck, and I had to shovel areas in front of the car while my friend drove us out. 

My old subway station

The three of us went back to our favorite places in college. There was a restaurant called Kayuga that my two friends worked at, and I had called in advance to make sure it was still running, and that the owners were there. Despite the freezing cold, we walked down Newbury street. We pretty much had all of Newbury street to ourselves, since no one else wanted to brave the cold. We trudged through the snow, the wind was made of ice as it hit our faces--it was like a very cold exfoliant, with bits of snow whipped up with the wind. From far away, it was beautiful--the wind would sweep up clouds of snow, and the white would swirl against the blue sky, as though someone was painting something in the air. 

Newbury Street
For lunch, we ate at Top of the Hub, a restaurant in the Prudential Center that overlooks the entire city. Boston was painted white, by the same force that gave us the show on Newbury street. We were lucky that the snow fell as we arrived, so we did not see the gunky gray slush that city snow inevitably turns to. A pipe happened to burst while we were there, so our lunch got delayed, but it wasn't so bad--we just enjoyed the view for an extra 30 minutes or so. 

The view from Top of the Hub
After returning from Boston, I flew to California to surprise my family Lunar New Year--my best friends came with me. My brother picked me up from the airport, and we surprised my parents. At first they did not notice because they were so busy getting ready for New Year's Eve dinner--the first to notice was my dog, who freaked out and started barking with excitement. In contrast with the cold in the east, San Francisco was glorious--crisp blue sky and sunshine. 
Golden Gate Bridge in February
We went through Muir Wood, and found a parking spot right in front of the park. It was a nice hike through the redwoods. My family has recently gotten into mushroom picking, which my mother calls "mushroom hunting," so they have become experts on types of mushrooms in the Bay Area. There is one type that looks like a little ball, and when poked, it releases spores in a puff, like a small yellow cloud. The woods were covered with shamrocks, so that the ground looked like it was carpeted with little green hearts. 
Redwoods
Sea of shamrocks
I went back to see the harbor seals. They lay on the beach with smiles on their faces, a few new pups since it is their calving season.  
Seal smiling
I was annoyed that my photo was "ruined" by a random couple that wouldn't move, but then as I took a few shots, and now that I look at the picture, I think their presence really makes the photo look nicer. I find myself feeling grateful again, for the people I have in my life, and excited for a new year to come.

The beach in February

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Distant Worlds

In high school, and a bit in college, I played video games, mainly Play Station--when I tell people this, some people ask me if I have a younger brother, which I do. I suppose otherwise I might not have started playing video games. Not that many types of video games appealed to me, but I really liked the Final Fantasy series because it tells a story. I've never been interested in shooting/war video games, and played fighting games mainly because my brother played them. Though I stopped playing as an adult, I still love the music.



The composer for the Final Fantasy series, Nobuo Uematsu, is one of my favorite composers of all time. I had always wanted to see it in concert, and finally got an opportunity to this winter. About four months ago, I had randomly googled whether there would be any sort of Final Fantasy symphony in the New York area. I do this for Jay Chou and some other foreign artists who do not tour the US often. I found that the Distant Worlds series would be having two concerts in Newark, New Jersey--the concerts would be two different concerts, with a different song list. I spent a lot of time debating which one I wanted to go to, and then decided to go to both, which was a good decision--there were songs in both that I really wanted to see live.

The first show started at 3:00 pm. Fortunately, a friend of mine was able to drive us there. I had better seats for the 3:00 pm show, in the orchestra section, which was much better because there was a choir for the 3:00 show and not for the 8:00 show. I do go to a lot of concerts, but I think this one was one of the best that I've been to. It made me think of something another friend of mine had said a few years ago--I went to a concert by the xx with a few friends, which I enjoyed, but not nearly as much as one of them did, and she went on and on about how the music was so beautiful that she got chills. I don't quite remember her exact words, because I had been too busy thinking that I definitely didn't feel anywhere close to that (I liked it, just not to that level), and that it would be nice to love a band or type of music THAT much--and I went through all the music that I liked in my head, and remembered thinking that some of Nobuo Uematsu's work might meet that standard for me. And indeed, when one of my favorite songs came on, I actually did get chills.

There is no filming allowed, but here are some youtube clips of stuff that they played:

To Zanarkand

Suteki Da Ne

Liberi Fatali

Answers

Eyes on Me

One of the singers, Susan Calloway, has an amazing voice.

As for Newark, there is not so much to say about it, since I only went for the concert. There was an Irish Pub that was pretty good, but I suppose that applies to most towns.