A question I have about rumsoakedboy
Who are you and why do I still think about you?
She flatters me too much… maybe some pad thai next time I’m in TO? I’m moving to Peterborough next month, so it wouldn’t take too many stars aligning!
Amazing what you find when you search for your own last name on Google…
I actually hit a thread posted 9 months ago describing the origin of the name Chang-Yen, which happens to be the exact story that my Dad (from Guyana) told me. Really cool.
You’ve read all the books I want to read and seen movies I didn’t even know I wanted to see. I commend you, my friend, for being so passionate about looking at the way we live.
Because after going over his lists he seems like a really cool person and my hubby and I need friends in Edmonton. :)
We have been high-fiving each other over the computer for months. It is high time we met; you should come to our (scorching) province, I will show you sunsets and curries and mountains.
what’s the meaning of Chang-Yen,it really looks like a Chinese ordinary name(maybe like 常岩),is it your another surname? I’m just curious.;)
‘I drew my world view from a drycleaners slip,’ said rum. ‘On a sultry day in April, over a wornout counter i once got a slip which read ‘Some stains can only be removed by the destruction of the fabric’
Buenos Aires was blurring into dawn. Geryon had been walking for an hour
on the sweaty black cobblestones
of the city waiting for night’s end. Traffic crashed past him. He covered his mouth
and nose with his hand as five old buses
came tilting around the corner of the street and halted one behind the other,
belching soot. Passengers streamed
on board like insects into lighted boxes and the experiment roared off down the street.
Pulling his body after him
like a soggy mattress Geryon trudged on uphill. Café Mitwelt was crowded.
He found a corner table
and was writing a postcard to his mother:
Die Angst offenbart das NichtsThere are many Germans inBuenos Aires they are allcigarette girls the weatheris lov-when he felt a sharp tap on his boot propped up against the chair opposite.
Mind if I join you?
The yellowbeard had already taken told of the chair. Geryon moved his boot.
Pretty busy in here today,
said the yellowbeard turning to signal the waiter-Por favor hombre!
Geryon went back to his postcard.
Sending postcards to your girlfriends? In the midst of his yellow beard
was a pink mouth small as a nipple. No.
You sound American am I right? From the States?
No.
The waiter arrived with bread and jam to which the yellowbeard bent himself.
You here for the conference? No.
Big conference this weekend at the university. Philosophy. Skepticism.
Ancient or modern? Geryon
could not resist asking. Well now, said the yellowbeard looking up,
there’s some ancient people here
and some modern people here. Flew me in from Irvine. My talk’s at three.
What’s your topic? said Geryon
trying hard not to stare at the nipple. Emotionlessness. The nipple puckered.
That is to say, the what the ancients called
ataraxia. Absence of disturbance, said Geryon. Precisely. You know ancient Greek?
No but I have read the skeptics. So you
teach at Irvine. That’s in California? Yes southern California-actually I’ve got
a grant next year to do research at MIT.
Geryon watched a small red tongue clean jam off the nipple. I want to study the erotic
of doubt. Why? Geryon asked.
The yellowbeard was pushing back his chair-As a precondition-and saluting
the waiter across the room-
of the proper search for truth. Provided you can renounce-he stood-that
rather fundamental human trait-
he raised both arms as if to alert a ship at sea-the desire to know. He sat.
I think I can, said Geryon.
Pardon? Nothing. A passing waiter slapped the bill down onto a small metal
spike on the table.
Traffic was crashing past outside. Dawn had faded. The gas-white winter sky
came down like a gag on Buenos Aires.
Would you care to come and hear my talk? We could share a cab.
May I bring my camera?