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Name: Purwa
Country: United States
State: California
Birthday: 8/20/1984


Interests: Music, reading, Michael Vartan hunting , hanging with friends, dancing, attacking any bookstore, chilling with my suitemates, exploring political views...
Occupation: Student


Message: message me


Member Since: 12/9/2002

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

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Saturday, August 28, 2004

 


Thursday, August 12, 2004

Starsailor- At the End of the Show

New xanga: www.xanga.com/voyageaparis

check it out for all the Paris happenings

Currently Watching
Just Shoot Me - Seasons One and Two
By Laura San Giacomo
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Monday, June 14, 2004

Jeff Buckley- Everybody Here Wants You

And the year is over. I can't believe it. Another year gone. Its so hard to believe. Next year is going to be so different than this one...obviously being abroad. When we come back so much will have changed. For starters- no Rafi....which as much as I don't want to buckle down and admit, but god am I going to miss that boy. The year went by so quickly...who knows how quickly these next two will go, and how different all of us will come back. But thanks for the memories, Geneva kiddos and other UCSD buds. I love you guys a lot, this year was awesome.

So finals ended for me on Tuesday after working unbelievably hard to get stuff out of the way on time. Wednesday was nuts....Andrew and I spent 3 hrs moving stuff out of the Geneva apt into the Trieste one (thanks again for your help Andrew). By the time we were done and I could finish packing and cleaning, it was time to leave for the airport. Saying bye to everyone kind of sucked, esp considering none of us will be together like that probably....ever. The flight was ok. I guess I got major allergies from the moving dust, so I was majorly doped up on the flight back to Jersey, and slept a whole bunch, and got into Jersey Thursday morning. I was back for practically only a couple hours before we headed out to Michigan.

My uncle and his family live in Michigan, and it was my baby cousin's 11th birthday, so we got to be there for his birthday party which was so much fun, esp cause he's the cutest boy ever. I love seeing my cousins and family, it feels so comfortable and its just nice to be around them. Yesterday (Saturday) we went around to visit old family friends. My bro and I were both born in Michigan, and my parents made their first "American" friends there (even though all Indian....you know how it goes). So there are a lot of people around who have known us since I was pretty much a baby, esp cause we left there when I was 3. We went around a saw two families who were good friends of ours when we lived there. It was really awesome. The kids we grew up with are all graduated from college and working now, and I don't really remember them, but for them it was weird to see me as, well, not a toddler. haha. We'd actually done just the same thing in Cupertino at Thanksgiving, so up next for this reunion business is Blue Bell in PA....but at least I still have contacts there. Well..1 (haha Poopy). So we drove back this morning, got back around 7 and I've just been chilling since then. Now, I am off to bed and to possibly call some folks.

Night all.

 

ps. for some reason I'm reading Bridget Jones' Diary- which I thought would be pretty amusing, but I'm finding kind of dull. Thinking of reverting to Prisoner of Azkaban, which was by far more amusing. We'll see.

Currently Reading
Bridget Jones's Diary
By Helen Fielding
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Wednesday, June 02, 2004

Nelly Furtado- Childhood Dreams

 

Two poems from Third World Studies that really spoke to me/touched me.

Kamala Das- An Introduction

 

I don’t know politics but I know the names

Of those in power, and can repeat them life

Days of week, or names of months, beginning with

Nehru. I am Indian, very brown, born in

Malabar, speak three languages, write in

Two, dream in one. Don’t write in English they said,

English is not your mother-tongue. Why not leave

Me alone, critics, friends, visiting cousins,

Every one of you? Why not let me speak in

Any language I like? The language I speak

Become mine, its distortions, its queernesses

All mine, mine alone. It is half English, half

Indian, funny perhaps, but it is honest,

It Is as human as I am human, don’t

You see? It voices my joys, my longings, my

Hopes, and it is useful to me as cawing

Is to crows or roaring to the lions, it

Is human speech, the speech of the mind that is

Here and not there, a mind that sees and hears and

Is aware. Not the deaf, blind speech

Of trees in storm or of monsoon clouds or of rain or the

Incoherent muttering of the blazing

Funeral pyre. I was child, and later they

Told me I grew, for I became tall, my limbs

Swelled and one or two places sprouted hair. When

I asked for love, not knowing what else to ask

For, he drew a youth of sixteen into the

Bedroom and closed the door. He did not beat me

But my sad woman-body felt so beaten.

 

The weight of my breasts and womb crushed me. I shrank

Pitifully. Then…I wore a shirt and my

Brother’s trouser, cut my hair short and ignored

My womanliness. Dress in sarees, be girl

Be wife, they said. Be embroiderer, be cook,

Be a quarreler with servants. Fit in. Oh,

Belong, cried the categorizers. Don’t sit

On walls or peep in through our lace-draped windows.

Be Amy, or be Kamala. Or, better

Still be Madhavikutty. It is time to

Choose a name, a role. Don’t play pretending games.

Don’t play a schizophrenia or be a

Nympho. Don’t cry embarrassingly loud when

Jilted in love…I met a man, loved him. Call

Him not by any name, he is every man

Who wants a woman, just as I am every

Woman who seeks love. In him…the hungry haste

Of rivers, in me…the ocean’s tireless

Waiting. Who are you, I ask each and everyone,

The answer is, it is I. Anywhere and,

Everywhere, I see the one who calls himself

If in this world, he is tightly packed like the

Sword in its sheath. It is I who drink lonely

Drinks at twelve, midnight, in hotels of strange towns,

It is I who laugh, it is I who make love

And then, feel shame, it is I who lie dying

With a rattle in my throat. I am sinner,

I am saint. I am the beloved and the

Betrayed. I have no joys which are not yours,

No Aches which are not yours. I too call myself I.

 

Makarand Paranjape- The Magic Lantern

 

In the darkened room,

The impoverished slide show was rigged up.

One of the walls, in pale pastel,

Serve as the screen. At the other end,

Beside the bed, I was put in charge

Or the old projector. A battered cardboard box

Overflowing with slides was dumped beside me—

‘There, see whatever you like…’

The other huddled near by, pulling up

Chairs from the dining room

 

You were such a chubby baby,

A real cuteums and cuddleums

Just like those fat and contented babies

On Lactogen tins. In your father’s

Arms, you looked like a smug kitten,

And ‘Kaka’, as you insisted on calling your father,

Himself was so handsome in his tweeds,

Almost like a film star. He had those smooth,

Appealing look.

            There you are, a brat of five or six

With a mad gleam in your eyes, hair disheveled.

Both sisters, framed in their mischief, like

Two little monkeys. No wonder, you still

Break into giggles once in a while:

You always had that lunatic fringe.

 

Here are a few family portraits—some common

                                                                        aunts

Ranged together with their babies. There’s my

Mother, behind, looking very pregnant,

Yes, it was me she was carrying—

And there you are, a baby again,

Nestling in the arms of your mom.

 

Our parents look marvelously young and energetic,

So confident, so full of like. And you and your cousins look grumpy and cross

Alike, as you sit on the terrace

Of your grandmother’s house in Pune.

 

The slide show ends abruptly:

The power’s failed again. I draw

The curtains aside and observed an altered world.

All your cousins are married now,

With children of their own.

I marvel at the passage of time and generation…

Are our lives going to be all that different?

 

Well, we had to stop reviewing the past

Before you reached adolescence. Your father said,

‘Anyway, there aren’t many slides of the girls

Grown up. I lost interest, you see,

And the hobby had become too expensive…’

So are we overtaken by life at some point

That we no longer have the luxury

Of sitting back and recording the passage of time.

 

Sharing your childhood has been a rather spooky

Privilege: an intimacy almost incestuous

And rather silly thoughts arise in my mind

Unawares: ‘So, all along you were growing up

For me, to be mine!’

                                    Guiltily, I look around

And observe the furrowed faces

Of your parents, whole lives are no

So many framed negatives in the box.

Our parents…they are all old now,

Their generation had moved up into

The senior citizen’s slot, leaving the ambiguous

Pride of place to us. In them I see our future

Just as in their past is our present

 

We have extended our relationship back

Into childhood, before puberty, and sexuality.

Romance and passion pass away:

This, our present relationship

Is therefore not the norm, but merely a phase.

Yet this is what the world calls love,

And celebrates so exhaustively.

I realize, inadvertently, that our ties are

Deeper far…and then cleverly, I begin

To create a mythology for us. You were

Born, and then you called me down…

 

In your absence, your home has yielded

Its secrets to me one by one. While

Your mom and dad sleep in their bedroom,

I lie awake in your room on your childhood bed,

Possessed in more ways than one, by you.

 

Currently Reading
Brave New World
By Aldous Huxley
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