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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Sorry for the delay

Guess it has been awhile since I have written...I won't take such a pause in the future, promise!

This has been a rather quiet month...lots of resumes e-mailed out, not much response.  Many books read.  Many online debates.  A graduation party, seeing family I hadn't seen in years and years (I won't let that much time pass again).  Too many sweet treats enjoyed--ok, maybe it isn't possible to eat too many sweet treats.

June coming up.  And it's still raining in San Francisco, with more rain forecast for the weekend.  I don't remember the rain lasting this late into spring since I arrived in the city fifteen years ago.  Cold, yes.  Last summer was memorably chilly all summer long.  But rain?  In June?  Is this the East or West coast?  Not that I mind so much, if it is going to be gray, it may as well rain.

So that's where I've been this month...how about you?

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Art Break

In San Francisco, we are fortunate.  Not only do we have amazing museums, but many of the museums have one day a month with free admission.  Because I've been working hard on my job hunt, I decided to take a quick break and visit the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SF MOMA).

The following are some of the highlights of my visit, I've taken photos of the information and the artwork, enjoy!


 Mondrian--the one I'd be eating soon...and not be tossed out of the museum for so doing!

 Pollack, me like!

Warhol, no information card needed!

 Jasper Johns

 Who knew that a recycling pile = art?

 Magritte

 Just because it was pretty much a black canvas.

 Another Warhol


 Sweets from the Rooftop Cafe
 Even the cappuccino is art!
 Yum!  Tasty and pretty.
 Scary!

 Calder...taken to commemorate the time at Butterfields when the telephone bidder I was helping set a world record price on a Calder, not this one though.  Ah, the olde days!
Funny map of my fair city that I found in the Museum Store.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Where Were You When You Heard the News?

It seems that we are at a historic moment.  Osama bin Laden's death announcement.

I was in my big chair, settling in to watch Law & Order Los Angeles, TIVO'ed earlier this week when my dad called to tell me to turn on MSNBC.

He said it was some announcement about bin Laden.

I am now watching the reaction from Facebook friends and Newsvine, waiting for the President to speak.

Big night.  Big night indeed.

Where were you when you heard?

Friday, April 29, 2011

Friday Evening Stroll

Friday evening!  Yes, even we searching for work types like knowing it is the weekend.  What to do?  Why not head over to Off the Grid at Fort Mason, the weekly festival of food trucks and music just a short walk from me?  Sure, I know, food trucks.  Trendy, almost annoyingly so right now.  But the food is fantastic and cheap and the walk pleasant--no fog, high 60s and light wind.  Slightly uphill through Fort Mason, but manageable.
Top of the hill at Fort Mason, OTG trucks crowd below to the left.

I'm so very indecisive at these things, everything looks good, no fantastic.  But I had a big lunch and it's only 5:30PM.
Some chai banana fritters with coconut jam sound good.  I'm a shameless wimp when it comes to sweets, though I did avoid the cupcake truck and creme brulee stand this time.

And yes, they were as good as they look.  Not too sweet, a nice 5PM snack.

Time to head home. 

It's hard to believe that I am in a big city as I walk through the Bay side of Fort Mason.  It feels very much like the national park that it is.
 Trees!
 Some bridge or something, Fort Mason piers in the foreground.....
 Trees. 
Lots and lots of trees, birds chirping  and an island.

But before I knew it, I was on the other side of Fort Mason and on the Wharf.  Seeing the Bushman, I decided to stop and enjoy the show:
How was your Friday?

15 Years Ago

This year marks a milestone: my 15th year in San Francisco.  It seems like just yesterday that I accepted a job on Alcatraz Island, packed up a suitcase and moved into the Hostel on Union Square.

Yes, a hostel.  My first home in the city was a place vacationers stay, my first job working with those vacationers.  It was quite a shock to this then-23 year old who had gone from the family home in Fresno to a safe, cushy dorm at Santa Clara University where 60 of us had our own rooms and a chef.  My life in the hostel was an adventure, from sharing a room with four others to having to fend for myself for breakfast, lunch and dinner while learning to navigate a major city.  Living with those on vacation while having to get up and head to work is a challenge, though I had little competition for the shower early in the morning!

But I wouldn't have had it any other way.  From the hostel, I moved into a residential hotel in the Tenderloin--with a Mongolian roommate who wanted to use my cell phone to call home, to a fantastic sublet in Cole Valley (near the Haight for you non-San Francisco types, a cute little neighborhood), back to the hostel and then to the house at 1906 Great Highway overlooking the ocean with 4 roommates---and from there to my two weeks in Oakland (meant to be longer), my first solo apartment with bigtime wiring and construction issues, to my 250 square foot gem in the heart of North Beach (I had to open the door to smile) to my current very comfortable and big apartment near Pier 39.

I feel as if I earned my way in the city and look back on my early days with wonder: could I do it again?  Would I?  Yes, to live in the city I love.  It was an adventure, every minute of it and I know I can stand on my own and handle a living situation where all I have is a bottom bunk and a suitcase.

Though I do I like my balcony, two cats and 500 square feet.



Thursday, April 28, 2011

Videos from Nightlife at the Academy of Sciences

In my previous post, I mentioned Nightlife at the California Academy of Sciences.  This is a truly "only in San Francisco" event every Thursday.  A DJ comes in, cocktails are served, there are special lectures and planet viewings on the living roof and the museum is open only to those over 21 years of age--no strollers!

I've been to several Nightlifes, including the very first one where there was no line for the Rainforest and a relatively sparse crowd.  Nowdays the crowd is bigger but just as much fun.  And the price is right--half the daytime entry fee.

Here are some videos from most recent one I attended.

Water spider!  A big guy, I was happy for the glass between us, though I couldn't stop looking at him/her(?).  Though I have yet to see it, he/she walks on water.  So long as that doesn't happen in my bathtub, I'm cool with him/her.

Sea Dragons!  Though they look like seaweed, they are in fact animals, like even more magical sea horses.  Someday when I am fantastically wealthy I will have a tank of these.

80-something year old Giant Sea Bass.  This guy is enormous.  And awesome, if slow moving.  Sorry for the length of this one, but I had a front row view of him turning around.  Rather like watching a semi-truck turn.

Finally, this funny guy is a Frog Fish.

Reading and reading

Being unemployed, I have had a good amount of time to delve into some books--all from the San Francisco Public Library, most requested, then sent to my branch library for pick-up.  Whatever did we do before we could request books online?  Here in San Francisco, we have a population that uses its library, oftentimes new titles can have a wait list of 80 or more people.  But it doesn't take long for the books to come to me as the library buys multiple copies.

So, on my reading list right now are:
The Tell Tale Brain, V. S. Ramachandran--fascinating look at how our brains evolved.  It does get a big medical at times, but is overall a good read.

206 Bones, Kathy Reichs--the only of Reichs' books that I have not yet read.  She is the one that the show Bones is based on.  The books are quick reads, delve quite a bit into forensics and have no characters from the show, thank goodness...even though I enjoy Bones, I wouldn't want to read books that are the show in print form.

Packing for Mars and Bonk, Mary Roach--I am catching up on my Mary Roach after seeing her lecture earlier this month at the California Academy of Sciences Nightlife.  Bonk is about sex research and Packing for Mars about the questions we'd all like to ask about space travel.  Roach is irreverent and fun, her lecture was fantastic.  As is Nightlife at the Academy of Sciences, the weekly cocktail party at the California Academy of Sciences for those of drinking age.  Highly recommend it if you find yourself in San Francisco on a Thursday night.   Fun to walk through the Academy, the aquarium with a cocktail in hand!

The Ex-Boyfriend's Handbook, Matt Dunn--very funny fiction about a man who has let himself "go" during his ten-year relationship with a woman who has let him go and run off to Tibet.  He, thanks to his local TV star friend, gets himself back in shape.  I'm about a quarter of the way into it.

So, that's on my reading table these days, what's on yours?  What can you recommend?  My request list at the library is always needing new material!