Monday, May 31, 2010

"Don't Get Impatient When It Takes Too Long...


Drink it all even when it tastes too strong. I gotta feel alive even if it kills me ... promise to always give you me ... the real me."

- Drizzy - Light Up (Ft. Jay-Z) CDQ/No Tags

Because not everybody gets it right the first time. Because I learned from my friends' experiences that dissing my parents to chase your passions may not be well worth it when the time you have with your parents may be a lot shorter than you'd care to imagine. Because whenever I've let truth and honesty guide my decisions, and exercised a little bit of steadfastness, life has lead me to a place where the direction of where I must go is apparent. Because becoming the values that I wish to see permeate throughout the world through living, and potentially through my offspring is where my idea of success lies. Because truth pays off in the audits...

My soul vibrates in a jazz progression. I continue. Head up. Ready for life's lessons. Not to mention, I'm tired of not doing exactly what I feel it is I should be doing anyway.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Under the Radar, and Into the Woods: The Introduction



So, I've been in a bunker.

Since March.

Though, the frequency of my excursions from my stronghold have increased lately due to birthdays, graduations, and the rare extroversion of some of my very closest friends. I've been exceptionally introverted for the last two months because I went from being on a path of significantly predictable financial security and stability to some higher variety of Bumhood over a very spiritually-taxing, and confusing weekend. Since then, many hours have been allocated between catching up on leisure reading (trudging through a book titled The Creative Life by Bob Ostertag, with In The Fed We Trust queued up, and its pages itching for a rub), regaining momentum in my creative endeavors (getting my sketching and rendering skills up, familiarizing myself further with Adobe PS, and beginning to orient myself to Logic and Reason, and singing more often), increasing my fitness level (started that P90 even though I was by no means chub), staying up on current events (in the fashion of NPR, as well as through blogs), self-evaluating and re-evaluating (fine-tuning "the machine" and its processes), job searching (though, I ain't no Aloe Blacc), researching academic pathways (as if I were confident that any of these pathways would bring me closer to self-actualization), contemplating my stance in this discussion, adjusting the family mission statement and dynamic, and contemplating the valuation of a successful life--need it really be said? A lot's been a brotha's mind. Alcohol occasionally helps to take the load off, though my endorphins from being active have been real good at warding off the big demons. But, to bring it back to the straw that broke the camel's back and led me to construct a psychological stabilizer in the form of excommunication by my own decree, it wasn't until recently (maybe two or three weeks ago) that I finished cycling through my grieving process, and am ready to jump back into the rivers of the world, once again--but, in a considerably different psychological and spiritual context.

Let's bring it back. Let's bring it back. (If this were an episode of Lost, then this would be a flashback.)

It's the end of August 2008. After two years of waiting to get into a nursing program, I finally started the beginning of what I hoped would not be the rest of my life. I was starting a nursing program at a junior college in Fairfield, CA--my ego in full bloom, and inconspicuously ashamed for two reasons:

1. I had always considered myself of higher than average ability to achieve due to my achievements in high school despite my often reckless study habits. And, despite my ability, here I was at a JC. Now, let's not braid it all up too quickly. I recognize that transferring to a 4-year from a JC is a legitimate alternative pathway to academic success--but, being young and having been raised in a society that primarily assesses the value of a person by the achievements they can list on a resumé got me feeling rather embarrassed that I was starting a nursing program at 22 y/o with no degree, when I felt there was a significant probability that I could have graduated that same year from some place more prestigious.

2. At this point in my life, I did not know what I wanted to do. But, then again I never really had the opportunity to genuinely explore just what it was I wanted to do for the rest of eternity. For one thing (and, possibly the only thing), I've always had a mother who had mastered psychological dominipulation (domination and manipulation in the same act). How had she achieved this? A lifetime of repetition coupled with one of the most effective non-response poses you've ever seen, and then somehow strengthened by a "You must be crazy" look that even the Romans couldn't have learned to sculpt to precision. The guidance started young (possibly even when I was still in the womb):

Stranger X: So, are you going to be raising a little doctor, or lawyer?

Dear Mother: Oh, no, no. He's going to be a nurse first. Then, he can do whatever he wants after. But, he'll be a nurse first.


Take this sample of a conversation, and multiply it by every social gathering throughout the year (the Hallmark holidays, family gatherings for birthdays, weddings, funerals, promotion parties, housewarmings, graduation parties, fiestas...any place there could be a conversation about the future of children), multiplied by every year I've been alive. And, you have a Southern, Affluent, Catholic-Raised, Traditional, Conservative Filipino brainwashing at its finest. My mind was dominated by my mother's repeated message. Ask me what I wanted to do at any age until I was 20, and I would simply repeat what my Mom would say pretty close to verbatim:

Stranger X: So, what are you going to do?

Me: I'm going to be a nurse first. It's not exactly what I wanted to do. But, I'll do what I really want to do after. But, I'll finish nursing first.

Stranger X: Oh! Why nursing?

Me: Oh.... uhhhhh (FUCK. WHY?)... Hmm, I never really thought about it. (Well, ain't thatta bitch.)


I had never really thought about it, and never really gave the future much serious thought beyond nursing because ... I mean ... shit was laid out. When you pop out of the womb and just start walking on the path laid out in front of you, questioning whether the path should be made of concrete, tile, or marble doesn't really come to mind when nobody had asked why the material was chosen. I just walked, ate, slept, shat, showered, loved, stretched, sweated, and everything else on that shit. No one asked me why I was doing everything on a road of scrubs and stethoscopes until senior year in high school. And, by that point, I really didn't know anything else. People had their dreams all dressed up real nice, and I didn't even exercise the idea that I could have a dream.

....I just earned grades.

The summer before my first year in college was one of the most creative of my life: I taught myself to play the guitar, taught myself to play the drums, was learning how to the bass, and wrote poems regularly that explored emotional depths so personal and dark that I probably made it to another universe through a black hole in the earth's core through them. I didn't realize it then, but creativity would become the coping mechanism with which I would protect my ego and mask the suffering that I could not communicate to a parent who was unwilling, and possibly incapable of listening.

At 18, I was at a point where I was given pretty much anything I ever really needed. Clothes on my back, food to eat, my own bed in my own room, a car, a cell phone, internet to browse Asian Avenue on ... shit man, I was living the life. My dad was working 16 hour days on the regular to keep everyone comfortable and then some, and my mom would average 4 hours of sleep during tax season to get it in for the family. I knew they cared about my brother and me. I didn't know what my dreams were, but I was constantly reminded that money was the key to security in everything from relationships to health. Nursing had one of the highest probability points on the graph in regards to job availability and security, and one of the highest incomes compared to its cost of education.

"Fuck dreams. We gotta make money, out here! .... and, reliably."

I'm pretty sure when I reflect on my thoughts at that point in my life, that definitely was not what I was thinking. But, if you glanced at what I did in the years that led up to my ultimate initiation in nursing school, it sure looked like it was.

End of Tape 1, Side 1.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

It's Coming....




I've made the decision to begin blogging again.

This time around I plan on making posts as all-inclusive, and with as much of the truth as possible (as long as it does not have untoward effects on others). Fucka polite, and professional forum. This is my "Nation" anyway. As for how the blog's to effect me?

I figure, "Ah, what the hell."

Ain't nobody really reading this, as it stands now--and, if that changes? Well, I don't plan on censoring me as much as I used to in my day-to-day life, anyhow. I've always been on the "very tactful, and sometimes to the point of silence" end of the blunt-tactfulness spectrum. So, I'm finding that my blunted outlooks are often inherently tactful anyway. Plus, I've always wanted to keep some sort of history of my thoughts as well as have a tangible tracking of my growth and ideas. It's fun to look back in time, and see what about you has changed, stayed the same, or was lurking in the background waiting to dominate the foreground without you even realizing it.

I had the itch to start writing, and like many creative itches of mine, I have found that the work involved in the piece will be much, much more than I had initially envisioned in all of those 10 seconds of inspiration that got me to loading up the blog on the laptop screen. I've got the coming piece saved, and plan on finishing the draft (Can you do me a favor? If I pull it together, make it) sooner than later ... music just finds its way in sometimes.

Anyway, a big ol' Mojo Jojo poop post is about to top the pile some time this week, and I just wanted to put in a little warm-up stretch so that no muscles got strained from the massiveness of the insertion.

As you were.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

New Deep

Sometimes you're fortunate enough to find just what you need in art. And, today it came in the very accessible form of an mp3.

A rejuvenating melody and lyric that helped me to attain realignment.

/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/

"I used to be the back porch poet with a book of lines
Always open knowing all the time I'm probably
Never gonna find the perfect rhyme
For 'heavier things'"

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Trey Songz: Ready ... for more than a week now.


Trigga Trey KILLIN' the musical scales on this album. Leaked out as early as last Monday, but didn't get a chance to preview the piece until Wednesday.

For the internet beasts:

Many of the songs have already been released, some for months now. Even so, Trey delivers the album well by adding minor, but significant enough tweaks to production that improve the overall balance of the songs (i.e. additional percussion on Invented Sex, additional vocals on LOL :-), and some subtle stringing differences on Be Where You Are). So, even on the older songs, there's still enough novelty factor that makes the music fresh.

On the album, in general:

Love it. The first track sets the tone for the first half of the album--this will be a must have album for singles who are dating, and couples alike. A couple of the tracks even have a long-term relationship appeal. So, considering those aspects, this album has a good variety of scenarios in the realm of Love and Sex. Musically, Trey got range and precision on the vocals like Tiger Woods and his swing. If sound could be seen like a performance on a stage, the album does a great job of filling the background, foreground, and mid-ground with a sense of balance, but not falling short on moving through the areas dynamically. While many may hear a resemblance to the legend R. Kelly in Trey's riffing and vibrato, it seems evident to me that Trey Songz knows himself and is honest to himself creatively: this makes the lyrical content and audible expression genuine, and somewhat infatuating. Trey Songz walks the fine line between objectifying a woman, and recognizing the woman as an individual queen who deserves all he can give of his body and soul--it sounds passionate, I know. But, that's because it is a passion-filled album made for a passion-starved audience. Lose your rationale to your heart and hips for 58.1 minutes and give this shit a listen. I'm sure you'll soon be hearing it through someone else if it won't be on your own accord in the privacy of your own room.

A must have for the R&B listener.

.
Support the artist and cop the album! For promo use only.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

After Getting Pwned By 1st Semester...

I'm back in the academic rotation, official as of last week.

I had to resolve some ego issues that affected my prioritizing during my first semester. I'm sure I could reach incredible depths of reflection that would leave me to an understanding of life that could be likened to the perspective of a Dr. Manhattan. But, for the sake of brevity and simplicity, my problem was this: I relied on my reasoning skills on exams much more than my studying skills--and, I dug myself a hole too deep in exam scores that hours of studying for the final could not make up for.

So, many things have happened since October. Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, Valentine's Day...and, those are just the commercial events. But, basically my basketball team, the Killa Beez, has been making great strides as a team in the AAA-E/Open Division of Dream League.



Despite our 2-4 record, we have grown A LOT as a team, and our skills on the court have shown a lot of improvement. I looking forward to seeing us next season.

I've also been keeping up with my physical activities. For those of you who find going to the gym an exertion of too much effort at times, I suggest you invest in an Iron Gym which runs for around 30 bucks on Amazon. A caveat, though: people with wider shoulders may not be able to get as good variety in their work out because of a doorway's width limitations. But, I've found the pull up bar to be a very effective strengthening tool. Cop eet, ya skinny bastards.

In any case, I'll be threading back into my life on my days after clinical, or other times I have a little bit of down time to procrastinate. Here's some eye candy:


Drake - Lust For Life x HoustonAtlantaVegas [mash-up video] from 5846productions on Vimeo.

This is a very emotive piece, and the two songs used are current (for a month, or so now) favorites of mine off of Drake's So Far Gone album. I know nothing about the artist of the video, but thought I would share such a great combination of audio and visual stimuli. I especially appreciated the accentuating of the most minor nonverbal cues--it really makes it a piece that can communicate almost universally. Check it out!

Sunday, October 26, 2008

The Nursing Program Owns My Life

So, I've been on a couple month hiatus because I finished off my summer with a lot of going out, a trip to the East Coast (which I still haven't finished editing all the pictures of), I started the Nursing Program at Solano Community College in August, and have been spending any free time I get with my girl, reading up on politics, or hitting up a bar, or two.

Even now, I've got my nursing care plan in front of me, with studying for tomorrow's exam queued up, and probably won't get to sleep til 0200 or 0300. I'll probably end up going to the gym after class, and then finish the prelim stages of Prismatica's 3x4 board that I need to get painted up by Sunday.

It's a busy week! But, somebody's gotta put in work. Our country is financially fucked, and I'm trynna get on a payroll in this bitch.

My brother's photography lately: