For Arshad, who must not have known what sort of insanity he was asking for:
Part 1
brought to you by yazthespazz & mayyamonster
in conjunction with endless laughter and torrents of rain
For Arshad, who must not have known what sort of insanity he was asking for:
Part 1
brought to you by yazthespazz & mayyamonster
in conjunction with endless laughter and torrents of rain
excuse me, america, you mispronounce my pain
Spoken word performances, oh how I love thee.
And I love that I introduced my friend H (this is a different H; let’s call him the confoozid boy who scrunches up his face at any mention of mint ‘n’ chip ice cream and salmon and I don’t understand why I’m even friends with him still) to spoken word for the first time in his life. (“You have to come to this spoken word performance!” I kept exclaiming over the weekend. “What’s that?” said he. “HOW DO YOU NOT KNOW WHAT SPOKEN WORD IS?!” said I), and he loved it just as much I was hoping he would, laughing at all the right moments and clapping with enthusiasm and thanking me nonstop afterward (“I owe you,” says he; “Thank you so much for telling me about it.” “No, you don’t,” say I; “Thank you for coming along”).
That was the highlight of my day, you don’t even know.
The next highlight is dinner.
Yeah, I know, about five hours late.
It’s that age-old dilemma: food or sleep, sleep or food? What to do, what to do? When it comes down to it, I always choose sleep, but dang, I’m really hungry right about now.
Alright soljahs, midnight raid on the kitchen begins…NOW.
(And in yet other news, I’ve decided I know too many guys whose names start with “H” and too many girls whose names start with “S.” Do you even understand how many days it takes for me to scroll through all the “S”s in my cell phone when I’m trying to find a name? I mean, really, the oh so rare instances in which I do use my phone, I’d like for it to be an efficient process, ya know. So that’s it, I’ve decided Hasan is gonna be the only H-guy I know and Somayya is gonna be the only S-girl, and all the rest of you H and S people are just gonna have to change your names. No arguments.
And what’s up with all the parentheses and semi-colon usage in this post anyway?)
ramaban mubarak
Whatever your personal goals are for this year’s Ramadan, I hope you find within you the strength and dedication and drive to fulfill your goals, and to maintain and implement those changes following Ramadan, too. May your fasting become a manifestation of worship and patience. May He accept your repentance and make it sound and permanent, and grant you guidance and success in following the straight path. May He purify your intentions, accept your fasting and tears, forgive your sins, and bless you with mercy and peace during this month and throughout the year.
Ameen.
miseducation
1.
I got home from school late last night, walking into the house with my new messenger bag slung diagonally from shoulder to hip. This bag rocks das Haus – it’s khaki-colored canvas, with five or six pockets just on the outside, Velcro straps and random buttons everywhere. And I love messenger bags, in case you didn’t know. My father peered up at me from his armchair, brushing his hand across my bag as I leaned over him to give him a hug.
Daddy-o: What’s this?
Yasmine: *shrugging* I got tired of my backpack, so I bought this instead.
Daddy-o: *winces* Couldn’t you have bought something a little more professional looking?
Yasmine: I don’t need something pretty or professional. I need a bag I can kick around when I get frustrated with school.
Daddy-o: Instead of this one, you could have gotten a nice little portfolio, or a bag to hold your laptop.
Yasmine: What laptop?
Daddy-o: It looks like a mailman bag!
Yasmine: No, it doesn’t!
Daddy-o: *shakes his head* Why do you always have to be so difficult? And different?
Somayya’s older brother, trying to be the voice of reason: It’s okay, there’s always one extremist in every family.
Daddy-o: Hippie! She’s a hippie!
Yasmine: *walks away laughing*
2.
The night before that, I helped facilitate a workshop for the university’s Student Housing division, at one of the first-year multicultural dorms. I’m starting to think I really shouldn’t be unleashed on large groups of people, because I just don’t know when to stop talking. But maybe that’s a good thing, and, besides, my colleagues kept assuring me that, No, I didn’t ramble or go off on tangents or whatever else I shouldn’t have been doing. And I appreciated the fact that the freshmen had lots of questions to direct my way.
‘Twas much fun. Here’s how my intro ended up going:
Yasmine: Hi, I’m Yasmine, and I’m a fifth year Human Dev –
*students start murmuring*
Yasmine: Thanks a lot, you guys, I really like how you did that collective gasp. Anyway, I’m majoring in Human Development and minoring in Social & Ethnic Relations. And, don’t worry, I promise I’m graduating in June.
*laughter*
Freshman boy #1: *whispers loudly to friend* She’s a fifth year? Dude, she must hella be a party girl!
Freshman boy #2: SHE’S SO COOL!
brought to you by the color orange
This is where I’ll be at tomorrow. Wish you all could be, too. I’ll be making a special mental note to stalk the UC San Diego MSA table throughout the day, where everyone’s favorite blurker (“blog+lurker”; thanks, Baji!) 2Scoops’ good friends will be selling t-shirts. Isn’t it amazing what a crazy small world it is? I love it.
Lord, please don’t let it rain.
Make it sunny. You know how I like all that yellow sunshine.
Lord, grant us all much strength, patience, and steady iman.
Make the event one that is successful and smooth.
And as beautiful and memorable as last year’s.
Lord, help us bring a positive change to the youth and the Ummah.
Grant us patience and shower Your blessings on this event as well as all other events going on this weekend.
Open the hearts of all those who attend and make everyone leave in a better state than that which they entered with.
Remind us to breathe. And pray for guidance. And give thanks for all You have blessed us with.
Bless those who, with endless kindness and generosity, helped make this event possible.
And those who had the passion, vision, and drive to start this movement and the dedication to ensure it continued.
Lord, guide our hearts and purify our intentions and make the event one at which we feel Your presence with clarity.
Ameen.
take a sad song and make it better
Okay, so if you’re anything like me, you’re driving up to school at 7 a.m., bleary-eyed and yawning because yesterday consisted of this: driving from your hometown to Sacramento, working until the afternoon, and driving from Sacramento to your hometown to Berkeley to San Francisco to Oakland to your hometown. And you’re stressed and highly bitter because it’s one day before the event and your printer is out of ink and your ISP is down and you need to be checking and replying to last-minute event-related emails and this is no time for your internet to not be working. So you’re listening to the Beatles’ album “1,” yawning so hard your jaw’s about to dislocate, and wondering how the hell they manage to sound so damn exuberant and happy even when they’re singing depressing songs.
Don’t worry, kids, I have the perfect solution:
One way to wake yourself up properly and get your day off to a nice start is to turn up the volume on “Hey Jude” and sing along towards the end,
“Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude
Na na na na-na-na, na-na-na hey Jude…”
at the top of your lungs. Loudly, okay. This is the important part. Once the song finishes, press the “repeat” button and start the song over again. I said, sing loudly. Repeat the process for however long it requires you to start giggling the rest of the way to school. Keep giggling and/or smirking whenever the song pops into your head at random moments throughout the day.
Hey, it works, okay.
Stop looking at me like that.
Following in the grand tradition of posting lists of my random thoughts when I have nothing worthwhile to say:
Today was the first day of fall quarter. Hold the applause. Do you know I have 8 a.m. classes four days a week? Do you know how early I have to wake up? Do you know what time I leave the house? Do you know how gorgeous the sky looks at that time of morning? Yes. Must stay positive. (Don’t worry, kids, stay tuned; further whining to recommence soon.)
So you want to know why I couldn’t find the blue paper to print out my timesheet at work? Because it was placed in a cubby-hole above my eye-level, dammit. Really, I shouldn’t have to strain my neck like that.
Fall quarter parking permits for school are now red. I like much.
Squash. As in, the vegetable. One word: NO. (Why does it always come back to this?)
Guys need to stop gawking while driving on the freeway. What’s even more annoying is when you’re forced to switch lanes and end up driving directly behind them, leading them to believe you’re stalking them on purpose. Please. Don’t flatter yourself. And get that victorious little smirk off your face. It’s not attractive. And while we’re at it, don’t put your face right up against the window like that. Didn’t your momma tell you? It’ll get stuck that way.
An awkward-looking man with scruffy orange sideburns was walking down the street in downtown Sacramento this afternoon with his tie tucked into his dress slacks. Why? WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS TO YOURSELF? Please note the deliberate use of the caps-lock key. Obviously, this is something I feel quite strongly about.
Stressed and sad is not a good combination. Stressed, because I’ve only made it through one lecture and I’m already feeling claustrophobic about being back at school. It must be that damn biology class, I’m telling you, because the thought of Renaissance Literature tomorrow doesn’t seem to have quite the same effect. And sad, because the world is a crazy heartbreaking place and ideally everything should be good for those of whom you know nothing but good, but it isn’t. Does that make sense?
Did I tell you I’ve been working in downtown Sacramento during the past three weeks? Uhh, I guess I kinda forgot. I still haven’t figured out yet if turning left onto a one-way street on a red light is legal. Someone tell me already, because I hate waiting for green lights. Meanwhile, I’ve stopped being intimidated by one-way streets, and my parallel parking skills have noticeably improved. I can now parallel park on both sides of the street! This is hella exciting, in case you can’t tell.
I bought a pair of flared jeans for $12.99. Like, really flared. This is so exciting that it even merits a mention on the weblog. See?
When I told my friend S about the new job, he responded with a capitalization-laden reply along the lines of, “You’re driving 75 miles to work during your summer vacation?! Are you insane?!” Of course I am. It’s a skill I’m constantly working on perfecting. This is what spending almost an entire summer away from California does to you – you start forgetting key information about your friends, and that’s just inexcusable. Besides, now that school’s back in session, I’m regularly in the valley anyway, so what’s an extra 15 miles to work from campus? It all somehow makes sense with my convoluted logic. Or lack thereof.
I’m working on perfecting my disdainful look, too, but it’s not working out real well, because I have a tendency to roll my eyes and burst into laughter instead. Goshdarnit.
The seemingly never-ending freeway construction means that westbound I-80 is missing lane markings approaching the Interstates-80/680 junction. This also means that every evening, all the cars traveling in a westbound direction get extremely confused about whether we have four lanes or six at our disposal. Some lady nearly sideswiped me at the junction yesterday simply because she couldn’t figure out where the exit lane began. CalTrans needs to hurry up and get this job over with and stop putting my life in danger already.
Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to research potential careers for me.
Re. teaching: NO.
I’ve been enjoying listening to the Beatles’ album “1” on and off for the past few weeks. Believe it or not, the only version of “Yellow Submarine” I’ve heard before this is my father’s. That, and his Pukhtu rendition of the same song. Fun stuff, but it’s nice to finally listen to the original as well.
I feel like retiring, and I haven’t even done anything with my life yet. Tell me, is this slightly problematic?
Last Saturday, while I was volunteering at a painting competition at the art center and drawing henna designs on little kids’ hands, the father of one of the children leaned over and asked curiously, “Where were you born?” I smiled sweetly and answered, “Berkeley.” And while it was the truth, it was quite obvious that that wasn’t the answer he had been expecting to hear.
With friends, I always laughingly append the answer with, “And that just explains everything, doesn’t it?”
I love Berkeley. I’m not there very often and, admittedly, I’m still not an expert at figuring out my way around, but if you leave me at the corner of Bancroft and Telegraph, I’m all set to go. From there, I can navigate my way to anywhere. There is only a small, select group of people I can tolerate shopping with, yet I’m content browsing for hours on my own and Berkeley is optimal for such an experience. I’ve bought candy from small corner shops and eaten it all while walking down the street. I’ve sat in cafes while drinking hot chocolate, watching the world walk by my windows, waving at people I happened to recognize. I’ve conversed with sidewalk vendors and returned the genuine, crinkly-eyed smiles of homeless people at the corners and tried on flip-flops and handled dangly earrings and slathered on lotion at the Bath & Body that’s now gone. I’ve taken my sweet time walking slowly from the BART station to the campus, inadvertently eavesdropping on people’s conversations, inwardly amused at the juxtaposition of buildings.
“Telegraph is overrated,” a girl said dismissively to me recently. I remember raising an eyebrow and making a curt, snappish remark in response. Perhaps my Berkeley experiences are not truly indicative of what it’s like to actually live in the town and know the place like the back of one’s hand, but the very fact that I don’t live there makes me appreciate it more, maybe. Berkeley is weird and wonderful and whack, and the fact that everything there is all slightly shabby and imperfect, eccentric and unexpectedly out-of-place, is what makes it all the more appealing.
I can see myself living in Berkeley.
I was in Berkeley recently to have lunch with a friend. Walking back to our car afterwards, I stopped abruptly in the middle of the sidewalk, hands on my hips, craning my neck upwards, and exclaimed loudly at no one in particular, “I love those bay windows!” It was a three-story house, two of the levels made up of the wide bay windows I couldn’t help marveling at. My friend, who had obliviously continued walking ahead without me, stopped and turned back, a bit disconcerted by my sudden display of enthusiasm. I suppose she didn’t know that it’s a habit I have, this stopping dead in my tracks whenever something captures my interest.
The Berkeley building reminded me of how much I miss our old Victorian home with the bay windows and soaring rooflines – the tall, dilapidated house we spent over a year taking apart and rebuilding, knocking down walls and taking out excess doors, retaining the old moldings and doorway carvings, polishing the hardwood floors until they gleamed, reveling in the sheer glory of the house, a vast expanse of space and light. We remained there for only two more years after the year of renovation.
There are college students living there now, and a Volkswagen Jetta parked in the driveway. They sprawl on sagging couches on the wide front porch, littering it with six-packs, and the elegant bay windows sport posters of rockstars. My father’s geranium plots and brick borders, once intricately laid out and lovingly tended, are long gone, replaced by a patch of grass and nothing else. I miss the ingenious placement of those red geraniums, so vivid against the gray and white of the house.
I also miss our behtuk in the village, and the way the multicolored shutters shimmered in the afternoon sunlight. I miss the smell of rain, and the indescribably peaceful feeling of sitting on the rooftop and gazing down on the village. And my bebe and how she refused to acknowledge me as “Yasmine” and stubbornly persisted in calling me by my middle name, always.
I miss the miniature rose bushes from the house we lived in before that, and the level, green lawn. I miss watching the sunset from the laundry room window, and standing on the back porch to gaze at the stars, and reading so many more books in one year than I have collectively since then.
And before that – well, before that, there was this, and I came back, didn’t I?
They say you leave behind pieces of yourself, too, in every place that you live in and leave. I, of all people, know how true this is, having abandoned bits of myself everywhere, gradually shrugging off the qualities and habits and personality traits I found lacking, ill-fitting, awkward, unnecessary, or even, yes, embarrassing. But I also think one learns to pick up pieces, too, and so it becomes not just a matter of leaving behind pieces, but of learning to resourcefully substitute new ones for every bit you discard.
The individual self is a jigsaw puzzle.
Or maybe I’m just a sentimental fool.