Friday, November 29, 2013

So what?

I've been reading several blogs with the usual 'what I am thankful for this year'
Ok, I'm not American, I don't much care about Thanksgiving and stuff. But it's an interesting question, as it forces us to look for the good things in our lives.

The only answer I came up with was "I'm thankful that life is not fair".
I bet it's not what you expected... or at least I hope so, otherwise you'll get bored easily reading my rambling.

So: I really think life is not fair. I'm not the smartest, nicest, most .../best at... (fill in the blanks with whatever you want) in the world – or even in my tiny universe. As one of my friends said about herself – but it applies to me as well, I'm average. I don't much like this thought, though. But that's another story.

Even if I'm average, I pretty well got everything I wanted. And when I didn't know what I wanted (yeah, that happens every now and then, you cynic people!), life threw something at me that in the end proved to be better than I ever expected.

I’ve been a pain to some of my friends, I made weird (or damn wrong) choices, I didn’t care about stuff I should have cared about, I’m a selfish bitch… and yet I have a pretty good life.

Life’s not fair. So what? It worked out well for me so far.

And a special thought to my college French teacher who reminded us often that good girls go to Heaven and bad girls go wherever they want. I like to think I am part of the second category.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Some bad Romanian music... and it's antidote

Coming back on an older subject: Romanian music.
I think I shared with you some groups that I like and I consider as good music. It might be a clear sign I'm getting old, I only like those that no longer play.
Now I have to share some that are pretty bad. By my standards, so it might not mean much, I guess. Except to me. I digress. That is soooo unusual…
Back to the topic. There’s an expression in Romanian highly used since the last… 25 years (Jeez, it’s been that long!). It’s “since the Revolution…”. Almost any conversation can start with this. And it’s all the Revolution’s fault – or the governments. You guessed: governments “since the Revolution”.
Anyway, there is a point to this, I think. Because I was about to write that “since the Revolution” there’s been a surge of really really stupidly horribly bad music in Romania. Might have been a general (natural?!) evolution, but all I saw was my simply surprising Romania.
And this is when the category of “manele” has been born. It’s really quite indescribable. What follows is my view on it. It is (or supposed to be) a mix of popular music and one “no-way-this-is-a-man” singing something after he drank tons of unidentified alcohol. This is one famous guy who was (is??) one of the ‘leaders’ of this type of music: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHNI6FXXbIA
Ok, the music is what it is and I won’t comment on it further. The lyrics are worse. They speak about love, women, heartaches, money, how cool & powerful a person is if he has the right car/money/clothes, whatever. A total mess all in all.
And now for the antidote I promised in the title.
Also ‘since the Revolution’ we have finally seen emerging some rap/hip-hop Romanian music. I’m not a big fan, but it was pretty good for the style, I would guess.
There’s one group though who I really like, called Parazitii (yes, it means parasites…) – and of course it’s mainly because of the lyrics. This kind of music relies on them heavily. And they have a terrific song that I listen regularly just to reassure myself that there are still normal people in Romania. The song is this one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qATTFDPLgaQ
 
And this is just an extract of why I love this song:
[…]
Imi place sa ma vad pe TV in cadru,
Mulumesc lu' mama ca mi-a pus televizor prin cablu.
Am 113 centimetri,
Sunt inalt in ochii tai,
Cu pantofii mei de lac las urme 53, ma vrei?


Femeile si banii sunt doar in capul tau, ba!
Bate, bate-bate inima, ti-e rau?
Toata lumea stie ca esti doar un lingau, ba!
Bate, bate-bate inima, ti-e rau?
[…]

In orice club ma duc, ma-ncurca
Pantalonii domnisoarelor pe juma' de buca.
Dedic aceasta piesa acelui tip de Casanova
Care-nvrte volanul de Renault pe Dacie Nova.


With my translation:

[…]
I like to see myself on TV
Thanks mom for getting me cable
With my 113 cm
I am tall in your eyes
With my cheap shoes I leave a size 53 trace
Do you want me?

Chorus:
Women and money are just in your head,
Your heart beats, beats, beats – are you sick, man?
Everybody knows you’re just a boot licker
Your heart beats, beats, beats – are you sick, man?
 […]
In any club I go I’m bothered
By the ladies’ pants that hardly cover half their ass
I dedicate this song
To that type of Casanova
That steers a Renault’s wheel
On a Dacia Nova.
 […]

Disclaimer: I realize my translation is crappy. It is way funnier in Romanian, probably also because it refers to some common stereotypes over there.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

So now I have a cat...

I've been reading this recently:
It contains very interesting ideas that I am trying to put into practice.
First advice is to spend 10 minutes, twice a day, with each of your kids (face-to-face, as we like to call it). You need to play with him exactly the way he wants to. It's called Mind, Body and Soul Time... and the purpose is to completely focus on each kid and give him the attention he need on a regular basis. This should help decrease their kind (or not so kind) requests for attention when you are trying to do something else. So I would be less likely to want to scream that often during the day. Win-win, right?

Now why did I talk about a cat in the title of this post? It is because since this week-end we really have one. A cat, yes. I am really really happy about that, as I love both cats and dogs and our current lifestyle (meaning about twelve hours out of our homes every day - I hope robbers do not read my blog!) does not allow us to have a dog. So a cat is the next best thing to having one of each (I heard you gasp, mister!)
All this to say that this morning, looking at the cat I realized it also needs attention. And I was wondering if I should schedule it in the 10-min routine. Like it was my third kid.

Then I started thinking why I prefer a cat to a third child.

  • I do not care if it "cries" in the middle of the night. I can ignore it and not to prison or whatever.
  • It knows where to "do its business" on its own - no diaper-investment, no running around the house "I'll catch you to change that smelly thing stuck to your a@#!"
  • It knows how to eat (and doesn't throw food everywhere when it's not what it wanted in the first place)
  • Can't ask for chocolate. Or cartoons. Or toys. Or more chocolate.
  • Seems happy when you are there and just scratching its head.
  • Doesn't mind if you shout, ignore or move them somewhere they don't want to be (like: out of my way, out of the bedroom, or not on my curtains)


I think this list is potentially infinite. Does this make me a bad mother?!