Wednesday, February 28, 2007

I Did It ...

No I did not finish my chapter. But I did reserve my copy of J.K. Rowling's final book in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, due out on July 21, 2007. I wasn't a true Harry Potter fan when Book 1 was released. As a matter of fact, I didn't become an avid reader and fan until Book 3. The reason? I had heard over the blogs that a Christian fundamentalist group was staging an anti-Harry Potter rally somewhere in Philadelphia. That the book was heretical and blasphemous and yadda yadda. The rally ended with a book burning of J.K. Rowling's works.

Now, I don't care much about anyone's religious affiliation. I grew up Catholic and I was educated by Jesuits in high school. I'm not a devout Catholic like others, but I do recognize and live with its influence.

But of all the things anyone could ever do, book burning is a huge no-no. It's anti-intellectual, and fascist. But, in a way, I'm glad because I've always found that 99.9% of whatever organized religion condemns, I will generally love especially if it's coming from the Catholic Church. And I love reading J.K. Rowling's fantastic world of Harry Potter.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Huh? Wha'?

Yes it's been much too long since I've last posted here. That's actually a good thing because I've been productive and writing my chapter and reading more law reviews on Virginia v. Black. At least, I'm trying to fit that in whenever I can on top of teaching classes.

I've been following Tim Hardaway's anti-gay comments and the subsequent outcry which resulted in his banishment from the All-Star weekend in Las Vegas. One in particular, has Charles Barkley not only admonishing Hardaway's comment, but stating that he should've known better. That as an African American and a black man, the history of discrimination, negative stereotypes, and violence should've taught him better than to say something so ignorant and incendiary.

[UPDATE: Yet another video removed for TOS violations.]

I was watching it and to my surprise Barkley seemed like the elder statesman. Well, rough around the edges, but he got the gist of it. Anyways, I came across this clip and consider it as a "different" to the usual public condemnation and subsequent "apology" by Hardaway. It stars George Takei, first shown on the Jimmy Kimmel Show, and I love the fact that it throws the stereotypes back at Hardaway. I think it works quite well.

[UPDATE: Damn this was a good video clip too.]

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Writing Fever

Like many friends I know, I was under pressure to finish and mail out a dozen fellowship applications. I get quite anxious over these things. It just needed to be postmarked but on February 1st, I was feverishly typing/editing away the night before, left early for Kinko's to make copies the next day, drove to the Post Office and waited in line -- fortunately it wasn't that long -- and made a frantic drive to campus in time for class. I could've done it after class, but I don't like carrying around these applications which includes my letter, abstract, dissertation prospectus, and cv. That's a heavy load to be hauling. Not only that, I needed some peace of mind knowing that my applications are off and away.

I have one more application due next week and it looks as though that will be it for this round of fellowships. It's extremely competitive and I know I should cast a wider net, but I did limit myself to mostly east coast schools. I didn't want to be that far away from home.

I'm making slow progress on my chapter. Working, even as a part-timer, does take quite a lot of time from the day. It may not look much but there have been plenty of moments when I thought to myself, "Where did the day go?" And then you fall asleep. We don't notice the passage of time, nor do we remember what exactly took so much of it in the first place. In the end, you just know that you do not have time to write.

A friend actually monitored all the activities she did in the day. It's a diary of your time. She had a large pad of paper and recorded the activity she was doing and how long it took. So for example, a typical day's recording looks something like this:

  • Cooked/ate breakfast - 30 min.
  • Answered emails - 60 min.
  • Surfed the internet - 45 min.
  • Cooked/ate lunch - 60 min.
  • Bank/paid bills - 45 min.
  • Drove to campus - 35 min.
  • Lectured -120 min.
  • Office Hours - 120 min.
  • Drove home - 45 min. (rush hour)
  • Cooked/ate dinner - 45 min.
  • Watched TV (an episode of "Heroes") - 60 min.
  • Dissertation writing - 30 min.

(This is not me by the way. But it looks rather familiar to my daily routine ... Fine! It does look like my average day!) Anyways, the point of doing this is to look at all the time that is spent on non-dissertation related activities. There's some activities like driving that cannot be negotiated especially if it's rush hour traffic. But there are others that could be cut down and the idea is to redivert that time to dissertation writing. I find it really useful and revealing to see how my day goes. You keep a daily log and review it to make sure you're keeping yourself accountable. In the end it's still about making time to write that gets the dissertation done.