University of Richmond

Archive for the 'Study Abroad' Category

Disconnection

I’m glad my mother not so subtly reminded me about Father’s Day (two days ago for me).  I would have completely blanked, which I did until she gave me a blank to fill.  “Hmm, what could today possibly be, Jordan?”  hehe.  I appreciate her sometimes.

I watched a comedian, Dylan Moran.  He was talking about Eastern religions and he said:

“You know, I’ve always found the parables from eastern religions dense and hard to penetrate.  Two monks were walking over a bridge, cherry blossoms falling down around them.  One monk says, ‘I’m quite thirsty.’ and the other monk replies, ‘yes, but I’m quite tall.”

I love it.  Guess you have to see him perform the piece for it to be funny but it is.  This is how I occupy my time between binges of studying bacteria.

My parents leave on Tuesday to come to Australia and they’ll get here on Thursday.  I’m actually excited to see them.  Thought I would still be on a Melbourne high at this point in the trip, but I’m ready to head up to the Great Barrier Reef and go snorkeling. 

 On the tram coming back from St. Kilda the other day I ran into a Canadian actor and his wife.  Obviously he was trying to avoid being identified (probably by me because I was snapping pictures of him without permission) because he only spoke in whispers and looked at me several times to make sure I wasn’t going to say anything.  I did take a picture, though, when he wasn’t looking and I’ve posted it.  Shame on me.  Yes, I’m sneaky…and silly come to that.  His name is Bruce Greenwood and he starred in such movies as:  National Treasure:  Book of Secrets (as the President), I, Robot (the guy who owns the Robot-building company), The Core (the commander before Hilary Swank), and Double Jeopardy (the husband who fakes his own death and sends Ashley Judd to prison for his murder).  Yeah, I watch way too many movies, but it was ABSOLUTELY him.  AH!  Pretty cool. 

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This is my quickly taken picture of Bruce Greenwood.  It’s pretty bad, but it was definitely him.

In other school-related news, I completed my first final on Friday.  Eighteen questions and 70% of my grade later, I think I did pretty well.  But we’ll have to wait until July to see just how well. 

 Gonna go study now.  Being responsible is hard for the last week of my study abroad experience.  But I will be responsible, I guess, hehe,

Jordan

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random picture of St. Kilda…bye!

Quotes of the week:

“For peace of mind, we need to resign as general manager of the universe.”
- Larry Eisenberg

 “When your sense of self is no longer tied to thought, is no longer conceptual, there is a depth of feeling, of sensing, of compassion, of loving, that was not there when you were trapped in mental concepts. You are that depth.”
- Eckhart Tolle

“As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to remake the world - that is the myth of the ‘atomic age’ - as in being able to remake ourselves.”
- Gandhi

“If you could get rid of yourself just once, the secret of secrets would open to you. The face of the unknown, hidden beyond the universe would appear on the mirror of your perception.”
- Rumi

“Possession of material riches, without inner peace, is like dying of thirst while bathing in a lake.”
- Paramahansa Yogananda

Meditation is not a way to enlightenment, Nor is it a method of achieving anything at all. It is peace itself. It is the actualization of wisdom, The ultimate truth of the oneness of all things.”
- Dogen

Sherlock Holmes and St. Kilda

Hey there,

My first final project is completed, my friends, and I am exhausted.  Yes, yes.  I deserve a break, but I won’t get one until June 27th.  And even then I have to wait two weeks to find out how I did on all this stuff.  I swear all my hair will have fallen out by the time I get back to Richmond.  But bald is in right now, right?  hehe.  Sure it’s sexy, but I think I want a little left over for the tropical fish on the Great Barrier Reef to nibble on when I go snorkeling. 

 Anyway, a few minutes ago I completed my 50% final essay for Victorian Crime Writing.  And, surprisingly since it’s due tomorrow, I think it’s pretty good.  Writing about Sherlock Holmes can be frustrating, let me tell you.  There are so many stories and each time I write about a different aspect I feel as if I’m going to confuse one criminal for another and my teacher will read it and have to flip back to that short story.  She’ll scratch her head and say, “Hmmm, I don’t remember Selden wearing a mask on his face.”  Because he didn’t.  No, no.  I didn’t make those kind of mistakes.  I just hope my argument is logical and coherent.  If I can get away with that, I’ll be very happy with myself.  And an A couldn’t hurt.

 My next final is on Friday and I start that studying adventure tomorrow.  That final is worth 70% of my grade.

 This weekend, though, I took a lovely long break on my black rock at St. Kilda.  Yes, yes I know I should be study, study, studying.  But it was 75*F out on Sunday!  How could I pass up an opportunity like that?  I didn’t even need my gloves, sweat shirt, and hoody to be warm.  There were no waves and it was an extreme low tide which means that I could see the sand on the bottom and it was stained the turquoise green of the sea.  Three exciting things happened there that made it one of the best days in Melbourne so far. 

First, a man in a full-body, black, leather motorcycle outfit walked to the rocks, climbed down to the water’s edge, and released eleven bunches of yellow flowers into the still water…and then he left.  As little ceremony as that.  And here I was thinking I could just jump into the water–it looked blessedly refreshing.  But I guess better not…at best he’s fulfilling a personal goal and at worst it’s like one of those roadside flower displays marking the place where someone met their end.  Only this one was taken with the tide.  Well, actually, it floated in my direction and then just laid there in front of me for a good thirty minutes (and formed a gigantic M) before moving on and then coming back again when the tide moved in the opposite direction toward the shore.  It was a spectacular beginning to a vividly wonderful day.

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Second, I am now a part of St. Kilda.  Or at least I left a piece of myself there.  Well, okay.  It was a few drops of blood.  And it was accidental.  But anyway, when the flowers drifted back by my spot, I decided that I wanted one of the flowers for my journal.  So I climbed down onto this particular rock covered in mussels and tried to reach my hand out without toppling into the water.  But I couldn’t reach it.  So I took off one of my shoes and used my toes to fish out one of the bundles from the water.  Each of the bundles was made up of fifteen or twenty little flowers so I took one of the little flowers (ever so respectfully) and returned the rest of the bundle to its watery bed.  In the process of bringing my foot back in, however, I accidentally stabbed my big toe on a piece of sharp dry coral on the top of the rock.  Yes, I’m brilliant.   Anyway, I went chumming for the day.  If there weren’t any sharks before then there were a few minutes later, hehe.  It was bleeding pretty well so I didn’t want to put my sock and shoe back on, so I slowly (very very gingerly) maneuvered my way back to my rock and cleaned it up with a spare napkin I happened to have (don’t ask me why I had one, I certainly couldn’t tell you).  Along the way back to my rock, however, I found an amazing colorful shell.  It’s pretty flat but still one of those coiling ones and the inside is the color gas makes when it’s on the street–all rainbow sheen.  Beautiful.

 Third, I saw a ten-ray starfish as I was leaving the pier for the day.  The sun was setting and I figured I should be getting back.  At first I thought it was a big piece of coral and the surrounding coral made it look like it had sharp ends.  But no, it was a starfish.  Gorgeous it its big, multi-armed glory.

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 blue light and the sensation of sensation,

Jordan

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Quote of the week:

“Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.”  - Henry David Thoreau

“You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in every moment.” - Henry David Thoreau

“It’s not what you look at that matters; it’s what you see.” - Henry David Thoreau

A Religious Conversion

There is a church a block from my dorm that freaked me out the first month I was in town.  It has a tower on the side of it and at the top metal bars act as supports to keep the stone structure that comes to a peak from collapsing in on the tower.  Obviously, I don’t know what parts of churches are called.  In any case it freaked me out because one night as I was passing by and lightning flashed in the distance I had a vision of Dracula.  It was straight out of a Bram Stroker dreamscape.  It’s funny, though.  I love dracula–I love the idea and the novel and some of the film adaptations so I should have liked the fact that the church reminds me of it.  But I didn’t.  It’s a creepy place to pass by. 

I found out it was a Greek Orthodox Church when I decided to write a novel about it.  And then it closed three days later.  Quite the coicidence.  However, for the past three Sundays I’ve walked by the church and its large congregation of Indian patrons.  It’s alive again with the sound of children and the presence of so many colorful saris.  Unfortunately, it would have been much more interesting if it had transformed over the semester into a Hindu temple–I might have actually gone to a service if it was one.  Sigh, it’s a Christian church but it’s still beautiful and I’m no longer freaked out when I pass by it.  The smiling faces definitely improve the aura of the place. 

It’s funny to think that one religion can move out and another can move into the same place of worship.  What does that say about religion in general, though these two have a lot in common?  I think it’s bizarre that people who claim they believe in an omniscient, omnipotent being try to pigeon-hole It into a single religion.  How can a single religion–a manmade construction subject to man’s faults–encompass an infinite force?  Faith I understand.  Possession I don’t. 

 At St. Kilda this weekend (yet again sans camera), I saw a ship that was straight out of Pirates of the Carribean sail away into the mist under a  red setting sun.  It’s been really foggy here too.  Every morning the world outside my window looks like the Stephen King story The Mist–I can’t even see the road at the bottom of my building.

 And I’m done with classes.  The exam period began yesterday and I have a ten-page paper due next Tuesday.  My parents arrive in seventeen days and my birthday is in one month and twelve days.  I still don’t want to be twenty. 

reflections in a thousand faces, each its own,

Jordan

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This is the only part of the church that I find beautiful–this either the tree of knowledge or the tree of eternal life but either way, it’s eye-catching.

Quotes of the week:

“God, to me, it seems, is a verb, not a noun, proper or improper.” - Richard Buckminster Fuller

“God loved the birds and invented trees.  Man loved the birds and invented cages.” - Jacques Deval