Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Even More 50 Flames

I believe in Destine, Fate, Serendipity.
That there’s a deeper meaning to life and we’re born with a purpose.
You see, I was put on this Earth to accomplish a certain number of things during my lifetime… Of course, right now I’m so far behind that I’ll probably never die.

50 Flames- a exactly 50 words mini story!


In my dream,
I'm wearing a dress and some man whose face I never see, has his arm around my shoulders.
But the weight is comforting, his voice deep and there’s a bitter-sweet scent in the air.
I wake up with a peaceful feeling I can’t name…
perhaps happiness.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Erasmus: A Burning Hellhole of Bureaucracy

Now...why I decided I wanted to go on Erasmus isn’t important, what matters here, is all the bureaucratic craziness that ensued....

The day I applied for Erasmus, started out bad and got worse in a hurry.

I woke up late, but that’s not really that surprising because I’m constantly late, in fact I’m late so often, that when I’m on time, people think I’m early.
It was actually a good thing that day, because since I was, once again, late, I decided to skip class altogether and make that little trip to the administrative services I‘d been procrastinating for the past 4 weeks.

There’s an old joke that goes like this: “diplomacy is to continue to say ‘nice doggy’ until you can find a big enough rock.”
Now, administrative advisers at my University are absurdly good at finding big rocks, so they seldom bother with the appeasing flattery.

Result? I dreaded any and all experiences, somehow related to the academic services.

I’d a friend of mine who went on Erasmus, and she told me, the first step to apply was to speak with one of the advisers there, and so this series of unfortunate events began:

I walked trough the doors and looked around, trying to find someone to answer my questions, now this takes some skill, and particularly good eyesight, thankfully I had had an eye corrective operation last year, so no biggie.

“Hi” I said to the only visible (hardly so, since she was cooped up in a tiny cubicle in the farthest corner from the entry) University worker.
She was wearing a stiff grey suit and a incongruous amount of eye makeup. “I came to the Academic Services to--”

“I’m sorry, miss, we are closed at the moment.” She interrupted me, without even looking away from the computer screen.

“Hum? But--” I said looking at the rectangle of paper badly taped to the cubicle window, that stated the opening and closing hours of the Academic Services. “It says here it’s open from 10h to 12h and from 14h to 16h. It’s 10:45h.”

“Yes, yes, but there’s no one here that can attend you right now.”

“You are sitting right there!” I was starting to get pretty tired from talking to the side of her face, since she continued to look at the computer and ignore me.

Thankfully she finally looked up. “Yes, but I can’t possibly attend you, and my co-worker is on her lunch break, so come back later.” The silent or don’t came back at all went unsaid.

Still I was feeling persistent. “Why can’t you attend me, exactly? I haven’t even said what I came here to do!”

The women looked at me like I was a sort of talking piece of gun that she had just steeped on.
“I don’t really attend public, I’m the Senior--” and yes, she put a capital letter on the title “adviser, I can’t possibly go around answering everyone’s questions.”

“Well there’s no one else here,” I said reasonably “so it’s not really everyone’s questions, it’s just my questions, which there’s no one else here to answer, even though this are your attending hours.”

“Look here, I very busy at the mo--” she looked away from the computer and turning her back to me yelled to someone, somewhere inside the room behind her. “ Marjorie, you’re never going to believe who just added me to their facebook!”

Oh, you’ve gotta be kidding me! I thought as a blond, equally tacky dressed women showed up, probably Marjorie, and bending over to look at the computer, began a series of half-sentences, that basically consisted of: “ No way…”; “Really?”; “You, lucky you!”; etc.

I got pissed. Obviously.
“Now, look here--”

“We are closed for lunch break.” The one named Marjorie said while closing the little glass window on my face.

Ok....
That didn’t go very well, but I wasn’t ready to throw the towel just yet.
I decided to try to go talk with my Department advisor; he should know what to do.

I knew he was called Ricardo, because although I’d no previous interactions with him, personally, I remembered hearing my classmates saying his name a couple of times.

So I headed down to my Department, I entered the tiny, overstuffed room walked right up to the first woman I saw, and said with a determined tone:

“I’m here to see my Department Advisor Ricardo, about applying for Erasmus.”

For my audacity, I spent the next 20 minutes filling out paperwork.

Finally the woman called me, and showed me a place to sit, right in front of a man, who I presumed was Ricardo.

He was a pleasant-looking young fellow, which offered a nice variation, from the stiff older women I’d been interacting with so far. He had dark, short hair and chocolate-brown eyes behind round, black wired glasses.

“Hi, I’m Ricardo, you wanted to speak to me?”

“Yes, I hoping to apply for Erasmus--” I began.

“What’s your student number?” He rudely interrupted. I told him the number and after tapping it in his computer and taking a look, he continued. “Everything seems alright…”

“I hope so, I’m trying to apply for Erasmus--” I began again.

“Have you talked with the Academic services?” He, once again, brusquely interrupted.

“Well, I tried, but they always seem to be on lunch break…”

“You should really talk to them.” he said absently, still looking at the computer, and supposedly my transcripts.

“Right, right, but while they are on lunch break, and since I’m already here talking to you, I’d really appreciate if you could give me some information. In fact, I have a quest--”

Ricardo looked vaguely alarmed. “Hum… I have to stop you right there. We can’t do that here.”

I blinked. “Come again?”

“We are the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, we provide information. That’s what we do. We can’t answer questions.”

“Sure, I get it, but can’t you--?”

“No, no, no, if you want to ask any questions, you have to call the University. Or use the Internet. I’m sorry but we can’t answer your question here.”

“Let me get this straight, this is the place I go to get information about this University…”

“Yes…”

“And you have the information necessary to answer my questions here--”

“Absolutely!”

“But, and even thought you know how, you can’t answer my questions?”

“Yes that’s correct.”

“Oh, okay.” This was weird, but after the morning I just had, I could be cooperative.
Probably.
I leaned back in the uncomfortable plastic chair. “Okay, so can I use your phone to call the University?”

Ricardo spread his hands apologetically. “Ah, jeez, you know, we used to let people do that but some folks abused the phones, and so--”

“So you’re telling me, I can’t call my own University, using one of the phones in that University, to get anyone to answer my questions about that same University?”

“Well technically, we are only a department of the University--” I suddenly wondered if the guy was technically robot… or drunk, yes perhaps he was drunk, I sure as hell would be as soon as I got out of this bureaucratic hellhole.
“And that’s why we can’t let you do that.” He shrugged. “Sorry.”

I leaned forward and speared him with my most fearsome gaze. “I need. To use. Your phone.”

“No!” He hunched over and clutched the phone protectively to his chest. “It’s against policy!”

While I was still trying to untangle myself from this behemoth game of bureaucratic twister, he continued, “You will just have to go home and contact the University, on your own dime, like everybody else.”

And they still wonder why kids bring machine guns to schools....
TO BE CONTINUED

Thursday, November 11, 2010

More PoF... this time not about my ex, but about my feelings towards people's expectations of me...

I'm owned and I'm branded
I'm marked and I'm caged
I'm kept, I am bottled
But watch as I rage
You think I'll sit quietly?
You think I'll submit?
You think me obedient?
-Not even a bit
For my pride, it is stronger
My stubbornness, steal
My anger, a thunder
That all heaven can feel
I breathe and I wait
My mind knows what's true
And with my every breath
Know I defy you.

About Poems On Fire

I just wrote my first poem last week.
In class. (who said school takes away your imagination?)

Here it goes:

Dots
or
Drawing a Life

Fleeting in the back of my mind
Regret, forget forsaken time
Spent making plans to follow through
For this old soul has things to do.

Lives and dreams of drawing dot to dot
To later bind up on the plot
And drawing, the lifeline to displays
What’s been done through all my days.

I look at all of them and grin
At all the places they have been
And want to finish mine so fast
But can’t remember my own past.

Lives and life time's have passed this way
stippling in fevered haze
Just waiting for my pen to die
And finish this whole plot of mine.

So now, this plot looks finalized
And so I think to draw the lines
But horror comes as I prospect…
None of my small dots connect.

Poems On Fire

I don't miss you
I know that it's true
I don't need you
I think that we're through
I don't miss your voice
And I don't miss you smile
I don't miss your heat
In fact, it's all vile
I don't miss your hands
I don't miss your touch
I don't miss your kisses
Well… I don't miss them much
I don't have a need
I don't have a hole
My heart isn't hollow
Turned from fire to coal
This house isn't empty
A cold, lonely place
And I don't find where you were
Is a vast, empty space

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Pyromaniacs Unite or is it Ignite?

Made this for an english homework... names of streets were omited for my safety...

On The Street Where I Live…

On the street where I live, people walk around like they’ve been beamed in from Sesame Street. Everyone knows everyone.
Unfortunately, I’ve only just moved to this street, to number 11 (better than being number one? being number one, twice!) about a month ago, in fact, I hadn’t even seen this area of ---- before I moved, I feel like the new kid on the block.

Do you know that old adage, “All roads lead to Rome”? Well, not all roads lead to my street, actually only two do: you can enter from the above or below.

If you’re coming from above, that direction being from ---, then you get the crowded, noisy atmosphere, typical of the middle of the city.

Busy shops selling a great variety of goods: jewelry, clothing, carpets, car pieces. And of course, the different buildings providing services:

There are eye doctors, and teeth doctors, mad doctors and doctors for mad people, (I think they’re calling them psychiatrists these days). Lawyers, who are not really doctors, and an employment center for unemployed people, who aren’t mad but are getting there.

On the other hand if you’re coming from bellow, from the direction of -----, there’s the lovely, peaceful view of the Garden. Playground, with set of swings, included.
The fact that it’s mostly occupied by drunks, drug addicts and old men playing cards, only adds to its charm.

Overall an astonishing ten shop windows, I check those every morning.

Then there’s the smell, that rich and fragrant smell that seeps trough every crack on the walls; that flows through every open window, the smell of freshly baked bread… you see, there are three bakeries in my street.

But since we’re on the topic of food, I can honestly say the “soul of my street” are definitely the food stands, not true restaurants, they are more on the line of lemonade stands attached to buildings, regardless of their not-so-glamorous appearance, they’re the glue that joins this small united community, which I’ve inadvertently become a part off, in the last month, and there hasn’t been one day, when I walked down the pavement to my home, in which I haven’t seen groups, some large some smaller, of people taking a break out of their hectic schedules, chatting away, smoking, and happily munching on a tuna and mayonnaise sandwich.
Just sitting on the front steps of every building.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Burning French Style!

My life rocks! really!
I'm going to Paris, walk around the city and to visit DisneyLand, of course!
My life is a dream come true, my first plane ride will be next thurday, the 7 of Oct.
I'll be in France untill the 10, and I going for a boat ride in the Sena.
See you there, hum?
I'll write all about it, when I get back!
A Kiss To My Future Self!

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

HURRAY!!! ERASMUS BURN!

YEAH!
I got accepted into the University of Glasgow! for Erasmus!
Hurray!
I will be spending 3 to 5 months in Scotland! Studying and learning in english!
that's a lot for a small girl who never was on a plane and hasn't seen much besides her own country of Portugal and a little of Spain.
I'm going to have so much fun! and learn so much, it's gonna be such a fantastic experience!
I applied for Erasmus because my greatest dreams have always been to travel around the world and to write a book or more about it.
And to think I'm finally beguining to furfill that dream, it's just...
Astonishing!
Why the UK? because I simply knew I need a country where they spoke english, to start with! since I can't speak anything besides my onw language and english, lol And why Glasgow? because Scotland truly speaks to my heart, it's tradictions, landscape and the University! heavens, it's like a castle, truly a dream come true. I feel like a princess, a very studious and hard working princess though! can't embarass my own University, I'll be representing my all country after all!
Oh gods! my heart is jumping with joy!
I actually got accepted into Bristol first, but I just wanted to go to Glasgow so much, besides my mom wouldn't accept Bristol as a replacement, so I decided to wait, and guess what? the girl who had taken my glasgow-opening got sick and can't go!
So, guess who is right back on track?!
ME!!!!!!!!
Wish me luck!
When I write here again I will probably be on international space!
Oh, I love my life!
And I love you who are reading this! I love you so much! regardless if your are just someone who stumbled upon this by chance, if you are someone who knows me or if You are Me from the future, thank you! thank you for reading, thank you for caring! and thank you for letting me share with you my joy, my utter happiness in life, and my love for you, for the guy who came up with the Erasmus program, and for life.
My love to all, always,
+scalvim+

Thursday, March 18, 2010

A Burn Of Innovation

I had to do a "pecha kucha" (means chit-chat, in japanese) for my english class, it basically consist of an oral presentation, together with a slide show in a 20X20 model (20 slides, 20 seconds each).
The theme was innovations of the 20/21 century. I thought internet. Then cell phones. And while I was doing my research I came across this:

CELL PHONE NOVELS

to know more about this new and amaizing innovation, try reading this artical on the New York Times:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/12/22/081222fa_fact_goodyear#ixzz0iXaoX4LN


Either way, check out my apresentation!

1 slide

Hi! My name is Sara and I have a question!
How many people here have cell phones?
Come on! Raise your hand! I don’t have all the time in the world!

Just as I thought…
And I bet many of you can’t even imagine life without a cell phone, well I’m sorry to inform you, it’s possible!
Thousands of people trough thousands of years lived without cell phones and without even having a idea of what the hell a cell phone was!
In fact the idea itself is quite modern! Created in the eighties!
But before you get carried away, no, my work is not about cell phones… it’s about cell phone novels!
-------------------------

2 slide

What is a cell phone novel?

For those of you, who have never even heard of this, relax!
I was surfing down the net, when something interesting caught my eye.
This!
Apparently cell phones are used so prominently in Japan (and other Asian countries like South Korea and China) that people read entire novels on their cell phones. The serialized portions are released periodically over a period of time and since only 140 characters can be read on a cell phone screen at most, the portions are extremely short. Some people are comparing it to what Charles Dickens did in the 19th century with his novels, serializing them chapter by chapter.Out of the top ten bestselling novels in Japan last year (2007), five of them were mobile phone novels.
----------------------------

3 slide

The first cell phone novel was published in Japan in 2003 by a young online writer, Yoshi.
His first cell phone novel was called Deep Love, the story of a teenaged prostitute in Tokyo.
It became so popular that it was published as an actual book, with 2.6 million copies sold in Japan, then spun off into a television, a manga, and a movie.
The cell phone novel became a hit mainly through word of mouth and gradually starting to gain traction in China and South Korea among young adults.

Later on, it spread! and is now available pretty much everywhere!
Europe, USA, Africa...

Within three years of its release the cell phone book’s download site had accumulated over 20 million hits. Now some of the book companies are already starting to use this idea.
Harlequin, the famous romance novel publishing house, now provides a subscription service called Harlequin On The Go, which delivers serialized Harlequin stories directly to users cell phones.
Already there are a wide variety of book types available for cell phones, including non-fiction, poetry, graphic novels, short stories, and whole novels.
---------------------------------

4 slide

Ok, so everyone is thinking: “of all the amazing inventions out there…”
But hear me out!

I thought: Cell phones and schools are not usually associated together, at least not in a good way.
But this form of technology is one that has been undergoing great leaps and improvements, and perhaps one day soon teachers will be reprimand students for forgetting to bring their cell phones to class, or teachers will be listening to excuses from the student who didn’t complete his reading homework because the phone battery was recharging.
After all most of the functions we have now with a computer, are already or will soon be available in your cell phone!
-----------------------------

5 slide

And before anyone dismisses the idea of using cell phones for reading, consider how readily available these tools are.
If you care to look at the statistics you will find that in 2003, 70% of middle and high school students and 61% of upper elementary students had cell phones, and the numbers have only been growing since then.
Just looking at how the average high school students of today spends their time shows some of the differences from previous generations, as today’s students weekly spend more time on the internet (about 16 hours) than watching television (about 13 hours), and still find time for talking on the phone (about 7 hours) this without mentioning texting messages!

We have to move with the times!
------------------------------

6 slide

Ok, so let me tell you more about cell phone novels now that you’re beginning to see the advantages:
Popularized about five years ago, these novels are posted to the Web by authors who write them on their phones, constrained by the limitations of the medium.Then they are released electronically as serials, They are called keitai shousetsu.
The most successful of them are published on paper in a format that mimics the cell phone experience. Some are adapted into manga comic books and movies.
aIn the first six months of 2007, half of the top 10 bestselling novels in Japan were originally thumbtyped on a phone, and have averaged 400,000 copies each in sales.
Most of these novels are written by women, and involve some seriously messed-up subject matter.
--------------------

7 slide

Popularity spreading beyond young girls
The popularity of the genre is spreading beyond young girls.
Ten of the bestselling printed novels in Japan in 2007 were based on cell phone novels, and each sold around 400,000 copies. Strikingly, the sales were strongest for costly hardcovers, which readers who had already experienced the work on their cell phone screens bought as memorials. Starts alone has released 40 titles that have sold 10 million copies.
-------------------

8 slide

At the same time, parents and critics are concerned that these works, with their substandard grammar and focus on violence and sex, might be a bad influence on the young women and grade school girls that are their many dedicated readers.
One grade school teacher wrote a scathing review of “Koizora” (2005), calling it a “crime of the media” and suggesting that the story — which involves a young girl in a tumultuous relationship with a juvenile delinquent
"The stories traverse teen romance, sex, drugs and other adolescent terrain in a succession of clipped one-liners, emoticons and spaces (used to show that a character is thinking), all of which can be read easily on a mobile phone interface. Scene and character development are notably missing. "

The answers to this accusations about the themes vary, but mostly people say:
---“Aah. So it's basically simple teen literature? Well, that's okay then.”

-----------------------

9 slide

Most critics believe that the furor will die down.
“The era of selling a million copies of one book is over, with the rising number of writers and the shrinking number of youth in Japan,” they says. “However, this is a very sturdy industry that will continue to mature and grow.”

Not everyone is so sure. “I think Japanese readers, publishers and society wish for cell phone novels to have more impact than they do,” said Kim, 37, a researcher at the University of Tokyo who has studied the cell phone novel phenomenon. “The point is, how long it will last.”

For the writers part, they don’t seem interested in the long term anyway. “I really haven’t thought about what to do from now,” Kiki, the writer of 'I, Girlfriend' says. “If people think for a second that my free-writing in cell phone novels is interesting, that is enough. I want to keep on writing like that.”
-------------------

10 Slide

I'm not sure it is agood thing some of the best selling novels in Japan last year were written with no more than two thumbs and some spare time.
Nevertheless, it is getting people to read, and some of the writers are actually interested in improving their craft.
Personally, I love books.
I could never imagine using a tiny device that could store my entire library of books onto one small, portable chip, let alone reading it off of a thumbnail sized screen.
Now if you'll excuse me, I have some music to go listen to, right after I charge up my...oh...crap.

The end

Wanna try it?!
Go right ahead!

Software for creating Java books:
BookReader by Tequilacat http://tequilacat.nm.ru/dev/br/index-en.html
ReadManiac http://www.deep-shadows.com/hax/ReadManiac/index.htm
mjBook4: http://www.mjsoft.nm.ru/booke.htm

Online for creating Java books:
t41 readme: http://www.t41.nl/

Existing cell phone book libraries:
Audiobooks For Free: http://www.audiobooksforfree.com/
HaperCollins: http://mobilereader.harpercollins.com.au/
Harlequin On The Go: http://store.eharlequin.com/splash/mobile_intro.jhtml
MobileBooks: http://www.mobilebooks.org/
tx2ph: http://www.tx2ph.com/

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

101 Things I Will Do, Before My Life Burns Away!

1. I will finish University!
I know it sound banal, but it's a very important thing! And it's not just about finishing it, it's about doing so with good grades that I can be pround of and most of all ending the third or fourth year, and leving University with the feeling that I actually learned something, that even if I never use in my work life, at least I enjoyed learning and knowing them has somehow, help me grow and improve as a person.

2. I'll go on ERASMUS!
Once again same theory, I don't really need to go to erasmus, it not essecial to my life, or my future career. But I have never really travelled far, and I know I can do it! why don't people let me try?! (people being the Erasmus administrators at school! I don't really know if they will let me go, most precisely if they will give me enough money on the schoolarship, so that my mom will let me go, I kow I know, momma's girl.)
I really want this! to travel far, hear everyone speak the language I love: english, and to try out new stuff. To learn about a different culture, different people and that strange, new world out there!
~~more to come~~
(writen on a school computer, shool's computers sucks!)
See you when butter flies...
scalvim signs out!