Love

The little Maid would have her will

Been stuck on this song since I finally watched 500 Days of Summer. :)

Note though, that I am hardly a hope­less romantic. I prob­ably sub­scribe more to Summer’s views on life and on love than Tom’s. Or maybe the little sis­ter. She seemed wise!

Monday, November 16th, 2009 Love, Movies, Music 3 Comments

No, no drama, no, no, no, no drama

Fergie & Will.I.Am in "My Humps"Highlight of my evening:

Allison says:
do you espe­cially like fergie’s sil­ver pen­cil skirt?
- justin — /​/​who’s taken BIOL 335? says:
…how could you tell =P
i think it’s just a shame she doesn’t dance with it more
Allison says:
maybe it was too dif­fi­cult
- justin — /​/​who’s taken BIOL 335? says:
prob­ably
haha
but the way to my heart is not really through a pen­cil skirt!
Allison says:
then what is it?
booty shorts?

Long time the manxome foe he sought

It’s been a while since I’ve really had any soul-​searching, coeur-​de-​coeur rev­el­a­tions which, I think, must be some indic­a­tion that I’m relax­ing! The unex­amined life, while not worth liv­ing, is rather relaxed – intro­spec­tion takes a lot of effort. While milling about my microb­lo­go­sphere, I’m pleased to see that most people are relax­ing this sum­mer and for those who aren’t, at least they’re adopt­ing healthy cop­ing strategies.

The other day, after hav­ing heard that Archie picked Veronica, I spoke with A about types of love and it brought back memor­ies of PSYC 100. For the unini­ti­ated, here are some of the most inter­est­ing facts about love and attraction:

  • attrac­tion is primar­ily based upon three, some­times four, prin­ciples: prox­im­ity (anti­cip­a­tion of inter­ac­tion leads to more pos­it­ive inter­ac­tions; mere expos­ure is enough to stim­u­late lik­ing), sim­il­ar­ity (we like that which is sim­ilar to us – our ingroup), mutual lik­ing (we like those who like us) and phys­ical appear­ance (it’s a bio­lo­gical thing – infants even stare longer at uni­ver­sally attract­ive people – it’s an instinct!)
  • Sternberg’s tri­adic the­ory of love includes three com­pon­ents: pas­sion (feel­ings of romance, sexual attrac­tion), com­mit­ment (the decision to remain together), and intim­acy (feel­ings of close­ness, bondedness)
    • Nonlove has none of these elements
    • Liking/​friendship is com­posed of intimacy
    • Infatuated love is com­posed of passion
    • Empty love is com­posed of com­mit­ment (think – arranged mar­riages with no real love between people)
    • Romantic love is com­posed of pas­sion and intimacy
    • Companionate love is com­posed of intim­acy and commitment
    • Fatuous love is com­posed of pas­sion and commitment
    • Consummate love is com­posed of all three elements
  • oxy­to­cin (the hor­mone that is upreg­u­lated dur­ing breast­feed­ing, thus bond­ing mother and child) is the hor­mone of love – it facil­it­ates bond­ing and attach­ment with that whom we share the experience

For more on love, you can watch Helen Fisher’s TED talk:

Monday, June 1st, 2009 Love No Comments

the rest is silence

Just had my ENGL 348 final today: the sec­tions were pretty dif­fi­cult and I felt so drained by the end. I think my Coriolanus and Winter’s Tale sec­tions were strong, The Tempest much weaker and MacBeth up for debate.

I’m really going to miss the class though! Dr. Sirluck was always sup­port­ive and it was really great meet­ing some new people. C and R were really great, I hope they suc­ceed at whatever it is they will embark upon! R was so thought­ful, he even sent around some music he made to cheer people up dur­ing study­ing. Class act!

I really like Usher’s “Will Work for Love” lately. I’m prob­ably over-​analyzing but it works! It just makes me think about how there’s so little love in the world some­times, so he has to work for it – not food, not water, not a safe place to stay, but for love. How respect­able. When he says, “got love to spare?” it just makes me think of all the unloved people in this world – the mar­gin­al­ized, the eld­erly, etc. How very sen­ti­mental of me. And how uncharacteristic.

I’ve got to quickly fin­ish study­ing for ENGL 357 for tomor­row – it’s entirely open-​book! I’m going to be mak­ing notes on what I want to write about. Unfortunate that we have to write it in Lasserre though, I find the build­ing mildly creepy. And I’ll have to pol­ish my term paper and read­ing ques­tions to hand in…yikes! 80% of my mark will be sub­mit­ted to Dr. MacKenzie tomor­row! I bet­ter do well…

I’ve been so addicted to Restaurant City lately, it’s ridicu­lous. K tried to trade me his use­less pep­p­er­oni for my use­ful items. I’m unamused. And L is mer­cen­ary! Asking for Lobster for a Mango. *sigh* It’s a Prisoner’s Dilemma game…hope people enable each other to succeed!

Had my Minischool inter­view yes­ter­day on the fly. Wonder how it went?

Oh! And on the spur of the moment, I’ll be watch­ing Les Misérables at the Arts Club Theatre in July with a few friends! Shame on me for get­ting tick­ets so late, but it’ll be great! John Mann and Jonathan Winsby will be in there, two of my favour­ite local act­ors. They’re so tal­en­ted! I hope they do “One Day More” justice – if they don’t, I will be severely under­whelmed. I’ll share a few of my thoughts here!

Lest on too close sight I miss the darling illusion

I won­der if I have some con­tempt for hope­less romantics or if I simply find overly emo­tional dis­plays of affec­tion abhor­rent. I am, as I have poin­ted out, a sin­gu­larly unemo­tional per­son. I think that emo­tions must threaten me, they occlude my already foggy per­cep­tion of the world. Since I was very young, I knew that any ink­lings of “romance” I thought I’d feel before I were 18 would simply be flights of fancy and, of course, I ask myself often, “where is fancy bred – in the heart or in the head?” And so as I round upon the turn into adult­hood, I won­der if I’ve been made heart­less or if there is some heart beat­ing beneath the ice and metal?

I know there must be some­thing that makes me feel empathy. I feel it every­day, when I look upon pain­ful images of need­lessly slaughtered chil­dren in Darfur, when I think about my life of sump­tu­ous con­sump­tion on the same planet where infants die daily from pre­vent­able dis­eases for lack of medi­cine or hos­pital care. It pains me to see the eld­erly struggle along in their eld­erly lives, for­got­ten and neg­lected, the detritus of an ever-​accelerating soci­ety. I won­der if I should grow old like them and slowly, slowly, surely, surely, draw to a leis­urely, unex­pec­ted, abrupt stop?

I woke up bright and early today, entirely unchar­ac­ter­istic for me at any time of year. I must be accli­mat­ized to the 8am classes – I think this is a good change. After eat­ing a brief break­fast with my fam­ily (dur­ing which I saw S! I won­der how fares his bio­tech­no­logy pro­gram? He’s always so busy.), I hopped aboard what I pre­sumed to be a 41 UBC bus. Of course, I had fallen asleep and we reached Dunbar and every­one hopped off the bus. I woke up and in my drowsy haze, I wondered why every­one was wait­ing out­side the bus…and I slowly made my way out to real­ise it was a 41 To Crown. How irrit­at­ing! Holiday sched­ule, I should have known.

And after fin­ish­ing some per­func­tory tasks at work, I real­ised that every food out­let within a walk­able radius had closed for Easter so I dragged myself to the Village to buy some food. I guess the walk­ing was good for me – I hate eat­ing at MacDonalds. The iced cof­fee was good though, so com­pli­ments to the line cook for that.

I’m only knee-​deep into my paper for ENGL 357 but I really should been up to my neck in research. On the bright side, I’ve brought home lots of research to sift through so I can rearrange them to form a cohes­ive paper. I’m so excited! I bet­ter do it quickly…and there’s the issue of the read­ing ques­tions! Agh!

Picked up my ENGL 348 paper from Dr. Sirluck’s house today. It was delight­ful! I would have lingered a little longer, told Dr. Sirluck that she is an amaz­ing pro­fessor and a magi­cian. That she has utterly impacted my philo­sophy of English lit­er­at­ure bey­ond former recog­ni­tion. And I did not. I politely took a brownie from the plate of pastries that she proffered, glanced at her curi­ous cat and uttered a few nervous pleas­ant­ries. I ran off rather quickly.

An A for my paper! Hurrah, I am cer­tainly excited for the rest of my exams now. I feel I can really take them on!

Back to study­ing and pre­par­ing for tutoring…