Tag Archives: viking.opinions

From the Xanga Archives: Welcome to the Institution

2 May

Well everybody, I’m getting married! You heard it here first. I proposed in a karaoke booth after singing “Happy Together” with Laura and she said yes. I’m so excited!

Now begins the annoying, convoluted, and potentially long process of getting myself a UK visa. The multifarious intricacies of the application process and of UK immigration law in general reminded me of a post I wrote on my embarassingly personal old blog, soulgrowl.xanga.com, when I was frustrated with the unnecessarily fiddly bureaucracy at my alma mater, Occidental College. Here it is, followed by a classic cartoon that also came out of my frustration. Enjoy!

Welcome to the Institution. We hope you enjoy your stay.

Your first week will be spent in rigorous and delightful orientation programs. You will be tickled, yelled at, washed, spun to dry, and fed. You will not be given maps, instructions, pamphlets, guidebooks, calculators, refunds, lemons, or access to our file cabinets. Please be aware that the Institution assumes no responsibility if you are unable to be oriented.

During the first week, you will attend mandatory socialization seminars, in addition to safety, health, sexual hygiene, oral hygiene, moral hygiene, awareness, recognition, and catharsis training sessions. You will not be briefed on protocol, expectations, disciplinary measures, animal husbandry, home improvement, “Home Improvement,” or authoring. Carnivals are provided free of charge every 10 minutes in the parking structure. Failure to engage in at least 3 carnivals by the end of the second week will result in automatic suspension of your identity. If you do not reclaim your identity by the end of the third week by filling out the requisite application form, with all required stamps and signatures, your files will be purged from the Office and moved into the Department, where they will come before a panel to decide on a date for their partial incineration. Applications to reclaim your identity will be unavailable after the third week. Thereafter, you may petition for a retroactive application with a minimum of 50 signatures (40 of which must be from people you have never seen before). Your petition will then be brought before the Committee, who will carefully review your petition and reach a decision by no later than 5:00 PM (HST) on the third Thursday of the following month. If your petition is accepted, you may apply to reclaim your identity, but you will incur a penalty fee of no less than 1/250 of the Supervisor’s projected salary for the next fiscal year (this is approximately equivalent to the cube of one month’s engagement fees). Retroactive applications will only be accepted after a thorough examination by the Office. You must explain all extenuating circumstances (including the number of igloos in which you have resided, and the length of time spent in each one) in an essay not to exceed five (V) words in order to prepare your retroactive application for the recommendable procedures.

For more information on orientation and identity reclamation regulations, please revisit Part B of your Institutional Handbook, Section 2, item J, psalm 4:23, line 3.

During your first year at the Institution you will be offered the opportunity to sit at a desk. It is recommendable that you accept this opportunity and thank the Supervisor with at least three (3) signatures in the log.

Approximately 55% (or 2/3) of your time at the Institution must be spent trying to destroy the other 45%. The Intranet will assist you in determining the most efficient and acceptable way to manage your percentages. Percentage negotiations are not permitted, except in the case of accidental death (excluding murder, suicide, Japanese “love suicide,” or spider bites), in which case your family will be reimbursed with at least 35% of your time. Time spent in mandatory orientation sessions, form completion exercises, spheres, or altered states of mind are considered extraneous and/or frivolous and will not count towards your time quota. The Department recommends that you attain your time quota by enlisting in activities specified by the Annual Report on Substantive Activities (ARSA) published by the Institutional Commission on Fulfillment and Development (ICFD). Activities listed in the ARSA database from previous years are considered problematic and will be discussed (we recommend discussing problematic activities with the Associate Mentor, who has access to this paragraph). Contradictions found between various ARSA publications should be reported to the Office, who will then audit the ARSA as well as the Institutional Handbook and the United States Constitution to determine the flavor of the activities in question (for more information on this process, please consult our page on ARSA Degustation and Digestion, located on the G drive, accessible through any Intranet outpost operating on LINUX or Windows 95). After the audit has been completed, you will be asked to undergo a routine physical examination from the Medical Center to test for psychosis, IBS, foreign languages, dental caries, and acne. If you are diagnosed with breast cancer or Remedial Pregnancy Disorder (RPD), we will be forced to (temporarily) revoke your identity until the Council on Breast Cancer Misdiagnosis has touched your genitals (occasionally, this may cause discomfort and possibly asphyxiation; you will be given more information on this during the mandatory health training sessions administered during the first week). Your physical examination can only occur after you receive your Institutional Insurance card, which is provided to all users of slang for approximately 113% of your current insurance premiums (or the square of two (2) months’ engagement fees). Please keep in mind that you will not be permitted to engage in any Substantive Activities unless you have verified your identity and stapled it to your identification badge, to be carried at all times.

If you wish to submit activities from other Institutions to count towards your time quota, you will be served a subpoena and a light brunch. In accordance with the Institutional Mission Statement and the Intranet User Agreement, you may not refuse the light brunch (free samples of this brunch are available upon request, but please be aware that you will only receive the most tasty morsels of the brunch usually reserved for the Trustees). Failure to attend the brunch or accept the free samples will result in immediate suspicion and cause unrest in the Department.

If you have any questions, please feel free to submit yourself to the Brig, located on the basement level of the Founder’s Hall of Symbiotics.

Tokyo, Mon Amour? 東京、モナムール?

10 Sep

I’ve always loved Tokyo. Even before I’d been there, I loved it, and then I loved it even more once I finally got a chance to visit. And I loved it more still after I learned to read. Y’know in the beginning of “Manhattan,” when Woody Allen talks about how much he loves New York? Well, swap out “New York” for “Tokyo” (and maybe “George Gershwin” for “Pizzicato Five”) and that should give you a pretty good idea of how I feel about Japan’s eastern capital.

Needless to say, I’ve always wanted to live there. But on my last visit to Tokyo – on my very last vacation within Japan – I realized that I’m really glad I didn’t. Not that I could have – it is exceedingly rare for JETs to be placed any closer to Tokyo than Saitama – but I’m glad I wound up in Kitakyushu.

Actually, let me restate this: it would have been awesome to live in Tokyo, totally awesome, maybe too awesome. I would have been more than glad to have lived there, and if I ever go back to Japan, I would easily choose Tokyo over Kitakyushu. Because when you live in Tokyo, you’ve got it all – the food, the entertainment, the shopping, the art, the Japanese (or the English, if that’s your thing). It’s such an awesome city that there’s little reason to leave. And many foreigners living there seldom do.

Which is fine, and understandable. But it’s also sort of a shame. One of the things that makes Tokyo so great is that it’s almost nothing like the rest of Japan – but that’s also what makes the rest of Japan so great. I loved traveling around to smaller Japanese cities, with their quirky attractions and unique histories, and to the Japanese countryside, with its gorgeous scenery, quaint onsen towns, and delicious local foods.

It worries me to think that I may not have experienced Japan’s periphery if I had lived in Tokyo. I would have missed out on so very much. But Tokyo is massive, insane, constantly changing, and beautiful in a way, with infinite backstreets to explore and the best public transit system I’ve ever seen. It also has outstanding ramen, luxury cinemas, exciting beer bars, a diverse music scene, and hundreds of other “only in Tokyo” quirks. Once you grasp how much there is to do there – and that doesn’t take long – it becomes very hard to leave.

It was especially hard this time around. But I’m satisfied with my life in Japan; I feel I made the most of it. Someday I hope to go back – I’m still not done with Tokyo, and I’ve never been to Shikoku or northern Honshu – but for now, I’m just excited to move to England.

I’ll just have to make sure I get out of London every now and then.

My Fantasy Beer Dinner 僕の空想の麦酒ディナー

26 Feb

I was just wondering what you folks would think might be the ultimate beer pairing dinner. The wife and I where thinking of talking about one on our pub cast so I thought I would get help from the best beer people in the world

Price is no option so go hog wild
pick a beer and food to go with it

course
1 appitizer
2 soup and/or salad
3 fish/seafood
4 main course meat
5. desert
6 after dinner drink.

Thanks for the help

Taelec, beeradvocate.com
This is a topic that was posted by a fellow Disciple on Beer Advocate earlier today. Spelling mistakes and punctuational inconsistencies notwithstanding, this is one of the most thought-provoking posts I’ve read in the Beer Advocate forums in a while. I spent literally an hour contemplating it at work today.

I took some liberties with the course order, but here is what I ultimately decided on for my ultimate fantasy beer dinner:

  1. Amuse-Bouche/Apertif
    Oil-Cured Moroccan Black Olives, Feta Cheese-Stuffed Manzanilla Olives, and Kalamata Olives
    Beer: New Glarus Enigma
  2. Hors D’oeuvre
    Monkfish Liver with Fresh Wasabi, Grated Ginger, and Ponzu
    Beer: La Fin Du Monde
  3. Soup
    Cream of Leek and Potato Soup with White Truffles, Cave-Aged Emmental, and Fresh Chives
    Beer: Spaten Optimator
  4. Seafood
    Charcoal-Grilled Miyajima Oysters with Yuzu-Green Chili Dressing
    Beer: Stone Smoked Porter or Guinness Extra Stout
  5. Sorbet
    Duchesse de Bourgogne Sorbet with Scandinavian Ginger Snaps
  6. Main Course
    Tea-Smoked Duck with Blackcurrant-Mustard Seed Sauce, Brussels Sprouts and Fennel Sauteed with Onions
    Beer: Trappist Westvleteren 12
  7. Salad
    Baby Spinach, Pomegranate Seeds, and Chevre with Aged Balsamic Vinegar and Sesame Oil Dressing
    Beer: Hitachino Nest White Ale
  8. Cheese
    One-Year Pleasant Ridge Premium Reserve, Shropshire Blue, and Six-Month Manchego with Candied Walnuts, Dried Figs, and Honeycrisp Apples
    Beer: Anchor Old Foghorn
  9. Dessert
    Bananas Foster with Hazelnut Gelato
    Beer: Rogue Shakespeare Stout or Hitachino Nest Espresso Stout
  10. Digestif
    North Coast Old Rasputin X, North Coast Old Stock Brandy Barrel Cellar Reserve, J.W. Lees Sherry Cask Harvest Ale, Stone Ruination, Samuel Adams Utopias, Dogfish Head Fort, or EKU 28

I can’t wait till I’m rich.

Thoughts?

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