14 January 2006

The 'stupid Owen' idea...


There are a lot of words that really sound like what they mean. For example: hiccup (hiccough), crash, hush, grunt, yell...

This was further elaborated by 'stupid Owen'. There are words that seem to be created after the sound of an expression with a similar meaning or context... his suggestions were:
Mind brain = migrane
Old timmers = Alzheimmer's
Oh! beast = obese

By the way, if you're the romantic type, you should ask who Owen is. You'll definately feel glad to find out. And you'll also like Nadine. She's not stupid.

13 January 2006

Friday 13


Bad luck.
I overslept.
No, it doesn't have anything to do with it being a friday, the 13th.

Actually, there are a few things that can make this particular friday a very lucky day... or any other friday like this.

Today (in most of Europe), one of the biggest lottery prizes is up for grabs as "Euromillions" has a total jackpot prize of over € 103,000,000.00 (a hundred and three million euros). Who wants to be the unluck one ?!... I've already place my bet and I do feel unlucky !!!

Historically, the origins of Friday superstitions are many. One of the best known is that Eve tempted Adam with the apple on a Friday. Tradition also has it that the Flood in the Bible, the confusion at the Tower of Babel, and the death of Jesus Christ all took place on Fridays.

Long before the Bible was written, Friday was considered an important day. Primitive people set aside Fridays as a special time to worship their deities and ask them for good crops, health and happiness. Those who worked on this day were told not to expect "good luck" from the gods.

In Israel, Friday the 13th is considered to be an unusually lucky day. In Judaism, Friday is a very special day because the Sabbath begins on Friday evening and because the Bible mentions that God noted that his creations on this day were very good. Moreover, the number 13 has always had a special lucky significance to Judaism.

A few examples:
- the Bar Mitzva is held at age 13;
- there are 13 months in the Hebrew lunar calendar;
- the Bible lists 13 attributes of God;
- there are 613 commandments.

Some Jews consider the american $1 bill lucky because there are so many 13's on it: 13 stars, 13 stripes, 13 steps, 13 arrows and even an olive branch with 13 leaves on it. Speaking of which, in America:

- there were 13 colonies in British North America;
- there are 13 stars and stripes in the original American flag;
- Alfred Hitchkock was born on Friday, August 13th (a quite fitting date).

To end this (and concerning the existance, or not, of luck), let me just add a quote from someone who was born on the 13th (not a Friday though) and who was a great poet. He wrote this on the very day he died:

"I know not what tomorrow will bring".

          - Fernando Pessoa

12 January 2006

A long distance made


Long distances made...

Marco Polo (1254-1324) was an Italian voyager and merchant who was one of the first Europeans to travel across Asia through China, visiting the Kublai Khan (the conqueror of China) in Beijing. He left in 1271 (he was a teenager at the time) with his father (Nicolo Polo) and uncle (Maffeo Polo); they spent about 24 years traveling (Nicolo and Maffeo had previously made a trip to China, from 1260-1269, during which the Kublai Khan requested holy oil blessed by the Pope). He sailed south from Venice, Italy, in the Mediterranean Sea to the Middle East. They then went southeast overland to Persia (now Iran), then through the Pamir Mountains and the Gobi Desert, to Beijing, China. They explored the area south of Beijing, including Yunan and Szechuan. Returning to Beijing, they traveled east to Tankchow (at the mouth of the Yangtse River), then south to Hangchow, China. They then sailed south along the coast of China, to what are now Vietnam and Sumatra. They sailed west to Sri Lanka and India, and then back to Ormuz (on the Persian Gulf). They went northwest overland to the Black Sea, then the Mediterranean Sea, and back to Venice, Italy. Marco Polo's written accounts of his travels were the first Western record of porcelain, coal, gunpowder, printing, paper money, and silk; Polo wrote "Book of Ser Marco Polo" around 1298.

Fernão de Magalhães, also know as Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521), was a Portuguese explorer who led the first expedition that sailed around the Earth (1519-1522). Magellan also named the Pacific Ocean (the name means that it is a calm, peaceful ocean) after he navigate a dangerous passage between the Atlantic and the Pacific in the south of Tierras del Fuego, Argentina and Chile. That happened on November 1st, 1520 and the strait was first called Estreito de Todos os Santos (Strait of All Saints) and then renamed Estreito de Magalhães (Strait of Magellan).

the strait of magellan


Roald Amundsen (1872-1928) was a Norwegian polar explorer who was the first person to fly over the North Pole in a dirigible (May 11th ~ May 13th, 1926) and was the first person to reach the South Pole. Amundsen and his small expedition reached the South Pole on December 14th, 1911, traveling by dog sled. Amundsen was also the first person to sail around the world through the Northeast and Northwest passages, from the Atlantic to the Pacific (in 1905). He was the first person to reach both the North and South Poles. Amundsen died in a plane crash attempting to rescue his friend, the Italian explorer Umberto Nobile who was lost in an airship.

James Cook (1728-1779) was a British explorer and astronomer who went on many expeditions to the Pacific Ocean, Antarctic, Arctic, and around the world. Cook's first journey was from 1768 to 1771, when he sailed to Tahiti in order to observe Venus as it passed between the Earth and the Sun (in order to try to determine the distance between the Earth and the Sun). During this expedition, he also mapped northern Australia. Cook's second expedition (1772-1775) took him to Antarctica and to Easter Island. Cook's last expedition (1776-1779) was a search for a Northwest Passage across North America to Asia. Cook was killed by a mob on February 14th, 1779, on the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii). At the time, he was trying to take the local chief hostage to get the natives to return a sailboat they had stolen. Cook was the first ship's captain to stop the disease scurvy (now known to be caused by a lack of vitamin C) among sailors by providing them with fresh fruits. Before this, scurvy had killed or incapacitated many sailors on long trips.

Colonel Yuri Alexeyevich Gagarin (1934 - 1968) was a Soviet cosmonaut and the first human in space. Gagarin was born in a small town west of Moscow, and grew up on a collective farm. His father was a carpenter. Yuri joined the Soviet Air Force and became a fighter pilot and an officer. He was chosen to be in the first group of Soviet cosmonauts. Gagarin piloted the Vostok 1 (Vostok means East in Russian) mission, which launched April 12th, 1961, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. His flight lasted 108 minutes and orbited the Earth one time. The capsule traveled at an altitude of 112 to 203 miles (180-327 km) above Earth, at a speed of 27400 km/h. Flight was controlled from the ground. The spacecraft was recovered later that day in the Saratov region of the Soviet Union. Gagarin died at age 34 when his MiG-15 plane crashed in bad weather near Moscow. He had been training for a second space trip. Gagarin Crater, a wide shallow, circular, and heavily eroded crater on the far side of the moon, was named for him.

Jacques-Yves Cousteau (1910-1997) was a French undersea explorer, environmentalist, and innovator. In 1943, Cousteau and the French engineer Emile Gagnan invented the aqualung, a breathing apparatus that supplied oxygen to divers and allowed them to stay underwater for several hours. Cousteau traveled the world's oceans in his research vessel "Calypso," beginning in 1948. (Calypso was a converted 400-ton World War 2 minesweeper; it sank in 1996, after being hit by a barge in Singapore harbor). Cousteau's popular TV series, films and many books (including "The Living Sea", 1963, and "World Without Sun", 1965) exposed the public to the wonders of the sea.

These refer to long distances.
Really long.

Not like the 10000 kilometres my new car completed (just some metres after the freeway toll booth) since October. leandro... after san lorenzo and before lisbon Or the distance Leandro Romagnoli had to travel so far (being a big fan of his since 2001, I went to see his Portuguese debut although I don't cheer for his new club). From Argentina to Mexico (after having one foot set in Germany) and now to Portugal, I've followed his career from afar. His plays in the 2001 Youth World Cup were something to be seen (and then the Torneo Clausura and Copa Mercosul).

Not that significant, compared to the gentlemen stated above.

But definately something to be recorded.
For me, at least.

11 January 2006

What do we decide/decode ?


Let's give ourselves an excuse (this continued from yesterday) for doing what we want regardless of what we should. Choosing what to be is never easy, especially if we fail to understand the world we're in. And maybe the world's too large for our comprehension, but we also fail to decode the environment we're in. Subsequently, we fail to decide.

Isn't it comfortable, nevertheless ?!
Our misjudgement is (one of) our best excuses... err... I meant justifications or explanations... or even "version of the truth". Our ignorance never is. Thank God for the argumentative power... some will say.

How do you spell "sarcasm" ?...
It's difficult to say because one uses it a lot, but seldom in the written form.

"We all become
What we most dislike
In this picket fence cartel
Tell ?... There's nothing left to tell

What have we become
Cycle all over again
Filled the shoes 'til i was ten
In front of the classroom
In front of my peers
That day will always be remembered
'cause it was etched in tears...
"

          - by At The Drive-In, in "Picket Fence Cartel"

10 January 2006

Who do we/they choose to be ?


Nowadays, it's difficult to decide.
More, it's difficult to decode.

Do we/they choose to be competent/skilled on some subject/issue/matter or do we/they prefer to be regarded as so ?... Are we/they wearing the suit, white shirt and tie for that piece of credibility ?... Because, when a negotiation/meeting/fight is on the horizon, we/they do reveal our/their true nature. And it rarely has something to do with politeness, knowledge or any other "honorable" ability.

The "fabulous four" from Liverpool had something to say on this regard:

"Have you see the little piggies
crawling in the dirt
And for all the little piggies
Life is getting worse
Always having dirt
to play around in

Have you see the bigger piggies
In their starched white shirts
You will find the bigger piggies
Stirring up the dirt
Always have clean shirts
to play around in...
"

          - The Beatles, in "Piggies"

09 January 2006

Something about Cleopatra...


When Cleopatra VII ascended the Egyptian throne, she was only seventeen. She reigned as Queen Philopator and Pharaoh between 51 B.C. and 30 B.C., and died at the age of thirty-nine.

Cleopatra VII was born in 69 B.C. in Alexandria, which was then the capital of the Egyptian Empire.

She was far from beautiful, despite her glamorous image today. She is depicted on ancient coins with a long hooked nose and masculine features. Yet she was clearly a very seductive woman. She had an enchantingly musical voice and exuded charisma. She was also highly intelligent. She spoke nine languages (she was the first Ptolemy pharaoh who could actually speak Egyptian!) and proved to be a shrewd politician.

In compliance with Egyptian tradition Cleopatra married her brother and co-ruler, Ptolemy XIII, who was about 12 at the time. But it was a marriage of convenience only, and Ptolemy was pharaoh in name only. For three years he remained in the background while Cleopatra ruled alone.

08 January 2006

Wolfgang


While listening to Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus", one of the few foreign-spoken songs to top both the UK and US charts, I recalled what I thought was Mozart's first name...

Wolfgang: third name of the austrian composer Mozart (1756-1791) whose complete name, translated to latin on his baptism, was Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Amadeus Mozart; there are several translations for the "Amadeus" name: "Gottlieb" in german, "Amadé" in french and it's said that Mozart himself preferred the french denomination.

Wolfgang: second name of the german poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) who was also a novelist, playwright, courtier, and natural philosopher, being one of the greatest figures in Western literature. He also made important discoveries in connection with plant and animal life, and evolved a non-Newtonian and unorthodox theory of the character of light and color, which has influenced such abstract painters as Kandinsky and Mondrian. His best known works are "Faust" and "Theory of Colours"; he also inspired Darwin with his independent discovery of the human premaxilla jaw bones and focus on evolution.

Wolfgang: first name of the austrian physicist Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958), winner of the 1945 Nobel Price in Physics for the discovery of the "Exclusion Principle", also called the "Pauli Principle"; for a brief period of time, he was an assistant to Niels Bohn (danish chemist, winner of the 1922 Nobel Price in Physics for his work and study on the structure of atoms) in Copenhagen and spend a relavant part of his career in the USA, working in several universities.

Wolfgang: model name of the guitar that was the result of the collaboration between Hartley Peavey's instruments company and guitarist Edward Van Halen (named Peavey EVH Wolfgang, but of course!). Due to his admiration of Mozart's work, Edward also named his son Wolfgang, some years before this guitar was in production.