Monday, July 27, 2009

san francisco

Oh, there's much to say. I was in SF for the long weekend visiting a college friend. I loved it there. I must sleep, but more's to come and here are some photos.



hipster park and beautiful church-turned-high school.



the view of the city from bernal heights.



mayan calendar mural thing on some kind of city community college.



pretty west coast style victorian houses.



la melanie and la alex chan. love 'em.



moi.
looking pretty smug on the zoom in size. sorry 'bout that! smile was just about to spread!

Last Week Run

Sunday - 6
Monday - 8
Tuesday - 7
Wednesday - 6
Thursday - 8
Friday - walked 10 miles around SF
Saturday - walked 10 miles around SF

Total: 35

Ack! Oh well.

Monday, July 20, 2009

How do you see the world?

Okay, people, no comments for awhile so I have to spice it up. Time for a how do you see the world question. Do you fold or crumple the toilet paper? Be honest. A neat little square (or rectangle) or a crumple that could pass for some form of modern art?

Me?

I'm a folder. Think what you will (OCD, neat freak, bor-ing, etc.), it's my method and I'm stickin' to it. And, for the record, I was shocked to find out that people did otherwise.

Your turn!



Sunday, July 19, 2009

Weekend activities

Last night I happened upon a cool bike event in Denver. It was some sort of 10 mile midnight bike ride through Denver. First went the family wave, then the youngin' 20-30s people. Thousands and thousands of people. We sat there for about 2ish hours and people just kept coming along. Man, I didn't even have my bike because I didn't know it was going on! People were in costumes and bikes all dressed up with glow-lights and costumes. I especially like the dancing banana and have to admit I laughed at the cut-out derierre of some dude's boxers. There was also a pink bus with a band on top jammin' away, tuba and all. Crazy! These pictures do NOT do it justice, but, check it out.





Today I headed up for a trail run in Nederland where it was quite dusty and hot. I'm back now, vacuuming, cleaning, and baking. Blueberries were 1 pint for $1 at the store so I bought a bunch. I just baked blueberry scones to have for breakfast this week.


Breakfast will be served at ~6:10, after the run and before biking down to 7:00 a.m. yoga class. Drop ins welcome.

Week Runs

Sunday - 8
Monday - 6
Tuesday - High up, trial run in the mountains. Steep, hard to breathe. Arrrgh. 1 1/2 hours, but 8
Wednesday - 7
Thursday - off
Friday - Trail run to my favorite place in Golden, CO, White Ranch Park. Went at 6 p.m. after work and a lunch date with my friend. 10
Saturday - off, lazy bum.

I actually feel okay with the low mileage this week because the 2 trail runs were long, even if they weren't that far distance wise.

Total: 39

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Onward and upward

Hurrah!

In the past few days I was accepted onto the Denver Journal for International Law and Policy. Technical law-loser talk is "I wrote on the journal." This is great news for me after the hassle and complete agony of the Candidacy process. The whole process felt like self-induced anxiety, bewilderment and always feeling like I didn't know what on earth I was doing or supposed to be doing. Stumbling through the legal way to cite and teaching myself from The Bluebook for hours on end was not exactly fun. Then, I wrote a "survey" paper that had an argument. Again, not my best work. I once laughed aloud while writing when thinking about how badly I felt for the poor soul who had to read my paper. I was a goner, sure not to pass. I had already convinced myself that I was just happy to have had the willpower to get through it without giving up. (It's not required to do a journal and it's easy to push off until the next round of Candidacy.)

I really liked my topic, though, and I hope to develop it more in the fall. I chose to write about protecting traditional medicinal knowledge of indigenous people. The issue is that big pharmaceutical companies are going to third world countries and getting patents on things indigenous people have known/been using for hundreds of years. Once the pharm companies get patents, the indigenous people no longer have rights to keep doing their own cultural, every-day-knowledge practices. More than that, though, the pharm companies are making a big profit with no benefits to the indigenous people who told them about the medicinal uses of plants.

As I had such limited time to write the paper and the paper was no more than 12 pages including footnotes, I had to drastically limit my argument. So, I argued that the legal framework for protecting traditional medicinal knowledge is a bad way to try to protect it. Right now, people consider TMK as a form of intellectual property. So international lawsuits over rights are over property rights. I suggested in my paper two alternatives. First, stronger domestic law would avoid some conflicts because there would be state-backing for indigenous people, rather than pitting indigenous people against big 1st world corporations. The second suggestion was that instead of thinking of TMK as property, think of it as some sort of human right or indigenous people's right. This would solve a lot of problems because TMK doesn't have a lot of the characteristics of regular property. It's hard to protect something as property when it doesn't fit into the accepted legal definition of property. Anyway, it was pretty cool to read about different plants and herbs that indigenous people have been using for medicine for hundreds of years. It's kind of the fusion of my interest in indigenous rights, international things, love of knowledge (philosophy!), health and law.

The other big thing this week is that I finished my first grad class toward my masters! I took a 9 hour (2 question) essay exam today and e-mailed it in. Hurrah! It was International Political Theory and I gobbled that stuff right up. I loved it. Hope the exam turns out well. It's amazing how much less stressful exams at grad school are than law school exams. And, I had so much more confidence that I could do well. Law school is such a downer - always feeling like you have no idea what to expect, purposefully unreachable standards ("It's impossible for anyone to get near a perfect score on my exams"), and stupid curved grading. Loving grad school. :)

Oh yeah, AND, I did my first Side Crow in yoga. I've been trying to do it since January!

Onward and upward...

Monday, July 13, 2009

coffeecoffeecoffeecoff...

So, as you may know, I gave up coffee during finals period after my stomach was really starting to hurt. I thought it'd be good to give it up for the summer. But then I realized that summer for me ended on June 15 (classes started). So, gulp, maybe I shouldn't feel guilty for now drinking coffee again?

My day starts early, I have a lot to do, and summer heat-sun-humidity make me sleepy. I'm pretty sure I also use it to bribe myself to get out of bed and go running. I'd rather be addicted to running and coffee than not addicted to either one. And, there are worse things upon which to be dependent. Mmm.. and it just tastes so good. Thus -- I resolved to spend less money and be realistic about my wee, tiny, ity-bitty aid for making it through my long days. I purchased a lovely 3-cup french press! This will be great, too, because I can't make coffee at home AND bike to school with it. So, I plan on leaving this in my "stuff" locker (as opposed to my "books" locker -- and yes, at law school we have lockers). Voila! This is what my press looks like. $14.99 at Targe-ay.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Week's runs

Sunday - Evergreen with friends. So high up, all hills (and by hill I mean, mountain). I felt like this was one of the hardest runs I've ever done in my life. Wow, I was hurting. Very, very pretty, though. 13

Monday - 5 easy

Tuesday - Loops around Wash Park with friend + baby stroller - 7

Wednesday - 6

Thursday - day off

Friday - 6

Saturday - Highline Canal with a bunch of women. Fun (and hot). 14

Week's Total: 51

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Feels like summer

So, I handed in a paper yesterday and did a little work this morning but took the afternoon/evening off. Really off. No e-mail, no computer, no sitting inside. Got some fabulous pizza at City, O' City, played Bananagrams at the patio of some Mexican place playing great salsa music. Then, went to the Rockies game for FREE, courtesy of Jeremy and the RMSC. Amazing to watch the sunset over the mountains on a warm summer night at the ball game. Took some photos. Don't even bother asking me who won.




Tuesday, July 7, 2009

How do you see the world?

I'm exhausted, so this will be short! During warm-ups and stretching at Frisbee practice in college (shout-out to Venus and Bower field!), I used to pose a question to everyone and we'd go around and answer it. Mainly, they were random, random, questions you'd never think to ask because you just assume everyone else is the same or does the same as you. Anyway - surprise surprise - we were all shocked to hear each others' answers. The first shock is that people live differently from you. The second shock is actually what is revealed about the other person when you learn the way she lives. I guess another shock is that people actually have a thought-out method for the things they do, no matter how petty or trivial the action. I think it's cool to hear how/why people act the way they do. All in all, it was always fun and made us laugh. I plan on asking one of these "How do you see the world" questions every once in awhile, so, here's my first question:

How do you organize the clothes in your closet?

ME? I organize my clothes by type (shirts, skirts, pants, winter/outerwear, fancy dresses). Then, within each section I organize by color. Yes, my shirts look like a snazzy rainbow. I love it. I do it this way because usually I have picked out pants/skirt first and so what shirt I wear really just comes down to what color matches best. Plus, it looks cool. I love colors and rainbows just ARE aesthetically pleasing. :)

Monday, July 6, 2009

a Photo a Day

I am sure there is a lot of hidden beauty here in Denver, so I want to be ready for it when I see it. To help, I'm trying to bring my camera around with my more often. I like how it puts me on watch, always looking around with a creative eye. It makes me pause and think for a second, "Huh, would that make a good photo?" or "Wow, that's so absurd." I'm training myself to look take another look, and then to look even closer. Here are some photos so far - nothing spectacular, but it's a start.

A full rainbow:



A summer thunderstorm leaving me in its wake:



This just struck me as ironic, simple, and profound all at once:



And, today, I saw a flutterbye - it even stayed in place while I took some photos. Look!:



Saturday, July 4, 2009

Running Week

Well, here's how the week went running-wise:

Sunday - off

Monday - alarm clock broken, woke up late. Squeaked in 5 miles and managed to find an iPhone AND fall, scrapping my knees big time, dripping blood, etc.

Tuesday - felt GREAT. I don't understand when I feel awesome in the midst of so many bad runs. I felt like I was finally running, not just shuffling along. 9.5

Wednesday - Confirmed that the alarm clock was broken. Ran at night - felt terrible again. Ended my run back at school where my bike was locked up. Rode the bike home. 7.5

Thursday - a.m. Ran at Highline at 7 with 2 friends. Felt even worse! 6 miles.

p.m. Wanted to run a bit more to shake out and hopefully feel better on Friday. 2 miles.

Friday - planned to run at exactly 4:45 before going to a 6:30 dinner. Got home at 4:40 from studying. When did the hail/rain/thunder/massive lightning start? 4:45. When did it end? 6:00 p.m. FAIL. Did manage to use the foam roller and stretch for about 20 minutes.

Saturday - felt pretty decent! Cooler out, but super humid. Cherry Creek path flooded over, dodged people hanging on the sidewalk waiting for fireworks. I'd also like to personally thank Bjork, The Knife, DJ Tiesto and Regina Specktor for this great run. 9.5.

Total: 40