Saturday, August 28, 2010

A festival for Saint Bartholemew

San Michele in Teverina is protected by St Bartholemew, who is also the patron saint of Armenia, bookbinders, butchers, Florentine cheese (eh?), salt merchants, Malta, neurological diseases (and those who seek their cure), plasterers, shoemakers, tanners and leather workers (he was flayed).  
Our village church has a large statue of him, and every year, in the week leading up to his Feast Day (August 24th), we celebrate with Masses in his honour, live music in the piazza every evening, games for the children, an Ape Gymkhana (see photo), and on the final day, a procession of the statue around the village.
This is an Ape (Ah-Pay), Italy's answer to the ute.



Gruppo Folkloristco arriving...

This year, on the Sunday afternoon, we also had a "Gruppo Folkloristico" come and perform. The first impression was more Main Street, USA than Corso d'Italia, but they were a lot of fun...AND check out the ribbons on their hats.
Yes, Italy does feature...
They had some really fun instruments, and I especially loved the cymbals on the scissors. This group seemed to have pulled "folklore" from the United States, England (Morris Dancing, anyone), and ... well, I guess, Italy.
The funny man with the scissor cymbals.

The marching/cheer leading girls were a big hit, and highly skilled. It was an original act, and I think most people enjoyed the music and the dancing. The main thing is that our village is protected for another year, and we can rest easy. 


Thursday, August 19, 2010

Very exciting moment.

For many of us in the on-line TESOL world, Alex Case is a bit of a hero. Well...he is for me, anyway. I check his blog regularly, and value what he has to say. So I was thrilled to bits when he asked me if I would comment on the Young Learners course I did in June. It took me longer than I wanted to write the blog (perfectionism going strong!), but I finally took advantage of Anti-Procrastination Wednesday (www.flylady.net), and GOT IT DONE...and submitted, too!
Today it is up on his blog, and I am really tickled to a high shade of rose to see it there! Of course, now that it is up, I'd like to tweak it a bit, but I'll deal with anything that needs tweaking in the comments!
A big thanks to Alex for inviting me to write for his blog. www.tefl.net/alexcase/teaching/tefl/teenagers/yl-extension-to-celta/

Thursday, August 12, 2010

A little oneirology for Thursday.

Studying your own dreams can be an interesting window into your current mental state. Most adults dream about two hours EVERY NIGHT of their lives – but most adults are also highly unlikely to remember more than one or two of their dreams.
When I was younger, single, and had more time on my hands, I kept a dream journal for six months. As soon as I woke up every morning, I would write down all the dreams I could remember. Initially, only one or two were clear, but as I began this habit, I started to remember more and more details, and then more and more actual dreams, until I could record up to seven dreams from a single night.
I was disappointed to note that there were no real patterns. Most of my dreams were fairly unexciting, and seemed to be more of a rehash of the day’s or week’s events, than any specific message from my subconscious.
Except for the Anxiety Dreams. I had read that people often have a particular recurring dream during times of heightened stress. The common examples are appearing naked in public, being chased, not being able to move, and the classic, turing up for an exam without having studied (I didn’t need to dream that one – it actually happened my first year of university. It was stressful. And I failed.). However, none of these was my Anxiety Dream of choice at the time I’m talking about (ten years ago now).
No, my AD was about toilets. A severe need to pee, and nowhere to do it, or else the toilet was up a tree, or in a vast maze of cubicles, mostly occupied, or mostly filthy, or mostly with a large audience. Whenever I found myself recording a toilet dream, it was a sign for me to examine more closely what was happening during waking hours.
I no longer have the time or the inclination to record all my dreams, but I have noticed over the last year that the nature of my AD has changed. In anxious moments, the location of terror is now an airport. I need to catch a connecting flight. I have too much luggage. I can’t find the gate. I have to go from one terminal to another, but can’t find the way. There are too many escalators, mainly going in the wrong direction. And last night, I was in a country between Italy and New Zealand (maybe Singapore, maybe Bangkok), and they had told us to wait in a garden. Where a smiling flight attendant gave me a suitcase, and told me to hurry to Gate [unintelligible], which was over there [vague gesture]…up and down escalators, have to validate boarding pass, have to go through a long corridor which is also a luxury hotel (picture walking along side many cubicles, each with a fancy bed and delicious linen). At the end is a staircase, very crowded, and my Australian aunt is there, but she isn’t going where I am going. She knows where I need to go, though, and starts to give me directions, while we are both being jostled by the crowd. In the background, at all times, is a large red clock, ticking loudly, counting down how much time I have left...
As it approaches 0:00 I am thankfully wakened by my son yelling “Muuuuuummmmmmmmyyyyyy.”
If I visit another airport tonight, I’m getting help.

Monday, August 9, 2010

NaNoWriMo - not just November.

For those of you who don't know, National Novel Writing Month (or NaNoWriMo) starts on November 1 every year, and ends on the last day of that month. The challenge is to write the first draft of a novel (at least 50,000 words) in that month. If you want more information, check them out at www.nanowrimo.org or on facebook under NaNoWriMo.
At the moment, as a way to keep us on our creative toes, they are running writing challenges, in the comments section of their fb wall, and today's was "Write a story that uses the words "happy" and "coffee" and is 50 words or less!"

So I thought I would cheat on my blog today, and just publish my entry :-) This year will be my third NaNo, and I am very excited about it - although this is the first year that I haven't had a single plot or character idea in the lead-up. I'm a little worried, but not too much, yet :-)

I'd love some comments about my wee story - perhaps THIS will spin out into the 50,000 for NaNo2010?
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Just another day turned to cheap farce when Samson entered his usual coffee shop and found the waiter locked in an embrace with Sylvia. Perhaps she had forgotten that this was where Samson always had breakfast. Or else she was trying to show him that she was no longer happy.

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Friday, August 6, 2010

A day's not wasted when you learn something.

I've been subscribing to TIME magazine for ten years now. Its weekly entrance into our home provides a take on world news and culture which I don't get from other sources - and nearly every week I find myself reaching for the OED to look up a word I don't know. Anything that expands my vocabulary is a good thing.
This week, however, I am excited to have been introduced to a whole new piece of jargon - for jargon it can only be. The August 2, 2010 Europe edition has an article about South Korea's LG Electronics, and I was puzzled by the sentence "...more than tripled the share of R&D spending on "disruptive" research -...". ??? How can research be disruptive, was my immediate thought. Reading on, I gathered that this term refers to research into brand-new areas, "breakthrough solutions" and that this research may not show results for a very long time. Okay...got it...
The very next article is about OLEDs (or Organic Light-Emitting Diodes) - fascinating reading. These are flat, flexible, and can even be transparent. They emit a warm glow, similar to sunlight, but remain cool to the touch. The last sentence of the second paragraph reads "..."That's the disruptive nature of it."..." - again, this word leapt off the page at me. At this point, a trip to the dictionary becomes mandatory.
My trusty OED only has the standard entry ...
disruptive adj. Causing problems, noise, etc. so that sth cannot continue normally.
Yes...time for a trip to that other font of all knowledge - google. Google, then to wikipedia, where I discover that I am many years behind on this one!
The entry for disruptive technology first entered the wikisphere in 2002! I'm eight years behind...
No, WAIT!
"The term disruptive technologies was coined by Clayton M. Christensen and introduced in his 1995 article Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave[3], which he co-wrote with Joseph Bower." (wikipedia).
I'm fifteen years behind!

And this is what wiki tells me it is all about.
"Disruptive innovation is a term used in business and technology literature to describe innovations that improve a product or service in ways that the market does not expect, typically by lowering price or designing for a different set of consumers."

Thanks to TIME, for helping me catch up, and thanks to google and wiki ( for teaching me something new today.