02 September 2006

Wereldhavendagen 2006



Braving gale force winds I stood on the Erasmusbrug and watched the evening spectacle of this year's Wereldhavendagen (World Harbour Days). Each year, the Port of Rotterdam opens its ports and gates to visitors and numerous festivities and excursions so that ordinary people can explore the Europe's largest and busiest seaport.





The port and the city are alsmost inseperable, and have a history closely tied to the Netherlands' economy and life. The majority of goods that arrive and leave the country go through the harbour, which is connected with an extensive network of railways and roads. Rotterdam itself is a modern city, and the only one in the Netherlands with a skyline of skyscrappers to speak of. 'Thanks' to the Germans who bombarded the city and its strategic harbour till Netherlands capitulated during the Second World War, Rotterdam has had to rebuild itself almost from scratch within the last couple of decades. No wonder this harbour-city with its international connections as well as connections with the rest of the country, is the pride and joy of the city. And the events this weekend celebrate that sense of nostalgia to the past when cruise ships moored on the docks, that sense of achievement you can clearly see when you see the tall skyscrappers compete with giant girafe-like cranes, and the sense of hope as the harbour and the city plans to develop into the future.




Laser lights, skylights, neolights boomboxes and ear-deafening music ushered in the evening's programme at 9pm sharp. The crowd was scarce at the time, perhaps deterred by the overcast skies, and, as soon as I stood still for a couple of minutes to take in the music and light show, the strong, strong winds. At times I couldn't stand still, since the sea winds were so fierce and unrelenting on the bridge. I felt a headache start to creep. I felt myself dread pessimistically the likelihood of me having to wake up in the morning with a sore throat and the beginnings of a cold. Forturnately as I left the house earlier on I decided against wearing just a T-shirt and wore a light-blue turtle neck sweater instead. Couples hid behind each other, embraced one another to keep warm. I embraced the wind that seeped through and triggered goosebumps and slight trembles.

There were different shows, each with very different characteristics. A wonderful 'dance of the cranes', as the gigantic steel storks turned their cumbersome bodies and seemed to gyrate on the spot to the beat of the music. With their massive 'hands' they dug into the river Maas and hoisted tonnes of water into the air. When releashed the water shed like a beautiful shower, sending vapour and moisture plummeting to the river below like a trickling waterfall. Colourful lights shone on the water made it all the more dazzling.

Then there was a choir singing so traditional Dutch hits, most about the life and drudgery of a sailor, about the goodbyes, the longings and the loneliness at sea. To contrast, a live DJ mixed and blasted disco and techno songs into the nightsky, this time with spiralling lights and flashing lasers as the dancers in the air and on the surface of the sea. I stood and could not keep my body from wriggling a bit to the beat of some remixes of songs I liked.

Rounding off the evening, the longest display of fireworks I've ever seen, projecting multi-coloured flashes and deafening explosions into the sky from a barge in the middle of the
river. I was bedazzled by the ever-changing kaleidoscope of shooting stars, giant balls of sparkling fairy dust, eliptical wheels of purple and white, rockets and missiles that soared up into the heavens and exploded with a loud sounding bang, leaving a trail of dense fog and smell of gunpowder. Soon I forget all about the cold, all about the pain of having to stand almost two hours.

Because it was worth it.





Go to my travelog for more pictures!

01 September 2006

Boat, museum and party


Woke up with a terrible headache this morning, and still feel a bit sick. I don't know if it was that glass of Heineken I drank yesterday, the nuts, olives or airline sandwiches, but ever since this morning I've been having this terrible feeling of dizzyness and like there's air in my chest I can't get rid of. When I breathe hard, the back of my neck hurts and my chest feels compressed.

I blame it on the beer. Frankly I don't like beer, and it's been years since my last 'pint', until yesterday that is. I don't know what posessed me to drink something that makes me want to throw up and pee all the time, and feel all gasy and nauseous afterwards...I guess when all the guys were drinking it, I sort of 'had' to too.

Since today's programme didn't start until noon, I could lie in a bit, which helped get rid of the nauseating feeling, if only a little bit. Picked up our 'packed lunch', packaged in a green paper bag, the contents of which look like they managed to skim off the left-overs of KLM's (Royal Dutch Airlines) on-board catering service.

Met some more people, all on the same course I'll be doing. And that was pretty nice, since for the day I basically had company and people to talk to. We did a boat trip, cruising around the canals and lakes around Leiden. This ancient city is shaped like a star and surrounded by moats. It was here that resistance against the Spanish (Catholics) was staunchest. For the sake of religious freedom and freedom of expression, the citizens of the town refused to cave into a siege in 1574. As a token of appreciation was rewarded with a university in that very year by William of Orange ('Father of the Netherlands'). That university is Leiden University, with the motto Praesidium Libertatis, (‘bastion of freedom’) on the emblem. And I'm now a member of that bastion.

Old(er) students
and professors of Leiden include Rembrandt van Rijn (painter), who never actually graduatlly and registered for the sake of getting cheap beer as a student (believe me beer is definitely not the reason why I'm studying here). The Dutch Royal family has traditionally gone to this university too. Rumour has it that during the years when our Crown Prince William Alexander, who is reputed for being a bit...slow, the tradition of publishing everyone's grades in public disappeared. Einstein taught here a while (there's a pub named after him), while Kamerlign Onnes was won the Nobel Prize for Physics for achieving the lowest temperate possible (absolute zero). My law faculty buidling is named after him, and located in the very building where he conducted the experiment. Then there's Huygens, who invented the telescope, and has a space probe named after him. Then there's the likes of Spinoza and Descarte, who escaped to Leiden on account of its libertarian values and freedom of expression. I doubt I'd come close to what these great people have achieved in my lifetime, but it's something to mention when people ask me in the future why I chose this uni as my own. I guess.

A museum visit was also part of the tour, and we were taken to Boerhave Museum, named after the physician who introduced natural sciences as key to the study of medicine
in Europe. Besides the famous Huygen telescopes and clocks, the sight of numerous 'pickled' feotuses, ovaries with a fertilised egg, fingers of young children, skinned snakes, inner ear of a dog, drawings of a disected woman carrying a baby, real skeletons of human beings, cats, elephants, horses and a turkey were not all that appealing. Especially when I was already feeling like throwing up the whole day. Dinner was immediate after the museum. I waited at least an hour before I could take a bite and swallow.

It was a bit silly how they organised the programme. By five we were ushered into the canteen and fed. The next event was the party at 10pm. Five hours to kill, in a town, in a country where shops are few and close at 6pm sharp. A bunch of us, three guys and two girls, all on the same course, sat around, got to know each other better, lurked around the empty streets a bit more, sat at a cafe and chatted the hours away. It was surprisingly relaxing, and we were pretty much on similiar wave lenghts, so I had a really good time.
Plus that cute Finnish guy was part of the group too : )

To be honest I wasn't really feeling all that well for the party, and the Finnish guy has a severe flu. But the girls insisted we at least go for a while. So we did. The disco was empty when we got there. People started arrives in small droves, amid the loud din and lazer lights, but everyone was just standing around wondering whether anything was going to happen. Huge screens showed girls engaged in a wet-T-shirt competiton, the aim being who can push the other off of a horizontal they were on. Exciting. Nobody danced, and I wouldn't actually dance unless someone else did the same. People suggested I be the one to get the bodies moving, but no thanks.

After less than an hour, the Finnish guy and I decided to go. And we did. A little embarassing meeting people we know in the corridors who were just arriving. Even more so when we turned out to be the first ones leaving. But he put it best when he said to the bouncer: "Clubbing is just not my thing."

Not mine either. A little tipsy, but glad to have gotten away from the crowd and party, we made our way to the station. We talked a bit more, about how we both just don't like those kind of places, and would rather be somewhere quiet where you could actually hear what the other one is saying. He can be a little nervous around people, and tends to mumble a litte
l at times, but once he loosens up, he's fun and funny to be around with. I didn't realise he was so similiar to me in that sense.

I mean today he didn't make it for lunch and by the time we were all heading for the boat he kept on calling me and asking where I was so he could join me. He could have very well gone on another tour, but he said he didn't want to. When we did finally manage to meet in the museum, he came in quietly as the guide was explaining things. I was on the other side of the room, but as soon as he saw me gave me this smile as if he was so glad to see me. I smiled back. Now and then,
there were some funny bits as the guide was explaining things. He'd start to giggle and look in my direction to see if I found it just as funny. And we'd try to hide our giggles, like sharing a secret laugh no one else understood.

At the station just before he disappeared up the stairs in a hurry to catch the train I turned around to him and said: "Take care, and get well soon."

And I meant it.

31 August 2006

First day at 'school'...


Woke up this morning a little before 7, and it was the earliest I’ve woken up in months. A laid-back life of being a bum gets you…laid back. Didn’t get too much sleep last night, since, well, ‘worry me’ lay in bed and had thoughts running around like crazy trying to picture what’s going to happen today.

Showered, got dressed, got beautiful, and got out the door. Sat in the train with a bunch of commuters trying to get a shut-eye, or open their eyes into through papers. It’s been over two years since I felt I was part of a community—a community of commuters with a purpose and a destination. Though by the looks of some people’s haggered faces and sad expressions, some may feel less like they have a purpose in life, let alone at work.

Arrived at the place where we were supposed to gather, only to be intimated by a crowd of around 100 people standing around, surrounding by a slight drizzle and the background noise of general chatter. They were doling out tea and coffee, so I got myself one, to keep warm, and keep my hands from fidgeting from nervousness. I don’t function well in crowds. Glanced around, looking for a place I can ‘butt in’, but everyone seemed so engaged in their little groups and conversations already. There were a couple of others who hadn’t managed to mingle yet, like me, and I wondered if they were as nervous as I was. Stood around a bit, thinking what a great way to start.

Then we got divided into smaller groups, according to our studies. Phew, I thought. Much better, since you know then the people walking around with you are going to be your classmates. One thing you have in common, one common topic to break the ice. Once that ice is broken, I guess the conversation just rolls from there…where are you from, what were you doing before, where, smile, why, how, when, smile, listen, talk, relate, answer, ask, smile.

The tour itself was alright, though our group was a little left out. You see, I’m going to be doing a Masters in Public International Law (LLM), and at this uni there are two courses of that: there’s one which is so-called ‘advanced’ LLM, because it offers more choice and better facilities and services, and then there’s the ‘normal’ LLM—the one I’ll be doing. The difference between the two? Oh, only around €10,000, give or take. No surprise why I’m doing the ‘normal’ one.

And from the moment go the differences in treatment were clearly visible. The ‘advanced’ people were taken away for an exclusive meet-and-greet with staff over coffee and a choice between apple pie, chocolate cake and cookies. We were told to hang around and wait to be picked up. There was coffee to be fair, but no pie, or given the choice, chocolate cake.

I guess the time we were ‘abandoned’ to wander the corridors of our new faculty was a welcome opportunity to mingle, meet and greet more people. And I guess it went pretty well. There are lots of Americans and Brits on the course, and all the rest are from the rest of Europe. We basically just talked and exchanged one another’s lives and experiences, and that’s plenty of material to cover. Another topic of common interest was how disorganised the whole course is, since courses start next week and almost everyone I met had no clue when and where the classes are going to be. Complaining, another ice-breaker.

All the new people had a welcome address from the Rector Magnificus (Latin for ‘head rectum rector’). Whenever that name was said a bunch of people burst out laughing. Not too much exciting news there, the usual why-this-university-is-so-great, how-privileged-you-all-are-to-be-the-select-few, and well-wishing for our future studies, because frankly we might not even get to see him again. Then this academic coordinator came up and started going through the list of (almost) all the countries in the world. The point of the ‘game’ was whenever a country is mentioned, people from that country should stand up, and he’ll try his best to say ‘hello’ in that country’s language. The first, being ‘G’day’ (Australia)…half an hour later Zimbabwe. We all sighed with relief that that was the end.

But it wasn’t the end. We were treated to a ‘movie’, made probably more than a decade ago, about Holland. Witty, amusing and revealing, but sometimes left me wondering why I need to know that the highest point in the country is 322,20m, and the lowest is 7m below sea level, or that Amsterdam, with 725,000 inhabitants, is the world’s smallest metropolis. All the facts, figures, need-to-knows, national dish (buttered bread and cheese), national flower (tulip), national sport (football) etc, etc. People cheered when the picture of a cannabis leaf appeared on the screen (cannabis is ‘legal’ in this country).

And that wasn’t the end either. Another lady came up and gave us a lecture on ‘culture shock’. Generalisations of course, but having lived here for years and years a lot of these things I can relate to:

  • While visiting someone in their home, when offered a biscuit, take only one. Take two and you won’t be invited again. (Dutch stinginess)
  • Complain, curse, whine, lament about the weather (Dutch national topic of discussion)
  • Guys will not pay for dinner on a date (heard of ‘Go Dutch’?)
  • Men do not hold doors open for women (Dutch sexual equality)
  • Don’t call your lecturer Dr, Professor, BA, Bsc, LLB, LLM, PhD, MPhil so-and-so, just call his Jan (typical Dutch name, equivalent of John) (Dutch laissez-faire attitude)

As we left the lecture hall and walked passed town hall, a lesbian wedding was in progress (Dutch sexual orientation equality)—Congratulations to Ilse and Roos!

Well, here’s the (bitter) sweet bit.

I got chatting with this really cute, sweet Finnish guy, who happens to be on my course, and did exactly the same study I did at uni, also in the UK as well. I saw him earlier in the morning in the crowd—wild blond hair, pouty lips, clean shaven, my height, around my age…sort of like ‘Leo’ in my LYLM story. We hung around each other the whole day, talking about this and that, laughing (I’ll say it again: Rector Magnificus...) and joking around.

And then, just as I was thinking and hoping and wondering, at one point he said something which was a downer: “Hm, I’m looking around to see if there are any hot chicks.”

That wasn’t the first time. And each time I just smiled in reply. *Hmpf*
Anyways we exchanged numbers nonetheless, and I’m sure I’ll be seeing more of him around. But he’s just not… *sigh*

Overall the day went pretty well I guess. But there was one thing I really did not like, and made me feel really, really uncomfortable. Put a bunch of guys together and after a while the conversation strays onto ‘chicks’. I mean it seemed like all these guys were just there and talking to girls in the hope of ‘getting some’. Maybe I’m being hypocritical, since I guess deep down when I talk to a guy I wonder too if he might be ‘one’. Maybe it’s human nature to crave for that sexual appetite and for potential partners who can satisfy it in our interactions with others. But I don’t walk around and talk about who I want to sleep with and how ‘hot’ someone is almost all the time. Maybe I might if being gay were the ‘norm’, but even so I really doubt I’m the kind of person to do that. At least I hope so. And put a bunch of guys, oogling the room for 'chicks', coupled with a few rounds of free Heinekens it gets worse.

In circumstances like that I just say nothing and keep quiet. I don’t even nod, like I usually do when I talk to someone. I just smile wryly. Maybe even that is too much.

Mind you, I did have a number of girls come up to me and just start chatting. At the reception at the end of the day I was alone at one point sitting at a table with olives, crackers and nuts. Many girls just dropped by and picked up an olive or two, some grabbed a handful of nuts, and starting talking to me. A few asked for my phone number. I don't know if they wanted something else more than a friendly chat... I hope it's the latter.

30 August 2006

Induction


Got an email today from uni today saying they want me to be there at 8.30am "sharp" tomorrow for induction. A surprise really, because they had over two months to inform me, but did so on the very last day. Better late than never.

So I had a look at the two-day programme: talks, lectures, welcomes addresses, tours, boat trips, museum visits, city walks, dinners and lunches, and a party to finish it off. Exciting. Yes.

But to be honest I'm nervous about attending. I've never been good in social situations, certainly when there are lots of 'strange' new people around. I've never been good tactful in just walking up to someone and introuducing myself or striking up a conversation with the aim of 'getting to know you better'. So as excited and looking-forward I am about starting my studies again, really I'm worried about 'fitting in'.

I know the induction programme is supposed to 'loosen you up', a sort of meet-and-greet, but just imagining myself there with all these other people around makes me shiver... I'm that nervous.

But then again, everyone else will be in the same 'boat'...it helps, to think and know that. Even just a little bit.

The Object of My Affection

Just watched this touching movie: The Object of My Affection (1998)

The plot is simple: girl (Nina played Jennifer Aniston) meets guy (George by Paul Rudd aka ‘Mike Hannigan’ in Friends); they become great friends and move in together. Girl gets pregnant unexpectedly from a fiancé who she doesn’t really love. Girl in truth is in love with the guy. Girl wants to raise the child with guy. One catch: guy is gay.

But even such a simple, and at times cliché, chick-flick managed to move me to tears. The relationship entanglements, the unspoken feelings of affection, the wrangling and choosing between loving one and not hurting another. And all so real, all so human.

Personally I experienced something very similar when I was taking care of my pregnant friend in France. It was as if I saw myself as that guy, and could very well imagine myself in his predicaments. Though my friend and I didn’t kiss or verge on having sex, there were feelings there I felt from her that went beyond feelings for the ‘gay-uncle-taking-care-of-my-child’. Once we even joked about getting married.

Some wonderful lines from the movie:

Nina to George: “I don’t want to look at you and feel so hurt by you”

--

“One shouldn't be too hard on oneself when the object of one's affection returns the favor with rather less enthusiasm than one might have hoped.”

29 August 2006

Late summer's rain


Though the leaves are green, they are yellowing. Just a little bit, on the corners.

I stood under a chestnut tree today, trying to escape from the rain. For many days in a row already we've been having sudden freak showers to be followed by sunshine and clear skies. Just as I was cycling home from the station, it started to drizzle. I thought I could just bear the rain, but then within minutes it poured, poured, poured! Water drops splashed on the road, like peas, disspating in all directions as they bombed the tarmac road and cycle path. I had to find shelter, and I sought it under the arms of a chestnut tree.

For a while the tree was enough to protect me from becoming wet. But only for a while. Soon enough it started to rain even harder, rain to the degree it was reminiscent of horrendous typhoons I experienced last summer. In a scenario reminiscnet of that one chapter in "Loving you, loving me".

And mixed with the falling rain were pea-sized chuncks of hail. They broke through the leafy shield and struck, bombarding my coat, jeans and cheeks. I was soaked, completely soaked like I had fallen in a pond. Water ran down my eyes till all I could see were blurs. My hair plastered to my forehead, and I could just feel the papers and book I had just bought for my studies in my bag go soggy.

And then it cleared. And the sun came out, surrounded by beautiful pure white clouds. Like it never rained.

Still dripping, I cycled home.


28 August 2006

New 'job'!


The last couple of days I've been preparing for this 'interview'. Read about it last week online about this great position at the Telders Organisation Office. Basically the office organises an international moot court in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) every year, and is participated and attended by students, academics and real international law judges. Teams from all over Europe are given a fictional situation which they have to argue and defend to the best of their abilities.

I went there a little anxious, not knowing what to expect. Dressed in a smart light blue shirt, navy blue trousers. I guessed I looked good. And it turned out to be quiet informal. Two ladies 'interviewed' me, and were already thoroughly impressed by my CV and experiences. I soon relaxed, and it was more like chatting to friends you've just met, with a bit of exchanging information about my past and what it is I'll be involved in. I've organised a big international conference before, almost completely by myself as an intern at Leiden University last year. And that went very well. The lady interviewers said that would prove useful in my new role.

There were two embarrasing moments was though. At one point one of them asked quite ambiguously "How's your finance?" I hesistated a little, thinking why they'd want to know about my 'finance', but then went on to talk anyway about my part-time job and how I'm about to receive the government grant for my studies. They both started laughing at the misunderstanding. The lady meant how I am with finance, ie how good I am dealing with numbers and budgeting and compiling financial reports! Made a fool of myself there, but we laughed it off.

The other embarrasing moment was when one of the ladies, who happens to be French-Canadian, asked me about me living in the 'egg'. I was like "I'm sorry, me living in the egg?" See, problem with French-speaking people is they don't pronounce the 'h', and what she really meant was the city 'The HAGUE", where I do live! Again made a fool of myself, but we laughed it off all the same.

In the end, I got the part : )

Message from past self


I received a couple of emails today, from my 'past self' to myself.
You see, about half a year ago I made some plans (some more like promises) with myself.

  • meet someone I love

    Uh…not such luck yet, but then again the last couple of months I’ve been either (hiding) at home or moving from place to place. Did meet this potential guy in France, but then not heard from him in two months. Besides, he’s far away and much older.

  • meditate every moment of the day

    It's hard to be mindful and live in the present moment. It's difficult to concentrate on what you're doing and saying without having background thoughts, worries and anxieties. But I do try to remind myself that I should be more mindful, be aware of my thoughts and things around me, in the here and now. That way I can have inner peace and live happier.
  • complete my degree

    Instead of complete, I’m just about to start! I do hope by this time next year I’ll have succeed in my exams and written up a 25,000 word thesis!

  • decide what I want to do next

    Still not sure what it is I want in life, but for the next couple of months I should be more or less set and busy with my degree. Who knows what that will take me one year from now.

  • not get involved in my parents' problems anymore

    I don’t really think about my parents any more, not that much anyways. The weekly phone calls are more or less just the only times I’m involved in their lives, and that’s when I hear complaints and things going on at home.

You can see more of my plans on the right---->

'Growing up with two mothers'


Annemik Leclaire, ‘Opgroeien met twee moeders’ [Growing up with two mothers], p24-30, 26 August 2006, Volkskrant Magazine

The ‘pioneering’ children of lesbians relationships have grown up and are now in their t(w)eens. Most of these children were conceived through artificial insemination, either with help from anonymous donors or acquaintances. An important question is how different these children are from other children with ‘normal’ man-woman parents. Here are two reactions from such children.

A 19 year old girl, Djoeke:

”I have always seen my family as a standard family. I have two parents, we have always had a dog and a cat, a corner house with a garden pointing south, and a boy and a girl. The only difference is that I have two mothers instead of a father and a mother. For me that is actually a very small thing. That gender-aspect is not that meaningful. Also not in the practical sense. I’m living in [a rented] room [for students] and my mother can hang [wooden] planks up, drill and carry really very well.”
16 year old boy, Jelmer:

“For me my family is completely normal. I’m used to it. I like it this way. The only thing that is not normal is that others don’t find it normal. […] I played football for eight years, and one of my parents always went along. They were just between the fathers, and those fathers were always pleasant, they didn’t make it difficult. And my mothers could get along with them very well.”

And what about ‘expert’ opinion on how children from heterosexual differ (or don’t differ) from homosexual relationships? At the University of Amsterdam, Dr Henny Bos conducted a research into this. And it appears that children growing up in lesbian relationships tend to receive more love and are more free to develop themselves:

“Between lesbian biological mothers (who carried the child) and the heterosexual women, she found no difference in the experience of parenthood or the way contact with the child is made. But [there is a difference] between the social mothers (the lesbian mothers who do not carry the child in birth) and the heterosexual fathers.

The ‘co-mothers’ felt more need to justify their parenthood, because they did not have any bloodtie with the child, and because they realise that they had put a deviant form of family on the world. Therefore, according to Bos, they do more than their best compared to fathers to be good parents. Also because they have longed for motherhood, and had to travel a difficult path in order to achieve that.

Further they put less emphasis compared to the fathers on traditional ideals of nurturing, such as self-control and conformist behaviour, and they put down less structure and boundaries on the child.

The differences in this study do not show up in the children. In terms of interests, behavious and psychological wellbeing, the offspring of lesbian women did not differ from children from man-woman relations. […]”

27 August 2006

Can we just talk?


Distrust, conspiracy, plots and miscommunication. That’s how I’d describe what governs the relationships between people in my family. There’s only four of us, spread across two countries and continents, but it’s ugly and very, very sickening.

I got off the phone today with my parents feeling upset, again. Talking to my mum was alright, but in the less than four minutes I talked to dad it was like talking to a brick wall.

As usual, it was about money, money, money. The problem is that my parents have really poor relationship with my brother, and any sort of communication goes through me. Now, they’ve always distrusted my brother with money, because he can be a big spender sometimes. But when every single time I talk on the phone they (dad in particular) go on to complain and scold me for how my brother is always just spending and not saving it gets very tiresome.

Frankly, what my brother wants to do with his money is his problem. I have my own savings, and make a little from the part-time job I do, and will soon receive a government student grant. I don’t like to get involved financially with him, because he can be very stingy and protective of his own stash. Just today I asked him to lend me some to pay for my health insurance (two months overdue). He huffed and puffed and sighed, gave me the evil stare and silent treatment, and reluctantly agreed. Left me feeling like a complete failure and idiot begging him for money, but I wouldn’t think of doing that at all if I didn’t have to. I told him, I’d pay him back once I have it. He said I don’t have to, but in a tone that was bitter and spiteful. I don’t want to say how great I am, but my goodness, how many times have I helped him out in the past by digging into my own savings, without even thinking of getting anything in return?? I’ve lost count already. And how much does he owe me now? Tens, hundreds, even more than a thousand…

And then there’s the bad attitude. It seems like nobody in this family can talk, just talk and listen to the other speak without ending up all heated and frustrated. Between my mum and me it’s quite fine. We can understand and talk to each other well. But all other relationships seem to be rooted in aggression, suspicion and fear of being stabbed in the back. My parents seem to be in limbo, overshadowed by a suspected extramarital affair on my dad’s part, loosely tied together by a marriage of convenience rather than of love—though to be fair my mum asserts that the situation is improving. As I’ve mentioned between my brother and my parents there’s practically no interaction of any kind. Conversations are brief and blunt. As the days go by, both sides do not understand, let alone can manage to tolerate the other. And between my brother and me, there’s really not that much talking either. We live under the same roof, and talk only on a need-to (know) basis. I try to avoid him if I could, because the atmosphere and air whenever he’s around always seem so tense and suffocating (cigarettes). The condescending tone, that constant demand for respect and assurance that he is boss, and that deadly stare of shame and silence is frankly frightening.

More and more it’s resembling the Cold War, a symbolic analogy I came up with a couple of years ago for the poor state of ‘inter-national relations’ between the four of us. And there does not seem to be an entente in sight. People are either not talking to each other, or when they do, it’s in tones and ways filled with anger, ill feeling and distrust. When need be, they threaten to ‘press the button’ to de-recognise (disown) one another. I often hope that they would, and end this permanent state of war and madness, because there’s really not much that binds up, but a lot that separates us. And by that I mean more than the distance and time difference.

They say you can't choose your family, but can choose your friends. I certainly hope it's the other way around.

Sex for Animals


A campaign by ‘Sex voor Dieren’ [Sex for Animals] last week is collecting signatures to initiate a citizen legislative proposal to make it a right for animals to have sex.

Campaigners argue that millions of animals die yearly in the Netherlands without having had the chance to develop themselves sexually. Some die as virgins. They suggest maybe people can start organising ‘speed dating’ for their pets, or even a ‘peepshow’ for couples, or perhaps start apologising to cows in the field.

“Animals work hard for us people.

They deliver, among other things, milk, eggs, meat, wool, and pleasant company. Therefore animals have the right to good working conditions and pleasure in life. It is up to us to provide for their primary needs of living, such as fun, good food, fun work throughout the week, and now and then healthy love making.

Sex for Animals strives for the animal rights mentioned below:

  • The right to sex
  • The right to reproduction
  • The right to choose partner freely
  • The right to family life
These primary animal rights are unfortunately under pressure, because artificial forms of reproduction are more profitable. In order to allow animals to taste love, special effort is necessary.”




Hmmm, I feel guilty now about my little Kitty… she never did have the (s)experiences I had (emphasis on had...).