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[personal profile] trinityofone
I'm baaaaaaaack! I mean, hi.

So my family left this morning. Mostly, the visit went very well: I was happy to see them, they were happy to see me, and their greatest criticism was that I hadn't put up more posters in my room. (Me: I decided that I would rather be able to eat than decorate. My mom: Even poor peasants try to make their space homey. Why don't you clips some pictures out of magazines and make a collage? Me: Because last I checked, my life isn't part of the nouvelle vague. [Okay, I didn't really say that last bit.]) We did a lot of stuff and I had a great time, although I'm very much feeling that I could use a vacation from this vacation, especially since my dad gave me his cold.

But they gave me other stuff, too! We were doing Christmas as "See something you want in Dublin, tell us what it is, and we will buy it for you (within reason)" this year, so I got to choose everything myself. Prezzies:

1. Don't You Have Time to Think? by Richard P. Feynman (Feynman was very much the type of man I would like to see Rodney become in 20 years. Minus the thing with bongos. *g* )
2. Creating Web Pages in Easy Steps by Nick Vandome (Finally!)
3. Cordelia's Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold
4. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough (*vbeg*)
5. Flannel PJs
6. A beautiful wool throw from the Avoca handweavers (Perfect for when I'm working at my computer--IOW, 98% of the time)
7. The complete first series of the new Doctor Who (It comes in a TARDIS! *geekgasm*)

I have excellent taste!

My parents also brought me presents from my aunt (A California Farmers' Market shirt) and my uncle (Nick Drake's Bryter Layter). Oh, and [livejournal.com profile] slodwick made me this:

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*loves*


The best thing, though, is that my parents brought me the correct kind of charger for my camera, so I can take pictures again! Many were taken over the last week, so I'm going to break them into smaller groups. I'll start you off with:

Dublin Signage

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All signs in Ireland are bilingual--English and Irish. This is out in Ballsbridge (British Islands place names = win!), which is a really posh neighborhood that I'll post more about later.

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This is what Irish traffic lights look like: in the foreground, you can see the signal for cars; in the background, the one for pedestrians. *shakes head* It's the little differences, man.

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And these are Irish exit signs. Or as my brother dubbed them, "This way to the monolith!" (This one is from the Guinness Storehouse, BTW.)

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Dublin is a city of contrasts. *g*

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No, really.

It's also a city with some of the best shopfront signage I've ever seen.

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South Great George's Street.

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O'Connell Street.

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An arcade on O'Connell.

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A jewellers on O'Connell.

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Somewhere south of the river--possibly Leeson Street. Baggot Street!

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Wicklow Street, just after sunrise.

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And again, with a warning.

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I still have no idea what this means.

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Or this, really.

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This is pretty clear.

And then there's the graffiti.

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A post box near St. Stephen's Green.

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On one of the derelict buildings behind Trinity College.

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The Simpsons--International School of Cultural Relations.

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Near the Guinness Storehouse, a reminder of why we should all pretend to be Canadian.

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And again, with my father, myself, and my brother, standing around like we're posing for an album cover. (Possibly something by The Smiths?)

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In Sandycove (about which more later), this cracked me up.

But not as much as this:
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And frankly, I'm confused. The first sign provided the helpful red slash, but this one, not so much. Therefore, is it a warning, or a recommendation? *g*

And finally, my favorite sign in all of Dublin, gracing the bottom shelf of my bookcase:
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More to come!

And finally, I'm at something like skip=200 bagillion, so if you said something to me in the last week, can you just poke me or link me or wave your arms and stomp your feet? I'm paying attention now, I swear. Well, mostly.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-12-29 05:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] soupytwist.livejournal.com
OMG OMG SANDYCOVE!! God, it's so gorgeous, and... does this mean you've read At Swim Two Boys? *has had dinner with Jamie O'Neill and totally looks for chances to boast about this to anybody who might have actually heard of him omg*

And wow, the pictures... I've only been to Ireland the once, but that's the Dublin I saw, and thankyou for capturing it so well. (Though I'm amused you mention the streetlights, cause that was one of the things I first noticed when I went to north america as being disorienting. :)) And I love the Smiths album cover, heh.

And also, y'know, squee for Dr Who and Rodney is TOTALLY going to end up being the new Feynman - *geeksquee!* - cause while the bongos not so much, the writing snarkily brilliant books which explain science is just, yes. Genius. Has to happen. :D ("Surely You're Joking, Dr McKay?" maybe. Heh.)

(no subject)

Date: 2006-01-02 12:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityofone.livejournal.com
I'm ashamed to admit that I haven't actually read At Swim Two Boys. It is ON MY SHELF at home in L.A., but I didn't quite get around to reading it before I left, and it was a big heavy hardcover so I couldn't bring it. [livejournal.com profile] jarsy is going to try to lend it to me, though. And having dinner with the author is still totally cool--dinners with authors are always cool! How did that happen?

I'm really glad you liked the pictures. There are a lot more coming, so... And ha, the streetlights! I love how many variations one can do on the "You people are weird," "No, you people are weird!" debate. Last night [livejournal.com profile] jarsy and I did basil: BAH-sil vs. BAY-sil (I'm in agreement that it should be BAH-sil, though half my country isn't) and herbs: erbs vs. herbs (I do say erbs, but I had to bow in the face of the Izzard argument: there is a fucking 'h' in it). Ahh, culture.

"Surely You're Joking, Dr McKay?"

Heh, yes. Though I'm torn between wanting Rodney to eventually be mature enough to just privately mock the idiots, like Feynman, and neverever stop being obnoxious and rude. "Surely you're joking, Dr. McKay?" "Surely you're not a complete and utter moron, Mrs. Eisenhart!"

Okay, really I'm torn between wanting to write a SGA Manhattan Project AU and the sad remains of my sanity, but, uh. Yeah.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-01-06 03:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] soupytwist.livejournal.com
Oooh, you're in for a treat. It's a wonderful book, really funny and very sad and just, yeah. I'm kind of jealous you get to read it for the first time, now. :) And the author (who I got to meet cause one of my friends emailed him once and ended up becoming his friend, like, HOW COOL IS THAT?!) is very like his book. More cool people should talk about their writing and be funny and stuff. :)

Yay more pictures! And I am absolutely on the bah-sil and herbs side of those arguments, hee. I've always wondered where that h-dropping came from. Though the weirdest one was when I got told to get off the pavement and it took me a good two minutes to realise she meant the street. Dude, random. Oh, and "jumpers" meaning a pinafore. Hee.

Manhattan Project AU.... oh. my. god. Please? That would be amazing! Sad, but amazing! And I veeeery nearly made the "and the answer is 'no, you really are that much of a moron'" jokes, heh, so I'm glad you did first. And I can actually totally see both possibilities for Rodney - like, he could end up getting less outwardly rude and bitchy as he gains more people who he really values and who will tell him why social graces are often useful, but then I also love the way that Rodney's not so much rude as ridiculously and kind of brutally truthful because he doesn't so much not understand social graces as think they're a complete waste of everybody's time. So him being seventy and wacking idiots with a cane is totally possible. :D

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