Best Google Reader hack I’ve seen.

15 05 2008

Google Reader Preview Enhanced will, when you click on an article’s title, load the entire article in the reader within a frame. This lets you see the full article for those folks who don’t share their full RSS feed, and it also lets you comment on any blog post without having to leave the Google Reader window. It requires Firefox and Greasemonkey, of course. This is a nice time-saver.




Back in the truck again.

15 05 2008
After the window incident, I borrowed my parents’ truck again. It’s been a reliable friend for years.

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Difficult kanji and a ‘bento diet’?

15 05 2008

Chugging along on the kanji. I’m at frame 134, and I think some generous soul just purchased Remembering The Kanji for me, which I think I will have by this weekend, so I will be able to keep on going! Praise God!

As far as the kanji study goes, I think things are going well overall, but I just have to be careful to pick vivid imagery to remember some kanji that have been tripping me up. Most notably among these are 別, which is the kanji for ’separate’. The imagery that Heisig (the author) provides is a samurai that’s been tied up, and he’s yelling loudly because he has been separated from his saber on the right. That’s vivid imagery, for certain, but I just have to associate the word with the kanji better than I have before.

I’m having a larger problem with 専, which means ’specialty’, such as a carpenter or contractor’s specialty. The primitives, from top to bottom (you might want to make your fonts larger so you can see it!) mean ‘ten’, ‘rice fields’, and ‘glue’. Heisig suggests:

Now if we made a simple sentence out of these elements, we get: “Ten rice fields glued together.” A specialty, of course, refers to one’s special ‘field’ of endeavor or competence. In fact, few people remain content with a single specialty and usually extend themselves in other fields as well. This is how we come to get the picture of ten fields glued together to represent a specialty.

I’m going to have to think about that a little bit more. I was thinking that ‘ten rice fields glued together’ would indicate that one’s specialty is a rice farmer, but I don’t want to remember the kanji as ‘rice farmer’. I’ll review it a few more days, and if the imagery still doesn’t stick, I’ll ask the folks at the Reviewing The Kanji forums for some help.

In other news, I am embracing better eating habits, little by little. For several years now, I have had symptoms similar to hypoglycemia or a minor case of diabetes, feeling faint whenever I don’t eat something for a little while. This was making me have to eat almost constantly during the day, and while I was eating healthy things, the fact that I am bound to a desk for 8+ hours a day with very little exercise means that I have packed on the pounds, and of course with the added weight, this has gotten worse. I have started exercising on my lunch breaks, taking a walk whether I feel like it or not. This helps, but it still doesn’t really give me the kind of cardiovascular workout I need. I weigh too much to run without seriously hurting my feet and knees (trust me, I’ve tried, and limped for several days afterwards), so I have to stick with walking at a fast pace. I don’t know how I’m going to get more exercise, but I do have to work on my eating habits.

On the way to work this morning, I was contemplating the Japanese bentō, and realized that with the smaller portion and (generally) healthier content, this might be a good solution for my eating habits. I looked at the huge lunch I normally take every day, looked at some bento boxes, and realized that probably the reason I’m so much overweight is…duh…I’m eating too much! This might be a fun way to control my portions. I’m going to check the prices on bento boxes, and if a nice, sturdy one is inexpensive, I might invest in a few with birthday money. I have to do something to get rid of this weight, and this seems like a fun way to start.

* In marginally related news, I just found out that the design for the IBM ThinkPad was based on that of a bento box. How cool is that?




Practice

14 05 2008

Half a page of new kanji. My handwriting WILL improve!
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Not good.

13 05 2008

Got out to my car tonight and discovered the passenger side window smashed in. I’d call this ‘being under attack’. Prayer requested.
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Update: The police did a report and the onsite security is stepping up patrols and looking into security cameras. In the meantime, I won’t be parking in the parking garage any more. The window replacement should be only about $160, so that’s something we can handle, and the glass company can come out to us. Looks like all is well. We were initially dismayed, but that’s what emergency funds are for. It’s ironic that this happened the day after we completed Financial Peace University Online. If we hadn’t had an emergency fund, we’d be up a certain creek without a paddle! :)




Kanji!

13 05 2008

There’s a funny review of the ‘Remembering The Kanji’ book that I’m using here. (via Reviewing the Kanji) Glowing Face Man gives a…well, ‘glowing’ review of the book, and speaks to some of Heisig’s detractors.

I’m up to frame 110 in the sample book so far, and am really enjoying this book. I had always thought the huge 2,000+ character ‘alphabet’ intimidating…but this book makes it logical and fun. I’m scrawling out strange glyphs all over the place and having a marvelous time.

In the mornings before I get to work, I spend as much time as I can (before I clock in) reviewing and learning new kanji. I have three tabs open at all times during the day:

1. Khatzumemo, the online SRS programmed by Khatzumoto of All Japanese All The Time.
2. The Heisig Kanji Index, which lists all the kanji by stroke count. I use that page to copy and paste the individual kanji into Khatzumemo. Heck of a lot easier than pasting from Windows Character Map. :)
3. The Remembering The Kanji sampler I mentioned earlier.

It’ll be a bit of a shame when I have to move to the print edition, since you can’t keep a book in a Firefox tab, but hey. :)




Mommy Notes: The faith of a child

12 05 2008

It’s the story of a child (ours), an accordion, and a prayer answered, over on Michele’s blog.




That felt good.

12 05 2008

Every now and then, I get the feeling that I just want to start again, to discard all the baggage of my past and move on.

Done.

Today I backed up all my old blog entries here and at Blogsome, and deleted everything but the most recent entries. The Blogsome site is gone now (if you still haven’t updated your links, please do). I’m starting again in my life, and I decided that rather than holding on to my past, I would just let it go. There are plenty of good memories, but there are also some painful and silly memories that I’d rather not remember. Since I don’t have time to sort through the good from the bad, and I don’t want to bother, I just decided to start over again.

There’s still some lingering sadness in my life, most notably our financial situation, which despite all we’ve done, has not improved, and the need for a new job, which hasn’t yielded much fruit as of late.

Yet there’s also new hope. I feel that God is calling me to learn Japanese, and along with that will open up new possibilities, I’m sure. Since that’s the only concrete direction I have from Heaven at present, I’m going to go with that, because that’s something I can do. The rest…will have to be a miracle from God.




Tornado Tatsumaki

12 05 2008

I’ve been looking for new Japanese music, and Ken just posted about a band named Tornado Tatsumaki. I really like their sound:




18 months or 8 months?

11 05 2008

My enthusiasm for my goal of being able to speak in simple conversations and read a Japanese newspaper by the end of December was tempered a little when I read that Khatzumoto did it in 18 months. Maybe a little more time than I have between now and then (8 months) will be required, but still, I’m going to bust my a** and try my darnedest. Any time that’s not spent on work and family will be devoted to learning Japanese. I’m that serious.

I’m going to work this week to try to hit the 200-character limit (remember, unless someone helps get me the book before then, my kanji studies will be on hold until the first part of June, because I won’t have any disposable income until then). Finances are tight right now, and I don’t mean in a good way. I will use what I have, however, and I know that wherever God calls, God equips.

‘Wherever God calls…’ I’ve been really praying about this, and for some reason I have a burning urgency about this in my heart, a desire to learn Japanese that’s never been this strong before. I can’t explain it all yet, because I don’t have all the answers, but this is something different that passes normal ‘interests’, many of which I’ve discarded along the years. This is different. It’s not a hobby, it’s not my latest ‘thing’. It’s something of destiny, something that I know by the Spirit that I’m supposed to do, and something that’s getting stronger every day. I’m sure I’ll be able to explain more later. :)

I added a PayPal donation button to my sidebar and About Me page. I feel a little like a leech, but hey, at least I’m a nice leech. :D

Please donate!

Like I said before, if you can help a guy out, please do. Thanks.




Happy Birthday Sarah!

10 05 2008

Beautiful inside and out, both then…

Sarah, 10 mos (by stshores24)

…and now.

20080427 013

Happy Birthday Sarah! Six years old today. Not sure how THAT happened. ;)




Kanji-gating along…

8 05 2008

Things are going well. The kanji are clicking along. I’ve learned about 50 so far, which is a decent pace. I’m hoping to get some money before my birthday (May 30th) so I can go ahead and buy Remembering The Kanji. I’ve been working out of the sample for the past week.

If you’re interested, I’ll post pictures and links of the system I’m using to learn kanji, which seems to work well for me. It might not look all that interesting, but I think it’s fun!




Don’t Give Up

6 05 2008

OK, so I had a bad day. I wanted to hit someone this morning. This afternoon I wanted to walk out of work. I was also sick of this Japanese stuff and wanted to walk away from it, call it another one of my stupid temporary obsessions, and give it up.

Then I calmed down a little bit.

Then I tested myself on some of the kanji I’ve recently learned…and failed. I got mad at myself and threw the graph paper down and said ’screw it’.

Then I remembered a song by Robbie called ‘Don’t Give Up’. I queued it up and it encouraged me. If you need encouragement, do pop over here and click on the second song down. It’s good.

After listening to that song, I picked up the graph paper and wrote the kanji that I had choked on (’tongue’ (舌) and ‘hundred’ (百)) down a few dozen times. I re-tested and did a little better. And I’m going on.




Winning at those claw games, and the secret to learning Japanese.

6 05 2008

This is kind of fun. Unlike here in the States, apparently it’s actually possible to win at those claw games in Japan. (They’re called ‘UFO catchers’ there.) I’d love to win some of those cute stuffed animals for my kids. :)

More insight at tofugu.com.

(via)

edit: OK, I don’t really have anything to write today, I admit it. I thought this video was great, too:




Japanese, Here We Go!

5 05 2008


I’m on my way!
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