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11/24/11

why occupy

WONDERING why occupy

It's been over 2 months since Occupy Wall Street started in New York City. However loosely organized, I imagine it's involved thousands upon thousands of people and millions of consolidated work hours across the country (not to mention the tension, violence, and pain it's had to endure). Basically, a ton of precious resources and attention - more than any kind of government program or business could ever receive in such a short period of time - have gone into this general movement. But why, I am wondering.

A theory:

People have nothing better to do. Seriously. Perhaps there is nothing better left to do in this country; maybe there are no other means left of pursuing happiness and freedom outside of occupying public space. As a country, the economy is tank, political processes have long been unsatisfying, and our personal lives are statistically overtaken by poor health, poverty, and broken families. Therefore, anything to address these issues in a quick and effective manner issues itself as an immediate priority.

The occupation of public spaces may not appear to be a quick and effective strategy however, since it is in fact a massive, unauthorized phenomenon of loose organization rearing unpredictable and unclear movement. However, unauthorized occupation is one way to move outside the amoeba of thick material that makes the status quo - an amalgamation of rules, structures, and enforcement; tools that citizens have been using for a long time without seeing timely or effective change.

Occupation may therefore pose the next best strategy for change and most benign form of unauthorized action, compared to violence, rioting, or terrorism.

Personally, I believe in evolution and see these occupations as expressions of that process, however unfortunate or uncomfortable it may seem in the short term. But that's just the Berkeley bio nerd in me :/



Free mixtape download from Lupe Fiasco, Friend of the People.

11/23/11

succulent obsession

PLANT CRAFTS succulents

An empty salt & pepper shaker. All it needs is a little plant living inside.

The past three hours, I've been crouched in the corner, quietly arranging succulents in little glass jars. Succulents are desert plants that store much of their water and energy in their waxy, succulent leaves. They're real easy to propagate or pocket! Also, I say 'quietly' because I don't want to scare the good relatives that are housing me with my obsession over these things. Some points on why succulents are attractive: 1. they are easy to grow b/c they are adapted to harsh desert climates, 2. they look like synthetic, plastic toys, no?

All plant materials foraged from the public & private lands of San Jose. Don't tell.

It's fun to water this one. Currently lives in my car.

From the last UCSC Farm & Garden plant sale.

At Succulent Gardens in Castroville, a 2-acre warehouse of just succulents.

Workshop time -thanks, Alice :] Time to get back to work..

11/20/11

KSW Arts & DIY Fair

EVENT Kearny Street Workshop Holiday Party

Kearny Street Workshop is the nation's oldest Asian American multidisciplinary arts organization.

Saturday, December 10, 6-9PM
1246 Folsom St. @ 8th Street in San Francisco (SOMA)

On Friday, I decided to follow my heart into the world of plant-based craft & design. Yup. So come check me out at this arts & DIY craft fair in SF (seriously). For sale: potted plant arrangements, terrariums, and holiday wreaths using foraged and re-used materials. And if that's not cool enough for you, there will also be things like festive music, homemade snacks, and an Asian Santa! :D

11/17/11

can't resist

QUOTE via Dave via François de La Rochefoucauld

If we resist our passions, it is more due to their weakness than our strength.

(Cannot resist: good food, plant-based crafts, flowers, neglected space, matching textures, patterns & colors, friendly dogs, light pink swept clouds in the sky, good company, antiques!)

11/8/11

Cat Profile

PROFILE Nanook



name Nanook
sex male
age young adult
studied philosophy at UC Santa Cruz
lives in Santa Cruz, California
from San Francisco Bay Area
works at UCSC Farm & Garden
status in a relationship with Milly
interests sustainable agriculture, pest control, organizational politics
activities hunting, road tripping, charming undergraduates
about me don't kidnap me, k thanks


11/5/11

growing at home (San Gabriel Valley)

Last weekend, I traveled back home to my southern California suburb and hometown of Rowland Heights in the San Gabriel Valley. I grew up here, driving everywhere, not really knowing my neighbors, and going to the mall all the time to shop. For a long time, suburbs, to me, have represented a gross problem of poor regional planning & development characterized by mind-shattering traffic, social isolation, and drab iterations of tract homes/shopping centers. Over time, however, I am beginning to see past the infrastructural frame of the suburb and into the cracks and corners - spaces that house unique cultural resources, social organizing, and innovation. Like amazing food & restaurants, church communities, and start-up businesses. In the San Gabriel Valley, the area also has the advantage of having immigrant populations on land with sunny skies = the know how & tenacity to grow culturally important (yummy) foods.

For example:

SUBURBAN FARM The Growing Home


During my visit, I stumbled upon the Growing Home: a house in Diamond Bar that transformed itself from a typical green lawn & cement landscape to a suburban farm & learning center. To me, this place represents a beacon of light that illuminates the darkness of suburban sprawl. The people of The Growing Home are starting a chapter of the international Slow Food Movement in the San Gabriel Valley. The first meeting is next Saturday.

URBAN FARM Earthworks

Also during my visit, I spent some time at Earthworks in South El Monte. I taught a workshop on the basic principles of irrigation (to elementary school kids)! The farm is in a period of transition and development, hopefully a place that will soon capture the huge potential that is offered by the combination of youth, immigrants, land, and year-round sun.

11/2/11

infographic graffiti

STATISTICS On the dollar, literally




Found this on infosthetics.com, which is a data visualization blog that features new infographic projects internationally. I check it out once in a while, usually when I get home from work and can't think of anything else to do. If you were really into this, you could download templates and print them on your own dollars. (Though, I think it is illegal to modify money. I think graffiti in general is illegal. Infographic graffiti, though=nerdy+illegal=genius.)

11/1/11

1 year

EVENT The 3rd Annual Harvest Gala


Friday, November 18th, 6-9PM @ the David Brower Center

The Food Collective was formed by hungry students who soon became amateur business planners, policy writers, accountants, board of directors, fundraisers, marketers, teachers, and chefs - all while living the usual Berkeley student life of procrastination, frolicking, studying, and sleeping way too late.

This month marks the one year anniversary of the Berkeley Student Food Collective's storefront on Bancroft and I can't help but feel a little proud, like a middle school student of her science project - of something she had spent a lot of time fretting over. The store is now equipped with a full-time manager, consistent membership, board of directors, organizational policies, a regular schedule, seasonal menus, and all kinds of grocery items.

flash back:

2010 2009