if you're reading this, i know you might be wondering where on earth i've been? i often ask myself a similar question at the end of the day: "what did you do with yourself today kalfas?" my life is a blur of activity and yet i find that i am able to absorb details around me, somehow i am managing to stop and smell the coffee (not really drink it) and still accomplish 80% of my daily to-do list.
anyway...this really isn't about my ability to multi-task because obviously i haven't done it all that well if i've neglected updating the blog i promised i would be updating.
the new semester at BU is upon me and i'm thrilled! i love the school, the city, the friends i've been making, the adventure of learning the ins and outs of a new place (yes, it is still new after 4 months). at this point i may even stay in Boston for my PhD...who knows? i arrived back to boston on january 5th (around 1am) and started back at my field placement internship the same day...9 hours later. but let me take you on a little trip back in time before i got on the plane to head back to boston...
...i spent some amazing days in buffalo reliving my former life, an amazingly, wonderful chapter that is still propped open a wee bit waiting to see if i will indeed end up back in Buffalo working for
Buffalo ReUse. maybe michael's (a co-op friend) prediction will come true and he'll be hiring me to work for him in a few years. it's an amazing organization that everyone should know about too.
as Jessica or Adam or Brian were shuffling me around town like my middle school days, i began to feel homesick for buffalo. i never expected it, but being back in the safety of that place, this city that had been my home for 10 years, i wanted to be back. walking into the
lexington co-op, where i had cashed people out for almost 3 years, i was radiating with joy to be back in that space seeing familiar faces, walking amongst the shelves that make up a store that is so much more than just a store to me.
(a side note here for those who may not know...jessica is the sister that the almighty overseer of the universe never gave me by blood, thankfully we met move-in day at canisius in august 1998. she can have a conversation with me in a voicemail because she already knows what i would say and how i would say it. she is forever part of my heart. jessica is married to adam, one of the most incredible men i have ever met in my life and also a fabulous friend. not to mention a killer editorial cartoonist for the buffalo news. adam and jess are fierce friends with my dear brother and me and we are all the better for them. brian is my partner in crime, he is stanford to my carrie (sex and the city), will to my grace (retired nbc sitcom), my platonic boyfriend, my gin and tonic happy hour or any hour, deep-thoughts comrade.)

it was in this visit home where i met olive, the cutest french bulldog you could ever imagine meeting. i had the chance to visit my old neighbors on livingston street and give them the nepal peace flags i had been promising since before i left in august 2008. that's marcia to the left, standing under the peace flags that her and christine (photographer) hung up outside the best little apartment building you could ever dream of living in! i miss my space there so much, it was so homey and wonderful. *sigh* but the space is still great and we were able to gather marcia, randy, brandon, christine, chris, brian and myself...nate and ryan were there in spirit too. it reminded me of our first potluck way back when i moved in a few years back. and seeing these glowing faces made me so happy that i have been blessed with the gifts of wonderful friends. i surely miss those gatherings of our urban family, but i am building an addition to that family up here in boston.
so i did all the typical things while in buffalo, ate at the old favorite places (Betty's, Lex Co-op, the shops of Elmwood Ave.), visited some favorite bars (Allentown Hardware) and had the time to be grateful for how good Buffalo was and still is to me. leaving was sad, but i know that good things are coming in the months that lay ahead of me here in boston.
now that i am back and settled in, for the most part, my residents are filtering back to the floor and my planner is filing up with classes, homework, events for my residents, events for me, yoga classes, trips home, alternative spring break and the list goes on. classes have begun. i enjoy all of them, especially my biostatistics class because it is helping to connect me to the school of public health. my research in the institute for geriatric social work is starting up again and i am on the path to getting a research assistant position there for the 2009-2010 academic year.
today is an incredibly cold day, the type of day where it is best to wear warm fleece clothes and watch movies while eating popcorn and drinking hot cocoa. which is what i am off to do right now. Manhattan. A Woody Allen movie that Jessica and Adam have been encouraging me to watch since the summer maybe? Yay netflix!
until next time, stay warm and remember the real reason we have a holiday on monday...MLK Jr. (an alum of BU actually) and the values he stood for. it is rather ironic that the inauguration of our new president is happening on the heels of this holiday. and i ask that if you are not happy with the president elect, to set aside any cynicism and negativity and try to be hopeful, try to believe in someone who wants to bring good things to our country. and if you have any questions as to why he chose to take on this task...just read the letter he wrote to his daughters. his perspective is wise and honest and flawed because he will never accomplish all he hopes for, but so what? what president has? his task is daunting and his dreams are many, but is it really valid to fault a person because they have hope? i would like to think there are worse characteristics a person could have, worse things a person could believe in when we live in a world where people are so quick to see the glass half-empty...maybe a good new year's resolution would be to try and see what the glass is life half-ful instead?
social workers can be community organizers. obama's first job was as a community organizer. people have even referred to jesus as a community organizer. even MLK was a community organizer, but it shouldn't take their life ending at the people who hate them, for the mission of the work to be respected and honored.
and in the end...if people are left uncomfortable because of this new president, good. it's good to be a little uncomfortable, a little uneasy, a little irritated because it means that you are tuned in and hopefully for the right reasons. change does that and change was needed here. and if you have a better idea about what the president should be doing then heed the words of Ghandi and be the change you wish to see in the world. it all starts in the mirror.
Quote of the day:
"Change, however, does not occur magically. It represents individual and collective pioneering efforts. You can still choose to be a pioneer? And I hope you will do so."
-Stephen Breyer