Tuesday, June 9, 2015

I'm Only Blogging When It Rains

I have returned to the land of smoked butter and...surprisingly pleasant weather.  Unlike my last visit, I no longer need to check the weather every hour to see how it schemed to torment and (eventually) kill me.  It's been overcast and occasionally rainy, but not full-on stormy. People told me a thunderstorm occurred on the night I arrived, but I was dead asleep through my double-glass windows.  Thanks to warmer weather, I am much more happier walking around and wandering, and doubly pleased that I somehow remembered how to return to some of my favourites from my last trip (here's looking at you, Thoroughbred and Monkey's Paw).

The team I work with doubled in size. It's a proper team now, but with sadly, the worst chairs in the biz to work from.  Every single person (new/old) told me about how much they want a decent chair to work in, to the point where I feel like starting a fund for them.

Most people are surprised that a lumpy old lady like yours truly enjoy watching sports. This week's been an embarrassment of riches (FIFA Women's World Cup, NBA Finals, Giants regular season), and I find myself glued to the bar counter of my hotel almost every night. Thankfully, the hotel is rooting for the right team, and we found ourselves commiserating over the tight game on Sunday.

I've had to change my habits a lot lately. This seems to be the theme for 2015.  I'm a little shaken by the recent hospitalization of two of my colleagues, not to mention my own demon to battle now with my recent diagnosis. It's sobering, and frankly, a fucking pain, to not be able to live like you want to, but I'm lucky I'm at a point where things are manageable.  It makes me conscious, more alert, and I guess, more deliberate and less flip about things. 
I'm sitting next to a Cavs fan. This is going to be a long night.






Monday, April 6, 2015

Things I Learned During Common Congested Cold Week


  • Pineapple juice is a better tasting cough suppressant 
  • If you are a child born and raised in 'merica, you prefer hamburgers to udon even when you're ill 
  • Personally, I'd choose high fever for 2 days over 5 days of persistent low grade fevers 
  • Pharmacies are depressing. Even their card section has "Loss of sister" "Loss of husband" and other sad, sad sections I wouldn't wish to ever have to buy for. 
  • Health is wealth. 
  • You do get bored of TeeVee. You even get bored of the interwebs! 

Monday, February 9, 2015

O'Canada!

Canada has one of the most satisfying anthem to sing (even though it seems to not care if their daughters have patriotism). There's that dramatic rise from the get go (starting with an interjection is always a great idea), and then a proclamation at the end ("O Canada we stand on guard for thee!"), and you can sing it in French if you so desire. Awesome.

It's also really empty as a destination on a weeknight in the dead of February.  I was the only non-Canadian on the flight and got through customs far before my luggage made it.  When I arrived at my small hotel, the receptionist greeted me by name, and was the friendliest ex-New Yorker I've ever met. He even gave me a free carbonated water from the bar and did not accept payment! He told me he hates the snow, though, and parted with a great bagel store recommendation (yes).

It's almost midnight here, so I am typing this to burn off some excess Californian jet lag. I've noticed that the city looks generally the same (last visit was about...5..6...years ago?). The currency has definitely been upgraded with the new plastic transparent ones, which is really neat. I love how some countries print non-politicians or rulers on their currency (Swiss Francs has Le Corbusier and I will forever keep that bill), oh wait...I'm checking out my bills and it's prime minister, prime minister, Elizabeth II, prime minister, prime minister...nevermind they're just colourful politicians.  I initially thought they were burnt until I realized that the transparent part is high tech cellophane (or polymer). The back of the bills are far more interesting - space, trains, and medical innovations like insulin.



swiss francs


The Queen is green


I haven't been outside in the below freezing weather for more than a minute yet but I did step on slush. Mr. Ex-New Yorker hates the cold and the snow, but for Californians, Adventure awaits! I must walk like a penguin to survive the long 1/2 block walk to my work tomorrow!

Monday, December 8, 2014

The London Chronicles: Here is London, "Home of the Brash, Outrageous, and Free"/You are repressed but you're remarkably dressed...Is it real?

I'm not sure if anyone is even reading this still, but if you are, thank you!  I've been back in rainy California,  enjoyed a late Thanksgiving dinner (crustaceans instead of turkey at my house), and being generally disoriented. I just took a lick of whiskey I brought back and am even more disoriented. I think I lost a few tastebuds along the way.

My last week in London was time-off week, so I spent a good amount of time staying away from
computers (wifi in my apartment refused to work until the very last day). When the plane landed, and I returned to a place with cell service and not have to multiply the price tag by 1.7 anywhere, I was flooded with relief, yet disoriented. But wait,  I'm jumping ahead.

On Friday night, I beelined to the Museum of London, spent 20 minutes trying to figure out where the entrance was, then straight into their Sherlock Holmes: the Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die exhibit.  I guess, calling it  "Sherlock Holmes: Fictional Character" was way too dry, even for British taste? I love it when things get DRAMATIC anyway.  You also get to enter the exhibit through a door disguised as a bookshelf! The exhibit was very thorough, with gobs and gobs of "actor" Sherlocks, costumes, but what really got my attention was how neat and tidy Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's handwriting was. Also, he was such a brilliant writer. If I lived back then, and was British, I would've worn mourning bands on my shirt (assuming I was male), too. One of the things I did was to participate in "Invitation to a Fall", which turned out to be falling off a very unassuming 25 cm or so, off a block, onto those padded things you see in stunt scenes of a gymnasium when you're doing something that involves landing full-body.  This was set up in an auditorium, with audiences (they ask at the entrance if you would like to fall, or if you'd like to watch). What I wasn't expecting was to be assigned a "Fall companion", who would talk to you before and after the fall. My companion was a young man with platinum blonde hair, who looked like a much more socially adjusted Draco Malfoy. He asked me several questions about why I wanted to fall, about calculated risks, about release and letting go, and he assured me none of this would ever be published and that nobody would see me falling forever (it's live, so the people sitting in the audience would, but only for a second). When my turn came, I wanted to fall like they do in Laputa, but obviously I didn't have my flying stone with me, so I ended up landing, with a thud, on to the mattress worrying that I'll flash everyone in the wake (I don't think I did). It was fun. Not exactly exhilarating, but fun.

St.Paul's, from my bus window 

My friend, and fabulous wallpaper at the pub

Thanksgiving@Fortum & Mason


Entrance to the Sherlock Holmes Exhibit

All you can watch Sherlocks!

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and his moustache

I think I mostly ran errands over the weekend until my friend arrived on Monday. I went to catch the Jesus and Mary Chain play Psychocandy in its entirety at the Troxy (way way way out east), caught up with a new friend I made in SF in February (another gorgeous archaeologist....I swear all archaeologists are gorgeous, and good peoples so far!).  The show was perfect. I felt floaty for days afterwards, but it could have been my loss of hearing.  On Tuesday, my friend and I hung out mainly around town, walked to Selfridges and Harvey Nicks, as I had tea with the girls in the office. On Wednesday, we had an early morning start to go to the Dr.Who Experience in Wales, which started off with an adventure - my friend woke up when I texted him from the lobby. We had train tickets so we had to scramble to hit Paddington Station before it left - a nailbiting 45 minutes or so and a mad dash to the platform.  We made it, and enjoyed some complimentary sweets and tea along the way.

Poverty Map (Booth's)

West Minster Bridge, House of Parliament and Westminster Abbey seen from the River 



Benedict wore this

Iconic 

X-Rayed Boots! So many hidden tales

I'd buy these, but probably wouldn't be able to walk without spraining my ankles 
Table of Variations in the Human Iris


New Specs, Old Face
The view home
We basically nerded out in cloudy Wales all day, which was completely off-season and empty. After closing down the gift shoppe with our combined buying power,  we jealously watched the people going to the BBC tour in addition to the Dr.Who Experience but it was booked up months ago. Next time!
Thursday was Thanksgiving in the US.  My friend (who was listening to Christmas songs in his room already) tried in vain to find us a place that has Thanksgiving foods, but I had a previous engagement to go see Sylvie Guillem and Akram Khan. Turns out that gig got cancelled due to injury, and we went to F&M to have proper Thanksgiving Tea. I was very grateful I had a friend with whom to spend Thanksgiving with, having Queen's Tea.  I also spent 2.5hrs that morning packing what my friend referred to as "All of London".  I had 4 suitcases...(small ones!) by the time I left, which involved me with a bunch of bags running into Primark (on Oxford), and scoring a bright red suitcase that I wheeled around all day.  On the bright side, I have 40% of my Christmas shopping done!  (Dark side, my wallet is quite empty).

So...28 days after landing in Heathrow:

Things I really liked about London
  • Arts and culture. So much arts. Once you managed to reach your destination, you can absorb all the arts you can manage to your hearts' content. And all they ask for is a donation most of the time. So many museums, plays, theatre, arts, libraries!|
  • You walk everywhere. I lost 15+lbs in less than 4 weeks. I really should stay for a year and see what happens.
  • CCTV everywhere keeps streets relatively safe and public transports clean. Buses ran all the time, and they apologize when they're 5 minutes late.
  • All the accents. Truly a world city.
  • Tea was always tasty anywhere. Food was actually way way better than I'd experienced on my last trip there.
  • Table manners. Everyone put down their mobiles during their meals, sat up (relatively straight), and used their knives and forks really well.
  • The parks, at dusk, walking to the palace on soft ground surrounded by tall tall trees with humongous leaves twirling in the air.
  • The announcements on public transit. "Chilton Spaaarrrrrr" ,"Alight here"
  • People were polite, and usually very nice. 
Things I didn't really like about London
  • Air quality. It felt Dickensian at times, with second hand cigarette smoke instead of coal filling my lungs at all times.
  • It was always under construction everywhere.  Sort of destroys the landscape and snarls traffic, which was always bad. Always.
  • Being the most expensive city in the world. The exchange rate was killer, along with all the hits in charges from financial institutions (these are greedy US financial institutions, so London is spared from this rage). However, the VAT officer who refused to return my VAT because my work visa is good until April 2015 can rot in her power-trip. She refused to give me a refund unless I can prove that I won't return to the UK (which is ridiculous....if I were here on a tourist visa, apparently that would've been OK. So you do the right thing and get a work permit to be safe (short-term, btw), and then they decide to steal from you because you MIGHT come back and wear that necklace you bought while in the UK. I never even got to use NHS or anything for this, so I feel robbed).
  • Witnessing the class system being very much a part of life there.  I also got some guy doing a Bruce Lee like kungfu move at me on Regent Street. Serves me right for being on Regent St.
  • Transportation. It was out to get you, and confuse you daily. 

Oh, London. Despite my grumblings, I miss you already. Thank you for a lovely 28 days, and hopefully see you next October for Cumberhamlet! 

Bonus Nerdery Photos 
My Dr.Who scarf in its shining moment 

One of my favorites

The Silence will Fall


Latest Doctor, cool coat, shoes are Docs (brogues)

My Doctor, I loved this shirt

The Scottish Doctor, nicely worn 

Sonic Screwdriver!

Downright realistic

My scarf died happy in the UK


Friday, November 21, 2014

The London Chronicles: Miscellany

I have 1 more week left in delightful London.  While I've done my best to cram all sorts of activities afterhours here, I still have this nagging feeling that I shoulda done something and I'm forgetting to. Tonight I'm going to yet another museum to experience the Reinbach Fall. I have no idea how, but I wore a floaty skirt so it can look something like this, instead of falling to my death with zero flair.

Castle in the Sky
As this entry is conveniently titled "Miscellany", I'm going to go in random order.  I have very loose plans this weekend, mainly around sourcing some good booze to bring back, and then checking football scores on Monday morning.  How tight are yours? Either way, have a lovely weekend!

  • I put on an accy! 
    Today during lunchtime (London is tasty, people. I don't know why we were so unlucky on our last visit), my Brit colleague took me to a betting shop so I can put on an accy.  What the hell are you talking about, you say? Accy stands for accumulator. London lets you bet legally!  So I went to a betting shop (not even a chain like ladbrokes, man, some real, scary looking little place) and randomly scribbled lines on a piece of paper (the people in the shop scoffed when they saw that my odds are 1/6000 or something awesome like that) which socc football teams would win the match this weekend.  We then placed a bet on a horse race that was being broadcast live.  Once again, I didn't know what the hell I was doing, but I picked a horse whose name I liked ("Jolly's Cracked It"), and after a nail-biting 2-3 minutes or so, my horse won!  I won 1.25 gbp. With all this side money I'm earning at pubs and betting shops, I may have some extra paperwork to do when I return!  "Welcome to London!" said the old man behind the bulletproof glass when I told him I'd won.  The race at Ascot was also interesting, because they jump hurdles along the way, and my horse stumbled on the second to last one but still made it to the finish by a good margin. Good show! Jolly good show!  It's also really distracting because they split screen and show another race starting (greyhounds), and man they are fast and gorgeous to watch. When I return I'm inclined to teach my dog how to run and jump hurdles like that. 
  • Random Celebrity Sighting 
    In addition to seeing Trevor Lock live (and getting a selfie with him to ensure @OngEmil gets jelly), I saw Mr. Timothy Spall who kindly stood by the door to chat with two eagle-eyed ladies who were obvious fans. He was very gracious, despite being in a rush. He looked just like he does in the movies.
  • West End Musical, Check
    I went to the American musical in London and had so many "OHGOD" moments, but I quickly learned to turn it off, like a light switch.  I'm glad my friend made me go, because I wasn't feeling like musicals this trip, and I would've regretted not catching this. Tickets sold out in SF so quickly, I remember it was lottery towards the end. The young actor who played Elder Cunningham was amazing (and convincing), as was Elder McKinley
  • Buckaroo & Tas
    At the comedy show, I learned about a game called "Buckaroo", where someone pretends to be a donkey, and then players put tons of stuff on him/her and then tries to make them buck (by using all sorts of things, like dirty socks, etc). Apparently Drunk Buckaroo is something you do at University, to passed out people as well, as evidenced here.  My French colleague got excited at this, and said that in France, they have something called "Tas", where people randomly fall on the floor at parties and people basically dog pile over him/her. I'm learning SO much every day.
Drunk Buckaroo - Exhibit A 

Drunk Buckaroo -Exhibit B

Drunk Buckaroo - Exhibit Camping

deux-bouledogues-anglais-pose-sous-un-tas-de-vetements-isoles-sur-fond-blanc




Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The London Chronicles: Wherein I Experience A Free Haircut

After a rollicking (cracking?) day at Bletchley, I wanted to have a less cerebral Sunday and decided to wander around a few neighbourhoods that operates on a Sunday.  I went to the London Bridge area to visit White Cube to catch the last day of Tracey Emin's exhibit. I can't believe how generous London is (so many of them free), until I realize that everything I buy here has to be multiplied by 2, essentially.  The exhibit was interesting, the space is gorgeous - so much ceiling height to display large bodies of work. I loved watching the people, too. Just, everyday, local residents walking in casually with their grocery bags.  I went through the gift shop (because I love to), and pondered who would buy ornaments like this for their tree. I couldn't really picture anyone real, or at least within my (albeit) small circle of friends and acquaintances. If you're one of them, please let me know what your tree looks like, and if you have Gilbert & George ornaments on them, too.

After doing yet another lost/walk (walking while semi-lost), I hopped on the bus and got to actually see the remaining poppies in the Tower of London from my window. They were removing it, and I was glad to have a nice view from behind glass way above the crowds.  The last time we came to the Tower, I wanted to stab myself because a) I was really jetlagged, b) it was raining and cold, and c) there were about 1000 x more people than I would have liked per square metre.   
Some of my coworkers suggested I visit Camden Town, which I imagined to be a lot like the Haight (it was), so I made it over there and started walking towards the horse stable markets, when a young lady asked me if I want to be a hair model.   I've never modelled anything (aside from that one time, when I did hand modelling for a magazine I was working for, but that was due to everyone else in the office at the time being male, and they needed a female hand. Don't ask).  I don't have much hair to cut, but I do have a patch of green in my hair which may have been taken as a sign of a risk taker?  I was really taken aback as to why I was asked. I decided this might be something to write home about - so I said yes. She took me to the salon/academy nearby, and I was penciled in for the next day.  The next day, I jokingly told my coworkers that I was going to get a free mohawk ("Just don't do anything too crazy", they wryly observed).  I show up at the salon, tell them I'm here for the, here for the, uh, (I can't bring myself to ever say "model", I'm like 50lbs overweight for that), and they show me upstairs, in the waiting area, where the other "models" are at.  I've always suspected that the Brits have a slightly different aesthetic when it comes to beauty.  Just look at British shows as proof. Prime Suspect had the realest cast ever - where every extra policeman in the background looks like they really are weighed down by all that they've seen, then compare it to, oh, I don't know, Prime Suspect US version, or more recently, Broadchurch.  They seem to be more forgiving if you're not textbook pretty, which in the US essentially seems to indicate flawlessness.  Perhaps this is why I was asked? 

UK version - oh how I loved Otley
US version 

*if you noticed me using British spelling all over the place, do note that I'm not intending on putting on airs; my spellchecker  (whom I named Basil) is British. You can read them in your head in faux-English accents and annoy yourself if you like. Flavour. Colour. Splendour. Barbour.

The point being, there were all kinds of hair models. I wasn't even in the minority here - there was another Asian girl with an even more daring do (and less hair) than I.  She had half of her head shaved, and the other side also shorn but with some elaborate bangs.  There was an older lady, who was clearly uncomfortable to be there.  Then there were the "real" models : Caucasian, Nordic or Eastern European, with intriguing accents, a pixie-like face, and legs like matchsticks.  I was even more confused as to why I was here.  I also watched someone who was clearly an artiste (he swore like one, had hand gestures like one, and was teasing the hell out of someone's poor marigold coloured afro). Also, as in real life models (I assume),  a lot of time was spent waiting. I brought my knitting, and made some good headway, until a dapper male in his early to mid-30s came bounding up, clapping his hands, and saying "So, let's go in to the other room, models!".  So we all gathered up our bags and followed him in.  He introduced himself as Ian, and filled us in on what was going on.  "Thank you all for coming in!  You're all here to be hair models for a group that's here from Italy. Don't worry, these are not students in beauty school - these are mainly salon owners and experienced hair cutters. I and my colleague (points to a tall blonde muscular male) here will do a consult, and then we'll do what we call "Salon Creative", which is salon cut with a twist. Ok, now take a seat, pick a mirror!". We all shuffle to a seat.  I get Ian.  There's about 7 of us, which makes them 2 short, apparently, so there's last minute upstairs wrangling of some other poor souls off the street.  Ian eventually makes his rounds and comes to me, and the first thing he asks is "Who cuts your hair? Where do you get it cut?".  I answer that I'm not from here, I'm from San Francisco, and I have a haircutter that I go to regularly there (whom I WILL  NOT name because I like being able to see her on a regular basis. She is awesome). She did, however, train in London, I say proudly.  Without missing a beat, he says "Ah, yes Sassoon. I can tell by the cut, and the curve here. You don't often see lines like these from people on the street".  I'm not sure, but I believe that was a compliment against my hairdresser. I smile politely.  Fortunately for me, Ian assesses my haircut as "Amazing, I love this whole look you got there", and does not want to veer away from this. But he thinks it'll be good to add some texture, and maybe trim my bangs? "You know, like how you returned from the pub all drunk and took some scissors at your bangs?". Wait, WAT?  My bangs already look like Jim Carrey in Dumb and Dumber. You cannot make Dumberer.  With that, he walks away.  The other instructor seems really stressed for some reason, and  all 9 of us "models" eye each other in the mirrors and exchange smiles and nervous expressions.  Then the Italian hairdresser team arrives.  None of them look like they are in their teens or 20s, in fact, they all look like a group of tourists that just returned from taking a 0.5 day sightseeing trip.  They all look at us nervously, too, until Ian asks them to pick a model.  I'm hoping the one that looks like Anne Hathaway dressed like a marionette (srsly, she had rouge on her cheeks and everything) might choose me, since I like that she has a Mary Poppins style carpetbag as her work bag, but Anna H. decides to go with the short haired girl next to me.  I get a middle-aged lady, who nods, and smiles at me as if to say "I got this, girl. Doncha worry".  Ian takes turns explaining the look we want to achieve, and we all take turns getting shampooed.  My person, whose name I don't find out until the end, gave a very generous, relaxing shampoo (I loooove getting my hair washed. Perhaps when my time has come, I can die while being shampooed? It would be such a relaxing way to go, not to mention, clean follicles that can be later used for wigs!), and we wait for Ian, as water drips down my shoulders.  By the time my hair pretty much dried, Ian is ready for me, and he starts instructing my person how/where to start.  I had to get misted again, but all that time, I got to watch with fascination how Ian approaches hair as if it's sculpture, and almost engineers it structurally ("her hair grows this way, so you have to allow it to be weighed down by this, like so"), and I watch a new style emerge like hedges being trimmed from a particularly thick, curly haired girl. 



While we all have such different hairs, different faces, different builds, we all have one thing in common, and that's uneasiness. "It's just hair, it will grow" mumbles the girl next to me, though she spent 5 minutes complaining to Ian earlier that she got a bad cut previously elsewhere, and it really dampened her self-esteem. A blonde girl with very thin hair is looking worried as her Italian trainee looks distractedly at other people while sort of drying her hair with one hand.  I'm listening to Italian all over, and feeling somewhat hungry.  If there's one body part of mine that is guaranteed a compliment (from haircutters), it's mah hair.  Every hairstylist I've ever had raves that my hair is healthy, great, amazing, fun to cut (and said nothing about my personality, my eyes, my thick middle, nothing. These parts are so neglected), but I have a very "meh" relationship with my hair. That girl is right, it's hair, it'll grow.  And I've grown it out multiple times so I can chop it off and donate it to Locks of Love. I've done it 4 times already and it always feels strange to take something that was attached to you an hour ago in an envelope and mail it, but it's very satisfying.  If you have hair and have low attachment to it, I highly recommend growing it out and harvesting it for a very good cause. 

 It's a 3hr cycle of instruction, attempt, judging and adjusting, and then finally, we get to my bangs. Every time Ian comes by, he says things to my person, like "You have to respect this hair. Treat it with respect, and it will respond. If you don't treat it with respect, I will punch you in the chest".  The Italian translator translates this, including the vigorous hand-gesture Ian did of attempting to punch my person in her chest.  My person laughs and nods. The only exchange between us so far that was more than "Thank you, grazie" and "Prego" was when she asked me "Is there any...pain?".
There wasn't, thankfully.  She had a steady hand and was very very careful. I saw that Anna H. was struggling the most out of all the stylists (she seemed very nervous, and kept getting corrected), so I felt like I somewhat dodged a bullet.
Ian managed 5 heads, his partner 4, and all the Italians gathered round to watch when someone was being looked at.  People poked and pulled at my green hair. "Bella!" said one, and another one gave me the universal thumbs up.  Eventually it came to my bangs, and Ian kept talking while snipping. "I love your hair! Your hair is just, amazing! It's one of those hairs that if it gets in your socks in the morning it'll bother you all day!".  Once again, I'm really not sure if this is a compliment or not, until at the very end, he looks at me in the mirror and says solemnly "It was a pleasure and an honour to cut your hair. I'd cut hair like this for free." Well, Ian,  you just did, and thank...you? 

My person beams at me when I thank her, and when I ask her name, she says "Paola.  From Firenze". My favourite Italian city! We smile, hug, and take a blurry selfie which I will not post here. 
My coworkers are disappointed that I didn't get a blue mohawk, but manage to hide it well. "It doesn't look that different!".  Well, actually, my bangs have never been shorter and my usual stylist will definitely know that I saw someone else (it's crooked on the left side), but eh, it was an experience.
If any Asian person with thick hair wants to get a short bob with Jim Carrey bangs while in Florence,  tell Paola I sent you, and give her my best. 
No Simon Pegg. Sigh. 
Just Like Haight


Poppies! 
London, you are so photogenic





Monday, November 17, 2014

The London Chronicles Weekend Edition: Field Trip to Bletchley Park or 158 Million Million Million

Sometimes, the planets align really nicely, to make you experience things that are extraordinary. As someone who works in security and tech, Bletchley Park  was the first thing I penciled in as a "must-do" over the weekend.   In anticipation, I went to the Barbican and watched the movie on Friday night.   I already had a membership to the Barbican and was curious about its Brutalist architecture. I am looking forward to coming back next year for CumberHamlet (it should be amazing, or it better be, as I stayed up until 4am to score those tickets, but I digress).  I had a few minutes to kill before the movie, so after having some pre-film dinner, I wandered around, and came across the London branch of my alma mater having some sort of social.

The movie was really good. It felt a bit rushed towards the end, but all the actors did a fine job of portraying their characters (although, I'm sorry but Samwise will always be Samwise, until he learns other facial expressions). 

The script was well written, 4 stars, would see it again.   After the movie, I went back to my temporary home as I had an early train to catch with a coworker. Side note:  Londoners do not knit in public. A few curious people came by to ask me what I was knitting (wrap), and if I'm a good knitter (debatable).

I couldn't sleep after the movie because I was too excited about my excursion. 

We took the train from Euston to Bletchley, and I had a great guide (my coworker who'd visited Bletchley 8 months ago with another friend/colleague).  We talked about work on the way for about 45 minutes, then talked about different paths we took that allows us to work together, which is extraordinary in itself - a Romanian soon to be UK citizen and a Japanese American (1st gen).  2014 isn't such a bad time afterall?  We talked about slave nations and personalities, and by the time we got to Bletchley I was ready for some fresh air.   

Apparently, the whole park was renovated recently thanks to Google and other sponsors (coughGCHQcough), and it was very well manicured, although the "huts" were tiny and damp. Some of the huts were more colder and draftier than others, and it was amazing to stand where the codebreakers once stood, many of them who took their secrets to the grave, and marvel at the brainpowers they harnessed. They were also running an AI contest based on the Turing test, which looked like a lot of fun.
I won't spoil too much in case you are planning to visit - but the Colossus (in the National Museum of Computing next door) and the Bombe rebuild is a must-see.  The docents and volunteer guides are really dedicated and happy to tell you tidbits of history and answer all sorts of questions.  Also note to the gift shop: You need moar (better) T-shrits!  Sell those ties and scarves!  My colleague and I spent the entire time scheming how to convince one of the workers to give it up. I bought a lot of books here.   They also spent time cracking Japanese code, which was very fascinating. It's one of the most difficult languages to master, and these people shortened a 5yr lesson into 11 weeks or so. Seeing their practice notebooks and flashcards and pencil writing of kanji characters really made them feel, well, real.  

Oh, and we also had a celebrity sighting!  Mr. James May of Top Gear fame. He seemed to be filming a segment for his Science show. I look forward to catching it on BBCAmerica when I return. 

We stayed for 6 hrs yet we ran out of time. I'm definitely going back.

The trains here run pretty reasonably, but wow the apologies!  The transit system actually apologises when it's late. "We are sorry that this train is running approximately 11 minutes late...we are very sorry". DK would feel right at home about this, if only he wasn't Canadian. 

I will now kill you with pictures, because I'm too lazy to type in 1k more words. 

Still in love with St.Pancras
Birthday pub lunch!
Meat the Pieminister! 

Inside Barbican Centre
Marvelous! 

Architects' tools 
I wonder if kids today use compasses


Architects send the BEST holiday greetings IMHO

My glamourous pre-movie dinner
why?

It's like being inside the white lodge
Sweet ride

Enigma

Japanese Dictionary

The Turing Bombe Rebuild Project 

Photographic Evidence 

Geekery

Almost like a Vegas spinwheel

Delicious on the inside





Mihai charms the lady

My favorite - a handmade Monopoly board to beat Turing

Turing's Bear
Turing's Bear


Oars


The perfect Billetee

Step Inside

He chained his tea mug to the radiator so nobody would use it

they have a room dedicated to carrier pigeons! 

Proud Pigeon Champion 

Sorry, What am I Supposed to Do Again?  
Solitary

The Boss' chair

When Can I Move In? 

I could totally do this 

The Mansion

That "object" is a dead animal 

Costumes and props from the Imitation Game 

Keira Knightley and Benedict Cumberbatch's costumes 



The bar set 

Handmade star chart

Turing killed himself with an apple laced with cyanide

The Machine Prop and I 


Hardware porn

Look at this!  LOOK! 

You called? 



Let's just hoist this thing over here...yup, easy peasy