Fed interview
Good news everyone--the Fed interview went well Wednesday. I met with a couple of groups, and I think I have a shot at the Bank Supervision division, doing research and writing on IT operational risk, bank resiliency, etc. It really seems like a great opportunity. In any case, they've asked for a writing sample, which I take as a good sign. I think I'm supposed to hear back from them in a couple of weeks about a 2nd-round so I may be flying back there soon. We shall see.
Thanksgiving at 2 Bayard Road...



The 
Thanksgiving dinner I gave this year was a surprising success. For some reason, every dish came out well, one out of the two wines I picked was really tasty (a Talus cabernet) and it was pretty well-timed...by the time all my guests were here, it was ready to serve. My guests this year: Madhuri, Mina, Hyeyoun, Sohee, Neha. All of them are great company, and I personally had a great time. We followed up dinner with tasty desserts made by Hyeyoun and Mina, and a showing of "The Jerk". The evening reminded me how much I'm looking forward to the day I can start entertaining on a regular basis again...
Pics from top to bottom:
--turkey and stuffing
--plate full of food
--cleaning up in kitchen (thanks again, guys)
--Sohee and Hyeyoun
--Madhuri and Neha
--Neha, Mina and Hyeyoun
Birthday Party

A Couple of pics from Amina's birthday party. Amina and Lydie are shy about having their pics posted, so there are only a couple of pics here I'll show...
First pic: myself and Mike toasting Amina's birthday and good times in general...
Second pic, starting left going clockwise: Mike, Larry, Tim, and Laura.
Seasonal poetry for your enjoyment
Hello friends... Today's the first day I really felt it was autumn here. Up till now it's either been relatively temperate or rainy. Today it was cool, crisp, and the trees were simply beautiful--I'm still struck by it even though I've already seen one autumn here.Anyway, I thought I'd share with you some topical poems I like. The first three are Japanese waka, the first two from the Hyakunin Isshu ("100 leaves") collection, and the third from the Kokinshu ("Collection of Ancients and Moderns").
Following this are two poems by two of Germany's greatest lyrical poets, Hebbel and Rilke. Not the greatest of translations, but what the hell...
Finally, I thought I'd throw in that great Shakespeare sonnet we all read in high school (73)....
Enjoy!
=====
Fujiwara no Masatsune
From Mount Yoshino
Blows a chill, autumnal wind.
In the deepening night
The ancient village shivers:
Sounds of beating cloth I hear.
Noin
By the wind storm's blast
From Mimuro's mountain slopes
Maples leaves are torn,
Which turn Tatsuta River
Into a rich brocade.
Anonymous
In the autumn fields
mingled with the pampas grass
flowers are blooming
should my love too, spring forth
or shall we never meet?
-----
Friedrich Hebbel: Autumn Scene
This is a fall day like I never saw!
The air is still, almost of breathing free,
but here and there are falling, without flaw,
the finest-looking fruits from every tree.
Do not disturb ripe nature's holy day!
This is a harvest that is all her own,
because, today, each fruit that breaks away
falls from a milder ray of sun alone.
Rainer Maria Rilke: Fall
The leaves are falling, falling as from far,
from wilting in the heavens' distant gardens:
They're falling to deny the summer's mirth.
And in the nights the heavy Earth
falls into solitude from star to star.
We all are falling. See my hand: it bends.
And look at others: It's in all their calling.
And yet there's One, who's holding all this falling
endlessly tender in His upturned hands...
-----
Sonnet 73
That time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
In me thou see'st the twilight of such day
As after sunset fadeth in the west,
Which by and by black night doth take away,
Death's second self, that seals up all in rest.
In me thou see'st the glowing of such fire
That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,
As the death-bed whereon it must expire,
Consum'd with that which it was nourish'd by.
This thou perceiv'st, which makes thy love more strong,
To love that well which thou must leave ere long.
last 4 weeks...sukiyaki...bad movies
I'm in the home stretch...4 weeks and I'm done. But what a hellish 4 weeks it's going to be.
I just bought an electric pan, and I'm dying to make some sukiyaki, but it's really no good making the dish for oneself. I need to have some time to go to the grocery, get the stuff, and invite people over. Also--need to start looking up some T'giving recipes on epicurious, if I'm actually going to invite people over for dinner that day. All this damn schoolwork is getting in the way of my gustatory self-indulgence. Sad.
In more practical matters--I believe my GAO interview went quite well. Don't want to jinx myself, but I think I should be getting a 2nd-round out of this. Also, there are some possibilities w/ the Fed; although I'm not entirely in, I have a contact there who is passing my resume around...finally some payback on this degree.
Most importantly, I just received in the mail the fruits of my Amazon shopping binge, which I probably shouldn't have done, but it made me feel good at the time, as burned out as I was. I now have 2 sweet classic 1970's kung-fu flicks - a collector's edition of "Master of the Flying Guillotine" and Jackie Chan's "Snake in the Eagle's Shadow". This should keep me in B-movie heaven for a while.
