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Tinypliny's Journal

tinypliny
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11/14/2010 18:31 #53105

Salsa for the Soul
Category: dance
Cue music!

::DOWNLOAD SOUND::


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I godzilla-stomped through Sarah and Sean's basic dance moves and yet, they made me feel as if I was their best dancer on the floor. They are probably the most amazing pair of teachers I have ever met.
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At some levels, their class reminds me of the days I struggled to comprehend the molecular orbital theory. In fact, salsa and the orbital theory share more intricacies than you might think is possible. It's all about energy levels, subshells, orbitals and spins. Solo salsa steps closely mirror the energy densities of s, p and d orbitals.

At the heart of all salsa steps is a return to a high energy center - the S orbital.
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You step out of the center and distribute the energy a bit to the periphery capturing the P orbitals. image

The d orbital is all those twirls and twists subtly layered on top of the p energy density distribution.
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And if you didn't guess already, the f orbital houses the salsa shines and some of the inspired freestyles by Sarah!
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The molecular orbitals or partnered dancing becomes easier once you get the gist of the atomic orbitals or solo salsa! Oh, and there is also this perplexing mystery of how exactly one picks up the rhythm of the clave in the music and decides to dance on-1 or on-2.
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I spent a good chunk of time listening to the Salsa Beat Machine at the but the beat of this quirky instrument is one of the toughest to isolate in the middle of all the other instrument racket. I read somewhere that some people are born with the rhythm resonating in their bones. I think I can believe this easily of Sean and Sarita. There is something so very inherently rhythmic about the way they move. If one of them is dancing, they can make even the most waddly of partners look graceful and poised.
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PS: Drop by the Configuration Dance Studio (at the corner of Ashland and Lexington at 7:15 PM on Thursday evenings) for some super-stylish Salsa Chemisty with Sean and Sarah! Catch up with Salsa for the Soul at: and

tinypliny - 11/18/10 22:16
I meant to come!! But I fell asleep IN costume! It was the lamest thing I have done in a long while. I woke up the next morning at 11:00 AM with one of the skeletons from my costume digging into my arm and giving me a massive bruise. I so sorry I missed you and (e:hodown)! Couldn't have been lamer.
lilho - 11/17/10 13:44
you're insane. why did you not come to the party?
tinypliny - 11/14/10 22:07
I knew some connection would pop up! It is amazing really. Someone ALWAYS knows someone else you know and it kind of links up in Buffalo.

Do you mean Sarah or Sean? Sean told me he is from NYC, but Sarah is from here - so you mean Sarah?

I hope you are still friends... "Used to be" is an ambiguous phrase.
paul - 11/14/10 21:42
Oh we used to be friends with your dance teacher's sister when we live on elmwood. Good luck with dancing.

11/14/2010 09:51 #53101

Pom Poms!
Category: the odes
I browse the Sartorialist for fun. I just saw this picture. The little kid looks somewhat like my brother... back in the day. I had to post it here, just so I could look at it and smile! :-)

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From the Sartorialist, November 9, 2010

tinypliny - 11/14/10 22:10
He is the cutest kid I have seen in a long while and... fashionable! :-)
paul - 11/14/10 21:41
That kid is so cute.

11/11/2010 14:10 #53091

At home
Category: the odes
I am at home on a sunny beautiful weekday after a really long time. As wonderful as it sounds, it's not even remotely satisfying. Every 10 minutes, I am coughing out what looks like greenish-greyish-yellowish globs of primordial slime. I am sorely tempted to post a gross picture here but I am trying not to offend (e:libertad). :-)

The thing is I have dance class at 7:15 today. And these two are my instructors:


I know. It's intimidating, especially when you have cold and can't think straight. Last week, I was caught up in lab and crashed the intermediate class instead of the beginners class. It didn't do my confidence any good but it was fun to watch all the footwork and see Sarah and Sean dance. I am hoping that I am well enough to get there at 7:15 today.

Oh and before I forget, I can't really be at home for long because my cells need some TLC in the lab.
metalpeter - 11/11/10 17:16
The Exercise will be great for you. It will make you move and get your body going and make you breath heavy and force things out of you and the sweeting will be good for you as well have fun....

11/08/2010 23:38 #53083

Pain Pain Pain
Category: the odes
I have a terribly sore painful throat right now - probably a result of lecturing at the top of my voice for two and half hours combined with a pharyngitis causing virus. My throat probably looks like this:
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What is worse is the nagging feeling that I didn't really give an interesting lecture. I wasn't feeling the joy I usually do and totally violating my personal rule of presentation zen. I was miles away mentally, worrying about my lab assays and data analyses while I was lecturing. I didn't connect with the students. As a result, I feel very fake and very ill right now and down in the dumps.

Maybe it's the impending cold or maybe it's just a realization that I didn't get all my energies out there conveying a simpler message to the students - always a sign of bad and graceless teaching. I feel as if I misused the time of those 25-odd students in the class. They definitely deserved a better lecture than this.

Sincerely yours,
Swimming-in-misery-and-throat-inflammation.
tinypliny - 11/11/10 14:06
Thank you! I am getting better. :)

LOL @ (e:fing)'s comment. I don't feel sorry for them!
libertad - 11/09/10 18:22
This is so sick looking. I hope nobody posts a picture like this again. I bet you are being hard on yourself and that the presentation was fine.
fing - 11/09/10 15:04
Just think. This is the last thing that countless vegetables have seen over the years.
heidi - 11/09/10 12:25
awwwww.... lots of tea and sleep for you! Get well soon.
matthew - 11/09/10 10:30
Get well soon, tiny!
paul - 11/09/10 10:09
Copycat (e:paul,32876) - get well soon.

11/06/2010 13:57 #53069

RPCI cuts down trees for no real reason
Category: work
I am very depressed that my workplace decided to cut down all the full-grown trees in front of my office and build an ugly cement rink and footpaths that were completely unnecessary. It is true that some of the employees complained about suffering falls in front of the building because of the uneven footpath. Instead of advising caution while walking, recommending sensible footwear and non-invasively fixing the few uneven concrete slabs in the walkway, my workplace, in its infinite wisdom, hired an industrial-scale landscaping crew/demolition squad, dug up all the grass and uprooted the mature trees that had probably grown there for nearly 40-50 years, judging by their girth and root-size.

The trees brought character to the building and filtered light through their beautiful foliage. When they turned, they were awe-inspiring and soothing to the senses. More importantly, they were part of the natural air-quality control near the periphery of the campus where employees, who are probably blind to the ill-effects of smoking, continue to smoke like chimneys and blow out puffs of smoke all through the day. As far as I know, these four trees were causing no structural damage to the building. I would be interested in hearing why exactly they needed to be chopped down and uprooted for no reason other than to satisfy some dull and unimaginative aesthetic.

The "tree of life" - a sad-looking evergreen at the centre of the Kaminski gardens in the campus was structurally damaged during the October snow storm a couple years back. A million emails were sent out to the employees and everyone else to assure people that the pruning of that tree was only made in the good faith that it would grow again. However, there has been no word of explanation, or even acknowledgement that cutting down four healthy trees is a sizable and real concern.

It is not enough that our recycling program is so patchy, that the employees misuse paper as if it grows out of thin air and that we "are proud to partner with" coke. Now, we go and cut down trees that have slowly grown over 40-50 years. All of this, compounded, makes me think that we are a cancer fighting institution only in name. Through our actions, we are indirectly destroying the very environment that contributes to our state of health. Our non-existing conservation strategy and poor decisions subtly have a detrimental effect on the health of our neighbouring communities.

Deforestation can NEVER be justified by some perverted notion of aesthetics or urban planning. I am sorry, but whoever argues that landscaping justifies cutting down full grown trees is an environmentally oblivious selfish human.


PS: The official suggestion box comments have been ignored since June. I'd be glad to hear what logic they could possibly have for cutting down the trees.
uncutsaniflush - 11/08/10 23:42
(e:tinypliny) - my understanding is that if a glue is oil-soluble eventually any oil exposure will weaken it. Furthermore, it is my understanding that when it comes to shoe-glue and oil/grease the problem is repeated exposure. I don't think that any shoe will fall apart just because you step into a puddle of grease once.
tinypliny - 11/08/10 23:21
And whoa - the whole idea of walking in oil strong enough to dissolve what holds your shoes together is somewhat disturbing. So, can regular vegetable/soybean/corn/canola/olive/coconut oil dissolve shoe-glue?! This is a whole new aspect of occupational safety I never thought about...
tinypliny - 11/08/10 23:17
Sadly, I think you might be right about the evil "masterplan". :(

It's not like they peeled down some hideous green wallpaper from the 70s. They probably took the word "renovation" in such a literal and crude sense that they got rid of the timeless trees.
uncutsaniflush - 11/08/10 20:37
(e:tinypliny) - In my haste to answer I neglected to include the phrase "slip resistant" to the Decalogue of attributes possessed by my "non-atrocious" safety boots. Oil resistant and slip resistant are not the same thing despite being linked together in footwear. Oil resistant means that the shoes will not fall apart when exposed to grease and oil. In other words, glues used are not oil-soluble. Slip resistant refers to the thread pattern and sole that meets some ASTM standard for such stuff to minimize the risk of slips on wet surfaces.

I'm a big fan of trees. Trees are especially wonderful in an urban setting. I think cityscapes without trees tend to be ugly. I don't know why RPCI did what it did. Maybe you are correct and someone there decided to spend tens of thousands of dollars to protect those who wear "atrocious" shoes on campus. But I tend to discount that possibility. Of course, if the administrator who oked the tree massacre is someone who crosses that area in "atrocious" shoes, all bets are off.

I suspect that this is part of some "master" plan to renovate the RPCI public spaces; however, unnecessary that might seem to some.
tinypliny - 11/08/10 18:56
What are oil-resistant soles? Are they similar to the spiky ice-resistant soles?
tinypliny - 11/08/10 18:55
I guess people can trip and suffer falls in any situation, (e:uncutsaniflush). I was being superficial.

Somehow that doesn't sit well as a justification for cutting trees, though.
uncutsaniflush - 11/08/10 11:17
hmmm "atrocious shoes"?? Ah,it would be wonderful indeed, if one could avoid tripping and falling by not wearing "atrocious shoes". I, personally, have tripped and fallen wearing steel-toed workboots with non-skid, oil-resistant soles (the ultimate in sensible safety-oriented "non-atrocious" footwear). I also believe that I am not unique in this.
tinypliny - 11/07/10 12:18
Good points, (e:metalpeter). Didn't think about those - especially #3. I still am not very happy. How do people walk on grass or uneven ground? If they fall, would they sue nature? It is ridiculous that people feel the need to wear the most atrocious shoes, walk with their ears glued to cellphones and then blame someone else for falling. :/


(e:Paul) - that building used to be a pediatric cancer ward. Not one office is without a window. (excluding the basement which was the laundry services back in the day)
paul - 11/07/10 10:10
Although I like trees, I think that whole building needs to go at some point. Did you ever look at it from Google maps sattelite view. I don't think a build could utilize its property any less efficiently. I bet they build a more dense square structure there at some point.
metalpeter - 11/07/10 09:35
Well there are two ways you can look at this depending on your view.....
  1. 1 It sounds like those are pretty big trees. You know what that means a lot of money can be made when the company sells or uses the wood itself for something.
  1. 2 If this is the same company that mows the grass and does snow removal then getting rid of those trees makes there job much easier and again saves them money, if they aren't that company then maybe they get an illegal kick back of some kind.
  1. 3 There is also the issue of liability: There is a chance that when the trees (depending on the kind) get big enough the roots will become a problem. It is possible for roots up lift up side walks and make them uneven. And if the tree continues to grow as all the roots get bigger and stronger the problem will get worse. If this company saw that and didn't do any thing about it they would be responsible for any broken sidewalks or anyone who got hurt. But there is another side to this. Again not sure how big the trees are or how far along they are in the life cycle or growth cycle. At some point they will get to a size that could be pretty big and at some point die or start to die or get some nasty disease. At that point they will become a danger and you don't want trees to get to that point around people....

I don't work for the company so I don't know I'm guessing mostly #1 and also that way they can do what ever they want with the walk way and not worry about the trees getting in their way.....