Sunday, October 22, 2006

my contradictions

I so much would like to travel the world and see new places - I'm so afraid of flying

I'm so overconfident and peaceful in my own body - Do you like me? why not? will you please like me?

I follow my emotions up and down - Can this be justified logically and rationally?

I love you - I hate you

I love me - I hate me

Hold me close - Let me go

I long for some peace, quiet, a vacation, relaxation - Doing nothing drives me crazy

I'm a wanderer - Stability's key to happiness

flirt with me, I'm playfull - How come you're so shallow?

Last night I cried myself to sleep - This morning I woke up smiling

I'll tell you all - Respect my privacy

I'm naked - don't undress me

I'll stay right here - Lets go

Friday, October 20, 2006

check out line two of this beautiful song!

Every long lost dream led me to where you are
Others who broke my heart they were like northern stars
Pointing me on my way into your loving arms
This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you






Thursday, October 19, 2006

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Nobel peace price


Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank
recieves the nobel peace price.

The fact that a peace price is given to a development project says something about how the world is more and mores percieved to be interlinked, how fighting poverty and empowering the individual through the possibility of making their own future is linked to the fight for peace.

I once visited some of the micro-projects in Togo and Benin and saw the impact they had especially on women. The way they talked and walked with more pride. They had espablished small cliniques and small businesses and they no longer felt left at the power of the man, or the wims of an unstable government. The interesting thing was that empowering the women also had the positive unintended consequence that the HIV rate tropped. By empowering women they were enable to say no to sex with more men if they did not want to, and they stood up to their husbounds cheating on them. And they actually started using birthcontrol. This is good work! very good work!



(these are the only pictures i have from Togo digitally - in 2003 i had all my pictures in print - i will definitly scan them in someday!)

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

today

New Page og X-Ray

I just started to love my job today. I knew this is somehow what I wanted to do, but since its only been a month here, I've been confused and a little freaked out about the responsibility. But today I fell in love witht he possibilities of the job.

I went to a conference about integration of multucultural youth (this is my work now - and a subject highky present in the media) and I was introduced to the finest bunch of entrepeneurs I've ever meet! It was young and enthusiastic people with the heart in the right place and with a wish to change our society and to give young people with a migrant background a future.

Oddly, I felt proud. In so many ways I have nothing to do with their achievement, but still I felt proud. And I could not really define why. I grew up not knowing their world existed, as I grew up pretty protected and without an immigrant in my classroom (except for a polish girl). At University and in my travels I took an interest in different cultures and I wanted to change they way minorities are treated in western society. But this self-rightegous idealism does not earn me the right to me proud. But read your self (if you understand norwegian) and you try not to feel proud of them:
Dilan Ayhan
Marco Elsafadi
Elyas Mohammed

I sort of realised what you could do in a job like mine; you can meet people like this and you can create a ground for them to build their ideas on, or more acuratly a place where ideas no longer are ideas but reality. I hope I will manage. And if I don't these people WILL manage.

The interesting thing though is that a bit of humanity is what I'm left with today. In my job I speak about what we can do for a specific group, but today I talked about human ideals; what makes us feel selfrespect and what makes us value ourself and our lives. These people work with a basic human principle: building selfrespect in youth who has lost that and so much more. They talk about giving young people courage and belief in themself with as simple methods as hugs, smiles

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Hands off

It begun with a handshake. Over the table the pulse of his fingertips touched the pulse of her wrist and the beats coincided, the warm blood lifted the veins towards each other as if the bodies collided. Afterwards the moment didn't exist, as if the touch was like no other touch, the pulse like no other heartbeat. They sat down opposite each other and wore the masks required inn offices, in hallways of grey and suits and reason over emotions. He decided as always to let go of questioning what his body did, it was always a riddle to him anyway, and focus on what his brain brought to his lips, the words of form and etiquette. His fingertips burned against the paper he held, the piece of paper she gave him just a second ago and his eyes focused on the letters, demanding the body to take away this feeling of a moment he had to decide had not existed anyway. She smiled, and he knew she hadn't noticed. The pulse had been inside his head, or more accurately, in his fingertips. He talked. He had already been talking for a while he realised. And he praised his ability to function disconnected from himself. Years of bureaucracy had taught him the words to say, the attitude to convey in any situation that challenged his judgement. He had asked a question and she embarked on answering, her soft voice floating between him and her and the walls and the third person he almost forgot was there. What was his name? He quietly rubbed his fingertips against the wood of the desk and suddenly realised the lines in the oak and the rounded figures his coffee cups had made. She stopped talking and his fingers wandered back to the paper and his lips read what they pointed at and he smiled as his question faded out. He noticed that the second his eyes left her face he forgot what she looked like and the moment she stopped talking he forgot what she said. If he had felt it was appropriate he would excuse himself and leave, say something about toilet or coffee or anything that would relate vaguely to a decent excuse. But he kept his seat. What was so different about this handshake he thought, and the answer of course was nothing. The amount of hands he's been shaking over the years, he always pulsated then too. He was always alive and the veins and heart would to their job as blood pumping vehicle then too, right. Nothing was different, I had a pulse then, I have a pulse now he thought, and questions her again, gaining more confidence. The moment was passing he knew. He was regaining control again. He could hear himself now, and he heard himself saying: "So how do you feel about working long hours?" and she answered smiling: "I have the energy to work long hours as long as I love my work, and I would love to work here". His colleague, who he now remembered the name of, said something important about the pay and the opportunities of promotion and the interview was over. They shook hands and he gave her his hand again. This time he did not take her whole hand, did not let his fingers touch her pulse, instead he wrapped his fingers around the top of her hand. And was shocked to find that her whole hand pulsated in the same way his own blood flooded to his palm. He let go as quick as possible and sat down. The dizziness overwhelmed him and his anger with the weaknesses of his body rose. The colleague looked quizzically at him when she had left.

He was quite rational in his arguments. The fact that she was young and lacked authority. She could not be hired. Naturally. The two men nodded with mutual understanding in the room of grey and routine. As he left to go home that day a chill of relief came over him. He rode that storm off pretty well. He was proud of himself; he had let nothing get in the way of his ability to control a situation. He could continue business as usually, and soon, very soon, his blood would stop feeling so warm and the memoirs of a raising vein would disappear again, he thought with pride.

intimacy



Is it true, what somebody told me: that we are today, in our time and day, so deteached from real intimacy that when we see it we do not recognise it and instead of understanding it we interpret it in sexual terms? Is it so that closeness in spirit and soul, the so called friendly, friendship intimacy has lost resonnanse with us because all we see is intimacy in sexual terms?