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Whale Talk

whaletalkWhale-Talk-2by Chris Crutcher

Wow, what an intense book. I have to admit, I’m glad they have a new cover out for it. I didn’t really get how the main character is a Japanese-black-white teen, but the cover picture is a pure white guy. I mean at least they got it right with the C on the letter jacket (unless they decided to portray Mike), but in the end TJ doesn’t even get a letter. Anyway, small technicality, but I’m glad that they have updated the cover to be a little more correct.

It’s pretty unbelievable the amount of hate in this world. And it’s great to see books being published that talk about race and hate and abuse in such an upfront and honest way. You can see how Crutcher’s experience as a social worker has really led to some profound insight that people might never really be exposed to, except in the darkest of places. I wonder how much of this is his own personal means of therapy. That maybe somehow he writes of the horrors he’s witnessed to try and pay something forward. I wish these books were more popular, I don’t even know if they’re on the shelf at work.

It was pretty heartbreaking how Heidi wanted to try and scrub away her color. How someone would feel so small that they were threatened by the existence of a little girl. And then try and kill her. But I think a lot of this stuff can’t be made up, it happens everyday.

“My parents have always encouraged me to be loud when I run into racism, but I can’t count on racism being loud when it runs into me.”

Dinner for Schmucks

dinnerTPL DVD: I’m definitely glad I didn’t pay money to watch this movie. Parts got a little long and tiring. But I really love how Paul Rudd has moved into comedies and out of the old romantic comedies he was doing before.

I actually thought that Barry would get some kind of gig selling his mice. They were actually pretty fantastic in a really crazy way. I wonder who did all of them, because the attention to detail was amazing. It was heartbreaking to find that he was expressing his loss and sadness through propping up his mice. But at the beginning of the movie I wondered why they all had red hair.

Flash Burnout

flash_burnoutby J.K. Madigan

I liked Blake’s point of view. I didn’t think he was that funny, but I liked how he tried to use his humor to get him through some tough situations. I thought that overall he was a pretty honest character who suffered some honest and real situations. I think it’s quite common to fall into other people’s lives and try and save them or try and help them out of their fucked up situations. I think Marissa was lost and couldn’t really accept the help from the people who were healthy enough to help her. She kept wanting her mother to do everything.

I feel like the ending was too abrupt. We never really find out what happens to Marissa or her mother. But I guess that’s how life is sometimes, people just fall out of our lives and we never really know what happens to them. Facebook and other digital forms of communication make it a little easier, but still, I feel like sometimes, once people are gone, they’re gone for good. And all we can do is hold on to the time that was spent together.

Taken

takenTPL DVD: Thought this was a pretty interesting movie. Sad to think of all these women being taken and sold this way. I couldn’t get over how immature his daughter was though. Her mother and stepfather kept giving her all this stuff and spoiling her, but she wasn’t able to process any of it. I think the part that annoyed me most was that she kept running everywhere. What 17 year old runs everywhere like that?

The Runaways

the_runaways_dvd_box_artTPL DVD: This movie was kind of slow and boring. But it was interesting to know that Joan Jett had made I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll famous and also did a cover of Crimson and Clover. So, I thought she had written these songs at first, but now after doing a bit of research, she kind of just covered them. She did a lot of covers.

Kind of sucks what happened to Cherie Currie though. She had some issues and they just seemed to be highlighted by drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. Good for Joan Jett for not giving up. She found something that kept her afloat and stuck with it. But other than those insights, I really didn’t like the movie or find her life that interesting. Kind of just another rock ‘n’ roll story.

Pearl Harbor

pearl-harbor-dvd-cover-2TPL DVD: I didn’t remember how cheesy the script was for this movie. The only part I really liked was the attack scenes. The shots that they got when the Japanese were flying in are great. It must have been quite overwhelming to see 300 Japanese planes suddenly descend from the skies.

But everything else just felt empty and stereotypical of what you’d think of an American WWII movie. Well at least they showed a little respect to the Japanese and didn’t make them all villains and horrible people. However, they still had racial slurs and put downs. But the Japanese were smart and overcame the barriers their opposition thought protected them, like making the torpedoes float through the shallower water. They were also sneaky and conniving, waiting till right before the attack to show their true colors.

Nurture Shock

NurtureShock4by Po Bronson & Ashley Merryman

I first saw this book at Indigo when I was shelving other titles and what got me was Po Bronson’s name. I’ve read 2 of his previous books and really fell in love with not only what he had to say, but the fact that he didn’t say it all. Most of his first 2 books were accounts from other people’s lives. They were simply answering a question that he proposed to them. This book was a bit different, but I still really enjoyed the way the information was presented. Here are little summaries of each of the chapters. Definitely should reread some of these chapters as the Bunny grows up. Especially Chapter 8, 9 and 10.

1. The Inverse Power of Praise: Sure, he’s special. But new research suggests if you tell him that, you’ll ruin him. It’s a neurobiological fact. I had heard something along these lines before. I think Jess was telling me about it. And I think this one, above all else, really resonated with me. I think effort and its adult counterpart, work ethic, are much more important than base smarts or intelligence. True character is drawn from working for something, not having it already. They noted that it’s important to give focused and specific praise based on effort, not smarts.

2. The Lost Hour: Around the world, children get an hour less sleep than they did thirty years ago. The cost: IQ points, emotional well-being, ADHD, and obesity. I thought this chapter was pretty fascinating as well. They reported kids as young as 10 years old having emotional breakdowns because their lack of sleep wouldn’t allow them to process their emotions or cope with stress. Apparently this is especially important for high school aged adolescents and that some schools throughout the US have adopted later starting times to allow kids to sleep longer. They claim that a lot of the stereotypical teen behavior are also characteristics of chronic fatigue. Interesting. The most interesting thing was that during sleep, negative memories are processed by the amygdala (which remains unaffected during sleep deprivation), while positive and neutral memories are processed by the hippocampus (which is hit hard by sleep deprivation), so people who don’t get enough sleep have no problem recalling negative memories and struggle with pleasant ones. I wonder if that’s why I have so many argh moments.

3. Why White Parents Don’t Talk About Race: Does teaching children about race and skin color make them better off or worse? I thought this chapter was the most uncomfortable by far. I can understand why parents have such a hard time talking to their children about race, you just never really know what’s right or wrong to say. I think that by being a visible minority, I get a bit of leeway, but not much. One study was pretty fascinating though. They took a preschool class and arbitrarily divided it and gave one half red t-shirts and the other half blue t-shirts. Over time, when asked, the children would reply that all the kids from their own colored shirt team were nice or smart, but that only some of the kids from the other colored shirt team were nice or smart. They instinctively divided the kids into us and them. Researchers claim that they same is happening with race and that by not talking about it, we’re leaving kids to make up their own minds and assumptions, leading to the us and them mentality. Also, that the more diverse and large a population is, the more likely you’ll get kids to cling or cliche with kids of their own race, rather than making friends with kids of other races.

4. Why Kids Lie: We may treasure honesty, but the research is clear. Most classic strategies to promote truthfulness just encourage kids to be better liars. Honesty was always a huge thing in my house growing up. My dad would literally go berserk if he thought we were lying to him. And what the researchers find interesting is how parents teach their kids to lie in some situations (to be polite or not hurt another’s feelings), yet continuously tell their kids that it’s not right to lie. They say that this sends mixed messages, especially if kids see their parents engaged in little white lies themselves. most of the time kids lie to avoid punishment or to please their parents. So apparently the best scenario is to enforce the worth and value of honesty by telling your kids it will make you happy if they told the truth and to try and remove the fear of punishment. They use George Washington and the story of the cherry tree as a prime example.

5. The Search for Intelligent Life in Kindergarten: Millions of kids are competing for seats in gifted programs and private schools. Admissions officers say it’s an art: new science says they’re wrong, 73% of the time. I didn’t think this one was as interesting. It seemed completely fascinated by the idea that rooting out a gifted child was super important and the right thing to do. I do think it’s crazy to think that you can find a gifted child at age 5 and they’ll stay gifted all their lives. It’s also crazy to think that children don’t evolve into their gifts at later ages. I think effort has a lot more to do with being gifted than base smarts and that children who work hard can absorb and progress just as well as children who are gifted.

6. The Sibling Effect: Freud was wrong. Shakespeare was right. Why siblings really fight. I got a little confused on this one. But it was really interesting to learn that siblings don’t fight because they’re jealous of their parents attention of one another. Looking back on my childhood, I don’t really remember that many fights. There were moments of jealousy, but not anything that dug in deep and festered. My brother was a major stink, but I think it was more because he was bored and I was just too easy of a victim. The lessons I’ve come away with are that siblings fight because they know that their brother or sister will be there the next day and the day after (while friends can come and go as they wish), they fight over things and that things aren’t always fair and they fight over previous fights. It’s important to teach siblings how to get along and care for one another.

7. The Science of Teen Rebellion: Why, for adolescents, arguing with adults is a sing of respect, not disrespect – and arguing is constructive to the relationship, not destructive. One researcher (Linda Caldwell) found that if you can teach teenagers how to NOT be bored, they are less likely to turn to drugs, sex and mischief for entertainment. And that it’s not the parent’s job to over schedule their children to try and prevent boredom, that usually just makes them more likely to get bored. I also thought it was really fascinating that if a teenager argues with their parents, it’s more a form of respect than disrespect. And that makes a lot of sense to me. It’s only with very close friends that I’d bother confronting them about something that bothered me or hurt me. I wouldn’t bother with a stranger or someone I didn’t care about to begin with. The same is true with kids and confronting their parents. If they didn’t have some respect and comfort with them in the first place, they wouldn’t even bother. They’d just go right ahead and do what they wanted in the first place. It’s important though for the parent to compromise when their teen makes a valid argument though, because if parents stay too firm on things because their stubborn, it will erode their teen’s respect and willingness to confront them.

8. Can Self-Control Be Taught? Developers of a new kind of preschool keep losing their grant money – the students are so successful they’re no longer “at-risk enough” to warrant further study. What’s their secret? I wonder if they have Tools of the Mind programs in Toronto. I want the Bunny to go to one. I wonder if the all-day kindergarten classes that have started in Toronto incorporate some of these tactics. Things to keep in mind for the Bunny: individual ‘play plans’ (outlines for what they’re going to do or play over the upcoming hour or day), letting kids choose their role in upcoming activities (because motivated kids will focus and sustain play and activity longer than unmotivated or forced kids), ‘clean-up song’ (specific song that when played kids immediately know they should start cleaning up and they also know how much longer they have because they’re familiar with the song), ‘buddy reading’ (read to the Bunny and afterward give the book to the Bunny and have them tell the story back to me), ‘private speech’ (where they talk to themselves on what to do, eventually they’ll internalize the dialogue, example: Start at the top and go around…) and play Simon Says (helps kids learn restraint).

9. Plays Well with Others: Why modern involved parenting has failed to produce a generation of angels. Interesting observation that childrens’ educational videos are actually teaching them bad social interaction. Most educational videos start with a negative interaction, like one character teasing or hurting another character; and end with the two characters reconciling. However, because children don’t remember something that happened half an hour ago, all they were really absorbing were more and more ways to be hurtful to each other. Researchers found this to be almost more detrimental to kids than watching violent shows. It’s important for kids to see their parents resolve conflict. So, if you start an argument in front of your kids, finish it in front of them as well, otherwise they never understand that people who love each other can work things out. Kids who are empathetic and understand the feelings of their peers can manipulate them just as well as they can console them. Jails are full of people who have empathetic sympathies than the general population. Try to integrate kids with other age groups, because otherwise it’s just the 12 year olds leading other 12 year olds.

10. Why Hannah Talks and Alyssa Doesn’t: Despite scientists’ admonitions, parents still spend billions every year on gimmicks and videos, hoping to jump-start infants’ language skills. What’s the right way to accomplish this goal? Baby Einstein videos don’t work. It’s important for parents to respond immediately to a child’s sounds. Touch or verbal response are both important to progress vocalization and later verbalization. Pay attention to your child and follow their lead (respond to what they’re looking at), rather than lead them (by telling them what to look at). When teaching them a new word by object, move the object around and say the word in a sing song manner. Have different people say the same words, kids learn what’s the same by weeding out the differences (such as voice, tone, intonation). Don’t crisscross words by assuming you know what the child is saying. If it says bah bah, it probably doesn’t mean bottle, especially when it’s holding and looking at a spoon. They’re just sounds. Respond to the spoon. Otherwise, the kid will think the spoon is called bottle. Kids remember and learn the last word best. So change the sentence structure around a bit so that the subject is sometimes the object and the object is sometimes the subject.

The Bank Job

bankjobTPL DVD: Not sure how much of this film is true, but it was pretty interesting. I can’t believe they let the bank robbers just go like that, having stolen around 4 million pounds. They sure were living a sweet life afterward. It’s sad that out of a team of 7, 3 of them died. 2 of them didn’t even know what was so precious in the boxes. Government cover ups… and I still think the British is a little unhinged for loving their royalty so devotedly.

Currently Reading

How to Make Peace in the Middle East in Six Months or Less without Leaving Your Apartment

Upcoming Movies

The Human Experience & Dancing Across Borders & White on Rice & Something Borrowed & Sucker Punch & Beginners

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Movies I've watched. Books I've read. Thoughts I've had. For the most part in chronological order.

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