Sneezing With Pride

Some people ascribe to the old saying “my ears are burning” nor “are your ears burning?” when talk is somebody who was not present but is the topic of discussion. However it’s 9 o’clock hour in the Philippines right now, the late dinner hour for my parents. I know they are talking about me.

Some parts of Asia think that one sneezes when being talked about behind their back.

I’m sneezing… I woke up sneezing, I’m sneezed on my commute, and I continue to sneeze here at work.  I have a feeling that my parents are laughing it up… talking about me and shoving food in their mouth.  Yuk it up mom and dad, I know you’re proud of me but I took a Claratin and you’ve got to go to sleep sometime.

Because Red Means Love

I’m getting around to reading my feeds, and I stumbled upon one that was slightly obscure post that totally got me… because it was about food.

Below, Alicia’s mom is telling her to eat noodles with red sauce (spaghetti) instead of noodles with black sauce (ZaZangMyun or Jajangmyeon [link]).  I assuming mom wanted her to have a red Valentines day… in the form of carbs.

http://mymomisafob.com/2009/02/13/parents-are-the-best/

MMIAF-Noodles

scents and sensibility

In the bleary-eyed hour as I trudge into the office I encounter a tableaux of smells. Some mornings the oleaginous odors of the commissary drift across my path, other days the wind blows across the loading docks carrying the plumes of diesel exhaust. Still mornings are amusing at best.

People of all colored collars utilize the same entrance I do and I have found that position or salary does not have any bearing on their toilette. The bright-eyed young professional men and women smell of modern fragrances, fresh citrus, light sandalwood tones, and wet hair. Older professionals, almost always men, smell of leather and tweed; the kind of smell that a perfumer would attempt when looking to capture the essence of the cigar bar. In the off chance one catches a seasoned professional woman, they would be whisked away to 8th arrondissement of Paris where due to size of waist and pocketbook limit these women to the cosmetics counter. Unfortunately the group that I admire the most is dwindling as fast as promises of early-retirement buyouts — the older men who smell of talc and pomade.

Conversely there are those of immigrant-worker status who are increasing in number. Obnoxious smells of mustard oil, fenugreek, and cumin mix with the flowery scents of wintergreen, eucalyptus, peppermint, and camphor. On warm summer mornings, one can expect this ethnic bazaar mix with the deodorant soaps and over-applied dime-store “body spray” used by those who either don’t bother looking for a befitting fragrance or have no faith in the laundering of their garments. The winter brings us the gym-bag toting stuffed shirts that smell of soured towels, sweat, and the nervousness of keeping a job as well as keeping a new year’s resolution.

This brings me to this morning. I was greeted with the bazaar, tickled with the talc, but curiously one gentleman smelled of Play-Doh. I think it’s a long shot to assume he was wearing the 2006 Demeter limited edition fragrance “Play-Doh”. I’ve come to the conclusion that perhaps there was some kind of alchemic reaction with all the people commuting, essentially drafting behind one another to make the smell of Play-Doh. Talc, mustard seeds, white flower essential oil, the ripe bartlett pear in my backpack?