Budgie Show
Feb 26, 2011 by Sushi Bird
I think this must be some of the most well trained budgies I have ever seen. So adorable.
Feb 26, 2011 by Sushi Bird
I think this must be some of the most well trained budgies I have ever seen. So adorable.
Feb 26, 2011 by Sushi Bird
I found some older pictures of my birds, and I still miss them so much. The pictures made me smile.
Feb 25, 2011 by Sushi Bird
Very random. I know. I wish someone could pay me to draw various birds all day.
Feb 25, 2011 by Sushi Bird
Hi Internet! It’s been a little while, but I have good excuses for not updating. All of a sudden I had to write a speech for a speech contest (in Japanese), soon after I was dog- and house-sitting in Aoyama in a really nice house. I spent the evening eating insane amounts of sushi, and today I helped out on a photo shoot. I didn’t know I had to set up the entire studio! We got to the studio, and nothing was set up at all, so I had to start from scratch. It has been quite a while since I set up studio lights, but it all worked out ok, so I hope that the photographer was happy with the lights, and I am looking forward to see the results once she is done editing them. Now it is finally weekend, and I am enjoying my evening with popcorn and white wine. Simple pleasures. I am happy.
Feb 25, 2011 by Sushi Bird
Oh god, this is the most amazing thing I have seen in a little while. These larvae uses things around them to build their cocoons, and Hubert Duprat gave them gold and pearls and other gorgeous materials, and the larvae spun their cocoons using the material he gave them. Isn’t that amazing. You can read more about it here.
Feb 21, 2011 by Sushi Bird
“Neurologist and author Oliver Sacks brings our attention to Charles Bonnett syndrome — when visually impaired people experience lucid hallucinations. He describes the experiences of his patients in heartwarming detail and walks us through the biology of this under-reported phenomenon.”
Feb 20, 2011 by Sushi Bird
“At TEDxRainier, Patricia Kuhl shares astonishing findings about how babies learn one language over another — by listening to the humans around them and “taking statistics” on the sounds they need to know. Clever lab experiments (and brain scans) show how 6-month-old babies use sophisticated reasoning to understand their world.”
I am not sure if I am completely in agreement with this talk – especially the point about how adults can not learn new languages fluently – basically this video builds up under the view that it is impossible to learn new languages as an adult. However, I have met several people who have become incredibly good at new languages they started to learn as adults. Especially people who learn English – they become immersed in English, probably because English influence is all around them, and they end up sounding next to native (at least to my ears).
At the same time I am thinking about the Norwegian language, I have not yet met a single person who came to Norway when they were older than maybe 12 – 14 years old who sound completely Norwegian. Their grammar and vocabulary might be fabulous and flawless, but you can still hear that there is this slight something (accent? naturalness?) which gives them away. Somebody prove me wrong here, please. I would really love to be wrong about this.
I am assuming that Paticia Kuhl is talking about true multilingualism in her talk above, and not the ability to make yourself understood in another language (using great grammar and vocabulary). She is saying that it is only infants up to age 10 months who can truly learn to distinguish different sounds from different languages. At the same time, after just spending a year in Japan – my Japanese is far from good, it is not even decent – but I can hear a much clearer difference between different Japanese sounds than what I did when I first moved to Japan. On that note, I know quite a few Japanese people that have made a huge improvement and can actually distinguish between English r and l, even if they did not learn this as an infant.
All in all, I thought this talk had some interesting points, but I get a bit sad thinking that I am basically in the middle of mission impossible here, trying to learn Japanese. That being said, my goal is not multilingualism, my goal is to have a decent conversation in Japanese and be able to express my option without having to directly translate every word in my head. And I think this is possible for most adults, and maybe we have to leave the perfect sounds up to the infants who can not utter a single word yet.
Feb 20, 2011 by Sushi Bird
New makeup! Chanel set + Bobbi Brown shimmer block.