Toska the Idiot

Write the script for a conversation with your long lost friend Toska, who deals with ‘a dull ache of the soul, a longing with nothing to long for, a sick pining, a vague restlessness, mental throes, yearning.’. Generate five random words from the Words with No Translation tool and make sure Toska uses one word in each of his lines, making sure his words give some shade to their meaning.

I took a few liberties with this assignment, but created a story while keeping the general idea of interacting with Toska.  Hope you enjoy!

We began to suffocate on the agitated humidity in the shoddy hut. It seeped through the tree bark exterior and caught in our throats, our brains began to expand like balloons pumped full of helium. Clarity began to overlap with a dangerous paranoia, and in this state of isolation, paranoia could prove fatal.

I looked over to see Toska stretched across firmly packed dirt of the hut’s floor with his once white t-shirt wrapped around his head like a turban. “The sun isn’t exactly beating down,” I said, “your shirt may prove more useful if you wear it to ward off mosquitoes.”

“It is warding off those damn bloodsuckers. They could be sucking out my brain,” Toska scoffed as he stood to his feet. He picked up a pair of brown, size 11 Prada loafers and after a brief look of disgust, brushed their surface with his hand and put them on his feet.

“Where do you think you’re going?” The idiot, I hoped he was eaten by a tiger.

“I’m going to iktsuarpok, there could be natives preparing to attack any moment. It’s best to stay on guard at all times.” Toska picked up a large stick propped against the hut’s entrance, he felt its weight in one hand before resting the back portion on his shoulder. Toska donned a Mowgli worthy crouch and a look of determination- he needed a red loin cloth.

I watched him awkwardly walk out in his crouch like state and decided to take a nap. He had not changed a bit since we were kids.

After ten minutes passed, I heard strange noises coming from outside, not as much frightening as they were irritating. It sounded as though someone were calling a dog, or maybe their pet tiger. My head dropped back to the ground and I closed my eyes once more. The noise slowly grew louder and louder, closer and closer. In an instant my lips shrank into a hard prune and my eyelids retracted back into their sockets, the turquoise cardigan draped across my face took a reddish hue.

“What the hell do you want?” I growled through clenched teeth after tossing the cardigan aside. Propped on my elbows, I waited for a reply from the messy blond hair peaking inside the entrance.

“I’ve been making faamiti at you for half an hour,” Toska yelled in a whisper. “Come outside, I need you to see this, it’s important.”

The tousled blond mess disappeared and my eyes explored uncharted territory in the back of my head. My shoes were already on, but I took my time standing up.

Outside, Toska was crouched behind a cluster of bushes, the long stick lay at his feet. Without the slightest intention of being quiet, I walked to him and tapped his shoulder.

I covered my ears for protection against the deafening squeal suddenly released. On the ground was suddenly a huddled mass of grown man devoid of any dignity. I tapped my foot. After an extended moment, a set of eyes were revealed as Toska peaked from underneath his arms. With his realization, he jumped to his feet and discretely brushed a couple tears from his eyes.

“How dare you mencolek me! Those childish tricks could have gotten you killed, I was just about to attack, too,” he condemned as he brushed dirt from his butt.

“You are speaking gibberish. You sound like an idiot.”

“Gibberish? Gibberish! Let’s use biritululo to settle this once and for all, present your yams!”

“You have a damp spot on your trousers.”

“Yams, woman! Show me your yams!”

I turned around and began walking back to the hut, I decided to take a nap. The cardigan was over my face once more and I closed my eyes.

It had been nearly ten years since last seeing Toska, I had forgotten that agreeing to a camping trip with him would be a bad idea, particularly his idea of a camping trip, i.e., going to a foreign country and living off the land. We were meant to have a ranger pick us up after three days in this hut, it had been thirteen days at this point.

I heard a light cough and removed cardigan. Toska stood at the entrance looking like a child coming to his mother after having using a Sharpie to draw aliens all over the walls of his bedroom.

“Your, uh, cardigan brings out your eyes,” he said to his feet.

I put the cardigan back over my face and fell to the ground. I heard his steps as he began to walk away, but he stopped abruptly. Suddenly, he was on his knees beside my head and started, “I didn’t mean to yell at you, honest. It’s just being here, the dépaysement of being in this country, it’s gone to my head! I really wouldn’t have attacked you either.”

I heard the desperation in his voice and thought, he really is an idiot, but how does he make so much money? I left my face covered. “Toska, just… take a nap or something. We’ll be okay, promise.”

I again closed my eyes and drifted off to sleep.

Word Definitions:

Iktsuarpok
“To go outside to check if anyone is coming”

Faamiti
“To make a squeaking sound by sucking air past the lips in order to gain the attention of a dog or child.”

Mencolek
“You know that old trick where you tap someone lightly on the opposite shoulder from behind to fool them? The Indonesians have a word for it.”

Biritululo
“What do you normally do when you have a dispute? Do you talk things over? Go to court? Well, in New Guinea, to settle disputes, the people rely on biritululo. Biritululo is the act of comparing yams (and I am hoping that is meant in the literal sense) to settle a dispute.”

Dépaysement
“The sensation of being in another country.”

Cooking Show – ds106-

The Assignment

For my second ds106 assignment of this section, I chose the assignments which is called Cooking Show by Jaymie on the video category. The assignment read: Do you love cooking? Why not make your favourite recipe in front of the camera? Host a cooking show in your own kitchen and show us how it’s done. We’re not all Jamie Oliver, but we can try.

The Process

First, I took a video with my degital camera while I was making  blueberry and creamcheese pound cake. When I was mixing ingredients, my mom took the video. After I took the video, I went to YouTube to uploard and edit it. I used the site which is called YouTube video editor to edit the video. First, I connected each scene to other one. Then I chose BGM from music category. After that, I wrote some sentences.

The Story

I chose this assignment because I love cooking. I used to bake a cake for my friends. Probably, it has been a year since I last baked a cake. It was not hard to bake a cake, but it was very difficult to edit the video for me. Although I access to YouTube almost everyday, this was first time to edit it on YouTube. It took 3 hours to edit it and add BGM in the video. The assignment value is just one star on the site of ds106, but it is five stars for me!

I put captions on the video, but it does not work….. I don’t know why :(

I’m so sorry for the bad quality video :(

16 Bit Dreams

 

I did the Your Dreams Out the Window assignment. I wanted to do something fantastical with pyramids in a jungle on the coast. It came out looking more like a 16bit video game landscape. You got polygons, jaggies and animation sprites. You can almost hear the Mario World music. I’d like to vacation here.

I drew the image in Gimp. I used to lasso tool to make the pyramids. I painted the waterfall river and used airbrush to make the mist. The horizon and the mountain are repeating rectangles. The hardest part was removing the original view from the window frame. I used Pixlr to do that because my Gimp opens in Japanese and I couldn’t figure it out.

I got the frame here and the wall here.

????? an early ds106 assignment!

So, I decided to get started on this section’s assignments early for a change! The things that a Thursday-free-of-school-AND-free-of-work does to me…

Anyway,  I did a writing assignment for last section, had a ton of fun with it, and decided to do another, different, one: Haiku it up! I know it’s incredibly pretentious to be living as a foreigner in Japan and write haiku, but… the assignment looked like fun (x^.^x) what can I say~?

The prompt says to

take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don’t know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn’t rhyme.

This is the photo I chose from a lovely photoblog:

Shallow depth of field–

Fashion’s horde caught your feathers’

dull iridescence.


Of course, the haiku actually has nothing to do with the bird, but I feel like the photograph’s focus and depth-of-field, and the crow’s golden eye and muted color, captures a mood that I’ve felt many times since coming to Tokyo.

Finally, I feel obligated to give you a chance to read some real haiku  here (just so you don’t make the mistake of thinking mine’s anything like it ;)

????? an early ds106 assignment!

So, I decided to get started on this section’s assignments early for a change! The things that a Thursday-free-of-school-AND-free-of-work does to me…

Anyway,  I did a writing assignment for last section, had a ton of fun with it, and decided to do another, different, one: Haiku it up! I know it’s incredibly pretentious to be living as a foreigner in Japan and write haiku, but… the assignment looked like fun (x^.^x) what can I say~?

The prompt says to

take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don’t know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn’t rhyme.

This is the photo I chose from a lovely photoblog:

Shallow depth of field–

Fashion’s horde caught your feathers’

dull iridescence.


Of course, the haiku actually has nothing to do with the bird, but I feel like the photograph’s focus and depth-of-field, and the crow’s golden eye and muted color, captures a mood that I’ve felt many times since coming to Tokyo.

Finally, I feel obligated to give you a chance to read some real haiku  here (just so you don’t make the mistake of thinking mine’s anything like it ;)

????? an early ds106 assignment!

So, I decided to get started on this section’s assignments early for a change! The things that a Thursday-free-of-school-AND-free-of-work does to me…

Anyway,  I did a writing assignment for last section, had a ton of fun with it, and decided to do another, different, one: Haiku it up! I know it’s incredibly pretentious to be living as a foreigner in Japan and write haiku, but… the assignment looked like fun (x^.^x) what can I say~?

The prompt says to

take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don’t know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn’t rhyme.

This is the photo I chose from a lovely photoblog:

Shallow depth of field–

Fashion’s horde caught your feathers’

dull iridescence.


Of course, the haiku actually has nothing to do with the bird, but I feel like the photograph’s focus and depth-of-field, and the crow’s golden eye and muted color, captures a mood that I’ve felt many times since coming to Tokyo.

Finally, I feel obligated to give you a chance to read some real haiku  here (just so you don’t make the mistake of thinking mine’s anything like it ;)

????? an early ds106 assignment!

So, I decided to get started on this section’s assignments early for a change! The things that a Thursday-free-of-school-AND-free-of-work does to me…

Anyway,  I did a writing assignment for last section, had a ton of fun with it, and decided to do another, different, one: Haiku it up! I know it’s incredibly pretentious to be living as a foreigner in Japan and write haiku, but… the assignment looked like fun (x^.^x) what can I say~?

The prompt says to

take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don’t know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn’t rhyme.

This is the photo I chose from a lovely photoblog:

Shallow depth of field–

Fashion’s horde caught your feathers’

dull iridescence.


Of course, the haiku actually has nothing to do with the bird, but I feel like the photograph’s focus and depth-of-field, and the crow’s golden eye and muted color, captures a mood that I’ve felt many times since coming to Tokyo.

Finally, I feel obligated to give you a chance to read some real haiku  here (just so you don’t make the mistake of thinking mine’s anything like it ;)

????? an early ds106 assignment!

So, I decided to get started on this section’s assignments early for a change! The things that a Thursday-free-of-school-AND-free-of-work does to me…

Anyway,  I did a writing assignment for last section, had a ton of fun with it, and decided to do another, different, one: Haiku it up! I know it’s incredibly pretentious to be living as a foreigner in Japan and write haiku, but… the assignment looked like fun (x^.^x) what can I say~?

The prompt says to

take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don’t know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn’t rhyme.

This is the photo I chose from a lovely photoblog:

Shallow depth of field–

Fashion’s horde caught your feathers’

dull iridescence.


Of course, the haiku actually has nothing to do with the bird, but I feel like the photograph’s focus and depth-of-field, and the crow’s golden eye and muted color, captures a mood that I’ve felt many times since coming to Tokyo.

Finally, I feel obligated to give you a chance to read some real haiku  here (just so you don’t make the mistake of thinking mine’s anything like it ;)

Black Hole

I did the Banner assignment where you design and make a new banner for your word press. For this assignment I used Gimp to make a little spacey image of Jupiter and Mars with a nebula annihilating black hole in the back ground

For Jupiter I used the elliptical tool to make the planet then I selected it and bucketed some orange in. Then I used the paint brush to draw yellow  lines for an atmospheric effect. I did the same for Mars and Jupiters moons. The little asteroid belt are air brush points. I used purple on the gradient tool set to Aneurism to make some neat plasma jets out in the distance. I smudge them around to make a cloudy nebula effect and added a little black hole in the center.

Final DS106 assignment!

So… this is late >< and there’s a really long story for why, but I won’t get into it.
The prompt for this assignment is to

Take two photos of the same subject from slightly different angles. Merge the two photos into a single looped, animated gif to create a wiggle stereoscopic image that simulates 3-D.

This was a ton of fun! I chose this assignment because I saw Danny’s version of the same assignment and loved it. It’s not at all hard to do–especially if you find a little bit of software to help you out!