The Interview Meme
Feb. 10th, 2007 10:38 amLeave me a comment saying, "Interview me."
2. I respond by asking you five questions so I can get to know you better.
3. You will update your LJ with the answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and an offer to interview someone else in the post.
5. When others comment asking to be interviewed, you will ask them five questions.
As interviewed by
mrsmosley:
- What do you like about Lois and Clark?
I’m a hopeless romantic, so I love the pure, unwavering, ideal kind of love that Lois and Clark share. It’s a truly legendary love story, the occasional cheesiness notwithstanding. Almost Disney, really, which was a plus point at the time I started watching it, as I was just ten years old. Strangely enough, my initial fixation was not with Dean Cain, but Teri Hatcher! Her eyes are amazing. I had a great fascination with her, in a my-favourite-Disney-Princess kind of way, and she made
- How many languages do you speak? What are they?
Only two languages; English and my mother tongue, Sinhala. Or Singhalese, as my Microsoft Word spell checker keeps insisting. I’m actually a bit more fluent in English than Sinhala, since I’ve been a copious reader of English novels since the age of eight. So it’s a bit weird to me that English is technically my second language. I maintain however, that cursing in Sinhala is a lot more colorful than in English. Our ancestors seem to have had some graphic imaginations! =D Also, Sinhala is more flowery and musical.
I’d also say that I know a smattering of Hindi and Tamil, only I can’t because my sister would pounce on me. She’s quite fluent and now writes poetry in both languages, having learnt entirely by watching Hindi movies since she was twelve, and downloading the alphabet off the internet. So it’s no small thing to practice using your knowledge of broken Hindi, when your know-it-all sister is always at your shoulder, sniggering and correcting you at every third syllable like a walking automatic grammar check application. I’ve given up.
Still, I maintain that if the Faerie ever spoke a human language, it would be Hindi.
- What is your favourite thing about the country you live in?
Well, it’s two things really. The weather and the food.
Cooking is a very lengthy and serious affair, in my country, and most of the great cooks scorn the modern oven and gas stove. All the food is heavily seasoned, laden down with spices and herbs, and cooked well with copious amounts of coconut milk we squeeze ourselves. Vegetable salads are a purely Western invention. I never feel I’m eating real Sri Lankan food until I eat at my grandmother’s house. Villagers are very traditional about cooking, and more than one house has a small thatched hut, with a clay floor and roofed with dried coconut leaves, wherein reside an open hearth for cooking. The smoke, insulated within the hut for long periods, adds flavor to the curries being cooked on the huge clay pots atop the roaring brick stoves, in a way that no city-dwelling chef can manage. My most enduring memory of my ancestral home is of the small cooking hut, which stands outside the kitchen. It always smells of earthy clay, the crisp smell of burnt coconut leaves and dry wood, a thousand elusive scents of spices and my grandmother’s love.
Actually, it’s only in a tropical country that Sri Lankan food can be properly cooked. That’s because all those spices and cooking creates a pungent aroma that rapidly turns stale and odorous if not allowed to waft outside and disperse. Houses in tropical countries have lots of ventilation, with large airy windows standing open all months of the year. Houses built in colder climates are pretty much sealed in so the smell and the smoke would become unbearable.
The visiting European or tender-tongued American should beware, though! When we say “hot”, we mean HOT! It takes a lot to burn the typical Sri Lankan’s seasoned tongue, but not many foreigners can bear even the milder of dishes. As Dr. Thomas Cornell, a specialist in world culture who has visited
There is an urban legend going on about the time President Rajapkshe had hoppers and chilli sambol served to President George Bush who was a guest at the President’s Mansion. Apparently, President Bush had thought it was chutney….
As for the weather, I never much cared for it until recently, thinking it boring and tedious to have only either hot sunshine or torrential rain all year round. And then I visited
I thought
The real downside? It was only the tail-end of the summer.
Suddenly I’ve realized why tourists in my country lie in skimpy swimsuits on beaches for days on end, as though being fried alive was one the greatest joys in life. I’ve always thought they were complete nutters. But by the time I once more set foot upon my lovely tropical homeland, I’d have gladly done the same!
Some people can’t stand the humidity here though. When we were in
No wonder we are such a lazy nation. We lack the impetus of having to struggle against the elements. Persistent danger zone for natural disasters? No. (One tsunami does not a disaster zone make. The majority of the country didn’t even know what a tsunami was until we got hit by one. Although some of the inland provinces do have floods nearly annually.) Fatal drops or increases in temperature? No. We just get hot enough to complain about. I’ve never even heard of anybody getting sunstroke. Dangerous snow drifts and ice? Nada.
It’s like the weather here is an indulgent and generous parent and we’re a bunch of ungrateful kids.
- Do you play sports?
Nope. Nada. Zilch. Never. I’m about as sporty as a plum pudding.
Although ballroom dancing is classified as a sport, I hear, in which case, yes, I do. =)
- What is you favourite color?
Although I have not been entirely able to give up my fixation upon all things purple, I would have to say my current favourite is red.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:11 am (UTC)Interview me?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:27 am (UTC)2) What is your favourite fanficiton, both LnC and Smallville, to date?
3) If you were alone at home, and suddenly you discovered your house was about to burn down, what would you automantically reach for, before escaping?
4) What is your favourite movie and song?
5) What is your favourite childhood memory?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:42 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-11 01:44 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:49 am (UTC)*waits for interview*
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 07:52 am (UTC)2) What's one of the most embarrassing things that have happened to you in high school?
3) In another fifty years time, what would you like your life to be like?
4) What fictional male character would you love to have a one night stand with?
5) In your opinion, who do you need most in the world and who needs you most in the world?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 07:50 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 07:58 am (UTC)2) Who's you favourite author (not fanfic)and why?
3) Where do you live, and what are two things you love about it?
4) Who is your favourite person?
5) If you could visit one place, anywhere in the world, for a holiday, what would it be?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 06:14 pm (UTC)2) What do you consider your biggest acheivement to date?
3) What is the thing you most want to experience before you die?
4) What's your motto in life and why?
5) What is the one thing you value most about yourself, and the one fault or lack in you that you can't seem to get over?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-10 07:08 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-02-11 03:05 am (UTC)Actually, it wasn't the heat that got to me. It was the air conditioning! Honestly, some supermarkets felt like giant freezers. I couldn't wrap my mind around the fact that people carry around sweaters to wear inside buildings!
Actually, if Florida had more waves on the beach, less parking lots and replaced the palms with coconut trees, it would be more or less just like Sri Lanka. =)