Thursday, April 26, 2012

A strange mix

I never thought that tea and beer could go together and make a nice drink. It's called the Heineken Green Tea drink. When a friend told me about it, I got really curious of this strange drink, and bugged her the whole afternoon to give it a try. Strangeness has always carried with it some charm. In the end she gave in and we went to the tea place right after dinner.

Crab balls or something, and tea
I'm no beer drinker, let that be stressed. Tried it once and I don't like it, except when mixed with something else like in a punch or shake. A little wine is fine with me too. Some food just taste great with it. So see, the taste (and texture, but definitely not the smell) is all I'm after.

Honestly, I don't get the idea of having "drinking sessions." Some people say it's not the alcohol that's good, but the company and the conversations while drinking. I don't get it. Let's talk when you're sober, over a cup of coffee or while having cakes and tea. I think what they're after is how alcohol can loosen up one's lips so they can talk freely. But when you're drunk, you're drunk and you fall asleep and have a bad headache the next morning.

Tea on the other hand is a drink I regularly have. It started last year when I tried out some teas my parents usually buy. Since then I always have my own stash. I like black teas, fruit teas, green tea; I love peppermint, but I hate jasmine. I enjoy my tea's aroma but there's something about the flowery smell of jasmine that tells me "that's a flower and it tastes like grass."

I guess that's how the idea of mixing tea and beer got me curious. An unusual mix of a drink that calms and another that sedates; one that I enjoy hot and another that is best served ice-cold; one that I like and another I don't (usually). They're mixed together to form this strange drink that's surprisingly great. It tastes like some weird calamansi juice -that's the best way I could describe it. I dunno where the citrus-y taste comes from but I like it.

I don't know if beer drinkers and tea lovers will like it. The idea sounds like sacrilege. But then what is sacrilegious in teas and beer? That is one strange idea. I like it.

It's supposed to be "green tea" but it's not green at all

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Where's this Heineken Green Tea anyway? I got mine from Tea 101 located at Tomas Morato. :)

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Seasons of Law

A whole school year of being in Law school has passed elapsed. Now we're blissfully spending our potentially last summer when we wouldn't be compelled to do any law-related work, unaware of our final grades from the second semester and of our eligibility/ ineligibility to enroll for certain subjects next term. Ignorance is bliss, they say; but I think the person who said so might have died not knowing what hit him. There's this anxiety creeping every now and then which I brush off when I remember we can't do anything about the exams we already passed or failed. To pray and pray hard is all we could do, aside from just enjoying every moment of freedom we have for now.

How was a year in law school... I'd borrow a song from Rent the musical to describe it. There are some feelings which words alone cannot express, and I think the whole year couldn't be summed up in a few lines. Nonetheless, here it goes:
525,600 readings. 525,000 moments so dear
525,600 readings. How do you measure, measure a year?
In highlights, in recits, in midnights and cups of coffee. In cases, in piles, in digests, in fives.
525,600 readings. How do you measure a year in the lib?
How about laaaaaw? How about laaaaw? Measure in law. Seasons of law!

Yes, that's how it was and how it will continue to be. FUN! A classmate suggested the "law" be read/sung with a German accent. After a full school year, I would like to believe we're still the same idealistic young people who dream of changing the country, or the world. We don't look like vicious soul-eaters just yet. While our college batch mates were tweeting about finding jobs, exploring, soul-searching, quitting their jobs, or in other words -not being in school and simply living their lives, we were inside the old, cold and dark building we now call our second home.

For those who didn't go digital for their copies of assigned cases, I think they each have at least a 10-ft stack of white paper. That's literally a mountain of readings. More trees will be cut down for our future use. Some might switch to tablets by next sem to help save on paper. Photocopying is expensive, btw. 500-1,000 pesos a week is how much a student would have to shell out to buy photocopies of all assigned readings. #truestory

Here's the cheesy part of this pizza blog: law school was made more fun thanks to these guys. We'll have to bear with each other for three more years. I kid, but only about the "bear with each other" part. Let's all love one another! For the next three YEARS! (years, years, years, years, years, years, years, years.... *fade*)

My apologies to those whose were cut (and also those who don't want their faces in my page.
PM me for violent reactions, if any).
I didn't want our faces to be so recognize-able so I used this app and it kept cutting the edges.

Have you met Simsimi?

A couple of weeks ago, my timelines in different social networking sites were flooded with Simsimi posts. People were posting snapshots of funny, witty and sometimes touching convos with the bot. I don't think their lack of social skills pushed them to start talking to a bot through an app. Boredom, curiosity, and the urge to do something else other than what we're suppose to do (aka procrastination), if I guess it right, are the reasons I see for people my age to try this out. It took me two weeks to get me curious enough to try out the app myself, and boy did I end up with dead end convos like this one:


Real people will always win. HAHA. Still not clever enough to fool someone in to falling in love with a "person" named Simsimi. Who knows? It's only been 10 years since the app was made available. It's been "learning" since then. After a bajillion years it might even end up as a sage. A repository or human knowledge! Or maybe not. It's just an app. But who knows? Who knows.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

How many lawyers does it take to change a light bulb?

How many lawyers does it take to change a light bulb?

Three. Two opposing counsels to argue on how to do it, and a judge to render a decision and order it's execution.

friends