Eid El Adha Mubarak

Eid El Adha, or the big Eid, as we Tunisians call it, is tomorrow.
The big Eid comes with the end of the Hajj, and is the day in which muslims worldwide sacrifice sheep in commemoration of the prophet Abraham’s story with his son.
It’s also a day of sharing, as people are supposed to give away some of the sheep meat to the poor.

Prices for sheep have sky-rocketed this year, even more than previous years, it’s as if they run on oil or something. Yet that hasn’t stood in the way of Tunisians obsessively competing to buy their sheep.

As usual, we’ll be going to my parent’s place for lunch, then visiting some close relatives.

Eid Mubarak to everyone.
May it be a happy and blessed Eid for you all.

And hey, take it easy on your stomachs…

Bloggies 2006 Nominations

The 2006 Bloggie Awards have started and they’re accepting nominations.

So please pass by their site and nominate my blog ๐Ÿ™‚
You can choose to nominate it for whatever category you want, but the main categories I’m aiming for are: Best African or Middle Eastern weblog, Best tagline of a weblog and maybe Weblog of the year :P.
So please nominate me there at least.

Here’s the link: 2006 Bloggies.

The name of this blog is: Subzero Blue
and the address of course is: http://www.subzeroblue.com
The blog tagline is: Echoing the voices inside my head…

For the past 2 years, my blog was a finalist for “Best African or Middle Eastern weblog”. So maybe this year with your help, I could win it.

Thanks a bunch in advance…
I’m counting on you guys ๐Ÿ™‚

New Year Resolutions 2006

Two days to go before this year is over and we embark on a new voyage through a new year, that we usually wish will be a lot better than the one we’re currently in.

As usual, most people are thinking of another set of new year resolutions, that they won’t be able to accomplish again, just like the ones from last year and the year before.

I guess I’m no different from all those people; I barely got any of my 2004 or 2005 resolutions done, but still I’m thinking of some resolutions for 2006.

In the end, the theme of the year 2006 for me, I guess, will be “Planning for the future”, in a sense that I’ll be doing my best to define where I want to be in the future in every certain area of my life, and taking the necessary initial steps to get there.

I won’t bother to list a set of resolutions this year because I’m starting to think that whenever I do that, those goals become sort of unreachable because of the unreachable nature of new year resolutions in general.

So, this new year, I want it to be less talk, more action. And good luck to us all.

London, London, London…

My recent trip to London was the first time I ever set foot there, and I wanted to use every single moment I had to discover this amazing city.

Our hotel was in the Paddington area, which I thought was a great place to go out from to discover London.

The first place we discovered on our first night in London was Edgware road which we were astonished to find full of Arabic restaurants and stores. There were even campaign posters for the upcoming Iraqi elections there.

In the days after that we went on to Oxford Street, Bond Street, Regent Street, Picadilly Circus, Strand, Knightsbridge…etc; checking out all the shopping malls and stores.

We visited both Regent’s Park and Hyde Park, which were both so very beautiful and breathtaking. It was so relaxing just spending time in these parks with the amazing nature and scenery around.

We checked out the famous Mme Tussauds, which was really cool. Some of those wax figures look so damn real you think they’ll move at any time or that you nearly miss them because you think it’s someone real standing there.
At Mme Tussauds we also went on this little ride called “The Spirit Of London” which took us through some of the landmark events and people in the history of London. It was nice to find Mahmoud El Fayed featured there.

We also went to the London Aquarium which was really nice and well, you know, full of fish. I especially liked the sharks, they looked really cool.
Something funny was when we were checking the different items that were found in the Thames river and we found a Tunisian 5 millimes coin there.

Right next to the London Aquarium, we hopped on to the London Eye which is really cool, overlooking the Thames and offering a great sky view of London. It goes slowly giving you the time to fully take in the city from above.

Big Ben looked better in real life than in photos I previously saw, and it was really interesting seeing the people standing in front of the parliament with all their banners opposing the war in Iraq and the government’s policies.

We thought going to London and not seeing at least one musical would be a great shame, so we went to The Phantom of the Opera at Her Majesty’s theatre. It was superbe, beautiful, amazing, out of this world… We absolutely loved it!
We left the theatre singing the songs all the way back to the hotel. It’s such a great experience.

Being a cinema freak, I had to go to at least one movie in London, which was Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, that we saw at the Odeon cinema near Marble Arch.
I wanted to see The Chronicles of Narnia too, but there wasn’t enough time.

We walked a lot, basically more than the 5 past years of my life put together. But we also tried out the buses and the underground which were so cool. We were lucky we got to London just before they pulled the old Routemaster double-decker buses off the street and that we got to ride in one.

I took a load of really nice photos that I’ll start putting up online soon.

In short, this was an amazing week that I truly enjoyed in a city I fell in love with and wish to get to visit again.
The only downside to it is that it’s a very expensive city. Other than that everything simply rocks.

More From London

Going around London feels like one big game of monopoly.
All the streets, squares and stations that you’ve gone through and bought while playing the board game are there, only this time it’s in the real world and you’re walking through them, discovering them, bonding with them.

There’s so much to see in London, and you get this feeling of not wanting to miss any single bit of it, and we’re doing our very best not to.
I’m sure that in these past 5 days in London, I’ve personally walked more than I have in the past 5 years of my life.

We’ve been all around London, visiting its landmarks and attractions, walking in its breathtaking parks, discovering its streets, taking photos of every corner and doing every single thing possible in this amazing city.
We’ve done so much in so little time that I feel that I’ve been here for ages.
It’s amazingly easy to get around and get by in this city, and so much fun too.

I’ll be writing in more detail about all the places we’ve been too and all the great stuff we’ve seen.
Till then, I’ll leave you and go back to enjoy this beautiful city that I’ve totally fallen in love with.

Enjoying London

A big hello to everyone from London…
Yep, you read that right. Right now, I’m sitting in an internet cafe on Praed Street, not too far away from Paddington station. My feet and legs hurt like hell after a long day of walking all over central London.

I’m here for the Global Voices 2005 London Summit. Can’t wait to meet all the members of the team and get to know them all.

This is my first time to London and I’m loving every second of it. This is a great and fascinating city, and I’m truly have a blast taking it all in.
Eman came along with me, and she’s acting as a guide for me, as she’s already been here 3 or 4 times before; although with her feminine sense of direction kicking in, I end up guiding her some of the times ๐Ÿ˜›

We barely spend any time at the hotel, wanting to see and do as much as possible.

I’m taking loads of photos, so I expect my flickr account to be overloaded once I’m back. A good time I guess for someone to get generous and give me a pro account ๐Ÿ˜›

I’m sorry if I won’t be blogging as often as before during this week. You’ll hear a lot more from me once I’m back to Tunisia next Sunday.
I’d also like to say sorry to the people who read my SuperStar reviews here for not being able to cover this week’s episode, as I couldn’t see it myself. Hopefully next week we’ll be back to normal.

Top Online Activities

According to a Pew Internet & American Life Project research, using a search engine is now the No. 2 activity for Web users.

The project also found that those likely to spend more time on search engines tend to be in their 30s and well-off.

Email remains the top internet activity for web users, and news is now the third most popular Web activity.

If I were to list my top 5 web activities, I guess they’d be:

1. News
2. Search
3. Email
4. Blogs
5. Chat

I almost get all my news off the net, find it easier to search for things on the net than bother to remember them, still have to use email although I’m starting to hate it, love blogging and reading blogs, and well it’s always nice to have the occasional chat with friends.

Disconnecting for a couple of days…

I’ll be disconnecting from everyday life and getting out of the city for a couple of days to get rid of some stress, just relax, contemplate life and do some sight-seeing.

I won’t be posting anything until I’m back, so if you’re interested you can hit the archives and check out some of my older posts.

Hopefully I’ll be back with a bunch of photos, that I’ll share with you all of course.

Till then; Take care and have fun…

Children…

Today, I went to the dentist’s for another one of my seemingly endless appointments for dental work. Sometimes I feel like I have some sort of membership card.

Anyway, as I entered the waiting room, I found this cute little 9 year old kid who was flipping through a French magazine, mainly focusing on the many pictures, flying by some and looking closer at some others.

I said hi and sat next to him and pulled a magazine from the stack too and started flipping through it myself.

The boy came across this perfume ad with a guy holding up this big snake, and he asked me: “How can he do that?”
I answered that I didn’t know, to avoid getting into the whole issue of it being a non-poisonous snake and how they can tell if a snake is poisonous or not, and I added that it looked scary, feeling a bit of responsibility there and not wanting him to go and try it if he comes across a snake someday. He agreed, so I felt reassured.

He then started pretending to read, even asking me about a word that I explained to him.

He continued flipping through his magazine, until he came by a picture of the president. He then told me about how he was in the car with his father the other day when they stopped them for the president to pass by.
And he asked me “Why can’t everyone meet him at anytime?”
I didn’t know what to answer, as I didn’t want to get into how and why the president is a very important person and all the security issues involved with his job, so I just told him that maybe there are certain times when he receives people and other times when he’s too busy.

He went on flipping through the pictures until he came across a picture of an American soldier holding a weapon in what looked like a war zone, maybe Iraq.
He asked me “Do you watch TV at night?”, pointing at the picture.
I said: “Do you mean the news?”
He answered “Yes, do you watch all the explosions and shooting?”
I said: “Yes, sometimes I do watch the news and I get to see things like that.”
He said: “I don’t like to watch it. It scares me. I like to watch cartoons.”
I said: “Cartoons are the best thing to watch. I like cartoons too.”

I then asked him what grade he was in at school, and he answered that he was in the third grade. Which made me know that he was a 9 year old, for you who wondered how I knew his age earlier.

He asked me: “And what grade are you in?”
I answered: “I finished school and now I work.”
He asked: “What do you do?”
I said, trying to stay as simple as possible: “I work with computers, I’m a programmer. Do you know the internet?”
He nodded, so I said: “I work on things on the internet.”
He asked me where I worked and so I told him that it was in the Lac region which he said he knew.

I then asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up and he answered that he wanted to be a dentist.

Seconds after that his father walked out from the dentist’s office and the boy said bye and ran away to his father to go home, leaving me thinking about our litte conversation.

I admire how children think, how they analyze things, how they try to understand everything, how they break the barriers between people and start a conversation, how they’re not afraid to ask the questions in their minds, how they are spontaneous and just speak their mind, how they’re instinct guides them to know what’s wrong and what’s right, how they are very peaceful, how they seem to know what they want in life…etc.

I wish we would all listen more to our children and try to be more like them, for they really have more wisdom, purity and innocence than we do, they speak the truth as they see it, they hold our human values by instinct, they see the world the way it should be, they haven’t been twisted and changed by life, they’re simply what a perfect person should be like.

The world would be such a better and more beautiful place to live in if it were ruled by children or at least people who thought like them.