zane_
Tape Ball Regular
- Joined
- May 26, 2014
- Runs
- 548
student hoon!
US mein na? Konsa state? Weren't you at Texas A&M?
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student hoon!
US mein na? Konsa state? Weren't you at Texas A&M?
what abt you? which state are you in?
The pain in my right wrist/forearm returned with a vengeance exactly the day before an important test!![]()
May ALLAh give you complete health soon, so that you can ace the test.
I'll be welcoming it here."Rain rain go away, come again another day."
That tune is in my head right now since the rain won't go away. Two days of rain is destroying my outing. I want to see the sun and the flowers blooming. While I am out there jogging. Yet sadly mother nature is not allowing me. It has officially become a bother for me.
I'll be welcoming it here.
At the moment, the heat and dust is annoying the hell outta me. As always.
nah transferred after a year. in PA now
Colorado. Absolutely love the mountains. Road trip doesn't cost that much money.
Pennsyltucky! My (adopted) home state!
What part of PA, if you don't mind my asking? The Appalachians aren't far away wherever you are. In fact I was actually in the Appalachians during my time there.
Central PA. just moved temporarily to philadelphia though but will prolly be back soon.
Aap kidhar se hain?
That reminds me, I need to transfer to CO. Ain't the Rockies grand?
Plus there's the herb. CO is heaven on earth.
Ever since I came here, I have read more of John Muir. Only 20 minutes away from a hiking trail. I think you should pack your bags and visit!
Oh dear, I think you're attending my alma matter.
We are!
doubt it! if the 2nd line is supposed to be a hint haha
Oh, I'm trying to get a trip arranged, ostensibly for business purposes, since my boss is based on CO Springs. The office is very close to Garden of the Gods.
CO Springs is a conservative place that has banned the herb. But my CO colleagues tell me I could drive to Pueblo for it.
I think Pueblo is a 30 min drive from Colorado Springs. But drive 30 min more and you're in Boulder. I'm sure you're familiar with Boulder, CO.
Of course. Hippie mecca. Wouldn't mind living there, and I was really upset when UC Boulder rejected me.
I could tell this is your kinda place. Just the cold gets to me sometimes, you know coming from Karachi. I spent some time in Southern California and I still think the weather there has no substitute.
Too bad. The second line is indeed the school's battle cry, so if that doesn't ring a bell, I guess not.
Now I'm trying to rake my brains about what other schools are in Central PA apart from the "big one" and it's many campuses. Juniata and Lock Haven come to mind.
You need to go a bit south... But lets leave it there.
so where are you based in now?
EDIT: Just saw you are in MN. How do Pakistanis end up in random states beyond TX, NY, PA, NJ, Cali and Florida... Is there a semblance of a desi or Pakistani community?
I personally prefer NOT to live in a big "Desi" community city in US. Have lived in NY and Houston, both cities have a huge desi diaspora. Somehow find it strange why people gravitate towards these cities when after all they are leaving their countrymen to go study/work in a foreign country. Why can't we try to assimilate. I just don't get it. Why not just stay back if you liked Pakistan so much, because the reality is no matter how many desis live around you or desi restaurants and shops you can possibly go to, it's still not your land. In fact I miss Pakistan even more in those cities. Feel like everyone else around me are missing Pakistan too, hence the overwhelming urge to stick together and show off your desiness openly. I am glad to be living in a cosmopolitan non desi city right now. Yes, we have Pakistanis here but not Iike Houston or NY.
honestly i prefer the same.. i went to school in a tiny city with literally no desis.
but i go to philly every couple of months. once in my sophomore year, a pakistani american friend's uncle asked me that surely i must must miss being in and around a desi community a lot. I replied without thinking, 'Not really. I dont miss being around desi people at all. I miss the food though.'
Was an awkward moment.....
i developed a hatred for the desi community when I found them sucking up to the americans. was at some indian function..and went to serve myself at the buffet. the desi guy organizing it was telling everyone, only one serving..only one gulab jamun..only one this and that, with that fake smile that is so typical of desis. that is fine.. but then found him serving the americans with his own hands, asking them to take another helping...and i felt like puking.
This reminds me: I was interviewing with the Big Blue in Houston. I hated the city, but I needed a job. So I looked up Pakistani restaurants, because I heard there was a big community there and I hadn't been to one in years.
I found a Pakistani restaurant that got really mixed views. The whites loved it, and the Houston press was full of rave reviews. The Pakistani/Indian crowd couldn't say enough bad things about the owner. One comment summed it up: if you're going there, take your white work buddies along.![]()
Do our communities really gravitate between obsequiousness and resentment towards the natives? It's fascinating actually how there doesn't seem to be a happy medium.
i developed a hatred for the desi community when I found them sucking up to the americans. was at some indian function..and went to serve myself at the buffet. the desi guy organizing it was telling everyone, only one serving..only one gulab jamun..only one this and that, with that fake smile that is so typical of desis. that is fine.. but then found him serving the americans with his own hands, asking them to take another helping...and i felt like puking.
and during the indian independence day, found them putting up the indian flag along with the american flag. i asked them, why have you put the american flag here, and i was told this is the rule. BS.
my most favourite memory was when I slapped a desi. aah..brings peace to my heart whenever i recall that.
They're not just overly religious, they've been Arabized in the wrong way.
In a way I understand why. Just as America, while being a melting pot, is culturally Anglophile (so much so that they take great pains to try to prove they aren't), so too is the Muslim community, while also being diverse, culturally Arabized. I think if I were born here and existed in the cozy Muslim bubble in, say, Brooklyn NY, where the neighborhood mosque was the focal point of the community in ways a mosque never is in Pakistan, I would find it completely natural to be what they've become. I think it rankles a lot of us (relatively recent) immigrants because our formative years were spent in our homelands and we hold our cultures dear.
The lack of integration into the fabric of society is an issue no doubt. But it must also be said that, try as they might to resist it or deny it, the newer generation is in so many ways quintessentially American, and have integrated better than the diaspora in many other Western countries.
Hi guys. Just dropping in to say my thoughts are with you. Life as an immigrant can be hard, but then look at the wider picture from the community you have joined. Suck up and grovel hard enough and perhaps you might be accepted.
Come again?
Not sure if the bad reviews by desi's were based on the restaurant being popular among natives, it's probably because the food they served is more Anglo-Indian than Indo-Pak, something we grew up eating and expect when we go to a desi restaurant, but I do get your point and it's a very interesting observation. I might come across as someone being more on the obsequious side but I think it's more to do with my rebellious nature and a constant hunger to explore and appreciate new experiences, whether it's culture, food or music. Plus my absolute disgust for becoming a stereotype. My best friend in US is white. One time I cooked biryani and he loved it. At times I just don't get him. We both connect on so many levels yet are totally different from each other on other things. But what builds any relationship is an inherent connection, words cannot explain. But the first step is to open yourself to new friendships, experiences and situations, live outside your comfort zone. My gripe with the majority of desi's here is they keep their options limited when they come here. They keep themselves reserved and quiet. They only open up to their fellow desi's, only eat at desi restaurant, shop at desi stores and in general make life as close in semblance to home as possible. The immigrant experience in US is to absorb everything and add ones own flavor to the melting pot. We need to let our guards down once in a while.
Hi guys. Just dropping in to say my thoughts are with you. Life as an immigrant can be hard, but then look at the wider picture from the community you have joined. Suck up and grovel hard enough and perhaps you might be accepted.
Try and fit in. In spirit even if it seems unnatural.
Coming from a Brit-Pak whose own community has done so poorly at integrating. Thanks but no thanks for the advice.
LOL lets not get there. Everybody knows about the economic and academic struggles of the BritPak community at large and the ghettoisation of it. Its just gonna lead to pointless arguments for the sake of it. Topic has been discussed to death over the years on this forum
I agree for the most part. If you look at the immigrants who came before us, the Irish, the Italians and the Jews in particular, they initially did the same i.e. exist in their little enclaves. But eventually they became a part of the mainstream while still retaining their identities. Prejudice against these three was rampant at one stage. While the reduction in prejudice helped, it can't be denied that they put in the effort to integrate.
I wonder if what we see today amongst our diaspora is just a case of teething pains. Then again, there are white right-wingers who insist that the US is intrinsically Judeo-Christian. Is there any truth in that? Were the Italians and the Germans and the Jews at an advantage in that they were bound to integrate sooner or later and the same isn't true for us?
Which car?My friend just bought a new car and I am feeling jealous . I am not feeling good even though I should be happy as he is my friend.![]()
Which car?
Nice car, I'm starting to understand your pain nowToyota Fortuner (White)
My friend just bought a new car and I am feeling jealous . I am not feeling good even though I should be happy as he is my friend.![]()
Just had to walk 40 minutes home in the dark
Couldnt stop thinking about the horror stereotypes [MENTION=1889]Saqs[/MENTION] and [MENTION=95766]leatherface58[/MENTION] were discussing earlier.
Was convinced I was going to die at one point. Dogs started to howl at one point for no reason. Thanks guys![]()
exams. 4 tests are over ,2 to go. and this 2nd last test is of research methadology, the most difficult of them all. the earlier 4 went good alhamdulilah. if i could somehow manage this one it would be awesome as the last test is pretty easy.
Toyota Fortuner (White)
IDF. IDPs. ISIS. TTP. PMLN. MH370. MH17. MD -83. GE222. Etc
WTH
2014 and humanity as a whole has been a pretty big fail.
IDF. IDPs. ISIS. TTP. PMLN. MH370. MH17. MD -83. GE222. Etc
WTH
2014 and humanity as a whole has been a pretty big fail.
Please don't call them IDPs, because it dehumanizes them. Stick to your principles.
I listed them because it is part of the list that bothers me.
Lol that comment was like totes amazing bro.
Whats bothering me now is that I have to put on suncream every single day its hot here since my pathetic skin cant even tan, it just burns![]()
I see you cry over this so much.. It just makes me laugh!![]()
Why???
Its quite irritating having to do it on every sunny/hot day![]()
But of course. Still you used the term that dehumanizes them. Happens. Principles vary from thread to thread.