Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Pomplamoose - Another Day



Great music + Nataly Dawn's eyes.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

End Of Planets

Lately, my 5-year old has been trying to put her mind around the fact that our planet and to an extent the entire universe will inevitably die or cease to exist. She calls it "the end of all planets."
I asked her where she got the idea and she told me it came from nowhere and that she suddenly got curious about life on planets ending. I didn't buy it. No 5-year old thinks about this stuff. She probably got the idea from a movie or a TV show or something and it just brewed in her little mind Inception-style.
Anyway, for a couple of days now, she has been asking me curious things like: "Daddy when will it happen?" and "How will it happen?" and even questions like "What will we do when the end of planets is here?" (She even asked if the same thing will happen on Pandora and what will Jake and the Na'vi do about it.) You can feel that she's really unsettled by these thoughts. Well the sweet thing about it is that her somewhat fidgety mind came from the fact that she is scared for her family. "I am scared kasi eh, I don't know what will happen to us and what will happen to Sooz." (Sooz or Suzie is her one-year old little sister.)
It is difficult to answer these questions in the way that a five-year old mind will understand. I was tempted to just tell her "Don't worry about it. It won't happen for a long time." But the scientist in me urged me to explain this to her as best as I could. It was like accepting a challenge and I obliged. However, it is particularly difficult to explain all of these with a sense of time on when it will happen. The entire universe has been in existence for around 13.7 billion years. So barring any nuclear holocausts, killer meteors, or zombie infestations, I think human life can exist for at least another 13.7 billion years (it may or may not be on another planet) given that cosmologists still consider our universe to be a young universe. It may take at least that time for the universe to stop expanding and collapse again on itself. That is almost FOURTEEN BILLION YEARS. It's no googleplex, but can a child even grasp that number?
So in the simplest of terms, I told her that, yes, the universe will die of natural causes, and that this will not happen for a very long time. A very long time in fact that everyone you know right now will have gotten old and their children would have children, and their children will have children, and so on. I told her not to be scared because everyone you know would have lived long and fulfilling lives.
After my explanation (she may have understood most of it, she may have not), she just told me "Daddy, I hope it doesn't happen in the night para we're prepared." Yep, this is my daughter. And I am her silly over thinking father.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

It's Not A Beautiful Day

This too shall pass.

Endure.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

It's A Beautiful Day


Thursday, June 17, 2010

The Great Conundrum

My affinity for numbers, time, space and everything in between have always led me to believe that man's conundrum wasn't really Science vs. Religion but rather Mathematics vs. Religion. Math as the real nemesis of Religion with mathematics (being the so-called universal language) as the great unifier and religion as the great divider.
As I think of this, my thoughts turn to quantum theories and cosmology - in the vicinity of a Black Hole, once past the event horizon, traditional ideas of time and space skew and warp exponentially to an almost incomprehensible level. However, to an extent, everything is still mathematically calculable even with the enormous rate of change. But that is only to an extent.
There is a point within a black hole called the Singularity, conventionally thought of as being in the middle of it, where the black hole begins (or ends, depending on your school of thought). It is at this point where all known mathematical formulas fail, certainty no longer exists, even probability as a concept is questionable, the normal is abnormal or is both, truth and fallacy exist at the same time. In essence, at this singularity, everything is unexplainable.
Some mathematicians believe that we should think of it as beyond the human brain's comprehension (or a hardware limitation for that matter) and that we were not meant to understand it in the first place.
Perhaps, this is where religion and faith parallels itself with the credence of the universal acceptance of mathematics. There is always a point where understanding something is not a prerequisite of its existence.
Perhaps.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

And So It Ends. And So It Begins.

"And so it ends. And so it begins." - Ira Winderman

And So It Ends

Notes on the 1st-round ouster of the Heat:
1. Down 0-3 was such a big hole. That Game 3 Paul Pierce buzzer beater was a heartbreaker.
2. I really thought Wade could do this. But it seemed his whole season was epitomized by a desperation 3 with the game tied and lots of time left on the last possession of their ultimately last home game - he really did not get to the hole that much.
3. No one on the roster did get to the hole that much. To Boston's credit, their defense made the Heat a jump-shooting team and forced a lot of turnovers. Not an easy thing to do since the Heat are 2nd in the entire league in taking care of the ball during the entire regular season.
4. The thing that struck me most about this series was how much Kednrick "Perpetually-Pissed" Perkins and Glen "Ticket Stub" Davis outplayed JO, UD and Beasley. Really. Think about that for a moment.
5. Buti na lang Rasheed Wallace was playing for the Celtics, kung hinde, baka na-sweep pa ang Miami.
6. Buti naka isa (Game 4). At least, hindi na sweep.
7. With Miami out, who do I root for now in the East? Orlando? Cleveland? Ah alam ko na. The SPURS.


Ans So It Begins

So now the anticipation of Heat fans shifts to the offseason. No one really has any idea how this summer is going to turn out for this franchise. I'm reading really good articles regading how much more cap space the Heat will have over other teams. That Miami can sign 2 superstars and another all-star caliber player.
Yes, Lebron is the holy grail of free agents. But no one is really pegging him to leave Cleveland. Why would he? He's been there all his life and he has a winning team. So if the probable happens, and Lebron stays with Cleveland, I just hope that Riley signs the next best FA - Chris Bosh.
My personal FA priorities in order (no Bron) - Bosh, Boozer, Stoudemire. I really don't have anything good to say about Amare Stoudemire's defense. Be it post or help. In fact, he rarely plays it, that he's not just a liability, he's a weakness. Boozer, on the other hand, can only play the 4 but would be a much better fit, I think, with Miami's offensive and defensive strategies. Bosh meanwhile will be the best 1-2 punch partner to Wade not named Lebron. He can slide from 4 to 5 and will be the next celebrated big man in Pat Riley's history - from Kareem, Ewing, Mourning, to Shaq. I know that's a huge list, but Bosh will have that potential in Miami.
Here's hoping for the best. I have to say this again - In Riles we trust.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Win or Go Home Time

Notes at the end of the regular season:
1. Twelve games above 500 for Miami - way better than I expected.
2. Dwyane Wade's career FG% dropped a little this season, and at times seemed to be coasting on both O and D. But, you can't deny his greatness with almost single-handedly keeping Miami at the 5th spot.
3. This was supposed to be Michael Beasley's year. He showed flashes of offensive brilliance but never showed any grit or determination like Haslem. Come to think of it, if they can get an all-star caliber PG, PF or C for him - Miami should JUMP on it. Immediately.
3.a. On a side note regarding Beasley - his potential seemingly decreases as his NBA career advances: From draft day potential to current/realistic potential - from Shawn Kemp (Sonics) to Carmelo Anthony (offense only) to Glen "Big Dog" Robinson (Bucks) to Chris Gatling (Nets) to Corliss Williamson (Detroit/Kings) to Matt Freakin Bonner.
4. D-Wright is a good kid. He just makes bad decisions - DUI and the "sex" scandal. Can't believe he's known as mister-5-inches now. Ouch.
5. JO has been better than expected, I just hope his knees hold up in the playoffs.
6. If Wade is the absolute priority this offseason, an all-star PF/C should be next and resigning Haslem should be a very, very close third. Yes, he is that important.
7. The Rafer Alston experiment ended at the right time. Carlos Arroyo seemed to be real professional with the way his minutes were handled and how he proved to be a natural leader this side of Wade. I still believe in Mario Chalmers - even more so than Beasley, think about that for a second.
8. Strong way to end the season. Boston in Round 1. (I wanted Boston instead of ATL in the first round - I felt Wade and co. had a better chance with them old guys than Smoove and Crawford in a seven game series)
9. Seven games in Round 1 and the season will be a success. Reach the second round and Miami exceeds all expectations.
10. Playoffs, baby!

League-wide notes:
1. I can't believe a team as dysfunctional as Chicago made the playoffs. Sure they caught a few breaks towards the end of the regular season (Jamison elbow to Bosh face), but it just goes to show you Rose's brilliance and Noah's heart.
2. The Cavs are GOOD. Hopefully they don't win it all this year so Miami has a window for Lebron. Blech. I know, never gonna happen. I can dream, right.
3. The Spurs won 50 games, yep. But no one is really counting on them to win the championship much less reach the WCF. Duncan and the Spurs are my second favorite team. Although looking at Duncan, it seems that age has caught up to the best power forward to ever play the game. Hopefully he still has a few more productive years left and they make a splash at this year's playoffs.
4. I honestly believe that Gilbert Arenas is one stupid-@$$ mo-fo. Probably thought he could get away with it.
5. Kawawa ka naman, Greg Oden. Na-injure ka na, nagka scandal ka pa. Actually, dein. Hindi ka pala kawawa. "Anlaki" mong tao eh. Mas kawawa si Dorell "Mr. 5-Inches" Wright.

My Picks:

Regular Season MVP (in order)
1 - Lebron James
2 - Kevin Durant
3 - Dwyane Wade
4 - Dwight Howard
5 - Matt Bonner

DPOY - Dwight Howard
ROY - Tyreke Evans
COY - Scott Brooks
MIP - David Lee

All-NBA 1st:
D. Wade
K. Byrant
K. Durant
L. James
D. Howard

All-NBA 2nd:
S. Nash
J. Johnson
C. Anthony
D. Nowitzki
A. Bogut

All-NBA 3rd:
-wag na-

All-NBA Defense:
R. Rondo
D. Wade
G. Wallace
L. James
D. Howard

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Pat Stood Pat

I'm actually relieved that the Heat did not make any moves before the deadline. As it stands, Miami still has the most cap space for the offseason in the entire NBA. I didn't think Booz or Amare would have made that much of a difference really. (Plus 5 or 6 in the W column perhaps?) Besides the cap space, I really didn't want the Heat to part with either Beasley or Wright - good production for cheap contracts.
Of course, all of these will be moot if we don't get Wade and another max contract-worthy player or if... gasp... Wade bolts.
(Take note of maximum contract "worthy" - a few players will be worthy of a max contract, James, Bosh, Wade ... but another group will get max contracts but really should just be a notch under it, Joe Johnson, Amare, etc..)
Go Heat!