Not exactly cat in the hat, but pair in the chair.
From above
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Not exactly cat in the hat, but pair in the chair.
From above
» Read more..
You Are 36% Nerdy |
You’re a little nerdy, but no one would ever call you a nerd. You sometimes get into nerdy things, but only after they’ve become a part of mainstream culture. |
I learned my lesson. Objects are easy.
Jason has been the standard-bearer on reporting this. I’ve posted on it several times as well.
The short summary:
Rachel Bevilacqua (a.k.a. Reverend Mary Magdalen) lost custody of her son after a conservative custody judge was outraged at the fact that she is a member of the Church of the SubGenius. As a result of appearing in a adult-rated parody of Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ,” custody of her son was taken from her and awarded to the boy’s father (the couple was never married). Rachel and her husband have fought a long, expensive battle to win custody of their son, while her ex-boyfriend’s legal costs have been entirely been handled by a pro-bono lawyer (who is a friend of his). Legal costs have exceeded $70,000 as of March 2007.
Rachel is accepting donations to her legal fund. If you can afford it, please consider donating.
About two years ago, I started coveting blonde streaks. I started seeing young women with dark hair and just one or two streaks of blonde. Looked hot. “I could do that,” thought I.
So I bought a home kit and I did it. And it looked kind of cool, but also kind of sloppy and amateurish. And since I also color the rest of my hair, after a while I looked a real mess. When I went to get my hair cut, the woman explained that what I wanted was highlights. I didn’t know I wanted highlights, but I don’t know all the hair language, and she seemed sure.
So the highlights looked great, and everyone complimented me on how attractive and flattering it was, so I thought I was happy with that, and at least now I knew what it was; what the word for it was and how to get it, and that helped.
So I got my highlights touched up maybe three times, and then the fourth time, I came home blonde.
Just. Blonde. And that was a mistake.
But I said I was happy with it, because, y’know, it’s all over the top of your head, and if you like it, it’s much easier to live with.
Fifth time, they look at me and say “Why the hell are you blonde?” And they do process color, which is more or less what you do at home except better, and now I’m back to my auburn, and there’s no blonde.
So I go a really long time without coloring my hair and I notice a gray stripe is growing in. And I think “stripe.” Like a memory reactivated. And I go to the hair place and I say “gray stripe.” And they say, “No, what you want is a blonde stripe,” and I say, “That’s what I want?” and they say “Yes.”
And it turns out, that’s what I wanted all along. It feels so…soothing to finally have what I’ve been seeking.
I learend all sorts of lessons out of this stupid, senseless, banal, and excessively girly experience. This is 100% how I interact with the world. If I can’t articulate what I want, I absolutely believe what people tell me. Even when they’re wrong. Even when they say “highlights” and I want “stripe,” if I don’t have the vocabulary or the expertise, I assume I’m wrong and they’re right.
And then I say I’m happy. Because it really is too painful to say otherwise. This is how I loved my bad tattoo until the very day I had it covered up. This is how I was happily married until the very day I asked for a divorce. And you know what? I don’t even know that it’s wrong. Maybe it’s “denial” which is unhealthy, but maybe it’s acceptance. Maybe it’s making lemonade. Maybe I’d have gone back and demanded that my hair be fixed if I didn’t deny deny deny, but maybe I’d have woken up and looked in the mirror and hated myself. Is that healthy? Maybe I just don’t expect that life is going to come up with better than lemons all that often, and making lemonade is a skill I’ve perfected.
And finally, I learned how easy it is to find safe space. You just have to be heard. If I say stripe, and they hear stripe, I feel…comforted. Soothed. Happy. Being listened to and heard, that’s the key to everything.
All solved!
1. An Algerian love knot
Solved by Evn (comment #3).
2. A red Swingline stapler
Solved by Evn (comment #1).
3. A camera in the back of a Buddha
Solved by George (comment #14).
4. A snakeskin jacket
Solved by Lisa (comment #12).
5. An envelope with several unusual stamps
Solved by maurinsky (comment #5).
6. A safety deposit box that isn’t listed on any bank record
Solved by TehipiteTom (comment #11).
7. A porter’s uniform with a missing jacket button
Solved by maurinsky (comment #10).
Dreamgirls (2006) 9/10
When a trio of female soul singers climb the pop charts in the early 1960s, their style, sound, and lives change in unexpected ways.
Dreamgirls is pretty much everything you’ve heard. The music is fantastic, the performances are mind-boggling, and with all the razzle-dazzle, all the makeupcostumesstagingsingingspectacle, you still manage to experience an unexpected amount of nuance and thoughtfulness.
The opening thirty minutes or so will renew your faith in the movies. Everything is perfect. The editing and photography are so deft, so down-to-the-beat, that you’re left breathless. And while you’re kind of falling apart at the glory that is Jennifer Hudson‘s voice, and while you’re asking yourself if that mousy little girl can really be Beyoncé, and while Eddie Murphy‘s James Brown-style soul singer is just blowing your mind, the film is also smartly moving the plot forward, doing some real character development, and also setting time and place with style.
So does it all fall apart? Hell no. It does get to drag, and then it gets a second wind, a new chapter is getting going. And somewhere in that second chapter I realized, “Oh, shit, they’re telling the whole story of the Supremes.” It’s kind of too much. Then there’s a huge, wall-size poster of Deena Jones’s (Beyoncé) face that is designed to leave no doubt that this is Diana Ross circa 1976. I think the roman à clef aspect of the thing is overplayed, too many poses and costumes that are perfect imitations. It’s not a biopic after all. Since so much of the ending of Florence Ballard‘s life is fictionalized, what’s the point of acting like it’s all true?
And now that I’ve bitched, let me say I think that’s a minor point, and I think the movie is a must-see if you have any tolerance for musicals at all.
Here’s what I love about Dreamgirls, and what has stayed with me: In the midst of all the music and dance and soap opera, we are getting a genuine history lesson. Not the gossiping behind the hands about Berry Gordy, but the real story of the racism that permeated the music industry, and how it shaped soul music and “cross-over” music.
There’s an early scene of Eddie Murphy and the Dreamgirls singing Cadillac Car, and then later the song being “covered” (stolen) by the whitest white-bread Perry Como teen idol type, and in what is essentially a musical joke these scenes manage to encapsulate the entire story of what was happening to African-American music at the time. I can’t think of many movies that have done something like that so skillfully.
Today we have a “guest meditation.” I’ve found this website that offers several short meditation “tapes” you can play on the computer with Real Player. They are, of course, selling a bunch of stuff, but the link is directly to the “Meditation Room” and you can skip the shop.
Enjoy.
next time I make the bed. You guys have no idea what you just missed. Turns out pillowcases are evil and must be killed.
Over at Magic in These Hills, they’re ruminating about the difference between prayer and spells.
This is a topic I treat in my book The Way of Four Spellbook. Before launching into a section that teaches how to do spells, I first explore the various sources of magical power. In other words, spells use power, but how do you get it?
One way of acquiring power is from the Gods. If you acquire power only from the Gods, you are praying. If you acquire power from your body or mind, or from nature, or from supernatural beings other than deities, or from tools in which power has been previously stored, or any combination of these things, in addition to or instead of acquiring power from the Gods, then you are doing spells.
If you look to religions that forbid spellcraft, such as Christianity, you will see this is spelled out (no pun intended) pretty clearly. You may pray to achieve goals. You may not recite charms to achieve the same goals. It is not the goal that is regulated, but the means to achieve that goal.
It’s a short step from saying the only permitted source of power is prayer, to saying that the only real source of power is prayer. A lot of religions go that route, dismissing magic as superstition while praying their knees off. A lot of witches have swallowed that to such an extent that they define magic as a form of prayer. But magic is only a form of prayer if the Gods are included. They don’t have to be.
So: