My resolutions, in no particular order:
1. Pay attention to what other people tell you about yourself. They are bound to be more truthful and accurate than the voices in your head.
2. Corollary to the above: take care of yourself, physically and mentally, no matter how difficult or annoying it is. If these people are telling the truth, then you deserve it, and they deserve to have you around for as long as possible.
3. Stop fantasizing and start dreaming -- and work on making the dreams concrete.
4. Forgive. Forgive yourself and forgive others. With one exception, there is no one who has hurt you so much that you cannot forgive them. Apologize. There are people out there whom you have hurt. Tell them how sorry you are.
5. Let. Go. Of. Outcomes.
6. Every once in a while, take a walk on the wild side. You're not dead yet.
7. Always take the detour for the chinchilla races.
8. Finish the damn book, already. Even if it is never published, heck, even if it is never submitted for publication, it deserves it. And while you're at it, make sure you write or blog every single freaking day. Period.
9. Spend time every day in gratitude for the blessings you have in your life, and the people who surround you.
10. Speaking of those people, reach out and rebuild or strengthen the connections you have, especially with your friends. It's a funny thing, the Internet, which actually allows people to keep in touch with each other.
11. Become more purposeful in how you live your life. Become the mother / wife / friend / writer / person who you are meant to be.
Notice that "Become more organized" is not on the list. Even I know a lost cause when I see one.
Friday, December 31, 2010
Navel gazing: WTF am I doing?
Okay, so it's after 11:00 1 a.m. and I am posting. Sue me.
One of the things I am trying to wrap my head around is the extent to which what I do here is art, or a preparation for art, or a procrastination or avoidance of art. I can't decide.
Elizabeth Bear has very good advice for those who would write a novel. The first rule? Butt-in-chair. You have to write everyday. I have not been doing that. I have been closer to doing that this year in any year previously.
You have to see yourself as an artist. I don't.
I am a blogger. Is that an art? The medium is closest to being an essayist, except that my essays are mostly very personal and probably of limited use to anyone other than myself.
Is this in fact a preparation for being a Writer with a capital W, or does it make me a writer in and of itself? I am not a novelist -- and if I really think about it, I have no interest in being a novelist. But I do have an interest in writing nonfiction. So I need to... write. And research. And I am thinking that all of the time I spend on writing for this blog takes away from the time I need to spend, you know, researching and writing in a format that will get me published someday.
Except... I like this. No, I crave this. Yes, there are far too many days when I let stupid things like a lack of a convenient computer get in the way. And there are days when I slack off, and don't write because I don't think I have anything to say. But I do write -- this year, for every month past June, save August, I have had at least 20 posts. A lot of those posts were short, but quite a number of them were substantive. Even though there has been a lot of down time simply due to lack of convenient computer access. (I keep telling myself that if I were a real writer, I would ignore and overcome that.)
So what is this? Does anyone other than me care? I clearly write for myself here. If I cared what size my audience was -- or at least to any real extent, since I do care some and am happy when I know people are reading -- I would have stopped bothering with this a long time ago. Because, let's face it, when your number of hits per day averages in the single digits (recognizing, of course, that that does not take into account people who read via Google reader or through the RSS feed) you have a negligible footprint on the web.
I will keep on thinking about these things. More importantly, I will keep writing -- hopefully more consistently, hopefully about more general things. I have spent the year in self-reflection; it is time to move beyond that.
In the meantime, there are several pieces I want to bookmark:
Elizabeth Bear's advice to would-be writers
Eric's rules for making art
Kevin Smith's "Be a filmmaker"
One of the things I am trying to wrap my head around is the extent to which what I do here is art, or a preparation for art, or a procrastination or avoidance of art. I can't decide.
Elizabeth Bear has very good advice for those who would write a novel. The first rule? Butt-in-chair. You have to write everyday. I have not been doing that. I have been closer to doing that this year in any year previously.
You have to see yourself as an artist. I don't.
I am a blogger. Is that an art? The medium is closest to being an essayist, except that my essays are mostly very personal and probably of limited use to anyone other than myself.
Is this in fact a preparation for being a Writer with a capital W, or does it make me a writer in and of itself? I am not a novelist -- and if I really think about it, I have no interest in being a novelist. But I do have an interest in writing nonfiction. So I need to... write. And research. And I am thinking that all of the time I spend on writing for this blog takes away from the time I need to spend, you know, researching and writing in a format that will get me published someday.
Except... I like this. No, I crave this. Yes, there are far too many days when I let stupid things like a lack of a convenient computer get in the way. And there are days when I slack off, and don't write because I don't think I have anything to say. But I do write -- this year, for every month past June, save August, I have had at least 20 posts. A lot of those posts were short, but quite a number of them were substantive. Even though there has been a lot of down time simply due to lack of convenient computer access. (I keep telling myself that if I were a real writer, I would ignore and overcome that.)
So what is this? Does anyone other than me care? I clearly write for myself here. If I cared what size my audience was -- or at least to any real extent, since I do care some and am happy when I know people are reading -- I would have stopped bothering with this a long time ago. Because, let's face it, when your number of hits per day averages in the single digits (recognizing, of course, that that does not take into account people who read via Google reader or through the RSS feed) you have a negligible footprint on the web.
I will keep on thinking about these things. More importantly, I will keep writing -- hopefully more consistently, hopefully about more general things. I have spent the year in self-reflection; it is time to move beyond that.
In the meantime, there are several pieces I want to bookmark:
Elizabeth Bear's advice to would-be writers
Eric's rules for making art
Kevin Smith's "Be a filmmaker"
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Huzzah! Sort of.
Not to bore everyone with my computer travails, but...
The iMac now is functioning, which means I can write posts at sometime other than 11:30 pm. (It also means I can check my email every hour obsessively. Not necessarily good.) I only have to kick all the people under thirty off the computer, since they are between school semesters and hence have no homework that they need the computer for.
Last night I received an email from the moderator of a Yahoo Group that I belong to telling me that she had just received three phishing emails from my account. Ack! So I went into overdrive, changing all my Gmail passwords, and posting notices here, on Facebook and on LiveJournal telling people not to pay attention to emails from me. I then get an reply from the moderator saying, "Um, I intended to send this to beadchick2003." The irony of this does not escape me.
Jan is still gone. We have not heard from the We-Fix-Macs place, and need to call them to find out what th heck is going on. The Apple store guys basically refused to do anything with it, since it is now "vintage." Apparently, computers become "vintage" after five years and obsolete after seven. 2005, it was a very good year.
The iMac now is functioning, which means I can write posts at sometime other than 11:30 pm. (It also means I can check my email every hour obsessively. Not necessarily good.) I only have to kick all the people under thirty off the computer, since they are between school semesters and hence have no homework that they need the computer for.
Last night I received an email from the moderator of a Yahoo Group that I belong to telling me that she had just received three phishing emails from my account. Ack! So I went into overdrive, changing all my Gmail passwords, and posting notices here, on Facebook and on LiveJournal telling people not to pay attention to emails from me. I then get an reply from the moderator saying, "Um, I intended to send this to beadchick2003." The irony of this does not escape me.
Jan is still gone. We have not heard from the We-Fix-Macs place, and need to call them to find out what th heck is going on. The Apple store guys basically refused to do anything with it, since it is now "vintage." Apparently, computers become "vintage" after five years and obsolete after seven. 2005, it was a very good year.
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
The tree of life
It's that time of year. Today is the fifth day of Christmas (did you get your rings? I was so sure I sent them), and in seven more days the Christmas tree will be coming down.
Many people have tasteful trees. Trees where the ornaments match, or at least don't clash badly. Trees with delicate glass balls and pine cones.
That's not our tree.
Our tree is eclectic, to put it charitably. It is a mess of scattered styles and materials, the colors ranging through all possible shades of the rainbow (and then some). We do not have any black ornaments, but that's about it.
Each year, our tree is a microcosm of our lives together. I buy an ornament for everyone in the household save myself. The tree becomes a living testament to our history.
There are ornaments of this year: Rocket Scientist's polar bear, Echidna Boy's pink velociraptor, etc.. There are the trains from former years for Railfan, and the glass chili pepper for the Not So Little Drummer Boy, who has yet to find a food other than ice cream that he will not put hot sauce on. There is every handmade ornament from school -- fading paper chains, cutout styrofoam trees with pictures on them, the tinsel garland with bananas and pineapples. All of them fragile, dilapidated, and treasured (if not by the kids, then by their parents). There are the cheap plastic angels that were part of someone's fundraising drive. There are the glass seahorses I bought on a trip to St. Croix, the icicles sent to us by one of my bridesmaids, the spun crystal angels I bought at York Cathedral.
Every angel we have ever had as a topper is on the tree: the pathetic one made out of yarn from the first tree after we got married when we could barely afford a tree, let alone anything to put on top of it; the larger one I made the next year with glitter wings and yellow yarn hair; and the one that now sits on top, the one with the yellow braids and pearls that I made fifteen years ago. For many years I pleaded with the Rocket Scientist to let me have a store-bought glass angel, and he adamantly refused. We will never have one now, I suspect.
There are markers along various roads: the brightly colored enameled balls we bought in Santa Fe on our way east, in a move that was going to be permanent, to Washington D.C. And the glass balls with doves on a somber deep red background that we bought in New Orleans on the way back, after Al Gore had reorganized the government and us out of a posting. There is the sterling silver gnome and the fiber ball with the MIT insignia on it, the first ornaments -- no, the first gifts -- the Rocket Scientist and I gave each other so many years ago.
The tree is a chronicle of our lives together, he and I, as friends, as lovers, as spouses, as family.
The tree is like all of us: crazy, chaotic, esoteric, somewhat messy, definitely unique.
And above all, loved.
Many people have tasteful trees. Trees where the ornaments match, or at least don't clash badly. Trees with delicate glass balls and pine cones.
That's not our tree.
Our tree is eclectic, to put it charitably. It is a mess of scattered styles and materials, the colors ranging through all possible shades of the rainbow (and then some). We do not have any black ornaments, but that's about it.
Each year, our tree is a microcosm of our lives together. I buy an ornament for everyone in the household save myself. The tree becomes a living testament to our history.
There are ornaments of this year: Rocket Scientist's polar bear, Echidna Boy's pink velociraptor, etc.. There are the trains from former years for Railfan, and the glass chili pepper for the Not So Little Drummer Boy, who has yet to find a food other than ice cream that he will not put hot sauce on. There is every handmade ornament from school -- fading paper chains, cutout styrofoam trees with pictures on them, the tinsel garland with bananas and pineapples. All of them fragile, dilapidated, and treasured (if not by the kids, then by their parents). There are the cheap plastic angels that were part of someone's fundraising drive. There are the glass seahorses I bought on a trip to St. Croix, the icicles sent to us by one of my bridesmaids, the spun crystal angels I bought at York Cathedral.
Every angel we have ever had as a topper is on the tree: the pathetic one made out of yarn from the first tree after we got married when we could barely afford a tree, let alone anything to put on top of it; the larger one I made the next year with glitter wings and yellow yarn hair; and the one that now sits on top, the one with the yellow braids and pearls that I made fifteen years ago. For many years I pleaded with the Rocket Scientist to let me have a store-bought glass angel, and he adamantly refused. We will never have one now, I suspect.
There are markers along various roads: the brightly colored enameled balls we bought in Santa Fe on our way east, in a move that was going to be permanent, to Washington D.C. And the glass balls with doves on a somber deep red background that we bought in New Orleans on the way back, after Al Gore had reorganized the government and us out of a posting. There is the sterling silver gnome and the fiber ball with the MIT insignia on it, the first ornaments -- no, the first gifts -- the Rocket Scientist and I gave each other so many years ago.
The tree is a chronicle of our lives together, he and I, as friends, as lovers, as spouses, as family.
The tree is like all of us: crazy, chaotic, esoteric, somewhat messy, definitely unique.
And above all, loved.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Ulysses's boat sprung another leak
I have all these things I'm thinking about, and once again, no computer. Jan is back in the shop -- this time with a suspect motherboard -- and the iMac is likewise down with a blown power supply. The only working computer is the Rocket Scientist's work laptop, and using it extensively is not a feasible option. Maybe I should go down to the public library.
Oh, joy.
I am spending my time reading. (I adore Stephen Sondheim, just saying.) I am learning a little about writing lyrics for the musical theater. a fair amount about Broadway history, at least for a certain swath of time and from a given viewpoint, and quite a bit about writing in general (by osmosis). Sondheim can be completely detached, and does not believe in sacred cows. Even Oscar Hammerstein, who was both an artistic mentor and a surrogate father for him, comes in a fair amount of criticism. (And praise as well: Sondheim saves his real ire for Noel Coward and Lorenz Hart.) Nor does he hesitate to explain what is wrong either with his own lyrics or with the productions he was associated with in general. It is refreshingly acerbic and honest. I can hardly wait for Volume II: this volume left off in 1981, before Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, or Assassins.
I have been contemplating a couple of relatively recent Supreme Court decisions, but I don't have the computer time to construct a polished post on them. (I refine my thoughts at the keyboard before publishing them.)
Finally, if there are more than the usual numbers of typos in this post, it is because I just got new contacts, and am trying to write this without resorting to reading glasses. Damn, I hate growing older.
I'll see you later, when I can.
Oh, joy.
I am spending my time reading. (I adore Stephen Sondheim, just saying.) I am learning a little about writing lyrics for the musical theater. a fair amount about Broadway history, at least for a certain swath of time and from a given viewpoint, and quite a bit about writing in general (by osmosis). Sondheim can be completely detached, and does not believe in sacred cows. Even Oscar Hammerstein, who was both an artistic mentor and a surrogate father for him, comes in a fair amount of criticism. (And praise as well: Sondheim saves his real ire for Noel Coward and Lorenz Hart.) Nor does he hesitate to explain what is wrong either with his own lyrics or with the productions he was associated with in general. It is refreshingly acerbic and honest. I can hardly wait for Volume II: this volume left off in 1981, before Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, or Assassins.
I have been contemplating a couple of relatively recent Supreme Court decisions, but I don't have the computer time to construct a polished post on them. (I refine my thoughts at the keyboard before publishing them.)
Finally, if there are more than the usual numbers of typos in this post, it is because I just got new contacts, and am trying to write this without resorting to reading glasses. Damn, I hate growing older.
I'll see you later, when I can.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
I am owned by a cat.
For years, I resisted having any pets on the grounds that I had kids, and the last thing I wanted was to be responsible for yet another living being. I resisted all pleas to get a cat, a dog, a parakeet, a monkey... (and no, BNL, I haven't always wanted a monkey). Not to mention being allergic to both dogs and cats (and probably monkeys, although I haven't had enough exposure to find out).
Then, four years ago, right before he left for the Arctic, the Rocket Scientist trapped two feral kittens in our backyard. In spite of my protests, we kept them. Chocolate, the more friendly of the two, sadly died of a congenital heart condition at the age of three. (We later got Pandora, so named because she is beautiful - she is a Russian blue -- and prone to getting into trouble. As it turns out, she has a tremendous fondness for boxes. And no, I am not making this up.)
Penwiper, named after a kitten in my favorite science fiction book, was always more fiercely independent. She wasn't willing to be cuddled by just anyone. Which was fine by me, since I am not by nature a cuddly person. So naturally, she decided that I must be the alpha human, and decided to adopt me. She climbs on top of me when I am laying in bed and demands to be petted. She will bat books down if I am reading, step on computer keyboards if I am writing, sit down in front of me if I am watching TV. (Unless I am watching Animal Planet. She particularly likes shows about lions. I am convinced she thinks she can be one one day if she just tries hard enough.)
But the absolute final straw came last week.
At 4 am one night, Penwiper climbed on top of me and started meowing very loudly. She did this until I got out of bed to follow her. She usually does this when she wants to be let into the garage -- but generally not in the middle of the night.
She walked into the living room, turning around every few steps to make sure that I was following her. She walked over and sat down in front of the Christmas tree. She then commenced practically howling until... I plugged in the Christmas tree. She then turned around, started staring at the lights, and purring.
I have got to start enforcing limits with this damn cat.
For years, I resisted having any pets on the grounds that I had kids, and the last thing I wanted was to be responsible for yet another living being. I resisted all pleas to get a cat, a dog, a parakeet, a monkey... (and no, BNL, I haven't always wanted a monkey). Not to mention being allergic to both dogs and cats (and probably monkeys, although I haven't had enough exposure to find out).
Then, four years ago, right before he left for the Arctic, the Rocket Scientist trapped two feral kittens in our backyard. In spite of my protests, we kept them. Chocolate, the more friendly of the two, sadly died of a congenital heart condition at the age of three. (We later got Pandora, so named because she is beautiful - she is a Russian blue -- and prone to getting into trouble. As it turns out, she has a tremendous fondness for boxes. And no, I am not making this up.)
Penwiper, named after a kitten in my favorite science fiction book, was always more fiercely independent. She wasn't willing to be cuddled by just anyone. Which was fine by me, since I am not by nature a cuddly person. So naturally, she decided that I must be the alpha human, and decided to adopt me. She climbs on top of me when I am laying in bed and demands to be petted. She will bat books down if I am reading, step on computer keyboards if I am writing, sit down in front of me if I am watching TV. (Unless I am watching Animal Planet. She particularly likes shows about lions. I am convinced she thinks she can be one one day if she just tries hard enough.)
But the absolute final straw came last week.
At 4 am one night, Penwiper climbed on top of me and started meowing very loudly. She did this until I got out of bed to follow her. She usually does this when she wants to be let into the garage -- but generally not in the middle of the night.
She walked into the living room, turning around every few steps to make sure that I was following her. She walked over and sat down in front of the Christmas tree. She then commenced practically howling until... I plugged in the Christmas tree. She then turned around, started staring at the lights, and purring.
I have got to start enforcing limits with this damn cat.
As the spirit moves
One of my favorite songs from the 80s is Mr. Mister's Kyrie. The chorus features the phrase "Kyrie eliason," which is from the Roman Catholic mass and means, in Greek, "Lord have mercy." The entire song, which speaks of longing and "the road that I must travel," is nothing less than a prayer. It is heartfelt, and meaningful, and somewhat surpisingly in a decade not known for deep reflection, went to #1 on the BIllboard charts.
I was thinking of this song today in contrast to the empty posturing of Madonna. Madonna's music is shallow, and void of true emotional content. Where she uses spirituality or religion ("Like a Prayer" comes to mind), she does so manipulatively. Her faith, whatever it may be, has no more significance than the rosaries she wore as jewelry at the beginning of her career.
I have no problem whatsoever with the explicitly sexual nature of Madonna's music. So what. Sex happens. It is an important part of the human experience, one which is as deserving of being celebrated in song as any other. Except, once again, she often uses it shallowly and for shock value. Sex can be many things, from an deeply emotional undertaking, to funny, to empty pleasure-seeking. The issue I have with Madonna's treatment of sex is that she manages to make it seem tawdry even as she seems to be attempting to represent it as something else.
I was thinking of this song today in contrast to the empty posturing of Madonna. Madonna's music is shallow, and void of true emotional content. Where she uses spirituality or religion ("Like a Prayer" comes to mind), she does so manipulatively. Her faith, whatever it may be, has no more significance than the rosaries she wore as jewelry at the beginning of her career.
I have no problem whatsoever with the explicitly sexual nature of Madonna's music. So what. Sex happens. It is an important part of the human experience, one which is as deserving of being celebrated in song as any other. Except, once again, she often uses it shallowly and for shock value. Sex can be many things, from an deeply emotional undertaking, to funny, to empty pleasure-seeking. The issue I have with Madonna's treatment of sex is that she manages to make it seem tawdry even as she seems to be attempting to represent it as something else.
Terry Prachett quote most likely to appear soon on an episode of Criminal Minds:
There are all kids of darkness, and all kinds of things can be found in them, imprisoned, banished, lost or hidden. Sometimes they escape. Sometimes they simply fall out. Sometimes they just can't take it anymore.Unseen Academicals, Sir Terry Pratchett, HarperCollins 2009, p.1.
It was a good Christmas. No travel, little stress. (This is going to be a boring post.) Going in with little to no expectations proved to be a winning strategy.
One advantage of the kids being older is that at least some people in the house can sleep in. I didn't -- I had turkey duty, and it was not until I was well and truly awake did I realize that we had purchased a twelve-pound turkey instead of our usual twenty-five pounder, and therefore it needed far less time to cook. I used the time to bake pies instead: pumpkin and the sour cream chocolate pie I wrote about earlier.
The Rocket Scientist and the Not So Little Drummer Boy were up very late, so they slept until 10:30. It was a far cry from days when all of us would be up by six. (Even today, were we at relatives, we would be up at about 7:00.) After breakfast of Hobee's coffeecake, we gathered around for presents at a staggeringly late 11:00 am.
The kids loved what they got, even though in two cases it was an IOU for a gaming system that isn't scheduled to be released for another three months. There was a lot of laughter.
For me, it was a Christmas for a lot of books:
Prisoner of Trebekistan, by Bob Harris, a gift from a friend earlier in the week. Harris is a very funny, humble guy, and a lovely writer. My friend had informed me that, having been on Jeopardy! I absolutely had to read this book, and he was right.
The Collected Works of Edgar Allen Poe, from other friends -- a lovely, leather bound volume, that is as tactilely delightful as the stories are disturbing.
Showtime: A History of the Broadway Musical Theatre. A serious look at a not necessarily serious subject.
Speaking of not necessarily serious subjects: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality. I wish I could tell you more about this book, but it was immediately snagged by the teenagers in the house, who are now in the middle of reading it.
Little Bee from my mother. I don't read much fiction, but this looks lovely.
The Mammoth Reader: Super-size stories and Incredible Information, from my sister-in-law, the Georgia Paramedic, who knows that my mind collects small shiny pieces of information the way that magpies collect tin foil.
And finally, the much-lusted-after Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes by Stephen Sondheim. I love Sondheim. He is one of the true geniuses in any cultural medium we have today. I have seen interviews with him, and he also witty, sly, and snarky. (He tops my list of "five people I would dearly love to have dinner with" along with Alan Rickman, Jane Austen, Terry Pratchett and Mark Twain.) (Any man who can have a Prince sing about Snow White "They lie there for years / As we cry on their biers" is my kind of human being.) My one complaint about the book is that it is too short, and does not discuss Into the Woods, Sunday in the Park with George, or Assassins. Clearly, Sondheim needs to release a second volume, and soon.
I also got a gift certificate, which I have already marked out for The Autobiography of Mark Twain. And not quite a book, but printed material anyway: my kids renewed my subscription to Games magazine.
My mind will be occupied for quite a while. I am looking forward to it.
My very favorite gift, though, was a blue canary night light. Unfortunately none of our light switches have outlets by them, but I plan to put it in as prominent a place as possible, so it can watch over me. It's not quite the only bee in my bonnet, though.
The rest of the day was spent reading -- either in my new books, or my second-favorite Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time, which the Rocket Scientist had discovered while cleaning out next to our bed. Or eating; Christmas dinner was lower key than it has been in a long time. The food was, as it always is at our holiday meals, quite good. The only glitch was my failure to make the cranberry sauce the night before so that the flavors had not had a chance to mellow out.
The evening was spent in a heartfelt discussion around the dinner table, followed by a hysterically funny game of Apples to Apples. Echidna Boy won, showing a level of psychological insight into the rest of us that is a little unnerving.
I recognize how blessed I am, not only in material goods, but in the joy and laughter we were able to share with each other. We generally like each others' company, and I know many people who do not feel that way about their family. My only regret is that I had been feeling too poorly from a cold to attend a Christmas Eve church service. It is the first time in a very long time that that has been the case.
As I said, a good Christmas.
One advantage of the kids being older is that at least some people in the house can sleep in. I didn't -- I had turkey duty, and it was not until I was well and truly awake did I realize that we had purchased a twelve-pound turkey instead of our usual twenty-five pounder, and therefore it needed far less time to cook. I used the time to bake pies instead: pumpkin and the sour cream chocolate pie I wrote about earlier.
The Rocket Scientist and the Not So Little Drummer Boy were up very late, so they slept until 10:30. It was a far cry from days when all of us would be up by six. (Even today, were we at relatives, we would be up at about 7:00.) After breakfast of Hobee's coffeecake, we gathered around for presents at a staggeringly late 11:00 am.
The kids loved what they got, even though in two cases it was an IOU for a gaming system that isn't scheduled to be released for another three months. There was a lot of laughter.
For me, it was a Christmas for a lot of books:
Prisoner of Trebekistan, by Bob Harris, a gift from a friend earlier in the week. Harris is a very funny, humble guy, and a lovely writer. My friend had informed me that, having been on Jeopardy! I absolutely had to read this book, and he was right.
The Collected Works of Edgar Allen Poe, from other friends -- a lovely, leather bound volume, that is as tactilely delightful as the stories are disturbing.
Showtime: A History of the Broadway Musical Theatre. A serious look at a not necessarily serious subject.
Speaking of not necessarily serious subjects: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality. I wish I could tell you more about this book, but it was immediately snagged by the teenagers in the house, who are now in the middle of reading it.
Little Bee from my mother. I don't read much fiction, but this looks lovely.
The Mammoth Reader: Super-size stories and Incredible Information, from my sister-in-law, the Georgia Paramedic, who knows that my mind collects small shiny pieces of information the way that magpies collect tin foil.
And finally, the much-lusted-after Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes by Stephen Sondheim. I love Sondheim. He is one of the true geniuses in any cultural medium we have today. I have seen interviews with him, and he also witty, sly, and snarky. (He tops my list of "five people I would dearly love to have dinner with" along with Alan Rickman, Jane Austen, Terry Pratchett and Mark Twain.) (Any man who can have a Prince sing about Snow White "They lie there for years / As we cry on their biers" is my kind of human being.) My one complaint about the book is that it is too short, and does not discuss Into the Woods, Sunday in the Park with George, or Assassins. Clearly, Sondheim needs to release a second volume, and soon.
I also got a gift certificate, which I have already marked out for The Autobiography of Mark Twain. And not quite a book, but printed material anyway: my kids renewed my subscription to Games magazine.
My mind will be occupied for quite a while. I am looking forward to it.
My very favorite gift, though, was a blue canary night light. Unfortunately none of our light switches have outlets by them, but I plan to put it in as prominent a place as possible, so it can watch over me. It's not quite the only bee in my bonnet, though.
The rest of the day was spent reading -- either in my new books, or my second-favorite Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time, which the Rocket Scientist had discovered while cleaning out next to our bed. Or eating; Christmas dinner was lower key than it has been in a long time. The food was, as it always is at our holiday meals, quite good. The only glitch was my failure to make the cranberry sauce the night before so that the flavors had not had a chance to mellow out.
The evening was spent in a heartfelt discussion around the dinner table, followed by a hysterically funny game of Apples to Apples. Echidna Boy won, showing a level of psychological insight into the rest of us that is a little unnerving.
I recognize how blessed I am, not only in material goods, but in the joy and laughter we were able to share with each other. We generally like each others' company, and I know many people who do not feel that way about their family. My only regret is that I had been feeling too poorly from a cold to attend a Christmas Eve church service. It is the first time in a very long time that that has been the case.
As I said, a good Christmas.
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
It was wondrous.
The moon, usually a silver-white disc, was... three-dimensional. Instead of a coin, it was a golden marble to be picked out of the sky. The face spread and dissolved into the jagged irregular maria.
Men walked up there, I kept thinking. There are footsteps in the dust; I can't see them, but they are there. I am looking at the farthest reaches of our collective first-hand adventures in the universe.
And I also remembered the words of Richard Feynman:
The moon, usually a silver-white disc, was... three-dimensional. Instead of a coin, it was a golden marble to be picked out of the sky. The face spread and dissolved into the jagged irregular maria.
Men walked up there, I kept thinking. There are footsteps in the dust; I can't see them, but they are there. I am looking at the farthest reaches of our collective first-hand adventures in the universe.
And I also remembered the words of Richard Feynman:
Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars — mere globs of gas atoms. Nothing is "mere". I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination — stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one-million-year-old light. A vast pattern — of which I am a part... What is the pattern or the meaning or the why? It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little more about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined it. Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?
Sunday, December 19, 2010
With great Power(Point) comes great responsiblity
Last week, I had a class in the 2007 version of PowerPoint for Windows. Heh heh heh.
It was a lot easier than either Word or Excel. By the time I got to PowerPoint, I had a pretty good idea where things would be on the ribbon. (May I just say right now that I much prefer the structure of the Windows 2007 version of Office to that of the 2008 version for the Mac? I hate pull-down menus.) While there were some things to learn, I was generally bored the first two days. So much so that I checked out, and spent ten minutes (while the instructor was explaining find and replace and other commands common with other Office programs) creating a slide show for a friend.
Ahhh, but then we learned animation. Heh heh heh. I took my slide presentation and added several animation elements to each slide. The original slide show took ten minutes to create; I spent two hours hunting through animation effects to find the ones I wanted. It is a classic example of overkill: it has an animation approximately every two seconds, with multiple effects per page. A six slide presentation had somewhere between 24 and 30 animations. I had an absolute blast.
For someone like me, who is very visual, and fascinated with creating complicated designs, PowerPoint is a drug. (Even worse than Word, although I have been known to spend ten minutes on a three-word sign ("Norton Gallery upstairs") trying to find the exactly right font.) The temptation to try to overwhelm, to dazzle, is almost too strong to resist.
I am going to have a lot of fun with this, although I suspect potential employers will not necessarily appreciate my mad skillz. Creating presentations that are so complicated that they become difficult to follow is not a good thing. And as the Rocket Scientist points out, it is often the case that the more complicated the presentation the worse the data. Oh well.
So, I've done a simple (except for the insane animations) presentation. Now, if only I can do a presentation which requires a 3-D exploded pie chart. I love 3-D exploded pie charts....
Edited to add: I just, um, added two slides to my simple presentation, involving 8 more animations. One of those was, er, a totally bogus 3-D exploded pie chart. *hangs head in mock shame*
It was a lot easier than either Word or Excel. By the time I got to PowerPoint, I had a pretty good idea where things would be on the ribbon. (May I just say right now that I much prefer the structure of the Windows 2007 version of Office to that of the 2008 version for the Mac? I hate pull-down menus.) While there were some things to learn, I was generally bored the first two days. So much so that I checked out, and spent ten minutes (while the instructor was explaining find and replace and other commands common with other Office programs) creating a slide show for a friend.
Ahhh, but then we learned animation. Heh heh heh. I took my slide presentation and added several animation elements to each slide. The original slide show took ten minutes to create; I spent two hours hunting through animation effects to find the ones I wanted. It is a classic example of overkill: it has an animation approximately every two seconds, with multiple effects per page. A six slide presentation had somewhere between 24 and 30 animations. I had an absolute blast.
For someone like me, who is very visual, and fascinated with creating complicated designs, PowerPoint is a drug. (Even worse than Word, although I have been known to spend ten minutes on a three-word sign ("Norton Gallery upstairs") trying to find the exactly right font.) The temptation to try to overwhelm, to dazzle, is almost too strong to resist.
I am going to have a lot of fun with this, although I suspect potential employers will not necessarily appreciate my mad skillz. Creating presentations that are so complicated that they become difficult to follow is not a good thing. And as the Rocket Scientist points out, it is often the case that the more complicated the presentation the worse the data. Oh well.
So, I've done a simple (except for the insane animations) presentation. Now, if only I can do a presentation which requires a 3-D exploded pie chart. I love 3-D exploded pie charts....
Edited to add: I just, um, added two slides to my simple presentation, involving 8 more animations. One of those was, er, a totally bogus 3-D exploded pie chart. *hangs head in mock shame*
Sour Cream Chocolate Pie
The pie I just made:
One graham cracker pie shell, either store-bought (what I use -- yay for the Keebler elves!) or homemade
2 cans sweetened condensed milk
3/4 to 1 cup good cocoa (in this case, Ghiradelli), sifted
3/4 cup sour cream
1/4 tsp. salt
2 eggs
Preheat oven to 350. Mix together all ingredients except the pie shell until smooth. Pour into pie shell. I am still playing around with the cooking time: 30 minutes seem to work. It will still be jiggly when you remove it from the oven. Let cool for a few minutes, then place in refrigerator for at least two hours, until thoroughly chilled.
Next up: Chocolate pie without sour cream but with 1/2 tsp of cinnamon and probably 1/2 to 1 tsp of ground chipotle peppers. Probably not today; there is only so much pie one can eat.
ETA: Oh, my God, is this good. Very rich, but good.
ETA, 11/25/11: The Not-So-Little Drummer Boy put peanut butter on his piece. It was good. I put marshmallow fluff on mine, and it rocked.
One graham cracker pie shell, either store-bought (what I use -- yay for the Keebler elves!) or homemade
2 cans sweetened condensed milk
3/4 to 1 cup good cocoa (in this case, Ghiradelli), sifted
3/4 cup sour cream
1/4 tsp. salt
2 eggs
Preheat oven to 350. Mix together all ingredients except the pie shell until smooth. Pour into pie shell. I am still playing around with the cooking time: 30 minutes seem to work. It will still be jiggly when you remove it from the oven. Let cool for a few minutes, then place in refrigerator for at least two hours, until thoroughly chilled.
Next up: Chocolate pie without sour cream but with 1/2 tsp of cinnamon and probably 1/2 to 1 tsp of ground chipotle peppers. Probably not today; there is only so much pie one can eat.
ETA: Oh, my God, is this good. Very rich, but good.
ETA, 11/25/11: The Not-So-Little Drummer Boy put peanut butter on his piece. It was good. I put marshmallow fluff on mine, and it rocked.
Singing for our lives
I sing. At home, in the car. Not in public, though. Show tunes, classic rock, country, folk. I am fond of Rent and the work of Steven Schwartz, and Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel. My kids get after me for my singing, but I do it anyway.
My father sang, at home, in the car. Show tunes, some big band, some country. He was fond of The Sound of Music and Marty Robbins.
There is something freeing in song. It takes you out of yourself. For me, it calms me and clarifies my mind. It reflects -- or sometimes changes -- my mood.
All too often we think of music as the province of professionals. We share songs, but it is records, or videos, of other people singing. We do not share our own voices. Except for church or carols at Christmas ( and for some people, not even then) or, for some brave souls, karaoke, we are silent, we reserve our music for ourselves. It is not good enough, we think. Oh, we many of us sing, as I do, to ourselves, or only to those close enough that we don't care what they think.
Harry Chapin wrote poignantly about this in "Mr. Tanner." A man sings beautifully, to the delight of his friends and neighbors. At their urging, he makes a professional debut, only to be savaged by the critics. He never sang again, except quietly to himself.
We need to reclaim our voices raised in song for ourselves. Music is one of the things which make us human. (Although is is not exclusively human: many mammals sing, after a fashion.) It is as important as speech. I only wish I had more occasion to sing with my friends.
A few minutes ago, in my kitchen, I was singing "Barcelona" from Company (one of the few Sondheim songs I can actually sing). I stopped, and listened: both of my two elder children were singing quietly to themselves. The Not So Little Drummer Boy was singing a song from, as is typical for him, a relatively obscure band I had never heard of. Railfan, to my delight, was singing "Wilkommen" from Cabaret.
I seem to have passed along a family tradition. I am so proud.
My father sang, at home, in the car. Show tunes, some big band, some country. He was fond of The Sound of Music and Marty Robbins.
There is something freeing in song. It takes you out of yourself. For me, it calms me and clarifies my mind. It reflects -- or sometimes changes -- my mood.
All too often we think of music as the province of professionals. We share songs, but it is records, or videos, of other people singing. We do not share our own voices. Except for church or carols at Christmas ( and for some people, not even then) or, for some brave souls, karaoke, we are silent, we reserve our music for ourselves. It is not good enough, we think. Oh, we many of us sing, as I do, to ourselves, or only to those close enough that we don't care what they think.
Harry Chapin wrote poignantly about this in "Mr. Tanner." A man sings beautifully, to the delight of his friends and neighbors. At their urging, he makes a professional debut, only to be savaged by the critics. He never sang again, except quietly to himself.
We need to reclaim our voices raised in song for ourselves. Music is one of the things which make us human. (Although is is not exclusively human: many mammals sing, after a fashion.) It is as important as speech. I only wish I had more occasion to sing with my friends.
A few minutes ago, in my kitchen, I was singing "Barcelona" from Company (one of the few Sondheim songs I can actually sing). I stopped, and listened: both of my two elder children were singing quietly to themselves. The Not So Little Drummer Boy was singing a song from, as is typical for him, a relatively obscure band I had never heard of. Railfan, to my delight, was singing "Wilkommen" from Cabaret.
I seem to have passed along a family tradition. I am so proud.
One of the downfalls of blogging (especially late at night) is that sometimes you shoot off your keyboard and realize the next morning that what you have written is uninformed, badly reasoned, and, quite frankly, you knew better.
So then the question becomes, what to do? In my case, I edited my standing post so that it becomes somewhat less stupid. (I eliminated the discussion of Prop 8. I think that's a very worthwhile subject, but I am going to see how it plays out a bit more before writing about it.) I am going to keep the post up though, if for no other reason than the object lesson involved.
Note to self: blogging while tired is not as dangerous to one's physical well-being as driving while tired, but it still carries with it the possibility of embarrassment.
So then the question becomes, what to do? In my case, I edited my standing post so that it becomes somewhat less stupid. (I eliminated the discussion of Prop 8. I think that's a very worthwhile subject, but I am going to see how it plays out a bit more before writing about it.) I am going to keep the post up though, if for no other reason than the object lesson involved.
Note to self: blogging while tired is not as dangerous to one's physical well-being as driving while tired, but it still carries with it the possibility of embarrassment.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
The second (or third -- or fourth) time around
I was listening this morning to the Smash Mouth version of "I'm a Believer." There's no way around it: this is just better than the Monkees version.
I know a lot of people with bias for performances by the original songwriter or performer. This makes sense, since they wrote it, the original writer* would be more tuned in to the meaning and emotion behind a song, which would make their version more authentic. And better. Except...
Well, there is Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan is one of the greatest American songwriters of the second half of the 20th century. His voice is also the aural equivalent of nails on a chalkboard. There are very few Dylan songs that I can stand to hear him sing, let alone prefer to hear him sing. (The only exceptions that come to mind is "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35," and "The Times They Are A'Changin," either of which I cannot imagine anyone else singing.) The Birds made their name, at least early on, by covering Dylan's work. Their versions of "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "My Back Pages" are poppier, more intelligible than Dylan's. (I know for a lot of people that's not a feature but a bug.) You can hear them without cringing. And many performers have made lovely versions of "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right." (My two favorite may be Johnny Cash's and Eddie From Ohio's.) And of course, Jimi Hendrix's version of "All Along the Watchtower" is iconic.
I also have a preference for the Bangles' version of "A Hazy Shade of Winter." It contains an edge that is only hinted at in the Simon & Garfunkel original. It's not simply a matter of "pretty" either: Johnny Cash's version of "Hurt" and Willie Nelson's cover of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" are not pretty, but they are evocative and beautiful.
Then there is my all-time favorite "cover": Eric Clapton's Unplugged version of "Layla." It fascinates me that an artist can come up with two such different versions of the same song, with such different nuances: the original was a young man's song, full of passion and desire. He is going to die if he does not get this woman, and he thinks he means it. The newer version sounds like a man who has been around the block more than once: yes, he finds this woman desirable, but if she rejects him, he won't die, he'll probably just hit on the next pretty face at the party.
Actually, I am wrong. My really all-time favorite cover is the Benzedrine Monks reimagining of "Smells Like Teen Spirit": Nirvana performed in the style of Gregorian Chant.** I loved it, because aside from the amusement value, it was the first time I had clearly heard the lyrics of the song.
So, what do you think? What songs are better when they've been recycled?
*It should be noted that "I'm a Believer" was written by Neil Diamond. I have never heard a version of the song done by him, so I can't know if it is better than Smash Mouth's or not.
**There is also Luther Wright and the Wrongs bluegrass version of Pink Floyd's The Wall, but the less said about that the better.
I know a lot of people with bias for performances by the original songwriter or performer. This makes sense, since they wrote it, the original writer* would be more tuned in to the meaning and emotion behind a song, which would make their version more authentic. And better. Except...
Well, there is Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan is one of the greatest American songwriters of the second half of the 20th century. His voice is also the aural equivalent of nails on a chalkboard. There are very few Dylan songs that I can stand to hear him sing, let alone prefer to hear him sing. (The only exceptions that come to mind is "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35," and "The Times They Are A'Changin," either of which I cannot imagine anyone else singing.) The Birds made their name, at least early on, by covering Dylan's work. Their versions of "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "My Back Pages" are poppier, more intelligible than Dylan's. (I know for a lot of people that's not a feature but a bug.) You can hear them without cringing. And many performers have made lovely versions of "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right." (My two favorite may be Johnny Cash's and Eddie From Ohio's.) And of course, Jimi Hendrix's version of "All Along the Watchtower" is iconic.
I also have a preference for the Bangles' version of "A Hazy Shade of Winter." It contains an edge that is only hinted at in the Simon & Garfunkel original. It's not simply a matter of "pretty" either: Johnny Cash's version of "Hurt" and Willie Nelson's cover of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" are not pretty, but they are evocative and beautiful.
Then there is my all-time favorite "cover": Eric Clapton's Unplugged version of "Layla." It fascinates me that an artist can come up with two such different versions of the same song, with such different nuances: the original was a young man's song, full of passion and desire. He is going to die if he does not get this woman, and he thinks he means it. The newer version sounds like a man who has been around the block more than once: yes, he finds this woman desirable, but if she rejects him, he won't die, he'll probably just hit on the next pretty face at the party.
Actually, I am wrong. My really all-time favorite cover is the Benzedrine Monks reimagining of "Smells Like Teen Spirit": Nirvana performed in the style of Gregorian Chant.** I loved it, because aside from the amusement value, it was the first time I had clearly heard the lyrics of the song.
So, what do you think? What songs are better when they've been recycled?
*It should be noted that "I'm a Believer" was written by Neil Diamond. I have never heard a version of the song done by him, so I can't know if it is better than Smash Mouth's or not.
**There is also Luther Wright and the Wrongs bluegrass version of Pink Floyd's The Wall, but the less said about that the better.
Recently I have been thinking about a twenty-year old Supreme Court case, and I have the writers of Criminal Minds and the proponents of prop 8 to thank for that. Just to get them out of my head, here are my somewhat disjointed musings on the topic:
In the first season of Criminal Minds, the writers penned an episode ("Riding the Lightning") revolving around a woman going to her execution who had been sentenced to death for the murder of a son she (and ultimately the BAU team) knew well was still alive, as well as involvement in murders committed by her lover. The team find evidence of her innocence. A large part of the plot involved the team finding out where the son was, and trying to talk the woman into admitting that he was still alive. She refused, because he had been adopted into a good home, and she was afraid that finding out who his mother was would destroy his life.
This episode annoys the hell out of me, for the simple reason that it is impossible. Firstly, there is no way that a court will provide relief: the strictures on the production of new evidence found in the AEDPA and state statutes (the case in the episode was in Florida) would mean that it would be thrown into the lap of the governor. Any governor with with a view to his political life would never pardon a woman who was viewed as complicit in the murders committed by her lover, whether or not she actually was.
But the bigger issue is... even if the BAU team found the son, so what? The woman was dead set against appeal. Which makes the whole issue moot due to a 1990 Supreme Court decision, Whitmore v. Arkansas (495 U.S. 149 (1990)).
Whitmore was a case that I followed for a paper I was working on for my Advanced Criminal Procedure class. (Yes, I know. I ended up a real propery/land use attorney. Considering I got an A in Advanced Crim Pro that might not have been all that good a career choice. On the other hand, I did also get an A- in Land Use.) It was a fun paper to write, involving a fact set that came straight out of a torrid crime novel, and interesting (and I understand completely that "interesting" is a relative word here) questions of law.
I chose it out of all those available to research because it had the best story. I am by nature a lover of stories; it is one of the things that most attracted me to law school. The facts were horrendous, if fascinating: Ronald Gene Simmons killed all fourteen members of his family in various ways, including his granddaughter by his daughter Sheila, and then went into Russellville, killed two people and injured one more. He was one of the worst "family annihilators" in American history. (Why yes, I am fascinated with serial killers, why do you ask?) He was speedily convicted and sentenced for execution.
At his sentencing, he stated his refusal to appeal either his conviction or his sentencing. Other inmates in Arkansas sought to appeal. On of the issues raised on appeal was the constituionality of Arkansas statute which provided for mandatory appeal (the higher courts had to allow appeal of the conviction or sentence by the defendant -- all states are required to do so) rather than automatic appeal (the higher courts automatically reviewed the sentence and/or conviction -- depending upon the state, the procedure at that time by all states except Arkansas).
The Supreme Court decided the case on standing issues. Although there might be some Constitutional issue about the difference between mandatory and automatic appeal, the only person who had standing to appeal was the defendant himself: the one person who was always allowed to appeal in cases of mandatory appeal, and who was not going to appeal otherwise. It is a true Catch-22.
Simmons was duly executed, his death warrant signed by the then governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton. Although I am generally opposed to the death penalty, I am the first to admit that if there is a death penalty, Simmons clearly deserved it. I did not mourn or regret his execution.
Standing is one of the legal issues (like land use) that most people are bored to tears by but which is in fact extremely important. Standing determines who gets access to the courts: limit it too stringently and people with possibly legitimate interests are stranded on the sidelines looking on in frustration as their interests are defended by someone else (or not, in the case of the prop 8 proponents and the state of California.) (One of the small satisfactions of the case winding its way through the courts is that I can read about and discuss standing issues with my friends and their eyes don't glaze over. Much.) Don't limit tightly enough, and people with nothing really at stake are clogging up the court system. Determining where to draw that line is tricky. In many cases, it is a matter of statute.
Standard IANAL(A)* disclaimer: standing, both criminal and civil, is a complicated subject which I have not studied since law school. My interest here is philosophical, really, since I have been out of the legal arena for close to two decades now. For professionals, these questions may be much more obvious; for laypeople, which I now consider myself, they are anything but.
What defines an interest? In the case of a defendant who may have plausible grounds for appeal but who chooses not to pursue it, should others have the right to step in? If outside considerations rather than their guilt or innocence cause a defendant to refuse appeal (fear for one's family, shame at conviction, despair or desire to avoid having to live on death row) , does refusing to allow others to appeal for them rise to allowing state-assisted suicide?
I ask these not as legal questions (as I said above, I am too far fallen away from the practice of law, and I have not kept up with developments in these areas) but as philosophical ones. For me, in this case, it boils down to a simple question: Am I my brother's keeper?
The answer I find myself coming back with is no. I am not. The world is not perfect, nor fair. At least theoretically, people could go to their deaths who really should not, by their own choice.** To do otherwise in the latter case is to violate the most important attribute we have as human beings: free will. It has taken twenty years, but lately I have been wondering whether the Supreme Court came to the right decision in Whitmore after all.
In the resolution penned by the writers of Criminal Minds free will triumphs. The woman convinces the team members to leave her son in peace and allow her to be put to death.
I just wish that, given that the writers chose to approach the issue of capital punishment, they would have selected a more reasonable legal scenario. The subject deserves it.
* I Am Not A Lawyer (Anymore).
**This would be in fact a very rare scenario. In almost all cases, the question becomes "Is someone going to be executed who should not be, in spite of all their efforts to avoid it?" As I said, Ronald Gene Simmons surely fit the definition of the sort of monster that most people envision the death penalty as being appropriate for, so his refusal to appeal really did not do much other than save him time on death row and the state some money in not having to fight protracted appeals.
In the first season of Criminal Minds, the writers penned an episode ("Riding the Lightning") revolving around a woman going to her execution who had been sentenced to death for the murder of a son she (and ultimately the BAU team) knew well was still alive, as well as involvement in murders committed by her lover. The team find evidence of her innocence. A large part of the plot involved the team finding out where the son was, and trying to talk the woman into admitting that he was still alive. She refused, because he had been adopted into a good home, and she was afraid that finding out who his mother was would destroy his life.
This episode annoys the hell out of me, for the simple reason that it is impossible. Firstly, there is no way that a court will provide relief: the strictures on the production of new evidence found in the AEDPA and state statutes (the case in the episode was in Florida) would mean that it would be thrown into the lap of the governor. Any governor with with a view to his political life would never pardon a woman who was viewed as complicit in the murders committed by her lover, whether or not she actually was.
But the bigger issue is... even if the BAU team found the son, so what? The woman was dead set against appeal. Which makes the whole issue moot due to a 1990 Supreme Court decision, Whitmore v. Arkansas (495 U.S. 149 (1990)).
Whitmore was a case that I followed for a paper I was working on for my Advanced Criminal Procedure class. (Yes, I know. I ended up a real propery/land use attorney. Considering I got an A in Advanced Crim Pro that might not have been all that good a career choice. On the other hand, I did also get an A- in Land Use.) It was a fun paper to write, involving a fact set that came straight out of a torrid crime novel, and interesting (and I understand completely that "interesting" is a relative word here) questions of law.
I chose it out of all those available to research because it had the best story. I am by nature a lover of stories; it is one of the things that most attracted me to law school. The facts were horrendous, if fascinating: Ronald Gene Simmons killed all fourteen members of his family in various ways, including his granddaughter by his daughter Sheila, and then went into Russellville, killed two people and injured one more. He was one of the worst "family annihilators" in American history. (Why yes, I am fascinated with serial killers, why do you ask?) He was speedily convicted and sentenced for execution.
At his sentencing, he stated his refusal to appeal either his conviction or his sentencing. Other inmates in Arkansas sought to appeal. On of the issues raised on appeal was the constituionality of Arkansas statute which provided for mandatory appeal (the higher courts had to allow appeal of the conviction or sentence by the defendant -- all states are required to do so) rather than automatic appeal (the higher courts automatically reviewed the sentence and/or conviction -- depending upon the state, the procedure at that time by all states except Arkansas).
The Supreme Court decided the case on standing issues. Although there might be some Constitutional issue about the difference between mandatory and automatic appeal, the only person who had standing to appeal was the defendant himself: the one person who was always allowed to appeal in cases of mandatory appeal, and who was not going to appeal otherwise. It is a true Catch-22.
Simmons was duly executed, his death warrant signed by the then governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton. Although I am generally opposed to the death penalty, I am the first to admit that if there is a death penalty, Simmons clearly deserved it. I did not mourn or regret his execution.
Standing is one of the legal issues (like land use) that most people are bored to tears by but which is in fact extremely important. Standing determines who gets access to the courts: limit it too stringently and people with possibly legitimate interests are stranded on the sidelines looking on in frustration as their interests are defended by someone else (or not, in the case of the prop 8 proponents and the state of California.) (One of the small satisfactions of the case winding its way through the courts is that I can read about and discuss standing issues with my friends and their eyes don't glaze over. Much.) Don't limit tightly enough, and people with nothing really at stake are clogging up the court system. Determining where to draw that line is tricky. In many cases, it is a matter of statute.
Standard IANAL(A)* disclaimer: standing, both criminal and civil, is a complicated subject which I have not studied since law school. My interest here is philosophical, really, since I have been out of the legal arena for close to two decades now. For professionals, these questions may be much more obvious; for laypeople, which I now consider myself, they are anything but.
What defines an interest? In the case of a defendant who may have plausible grounds for appeal but who chooses not to pursue it, should others have the right to step in? If outside considerations rather than their guilt or innocence cause a defendant to refuse appeal (fear for one's family, shame at conviction, despair or desire to avoid having to live on death row) , does refusing to allow others to appeal for them rise to allowing state-assisted suicide?
I ask these not as legal questions (as I said above, I am too far fallen away from the practice of law, and I have not kept up with developments in these areas) but as philosophical ones. For me, in this case, it boils down to a simple question: Am I my brother's keeper?
The answer I find myself coming back with is no. I am not. The world is not perfect, nor fair. At least theoretically, people could go to their deaths who really should not, by their own choice.** To do otherwise in the latter case is to violate the most important attribute we have as human beings: free will. It has taken twenty years, but lately I have been wondering whether the Supreme Court came to the right decision in Whitmore after all.
In the resolution penned by the writers of Criminal Minds free will triumphs. The woman convinces the team members to leave her son in peace and allow her to be put to death.
I just wish that, given that the writers chose to approach the issue of capital punishment, they would have selected a more reasonable legal scenario. The subject deserves it.
* I Am Not A Lawyer (Anymore).
**This would be in fact a very rare scenario. In almost all cases, the question becomes "Is someone going to be executed who should not be, in spite of all their efforts to avoid it?" As I said, Ronald Gene Simmons surely fit the definition of the sort of monster that most people envision the death penalty as being appropriate for, so his refusal to appeal really did not do much other than save him time on death row and the state some money in not having to fight protracted appeals.
The Not-So-Little Drummer Boy is home from college for the Christmas break. Which means...
I have to remind him and his friends that they need to turn the stereo low and keep their voices down because I really do not want a visit from the cops at midnight.
"Like" and even occasionally "Duuuuuude!!!" have crept into my conversation.
I am forced to determine whether the noises from the garage are the cat screeching or simply something (I hesitate to call it music) coming from the stereo. Thus far, it has been the latter.
But most of all, it means discussing art.
The NSLDB interned with a couple of artists the summer before his freshman year, and has taken a number of college art courses, including courses on conceptual art. On the surface, he is jaded, cynical. He is especially contemptuous of the hype that seems to permeate the art world.
But scratch that surface, and there is passion. Love, and knowledge, of the art itself. Appropriate disdain for the pretension that reduces the art to nothing more than ego on the part of either the artist or the observer. An understanding of how art is, first and foremost, a means to communicate; absent that, it is insignificant or meaningless.
I do not know what form this love will take; it may be that he becomes an artist himself (although his first love has always been music), or at the very least he will go through his life appreciating the art he encounters.
But what I do know is that talking to him is a joy, and that something in me is very happy that I have raised a kid for whom art matters such a great deal. I will be sad once he leaves for school again, and am reminded how soon it will be before he is gone, not quite for good, but for pretty much everything save holidays. Although he is a Northern California boy through and through, I really do not expect him to return here once he is done in western Massachusetts. I would be very surprised if he did not end up in New York or L.A.
It is usually said that children are gifts, blessings; it is lovely to have such reminders of how much he and his brothers mean in my life.
I have to remind him and his friends that they need to turn the stereo low and keep their voices down because I really do not want a visit from the cops at midnight.
"Like" and even occasionally "Duuuuuude!!!" have crept into my conversation.
I am forced to determine whether the noises from the garage are the cat screeching or simply something (I hesitate to call it music) coming from the stereo. Thus far, it has been the latter.
But most of all, it means discussing art.
The NSLDB interned with a couple of artists the summer before his freshman year, and has taken a number of college art courses, including courses on conceptual art. On the surface, he is jaded, cynical. He is especially contemptuous of the hype that seems to permeate the art world.
But scratch that surface, and there is passion. Love, and knowledge, of the art itself. Appropriate disdain for the pretension that reduces the art to nothing more than ego on the part of either the artist or the observer. An understanding of how art is, first and foremost, a means to communicate; absent that, it is insignificant or meaningless.
I do not know what form this love will take; it may be that he becomes an artist himself (although his first love has always been music), or at the very least he will go through his life appreciating the art he encounters.
But what I do know is that talking to him is a joy, and that something in me is very happy that I have raised a kid for whom art matters such a great deal. I will be sad once he leaves for school again, and am reminded how soon it will be before he is gone, not quite for good, but for pretty much everything save holidays. Although he is a Northern California boy through and through, I really do not expect him to return here once he is done in western Massachusetts. I would be very surprised if he did not end up in New York or L.A.
It is usually said that children are gifts, blessings; it is lovely to have such reminders of how much he and his brothers mean in my life.
Friday, December 17, 2010
Ulysses' boat has sailed into the harbor
Jan is back home from the "We-Fix-Macs" store. In the past month, he has had his memory card and hard drive replaced and had a battery problem discovered (which resulted in having to replace the "new" but defective battery with the old and incapable of holding a charge of more than 15 minutes) and the power outlet realigned. I haven't gotten a new keyboard, but since I went through three of those in the first eighteen months I owned him (the letters kept wearing off) I was hoping we are past that little hardware problem.
The system will not load properly: this weekend I will undertake a complete reformatting and reloading of the disk to see if we can't get this straightened out. My job search folders are not easily accessible (make that at all), and vitals such as the latest versions of Quicktime and Adobe Reader won't run. The Quicktime would not matter except that it is necessary to run iTunes. No iTunes, no music. Or at least music I can choose. Pandora's great, but is not the same as having one's playlists at one's command.
System preferences won't pop up, which makes issues such as security and creating additional users impossible (not to mention little things like sound and display settings). It is frustrating, to say the least.
On the other hand, I know have a computer I can sit and type at which is located at my proper level, so I don't have to perch on an uncomfortable (to me) bar stool or reach up to type. Not to mention having to fight for access: while I am the metaphorical 500 lb gorilla, the 150 lb chimpanzees can make my life miserable, even if they can't actually kick me off the computer except for schoolwork. ("Are you done yet, Mom?" "Are you going to be done soon, Mom?" "Can I just check my Facebook to see if Wendy is on, Mom?" and so on ad nauseum. And I am sure they're not very happy about it either.)
I have net access. I have Office. I can cope.
There is something freeing about my laptop which I never fully appreciated until I lost use of it. Being online has become a large part of my social network, my communication style, and most significantly to me, my source of self-expression and in some ways self-identity. While not having a laptop does not make any of those things less true, it does make all of them more difficult to deal with.
I blog, therefore I am. Sadly. I am very uncomfortable with the ways in which so much of my interaction is electronic these days: does it indicate increasing isolation on my part, or is it everyone else, too?
Is it a sign that I am too much in love with the sound of my own voice, metaphorically, or a sign that I feel stifled and unable to hear myself elsewhere?
Solipsistic? or Silenced?
It's hard for me to tell. I may need to ask other people. Probably my Facebook friends....
The system will not load properly: this weekend I will undertake a complete reformatting and reloading of the disk to see if we can't get this straightened out. My job search folders are not easily accessible (make that at all), and vitals such as the latest versions of Quicktime and Adobe Reader won't run. The Quicktime would not matter except that it is necessary to run iTunes. No iTunes, no music. Or at least music I can choose. Pandora's great, but is not the same as having one's playlists at one's command.
System preferences won't pop up, which makes issues such as security and creating additional users impossible (not to mention little things like sound and display settings). It is frustrating, to say the least.
On the other hand, I know have a computer I can sit and type at which is located at my proper level, so I don't have to perch on an uncomfortable (to me) bar stool or reach up to type. Not to mention having to fight for access: while I am the metaphorical 500 lb gorilla, the 150 lb chimpanzees can make my life miserable, even if they can't actually kick me off the computer except for schoolwork. ("Are you done yet, Mom?" "Are you going to be done soon, Mom?" "Can I just check my Facebook to see if Wendy is on, Mom?" and so on ad nauseum. And I am sure they're not very happy about it either.)
I have net access. I have Office. I can cope.
There is something freeing about my laptop which I never fully appreciated until I lost use of it. Being online has become a large part of my social network, my communication style, and most significantly to me, my source of self-expression and in some ways self-identity. While not having a laptop does not make any of those things less true, it does make all of them more difficult to deal with.
I blog, therefore I am. Sadly. I am very uncomfortable with the ways in which so much of my interaction is electronic these days: does it indicate increasing isolation on my part, or is it everyone else, too?
Is it a sign that I am too much in love with the sound of my own voice, metaphorically, or a sign that I feel stifled and unable to hear myself elsewhere?
Solipsistic? or Silenced?
It's hard for me to tell. I may need to ask other people. Probably my Facebook friends....
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Pat's Greatest Hits?
In the past six months, I have introduced a lot of people to this blog. Personally, I think that's cool, but I find myself wanting to say... wait! you should have read what I wrote back then!
Not to mention that there are a lot of information about me locked away in things I wrote three years ago and have not revisited. (I also believe I simply wrote better then, and that I need to work on reclaiming my writing chops, but I have heard divergent opinions on this from other people.)
So, if you will excuse this exercise in complete self-indulgence, herewith are a few of my favorite posts:
Out here with yellow lines and dead armadillos...
Play Ball!
Torture: Once More With Feeling
Mercenary Music
On Seeing Art
To the ends of the earth....
EchidnaQuest 2006, Part 1 and Part 2
Gold and Darkness
Walking the Path: Lessons of the Labyrinth
Twenty [More] Statements About Me. Plus One. and its predecessor, Twenty Statements. Plus One.
I am also pleased with my 2006 and 2008 posts about voter registration, absentee balloting, and voter's rights, but those are really boring and no longer relevant.
There's a lot more, but I think my ego can let go of posting all of the others : )
Not to mention that there are a lot of information about me locked away in things I wrote three years ago and have not revisited. (I also believe I simply wrote better then, and that I need to work on reclaiming my writing chops, but I have heard divergent opinions on this from other people.)
So, if you will excuse this exercise in complete self-indulgence, herewith are a few of my favorite posts:
Out here with yellow lines and dead armadillos...
Play Ball!
Torture: Once More With Feeling
Mercenary Music
On Seeing Art
To the ends of the earth....
EchidnaQuest 2006, Part 1 and Part 2
Gold and Darkness
Walking the Path: Lessons of the Labyrinth
Twenty [More] Statements About Me. Plus One. and its predecessor, Twenty Statements. Plus One.
I am also pleased with my 2006 and 2008 posts about voter registration, absentee balloting, and voter's rights, but those are really boring and no longer relevant.
There's a lot more, but I think my ego can let go of posting all of the others : )
Monday, December 13, 2010
Thoughts for today....
It is diverting to look at the interests of one's Facebook friends, and notice how the different parts of your life meet up in a like of, say, bacon. The thought of the individuals involved all in one room discussing bacon is amusing, particularly because they are otherwise such very different people.
I wonder if the chocolate pie recipe I developed a couple of weeks ago would be made better by the addition of sour cream or by the addition of ground chipotle and cinnamon. (I don't think adding all of those would be very good.) Maybe I will be forced (forced!) to make two chocolate pies next weekend. My family will be pressed into service as pie-tasters. It's a tough job, but somebody's got to do it.
I have just seen Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade for the nth time. I am still in love with Sean Connery.
Last night I saw Raiders of the Lost Ark. I can pinpoint exactly when I fell totally and completely in love with the character (and not just for the "it's not the years, honey, it's the mileage" crack). I fell in love with Indiana Jones when he stood on the ridge on the island, and was unable to destroy the ark. I understood that totally: I would have done likewise. There are things which lie beyond our importance as mere human beings. (I also believe that he understood that once his bluff had been called he wasn't going to get out of there anyway, let alone with Marian.)
I now know what the letters LARP stand for. Why someone would spend time doing such a thing is beyond me, but that is probably a failure of imagination on my part. I've never quite understood the allure of the SCA and Ren Faire and Dickens Fair, either. (Do not get me started on the historical inaccuracies in those last two. Just don't.) I have studied the Renaissance a little, and more to the point 19th Century England as a history major, and you could not pay me enough to change places with those people. Even the wealthy gentry. ESPECIALLY not as a woman.
Last night, Echidna Boy tossed out his theory of were-lawyers: some people are struck by the full moon, and instead of turning into wolves or howling, they send out law school applications.
A friend of mine just sent me the song "Mammal" by They Might Be Giants. This makes me wonderfully happy, and will delight Echidna Boy as well, I know: the song mentions both echidnas and monotremes in general. It has displaced "Particle Man" and "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" as my second favorite TMBG song, and gives "Birdhouse in Your Soul" a close run for its money.
I spent this evening cleaning off the top of my dresser, a task somewhat akin to Heinrich Schliemann excavating Troy. I am appalled by the amount of stuff I cleaned away, and even more appalled by the amount of it that wasn't even mine. Since when did I become the owner of a Dr. John CD? At least I was able to find the DVDs to the Muppet Show season 1 and the BBC version of Pride and Prejudice,
Ah well, it is late. My bed calls, for I have a class tomorrow to learn PowerPoint. Oh, joy.
'Night, everyone, sleep tight, and don't let the were-lawyers bite.
I wonder if the chocolate pie recipe I developed a couple of weeks ago would be made better by the addition of sour cream or by the addition of ground chipotle and cinnamon. (I don't think adding all of those would be very good.) Maybe I will be forced (forced!) to make two chocolate pies next weekend. My family will be pressed into service as pie-tasters. It's a tough job, but somebody's got to do it.
I have just seen Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade for the nth time. I am still in love with Sean Connery.
Last night I saw Raiders of the Lost Ark. I can pinpoint exactly when I fell totally and completely in love with the character (and not just for the "it's not the years, honey, it's the mileage" crack). I fell in love with Indiana Jones when he stood on the ridge on the island, and was unable to destroy the ark. I understood that totally: I would have done likewise. There are things which lie beyond our importance as mere human beings. (I also believe that he understood that once his bluff had been called he wasn't going to get out of there anyway, let alone with Marian.)
I now know what the letters LARP stand for. Why someone would spend time doing such a thing is beyond me, but that is probably a failure of imagination on my part. I've never quite understood the allure of the SCA and Ren Faire and Dickens Fair, either. (Do not get me started on the historical inaccuracies in those last two. Just don't.) I have studied the Renaissance a little, and more to the point 19th Century England as a history major, and you could not pay me enough to change places with those people. Even the wealthy gentry. ESPECIALLY not as a woman.
Last night, Echidna Boy tossed out his theory of were-lawyers: some people are struck by the full moon, and instead of turning into wolves or howling, they send out law school applications.
A friend of mine just sent me the song "Mammal" by They Might Be Giants. This makes me wonderfully happy, and will delight Echidna Boy as well, I know: the song mentions both echidnas and monotremes in general. It has displaced "Particle Man" and "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" as my second favorite TMBG song, and gives "Birdhouse in Your Soul" a close run for its money.
I spent this evening cleaning off the top of my dresser, a task somewhat akin to Heinrich Schliemann excavating Troy. I am appalled by the amount of stuff I cleaned away, and even more appalled by the amount of it that wasn't even mine. Since when did I become the owner of a Dr. John CD? At least I was able to find the DVDs to the Muppet Show season 1 and the BBC version of Pride and Prejudice,
Ah well, it is late. My bed calls, for I have a class tomorrow to learn PowerPoint. Oh, joy.
'Night, everyone, sleep tight, and don't let the were-lawyers bite.
Friday, December 10, 2010
Time to get demotivated...
Sunday, December 05, 2010
A little Christmas merriment
It's the time of year again for those wonderful sounds of the season... "humorous" Christmas songs. I am by nature a lover of traditional Christmas carols, so secular Christmas songs don't necessarily do that much for me.* Especially ones that are supposed to make me laugh.**
I really detest "Grandma Got Run Over by A Reindeer." It's mean spirited and cruel. The fact that the Rocket Scientist's grandmother died right around Christmas doesn't help, either. And "Santa Baby" is just... blech.
I do have an odd fondness for the Chipmunks. I won't give the title of the song, since it is such an infectious earworm that just seeing the name can cause discomfort, and I like all of you too much to do that to you. I also like "I Want a Hippopotamus For Christmas," which the rest of my family royally loathes. I'm not sure if that makes me like it more, but it doesn't hurt. My kids like Weird Al's "Christmas at Ground Zero," which is the only Weird Al song that I not only dislike but actually cannot listen to. (It tends to wrap itself in a massive Mobius strip with "Jingle Bell Rock" in my brain -- a loop from hell that goes around and around and WILL NOT STOP.)
The two very best comedic Christmas songs take dead aim at the materialism of the season, as displayed in the myth of Santa Claus and the competitive race to have the best Christmas lights. (Actually, that last sentence is hypocritical of me: I adore Christmas lights, wish they went up in July, and feel there is no such things as too many of them. The guy who choreographed his lights to the music of the TransSiberian Orchestra is my hero.)
Herewith, the Barenaked Ladies ode to labor, "Elf's Lament":
And the wonderful send-up of those of us who believe that, when it comes to Christmas decoration, more is always more, "Fifty Kilowatt Tree" by The Bobs:
*Or contemporary religious songs, either. Whomever wrote that godawful "Christmas Shoes" country song a few years ago should be taken out and have a stake of holly driven through his heart. Or mistletoe. Something suitably druidic and Yule-flavored.
**Except for Bruce Springsteen's version of "Santa Claus is Coming to Town." Bruce rocks, in every possible sense of that verb.
I really detest "Grandma Got Run Over by A Reindeer." It's mean spirited and cruel. The fact that the Rocket Scientist's grandmother died right around Christmas doesn't help, either. And "Santa Baby" is just... blech.
I do have an odd fondness for the Chipmunks. I won't give the title of the song, since it is such an infectious earworm that just seeing the name can cause discomfort, and I like all of you too much to do that to you. I also like "I Want a Hippopotamus For Christmas," which the rest of my family royally loathes. I'm not sure if that makes me like it more, but it doesn't hurt. My kids like Weird Al's "Christmas at Ground Zero," which is the only Weird Al song that I not only dislike but actually cannot listen to. (It tends to wrap itself in a massive Mobius strip with "Jingle Bell Rock" in my brain -- a loop from hell that goes around and around and WILL NOT STOP.)
The two very best comedic Christmas songs take dead aim at the materialism of the season, as displayed in the myth of Santa Claus and the competitive race to have the best Christmas lights. (Actually, that last sentence is hypocritical of me: I adore Christmas lights, wish they went up in July, and feel there is no such things as too many of them. The guy who choreographed his lights to the music of the TransSiberian Orchestra is my hero.)
Herewith, the Barenaked Ladies ode to labor, "Elf's Lament":
And the wonderful send-up of those of us who believe that, when it comes to Christmas decoration, more is always more, "Fifty Kilowatt Tree" by The Bobs:
*Or contemporary religious songs, either. Whomever wrote that godawful "Christmas Shoes" country song a few years ago should be taken out and have a stake of holly driven through his heart. Or mistletoe. Something suitably druidic and Yule-flavored.
**Except for Bruce Springsteen's version of "Santa Claus is Coming to Town." Bruce rocks, in every possible sense of that verb.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
How to tell you're a lawyer....
In my last post, I said " I have to say I rather like the opinion, aside from its outcome."
Um, yeah.
Um, yeah.
South Florida does it again.
Let's hear it for environmental regulation. Or not. The Supreme Court has denied cert for Friends of the Everglades v. South Florida Water Management District.
I ended up reading about this case, which I was unaware of since it happened across the country from me, because of the Supreme Court's refusal to hear it. And I am appalled. For once, I am not appalled at the Supreme Court. And, as much as I hate to say it, I think the 11th Circuit reached the proper decision. No, in this case I am really annoyed at the EPA.
The issue at hand in this case is whether water transfers -- moving water from one "navigable body of water" to another -- require permits under the Clean Water Act. In this case, the transfer involved pumping water from the navigable (and very polluted) waters of Army Corps of Engineers drainage canals uphill through pumping stations to canals feeding into into the waters of Lake Okeechobee, which, in the natural order of things, would feed into the Everglades. As it is now, the land south of the lake has been drained (starting in the 1930s), but attempts to restore the Everglades (an incredibly sensitive habitat) involve undoing at least some of that.
In prior decisions, courts had rejected the "unitary waters" theory, which argues essentially that all navigable waters are part of a whole, and so an entity did not need a permit under the Clean Water Act before the transfer of the pollutants.
So... the EPA, while the case was winding its way through the court system, adopted a regulation which specifically exempted water transfers from the permitting requirements. Thanks, guys. And the 11th District, reluctantly but properly,* stated that this decided the case in favor of the Water Management District... and against the environment. And the Miccosukee Tribe, which had argued that the pollution threatened their way of life.**
Lake Okeechobee is already polluted: the levels of phosphorus in the lake are about four times the legal limit. Allowing for the dumping of still more pollutants into it will just make things worse.
The real problem underlying all of this is nonpoint source (NPS) pollution. In Florida (and California, as well), this often means agricultural runoff. (In New York, it would be more likely municipal runoff.) It is noteworthy that one of parties in this suit (on the side of the Water District, of course) was the United States Sugar Corporation. The canals, which drain farmland, were contaminated by pesticides and fertilizers. Agricultural concerns have an interest in having the disposal of runoff be as easy as possible.
Just to clarify, since the runoff is not regulated when it flows into the canal, this decision means that the runoff is not regulated at any point between the field and the lake. Yes, this is a big loophole: but, as the judge noted in his opinion, an even bigger loophole is the Act's refusal to regulate NPS to begin with, and its specific exemption for agricultural runoff and discharges from the definition of "point sources." As Judge Carnes said:
This decision has the possibility of affecting far more than the state of Florida. It essentially means any navigable water, no matter how pristine or environmentally sensitive, is potentially at risk, if it receives flows from any other navigable water with pollutants.
That's scary. And all of this pushes the restoration of the 'Glades -- one of the lost or endangered natural wonders of North America -- further down the line.
And that's just sad.
* I have to say I rather like the opinion, aside from its outcome. The opinion's author, Judge Edward Carnes, wrote an understandable opinion that was not unsympathetic to the plaintiffs. He also quoted country singer John Anderson's ode to the lost Everglades, "Seminole Wind." That's just cool.
** SFWMD has tried to shaft the Miccosukee in regards to tribal remains, as well.
I ended up reading about this case, which I was unaware of since it happened across the country from me, because of the Supreme Court's refusal to hear it. And I am appalled. For once, I am not appalled at the Supreme Court. And, as much as I hate to say it, I think the 11th Circuit reached the proper decision. No, in this case I am really annoyed at the EPA.
The issue at hand in this case is whether water transfers -- moving water from one "navigable body of water" to another -- require permits under the Clean Water Act. In this case, the transfer involved pumping water from the navigable (and very polluted) waters of Army Corps of Engineers drainage canals uphill through pumping stations to canals feeding into into the waters of Lake Okeechobee, which, in the natural order of things, would feed into the Everglades. As it is now, the land south of the lake has been drained (starting in the 1930s), but attempts to restore the Everglades (an incredibly sensitive habitat) involve undoing at least some of that.
In prior decisions, courts had rejected the "unitary waters" theory, which argues essentially that all navigable waters are part of a whole, and so an entity did not need a permit under the Clean Water Act before the transfer of the pollutants.
So... the EPA, while the case was winding its way through the court system, adopted a regulation which specifically exempted water transfers from the permitting requirements. Thanks, guys. And the 11th District, reluctantly but properly,* stated that this decided the case in favor of the Water Management District... and against the environment. And the Miccosukee Tribe, which had argued that the pollution threatened their way of life.**
Lake Okeechobee is already polluted: the levels of phosphorus in the lake are about four times the legal limit. Allowing for the dumping of still more pollutants into it will just make things worse.
The real problem underlying all of this is nonpoint source (NPS) pollution. In Florida (and California, as well), this often means agricultural runoff. (In New York, it would be more likely municipal runoff.) It is noteworthy that one of parties in this suit (on the side of the Water District, of course) was the United States Sugar Corporation. The canals, which drain farmland, were contaminated by pesticides and fertilizers. Agricultural concerns have an interest in having the disposal of runoff be as easy as possible.
Just to clarify, since the runoff is not regulated when it flows into the canal, this decision means that the runoff is not regulated at any point between the field and the lake. Yes, this is a big loophole: but, as the judge noted in his opinion, an even bigger loophole is the Act's refusal to regulate NPS to begin with, and its specific exemption for agricultural runoff and discharges from the definition of "point sources." As Judge Carnes said:
What this illustrates is that even when the preamble to legislation speaks single-mindedly and espouses lofty goals, the legislative process serves as a melting pot of competing interests and a face-off of battling factions. What emerges from the conflict to become the enactment is often less pure than the preamble promises. The provisions of legislation reflect compromises cobbled together by competing political forces and compromise is the enemy of single-mindedness.
This decision has the possibility of affecting far more than the state of Florida. It essentially means any navigable water, no matter how pristine or environmentally sensitive, is potentially at risk, if it receives flows from any other navigable water with pollutants.
That's scary. And all of this pushes the restoration of the 'Glades -- one of the lost or endangered natural wonders of North America -- further down the line.
And that's just sad.
* I have to say I rather like the opinion, aside from its outcome. The opinion's author, Judge Edward Carnes, wrote an understandable opinion that was not unsympathetic to the plaintiffs. He also quoted country singer John Anderson's ode to the lost Everglades, "Seminole Wind." That's just cool.
** SFWMD has tried to shaft the Miccosukee in regards to tribal remains, as well.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Good things come in threes.
I have now made more posts this year than any year since I started the blog, and I did not start until late April, and I still have a month to go.
I made a killer chocolate pie over the weekend, from a recipe I developed all by myself from scratch. (It's a simple recipe, with only a few ingredients, but I still think it's cool that I took the initiative to try.)
And...
The Fire Mountain Gems ad featuring the Christmas tree I made for their 2008 Beading Contest, originally used in the December issue of Beadwork magazine, has been reprinted on the back of Bead Unique. We are talking a full-page, full-color ad in a nationally distributed magazine. Featuring my work. For the second time. Hot damn. I just wish I could find some way to work it into my resume or my LinkedIn profile.
I made a killer chocolate pie over the weekend, from a recipe I developed all by myself from scratch. (It's a simple recipe, with only a few ingredients, but I still think it's cool that I took the initiative to try.)
And...
The Fire Mountain Gems ad featuring the Christmas tree I made for their 2008 Beading Contest, originally used in the December issue of Beadwork magazine, has been reprinted on the back of Bead Unique. We are talking a full-page, full-color ad in a nationally distributed magazine. Featuring my work. For the second time. Hot damn. I just wish I could find some way to work it into my resume or my LinkedIn profile.
I'm sorry for my sporadic posting as of late. It is likely to continue. Jan (the laptop) died -- the Rocket Scientist spent about twelve hours over the weekend troubleshooting and replacing the hard drive (which means taking the darn thing completely apart -- great design there, Apple) not once but twice (the first drive turned out to be defective) and troubleshooting the battery.
Right now everything is flaky. System Preferences won't open, mail won't work. Even Bejeweled keeps dying. I am hoping that cleaning everything out, reloading the operating system and doing a simple drag and drop rather than using the restore software will clear everything up, but the replacement disks for the operating system (which have mysteriously disappeared and which had to be reordered) won't be here for a few days. And it will take me a full day to get all the files back on line.
For a while I thought I had lost everything, although I thought I had backed up recently. (Turns out I had not backed up since 10/29. Bad, bad me.) I thought I had lost all my job search work, and more importantly, in terms of sunk time and irretrievable effort, the trivia book I had been working sporadically on since 2006. (I have not done anything with it in at least a year, but I always knew it was there and have been thinking of getting back to working on it. Arguably, once I get the references in shape, I have enough material to actually produce a book, although I have less material than my goal, which was 1000 questions. I have about 725.) For a little while, I could not decide whether to throw up or cry. Fortunately, I have been able to locate both the book and some of my resumes and cover letters.
So, I will have occasional access to other computers, and hopefully at least Firefox will run on this computer. (Word also seems to run. Hopefully it will keep doing so.) I never thought I'd say it, but thank God for Gmail. But I am not holding my breath -- I expect Firefox to die any moment.
So, you'll see me when you see me. I hope I can get to my post-in-progress, regarding the show Criminal Minds and the challenge to Prop 8 (for you lawyers out there, it's actually a post about standing in death penalty cases). Not to mention my usual musings on the season.
I think I can get one more post out this evening.
Take care, folks.
Right now everything is flaky. System Preferences won't open, mail won't work. Even Bejeweled keeps dying. I am hoping that cleaning everything out, reloading the operating system and doing a simple drag and drop rather than using the restore software will clear everything up, but the replacement disks for the operating system (which have mysteriously disappeared and which had to be reordered) won't be here for a few days. And it will take me a full day to get all the files back on line.
For a while I thought I had lost everything, although I thought I had backed up recently. (Turns out I had not backed up since 10/29. Bad, bad me.) I thought I had lost all my job search work, and more importantly, in terms of sunk time and irretrievable effort, the trivia book I had been working sporadically on since 2006. (I have not done anything with it in at least a year, but I always knew it was there and have been thinking of getting back to working on it. Arguably, once I get the references in shape, I have enough material to actually produce a book, although I have less material than my goal, which was 1000 questions. I have about 725.) For a little while, I could not decide whether to throw up or cry. Fortunately, I have been able to locate both the book and some of my resumes and cover letters.
So, I will have occasional access to other computers, and hopefully at least Firefox will run on this computer. (Word also seems to run. Hopefully it will keep doing so.) I never thought I'd say it, but thank God for Gmail. But I am not holding my breath -- I expect Firefox to die any moment.
So, you'll see me when you see me. I hope I can get to my post-in-progress, regarding the show Criminal Minds and the challenge to Prop 8 (for you lawyers out there, it's actually a post about standing in death penalty cases). Not to mention my usual musings on the season.
I think I can get one more post out this evening.
Take care, folks.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Oh, what the heck, while I'm at it...
This is my brownie recipe. I know it by heart, but I know other people who have asked for it.
Pat's Damn Good Brownies
1 stick Crisco butter flavored shortening. You can use butter, but as far as I'm concerned the texture won't be right. Edited to add: 1 stick of Crisco is one cup. If you do decide to use butter, you will need TWO sticks.
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
2 tsps vanilla
3/4 good cocoa: I use Penzey's High Fat Natural Cocoa, but Ghiradelli works. Best of all is Vahlrona or Scharffen-Berger, which I have been known to use for very special occasions.
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup good chocolate chips (Ghiradelli or Guittard)
Preheat oven to 325. Melt shortening in large microwaveable bowl, add sugar. Beat eggs in one at a time, beating thoroughly after each addition. Stir in vanilla. Stir in cocoa (I usually use about 3/4 cup + 1-2 tbs). Stir in flour, baking powder, and salt. Add chocolate chips. Pour batter into 13 x 9 pan. Bake for oh, about 30 - 35 minutes (check to see if a knife come out clean, or with only a few fudgy crumbs on it). I generally start checking about 28 minutes, and check every 5 after that.
And if you are so inclined...
Easy Mint Icing
2 large bars Ghiradelli (or Lindt) mint chocolate (the solid ones, not the ones with the mint creamy filling)
Heavy whipping cream: 1 oz per 2 oz chocolate
Shave or food process chocolate bars into small pieces, place in glass or metal bowl. Heat cream until just short of boiling. Pour cream over chocolate, let sit a few minutes. Stir thoroughly -- keep stirring until cream is totally incorporated and mixture starts to stiffen. Let cool completely, spread over cooled brownies.
Pat's Damn Good Brownies
1 stick Crisco butter flavored shortening. You can use butter, but as far as I'm concerned the texture won't be right. Edited to add: 1 stick of Crisco is one cup. If you do decide to use butter, you will need TWO sticks.
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
2 tsps vanilla
3/4 good cocoa: I use Penzey's High Fat Natural Cocoa, but Ghiradelli works. Best of all is Vahlrona or Scharffen-Berger, which I have been known to use for very special occasions.
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup good chocolate chips (Ghiradelli or Guittard)
Preheat oven to 325. Melt shortening in large microwaveable bowl, add sugar. Beat eggs in one at a time, beating thoroughly after each addition. Stir in vanilla. Stir in cocoa (I usually use about 3/4 cup + 1-2 tbs). Stir in flour, baking powder, and salt. Add chocolate chips. Pour batter into 13 x 9 pan. Bake for oh, about 30 - 35 minutes (check to see if a knife come out clean, or with only a few fudgy crumbs on it). I generally start checking about 28 minutes, and check every 5 after that.
And if you are so inclined...
Easy Mint Icing
2 large bars Ghiradelli (or Lindt) mint chocolate (the solid ones, not the ones with the mint creamy filling)
Heavy whipping cream: 1 oz per 2 oz chocolate
Shave or food process chocolate bars into small pieces, place in glass or metal bowl. Heat cream until just short of boiling. Pour cream over chocolate, let sit a few minutes. Stir thoroughly -- keep stirring until cream is totally incorporated and mixture starts to stiffen. Let cool completely, spread over cooled brownies.
Recipe: Vegetarian Cornbread Stuffing/Dressing
This was developed over the years from a recipe my mother-in-law gave to my husband. While this version is vegetarian (at least the part NOT used to stuff the turkey), it really is much better using chicken stock rather than vegetable stock. Note: while I love this stuff, it does essentially take two days to prepare. It also makes a LOT of stuffing.
Day (or evening) 1:
2 red bell peppers
2 medium onions
4 stalks celery
1 stick butter
Double recipe cornbread (I use the recipe off of the Quaker Corn Meal Box -- it makes two nine inch rounds)
Twelve pieces bread (this year I used half sourdough and half standard buttermilk)
1/2 - 1 tsp kosher salt
2.5 tbs Bell's Poultry Seasoning
1/2 - 1 tsp ground chipotle pepper
Chop peppers, onions and celery in food processor. Fine, but not too fine (definitely not pureed). Saute veggies in butter until soft. Let cool completely, place in Ziploc and refrigerate until ready to use.
Toast bread in oven on low heat, until thoroughly dried. Crumble dried toast and cornbread thoroughly (you can process them, but it make the final texture smooth -- some people are okay with this, others prefer more chunkiness) in a large bowl. Add salt, poultry seasoning, and chipotle. Mix thoroughly.
Next morning:
Veggie mixture
Cornbread/bread mixture
1 stick butter
2 eggs, beaten thoroughly
3-5 small cans vegetable broth
Mix together veggies and crumb mixture. Cut up butter into very small chunks, mix into crumb/veggie mixture. Add eggs. Add broth one can at a time until the proper consistency is met. The dressing should be wet, but not dripping. (Minimum 3 cans.)
Use to stuff turkey. Put excess in 13 x 9 pan, cook at 375 until brown on top, 35 - 40 minutes.
ETA, 11/25/11: This Thanksgiving, I used 2 large onions, 3 peppers (2 red, 1 orange), made the veggies a little chunkier, increased the chipotle powder to 1.5 tsps. and added half again as much Bell's seasonings. People loved it.
Eat for three days, along with leftover turkey and cranberry pineapple sauce. Best thing to do? Make sandwiches with stuffing spread on one side, turkey in the middle, and cranberry sauce on the other, preferably on sourdough bread.
Oh, the turkey? Rub with Penzey's Bicentennial Rub. Pat down with a stick of butter, softened, with more rub in it. Bake at 425 for 15 minutes, then drop temperature to 325. Pull turkey briefly from oven, cover with cheesecloth saturated with olive oil, return to oven. Cook for about ten minutes per pound, until turkey hits 165, basting every 20 - 30 minutes. Pull off cheesecloth when you estimate it's about 20 minutes until done, so the skin can brown.
Day (or evening) 1:
2 red bell peppers
2 medium onions
4 stalks celery
1 stick butter
Double recipe cornbread (I use the recipe off of the Quaker Corn Meal Box -- it makes two nine inch rounds)
Twelve pieces bread (this year I used half sourdough and half standard buttermilk)
1/2 - 1 tsp kosher salt
2.5 tbs Bell's Poultry Seasoning
1/2 - 1 tsp ground chipotle pepper
Chop peppers, onions and celery in food processor. Fine, but not too fine (definitely not pureed). Saute veggies in butter until soft. Let cool completely, place in Ziploc and refrigerate until ready to use.
Toast bread in oven on low heat, until thoroughly dried. Crumble dried toast and cornbread thoroughly (you can process them, but it make the final texture smooth -- some people are okay with this, others prefer more chunkiness) in a large bowl. Add salt, poultry seasoning, and chipotle. Mix thoroughly.
Next morning:
Veggie mixture
Cornbread/bread mixture
1 stick butter
2 eggs, beaten thoroughly
3-5 small cans vegetable broth
Mix together veggies and crumb mixture. Cut up butter into very small chunks, mix into crumb/veggie mixture. Add eggs. Add broth one can at a time until the proper consistency is met. The dressing should be wet, but not dripping. (Minimum 3 cans.)
Use to stuff turkey. Put excess in 13 x 9 pan, cook at 375 until brown on top, 35 - 40 minutes.
ETA, 11/25/11: This Thanksgiving, I used 2 large onions, 3 peppers (2 red, 1 orange), made the veggies a little chunkier, increased the chipotle powder to 1.5 tsps. and added half again as much Bell's seasonings. People loved it.
Eat for three days, along with leftover turkey and cranberry pineapple sauce. Best thing to do? Make sandwiches with stuffing spread on one side, turkey in the middle, and cranberry sauce on the other, preferably on sourdough bread.
Oh, the turkey? Rub with Penzey's Bicentennial Rub. Pat down with a stick of butter, softened, with more rub in it. Bake at 425 for 15 minutes, then drop temperature to 325. Pull turkey briefly from oven, cover with cheesecloth saturated with olive oil, return to oven. Cook for about ten minutes per pound, until turkey hits 165, basting every 20 - 30 minutes. Pull off cheesecloth when you estimate it's about 20 minutes until done, so the skin can brown.
Recipe: Cranberry & Pineapple Sauce, Key Lime Pie
Cranberry & Pineapple Sauce
I'm just putting this here so, no matter what happens, I'll have it available, since it is a recipe I developed this year.
1 cup pineapple juice
1/2 can chunk pineapple, drained and chopped -- where you get the pineapple juice from! (chopped chunk pineapple has more structure than crushed pineapple)
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1 package cranberries (I believe it was a pound, but can't remember: I think it was four cups)
1/2 cup dried cranberries
pine nuts or pomegranate seeds (optional)
Dissolve the sugars in the pineapple juice in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil, and add both types of cranberries. Cook until the fresh cranberries have pretty much exploded. -- this will take probably 10 - 15 minutes. (I can't really explain it -- you have to see it.) Pull off heat, add pineapple, let cool completely. Refrigerate overnight. If desired, the next day just before serving stir in pine nuts or pomegranate seeds.
Key Lime Pie
This is pretty much Emeril Lagasse's recipe, except that Emeril makes his own pie shell, and places sour cream on top. And no ginger.
1 graham cracker pie crust
2 cans of sweetened condensed milk
2 eggs
1 cup Key lime juice (note: do NOT use regular lime juice, the pie will not be tart enough. You can either juice Key limes -- annoying little buggers -- or buy Key lime juice (available in some supermarkets).)
1/4 cup crystallized (sugared) ginger, chopped fine
Bake graham cracker crust according to directions, let cool completely. (Or not. I use mine without cooking -- the Keebler elves tell me I can -- and the pie turns out fine.)
Preheat oven to 325. Whisk together the eggs, lime juice, and condensed milk. Pour into the pie shell, bake for 15 minutes. Sprinkle chopped ginger on top. Refrigerate for two hours, at least.
My family likes it.
I'm just putting this here so, no matter what happens, I'll have it available, since it is a recipe I developed this year.
1 cup pineapple juice
1/2 can chunk pineapple, drained and chopped -- where you get the pineapple juice from! (chopped chunk pineapple has more structure than crushed pineapple)
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1 package cranberries (I believe it was a pound, but can't remember: I think it was four cups)
1/2 cup dried cranberries
pine nuts or pomegranate seeds (optional)
Dissolve the sugars in the pineapple juice in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil, and add both types of cranberries. Cook until the fresh cranberries have pretty much exploded. -- this will take probably 10 - 15 minutes. (I can't really explain it -- you have to see it.) Pull off heat, add pineapple, let cool completely. Refrigerate overnight. If desired, the next day just before serving stir in pine nuts or pomegranate seeds.
Key Lime Pie
This is pretty much Emeril Lagasse's recipe, except that Emeril makes his own pie shell, and places sour cream on top. And no ginger.
1 graham cracker pie crust
2 cans of sweetened condensed milk
2 eggs
1 cup Key lime juice (note: do NOT use regular lime juice, the pie will not be tart enough. You can either juice Key limes -- annoying little buggers -- or buy Key lime juice (available in some supermarkets).)
1/4 cup crystallized (sugared) ginger, chopped fine
Bake graham cracker crust according to directions, let cool completely. (Or not. I use mine without cooking -- the Keebler elves tell me I can -- and the pie turns out fine.)
Preheat oven to 325. Whisk together the eggs, lime juice, and condensed milk. Pour into the pie shell, bake for 15 minutes. Sprinkle chopped ginger on top. Refrigerate for two hours, at least.
My family likes it.
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
The uninevitability of desire
Glinda: You can still be with the wizard, what you've worked and waited for, You can have all you've ever wanted....
Elphaba: But I don't want it... No, I *can't* want it, any more...
In the car yesterday, I was listening to one of my mix CDs, and the song "Defying Gravity" from the musical Wicked came on. I love this song, about freeing yourself to be who you are, and this small section is the part I find most intriguing.
We have a notion in society that desire -- for people, for things, for events -- simply exists. We want what we want, and there is nothing we can do about that longing. We can choose to "overcome" it, to suffer without the object of desire, but we still want them or it.
This passage suggests otherwise. That people can recognize that one's desires are unwanted, unethical, immoral* or simply bad for one's peace of mind, and reject that longing.
Part of the societal belief about longing is part of what I think is a larger misunderstanding about the nature of feelings and thoughts. (Mood, as part of a larger issue involving mental health, is a different issue.) How many times have you heard someone say "Your feelings are your feelings"?
Yes, "your feelings are your feelings" and other people should not try to change how you feel. That is intrusive, demoralizing and infantilizing. It is an insult to your intelligence, and your sovereignty over yourself.
And those feelings have purposes. They can be a spur to action, or a recognition of loss, allowing mourning and closure. The anger engendered by hurt has on occasion transformed not only people, but the world. I would not want to change that. And recognition of the pain caused by others is important.
But sometimes feelings simply get in the way of living a healthy life. Or of acting in one's own best interests. And they can often be changed. This is the basis of many recent developments in psychotherapy: both Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy involve changing how you feel by changing how you think.
Elphaba seems to know this. Wanting what she wants -- indeed, getting what she would be able to get -- would involve ignoring an important part of herself. And she refuses to do that, refuses to even consider it.
The Rocket Scientist has pointed out the flip side to this. Before she rejects her longing, Elphaba first admits that it exists. Has to admit that it exists. The flip side is people who never understand or admit their feelings to themselves, placing them at the mercy of things that they won't let themselves think about. This is no more healthy than hanging on to feelings that have out lasted their useful purpose.
I have to respect Elphaba. I have to respect letting go not just of what you want, but your desire for what you want. Even if you can get it.
*This is clear in the context of the play.
Elphaba: But I don't want it... No, I *can't* want it, any more...
In the car yesterday, I was listening to one of my mix CDs, and the song "Defying Gravity" from the musical Wicked came on. I love this song, about freeing yourself to be who you are, and this small section is the part I find most intriguing.
We have a notion in society that desire -- for people, for things, for events -- simply exists. We want what we want, and there is nothing we can do about that longing. We can choose to "overcome" it, to suffer without the object of desire, but we still want them or it.
This passage suggests otherwise. That people can recognize that one's desires are unwanted, unethical, immoral* or simply bad for one's peace of mind, and reject that longing.
Part of the societal belief about longing is part of what I think is a larger misunderstanding about the nature of feelings and thoughts. (Mood, as part of a larger issue involving mental health, is a different issue.) How many times have you heard someone say "Your feelings are your feelings"?
Yes, "your feelings are your feelings" and other people should not try to change how you feel. That is intrusive, demoralizing and infantilizing. It is an insult to your intelligence, and your sovereignty over yourself.
And those feelings have purposes. They can be a spur to action, or a recognition of loss, allowing mourning and closure. The anger engendered by hurt has on occasion transformed not only people, but the world. I would not want to change that. And recognition of the pain caused by others is important.
But sometimes feelings simply get in the way of living a healthy life. Or of acting in one's own best interests. And they can often be changed. This is the basis of many recent developments in psychotherapy: both Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy involve changing how you feel by changing how you think.
Elphaba seems to know this. Wanting what she wants -- indeed, getting what she would be able to get -- would involve ignoring an important part of herself. And she refuses to do that, refuses to even consider it.
The Rocket Scientist has pointed out the flip side to this. Before she rejects her longing, Elphaba first admits that it exists. Has to admit that it exists. The flip side is people who never understand or admit their feelings to themselves, placing them at the mercy of things that they won't let themselves think about. This is no more healthy than hanging on to feelings that have out lasted their useful purpose.
I have to respect Elphaba. I have to respect letting go not just of what you want, but your desire for what you want. Even if you can get it.
*This is clear in the context of the play.
On a whim, I went to see Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 at 12:03 am last night. It was not the smartest decision I have ever made, since I needed to be at the job center at 7:00 am to sign up for a PowerPoint class. I am not twenty any more, or thirty -- the Rocket Scientist and I were the oldest people there by probably a decade. Sane people our age were home asleep.
That said, I am not going to review the movie, since most of you have not seen it yet, if you're going to, other than to say I liked it, it suffered from the same defect as the book, there is a very lovely added scene not in the book, and lastly...
They sure find a lot of occasions to show Daniel Radcliffe without his shirt on.
Edited to add: In retrospect maybe it was only three or four scenes. But it seems like more, especially given... oh, wait, I can't tell you that. Also, I don't recall them ever showing him shirtless in any of the other movies -- clearly, Radcliffe doing Equus on stage has had some effect on how people view him.
That said, I am not going to review the movie, since most of you have not seen it yet, if you're going to, other than to say I liked it, it suffered from the same defect as the book, there is a very lovely added scene not in the book, and lastly...
They sure find a lot of occasions to show Daniel Radcliffe without his shirt on.
Edited to add: In retrospect maybe it was only three or four scenes. But it seems like more, especially given... oh, wait, I can't tell you that. Also, I don't recall them ever showing him shirtless in any of the other movies -- clearly, Radcliffe doing Equus on stage has had some effect on how people view him.
Monday, November 15, 2010
I need to hunt down Railfan's hockey skates. Fortunately, I already know where Echidna Boy's figure skates are. Unfortunately, ever since I broke my ankle in college (a long and embarrassing story, there) I can't skate. This is a problem...
Because....
My college-sophomore eldest son friended me on FaceBook this weekend.
I expect the ice sheet coming up from Hell to hit here any moment.
Wait, was that a pig I just saw flying by?
Because....
My college-sophomore eldest son friended me on FaceBook this weekend.
I expect the ice sheet coming up from Hell to hit here any moment.
Wait, was that a pig I just saw flying by?
I'm doing something right.
Last weekend a local college had a program of various classes for junior and high school students. Railfan (aka middle son) took a fascinating class on the impact of Japanese culture on gaming, which after we talked about it, I wished I could have taken.
Echidna Boy took three classes: one on using your Macintosh productively,* one on the cosmology of black holes, and one on the sociology of sex, dating and marriage. (The last two reserved for high school students.)
We had a fascinating discussion after the last one. (As opposed to the cosmology course, where I could only decipher about half of what he was enthusiastically talking about.) During our discussion, he turned to the issue of "types."
"I figured out I have a type of girl I'm attracted to, Mom," he said. "My favorite type of girl is very smart, athletic, and thinks for herself."
Whoa... no pretty? no popular? no sweet? His type of girl is smart? athletic? independent-minded?
Yesssss!!!!
I have trained this kid well.**
* Since he was later that evening trying to access root on the iMac to get "superuser" powers, he didn't really learn much he didn't already know.
** Okay, I would have been slightly more happy if he had said "creative" rather than athletic, but that's only because athletic people intimidate me.
Echidna Boy took three classes: one on using your Macintosh productively,* one on the cosmology of black holes, and one on the sociology of sex, dating and marriage. (The last two reserved for high school students.)
We had a fascinating discussion after the last one. (As opposed to the cosmology course, where I could only decipher about half of what he was enthusiastically talking about.) During our discussion, he turned to the issue of "types."
"I figured out I have a type of girl I'm attracted to, Mom," he said. "My favorite type of girl is very smart, athletic, and thinks for herself."
Whoa... no pretty? no popular? no sweet? His type of girl is smart? athletic? independent-minded?
Yesssss!!!!
I have trained this kid well.**
* Since he was later that evening trying to access root on the iMac to get "superuser" powers, he didn't really learn much he didn't already know.
** Okay, I would have been slightly more happy if he had said "creative" rather than athletic, but that's only because athletic people intimidate me.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Musical Cars.
Most great works of art have a theme which holds them together. This one doesn't. Harry Chapin, "30,000 Pounds of Bananas"
I have written a fair amount about music, what I listen to, what I think. I guess you could say it is an important subject for me, albeit from the perspective of a middle-aged white woman who tends to be set in her ways. In fact, this entire post may be completely redundant. So feel free to skip this.
Libra: A big promotion is just around the corner for someone much more talented that you; Laughter is the very best medicine, remember that when your appendix bursts next week, Weird Al Yankovic, "Your Horoscope for Today"
Music is an important consideration in my choice of vehicles. I have been known to decide which car to drive based on which of our older cars has a functioning stereo at the time. (The green Mazda, which is my preferred vehicle, has a flaky MP3 player, which is very good when it functions, but has an annoying tendency to short out when you're miles away from home. Then again, the car has over 200,000 miles on it.) You know how some people smoke when they drive? I have to sing along with the stereo.
When I am down and, oh my soul, so weary; When troubles come and my heart burdened be; Then, I am still and wait here in the silence, Until you come and sit awhile with me.
Josh Groban, "You Raise Me Up."
Singing makes driving easier, even possible on some days. I hate driving people in my car I am not related to because then I can't sing. (I never feel compelled to sing in other people's cars, unless they are singing.) It just doesn't feel right. It raises my stress level. If I'm sleepy, driving without music makes me even more so.
Will I lose my dignity? Will someone care? "Will I", from Rent.
I like having a variety of music in the car. I know that I have little hip-hop and no rap, and I save instrumental music for times when I'm not driving. I have not found much rap or hip-hop I like, anyway, which may be a cultural and generational thing as much as anything else.
So I own not a notion, I escape and ape content; I don't own emotion, I rent... "What You Own," from Rent.
But many other genres are fair game: country, rock, pop, gospel, folk, Broadway. (Speaking of gospel, let me just say right now, that if there is a heaven, and if I get there someday, I fully expect God to look and sound like Aretha Franklin.)
It's astounding, time is fleeting, madness takes its toll, "The Time Warp," from The Rocky Horror Picture Show
With the MP3 player in the Mazda, I am not limited to 22 songs -- I can put four times that many on a CD to play. So I tend to pick a much more varied selection of songs. Which is great, sort of.
At night I could hear the blood in my veins , Black and whispering as the rain, Bruce Springsteen, "The Streets of Philadelphia"
I do not have a rational, musical reason for the selection of songs I put on any given CD (except for my Great Big Sea mixes) -- they can run the gamut of styles and subject matter. I do sometimes make mixes with songs with all the same tempos, but that is the exception rather than the rule. The other members of my family hate this, because I have a whole lot of CDs in the car labeled with the date and n of n, and they have no clue what's on them. Neither do I, for that matter, but I don't care. I do occasionally do a theme mix: "Numbers," Geography" and my favorite, "Occupationally Speaking."
But that's just a lot of water, underneath a bridge I burned; and there's no use in backtracking around corners I have turned, Trisha Yearwood, "The Song Remembers When"
I sort my mixes either through iTunes shuffle or alphabetically by title (either forward or back), which serves much the same function. This presents a bit of a problem: listening to the songs fully requires a certain level of emotional and cognitive shape-shifting. Because my music will veer from topic to topic, often eliciting the comment "Umm, interesting segue there, Mom," the change in mood can be extreme. You think it is a jump from Weird Al to Josh Groban, or even worse, from "Time Warp" to "Streets of Philadelphia" ? On "Occupationally Speaking," I had a segue from "Prince of Darkness" by the Indigo Girls to "Dentist!" from Little Shop of Horrors. The emotional transition was severe enough I usually would skip one song or the other, depending upon what mood I was in that day.
I'll eat when I get hungry and I'll drink when I get dry; Get drunk whenever I'm ready, get sober by and by, Great Big Sea, "River Driver"
I'm not sure what the answer is to this, or even if I need an answer to this. If nothing else, I could turn my iTunes over to the Not-So-Little-Drummer-Boy, who is very good at mixing music, and once he stopped laughing, let him create my mixes.
Is it too much to demand, I want a full house and a rock-and-roll band? Pens that don't run out of ink, cool quiet and time to think? Mary Chapin Carpenter, "Passionate Kisses"
I'm having a hard time ending this post. Most posts have a theme which holds them together. This one doesn't. Other than if you see me tooling down the street, singing, and my mood seems to shift, it's not that I'm crazy, just that alphabetical imperative and its resulting change of song have hit hard.
I have written a fair amount about music, what I listen to, what I think. I guess you could say it is an important subject for me, albeit from the perspective of a middle-aged white woman who tends to be set in her ways. In fact, this entire post may be completely redundant. So feel free to skip this.
Libra: A big promotion is just around the corner for someone much more talented that you; Laughter is the very best medicine, remember that when your appendix bursts next week, Weird Al Yankovic, "Your Horoscope for Today"
Music is an important consideration in my choice of vehicles. I have been known to decide which car to drive based on which of our older cars has a functioning stereo at the time. (The green Mazda, which is my preferred vehicle, has a flaky MP3 player, which is very good when it functions, but has an annoying tendency to short out when you're miles away from home. Then again, the car has over 200,000 miles on it.) You know how some people smoke when they drive? I have to sing along with the stereo.
When I am down and, oh my soul, so weary; When troubles come and my heart burdened be; Then, I am still and wait here in the silence, Until you come and sit awhile with me.
Josh Groban, "You Raise Me Up."
Singing makes driving easier, even possible on some days. I hate driving people in my car I am not related to because then I can't sing. (I never feel compelled to sing in other people's cars, unless they are singing.) It just doesn't feel right. It raises my stress level. If I'm sleepy, driving without music makes me even more so.
Will I lose my dignity? Will someone care? "Will I", from Rent.
I like having a variety of music in the car. I know that I have little hip-hop and no rap, and I save instrumental music for times when I'm not driving. I have not found much rap or hip-hop I like, anyway, which may be a cultural and generational thing as much as anything else.
So I own not a notion, I escape and ape content; I don't own emotion, I rent... "What You Own," from Rent.
But many other genres are fair game: country, rock, pop, gospel, folk, Broadway. (Speaking of gospel, let me just say right now, that if there is a heaven, and if I get there someday, I fully expect God to look and sound like Aretha Franklin.)
It's astounding, time is fleeting, madness takes its toll, "The Time Warp," from The Rocky Horror Picture Show
With the MP3 player in the Mazda, I am not limited to 22 songs -- I can put four times that many on a CD to play. So I tend to pick a much more varied selection of songs. Which is great, sort of.
At night I could hear the blood in my veins , Black and whispering as the rain, Bruce Springsteen, "The Streets of Philadelphia"
I do not have a rational, musical reason for the selection of songs I put on any given CD (except for my Great Big Sea mixes) -- they can run the gamut of styles and subject matter. I do sometimes make mixes with songs with all the same tempos, but that is the exception rather than the rule. The other members of my family hate this, because I have a whole lot of CDs in the car labeled with the date and n of n, and they have no clue what's on them. Neither do I, for that matter, but I don't care. I do occasionally do a theme mix: "Numbers," Geography" and my favorite, "Occupationally Speaking."
But that's just a lot of water, underneath a bridge I burned; and there's no use in backtracking around corners I have turned, Trisha Yearwood, "The Song Remembers When"
I sort my mixes either through iTunes shuffle or alphabetically by title (either forward or back), which serves much the same function. This presents a bit of a problem: listening to the songs fully requires a certain level of emotional and cognitive shape-shifting. Because my music will veer from topic to topic, often eliciting the comment "Umm, interesting segue there, Mom," the change in mood can be extreme. You think it is a jump from Weird Al to Josh Groban, or even worse, from "Time Warp" to "Streets of Philadelphia" ? On "Occupationally Speaking," I had a segue from "Prince of Darkness" by the Indigo Girls to "Dentist!" from Little Shop of Horrors. The emotional transition was severe enough I usually would skip one song or the other, depending upon what mood I was in that day.
I'll eat when I get hungry and I'll drink when I get dry; Get drunk whenever I'm ready, get sober by and by, Great Big Sea, "River Driver"
I'm not sure what the answer is to this, or even if I need an answer to this. If nothing else, I could turn my iTunes over to the Not-So-Little-Drummer-Boy, who is very good at mixing music, and once he stopped laughing, let him create my mixes.
Is it too much to demand, I want a full house and a rock-and-roll band? Pens that don't run out of ink, cool quiet and time to think? Mary Chapin Carpenter, "Passionate Kisses"
I'm having a hard time ending this post. Most posts have a theme which holds them together. This one doesn't. Other than if you see me tooling down the street, singing, and my mood seems to shift, it's not that I'm crazy, just that alphabetical imperative and its resulting change of song have hit hard.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Just where is Margaritaville?
Last Christmas, the Not-So-Little-Drummer Boy was home from college for Christmas. We were talking about his classes, especially a class in Afro-Caribbean music. "I can never listen to Jimmy Buffett again," he declared. "He just appropriated everything from Caribbean cultures." I agreed at the time, but now, I'm pretty sure he's wrong.
I love Jimmy Buffett. I am the first to admit he is not the best songwriter or singer in the world. Some of his lyrics grate painfully. His voice, although animated and amusing, is average.
But he resonates, in large part because I understand the world which he is coming from.
Yes, there are some songs that clearly and unabashedly rip off Caribbean rhythms and nuances: "Volcano" and "Great Heart" (from Hot Water), come to mind, as does "One Particular Harbor." But most of his music doesn't. First of all, most of it is straight ahead pop-rock. (Closer to country, really: his duet with Alan Jackson on "It's Five O'clock Somewhere" is really very similar to most of his other music.) Unless you want to define the addition of steel drums to a rock song as being culturally appropriative, or referring to pot as "ganja" as being disrespectful of Jamaicans, or the references to tropical subject matter objectionable, the argument doesn't hold up. (By the way, I have heard pot referred to as "ganja" since before I heard Jimmy Buffett. I have also heard of it referred to as "square grouper," but that's another story.) Yes, you can pick and choose to find songs he's done which seem more objectionable than others, but to toss out a man's entire oeuvre because of a few songs seems overkill.
Coastal Florida is a melting pot of cultures. (I have recently thought of it as being a cross between Southern California and Georgia, with Caribbean influences thrown in.) It has its own rhythms, its own feel. Jimmy Buffett has captured some of that: the seniors at my high school had lyrics from "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes" painted near the lockers for a reason. His music does not sound strange or foreign to me; it sounds like home.
Buffett is not Paul Simon going to South Africa for Graceland. He is not walking into a culture he has never experienced and lifting music wholesale from a world he has no stake in. Buffett has been part of the South Florida landscape since the seventies. You think Florida has no tropical or Caribbean overtones? You have clearly never been to Key West. Or Miami. Or even Tampa. And it always looks south for its inspiration.
Actually, I think a more interesting discussion would be the extent to which Buffett has possibly appropriated Cajun culture for songs such as "I Will Play for Gumbo."
Rock music has always taken from many cultures. If Jimmy Buffett allegedly appropriating Caribbean music is objectionable, what does that say about the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin channeling black American bluesmen? Or the myriad white performers who have written or performed reggae songs? Why is one acceptable and the other not?
For that matter, why does music differ from food in this regard? Bobby Flay, born in Brooklyn, is a master of Southwestern cuisine. Nobody bats an eye. Which is, perhaps, the way it should be: the world is a varied place, and incorporating what we find to make new and interesting things does not strike me in and of itself as being bad.*
*That said, I think it is true that there is far too little understanding or awareness of Caribbean music in general (especially if you remove reggae from the mix), but I chalk that up more to typical American myopia than to being Jimmy Buffet's fault.
I love Jimmy Buffett. I am the first to admit he is not the best songwriter or singer in the world. Some of his lyrics grate painfully. His voice, although animated and amusing, is average.
But he resonates, in large part because I understand the world which he is coming from.
Yes, there are some songs that clearly and unabashedly rip off Caribbean rhythms and nuances: "Volcano" and "Great Heart" (from Hot Water), come to mind, as does "One Particular Harbor." But most of his music doesn't. First of all, most of it is straight ahead pop-rock. (Closer to country, really: his duet with Alan Jackson on "It's Five O'clock Somewhere" is really very similar to most of his other music.) Unless you want to define the addition of steel drums to a rock song as being culturally appropriative, or referring to pot as "ganja" as being disrespectful of Jamaicans, or the references to tropical subject matter objectionable, the argument doesn't hold up. (By the way, I have heard pot referred to as "ganja" since before I heard Jimmy Buffett. I have also heard of it referred to as "square grouper," but that's another story.) Yes, you can pick and choose to find songs he's done which seem more objectionable than others, but to toss out a man's entire oeuvre because of a few songs seems overkill.
Coastal Florida is a melting pot of cultures. (I have recently thought of it as being a cross between Southern California and Georgia, with Caribbean influences thrown in.) It has its own rhythms, its own feel. Jimmy Buffett has captured some of that: the seniors at my high school had lyrics from "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes" painted near the lockers for a reason. His music does not sound strange or foreign to me; it sounds like home.
Buffett is not Paul Simon going to South Africa for Graceland. He is not walking into a culture he has never experienced and lifting music wholesale from a world he has no stake in. Buffett has been part of the South Florida landscape since the seventies. You think Florida has no tropical or Caribbean overtones? You have clearly never been to Key West. Or Miami. Or even Tampa. And it always looks south for its inspiration.
Actually, I think a more interesting discussion would be the extent to which Buffett has possibly appropriated Cajun culture for songs such as "I Will Play for Gumbo."
Rock music has always taken from many cultures. If Jimmy Buffett allegedly appropriating Caribbean music is objectionable, what does that say about the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin channeling black American bluesmen? Or the myriad white performers who have written or performed reggae songs? Why is one acceptable and the other not?
For that matter, why does music differ from food in this regard? Bobby Flay, born in Brooklyn, is a master of Southwestern cuisine. Nobody bats an eye. Which is, perhaps, the way it should be: the world is a varied place, and incorporating what we find to make new and interesting things does not strike me in and of itself as being bad.*
*That said, I think it is true that there is far too little understanding or awareness of Caribbean music in general (especially if you remove reggae from the mix), but I chalk that up more to typical American myopia than to being Jimmy Buffet's fault.
Hands.
There will be time to murder and create,
And time for all the works and days of hands
That lift and drop a question on your plate
"The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," T. S. Eliot
I was looking at my hands lately. They are not particularly interesting hands, neither large nor small. They have a small scars on them, cuts and burns, the evidence of clumsiness with knives and toaster ovens. There is a spider-web shaped one on my left hand, but where it came from I don't know; the large red scar on my right, the result of trying to fit a 25 lb turkey in an oven more fitting for a 15 lb bird and getting my hand pinned to the side for my efforts, is mostly faded into nonexistence.
They have done a lot of things, these hands.
They have cast fishing line with my father and skipped stones with my sons.
They have held crying babies, and changed countless diapers. They have stroked hair and held hands and wiped away tears. They have tied baby shoes and baseball cleats and figure skates.
They have opened books, for myself, for my children, for other people's children. They have patted the bunny.
They have signed countless papers: checks and mortgages and student loans and time sheets and IEPs, with a signature that with each passing year gets slightly more expansive, more defiantly extravagant.
They have written thousands of words, letters (far too few) and papers and, on a few occasions, diary entries. They have, under pressure, scrambled to complete finals and the Bar exam, stopping only so I could try to rub away the cramping.
They have flown over keyboards, racing to keep pace with the information from my eyes. They have sat, frozen, on the keys as my brain struggled to produce the right words.
They have dug in the dirt and planted; they have pruned and watered. Ten years ago -- long enough that I cannot remember how to do it -- they wired light switches and cable jacks. They have painted walls.
They have touched the stone walls of castles in Scotland, and held a baby sea turtle in Georgia.
They have created: baby blankets and bracelets. They have drawn and painted. They have made Halloween costumes and Advent wreaths; and helped other hands make collages of buttons and a model of the Santa Barbara mission in Styrofoam and salt clay. They can wield a knitting needle (not very well), wire cutters, and a charcoal pencil. They have cooked: Thanksgiving dinners, Easter hams, a chocolate cake for a friend's ordination. Brownies for coworkers, key lime pie for friends.
T. S. Eliot notwithstanding, they have not, as of yet, murdered.
What of your hands? What do they say about you?
Are they slender and delicate? Broad and strong? Are the nails cut precisely, or bitten ragged, or painted in wild colors? Do the fingers taper neatly? Or are they blunt and thick? Are they sure-fingered and nimble, or are they sometimes clumsy? Are they smooth and soft, or covered in scars and callouses?
What have they done? Where have they gone? Have they rappelled up a mountain, or photographed a polar bear? Played a piano or a guitar? Made sand castles or snowballs? Held a bat, thrown a ball, reached for a finish line? Helped those who had fallen? Given a pat on the back in appreciation or rested on a shoulder in encouragement? Stroked a lover's cheek or a child's head?
Have they built a house? A dream? A life? A world?
And time for all the works and days of hands
That lift and drop a question on your plate
"The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," T. S. Eliot
I was looking at my hands lately. They are not particularly interesting hands, neither large nor small. They have a small scars on them, cuts and burns, the evidence of clumsiness with knives and toaster ovens. There is a spider-web shaped one on my left hand, but where it came from I don't know; the large red scar on my right, the result of trying to fit a 25 lb turkey in an oven more fitting for a 15 lb bird and getting my hand pinned to the side for my efforts, is mostly faded into nonexistence.
They have done a lot of things, these hands.
They have cast fishing line with my father and skipped stones with my sons.
They have held crying babies, and changed countless diapers. They have stroked hair and held hands and wiped away tears. They have tied baby shoes and baseball cleats and figure skates.
They have opened books, for myself, for my children, for other people's children. They have patted the bunny.
They have signed countless papers: checks and mortgages and student loans and time sheets and IEPs, with a signature that with each passing year gets slightly more expansive, more defiantly extravagant.
They have written thousands of words, letters (far too few) and papers and, on a few occasions, diary entries. They have, under pressure, scrambled to complete finals and the Bar exam, stopping only so I could try to rub away the cramping.
They have flown over keyboards, racing to keep pace with the information from my eyes. They have sat, frozen, on the keys as my brain struggled to produce the right words.
They have dug in the dirt and planted; they have pruned and watered. Ten years ago -- long enough that I cannot remember how to do it -- they wired light switches and cable jacks. They have painted walls.
They have touched the stone walls of castles in Scotland, and held a baby sea turtle in Georgia.
They have created: baby blankets and bracelets. They have drawn and painted. They have made Halloween costumes and Advent wreaths; and helped other hands make collages of buttons and a model of the Santa Barbara mission in Styrofoam and salt clay. They can wield a knitting needle (not very well), wire cutters, and a charcoal pencil. They have cooked: Thanksgiving dinners, Easter hams, a chocolate cake for a friend's ordination. Brownies for coworkers, key lime pie for friends.
T. S. Eliot notwithstanding, they have not, as of yet, murdered.
What of your hands? What do they say about you?
Are they slender and delicate? Broad and strong? Are the nails cut precisely, or bitten ragged, or painted in wild colors? Do the fingers taper neatly? Or are they blunt and thick? Are they sure-fingered and nimble, or are they sometimes clumsy? Are they smooth and soft, or covered in scars and callouses?
What have they done? Where have they gone? Have they rappelled up a mountain, or photographed a polar bear? Played a piano or a guitar? Made sand castles or snowballs? Held a bat, thrown a ball, reached for a finish line? Helped those who had fallen? Given a pat on the back in appreciation or rested on a shoulder in encouragement? Stroked a lover's cheek or a child's head?
Have they built a house? A dream? A life? A world?
Monday, November 08, 2010
Dear Keith...
I love you man. I think you've gotten a bit too strident over the past five years or so, but then doing what you do every night, having to face what's going on in this country, would make anyone foam at the mouth a bit. Still, I agree with you on most things.
But...
Your employer had a policy. Right or wrong, it doesn't matter. Fair or not, it doesn't matter. Whether other alleged "news" organizations were doing other things, it doesn't matter.
Your employer had a policy, of which you were presumably aware, and you chose to flout that policy.
Of course they were going to suspend you. I would have too, even if I were sympathetic to the causes to which you donated, which I am.
Sorry, but you had this one coming.
But...
Your employer had a policy. Right or wrong, it doesn't matter. Fair or not, it doesn't matter. Whether other alleged "news" organizations were doing other things, it doesn't matter.
Your employer had a policy, of which you were presumably aware, and you chose to flout that policy.
Of course they were going to suspend you. I would have too, even if I were sympathetic to the causes to which you donated, which I am.
Sorry, but you had this one coming.
Updates
I decided not to do National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) after all, my extensive research *cough* drive down to San Simeon *cough* notwithstanding. I really need to spend the time job hunting, and besides, further contemplation convinced me that it would not be possible to write this novel at all convincingly -- or even at all, really -- unless I did extensive research that involved driving from the Bay Area to Ocean City, Maryland by way of Chicago. (Don't ask.)
I may someday, however, "So don't ask where I'm going / just listen when I'm gone / And far away you'll hear me singing / Softly to the dawn..."*
It's just as well that I didn't do NaNoWriMo -- I have no laptop. I am sitting uncomfortably writing at the desktop Mac we have on our counter, which requires me to perch uncomfortably on a bar stool to reach the required height. (The kids do just fine with this which is why it hasn't been moved somewhere lower.)
This is also why I have not written anything here in several days -- freaking laptop computer won't boot off of anything. And while it is possible to post short FaceBook updates standing up, standing is not conducive to composing longer pieces, especially anything that requires a) thought or b) revisions. I have a piece I am dying to write about Jimmy Buffett and cultural appropriation but which is going to have to wait until I have a more comfortable computing environment. Retrieving my resume is going to be a joy all its own. Sheesh.
Speaking of this blog, I was retrieving my email in a very silly mood this morning, when I got an email offer from Vistaprint for 250 "premium business cards" for $1.99. Now, I already am awash in business cards: I have my personal ones which I am supposed to use for networking (hah!) but which are not terribly business-like (pretty, and reflecting my own aesthetic sensibilities, but too colorful to be business like), I have ones from two years ago when I was actually making jewelry enough to sell (pmgDesigns) and some my husband made for me years ago, when I complained that all those contests for free breakfasts in restaurants required you to drop in a business card and I didn't have any. He put the url of this blog on them, but also put an email address I now normally only use for business email, and not the one associated with the blog.
So... I bought business cards, with a picture of windmills on them, "Wild Winds of Fortune," the url, and our unofficial slogan: "Tilting at Windmills Since 2006." I also bought a single pen (free!) and a cap (free!) with the design, blog name, slogan, and url. It was a moment of insanity, but a cheap one -- less than ten dollars including shipping. What I am going to do with blog cards rather escapes me just at the moment. Anybody want some? I'll let you know when they come in. The hat and the pen, however, I am excited about.
My housemate claims that this is simply a way of me affirming my commitment to writing here. Nah, I just wanted to have cool looking cards. And a way cool cap.
As I said, I will be posting from odd places,** so don't expect a lot until I get a new laptop or at least a desktop with a chair I can feel comfortable in. I'll check in when I can.
*"Corner of the Sky" from Pippin
**As opposed to my normal posting places: Starbucks, Red Rock Cafe, the public library...
Friday, November 05, 2010
Except for a red, white and blue bracelet I had made for myself for the last day of work (Census? Red, white and blue? Get it? Okay, so it's not that funny), I had not designed any significant jewelry for a long time until last weekend. There were a lot of reasons for this, among them a recurrence of tremor that makes it difficult to thread small beads. (I have not made any baby Elvises for a long time for that reason.)
I'm not sure about my design skills anymore, but I think these may have come out okay. They are both short -- longer than choker length but not by a whole lot. The one on the left is Swarovski crystal in Siam (a deep red), peach colored freshwater pearls, white cloisonné, small gold-filled spacer beads and a handmade gold-filled wire clasp.
The one on the right is primarily hematite (which is a metallic silver gray) with leopardskin jasper, black onyx, mauve freshwater pearl and black cloisonné accents. The spacer beads are sterling silver, and the clasp is hand-made from 18 gauge sterling silver wire. I'm thinking this one may be a bit busy.
Just a list of unrelated things...
Cornflower blue.
Lapis lazuli.
The Hermitage.
George Gershwin.
Aaron Copeland.
"Rhapsody in Blue."
"Take Five."
"Appalachian Spring."
"The Kitchen Maid."
"A View of Toledo."
Tapas.
Madrid.
"Guernica."
London.
Harry Potter.
The British Museum.
Stonehenge.
The Musee d'Orsay.
Big Sur.
The ocean -- any ocean.
Great Big Sea.
"Walk on the Moon" and "Helmethead."
Jimmy Buffet.
Key West.
St. Croix.
Really good rum.
Really good Riojas.
Paul Simon.
Rent.
Boston.
"Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "The Road Less Traveled."
"somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond all experience."
Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Dogma.
Stardust.
Criminal Minds.
Master and Commander.
Pride & Prejudice.(The book, and the BBC miniseries.)
Romance.
Sex.
Love.
Chocolate.
Writing.
Good people.
Lapis lazuli.
The Hermitage.
George Gershwin.
Aaron Copeland.
"Rhapsody in Blue."
"Take Five."
"Appalachian Spring."
"The Kitchen Maid."
"A View of Toledo."
Tapas.
Madrid.
"Guernica."
London.
Harry Potter.
The British Museum.
Stonehenge.
The Musee d'Orsay.
Big Sur.
The ocean -- any ocean.
Great Big Sea.
"Walk on the Moon" and "Helmethead."
Jimmy Buffet.
Key West.
St. Croix.
Really good rum.
Really good Riojas.
Paul Simon.
Rent.
Boston.
"Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "The Road Less Traveled."
"somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond all experience."
Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Dogma.
Stardust.
Criminal Minds.
Master and Commander.
Pride & Prejudice.(The book, and the BBC miniseries.)
Romance.
Sex.
Love.
Chocolate.
Writing.
Good people.
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