Anything growing where you don't want it to is a weed, no?
When I was in college I spent a summer working for the college grounds crew. We mowed lawns and trimmed trees and pulled weeds. One morning they sent us down to the new athletic field, where the recently planted grass was infested with cockleburs. I spent a hot, miserable morning pulling cockleburs out of the grass.
In the afternoon, they sent us to the biology department's gardens, where the faculty grew plants for research and for use in botany classes. One of the professors studied cockleburs, because they are unusually sensitive to changes in the timing of light/dark cycles and provide insights into how plants adapt to the changing seasons. My job was to go into his cocklebur patch and pull out the weeds, mostly grass.
So there I am as a too earnest, too inquisitive, and hopelessly naïve student. Spend the morning pulling cockleburs out of the grass. Spend the afternoon pulling grass out of the cockleburs. It was obvious to me that this life thing was going to be built of the absurd.
Trivial, out-of-nowhere factoid:
Stonehenge is technically not a henge.
Okra is in the hibiscus family and is pretty in a spiky sort of way
And, okra is tasty!
My local 7-11 actually had paczkis today. Which scares me a little. How good can 7-11 paczkis be?
But - in what way is Lent a fast? I thought it was a period of "giving up" on things (like alcohol, meat, chocolate, the like).
Nilly, on Ash Wednesday (the first day of Lent, which is tomorrow) and on Good Friday (the last friday of Lent, 2 days before Easter), [some] Catholics fast for 2 meals, or they have fruit juice during the day and then a proper dinner in the evening -- things like that. [Obviously, exceptions are made for people who are sick, diabetic, frail, elderly, and young -- they don't have to fast.]
On Fridays in Lent, [some] Catholics don't eat meat (beef, pork, poultry), but fish is allowed.
And then there's a tradition of people "giving up" something for the 40-day period of Lent -- no chocolate, no sugar, no alcohol, no TV -- basically the idea is to give up something that it's a real sacrifice to give up.
Fiddleheads are good sauteed with a bit of garlic. I don't have strong feelings one way or the other about okra. Though my roommate's mom used to do it dredged in cornmeal and then fried, and it was mighty tasty.
t hangs around, waiting for confirmation that this is also "Taco Tuesday"
t thinks: Wait! That is a commercial thing.
t shakes not-so-tiny fist at ... whichever Buffista did that.
I had almost forgotten about Fat Tuesday. Maybe I should indulge for lunch today.
Actually, since it's almost 11 and I haven't had breakfast yet, I think I'll let it slide.
hangs around, waiting for confirmation that this is also "Taco Tuesday"
It is Taco Tuesday in the Cult of Gud. You can join for just six easy payments of $19.99. AND if you join today you can get a free bathrobe with the image of Gud on the back.
Here's additional info about fasting during Lent that I found here: [link]
"The law of fasting requires a Catholic from the 18th Birthday to the 59th Birthday [i.e. the beginning of the 60th year, a year which will be completed on the 60th birthday] to reduce the amount of food eaten from normal. The Church defines this as one meal a day, and two smaller meals which if added together would not exceed the main meal in quantity. Such fasting is obligatory on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. The fast is broken by eating between meals and by drinks which could be considered food (milk shakes, but not milk). Alcoholic beverages do not break the fast; however, they seem to be contrary to the spirit of doing penance.
"Those who are excused from fast or abstinence -- besides those outside the age limits, those of unsound mind, the sick, the frail, pregnant or nursing women according to need for meat or nourishment, manual laborers according to need, guests at a meal who cannot excuse themselves without giving great offense or causing enmity and other situations of moral or physical impossibility to observe the penitential discipline."