You know, that is true.
For all of the battered, bruised and occasionally bloody times we've had, the furniture is still a far healthier relationship than the ones I have with the sibs...
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
You know, that is true.
For all of the battered, bruised and occasionally bloody times we've had, the furniture is still a far healthier relationship than the ones I have with the sibs...
Well, furniture doesn't give you babies with which to play.
Huh. My Lego spaceships tended to last an hour or two, as I'd quickly build another so they could battle. And sometimes I'd build whole armadas of little Vipers and Cylon fighters, which would fight in hours-long campaigns.
You would get on SO well with my wee boys.
(Loved The Enterprise, MM.)
Happy belated birthday, Hil!
Thanks, Fay! (My birthday was actually a few weeks ago. This was just the first time since then that I was in the same city as my parents, so that they could take me to dinner.)
La la la la.... working on a reasearch proposal, my final project for my class this semester... I don't know why I can't get it together to get stuff done before it is ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY. My brain just doesn't want to do stuff if I can get away with doing it later! (I really meant to do some stuff yesterday)
Happy Birthday, Daisy Jane!!!
Nora, I'm the same way, and then hate myself for it, during the "okay, these are the absolutely necessary hours I need to be doing the absolutely necessary tasks?"
ION, I upgraded to IE 7, and I do not like it, mostly because it is different, which is kind of sad. But it is different. Very. Even the font here looks different.
Everything looks a little bolder and fatter, so if your favorite pants don't fit today, Bitches, it's not you; it's me. Also, I can't find my favorites. I'm going to have to call tech support away from his coffee.
I slept 'til 10ish this morning. I never do that, any more. I'm not sure I like it, which is kind of sad, too.
Thanks for the Julia birthday wishes. She had a very good day, which is what Julias do best.
Hey Cindy, did you hear about the Swampscott shopping plaza that was shut down on Friday due to a bomb scare? I saw something about it on a silent television in the background (looked like our Trader Joes!) but I can't find anything about it online now.
Your post is the first I've heard of it, Nora, but it looks like there's an article, here: [link]
Cindy, I was just reading this in Oxford American and thought of you.
Most tonic for me as I’ve struggled with my own logocentrism has been the African–American church in North Nash-ville where my wife and I, who are white, have worshipped for about twenty years now. We first visited the congregation—which is part of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), the left-of-center Protestant denomination to which we belong—because we had heard that the music and the people there were great, and it was true, but not some of the doctrine. It wasn’t that the preaching and liturgy weren’t in keeping with “Disciples theology” so much as that they retained vestiges of outmoded downhome religion. Foremost among these were the personification of evil in the character of Satan; prayers addressed to Jesus as if he were still alive; and the ubiquitous references to Jesus’ blood and all the wonderful things it had done and continued to do on our behalf. We didn’t take any of it literally, or presume that every one of the church’s members did. Still, some of this imagery posed a stumbling block for us, especially the buckets of references to blood.
Over the years, we nevertheless grew more comfortable with this language, or in any case stopped getting hung up on the meanings that could be wrested from it. It wasn’t that our theology had narrowed—if anything, it had grown more expansive, more post-Christian than anything else. What did sink in, however, was the buzz and heat in our hands as we clapped them numb each week, the anguish and joy in people’s gleaming faces, the waves upon waves of kisses and hugs that we gave and received, to say nothing of the unshakable conviction that rose from our voices as we shouted and sang together. What hit home for us wasn’t the meaning behind these experiences but the truth in them, the glorious and inexhaustible reality of it all: rough, smooth, tangy, sweet, piercing, hushed, aggrieved, rapturous, and thousands of other things besides. These things, no matter how we conceived them, were the redemption in all that talk about “the blood.” The sheer humanity of it—the brokenness, the acceptance, the grace and love that mere words could never express—was the transforming blood of which we sang: the blood, very much present among and stirring within us, that would never lose its power.
Happy Birthday Daisy Jane!