I'm 17. Looking at linoleum makes me want to have sex.

Xander ,'First Date'


Natter Area 51: The Truthiness Is in Here  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Jessica - May 26, 2007 12:57:11 pm PDT #9380 of 10001
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

IIRC, most robot hips are built so that the legs and knee joints are completely vertical, instead of slightly angled the way human (especially female) legs & knees are, which eliminates a lot of the joint stress issues we have.

I would give massive amounts of money right now to have robotic leg joints. Swelling + extra weight + soft useless pelvic ligaments = OW. When I become a deity capable of designing intelligent life, it's gonna lay eggs. I am so over internal gestation.


Jesse - May 26, 2007 12:59:06 pm PDT #9381 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Buddhist monks always make me want to be one, and I've had the same experience in an Episcopal monestary -- it's that deeply peaceful feeling. It's like relaxing to my soul.

On the priest/brother/monk thing, I think we tend to call the Christian religious-ordered people all monks and nuns, when really those should be the term for cloistered people, not out in the world. Those are sisters and brothers. I've heard people use the term "women religious," but I think that was referring to sisters. If I've got it all right.

Even British people sometimes find British accents difficult to understand so use Close Captioning - and included directions on how to get your close captioning to work.

That's really funny.

I wish I trusted the weather enough to put my air conditioner in my bedroom, but if I do that, I can never leave the window open again.


beekaytee - May 26, 2007 1:07:30 pm PDT #9382 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

women religious

Right. At Loyola, they used 'avowed religious' to cover anyone how had taken specific vows.

I cracked up when another classmate described why he'd become a Jesuit, rather than some other order. "We have all the money and the best clothes...oh, and there is that education thing too."

He was always impeccably dressed...in an academic setting.

Oh, and no, I don't think cloistering dictates the job title. Many, many nuns in my program lived independently...apart from a mother house. Though, I'm not sure about monks.


sarameg - May 26, 2007 1:12:09 pm PDT #9383 of 10001

My cousin's ex's father founded a major buddhist center in...St.Paul? I think it was St.Paul, not Minneapolis. Oh! He's on wikipedia! [link]


Jesse - May 26, 2007 1:20:14 pm PDT #9384 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Wikipedia tells me that among Catholics, at least, the nun/sister thing I was saying is right: [link] I realize Wikipedia is not infallible, but it sure is convenient.


Jesse - May 26, 2007 1:24:15 pm PDT #9385 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

This is so interesting! Here's a sister's blog, which says much of the difference is about money. [link] She says she uses "nun" in general conversation, because it's easier, but also says she didn't realize that her Ursuline coworker was actually a nun!


Kat - May 26, 2007 1:26:09 pm PDT #9386 of 10001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

ita, I've been on a tour of Green Gulch and can totally see going there.


shrift - May 26, 2007 1:30:34 pm PDT #9387 of 10001
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

I've been running errands and cleaning like crazy most of the day. Now I have ice cream and porn while I wait to rotate in more laundry. And seven open tabs on Zappos for casual walking shoes.


Kat - May 26, 2007 1:33:42 pm PDT #9388 of 10001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Oh, and no, I don't think cloistering dictates the job title. Many, many nuns in my program lived independently...apart from a mother house. Though, I'm not sure about monks.

It's actually true, in Catholicism. Monks are cloistered and Friars are not. Though, medeivally speaking, it got messy as monasteries became major landholders and they needed outrider monks to visit the property.

Initially all nuns were cloistered.


§ ita § - May 26, 2007 1:38:11 pm PDT #9389 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Kat, that sounds really amazing. Man, I wish I had some vacation time, or would within the next four months. I really need a shift of some sort.

Hmm. I could never actually be a monk without the fighting thing. One of the krav junior instructors went on a long trip to China last year, and went from temple to temple looking for some fighting instruction. NSM of that--though he did get shooed off by a monk on his cellphone arranging stock trades.