Spike's Bitches 40: Buckle Up, Kids! Daddy's Puttin' the Hammer Down.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Very Cool Teppy!
While in Brooklyn on Friday, something in the angle of the light, the caveiness of the bridge we were walking under, and the sound of having an elevated train go overhead did something to our group and the following conversation happened - which still cracks me up:
"This is like the opening of a novel..."
"where people are living under a bridge?"
"No! more like passing through on their way somewhere, wearing Victorian clothes and carrying laptops."
(so I had to chime in) "Passing through on Segways? Or, velocipedes?"
"Oh wow! Totally Segways! With the ribbons from those little hats streaming behind them! Cool! Yeah! Like that! What's a velocipede?"
... all of this, before we got to the bar.
That necklace is fantastic, Teppy!
So my fever broke! I don't know if it's going to stay broken, but I'm so relieved right now. I got a little overzealous, though. I put clothes away, showered, cleaned the kitchen up, and scooped litter boxes. Now I'm collapsed on the couch. I feel like I ran a marathon. I need to remember that feeling better does not equal healthy. Oy.
"No! more like passing through on their way somewhere, wearing Victorian clothes and carrying laptops."
Known as Jilli Going To Work?
... sorry, sorry. I'm delighted that Steampunk is taking off and becoming well-known. It just cracks me up to see all sorts of posts on, say, the steamfashion LJ comm where people are asking for help incorporating Steampunk elements into their everyday wardrobe.
Teppy, the necklace is lovely!
I need to remember that feeling better does not equal healthy. Oy.
No, it does not. Trust me on this. I left the house yesterday (yay for putting on makeup and proper clothing!), and found this out pretty quickly.
Nice one, Tep. I love that he both bought it for you and said exactly what you said he would.
I use the biodegradable dog poop bags. They hold together long enough to get into the garbage can and, afaict, get picked up with the restof the trash. I'm taking it on faith that they biodegrade at all. I have recently learned that you canfeed pet waste to worms if that is all the worms ever get and you don't use the worm castings on plants you are going to consume.
it's hard to find trashbags you can hang over a door knob and I might have to get an actual trash can
I've been hanging drawstring-style kitchen bags from a hook not much higher than a door knob while I look for a the perfect garbage can. It works okay.
Known as Jilli Going To Work?
Well, that was what sprung to my mind.
The people I was with were delighted at Steampunk as concept. And I am sure, in one case, a potential tap root for inspiration, but I don't know how practical they consider it. Nor are they familiar with any literature. Nor do they know anyone who lives it, thinks it through, and so on. So I think they like it as a catchy ad, with some powerful music in the background, if it helps to sell the car.
I feel differently. And am amused that they mistook my tone.
Still wondering where I fit in though - (and voila: my inner conflict on display-) I need a corner that is William Morris, meets Curta Calculator, meets Gothic revival. Yes. I know that the three are mutually destructive. Nice to meet you, I'm Sox.
aw you guys, take care of yourselves! Get some rest. And drink plenty of fluids.
NPR did a report a few months ago on plastic bags and other recycling initiatives and how outright bans can backfire to some degree. I think it was Ireland that they used as an example. They either banned or put a surcharge on the plastic bags used in stores. As a result people started purchasing plastic trash bags to line trash cans and for things like pet waste. The purchased plastic bags tend to be thinker than the shopping bags. They actually saw a pretty significant spike in the amount of trucking used to transport the plastic bags that were being sold. So yes, it kept some plastic out of the landfills, but people ended up buying other plastic products, and then there was an unforseen impact with vehicle emissions from diesel trucks.
Yeah, I think I heard about that somewhere. Still, I have to think making people purchase their bags cuts down on the free-floating unused bags that are clogging up the ocean. And even if the bags are heavier - I can't imagine that anyone who doesn't have pets comes close to using as many purchased bags as the number they acquire under the current bag-happy routine.
It's definitely a complex problem, which means that things like devising newer and cheaper kinds of bags is key, as is doing more to encourage/enforce recycling and simply reducing use.
In Decatur, Georgia, when I lived there, they had put in place a policy that trash would only be picked up in special blue City of Decatur bags that you had to buy at stores for $1 a pop. You better believe people paid more attention to what they were buying and throwing out v. recycling/composting, etc.
I ended up buying the dog a new crate while out because she can no longer hold her head up while standing in her puppy crate. She's pointedly ignoring it, but I'd like her to get used to the idea that it's her room before she goes to stay with my parents next week.
I have found with carrier-shy cats, that it works wonders to toss a treat or two into the carrier.