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Saturday, January 31, 2009

BR’ER EINSTEIN

Mammy went out one moonlit night
And grabbed a skillet at the speed of light
Took cornmeal and eggs and (it is said)
Fixed her little baby some Foreshortnin’ Bread.

Loving Play



The two youngest members of my household, Remy & Annie.






Annie wants to play with her duck...while Remy wants to love Annie.




Annie, get that duck. Get it.





Eat that duck, Annie! Eat it!!





And then, exhausted from her chewing session...




Annie falls asleep, with her duck.



If you haven't joined Camera Critters yet, what's taking you so long?
Grab a camera, take a picture of a critter!!
It's fun!



Camera Critters


The Waiting Game

While waiting to hear from Herself re Miss Birdie's book, a scene from Douglas Adams's Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency (one of my favorite listens of all times) comes to mind.

"Do you have any brandy, French cigarettes, or worry beads?" Dirk asks and, on being told no, says, "Ah, then I shall have to fret unaided."



I am fretting unaided.
Only fair, as Herself had to wait six months, past deadline, for me to get Miss Birdie to her.

Here's a little something to pass the time. I talked a while back about Maira Kalman and her book The Principles of Uncertainty. This is her charming take on the Inauguration.

Possibly better than worry beads.

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Friday, January 30, 2009

A WOOKIEE IS NAUGHT BUT A HONKIN’ BIG EWOK

There are some chunks of Pop Culture that are so well-embedded in our collective consciousness that we forget that not everyone is familiar with them. The Star Wars oeuvre, f’r instance. Is it possible that there are a few benighted souls out there who have never seen a single Star Wars movie?

Well, yes. In fact, I’m pretty sure that the Mistress of Sarcasm herownself has managed to escape the grip of the Force. And she is not alone...

Witness this delightful little Filmic Recap of the world of Star Wars... the first trilogy, not the piece-of-shit second trilogy... as recounted by someone who has never actually seen it firsthand. Amazing.


Star Wars: Retold (by someone who hasn’t seen it) from Joe Nicolosi on Vimeo.

Note: If you get audio with no video, just use the link to go to the Vimeo page, where the video does work.

[Tip o’ th’ Elisson fedora to Deborah Laufer.]

FRIDAY RANDOM TEN

Here it is Friday, the penultimate day of January 2009, and I am faced with a dilemma... for I now have two Choon-Boxes. There is the Little White Choon-Box, packed with 3,185 sound files with which we are all too familiar, and there is my new iPhone, which also carries a big wad of tunage.

The iPhone, alas, does not have the prodigious tune-storage of the iPod, owing mainly to my iPod being an older model that is not video-capable. The iPod doesn’t have to carry around two dozen mostly useless apps... nor does it have to act like a cell phone. It’s Just Plain Audio.

And so, until the Missus absconds with the iPod d’Elisson and converts it to her own nefarious purposes, I’ll continue to draw my Friday Random Ten from it, rather than the iPhone. More music = more Random Idiocy.

So, with all that prologue, what’s playing?
  1. Tones for Joan’s Bones - Chick Corea

  2. Chinese Invade - Philip Glass, Kundun

  3. The 12 Inches - Frank Zappa (with Tom Waits)

  4. King Without A Crown - Matisyahu

  5. Asuntovelka - Alamaailman Vasarat

  6. All You Need Is Love - The Beatles

  7. I Was Made To Love Her - The Beach Boys

  8. Der Terk in America - The Klezmer Conservatory Band

  9. Last Steam Engine Train - Leo Kottke

  10. The Sinister Minister - Béla Fleck and the Flecktones

It’s Friday. What are you listening to?

I've finally one-upped Mary Poppins

The origins of this post started two nights ago, when I woke in the middle of the night with an intense leg cramp.

It HURT.

I hadn't had one in years!!

I find when I'm good about taking vitamins and getting plenty of potassium and fruits, that I don't have leg cramps at all.

Then I remembered my grandmother a sweet lady who-shall-not-be-named, mentioned that older folks suffer leg cramps. And she discovered, through the elderly grape vine, that if you put a bar of soap under your sheets, that they go away. She tried it, and it worked. Now she sleeps with soap in her sheets.

huh.

Then, on the NPR the other day, I heard them talking about leg cramps.
And how a teaspoon of mustard every day keep the leg cramps away.

huh.

A lady called into the show and said it worked for her. She had taken to eating everything in mustard lately. Lots and lots of mustard.

Then I thought...well, shoot, maybe I should try these two things.
But, then, I don't get the leg cramps enough to really tell if it was working or not...

Who knows what else mustard could do if we added it to our diets regularly?
Maybe it could increase night vision in our troops.
I'm sending a few hundred jars to experiment.
I'm sure they won't mind.





Then I found on Wiki that mustard plasters are used in Russia where they think it stimulates the immune system and relieves pain.

Maybe mustard in my hair every night would make it silky smooth with no tangles?
I might try it.

Maybe mustard applied in our nether regions could help people who have trouble getting pregnant, conceive! Think of the thousands they could save in fertility testings and treatment if only they had a jar of mustard?!

Who knows what I could discover!!

But maybe A teaspoon of mustard would help the medicine go down?
In the most delightful way.





What do you think?
How can mustard help you?
Any fun home remedies to share?





***I am not a doctor and should not give out medical advice. Please do not try any of these ideas at home. Ignore me completely, I am a cracked lunatic with no medical training whatsoever.




The World Made Straight



Yesterday, after a necessary trip to the recycling center, the P.O., and the grocery, I came home and frivoled. I lay on the sofa by the fire and read Ron Rash's The World Made Straight -- a book that's been awaiting me for months.

It's beautifully written, as are all of RR's books, but, for me, the bonus is that it's set right here in Madison County -- and the names and the settings and the people are oh so familiar.

So familiar that I'm very glad I finished Birdie's book already. Rash's Travis and Dena bear a whole lot of similarity to my Calven and Prin. But then, we are writing about the same place, even if I call it Marshall County.

Possibly my favorite supporting character is the cold-bloodedly vicious Carlton Toomey -- the marijuana grower and drug dealer who puts on an ignorant hillbilly act when talking with the big-city drug dealers, but can actually speak Standard English and enjoys doing crossword puzzles. Oh, and he sings gospel with an angel's voice.

Toomey is a pretty horrible person but he's a fine example of the fact that few people are completely good or completely bad.



The historical fact of the Shelton Laurel Massacre plays a major part in this story. Our county gained the title Bloody Madison during the Civil War mainly because people's sympathies were divided. The mountain folk, for the most part, were not slave holders and, seeing the war as a rich man's war, wanted no part of it. No matter -- when NC declared for the South, many were conscripted, others hid out, thus setting the stage for a neighbor against neighbor, even brother against brother struggle.

And as Rash's book points out, memory lingers.

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

SOLITUDE

Hakuna 012909
“Get that camera outta my face, Bub.”

Hakuna enjoys a moment of afternoon solitude in her Kitty-Bed.

She looks pretty sedentary, curled up in that cushy little bed, but don’t let that fool you. When the Red Dot attracts her attention, she’s booming and zooming like a fighter pilot.

Update: Friday Ark #228 is afloat over at the Modulator.

This Sunday, Carnival of the Cats comes to roost (now, there’s a mixed metaphor for you!) at one of the venerable spots in the Kitty-Blogosphere: Mind of Mog. It promises to be a great Carnival, so be sure to stop by!

Update 2: This week’s Haveil Havalim (“Vanity of Vanities”) is up at Ima On (and off) the Bima. It’s the 203rd installment of this Jewish-themed Blog Carnival.

Update 3: Carnival of the Cats #255 is up, with Hakuna in pole position.

Bare Ruin'd Choirs

. . . yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
Bare ruin'd choirs where late the sweet birds sang.

from Shakespeare's Sonnet 73



Shakespeare's comparing himself, as an aged man, to a winter-bare tree. It's a pleasant metaphor but a little unkind, in my opinion, to the trees. Personally, when I look at trees in winter, I'm aware of the latent strength, just waiting to burst forth in buds and leaves.

Even the old black willow that leans across the road in front of the barn, in spite of its requiring support to remain upright, is just marshaling its reserves to add another foot of crooked growth this year.

The three river birches below our house, finger-diameter whips when I planted them (fortuitously below our septic tank) over thirty years ago, are beginning to show a reddish tinge -- and if you put your hands to their trunks, you can sense the cool, damp sap within, ready to rise and start the riot of Spring.

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Silver-lined Excrement

My mom and stepfather are in Hawaii right now.

I'm so jealous.
I get emails from my mom talking about all the whales they're seeing.
The only whale I've seen in real life was Shamu at Sea World.
My mom takes fabulous photos, so I can't wait to see her pictures.

I digress.

While my mom is in Hawaii, her 13-year-old black Labrador, Seamus, is staying with us.






13 is really old for a Lab.
Seamus is an old man dog.
He has a gray muzzle, it's getting harder for him to see or smell, and he has trouble getting up and down.

And...wait for it...

he has trouble keeping poop in.

That's right, it just randomly pops out.

I warned the whole family to keep an eye out for poop.
And every day I've found some here or there.






Well, then we come to yesterday. I'm getting ready for work (at my new job!), and my dad calls me to his part of the house. He says he needs my opinion.

huh. That's unusual.
Does he want advice on what to wear?
His vision is bad.

Well, turns out, he wasn't sure what the big mess was on the carpet outside his room.
The mess that was smushed and tracked everywhere.

I gave my opinion.
"That's not mud, Dad."

I'm sure you've guessed by now, Seamus had struck again.

Texas Homeboy ended up on his hands and knees cleaning up miles of poop out of the carpet, while I finished getting ready for work.

Before I left, my dad said to me, "You know, there's a silver lining."
me: "Oh, really? What's that? (as the smell of poop permeated the entire household)"
Dad: "It could have been MY poop."

Oh. huh. He has a point.

And then, he took it too far...
Dad: "I bet my poop smells better."

Thanks, Dad.





That was the silver lining yesterday.


Do you look for silver linings in your bad situations?

Want to share one?





Wednesday, January 28, 2009

WE HEARTS DARTS

Prémio Dardos

WTF izzit? It’s a Prémio Dardos Award.

“The Dardos Award is given for recognition of cultural, ethical, literary, and personal values transmitted in the form of creative and original writing. These stamps were created with the intention of promoting fraternization between bloggers, a way of showing affection and gratitude for work that adds value to the Web.”

The ever-gracious (if slightly Taste-Impaired) Ivan G. Shreve, he of the marvelous blog Thrilling Days of Yesteryear, has seen fit to bestow the fabled (and heretofore barely known) Dardos Award upon your humble servant.

I will have to ask him what he has been smoking.

Meanwhile, as Ivan points out, there are rules. To paraphrase Indiana Jones, “Rules. Why’s it have to be rules?”

Because, that’s why.

Oh, the rules. Here they are, and they’re simple enough:

1. Accept the award by posting it on your blog along with the name of the person that has granted the award and a link to his/her blog.
2. Pass the award to another five blogs that are worthy of this acknowledgement, remembering to contact each of them to let them know they have been selected.

Hmmm. Sounds awfully much like a bit of Link-Whorage, don’t it? But that’s what bloggy memes and awards are all about, so let’s be good sports. And besides, Ivan’s one of my longest-standing Blog Buddies, as well as being the Go-To Guy for anyone with at least a passing interest in old-time radio, television, or movies. To use a wine analogy, Ivan doesn’t drink in his Pop Culture unless it has had a chance to mature for a few decades... like vintage Port. None of that crappy white Zinfandel pop culture for him.

So: Who should I honor with this little gem of an award? Lessee...
  1. Velociworld. Velociman is one of the handful of genuinely talented writers out there in the Bloggy-Sphere, a true original voice. Whether you agree with his politics or not, the singular way in which he expresses himself makes him Required Reading. Quite possibly the bastard child of William Faulkner and Hunter S. Thompson.

  2. Straight White Guy. Eric, a soldier with the soul of a poet, can take the most mundane events and tease out the exceptional and the beautiful from them in a way few others can. Whether it’s a childhood reminiscence or a declamation on the view out the back window on a rainy day, Eric brings it to you in a way that I can only dream of. He’s a true Artful Blodger. Plus, he hates zombies.

  3. A Perfectly Cromulent Blog. Last week, I finally had the opportunity to meet Pete Vonder Haar, one of the first people to blogroll me when I was a fledgling Online Journalist. He’s got his finger up the ass of on the pulse of American pop culture, and writes a blog that is consistently smart and entertaining.

  4. Treppenwitz. David Bogner can do outrage. David Bogner can do politics. David Bogner can do the tearjerker posts. David Bogner can do teh funny. And to everything he does, he brings a calm, insightful intelligence. A daily read for me.

  5. Yourish.com. If there were no Meryl Yourish, we would need to invent her. When the wire services write articles on the Israeli-Arab conflict that are either subtly or overtly biased against Israel - which is all the fucking time - nobody rips them a new asshole better than Meryl. Hulk smash!

  6. Sisu. Yeah, I know this is number six, but rules were made to be broken, especially bullshit blogmemey rules. And Sissy Willis, who uses the light fantastic to reveal beauty in unexpected places, certainly meets the criteria for the Prémio Dardos: The Web would be a poorer place indeed without her incisive writing and lovely photographs.

Now, go forth and check these sites out, if you have not done so already!

La Montagne des Secrets

's

Oh, my word! This is almost unbearably cool! Quelle hoot, in fact.

I received my copies of the translation of Signs in the Blood in the mail today and have had so much fun, with my (very) limited French, trying to see what Sophie (the translator) has done.

Somehow, I take a childish delight in seeing the snake handlers transformed into manipulateurs de serpents, the hippies on Hog Run into les hippies du ravin des Sangliers; Little Sylvie (Petite Sylvie) 's chamber pot into un pot de chambre en faience decore des fleurs rose . . .



And when they use strong language! Phillip says, at the beginning of Chapter 12, "Nom de Dieu! and "quelle blague!" He seems so . . . so French!

I am loving this -- thank goodness Miss Birdie is out of the way for the moment and I can amuse myself.




They did a great job with the cover, I thought. I had to look twice to make sure the photo wasn't one of mine -- there's a very similar old building down at the bridge.




"une riche monsieur du Tennessee"


What fun! Thank you, Sophie!!!
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A LITTLE-KNOWN FACT IS UNEARTHED

It was a recent post over at Eric’s place that reminded me that the one-and-only Bard of Ayrshire celebrated his 250th birthday this Sunday past.

Alas, I was dividing my time between Baltimore and Atlanta that day, and so could not celebrate the occasion appropriately. I couldn’t even make it to the January Guild event, more’s the pity.

But it was Erica’s comment on that post that reminded me of a little-known fact, a fact so obscure that nobody knows it except a handful of scholars. Well, maybe not a handful of scholars. Just me, actually.

The little-known fact? At the risk of converting it into a well-known fact, I will tell you.

Robbie Burns was Jewish.

Oh, he hid his Hebraic ancestry well. But his love for smoked salmon was well-documented... and, after all, what is a haggis but a fleischig kishke?

In fact, there exists an alternative version of his famous “Ode to a Haggis,” a poem that celebrates that greatest of Scottish dishes, that renders Burns’s religio-cultural background a matter beyond dispute. Perhaps it was a draft... or perhaps something that he circulated only amongst his morning Minyan buddies. And I found it, tucked neatly into a seam in the bottom of a box of steel-cut oatmeal.

Submitted for your approval...

Ode to a Kishke

- by Rachmiel Burns

Fair fa’ your scheine, zeeseh face,
Great chieftain o’ the kugel-race!
Aboon them a’ ye tak your place
Ye stuffit seckel:
Weel are ye wordy of a grace
As lang’s my schmeckel.

The groaning trencher there ye fill,
Your tuchus like a distant hill,
Your bulk wad help to fill a mill
In needfu’ time,
While thro’ your pores the schmaltz distil
Like kosher wine.

His knife see rustic Labour dight,
An’ hack you up wi’ ready sleight,
Like shechting a giraffe, it might
Just be a bitch;
Yet then, O what a glorious sight!
(But first, let’s pish.)

Then, spoon for spoon, they rip an’ rack:
Chuleria af dem letzten! on they whack,
Till a’ their food-stuff’t pupiks, packed,
Stick out like thumbs;
And then the Rabbi, guts like to crack,
A bentsch’n hums.

Is there that owre his brisket-stew
Or lox-and-bagels – sable, too,
Or matzoh-balls wad mak her spew
Wi’ perfect sconner,
Looks down wi’ sneering, scornfu’ view
On sic a dinner?

Poor nebbish! see him owre his trash,
As feckless as a wither’d rash,
His spindle shank, a guid whip-lash,
Like squozen zit;
Thro’ shul or temple for to dash,
O how unfit!

But mark the Landsman, kishke-fed,
The trembling earth resounds his tread.
Clap in his groisse hant a blade,
He’ll make it whissle;
An’ tender slabs o’ whitefish schneid,
Like taps o’ thrissle.

HaShem wha mak mankind your care,
And dish them out their bill o’fare,
Auld Israel wants a single ware
Her dearest wishke;
So, answer, please, her gratefu’ prayer,
Gie her a Kishke!

Taking note.




Yesterday.

Yesterday, I caught my dad eating ice cream with his spaghetti.
Yesterday, my mom's black lab Seamus pooped on our carpet. Several times.
Yesterday, Remy left a piece of gum on the toilet seat after trying to spit it in the trash can.
Yesterday, my children got out of school early due to the threat of ice. No actual ice. Not one bit.
Yesterday night, that ice finally arrived...it rained ice. But by then we were all in bed.
Yesterday, my husband fell asleep on the couch with his new love, the big screen TV.
Yesterday night, I shared MY bed with two boys and an 80lb dog.
Yesterday I was someone else.



NOW.

Now I'm half asleep in my chair.
Now I'm thinking. slowly.
Now I know it's time to get moving.
Now I'm me.



Tomorrow.

Tomorrow I'm banning gum in the house.
Tomorrow I will not watch my father eat.
Tomorrow I will put a diaper on the black dog.
Tomorrow I send my kids to school no matter if there is ice or not.
Tomorrow I will watch LOST on that big screen TV.
Tomorrow I will probably end up sleeping with everyone in my bed.
Tomorrow I will be someone new.



Welcome to my life.



Who were you?
Who are you?
Who will you be?



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

How is a uterus hazardous to small children?

Cajun Mama had a tweet over the weekend that mentioned a uterus recall.

I was baffled.
I was intrigued.

I followed her link and found this:







I'm now in love with this company called I Heart Guts.



It's brilliant!
It's hilarious!




Where else can you find t-shirts that say this?






or t-shirts that say this?




That says, "Black Lung" in case you can't read it well.




And then they have plushies.




I've got beat...


heart beat, that is.






And a timeless classic: A heart of gold.





Way too cool.
I wish they'd send me some of their products, you know, so I could review them.

I'm in love.

What organ would you like to see made into a t-shirt or plush?

Wait, maybe you shouldn't answer that...

The Doulas



It's been a long road (to shift from the birth metaphor) and we're not there yet but I want to thank the folks who have served as doulas (to shift back to the birthing image) during the labor and delivery of Miss Birdie's book.

Doula is from the ancient Greek and means 'woman who serves.' Nowadays, doula refers to one (often a professional ) who provides support -- physical and/or emotional -- to a mother before, during, and after delivery.

I am blessed in my many doulas . . .

My husband has endured night after night of my creeping to bed and often waking him long after he's fallen asleep; he has taken over the chicken chores and most of the vacuuming; he's made popcorn and pizza, and has seen to so many other odds and ends that I have left undone. He has been very patient with this prolonged labor of mine.

Justin and Claui have pitched in by cooking dinner at crucial moments and by taking up the slack in untold other ways.

All my family and friends have kindly overlooked the perpetual faraway look in my eyes that tells them I'm thinking about the book rather than listening to what they're saying.

Ann, my agent, and Kate, my editor, have been encouraging when they had every right to be impatient.

And no one has said what I'm sure they were thinking "Are you ever going to finish that wretched book?"

And you all -- my constant commenters -- have been the best cheering section imaginable! Now that the baby is delivered, I'm eager to get it cleaned up and presentable so that you all can meet it.

Consider yourselves godparents.



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Monday, January 26, 2009

Answers revealed - Magical Photo Mystery Tour



The person with the most correct answers,
four right out of six,
is Erika Jean,
which is so cool,
because she's the one who reminded me
that I need to do a mystery photo post!

Clearly she rocks at this game.



Here are the answers:


I think just about everyone got #1 right!
Yes, it was a pill bottle.







Only two people came close to getting #2.
Everyone thought they were lite brites,
except Erika Jean and Linda,
who correctly guessed they were the tops to pens/markers.







#3 is another one just about everyone got.
The game board for Trouble.






#4 was kind of unfairly hard.
It was obviously a hinge.
But no one got that it was a glasses case.
But how could you know?
Maybe that one was too hard.
Sorry!







And most of you got #5.
A Waterford Crystal ring holder.
I just got it for Christmas.
I love it!







#6 was another hard one that only two of you got!
Good job, Mama Dawg and Sue!

It's Annie's well-loved and well-chewed bone.
Totally gross, I know.




Thank you so much everyone for playing!

I had so much fun reading your guesses.
We'll do this again real soon!




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