Archive for December, 2010

On Being a Feminist (7)


12 Dec

I am one of the lucky ones. Let me be very clear on this. I have wonderful, supportive parents and family, who are proud of my accomplishments, who would have been proud of me not matter what.

I have an amazing husband who has known from the beginning that I would be the primary earner, and does not feel threatened by it. (And does his share of the housework.)

I work in a field where women are prevalent in executive positions.

But just because I haven’t felt discriminated against doesn’t give me the luxury of pretending the problem doesn’t exist.

On Being a Feminist (6)


11 Dec

My father asked me if he had ever told me I couldn’t do something because I was a girl. He never did. But the messages we pass on to our children aren’t always conscious. What follows is not meant to be a critique of my parents, simply a notation of how we foster different attitudes for our daughters than we do our sons.

Our family started collections for my brother and I. His: model airplanes and baseball caps. Mine: perfume bottles and dolls. We both went shooting with our father. I was never given my own gun; my brother was.

WoW Cataclysm


10 Dec

I took the day off work in order to partake of WoW Cataclysm on opening day, for as much time as I could stand.

We were on at midnight. In the new high level content, it was beyond crazy. Quests that should have taken less than 2 minutes took 20, simply because of the sheer numbers. The next day in the new goblin zone, it was a little less crazy, and there were rocket cars to drive.

I’m glad I was part of opening day, but I’ll like it a bit better in 2 weeks when things aren’t as crazy.

MythBusters (ep 157)


09 Dec

I love Archimedes Death Ray. It is the quintessential MythBusters myth. The intro mentioned that they’ve done it twice before, but that’s not really true. They did it. The MIT professor wrote in that they did it wrong, AND they had a small scale competition to see if someone else could get it right. One girl even got in internship with Jaime out of it. By my count, this was death ray #4.

 The B team shouldn’t have been worried about running over what hit the jeep. Hellboy served as a bit of a fulcrum himself, kept the weight stationary.

Darren Aronofsky


08 Dec

I’ve now seen two Darren Aronofsky films. On some level, it’s hard to believe that The Fountain and The Wrestler came from the same director. The difference in scale, the grand overlying themes, seem to put these movies worlds apart. And yet, they are both intimate portraits of a man.

The grandiosity of The Fountain is why it didn’t work for me. While I understood the conceit, it never seemed to coalesce into anything cohesive. The Wrestler, on the other hand, was so simple in its goals, in plot and storyline, that it seems to rise above its subject matter.

Just Finished Reading: Night Shift by Lillith Saintcrow


07 Dec

This is the first of the Jill Kismet books, and I must say, at this point, I like Jill more than I liked Dante Valentine (not that I didn’t devour those books). Jill seems a little more approachable, a little more relatable in her issues. And I like her love interest more.

In both series, I have a hard time understanding the love interest’s motivations- I’m not certain what he’s getting out of the relationship.

Of course, I don’t think it matters. The books are pulp. They’re action with a little bit of romance thrown in. Saintcrow does that beautifully.

Shameless Self Promotion


06 Dec

On Tuesday, Nov 23, I hit 1000 views on this blog. It took 1 week short of 7 months to get there, but get there we did. To celebrate, I’m sharing my other blogs, Fiction in 50 and Life by Pets.

Fiction in 50 was started on October 7 and is already at over 500 views. It is dedicated to inspiring people to write at least one 50 word micro-fiction story a week.

Life by Pets was started on Dec 1. It’s a longer form for myself and others to share stories about the pets we love and live by.

Breaking Up the Band


05 Dec

We bonded over music. The first CD my husband ever loaned me was Mental Jewelry, the debut album from LIVE. They became “our band”. Why settle for a song, when you can have a band? “Dance With You” from Distance to Here, was our wedding song. We travelled out of state and out of country (twice) to see them perform live.

So its hard to see the band break up, to realize that everything turned sour. This was our band. I’m excited to hear what the former members are doing now, but I can’t help but be a little sad.

A Youth that Never Was


04 Dec

Midnight, on a Wednesday, the lead singer says stick around and have some drinks with us after the show. And I think, why couldn’t I have lived in Seattle when I was young? (I did; I couldn’t afford concert tickets.) This was the kind of concert I dreamed about attending- a new band, a small venue. I could have been right up against the stage from the beginning, shaking hands with the lead singer as he reached out, looking enviously at the old friends he kept pointing out in the crowd. And I definitely would have stayed for a drink.

Great live performances – The Gracious Few


03 Dec

“It’s called rock and roll, look it up.” This slogan was repeated a couple times during the Gracious Few concert, and rock and roll it definitely was, with a bit of blues thrown in. To quote Huey Lewis and the News, “They say the heart of rock and roll is the beating” and that was definitely true here. The beat and baseline drove the music, while the guitar solos added some flash.

Toward the end, they sat down for their “untamed” section- a little swamp bluegrass, they called it. It was intimate and added a new dimension to the performance.

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