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Wednesday, November 11th, 2009
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(comment on this) Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
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commonreader
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4:40p Understudied Developmental Milestones in Adults
the point at which you stop shopping in certain places cause it's too loud in there the point at which you become interested in good jewelry the point at which you finally have enough socks and underpants to never have to wear the Christmas ones in June the point at which jazz stops being noise
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viggorlijah
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11:53a
They are setting up for Raj and Howard to come out of the closet in the season finale of the Big Bang Theory - right? Right?
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(2 comments | comment on this) Monday, November 9th, 2009
cowboy_r
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4:48p Cowboy R und den Wand
Ich war mal ein austausch schuler auf Deutschland.
I was an exchange student in Germany. I went with a private organization, and made a direct exchange with a German family... their kid came and lived with my family for a year, while I went to Germany and lived with his family. This did not develop into a friendship between either of us and the other's families... we were simply too different, had values that were too far apart.
That's not really what I wanted to write about, though. I wanted to write about the fact that today is the twentieth anniversary of the reunification of Germany.
When I went to Germany in 1986, there were two Germanys, the Federal Republic of Germany (West) and the Democratic Republic of Germany (East). I went to a town named Göttingen, which was only a few kilometers west of the border. My host family took me, at one point, to an overlook, where I could look down on the chain-link fence topped with razor wire.
It was dangerous to have a united Germany. After all, a united Germany had started two world wars in thirty years. I had my doubts about the causal relationship between a united Germany and world wars, but that was the official line... there would not be a united Germany in our lifetimes, because it would be dangerous.
I wanted to go to East Germany. I got on a train bound for Berlin, but the border guards looked at my passport and turned me back. They said I didn't look enough like my passport picture. I imagine that was just an excuse, but who knows what the real reason was.
At the end of the year, I reluctantly left Germany. If I could have figured out a way to stay, I might well have. I was mostly happy in Göttingen. I had friends, I liked the atmosphere of the city... the only thing in the whole town I didn't like, actually, was my host family.
But I didn't have the resources to stay, so I came home to Arizona, and a while later, joined the Navy. Which is where I was in November 1989. I don't remember President Reagan's "tear down this wall" speech, but I do remember feeling very relaxed about being in the Navy, feeling that the likelyhood of the war we'd been dreading throughout my childhood was now very low. (I was surprised, a year later, to find myself in a completely different war... but that's another story).
I remember watching on the television on the mess deck of USS Papago (ATF-160) as the wall began to topple. I was surprised and overwhelmed that the world could be so reasonable for a change.
Unfortunately, I have not been able to return to Germany since the wall came down. I'd like to. I'd like to travel in the places that used to be East Germany, to look at the architecture, to see what it's like.
Congratulations to my German friends, for being part of a country that [i]isn't[/i] a dangerous factor in world politics. Congratulations for being part of a reasonable world. And most of all... congratulations on this twentieth anniversary of the wall falling.
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commonreader
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1:37p Dream Post!
I've had two recurring sets of dreams, one as far back as I can remember and one beginning in 1989 (I'll give you a prize if you can figure out why that date). In the first, I am left in a car that starts somehow and I have to navigate it through traffic. In the second, there is a massive natural or manmade disaster and I am trying to convince my family to leave the area, which they refuse to do even though things are on fire.
The second set of dreams, the disaster ones, stopped when I moved out of my parents' house, and recently began again except this time I successfully pack and leave. w00t. The car dreams morphed into a series of dreams where I managed to drive the car but was chronically worried about getting busted for not having a license. OK, that makes sense, right? So what does it mean that the night before last I dreamt about going all over the neighborhood I grew up in on a horse, bareback?
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(4 comments | comment on this) Sunday, November 8th, 2009
commonreader
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10:43p I Feel All Nice
Every single co-op house in the Bay Area that I ever set foot in except Barrington is still open. Hooray for continuity.
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(comment on this) Monday, November 9th, 2009
viggorlijah
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9:46a Lengend of the Seeker is baaaaack
This is one of my guilty pleasures- look it's got a ninja army of women who kill things and then loll around in spa baths, okay?
The central premise of the two leads being deeply in love, but unable to consummate because the woman will then control the hero as a mindless slave, keeps the show rolling along well. It helps that she's clearly brilliant and capable.
Anyway! This season has Charisma Carpenter in the opener as one of the ninja warriors, and oooh, her curves are good in red leather! What's really fascinating is that her face isn't botoxed - her expressions are mobile and when she smiles, there are tiny wrinkles at the corners of her eyes. The women in the Seeker - and the men - come in a pretty wide variety of body shapes, possibly because they're mostly Australian-Kiwi actors.
Also, as mentioned, women in red leather with big swords! I'm shallow.
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(2 comments | comment on this) Saturday, November 7th, 2009
commonreader
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5:30p Whining about Publishing
Here's a typical example.
What gets left out of these whines though, which I am sure have lots of merit as description of business practice, is that the midlist is mediocre lame crap and doesn't deserve anything better than what it's getting. Just because Sarah Palin's memoir is getting whatever crazy advance and whatever crazy publicity budget it's getting, doesn't mean that justice would be served if that amount were to be divided equally among the midlist. The quality of the midlist is so bad, there is not a single person of my acquaintance who has had the discipline to sit down and produce an entire novel, memoir, or piece of nonfiction who has not managed to get it published by a mainstream publisher if that's what they wanted, because mainstream publishing is that desperate. (I will admit that one of those people was Laura Albert, and I do not recommend her strategy.)
I went from not bothering to look at the bestseller lists, to not bothering to look at the staff pick table or shelf at the bookstore, to not even bothering to go to the bookstore anymore. I cannot remember the last time I discovered a readable book written in the last ten years - not a good one, just a readable one. Oh, wait, yes I can, it was Drugs Are Nice, written not coincidentally by someone who, in the absence of a publicity budget, went to every available social networking site and commented on every single person's lj or myspace or whatever that had her listed as an interest "hey, I have a new book out!" Oh, and she got into a fistfight on Divisidero outside the occult supplies shop with Anton LaVey's daughter so she could get her booktour into the paper.
You know what I'm reading right now? The Chapterhouse at Parma and a Noel Streatfield memoir, mostly about the war.
eta: tupelo's books are readable. I had to add that after I checked their publication dates.
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(1 comment | comment on this) Friday, November 6th, 2009
viggorlijah
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6:32p
Sreypov's story - I recognise a bunch of the photographs and places mentioned. She's so brave.
I wish we'd been there twelve years ago.
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