Bush Urges China to Grant More Freedoms

November 15th, 2005

Guardian Unlimited | World Latest | Bush Urges China to Grant More Freedoms

President Bush prodded China on Wednesday to grant more political freedom to its 1.3 billion people and held up rival Taiwan as an example of a society that has successfully moved from repression to democracy.

In remarks sure to rile Beijing, Bush said, “Modern Taiwan is free and democratic and prosperous. By embracing freedom at all levels, Taiwan has delivered prosperity to its people and created a free and democratic Chinese society.”

Oh good grief. Bring the idiot home already….

November 14th, 2005

November 14th, 2005

Meditation is Good for Your Brain

November 14th, 2005

Via Mind Hacks:

Meditate on This: Buddhist Tradition Thickens Parts of the Brain

Meditation alters brain patterns in ways that are likely permanent, scientists have known. But a new study shows key parts of the brain actually get thicker through the practice.

Brain imaging of regular working folks who meditate regularly revealed increased thickness in cortical regions related to sensory, auditory and visual perception, as well as internal perception — the automatic monitoring of heart rate or breathing, for example.

The study also indicates that regular meditation may slow age-related thinning of the frontal cortex.

“What is most fascinating to me is the suggestion that meditation practice can change anyone’s gray matter,” said study team member Jeremy Gray, an assistant professor of psychology at Yale. “The study participants were people with jobs and families. They just meditated on average 40 minutes each day, you don’t have to be a monk.”

The research was led by Sara Lazar, assistant in psychology at Massachusetts General Hospital. It is detailed in the November issue of the journal NeuroReport.

The study involved a small number of people, just 20. All had extensive training in Buddhist Insight meditation. But the researchers say the results are significant.

Most of the brain regions identified to be changed through meditation were found in the right hemisphere, which is essential for sustaining attention. And attention is the focus of the meditation.

Other forms of yoga and meditation likely have a similar impact on brain structure, the researchers speculate, but each tradition probably has a slightly different pattern of cortical thickening based on the specific mental exercises involved.

Cool. I’m gonna have to start taking my meditation more seriously…

Graham Amendment Invokes Constitutional Crisis

November 14th, 2005

t r u t h o u t – Marjorie Cohn: Graham Amendment Invokes Constitutional Crisis

The “accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands … may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.”
–James Madison, Federalist Paper No. 47

In blatant defiance of the Constitution’s guarantees of Habeas Corpus and separation of powers, the Senate on Thursday approved the Graham Amendment to the Department of Defense Authorization Act by a vote of 49 to 42. Five Democrats joined all but 4 Republican Senators in giving the President unfettered power to hold prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, for the rest of their lives, with no criminal charges, and no right to challenge their confinement by Habeas Corpus.

Last year, the Supreme Court held in Rasul v. Bush that the Guantánamo detainees are entitled to file habeas petitions in US courts to contest their detentions. The high court determined that non-US citizens held at Guantánamo, “no less than American citizens, are entitled to invoke the federal courts’ authority” to hear their petitions under 28 USC § 2241, the US Habeas Corpus statute.

The Supreme Court stated firmly in Rasul, “Consistent with the historic purpose of the writ, this Court has recognized the federal courts’ power to review applications for habeas relief in a wide variety of cases involving Executive detention, in wartime as well as in times of peace.”

The Graham Amendment is crafted to render Rasul a nullity by cutting off the rights of Guantánamo prisoners to have their habeas petitions considered by the federal courts. The Amendment limits federal court review to the narrow issue of the validity of decisions rendered by Combatant Status Review Tribunals. These kangaroo courts were set up to determine whether the Guantánamo prisoners are “enemy combatants.” They are not independent judicial tribunals, but rather administrative proceedings stacked with military officials who can use secret or even fabricated evidence. The prisoner is not entitled to be represented by an attorney.

Habeas Corpus, known as The Great Writ, is the final bastion of liberty for those unjustly held. The last time this country suspended Habeas Corpus was for the internment of tens of thousands of Japanese-Americans during World War II. That travesty is now universally recognized as a shameful chapter in our nation’s history. To suspend The Great Writ once again, while allegations of systematic torture continue to emerge from US prisons, will threaten our Constitution and render “quaint” our democracy.

The Democrats who voted in favor of the Graham Amendment were Joseph Lieberman (Conn.), Kent Conrad (N.D.), Ben Nelson (Neb), Mary L. Landrieu (La), and Ron Wyden (Or).

These are not Democrats, they are Republicans playing Democrats. These people need to GO – if you live in these states, vote them OUT. Especially Lieberman – he’s been a thorn in the Democratic side long enough.

The Wal-Mart Movie

November 13th, 2005

The Wal-Mart Movie:The High Cost of Low Price

Everyone has seen Wal-Mart’s lavish television commercials, but have you ever wondered why Wal-Mart spends so much money trying to convince you it cares about your family, your community, and even its own employees? What is it hiding?

WAL-MART: The High Cost of Low Price takes you behind the glitz and into the real lives of workers and their families, business owners and their communities, in an extraordinary journey that will challenge the way you think, feel… and shop.

Saw this today, and it is well worth viewing. I doubt I’ll ever shop at a Wal-Mart again after watching it. The five main Wal-Mart inheritors collect $18 BILLION a piece every year, yet contribute almost nothing to charity and let employees survive on minimum wage and public assistance. Those items you buy at Wal-Mart are made by sweat-shop workers in China, who must live in Wal-Mart dorms or be charged rent for the dorm from their wages anyway. The conditions are squalid. And this is repeated in WalMart factories world wide, while Wal-Mart’s owners reside in huge mansions and have a guarded bunker ready just in case they need to bug out for any reason.

The damage continues through small towns destroyed by Wal-Mart stores, which then move on to other areas before having to pay taxes to the communities that gave them subsidies to get them to locate stores there, suppliers destroyed by constantly having to lower their prices, customers raped, murdered, and robbed in unprotected Wal-Mart parking lots, often only a few feet away from store entrances. workers forced to work unpaid overtime and harrassed for trying to start union activity, etc. etc…..

You can find a screening in your area here:

http://www.walmartmovie.com/find.php

or purchase the movie here:

http://www.walmartmovie.com/watch.php

Wal-Mart fact sheet here:

http://www.wakeupwalmart.com/facts/

Joy

November 12th, 2005


Radical Joy by Caroline Madden and the Chiskale Quilters of Cazadero, California

Do your devotions make you happy?
Is your life a joyous song?

In all this talk about spiritual devotion, there is one simple fact. You have to like it. It should make you happy. It is unfortunate that so much coercion, unhappiness, bitterness, guilt, and fear become wrapped up in spirituality. Why can’t we simply do things out of joy?

Practicing spirituality isn’t a matter of drudgery. It isn’t a matter of fear. It isn’t for fitting into a social group. It has nothing to do with status. Being devoted to holiness in your life is a matter of joy and celebration. When you sit down to meditate, a smile should come to your lips and a feeling of joy should permeate your body. When you go to consecrated ground to give thanks and celebrate, you should do so not because of the day of the week or out of the habit of ritual, but because this is the best way that you know how to adore your gods and express the wonder of being on this earth.

Yes, yes, there is much unhappiness in this existence. That unhappiness is part of the overall field of negativity. There are also positive things in life, and spirituality is foremost among them. So whenever we practice our spiritual devotions, let is be in gladness and joy.

Deng Ming Tao, 365 Tao

“We are shaped by our thoughts; we become what we think. When the mind is pure, joy follows like a shadow that never leaves.”
– Buddha

“Joy is not in things; it is in us” — Richard Wagner

“Find ecstasy in life; the mere sense of living is joy enough.”
– Emily Dickinson

“If the sight of the blue skies fills you with joy, if a blade of grass springing up in the fields has power to move you, if the simple things in nature have a message you understand, Rejoice, for your soul is alive.” — Eleanora Duse

“Participate joyfully in the sorrows of the world. We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy.”– Joseph Campbell

“I will not be just a tourist in the world of images, just watching images passing by which I cannot live in, make love to, possess as permanent sources of joy and ecstasy.” — Anais Nin

“I have drunken deep of joy, And I will taste no other wine tonight”
– Percy Bysshe Shelley

“Every person has the power to make others happy.
Some do it simply by entering a room –
others by leaving the room.
Some individuals leave trails of gloom;
others, trails of joy.
Some leave trails of hate and bitterness;
others, trails of love and harmony.
Some leave trails of cynicism and pessimism;
others trails of faith and optimism.
Some leave trails of criticism and resignation;
others trails of gratitude and hope.

What kind of trails do you leave?”

— William Arthur Ward

Terminated

November 11th, 2005

Veterans Day, November 11

November 11th, 2005

Department of Veterans Affairs

Disabled American Veterans:

By Arthur H. Wilson
National Adjutant/CEO
Disabled American Veterans

On Veterans Day, as our nation remains at war in Iraq and Afghanistan, the President and Members of Congress will call on America to support our troops and talk about how much we owe our men and women in uniform. But instead of honoring its commitment to those whose service and sacrifice have kept us free and safe, our government has launched a devastating assault on benefits for America’s veterans.

Federal funding for veterans programs over the years has not even kept pace with inflation, let alone the increased demands on the Department of Veterans Affairs for health care and other earned benefits. The administration claims to have provided record increases for veterans, yet thousands of them have been denied access to VA health care. Because of budget shortfalls, VA facilities in every region of the country have exhausted reserve funds to meet critical needs. Many have stopped hiring doctors and nurses, while still others have cut back or even eliminated medical services. It is a clear indication that the men and women who have served and sacrificed for our country are not a national priority

But inadequate funding for medical care isn’t the only thing veterans are concerned about.

In recent years we have witnessed a systematic erosion of veterans benefits even while our nation is engaged in a war that is adding to the ranks of sick and disabled veterans who will need the VA for decades to come…

Veteran bloggers (via Skippy):

Why Now?

Democratic Veteran

One Veteran’s Voice

The All Spin Zone

Dark Bilious Vapors

Daily Kos


Main and Central

One Pissed-Off Vet

Voice of a Veteran

Veterans running for office:

Paul Hackett – Senator for Ohio


David Ashe – 2nd Congressional District Virginia

Patrick Murphy – 8th Congressional District Pennsylvania


Brian Lentz – 7th Congressional District Pennsylvania

Air America Fighting Dems Series

Daily Kos Fighting Dems Series

For Veteran’s Day: Our Democratic Veteran Candidates

Karma Chameleon

November 9th, 2005

Maria Kuznetsova, Chameleon

If I don’t want to be known, I cannot be known.
The best actor can divide role from self.
The best liar can divide truth from falsity.

People think that they know you. Soon you begin to play the role that they place on you. Why should you act a certain way to please others? You should do things from your inner awareness and from your own feelings. If they do not accord with the herd, then so much the better.

You should change when it pleases you. Your life is flexible. If you let other people shape you, then you will never know independence.

The sages say that all life is illusory, and they usually lament this. The way of Tao is to use this fact and not let it oppress you. If you want to dodge others, then step behind one of the myriad illusions in this world. If you do not volunteer anything and you neither confirm nor deny, the opinions of others can never stick to you. Then you will be left in peace.

True sages never go by appearances. When it comes to introspection, they are not deceived by the appearances their own minds spew out. They know that if they want to get at the truth, then they must pierce to the very core.

So if you would hide from others, avail yourself of the false appearances of life. If you would know yourself, distinguish between the false appearances of life. Above all, do not be put off by the illusory nature of life. Use it. Everything in this life can be an advantage to the wise.

Deng Ming Tao, 365 Tao

“We are like chameleons, we take our hue and the color of our moral character, from those who are around us.”
– John Locke

“We are chameleons, and our partialities and prejudices change place with an easy and blessed facility, and we are soon wonted to the change and happy in it.”
– Mark Twain

The chameleon changes color to match the earth, the earth doesn’t change color to match the chameleon. — Senegalese Proverb

What’s the animal that always changes color? A chameleon. I feel kind of like that. Because if they’re nervous or scared or they don’t trust someone, they have a different sort of camouflage. But as soon as they warm up to someone, they reveal their true colors. — Gina Gershon

When I was a teenager, my mom once gave me a card addressed to “the daughter I don’t know” because I acted in ways that didn’t please her or meet her expectations. Most people say I am difficult to get to know very well, thinking I’m just a calm, unusually happy person who is pretty quiet . Yet, I understand other people very well and come to know them very quickly, and can have an awful lot to say if people really want to know what I’m thinking, as those who bother to read my blog know. Most people are simply more content to prattle on about themselves or tell me what they think and feel, however. I listen and take it all in, and end up knowing far more about them than they ever learn about me.

Perhaps the things that I intuit so quickly about others are things they expect the other person to tell them about without prompting. But I guess I always figured that if people wanted to know me badly enough, they ought to put a little effort into it. That way I know they are actually interested in me, and not just in whatever it is they happen to want from me at that moment.

And there isn’t much that I really want or need from other people. Just toss a few crickets my way, and I’m happy to sit on my branch in the sun. I’ve always been fiercely independent, until I became even more fiercely interdependent. I’ll gladly hide my true colors until someone threatens my interests or those of my friends or family, and then, look out. There are those who know all too well how bright my colors can get!

November 8th, 2005

Let’s Get Small

November 7th, 2005

You may be capable of great things,
But life consists of small things.

Big things seldom come along. One should know the small as well as the big. We may all yearn to make lasting achievements and to be heroes, but life seldom affords us the opportunities to do so. Most of our days consist of small things — the uneventful meditations, the ordinary cooking of meals, the banal trips to work, the quiet scratching in the garden — and it is from these small things that the larger events of life are composed.

We rarely have the occasion to make grand gestures. The champion gymnast’s greatest moment is but an hour out of an entire lifetime. The works of great artists are viewed for very short times. The master musician’s best composition is but one work in a sea of musical tones. If we want to be successful, it is the small things that we should pay attention to.

We must not fall into the trap of waiting so long for the big things that we let numerous small chances slip right by us. People who do this are always waiting for life to be perfect. They complain that fate is against them, that the world does not recognize their greatness. If they would lower their sights, they would see all the beautiful opportunities swirling at their feet. If they would humble themselves enough to bend down, they could scoop untold treasures up into their hands.

Deng Ming Tao, 365 Tao

“Infinities and indivisibles transcend our finite understanding, the former on account of their magnitude, the latter because of their smallness; Imagine what they are when combined.” — Galileo Galilei

“It is not the greatness of a man’s means that makes him independent so much as the smallness of his wants” — William Cobbett

“Do not let yourselves be discouraged or embittered by the smallness of the success you are likely to achieve in trying to make life better. You certainly would not be able, in a single generation, to create an earthly paradise. Who could expect that? But, if you make life ever so little better, you will have done splendidly, and your lives will have been worthwhile.” — Arnold Toynbee

Peace is easily maintained;
Trouble is easily overcome before it starts.
The brittle is easily shattered;
The small is easily scattered.
Deal with it before it happens.
Set things in order before there is confusion.
A tree as great as a man’s embrace springs from a small shoot;
A terrace nine stories high begins with a pile of earth;
A journey of a thousand miles starts under one’s feet.

– Tao Te Ching, 64

In keeping with this theme, I certainly don’t have any great words of wisdom today. Only the thought that I need to take care of the mundane little things today – get milk from the store, do some laundry, clean things up around here that have been neglected. I spent a lot of the weekend cleaning out summer’s exuberance from the garden, trimming overgrown plants so the bulbs that are starting to come up can have a little room to grow and some sunlight, figuring out where new plants need to be planted. Here in SoCal that’s a fall task, so plants can grow a bit before winter and start their roots to be ready to take off in spring.

My blog is one of the small ones that doesn’t get a lot of traffic, just a little side track on the Internet. Which is fine with me. I like that I can post what I like and not care who reads it or doesn’t. I live my life pretty much the same way these days, taking care of what comes into my path, and doing the little that I can to help make the world, and my part of it, a nicer place to be. My home is small but suits our needs. Our children are in no rush to leave even as I see so many kids eager to leave their parent’s houses. They bring their friends to our house all the time. Our friends gather here and are comfortable. I have my small MoveOn group meet here, and do my little bits to change the political landscape, however slowly.

Yes, life is full of small things. We don’t have to do big things all the time. Just small things – with great love.

What Hunter Said…

November 6th, 2005

Daily Kos: Shameless. Absolutely Shameless.

When I was somewhere around twelve years old, I remember vividly going with my mother, on one singular wait-in-the-car-and-don’t-talk-to-anyone occassion, to the food bank of a local church to pick up two heaping bags of groceries. An expected paycheck didn’t come, then another, and so a family of six living hand to mouth under the best of times suddenly found themselves completely without, for a week.

Even though our own Catholic church offered the same relief, my mother went to the Lutheran church a few blocks from our house, so that those we went to church with wouldn’t know or ever hear that our family needed to beg for a week’s groceries. And no matter what came, we never but never took any government help. There was pride, and then there was pride.

So given all that — just a single week of falling off an edge that lurks just beyond the refrigerator door of millions of families in this nation — I’ll never understand the Republican fascination with screwing the poor at every opportunity. Countless numbers of American middle class families are one month, one week, or one very bad day away from being poor, indebted, or homeless, or at the very least not having enough food for the kids during one particular week. While my Catholic family was indeed, sigh, unalterably Republican, watching the Reagan years it didn’t take much to demonstrate just how much Republicans loathed the middle class — the average folks who had paychecks, not trusts, and whose most sizable long-term investments consisted of the savings account at their bank, not stock market portfolios.

And I’m not talking “ignored”, or “were indifferent to”, but absolute hatred. The idea that some poor person, somewhere, might be sucking a dime too many out of the system is largely used as the reason to carve, gut and bury whatever safety-net welfare programs the party sets its eyes on. Rather screw a thousand people, than to have the children of some undeserving “welfare queen” get milk today.

But God Help Us All if we don’t pass, in the middle of all of this apparently urgent pain, yet another business-humping, morality-punching tax cut for the folks with greens fees to pay.

Whatever. My tolerance for these pretenders of morality has been pegged at zero for a decade. I can’t wait to hear the Fox News spin on how those nasty children on Medicare or those bastards taking advantage of the school lunch program are hurting the God given economic competitiveness of the investor class.

Update by kos: This was large a party line vote (52-47) except for the following:

Democrats voting for it:

Landrieu (LA)
Nelson (NE)

Republicans voting against it:

Chafee (RI)
Coleman (MN)
Collins (ME)
DeWine (OH)
Snowe (ME)

THIS is why it matters who is in charge, my dear brother. This is why it matters. Republicans like watching people suffer, and Democrats don’t. That’s pretty much it.

Friendship

November 6th, 2005


Friendship, Oleg Zhivetin

Those truly linked don’t need correspondence.
When they meet again after many years apart,
Their friendship is as true as ever.

In the distant past, there was once a young and wealthy statesman who was on a diplomatic mission. Pausing by a river at night, he heard the haunting sounds of a lute. A passionate musician himself, he took up his own lute and eventually found a goatherd sitting on an old ruin. In those days, an aristocrat would not associate with a commoner, but the two men struck up a friendship through their music. Their playing was as smooth and natural as flowing water.

Once a year, the ambassador and the goatherd would renew their friendship. Though they had the chance to play their music with others during the rest of the year, each man declared that he had found his true counterpart.

The ambassador tried for many years to lift the goatherd out of his poverty, but his friend steadfastly refused. He did not want to pollute their friendship with money.

Years later, when the ambassador was gray haired, he went to the appointed spot, but his friend was not there. He tried to play alone, but his melody was forlorn. Finally someone came to tell him that his friend had starved to death during a recent famine. This news made the ambassador despondent. He was caught in the irony of knowing that he had the money to save his friend, and yet he understood the man’s values as well. In sorrow, the ambassador broke his lute. “With my friend gone from the world, who will I play my music for?”

True friendship is a rare harmony.

Deng Ming Tao, 365 Tao

“True friendship comes when the silence between two people is comfortable.” — David Tyson Gentry

“But what is the good of friendship if one cannot say exactly what one means? Anybody can say charming things and try to please and to flatter, but a true friend always says unpleasant things, and does not mind giving pain. Indeed, if he is a really true friend he prefers it, for he knows that then he is going good.”
– Oscar Wilde

“The friendship that can cease has never been real.” — St. Jerome

“It is only the great hearted who can be true friends. The mean and cowardly, Can never know what true friendship means.”
– Charles Kingsley

“I offer you peace. I offer you love. I offer you friendship. I see your beauty. I hear your need. I feel your feelings. My wisdom flows from the Highest Source. I salute that Source in you. Let us work together for unity and love.”
– Mahatma Gandhi

“What sweetness is left in life, if you take away friendship? Robbing life of friendship is like robbing the world of the sun. A true friend is more to be esteemed than kinsfolk.” — Marcus Tullius Cicero

“To say that a man is your Friend, means commonly no more than this, that he is not your enemy. Most contemplate only what would be the accidental and trifling advantages of Friendship, as that the Friend can assist in time of need by his substance, or his influence, or his counsel. Even the utmost goodwill and harmony and practical kindness are not sufficient for Friendship, for Friends do not live in harmony merely, as some say, but in melody.”
– Henry David Thoreau

“Don’t walk in front of me; I may not follow. Don’t walk behind me; I may not lead. Just walk beside me and be my friend.” — Albert Camus

I received a birthday card the other day from Judi, my longest lasting friend. She and I have been friends since the fifth grade, when she moved to Arizona from New York. It’s always tough starting somewhere new, especially as a long-legged, gangly girl. I felt something special with her for some reason and was one of the few who befriended her, and we’ve been friends ever since.

We don’t talk sometimes for months or years at a time, yet always seem to be able to pick up the threads and reconnect with what’s going on in each other’s lives pretty quickly. We’ve been there for each other through the end of her first marriage, the raising of our children, my affair and the subsequent loss of other friends from my life, the death of my parents, the death of her nephew and stepdad, and so many other things. Whatever happens, we always know there is someone who will listen and understand and not judge.

We really only ever had one brief falling out, when I was spending too much time with my first love and not enough time with her. She made me see even then how important balance in life is, and I worked to spend more time with her and less with the boyfriend. These days, we don’t need to spend time with each other to know the threads of our friendship are secure. It is simply there.

I guess she is what Judith Viorst would refer to in her book Necessary Losses as a historical friend, one who understands my history and where I’ve been, as I understand hers. We knew each other way back when, and still love and care for each other. I’m really honored to have her in my life. I hope we will play music together for the rest of our lives together.

Arrr…

November 4th, 2005

Your pirate name is:
Iron Jenny Rackham
A pirate’s life isn’t easy; it takes a tough person. That’s okay with you,
though, since you a tough person. You have the good fortune of having a
good name, since Rackham (pronounced RACKem, not rack-ham) is one of the
coolest sounding surnames for a pirate. Arr

What’s your pirate name?

Lily

November 4th, 2005


Big Frog on Lily Pad with Root System, Tom Otterness

Dormant bulb, skin of tea-stained parchment,
Reaches into water with pubic tendrils –
It is the roots that make tall green shoots possible.

A lily bulb is the center of the future plant, containing all that is needed for growth. When it is set over water, it will first reach down with many white roots to drink deeply. Only then will it begin to split and put forth splendid green shoots. The same is true of life. We need to put deep roots down in order to bring forth beauty.

While most people can accept that anyone needs a strong foundation in life, we are speaking here of a more literal interpretation. Those who follow Tao believe in meditating upon all the centers of the body. It would be wrong to think of spirituality as wholly brain-oriented. Quite the contrary. One must establish a deep connection to one’s very energy, which arises in all parts of the body. One must come to terms with one’s sexual energy, which comes from the loins. One must become aware of one’s legs (what else holds you up all the time?) in order to become more stable. What is below is essential to what is above. What is below is the source of tremendous energy.

Therefore, when meditating, learn methods that focus on all parts of the body and mind. When moving, pay attention to the legs. When acting, make sure that you are well connected to others. When learning, master the fundamentals. If you do this, you will be able to fulfill your ultimate potential.

Deng Ming Tao, 365 Tao

I like not lady-slippers,
Not yet the sweet-pea blossoms,
Not yet the flaky roses,
Red or white as snow;
I like the chaliced lilies,
The heavy Eastern lilies,
The gorgeous tiger-lilies,
That in our garden grow.
– Thomas Bailey Aldrich

And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. — Matthew (ch. VII, v. 28-29)

And the stately lilies stand Fair in the silvery light,
Like saintly vestals, pale in prayer;
Their pure breath sanctifies the air,
As its fragrance fills the night.
– Julia C.R. Dorr

A flower’s fragrance declares to all the world that it is fertile,
available, and desirable, its sex organs oozing with nectar.
Its smell reminds us in vestigial ways of fertility, vigor, life-force,
all the optimism, expectancy, and passionate bloom of youth.
We inhale its ardent aroma and, no matter what our ages,
we feel young and nubile in a world aflame with desire.
- Diane Ackerman, A Natural History of the Senses

Lone and erect, beneath light’s primal flood,
A lily! and pure as any one of you.
- Mallarme

My lilies are sleeping right now, storing up their energy to bloom once again in the spring. They are among my favorite flowers. Unfortunately the tiger lilies have died out, so I need to replace them. But the Asian lilies do very well here, and come back year after year. So I grow a lot of those.

I tend to put my roots down deeply, sometimes too deeply for some people. I become overly connected to them, caring more about what happens to them than they sometimes seem to themselves. This had led to some major conflicts for me, when I feel too strong a connection. So, I’ve learned to be more cautious in who I connect with, and how deeply. Few people seem to really want to be connected in this world, no more how often they cry out for it. Our society fears real connection, and then we wonder why we feel so cut off from others. Perhaps it is really because so many of us are cut off from themselves, never really understanding or paying attention to their deepest feelings, totheir bodies, to their souls. We ought to teach meditation and self awareness in our schools as much as math and reading. But then, the Christians would get upset I suppose, accusing us of teaching touchy-feely subjects. Can’t have things like that in schools can we? But their touch-feely intelligent design garbage is ok. Feh.

I’m not nearly as good at meditation as I would like to be. I can do it after yoga, going deep into shavasana. But other than that, I don’t really meditate very often, though I have tried. I guess moving meditation is what I am best at. Sitting still, not so much. So I like this idea of meditation that focuses on all parts of the body and mind. I’ll have to explore that idea further….

November 3rd, 2005

Right-Wing “Wackos”

November 3rd, 2005

Salon.com News | Abramoff-Scanlon School of Sleaze

Consider one memo highlighted in a Capitol Hill hearing Wednesday that Scanlon, a former aide to Rep. Tom DeLay, R-Tx., sent the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana to describe his strategy for protecting the tribe’s gambling business. In plain terms, Scanlon confessed the source code of recent Republican electoral victories: target religious conservatives, distract everyone else, and then railroad through complex initiatives.

“The wackos get their information through the Christian right, Christian radio, mail, the internet and telephone trees,” Scanlon wrote in the memo, which was read into the public record at a hearing of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee. “Simply put, we want to bring out the wackos to vote against something and make sure the rest of the public lets the whole thing slip past them.”

Heh. THIS is what the Republican insiders REALLY think of you, conservative Christians. Wake up, already.

It’s My Birthday, Too, Yeah!

November 3rd, 2005


Judith Jaffe, Happy Birthday

So hubby gets me this card…

The Birthday Rules

1. The female always makes the rules
2. The rules are subject to change at any time without prior notification.
3. No male can possibly know all the rules. Nearly all females are born with this knowledge.
4. If the female suspects the male know all the rules, she must immediately change some or all of the rules.
5. The female is never wrong.
6. If the female is wrong, it is due to a misunderstanding which was a result of something the male did or said wrong.
7. The male must apologize immediately for causing said misunderstanding.
8. The female may change her mind at any time.
9. The male must never change his mind without the express written consent of the female.
10. The female has every right to be angry or upset at any time.
11. On birthdays, the female doesn’t get older, she just keeps getting better and better and better…

So, of course I went on the net and found additional rules…

12. The female must, under no circumstances, let the male know whether or not she wants him to be angry and/or upset.
13. The male is expected to mind read at all times.
14. Any attempt to document the rules could result in bodily harm.
15. If the female has PMS, all the rules are null and void.
16. The female is ready when she is ready.
17. The male must be ready at all times.
18. The male who doesn’t abide by the rules can’t take the heat, lacks backbone, and is a wimp.

Guess hubby didn’t know about rule 14….

There are three hundred and sixty-four days when you might get un-birthday presents … and only one for birthday presents, you know.
Lewis Carroll

Youth is a wonderful thing. What a crime to waste it on children. ~George Bernard Shaw

Growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional. ~Chili Davis

Those whom the gods love grow young. – Oscar Wilde

At middle age the soul should be opening up like a rose, not closing up like a cabbage. – John Andrew Holmes

political speech meets Magic: the Gathering

November 2nd, 2005


Stop SOPA