Random (but not really)

Wednesday, May 19, 2004

May Showers

Are giving me lovely flowers.

You can check out what is blooming right now in my garden.

In addition to my climbing rose and lemon lillies, I also have flowers on my yellow minature rose, the violet, and the day lilies along the front of the house are almost ready to bloom. The holly plants have put out scads of new leaves, and the hydrangea and hibiscus, which I had feared were dead, are doing quite well.

It’s kinda hard to be depressed when surrounded by all this growth and all these flowers.

Written by Michelle at 6:25 pm    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: House & Garden  

Good Versus Evil

My weblog is 39% evil, 61% good according to the Gematriculator.

Gematria is searching for different patterns through the text, such as the amount of words beginning with a vowel. If the amount of these matches is divisible by a certain number, such as 7 (which is said to be God’s number), there is an incontestable argument that the Spirit of God is ever present in the text. Another important aspect in gematria are the numerical values of letters: A=1, B=2 … I=9, J=10, K=20 and so on. The Gematriculator uses Finnish alphabet, in which Y is a vowel.

How could this be anything but true, when it tells me:
“Value of phrase “health care rant health care in the us website stuff site redesign danger!”: 3889 3+8+8+9=28=7×4″

It also gives me points of interest:
Amount of letters: 31318 31318=7×4474
Amount of different words: 1813 1813=7x7x37 1+8+1+3=13
Amount of different words beginning with vowel: 357 357=7×51
Amount of different words beginning with consonant: 1456 1456=7×208 1456=13×112
Amount of words: 7158 7+1+5+8=21=7×3
Amount of words beginning with vowel: 2051 2051=7×293
Amount of words beginning with consonant: 5107 5+1+0+7=13
(via Language Log)

Written by Michelle at 11:52 am    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Tuesday, May 18, 2004

Read Out

Sorry I’ve been quiet, but I’ve had stuff on my mind recently.

So to drown all that stuff out, when I haven’t been working on the house, or gardening, (or at work), I’ve been reading:
J.R.R. Tolkein: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, The Return of the King
Lemony Snickett: A Bad Beginning
Terry Pratchett: Pyramids, Guards! Guards!, Faust Eric
Ann Marston: Kingmaker’s Sword

So if you want to know where I am for the next bit, check the garden–or the sofa.

Written by Michelle at 8:21 am    

Comments (2)  Permalink

Categories: Books & Reading  

Friday, May 14, 2004

Congratulations All Around

Congratulations are in order for several people this week:

Congratulations to pericat, who just became a Canadian citizen!

Congratulations to Erin, who should have been sworn in as a member of the WV bar, thus making her officially a poet-writer-lawyer!

Written by Michelle at 5:44 pm    

Comments (2)  Permalink

Categories: Uncategorized  

Thursday, May 13, 2004

I Write Like A Boy

I was reading Respectful of Otters and was fascinated by the discussion about Rivka’s gender based on her writing style. Via some Language Log posts about Rivka’s writing style, I found the Gender Genie, that analyzes writing for gender differences.

According to the Gender Genie, I’m male. I analyzed two posts, one on the nature of evil (Words: 635 Female Score: 715 Male Score: 1580) and post on an NPR news piece on South Africa (Words: 250 Female Score: 344 Male Score: 583)

So. I write like a boy.

And I don’t care.

Written by Michelle at 3:00 pm    

Comments (2)  Permalink

Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

Where Have I Been

I’ve been busy. But a different kind of busy from studying.

We went to my cousin Eric’s graduation. It was lovely to see everyone, even if it was just for a short time.

Then we came home and did a lot of work on the house. We painted the front porch (and are now the proud owners of a paint sprayer–there was no way were going to paint the latice by hand), and the window frames (this involved ladder climbing and contortionism to paint around the awnings). And of course I did a small amount of gardening: I purchased another astilbe for the shade along the side of the house, and another Calibrachoa–this one purple–for a hanging basket. All in all I’m pretty pleased with the way things look. I’ll have more pictures of the plants as I straighten and mulch.

Written by Michelle at 12:27 pm    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: House & Garden  

Monday, May 10, 2004

VOTE

VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE!

Tuesday 11 May 2004 is WV Primary ELECTION DAY!

If you would like information on candidates:
Project Vote Smart
West Virginia Secretary of State
League of Women Voters-West Virginia

WV Democratic Party
WV Libertatian Party
(No, you may not have the address for the Republican Party)

Make sure that you exercise your right to VOTE!

If you would like to see how voting made a difference in the results of Presidential elections for the 20th century, you can go here

Remember, if you don’t vote, then you can’t bitch.

VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE!

Written by Michelle at 9:40 pm    

Comments (1)  Permalink

Categories: Politics  

Saturday, May 8, 2004

To Live Is To Fly

It’s now been ten years since I graduated from college. That means it’s been ten years since Mike Marlin’s death.

It’s strange the things that stick with us, and take on importance in our lives.

We went to the same high school; he graduated a year behind me. But in a high school with less than 100 people, class rank wasn’t really that significant. We both ran track, and that may have been the only thing we had in common. In college we had a few friends in common, and we hung out in the same places, but for the most part his friends didn’t seem to care much for me, so I spoke to him only rarely. But then I do have a tendency to avoid talking to people—fear of rejection I suppose—that perhaps leads people to avoid me.

I have regrets. I wonder whether I should have talked to him more, whether my avoidance of people is something I should change—whether I should reach out to people more, and to hell with the fear of rejection. I regret never thanking him for carrying me to the bus after I passed out at my last track meet. That and the fact that he was one of the people who was never cruel to me in high school. Sounds stupid when I put it that way, but that’s how it was. It was only when I went to Catholic school that I learned what cruelty really was. You take small acts of kindness where you can find them.

My absolute hatred of the Dominion Post stems from this time. Their front page picture of his body after it had been drug from the river was a punch in the stomach. I’ll never understand why people feel the need to publish pictures of such things. What good does it serve? There was a recent debate over the publishing of the photos of the mutilated bodies of the contract workers. Some claimed that people needed to see the photos to understand the true horror of it. I don’t get it. What is wrong with people that they can’t be outraged over the treatment of humans, unless it’s in full, living color? We can’t feel the horror unless we see it? That can’t possibly be right, although sometimes I do wonder.

But it’s been ten years now. And I still think about it, and I wonder how much has remained with others. How frequently do his friends think of him? Does his family wonder what his life would have been like?

I’d been thinking for the past several months about this upcoming anniversary. It’s odd I’ve thought more about his death, than the changes in my own life over the past ten years. I’ve also been thinking about death in general. It’s strange how death and illness seem to come in waves. I won’t go to a funeral for years, then suddenly I’m surrounded by grief.

I was recently thinking about my grandfather’s funeral. There has, for obvious reasons, been a lot of discussion of military funerals in recent months. Of whether it is respectful to show caskets coming back. Personally, I don’t see how honoring those who died in service to our country could be disrespectful, but then there is a lot I don’t understand.

My grandfather’s funeral was a hard thing. Not because we were close, but because we weren’t. He’d gone down to the local convenience store, like he did every day, to buy lottery tickets. He had a heart attack, and died right there. Someone stole his wallet—took it from his body. Of everything, that was probably the hardest thing for me to comprehend.

My cousin was in Jr. ROTC then. Still in high school, in his dress uniform, and trying so very hard not to cry. He was probably closer to my grandfather than anyone. It was painful to see such grief. Hard to see someone hurting so much. Hard because I felt like I should be hurting that much, yet I wasn’t. Don’t get me wrong, I was sad, but it wasn’t the same. During the memorial service my uncle described how my grandfather would play with his grandkids, but to me it was as if he was describing a stranger. My grief was for the relationship I never had, more than the relationship I did have.

So I’ve been thinking about this, and the death of my grandfather, and the death of Mike Marlin. There are so many ways to die, and so many different types of grief. Sometimes I feel as if that is what growing old is—absorbing all that grief, and making it part of you.

Sometimes I feel as if part of me has been old for as long as I can remember.

Written by Michelle at 8:28 am    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Thursday, May 6, 2004

Site Redesign

Site redesign time. I’ve made changes to almost everthing except here and the books section.

If you have time, please let me know what you think.

ADDENDUM the First: Anyone out there who is good at CSS? I’m having a problem getting a border to stretch completely across the screen in IE. The section is set to 100%, but there is a gap at the right side of the screen. Any suggestions? (It works fine in Mozilla and Opera)

Written by Michelle at 4:53 pm    

Comments (7)  Permalink

Categories: Uncategorized  

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

Nail Guns Scare Me (with Good Reason)

A construction worker has miraculously survived after six nails were embedded in his skull.

You must click on the link and see the x-ray.

I am, of course, immediately reminded of Phineas Gage. I wonder whether the portions of his brain that were damaged will lead to similar problems such as Phineas Gage had.

Written by Michelle at 11:58 am    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: Science, Health & Nature  

WV Governor Race

Monty Warner is running for governor of West Virginia. This is apparently how a good Republican conducts business in West Virginia:

Their building is worth more than $1 million, but their property tax bill was only $5.57.
They bought the building three years ago for $10,000, and recently put it on the market for $795,000.
And their family businesses are delinquent on more than $75,000 in local property taxes.

“Things are dead in Philippi. No new company wants to come to Philippi, West Virginia. No new business wants to move to West Virginia,” he (Kris Warner) said.

The Warners are delinquent on what little property taxes they were charged for this year on the $1 million property, Sipe said — $5.55.
….
Another company owned by the four brothers, McCoy 6, owes more than $50,000 in property taxes in Morgantown.
from the Charleston Gazette

Thanks to S for the heads up.

Written by Michelle at 8:08 am    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: Politics  

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

The Nature of Responsibility

I’ve been thinking about the latest horrors in Iraq, and once again I am thinking about the nature of responsibility. Various people are saying that the soldiers were possibly told what to do and how to do it by Military Intelligence. Some soldiers are claiming that they weren’t trained in how to handle prisoners. Our president has said that these actions were shameful and appalling.

But no one is apologizing. No one is taking responsibility. No one is saying “I’m sorry this happened and I’m going to do my best to make sure nothing like this happens again.”

I was loathe to say anything about the abuses in Abu Ghraib, because I don’t know anything about it other than what I’ve read, and my only claim to the situation is that those actions were taken in my name. So what is my responsibility in this? Should I stand up and say that this is wrong, and I do not approve of what has been done by my country in my name? Or are my words only joining the name calling and finger pointing?

Is it my responsibility to stand up and point out evil where I see it, to let people know that these actions were the actions of a few and that those who are part of the majority will not stand for such abuses? Or should I stay out of the way and allow those who know what they are talking take care of the problem, and be effective in their actions instead of drowning out those who could effective with a chorus of “Me too!�”

Where does my responsibility lie?

I think that perhaps I must stand up and point out wrongs where I see them. That perhaps silence is a tool of the enemy (and I don’t mean any specific enemy here, but rather the enemy that once might have been called Satan–the enemy of allowing evil to exist uncontested.)

The problem is that there are so many battles to be fought, and so little time in which to fight them.

Written by Michelle at 8:24 am    

Comments (1)  Permalink

Categories: Religion & Philosophy  

Good Grief

My mom, in a blonde wig.

(Dad’s going to get me the paper copy that I’ll scan for a better picture.)

Written by Michelle at 8:18 am    

Comments (0)  Permalink

Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Monday, May 3, 2004

Very Bad Things

I haven’t said anything about the horrid things that have been happening in Iraq, mostly because I don’t know what to say, other than things like that should never happen.

But they did.

Teresa Nielsen Hayden at Making Light has an eloquent post, as well as a synopsis of the news, and links to the pictures at Memory Hole. The only link I’m giving is TNH’s, so you can read that, and follow the links from there.

I do, however, disagree with Teresa about the flag. Although those who did those acts did them in my name, in the name of my country, the flag and our country are more than that. I will continue to fly the flag with all the respect and dignity it deserves, for those whose actions are not represented by the actions of those ‘soldiers’ in Abu Ghraib.

ADDENDUM the First: Pericat has a nice bit on the stanford prison experiment and the relationship of prisons to society.

ADDENDUM the Second: While I’m thinking about it, here again are the rules for flying the US flag.

Is it okay to have a flag t-shirt with words written on it?
No, the flag should never be worn and no, the flag should never have marks or words written upon it. Section 8d (see below): “The flag should never be used as wearing apparel.” Section 8g: “The flag should never have placed upon it, nor on any part of it, nor attached to it any mark, insignia, letter, word, figure, design, picture, or drawing of any nature.”

Is it okay to use flag napkins or flag paper plates?
No. Section 8i (see below) reads: “It should not be … printed or otherwise impressed on paper napkins or boxes or anything that is designed for temporary use and discard.”

Is it okay for an advertisement to use the flag?
No. Section 8i (see below) reads, “The flag should never be used for advertising purposes in any manner whatsoever.”

ADDENDUM the Third: Go read this article from the BBC on the abuse of captives and the Stanford experiment.

Written by Michelle at 7:20 pm    

Comments (4)  Permalink

Categories: Politics  
« Previous PageNext Page »

Powered by WordPress