Random (but not really)

Monday, February 21, 2005

Today

Happy Birthday Erin!

Written by Michelle at 6:23 pm    

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Sunday, February 20, 2005

The Phoenix Guards & Five Hundred Years After

The Phoenix Guards (1991) & Five Hundred Years After (1994) Steven Brust

Sometimes you just need to read a book that you know is going to make you happy. When those times come upon me, I frequently read Steven Brust.

The Phoenix Guards and Five Hundred Years After are two of the ‘Khaavren Romances’ centered around Khaavren the Tiassa, and written in the style of Alexandre Dumas.

(S)omeone once asked, in all seriousness, which was the best translation of Dumas’ The Three Musketeers into English. The two fastest answers she got were “Learn French, as nobody’s managed to make a translation that’s half as good as the original”, and “The Phoenix Guards.”

Read More about Steven Brust’s The Phoenix Guards & Five Hundred Years After

Written by Michelle at 9:19 am    

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Categories: Books & Reading  

Saturday, February 19, 2005

Grrrr….

$#&$&@ stinkin’ spammers…

Due to the high amount of comment spam I’ve been getting, and the fact that Blacklist doesn’t seem to be working, currently comments require approval before they’ll appear.

Sorry.

So go ahead and comment, it’ll just take a few hours for the comment to appear. At least until the volumn of comment spam drops, or I get MT blacklist to work.

ADDENDUM the First: Latest version of MT installed…

ADDENDUM the Second: Latest version of Blacklist installed. Comments have now been set to previous status. Cross your fingers….

Written by Michelle at 10:18 am    

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Friday, February 18, 2005

Referrer Logs

Unlike Pericat, I’m okay with the top items in my referrer logs.

vlad taltos
odd things
plane picture
grass jelly
cirque dreams program
craft corner deathmatch
states admitted to the union
plush germs
stephen hawking iq
bathtub

Oddly enough, I know precisely which pages each request was sent to.

Written by Michelle at 8:30 am    

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Flagging

So, apropros of nothing in one of Pericat‘s posts, I wondered whether countries other than Canada had flags with plants.

Belize has a tree, although it’s not the focal point
British Indian Ocean Territory has a tree, though I have no idea where they’re located
Lebanon has a nice tree in the center of their flag.
Norfolk Island also has a tree in the center of their flag.

So, from what I found, it looks like only Canada, Lebanon, and Norfolk Island have flags that feature plant matter. Of those three, I have to say that I think the flag of our great enemy to the North, Canada, is the most attractive.

I love the internet.

All flags in alphabetical order
Flags of the World

Written by Michelle at 8:21 am    

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Categories: Politics  

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Enterprising

So, they’ve cancelledEnterprise.” the last Star Trek show left on the air.

Michael and I have not watched it (he, for lack of access; me, for profound lack of interest) but my mother (who has a framed certificate saying she graduated from Starfleet Academy) hated last season, and pretty much gave up watching. (Though I know that this season she at least watched the episodes with Brent Spinner.) So I’m not really surprised at this turn of events. Michael, however, is a little saddened, since this will be the first time for years that there won’t be a Star Trek show on.

To be honest, I could care less, since the only Star Trek show I really liked was “Deep Space Nine.” I can watch “The Next Generation” but can’t stand any of the other shows (and I’m pretty vehement about it too. Michael watched an episode of “Voyager” where they landed the ship on a planet. I think I made fun of that for years. [Giant ship. Itty bitty legs.]).

But he’s right that it is strange. No more Star Trek on TV, and no more movies.

Whatever will I mock?

Oh, wait. Reporting like this:
“Star Trek” movies also have been released.

Really?

Written by Michelle at 12:45 pm    

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Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Festival of Ideas

The schedule for this years Festival of Ideas is out. Except for “Ethical Leadership in Business” they all look very interesting. (Though come to think of it, ethical business values may be pure fantasy, so it COULD be interesting at that)

Monday, Feb 21 · Constance Morella
The Marshall Plan: The Gift That Keeps on Giving
The Legacy of the Marshall Plan
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Wednesday, Mar 2 · Julian Bond
Civil Rights: Now and Then
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Monday, Mar 7 · Carolyn Kepcher
Ethical Leadership in Business
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Monday, Mar 21 · Cyril Wecht
Role of Forensic Pathology in Modern Day Society
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Monday, Mar 28 · Moral Values Debate
Reds vs. Blues: The Question of Moral Values in America
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Monday, Apr 18 · Morgan Spurlock
Supersize Me
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Monday, Apr 25 · Seymour Hersh
The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib
Mountainlair Ballroom · 7:30pm

Written by Michelle at 12:19 pm    

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Today’s Word

I’ve always been rather fond of today’s word.

fey \FAY\ adjective
1 a chiefly Scottish : fated to die : doomed b : marked by a foreboding of death or calamity
2 a: able to see into the future : visionary b : marked by an otherworldly air or attitude c : crazy, touched
3 a: excessively refined : precious *b : quaintly
unconventional : campy
Merriam-Webster’s.com

Written by Michelle at 8:02 am    

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Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

Monday, February 14, 2005

Far Beyond Normal

Mental illness is infrequently presented well in books and TV, but there is one type of presentation that I’ve found fascinating.

The first time came across it was in the Margaret Weis and http://www.trhickman.com/ series “Death Gate Cycle”, where the wizard Zifnab (Zifnab is what brought this to mind. There’s just something pleasing about the name.) spouts off crazy ideas and concepts that are recognizable to the readers as quotes and ideas from modern books, movies and television. It was as if Zifnab couldn’t function well in his world, because he was channeling ours.

The second was in the Deep Space Nine episode, “Far Beyond the Stars“, where Sisko has an experience that displaces him in time and space. He is no longer Captain Benjamin Sisko in the 24th century, but is instead Benny Russell, a science fiction writer in the 1950s. Upon being given a picture of DS9, Benny begins to write the stories of Sisko’s experiences, and then begins to see flashes of Sisko’s world. These flashes, combined with the racial segregation of the 1950s,make it harder and harder for Benny to function in his own time. (If you’ve never seen “Far Beyond the Stars” I highly recommend it. Avery Brooks did an amazing job in both acting and directing.)

The third was an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, “Normal Again“, where Buffy is led to believe that the past six years of her life have been nothing but a schizophrenic episode. In that case, Buffy couldn’t function in the “real” world because she was entirely immersed in another world or reality. As with “Far Beyond the Stars” Buffy cannot function well in either world during the disruption. Although what I found most intriguing about this show was its ending, which left it open as to which reality was true.

Of course there are significant differences in the three examples. Zifnab was channeling the distant past, Benny was channeling the distant future, and Buffy an alternate reality, yet the idea behind each was the same: individuals tune into a reality other than ours, and it drives them mad.

It leads to the interesting idea that those who are classified as insane might simply be channeling other times, places, or realities. Like watching ‘General Hospital’, while getting the sound from ‘Days of Our Lives’. Of course for most people scizophrenia is a chemical disorder that for many can be treated with medication. But it’s intriguing to think that there are alternate realities, other worlds, and that there are people who are blessed or cursed with the ability to see through space and time, into those other realities.

Written by Michelle at 5:32 pm    

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Categories: Religion & Philosophy  

Sunday, February 13, 2005

Bad Medicine

Teresa, over at Making Light, has just had an unfortunate/horrible/vile mixup with her prescription medication.

I’ve taken various prescription medications for various problems at various times throughout my adulthood (all of which made me glad to have health coverage that paid for prescriptions drugs) and never really thought much about it.

Which is quite odd, considering that for many people, such medications keep them alive and functioning in a way that would have been impossible a century ago. (See the recent article in US News about FDR’s heart disease.)

Three incidents in the past made me think more seriously about the medicines that we take for granted. The first was when my grandmother got her blood pressure prescription filled while visiting my Aunt. (Point: It was not her regular pharmacist.) She got the pills home and thought that they looked different–they were–they were the wrong pills. If she hadn’t noticed, well, things could have been bad.

The second was my great-aunt Sophie going into the hospital after her heart slowed to a dangerous level. She was taking several different medications, all of which affected her heart, and they call combined to cause a serious problem.

The third incident was when my husband’s grandmother went to a gerontologist. One of the things she had to do was to take ALL of her meications with her. The gerontologist was able to drastically cut down her medications by cutting out some medicines entirely, and suddently she felt better than she had in a long time.

The point of this is that it is impossible for a doctor to know everything about all the medications out there. The problem is even worse if a person goes to several doctors for different problems. A specialist may be familar with the drugs to treat the disorders of their speciality, but is probably not familar with drugs used outside their speciality. And if the patient does not get all their prescriptions filled at the same pharmacist, the problem is that much worse.

If you consider this with the fact that prescription drug errors are on the rise, you are looking at a serious problem, whose best solution is for patients to be proactive: to check their prescriptions carefully each month, to make sure that all doctors they see know they full range of medications they are taking, to make sure that their pharmacist knows ALL the medications they are taking, and to ask the pharmacist about OTC drugs that may interact with prescription medications.

And the elderly who are taking multiple medications should consider seeing a gerontologist, because as we age, our metabolism changes, and a dosage that may be acceptable for a 40-year old may not be correct for a 70-year old.

So take her post, and this one, as a reminder to check your medications every time you pick them up, and to let your doctor know about all medicines you’re taking–even over-the-counter drugs and vitamins.

It could be worth your life to do so.

Written by Michelle at 12:22 pm    

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Hot Tea

1 bag Irish Breakfast Tea
1 Clove
Small portion cinnamon stick
Boiling water
Steep 3 to 5 minutes
Remove teabag, clove cinnamon
3 tsp sugar
Cream, to taste

Written by Michelle at 12:02 pm    

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Categories: Food  

Saturday, February 12, 2005

Random Happiness

ch940212.gif

Written by Michelle at 7:53 am    

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Friday, February 11, 2005

Non-Sequitur Day

Taking a minute or two to get caught up…

I received e-mail from Howard Chalkley last month, who kindly linked to my book pages. His weblog, where he occasionally talks about books, is hchalkley.blog.

I also discovered that a weblog called Reasonable Liberalism that had linked to me.

From Gina:
Go to: http://mappoint.msn.com/DirectionsFind.aspx
1. In Start and End, pull down “Address in” and choose Norway. 2. In
Start, enter “Haugesund” into City. 3. In End, enter “Trondheim” into
City. 4. Press “Get Directions”

fastestroute.jpg

Written by Michelle at 5:09 pm    

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Categories: Non-Sequiturs  

O Happiness!

Engrish.com

It’s like walking through the foreign food aisle of Jungle Jim’s, only better!

Written by Michelle at 12:51 pm    

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Categories: Non-Sequiturs  
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