Crankypantsing, Photography

Bookshelves

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Dawn mentioned in comments that bookshelves are for books, not knick-knacks. I obviously agree. Bookshelf real estate is a precious commodity in my house, and I don’t see the sense in wasting it on trinkets. On the other hand, knick-knacks have a way of insinuating themselves into my life (“Ooooh! Shiny!”), and once in my house, they breed in the corners like Tribbles. It won’t be long before my nice, new bookshelves are riddled with tchotchkes. It is inevitable.

Which brings me to today’s crankypants observation. I’ve mentioned my addiction to house porn? I’d watch TLC and HGTV all day, if I could. One thing I’ve noticed is that redecorating shows invariably waste a chunk of their budget on purchasing tchotchkes. What on earth is wrong with people, that they don’t have boxes and bins and bags and closets full of crap, so that they have to actually go out and purchase decorative junk? I just don’t get it. I collect junk because I like it and want to look at it, not because I need something to match the sofa.

Photo: Speaking of junk accumulating. My mom had her chimney replaced years ago (it had separated from the house and was leaning out into thin air), and the pile of bricks from the old chimney is still lying right where it landed.

Pets, Photography

We Have Achieved Shelving

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I’ve been trying to find time to knock together these rickety-assed shelves for weeks, and finally managed it last weekend. I opted to use a couple of shelf brackets to stabilize them, instead of plywood backs or swaybars. Eventually, they’ll get a coat of paint and proper backs, but for now, they’re functional. Hallelujah! I was sick and tired of piles of boxes of books everywhere.

Our lovely spokesmodel is Pandora, who, with the perversity inherent in all cats, chose to take a bath while I was taking the first photo. Pandora has perfected the art of being exactly where you don’t want her, at the precise moment when you least want her there. She also has a death wish, in which she indulges by way of flopping around on top of the dog’s bones and chewy toys. Harriet isn’t the most patient or tolerant of dogs, so I think she deserves some sort of medal for not putting the smackdown on Pandora.

(And, yes, I do have lots of kiddie books.)

Ladybusiness

Homestead Women

[Edited to add video and update broken links 16 Oct 2015]

A few months ago, I stopped at the Mission thrift shop and picked up a stack of old medical and high school text books. My intention was to use them for art projects, either altering them or using the illustrations in collage work. Because I’m still suffering from a lack of motivation, I spent some time this morning leafing through them, and came across this photo of four sisters who made a homestead claim in Nebraska Territory. The book is old and the print quality is poor, but I thought I’d scan and share it anyway.

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about contemporary popular assumptions about the roles women played in the settling of this country. I suspect that women, like these four sisters, were not the dainty flowers that we are led to believe they were. Although it wasn’t common, women were legally able to file for Homestead claims as head of household. And, they did. Homesteading was back breaking work. It involved building a home by hand, planting and harvesting crops, and improving the land, in a wild and isolated environment. The women below look like they’re made of stern stuff. I hope they succeeded, but the reality is that many homesteaders ended up failing and having to forfeit their claims.

Women Homesteaders
Caption: They built “a little sod shanty on a claim.” The four sisters shown below claimed land in Custer County, Nebraska under the Homestead Act of 1862. There were few trees on the Great Plains so the pioneers had to build shelters of earth or “sod.” — Image and text from Moon, Glenn W. and John H. MacGowan, Story of Our Land and People. NP: Henry Holt and Company, 1955. (LC card catalog number: 55-5854.)

Addendum: Holy crap! Ask and ye shall receive, I guess. I did a little Googling, and came up with a link to women homesteaders in Nebraska. And, guess what? The above photo is of the Chrisman sisters. It was taken on June 14, 1886 by Solomon D. Butcher.

The Chrisman sisters lived near the Goheen settlement on Lieban Creek in Custer County. Lizzie Chrisman filed the first homestead claim in 1887. Lutie Chrisman filed her claim the following year. The sisters took turns living with each other so they could fulfill the residence requirements without living alone. The other two sisters, Hattie and Jennie Ruth, had to wait until they came of age to file. All the land was gone before the youngest sister was old enough to file, but all four were well-known members of the community.

Ladybusiness, News & Politics

Family Values in the Culture of Control

Via Feministing.

Apparently, in the city of Black Jack, you must conform to a specific standard of “family” or you’ll be run out of town. According to a CBS News article, city council members in the Missouri town have “rejected a measure allowing unmarried couples with multiple children to live together. The mayor said those who fall into that category could soon face eviction.” The couple has three children in common, yet the city council refuses to grant them permission to live together. Since when is the government in charge of telling folks what forms their families must take? Since when is it appropriate to force families to choose between housing and staying together?

This bit made me laugh (It’s funny, cuz it’s true!):

In the statement, McCourt said, “the city provides information about its occupancy permit requirements to anyone who requests it. … As mayor, I am required by state law to uphold the laws of the city of Black Jack.”

Mr. McCourt is apparently familiar with his Douglas Adams:

‘But Mr Dent, the plans have been available in the local planning office for the last nine months.’

‘Oh yes, well as soon as I heard I went straight round to see them, yesterday afternoon. You hadn’t exactly gone out of your way to call attention to them had you? I mean like actually telling anybody or anything.’

‘But the plans were on display …’

‘On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.’

‘That’s the display department.’

‘With a torch.’

‘Ah, well the lights had probably gone.’

‘So had the stairs.’

‘But look, you found the notice didn’t you?’

‘Yes,’ said Arthur, ‘yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying Beware of the Leopard.’ A cloud passed overhead. It cast a shadow over Arthur Dent as he lay propped up on his elbow in the cold mud. It cast a shadow over Arthur Dent’s house. Mr Prosser frowned at it. ‘It’s not as if it’s a particularly nice house,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry, but I happen to like it.’ ‘You’ll like the bypass.’ ‘Oh shut up,’ said Arthur Dent. ‘Shut up and go away, and take your bloody bypass with you. You haven’t got a leg to stand on and you know it.

Ladybusiness

But the next post such stories I will tell

I trust everyone made it through the Ides okay? No knives in the back? I apologize in advance for the lack of Deep Thoughts and for the to-ing and fro-ing. Some posts are just like that. Tomorrow’s might be better, but I wouldn’t want to bet on it. But, hey, 4 out of 6 paragraphs have to do with animals, so that’s some sort of theme, isn’t it?

I had a most pleasant surprise this morning when I got to my car. The lovely Ms. Lea had stopped by on her way home last night and installed a clip on my seatbelt to keep it from strangling, or, hopefully, decapitating me. I’m so short that even with the seatbelt adjusted down as far as it’ll go, it still lies across my neck. Not a good thing for either comfort or safety.

And, further proof that this will be a good day, I saw a gray fox. It was hard to tell because he was a little unkempt and the brightness of my headlights washed out his color, but his coat looked to be light greyish and his tail had a black tip. It was too small for a coyote, too large for a cat, and not shambly enough for a ‘possum. It was definitely a slinky little fox.

I also had a cute encounter with a mouse when I stopped for gas. I went in to buy a pop, and as I walked back to my car, I saw what I thought was a leaf scuttling along the ground between the front tires. When I got closer, I saw it was a little mouse. He ran into my rear wheel and poked his head out between the alloy spokes and stared and stared and stared at me with his shiny black eyes. I told him he ought to move along, because it would be a long and unpleasant ride to Bloomington. I hope he took my advice.

Via Boing Boing, Garfield is finally funny. Really, really funny. The best part is that you can play along at home. Just remove Garfield’s thought bubbles, et voila, instant improvement!

I’ve added Carol J. Adams’ The Pornography of Meat to my Amazon wish list. Dear lord, there is a lot of bizarre advertising out there, and the worst of it seems to be that which involves the pimping of meat. The reviews of this and Adams’ earlier book are a mixed bag, but I’m curious about what she has to say on the subject, and about where she falls on the animal welfare-animal rights spectrum. I don’t have a lot of patience–precisely zero, in fact–with PeTA and those who knowingly or ignorantly buy their flavor of Kool-Aid. I do think that there is a lot that can and should be done to ensure that animals are treated more humanely and respectfully in the US, but I think PeTA (remember, small e for ethical!) has gotten it spectacularly wrong.

Art, Crankypantsing

Happy Ides of March!

Beware, this post contains crankypantsing.

First, certain people I work with speak far too often and far too loudly. I wish they would either shut the hell up or use their indoor voices. One of these days, I’m going to snap, and yell, “Shhh! This is a library!”

Second, I pulled a muscle in my neck and it’s killing me. I’m praying that little movement and much ibuprofen will be of help.

Instant Review: Creating Sketchbooks for Embroiderers and Textile Artists by Kay Greenlees

According to Amazon.com, it hasn’t been released yet. It came through my coworker’s cataloging queue, today, so I got a chance to check it out.

  • Eye candy galore
  • Chock-a-block with color plates
  • Hardback with sewn binding
  • Amazon.com has it listed for $15.72, but the US price listed on the cover is $24.95, which is still damned good value for money

The book is geared toward the use of sketchbooks for fiber artists, but I think there is plenty of information and inspiration for those who, like me, are fiber-challenged. It’s not really a journaling resource, as it focuses more on the relationship sketchbooks play in the creation of finished artworks. Not that journalers wouldn’t get their money’s worth out of it; I think they would. It’s just not a journaling-specific resource, so it deals less with personal exploration than it does with the process of creating visual concepts. Anyway, I’ve added it to my Amazon wish list and will be purchasing it when it comes out. I’ve definitely spent more money on lesser books.

Oh, hey! My neck/shoulder cramp is nearly gone. Hallelujah!

Art, Journals

Soul Mapping

Soul Map Chapter 2
Soul Map, Chapter 2

Last year, I started working through the book Soul Mapping. I got a few chapters into it, and the going got rough, so I put it aside. I picked it up a few weeks ago, and have been trying to do a little work in it every day. I’m not big on self-help books, but this one is geared toward artists and finding motivation and inspiration, so it’s a little bit different.

One of the goals of the exercise is to develop a visual vocabulary that can be implemented in one’s artwork. So, it’s helpful to artists who feel they have run out of inspiration or who are having trouble finding their voices. The exercises require a lot of of both written and visual journaling. Each chapter culminates in the creation of a small soul map, which together will ultimately form a large soul map.

Unsurprisingly, the beginning exercises deal largely with childhood and formative issues, which can be incredibly difficult for some people to sort through. When I started the book, I was working through it along with a group of people on one of my art lists. We all did really well with the first two chapters. When we hit chapter three, everything fell to pieces. I guess everyone felt it was just too damned hard.

Well, I’ll be damned if I’m going to let it get the better of me. I guess that’s why I picked it back up again. Just based on how large an impact the first couple chapters had on me, I know there is a huge amount to be gleaned from persevering and forcing myself to finish working through the book. Boy, is it ever hard, though!

Soul Map Chapter 1
Soul Map, Chapter 1

And, on a lighter note:

There’s a commercial for a local personal injury attorney that cracks me up. Apparently, the best selling point they can offer up is that they will argue your case in court using Power Point. Oh yeah, that impresses the hell out of me.

Art, Crankypantsing, Meta

I’ll Take Potpourri for $200, Alex

Here’s a look at marginalia.

I have had about a million discussions about the proper care and handling of books, both from the perspective of a caretaker and an owner. A common sentiment among bibliophiles is that modifying a book in any way is an act of vandalism. Book ownership as a trusteeship; we should preserve our books for future generations, so that they might experience those books as they were originally published. I don’t buy that argument, though. A book is a living thing. The very act of reading it transforms it. From oils in your hands, which over time develop into stains, to creases along the spine, a book that has been read bears scars that testify to its life’s travels. When further transformed, by the addition of annotations, a book becomes a unique and priceless historical document. Not that my marginalia have any pretensions to such importance, but I think they are a far cry from vandalism.

One of my favorite high school teachers said that, if you hadn’t written in a book, you hadn’t truly read it. I don’t know that that’s strictly true, but being given the permission to write in text books dramatically changed the learning process for me. From that point on, I underlined, bracketed, highlighted, dog-eared, and took notes in the margins, all with great glee and abandon. Books became living things I interacted with, instead of passive things that simply existed to be read. Thank you, Mrs. Taylor, for that, and for a whole lot of other stuff. You were one of the bestest teachers EVAR.

I mention this, because it relates to my next altered book project. I still don’t have anything concrete enough to share, but it shall be forthcoming. Soon!

A Festivus for the Restivus? I used to dislike Seinfeld, but then I moved to the Land of No Cable, and discovered that when there’s nothing else on television, Seinfeld isn’t so bad. In fact, it’s occasionally damned good. There’s rarely a day that goes by that something Seinfeldian doesn’t crop up. Right now, as it’s the Solstice Season (Bill O’Reilley can kiss my fat ass), I feel like work is nothing but a revolving staff party. I hate staff parties. I don’t go to them, it makes me cranky to get the inevitable food sign-up memos, and I especially hate the twelfty gabillion e-mails counting down the commencement of the inevitable party. The worst, though, is when higher-ups go around corralling and shaming anti-social folks like me into attending. That especially pisses me off.

So, a co-worker called this morning (I’ve mentioned that I’m the only one who seems able to answer the phone?), asking me to go downstairs to meet her at the loading dock with a book truck, so that she could deliver goodies for this afternoon incarnation of The Party. I was not amused. Not amused in the least. It’s enough to make the Baby Jeebus cry. And, if that doesn’t do it, maybe this will? I mean, who wouldn’t want a menorah made out of tampons?

If you haven’t noticed, I’m not exactly brimful of the Holiday Spirit, whatever the hell that is. Not even the Viggo Mortensen Advent calendar has been able to ungrinchify me.

And now for a quick game of Statstacularity. I have to wonder if the folks who get to my blog or websites via a search engine bother to read the accompanying descriptive text. Because, somehow, I don’t think they do. Otherwise, the person searching for “ejaculating penis photos” probably wouldn’t have bothered visiting. I’m just sayin’… Also, “n.u.d.e. celebrity photos.” And, what’s up with acronymization? Is it supposed to be some sort of super s33kr1t code? I’m still getting lots of hits for puggles and “winter sky,” though singly, not in combination. There’s a thought, though. Imagine a Pug x Beagle, ears outstretched, soaring majestically through the brooding winter sky.

And since I’m in the mood to pick nits (whenever am I not?), the Maya people speak Mayan. There is no -n on the end of the word when it refers to the people themselves, or when it refers to their artifacts. It’s one thing for regular folks to get it wrong, but there is just no excuse for news editors not knowing the difference. That said, this mural is pretty damned cool. What’s special about it is that it dates from ~100BCE, which is 200 years before the classic period. These may be the earliest Maya wall paintings to be discovered.

Mural paintings in San Bartolo

This portion of the mural depicts a king making a blood sacrifice by piercing his penis. The practice was common among Maya rulers, who bore responsibility for the well being of their subjects. The genitals or tongue would be pierced using either an obsidian blade or a stingray spine. Pieces of bark paper were soaked in the blood, or, in some cases, ropes made of bark paper were pulled through holes pierced through the skin. The blood-soaked paper would then be burned in an offering to the gods.

To the ancient Maya, blood sacrifice was necessary for the survival of the gods, who in turn provided the Maya with everything they needed. The gods could not exist without the Maya, and the Maya could not exist without their gods.

I’m all blogged out, but since I invoked Viggo up there somewhere, I’ll leave you on this note:

I’m not anti-Bush; I’m anti-Bush behavior. In other words, I’m against cheating, greed, cruelty, racism, imperialism, religious fundamentalism, treason, and the seemingly limitless capacity for hypocrisy shown by Bush and his administration.
— Viggo Mortensen

Crankypantsing, Meta

Stop! Thief!

While perusing my website stats, I found that someone was using one of my photographs as the background image for their blog. It was a large image, too, and because they had linked directly to my file instead of placing it on their own server, they were sucking my bandwidth. Bastards! I renamed the file and replaced it with another containing “image used without permission” text.

What is wrong with people? Do they think that, just because they found it on Teh Internets, they have a right to steal it? Or, do they just not care? I don’t get it. It’s not even like this girl was being half-way smart about it, either. If she’d copied it to her own server, I would have been less likely to have noticed (or cared!) that she’d taken it.

And, damn! I made brownies yesterday and forgot to put one in my lunch this morning. I also made some kick-ass vegetable soup, which I did remember to bring. It’s got all sorts of good stuff in it: garlic, green onions, tomatoes, potatoes, broccoli, carrots, celery, and brussels sprouts (I didn’t have cabbage, which is just as well, because I think the brussels sprouts were even better). It’s rich and thick and just what I needed, bein’ deathly ill an’ all.

I received my copy of The Diary of Anne Frank:  the revised critical edition–just in time, too, because I needed something to entertain me while I battled the plague. The book is a bit overwhelming, and, at 800+ pages is too large and heavy to be a comfortable read-in-bed book, but I couldn’t wait to get started on it. I haven’t gotten to the actual diaries yet–yes, diaries, plural. While in hiding, Anne wrote, then rewrote her diary with an eye toward publication. Then, her father expurgated much from the version that was originally published, so there are three versions of the diary–because I’m working my way through the documentation at the beginning of the book. There’s quite a lot of it, so it’s no small feat. Not that it’s not fascinating–it is!–but I can’t wait to get to the diaries themselves. Obviously, I’m reading them because I’m interested in the subject matter. I’m also interested in them as a journaler, though, so that gives me another perspective to consider as I’m reading them.

Uncategorized

Are We There Yet?

Is it really Friday? Finally? This has been a spectacularly long and worrisome week, and I’m glad it’s pretty much wrapped up.

Saturday, I woke up to find that Rory had another blockage. One of the vets from the 24-hour emergency clinic has a practice about 30 minutes south of me, so I took him there. The plan was that the vet would clear the blockage, then take Rory home with him that night and take him to work at the emergency clinic with him the next day. He cleared the blockage and catheterized him, but he became blocked again. That blockage was cleared, and I was supposed to pick him up Thursday, but he became blocked yet again. Apparently, the crystals in his bladder are so compacted that they’re like concrete. There is also quite a bit of scar tissue in his bladder and urethra. Poor cat. That has to be hellishly painful.

Luckily, one of the vets who works at the emergency clinic also has a cat clinic–in Spencer! She’s got ultrasound equipment at her clinic and will, hopefully, be able to break up the mass of crystals so that they can be passed. Assuming that goes well, he’ll come home on Saturday or Monday to recover. Later, he’ll need to have his urethra widened, so that if more crystals form, they will be able to be passed.

I have no idea what a week’s stay at an emergency clinic is going to cost. I don’t want to know how much it’s going to cost. The mere thought makes me want to throw up.

So, since I’m in denial, I thought I’d engage in some retail therapy. Not a lot of retail therapy, mind you, but a little bit.

When I was in 4th grade, our class read a dramatic adaptation of Anne Frank’s diary. It was a bizarre experience, because the story covered only her time in hiding. There was very little explanation for why she was in hiding, or for what happened to her after her family was found. I expect that the powers that be decided that such details were beyond the comprehension of young children (heck, they’re beyond the comprehension of most adults) or that they might give kids nightmares (again, who wouldn’t get nightmares?). The thing that sticks out in my mind is that we were told that concentration camp victims were treated like dogs, and that Anne died a month before her camp was liberated. I remember visualizing people being kept in dog kennels and being fed dog food, and, while that would’ve sucked mightily, I couldn’t, for the life of me, figure out why people had died from it. Let that be a lesson to those who deal with children to be careful what you tell them.

I read the Scholastic edition of Anne’s diary when I was in 6th grade. By that time, I better understood what had happened during the Holocaust and what it meant to be an inmate in one of the Nazi death camps. I also began to understand why I found Anne’s story so interesting. Obviously, it gave me a window on the Holocaust. The horrors that happened are like stars in the sky–too numerous to comprehend when taken all together. But, looking at those events through the lens of one person’s experience provides a framework to hang everything on. More importantly for me, though, I think my fascination with Anne’s story lay in the realization that one person’s voice can be important; that a single voice can resonate so clearly across time and space

The Nazis could kill millions of people, but they couldn’t stifle the voice of one small girl. That is power.

So, anyway, when I was in high school, my family moved across state. I lost almost all of my childhood books, including my well worn copy of Anne Frank’s diary. I haven’t read it since then, and I thought it was about time to visit my old friend.