Crankypantsing, Genealogy

Mormons Being Creepy

So, as I’ve been going through all this genealogy BS, I’ve come across a metric fuck-load of references to the phrase “sealed to parent/child,” along with recent-ish dates. Wondering what on earth that might mean, I went a-Googling. Lo and behold, it refers to LDS baptism and binding. Basically, no matter when you died, or, apparently, what your faith was when you keeled over (boggle), your present day descendants, if they are endowed[1] LDS members, can opt to have you baptised and sealed to them. In other words, your spirits are then eternally bound together.

Now, I’m all for folks practicing whatever sort of mumbo-jumbo floats their boats, but I think it’s of the utmost importance for people to have free choice of which flavor of Kool-Aid they prefer to drink. I’m squicked out by the thought that hundreds of years after someone’s death, their descendants can fool around with their eternal souls.

I think that definitely qualifies as spiritual “Bad Touch.”

I’m just trying to imagine how some of the Quakers I’ve been researching would react if they found out their souls were being enshrined against their wills in some sort of Mormon death cult. I mean, these were folks who took their own brand of religion seriously enough that they were willing to come to this country in order to practice it freely. They also don’t strike me as folks who were into super secret rituals.

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[1] What endowment means is anyone’s guess. It apparently entails participating in an uber-s00per-s33kr1t ceremony that none must speak of ever after.

News & Politics

A Cavalcade of Wacky News Stories

Nacho jesus
Nachos of Turin

Holy nachos, Batman! Workers at a Florida restaurant found the image of the Son of God at the bottom of a nacho pan.

Mother Theresa Cinnamon Bun
Mother Theresa Cinnamon Bun

Mr. Christ isn’t the only one whose personage was in the news. A cinnamon bun bearing the likeness of Mother Theresa was stolen on Christmas day from a Nashville, Tennessee coffee house.

A man, um, crossed the US-Mexican border via cannon.

It’s official, Canadians can legally have group sex in clubs.

A hilarious music video, starring Flickr Creative Commons images. If you have broadband, download and watch it. It’s really, really funny in a kinda sad, kinda sweet sorta way.

This is not your grandma’s needlepoint. (Is it just me, or does the one of Axl Rose look like Jeffrey Dahmer?)

In other arty news, here are some really cool sculptures made out of old tires.

And, speaking of tires, which brings me to cars, I think I’ve mentioned that I don’t like driving when it’s windy. Well, folks, there might be a reason for that. I live in fear of going ass over tea kettle. It could happen!

Crankypantsing

Guilt By Association

Concerning last night’s rant, I think I’ve figured out the vague feeling of discomfort. It’s the same feeling I got as a child, when the kid next to me behaved badly. The possibility that I would be assumed to be complicit in the behavior was upsetting. On the one hand, I didn’t want to be associated with what had happened, but on the other, I felt powerless to stop it, because of some stupid unspoken kids’ code. It’s a matter of peer pressure. “Don’t rock the boat, or your life will get even more difficult.” As I learned yesterday, that sort of bullying is not just child’s play; adults do it, too.

And, to be clear, I don’t have a problem with Christmas itself. I was raised nominally Catholic, and my family still celebrates the holiday. However, I don’t take that as a license to smack other people upside the head with my personal holiday fetish. It bothers me when others do it, because it seems manipulative and unsportsmanlike. Or maybe it’s just ignorance. I dunno, but it seems to be born of the same urge as the chipper “Happy Yom Kippur!” blessings that obviously non-Jews wish to Jewish folks. Nice try, but it’s so close, and yet so far. I assume the effort is appreciated, but the end result only underscores the lack of any serious interest in understanding another point of view.

I have a similar problem with films like Memoirs of a Geisha. It’s a thoroughly western movie about a non-western subject. In it’s way, it’s repackaged Orientalism: it’s objectifying, exploitative, and fetishistic. And, I can’t get past the fact that the actors are Chinese. Because, apparently, all Asians do look alike.

Crankypantsing

Resistance Is Futile

I find the underlying assumption that the default state is Christian troubling. I feel the same way when I’m wished a cheerful, peppy “Merry Christmas” by the cashier at the grocery store. It’s not a huge deal. I don’t expect that there’s anything to be done to solve the problem, or even if there is a problem. I just know that it makes me squirmy.

Apparently, it’s Not Allowed to say so out loud, though. If you do, you may be told that your discomfort indicates that you’re bitter, insensitive, uncivilized, unhappy, and intolerant, or that it means you want to kill the baby Jesus. You may even be told that most Americans are Christian, so if you don’t want to celebrate Christmas, you don’t belong here, so you should move to another country. No matter that you are an American citizen and you have every right to stay right where you are, and to voice your discomfort in ALL CAPS. Because, my understanding is that it’s not okay to dictate how other people feel, and that’s what the entire exchange came down to. I felt uncomfortable about something, and was told that I have no right to feel that way. Talk about a ridiculous response!

Another thing I find troubling is the insistence, by some folks, that non-Christians should just go ahead and celebrate Christmas because it’s the season and everybody else is doing it. Why the pressure to take part in what then amounts to a secular holiday?

And all because I had the nerve to say that I felt uncomfortable when people assume that everyone else is automagically Christian. The mind wobbles.

Crankypantsing

Happy Festivus

Since the Christmas season makes me cranky as hell, and because today is Festivus, I shall commence with the traditional Airing of the Grievances.

  • In 1979, my younger brother left a peanut butter sandwich on the table in the front hallway. I was punished for it, even though it was not my fault. To be fair, I accidentally set him on fire in 1978, so I guess we’re even.
  • I had to eat liver and onions when I was a child, and I’ll bear the emotional scars for the rest of my life.
  • In 1976, Vicky Poff stole my library book about Hawaiian gods, and I had to spend an entire month’s allowance to replace it. That grieved me terribly.
  • In 5th grade, Beverly borrowed my Unauthorized Biography of Andy Gibb and did not return it. I was over it by 6th grade, but I haven’t forgotten.
  • Speaking of book stealers, one of my former coworkers borrowed my big-assed Oxford Classical Dictionary, and never returned it. I am seriously grieved about that. Bastard! (You’ll note that my taste in reading material has improved dramatically over the years.)
  • I hate blog memes/tagging. I find them a total waste of my time.
  • I moved 18 times and attended nine schools, before finishing high school. And, no, I’m not from a military family.
  • I got the horse of my dreams when I was nine years old, but he was green-broke and ornery as hell, so he was actually more of a nightmare. I was not only grieved by this, but was damn-near killed on a couple of occasions.
  • I spent the majority of 9th grade at a school chock-a-block with preppy, rich doctors’ kids. Sophomore-senior years were spent at a teaching laboratory school, which was, again, chock-a-block with preppy, rich doctors’ kids. I didn’t care so much, though, because it was on a college campus, and it was easy to skip class and get drunk.
  • My 2nd grade math teacher told me that I was slower than molasses in January. I had no idea what that meant, but I knew it wasn’t nice.
  • My algebra and computer programming teacher was more interested in picking on kids and looking down girls’ shirts than he was in teaching.
  • My 9th grade Algebra teacher, who wouldn’t let “stupid girls” ask questions in class, is at the top of my teacher-related grievance list. That jackass should have stuck to coaching basketball, because he had no business anywhere near a classroom.
  • Math, in general, grieves me. Not so much because I had some really bad math teachers, but because I’m numerically dyslexic. I try to be careful, but there’s a disconnect between the numbers I see/think and the numbers my hands write/type, so I’m forever transposing numbers, not seeing them, or just making them up. I’m constantly screwing up my check book because of it.
  • In one of my family’s many moves, I lost nearly all my childhood books. That was Teh Suck. I’ve managed to replace most of them, but there are still a few that I’m missing.

Next, The Feats of Strength!

Crankypantsing, Ladybusiness, News & Politics, Pets, Photography

Friday Round-up

Harriet has long contended that squirrels are eeevil, that they should be exterminated, and that she’d ought to be the one doing the exterminating. Now, we have proof that her concerns were well founded.

Squirrels have bitten to death a stray dog which was barking at them in a Russian park, local media report.

Passers-by were too late to stop the attack by the black squirrels in a village in the far east, which reportedly lasted about a minute.

They are said to have scampered off at the sight of humans, some carrying pieces of flesh.

A pine cone shortage may have led the squirrels to seek other food sources, although scientists are sceptical.

Via Feministe: A play in one act, in which a professor entered his office, to find that two students had broken in and were having sex. Now, the story is plenty damned funny on its own, especially this bit, wherein the trespassing male tells the prof to go away and threatens to report him for sexual harassment.

HALF-NAKED MALE: GO THE FUCK AWAY! THIS IS PRIVATE! WE’RE BUSY!
ME: (holding the door half-open) I’m coming in.
HALF-NAKED MALE: STOP HARASSING US YOU PERVERT OR I’LL REPORT YOU!
ME: (still holding door) You’ll report me for your having sex in my office?
HALF-NAKED MALE: GO THE FUCK AWAY!
ME: (still holding door) That’s it. Put your clothes back on. You can’t have sex in my office.

The comments, too, are worth reading. However, I found myself thinking the entire event would have been even more amusing if the prof had quietly entered the office, sat down, and gone about his regular work, ignoring the burgling shaggers.

Via The Smirking Chimp, a rant about Bill O’Reilly and the “war on [White] Christmas”. Because, after all, it is the season. It includes the following gem, on Christmas balls Holiday ornaments:

Speaking of buying, I have a problem with your online shop there, Bill. Yeah, yeah — I hate to interrupt a good misguided rant, but I’m disappointed in you guys at Fox News and the O’Reilly Factor. Being as I’m holding out hope that Christmas won’t be stolen by the liberal Whos of Evil-doer-Whoville (you can use that one, too), I went to the online Fox News Shop to buy some of your balls. But what’s this? I couldn’t find a single Christmas ball in the store! They’d been replaced by these bizarre spheres called “Holiday Ornaments.” The description under the The O’Reilly Factor ornaments claim they’re designed to adorn something called a “holiday tree.” What is this so-called holiday tree? I know what is a Christmas tree, but this holiday tree thing has me stymied. Do I need to buy a second tree? What’s the deal?

Ah, I do so love the smell of hot, buttered irony in the morning.

I’ve mentioned that I watch Survivor, haven’t I? Last night’s episode was lovely, because Judd was finally voted off (hallelujah!). Even lovelier was his reaction. After a speech, in which he claimed that no one was safe, that anyone could be voted off at any time, and that there should be no whineypantsing about it, because it’s a game, stupid, Judd turned around and cursed his tribemates for having the nerve to give him a boot to the head. What an ass!

Speaking of people who need a boot to the head, Oprah gets on my very last nerve. When she’s not busy leading her cult members in I Love Oprah fests, she’s telling women that they should submit themselves to the patriarchy. Most recently, this patriarchifilia has taken the form of touting a new and apparently mediocre form of plastic surgery, called a “thread lift.” Small barbed, plastic threads are inserted under the skin. The barbs catch and hold the tissue, so that it can be pulled tight. Apparently, one can have this relatively inexpensive and speedy procedure done during one’s lunch hour. Because, you know, women ought to have bits of plastic stitched into their faces, so that they can look more babe-uh-licious. Or something. No matter that the procedure can potentially do more harm than good. I dunno about y’all, but I don’t think pain and deformation sound very sexy.

And, don’t even get me started on her magazine. Talk about a heaping helping of harmful messages.

100_0963

And now for the obligatory Friday dogblogging, starring everyone’s favorite Boxer, Miss Harriet Brown. This was taken last Saturday, in my mom’s kitchen. Harriet is such a delicate flower that she insists she can’t lie on the bare, hard floor. She’d rather have a nice, fluffy dog bed, but a rag rug will suffice in a pinch. It’s not like there wasn’t a comfy couch for her to sleep on, either. There was, and it was even heaped with pillows and blankets and all manner of soft, cushy things amongst which dainty Boxer dogs might wish to lie. But, no. We were sitting around the kitchen table, drinking coffee and talking, so Harriet had to be in the kitchen with us. To supervise, dontchaknow. That’s onna count of the fact that humans cannot be trusted on their own. This is apparently a sacrament that every Boxer dog holds dear.

And now, a rumpus of random ramblings:

  • Whispering–I can’t stand it. All that pst pst psting drives me batshit crazy.
  • Obsessive throat clearing–I can’t stand that, either. It’s one thing to periodically clear your throat, or to do so more frequently when you’re sick, but when you make disgusting horky noises every two minutes, that’s socially unacceptable.
  • Did you realize that you can rearrange the order of tabs in Firefox, by grabbing and moving them? “The more you know…”
  • Overheard at work: “How long have we had MS Office?” Um, how long have you worked here?
  • I hate it when people ask for information, then don’t pay attention to the answer! Surely there’s a special place in Hell for such time wasters?
  • I spilled something on my shirt this morning, and didn’t notice it until I got to work, so I turned it around so the stain wouldn’t bother me.
  • While watching teevee last night, and petting the dog, I noticed that she’s getting white patches of hair inside her ears. Her muzzle started to go grey years ago, which is common in Boxers, but damn, 6.5 is too young to be going grey.
  • I have to work on Saturday. Waaah!
News & Politics

Git Along Little Doggie

Day-um, but Teh Internets are slow today. Anyway, today’s roundup includes:

  1. A heaping dose of patriarchal craptacularity
  2. Satanists for Jeebus
  3. Dildo cozies
  4. Beam me up, Scottie
  5. Those wacky Texans
  6. Coo-coo for Jeebus

First, via Feministing, an article about a family in Pakistan, whose daughters were married off as young children, in compensation for one of their relatives murdering a member of the rival family.

A village council in Pakistan has decreed that five young women should be abducted, raped or killed for refusing to honour childhood “marriages.”

The women refused to honor the agreement, so the village council have decreed that they be abducted and raped or murdered. That’s seriously fucked up. Leaving aside the awfulness of forced marriage and using rape as a form of punishment, why on earth should those women have to pay the price for someone else’s transgressions? They did nothing wrong. Well, aside from being women, that is.

Pat Robertson, that wacky Jesus Fetishisht, flashes the debbil’s gang sign. And, he’s not the only one. It looks like Lucifer has a Posse!

Craftgrrl crochets herself an adorable Flying Spaghetti Monster dildo cozy. You should go look at it–unlike Pat Robertson, it’s actually really cute.

(above) Our, um, petulant leader, trying to beat a hasty retreat from a news conference, after a reporter asked him a question he didn’t feel like answering. But, alas, the doors were locked, so he was unable to escape until an aide came to his rescue.

And, to prove that the wacky presidential nut didn’t fall far from the wacky tree, Texans appear to have banned marriage, full stop. Not that I think that’s necessarily a bad thing, mind you, but it seems like a drastic move just to rid themselves of Teh Gay Menace

Last but not least, did anyone watch the recent episodes of Trading Spouses? The one with the ignorant woman who was coo-coo for Christ? She got completely bent out of shape because the family she stayed with had mandalas, a star, Buddha statues, and gargoyles in their home. She accused the family of being “of the dark side.” Very peculiar, I thought. First, she’s Catholic. Apparently, she doesn’t realize that many Catholic cathedral and churches are adorned with gargoyles. She refused to listen when the father tried to explain to her that the things she was worried about were not, as she claimed, satanic. I can’t imagine what sort of a hole she’s been living in if she really thinks that Buddhists are some sort of Satanists. And stars? Has she actually read the Bible?

Later, she pulled the kids aside and tried to witness at them. I was shocked. I can’t imagine trying to convert someone else’s children. How presumptuous and rude! The kids weren’t interested, and the woman got upset that they were not open to exploring her religious beliefs. The kicker was that, when the two mothers met, at the end of the show, the christian woman accused the non-christian mother of trying to convert her kids! Ah, the irony.

It gets better, though. Each family gets US$50,000 as compensation. The visiting mother gets to decide how the family will spend the money. The christian mother tore up the letter from the other woman, and refused to accept the money because it was supposedly “dark sided.” She changed her tune when she found out that a large chunk of the money had been earmarked for her own use. Nice principles, eh?

Ladybusiness

How to Train Up a Child

The Rude Pundit told a story about his experience with early attempts at religious indoctrination. It reminded me of a funny (to me, now) experience I had when I was 6 or 7 years old.

Although we were only nominally Catholic, my only church experience thus far had been going to midnight and Easter masses. For me, it was not a religious experience, as I hadn’t a clue what was going on. I just liked the smell of the incense and the cadence of the prayers. Because we didn’t regularly attend mass, it was exotic and exciting.

So, when Jodi Sabinske asked me to go to Sunday school with her, I figured, what the hell? It sounded like fun. My mom was reluctant to let me go, as we weren’t religious and she didn’t want my head filled up with a bunch of nonsense. I remember promising her that I wouldn’t let that happen, though at that age, I’m sure I hadn’t a clue what she meant. I picked up on the fact that she felt there was something slightly unsavory and dangerous about it, but I wasn’t old enough to figure out why. I think that probably made me even more curious, and more determined to embark on what was sure to be a grand aventure*.

So one Sunday, I got on the white and blue church bus with Jodi. We must have been toward the beginning of the route, because we seemed to spend half the morning driving around and picking up kids. Then, we drove out of town and into the nearby countryside, finally coming to the First Barn of Jeebus. I’d never seen anything like it before. To me, church was an old stone building with stained glass, not a shiny-new, cavernous, aluminum-sided barn.

After my shock at the hangar-like ginormity of the FBoJ, the second thing that surprised me was that inside, it was set up like a school, not a church. The interior of the building was a warren of passageways and classrooms, with a large auditorium at one end. Everyone met in the auditorium for a short welcome service, then broke up into age-appropriate groups and went to their classrooms for Bible study.

Oh my, the Bible Study… Some of the stories were acted out by groups of high school aged kids, in a manner not entirely unlike that of the Legz Akimbo Theatre Company. Others were told with the aid of a large felt board. I had only a passing acquaintance with the Bible then, so the stories–like the Tower of Babel and Lot and His Daughters–were all new and fascinating to me. And, a little scary, but that was, I’m sure, intentional. I remember that there was a lot of emphasis placed on the Old Testament, and on God’s wrath. The God of the FBoJ was, I thought, a big, giant bully. I thought he sounded like an abusive, psychopathic parent–someone to walk on egg shells around, lest you get your ears boxed for some arbitrary reason.

But, still, I continued to go to Sunday school. See, the folks at that church knew how to sucker kids into attending. Every Sunday, we got some sort of treat. Sometimes, it would be a 2L bottle of soda or a whole watermelon. Other times it would be a trip to an amusement park or to a stable to go horseback riding. One time, they brought in a bunch of camels and elephants for us to ride after Sunday school. Every week, it was something different, so I’m sure lots of kids showed up just to see what the Treat of the Week would be.

I probably would have attended indefinitely–and may have been assimilated–except the FBoJ finally tripped my bullshit meter. One Sunday, one of the ministers came to our room to direct our Bible study class, instead of the Legz Akimbo for Jeebus Players. The minister told all the girls wearing pants to stand up. Most of the girls wore dresses, but it was the ’70s, so there were a few of us in jeans or slacks. I never wore dresses, so I was one of the girls who were singled out. We had to stand while being regaled with all manner of nightmare-inducing descriptions of Hell. We were told that we would be going there if we didn’t start wearing dresses. The preacher went down the line, from girl to girl, making us promise to never wear pants again. I refused. I told him that God didn’t care what people wore, and that I was going to continue wearing jeans. All the other girls were allowed to sit down, but I was told that I would have to stand for the rest of the class. I would have done it, because it was worth it to make it clear that I refused to A) lie or B) give in to what I figured was no better than blackmail. But, I didn’t end up standing the rest of the day. I told the minister that I didn’t believe in his Hell, and that I surely wouldn’t be going there, but that he was welcome to it. Then, I went and sat in the hallway for the rest of the day.

I never went back to Sunday school.

Teh Enb.

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* And, I do mean adventure. It may not have seemed to be a so very big deal at the time, but the experience had a profound effect on me. It gave me–at an early age–the understanding that other people’s realities can be vastly different from mine. It also was the first time I’d had an Important Experience of my own. I’d been allowed to go off to God knows where, with God knows who, and study God knows what, and I was responsible for all of it. Third, I learned that I was Allowed to stand up to patriarchy-spewing asswagons. That’s an awful lot of power for a 6-7 year-old girlchild to wield.