Saturday, December 25, 2010

Beach Christmas


Ok, so since not everyone lives in a place where snow is a major part of the holidays, I've decided to write a little song for us non-snow birds and share with the snow birds how wonderful it is to live in a place that's always nice, warm, and sunny. Now like most parody songs, I just took the melody of "White Christmas" and changed the words around a little. Credit for the melody goes to Irving Berlin, the words however are my own.

I'm living through a warm Christmas
Just like the ones I used to know
Where the palm trees a-sway
and people a-swim
in beaches drenched in sunlight.

I'm living through a warm Christmas
With every kitch postcard I write
May you not congeal and freeze
Oh I'm glad my Chistmas is at the beach!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

New Top 5 Underrated and Underappreciated

1) Streetlights by Ludo- I LOVE Ludo. I know that I already have a post about them, but they really are worth checking out. If I had to pick one song as my favorite, I would have to pick this one. It's a mostly acoustic song with an "stereotypical Italian" style guitar in the instrumental parts. The lyrics are not the typical Ludo lyrics with a peppering of nerdy references; it's a more straightforward romantic song. It does tell a little story like many other Ludo songs. It's about the moment before you confess your love to someone. There's the nervousness, the anticipation, the giddiness, the purity of the moment. The words create very vivid images that create a little movie in my head. I can see two youths standing on the sidewalk beneath a streetlight in the early summer dusk.

2) Michael Buble- I know I didn't list a song. Just about anything by this man is sexy, baby-making music. He has that Frank Sinatra, Harry Connick Jr sound. A little jazzy, a little bluesy, with a generous helping of swing. He does a lot of the standard songs like "Feeling Good", "Fly Me to the Moon", "Georgia on my Mind" and "Me and Mrs. Jones". He also has originals which he writes for his girlfriends. "Home", "Lost", "Haven't Met You Yet" are such examples. He has a sexy voice that goes well with the body it's in. He is gorgeous. He has a classic look with a modern flair. No piercings, no bad haircuts, no guyliner either. He's my new husband, he just doesn't know it yet because he hasn't met me yet. <3

3) Over the Hills and Far Away by Nightwish- They are known as a symphonic metal band. I prefer Tarja to Anette even though Tarja is a diva. This song tells a story reminiscent of The Count of Monte Cristo and it is similar to a traditional English. song dating back to the 1700's. You can hear that influence in the music. However, this is a cover of Gary Moore. I've never heard the Gary Moore version so I don't know how they compare. Check it out and let me know.

4) Symphony by Sarah Brightman- She originated the role of Christine Daae. Do not tell me anyone is better than her because that role was written specifically for her. It's no wonder either because with a voice like the one she has...it's like an angel. Her voice glides over the notes and resonates leaving you mystified as opposed to sad, because the lyrics are sad. It sounds like a song an ice skater would use in her program.

5) Memories by Within Temptation- A band I have recently been introduced to from the Netherlands. They are classified as symphonic metal, gothic metal, and symphonic rock. If you like Evanescence but want something more alternative, something a little bit fresher and not as played out, you will probably like this band. Sharon den Adel's voice is more operatic and more in the soprano range, somewhere between Amy Lee and Sarah Brightman. 'Memories' is one of those songs who words pierce your soul especially when you use your memories to keep someone who's gone close by.

Elephant Man- The story of a dress


I can't believe I've been able to write so many posts the past month or so!
I'm currently involved in a production of "The Elephant Man" as the costume designer. Below is the story of how I got the job, the story of Sundance, and my rescue.

Last year I took the beginning costume class and I really enjoyed it. I knew that I wanted to learn more and really be good at sewing. So this summer I volunteered with a seamstress. During the course of the summer, I found out that I really wanted to sew and work with costumes. How the hell I was going to do that, I didn’t know. I just figured I’d move to New York at some point after graduation and find a costume house that would hire me. But in October I was at the Japanese restaurant formerly known as Shooting Star with my boyfriend, Sam, and the guy that I had been talking to for the past six months, but had only met a few hours ago, Max. At Shooting Star, I saw this guy. I didn’t know his name, or exactly where I knew him from, but he looked really familiar. I leaned over and over the deafening bluegrass music I told Sam “I know that guy. I don’t know how I know him, nor do I know his name, but I know him.” Turns out, Sam knew him from when he volunteered at the Acrosstown Repertoire Theater (ART). I nudged him to go and say hello. Eventually, they come back to where Max and I were sitting. Sam introduces me to Mike and he starts telling me about how he’s going to be directing “The Elephant Man” at ART. So we’re talking about what we’re studying, etc. and it comes back to the play because I tell him that I’m into costumes. He was telling me he wanted to keep it as simple as taking off coats to delineate one character from another since there was going to be a lot of double casting. But I started throwing out ideas and I’m not 100% sure how exactly it happened, but he gave me the job of being the costume designer for this show. Sam and Max are just sitting there in silence watching me magically get this job. I warned them as we were walking to the car that I was going to let out a long, loud, shrill scream.
When I first went to ART, I looked at the costume stock. I found one dress that would work and would not need a lot of fixing. She is Beloved. (Yes, I named some of the costumes.) Then I found 3 wedding dresses and lots of fabric that used to be curtains. I decided in a sheer moment of delusional madness that I’d take these wedding dresses and this fabric and convert them into Victorian gowns. Thus I began to work on Sundance. Mind you, this gown would be on stage for all of 5 minutes in total, I don’t have a sewing machine, this wedding dress looks like the worst of the ‘80’s vomited and that birthed this dress, and I don’t have anybody to help me. This wedding dress has pearl beads, sequins, lace, a long train, poofy shoulders that extend into lace sleeves, and bows. There were 4 Lady Gaga sized bows on the train alone. I took those shits off. They had to go. How did I go about tackling this monstrosity? I turned the train into the bustle for starters. I then put burgundy fabric under the poofy shoulders and am now in the process of adding the same burgundy fabric to the skirt of the dress. It’s actually really starting to take form now.
Mike offered to get in contact with the costume designer at the Hippodrome which I eagerly took the offer without shame. I needed help and lots of it! There was no way in hell I could pull this off by myself. This is my first show, after all. So this past Saturday, we went and raided the costume stock of the Hippodrome. I took several coats, a number of dresses, a couple nun frocks, a bishop’s robes, and a chef coat that will be Merrick’s patient garb. Marilyn was also nice enough to let us borrow the hood she made for the Hipp’s production of “The Elephant Man” thirty-eight years, almost to the date, of our production. She even offered to help me in any way she could including letting me come over to dye Sundance, or use the sewing machines.
So now I can go home on Christmas break, finish up Sundance, and rest easy knowing that I was able to get most of the costumes done. I only have a few loose ends to tie up and then we’re good to go. This is definitely an experience. I figure ‘if I can pull this off when I have so few resources, imagine what I can do when I have more available to me.’ Not only have I learned so much about what it takes to put a show together, but I’ve made valuable connections with people who have worked in the field, out in the real world.

The picture attached is indeed a picture of Sundance before I started working on it.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Your Love- a free verse poem

To commemorate the three month mark of my relationship, I've written a poem. It's free verse, almost stream of consciousness.

Your love has saved me from the darkness I have come to know.
I had forgotten what it was like to be loved,
What it was like to cry
What it was like to smile.
But your love has shown me a new way to live
What it means to be alive
What it means to be young.
I can’t believe how much has transpired between us.
Never thought I’d see you in this way
Nearly a year ago when I met you
But now I’m glad for your love.
Your love wraps around me
Like a blanket in a cold winter’s night.
Your love has me protected
From fears that once ate me alive.
Now I can say ‘I love you’ without fear of falling
Because I know you’ll catch me
With the strength of your love.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

An Oversimplified Explanation of What Went Wrong with our Policies

*Note- this is a real conversation that I had with a friend of mine. Grammatical errors have been fixed but those are the only changes I have made. A reference to our location as also been erased. As the title hopefully implies, this explanation is hopelessly simplified but I hope it makes the point.
Goku
what evs. I'll order the campus special
Maverick
you can't
Goku
I found a loophole. I'll just go to the Family housing which is like 5 seconds from my apartment, have it delivered there and then walk back home with the pizza
Maverick
I don't know if family housing is allowed that special
Goku
it's on campus therefore yes
Maverick
I don't know if it's dorms/greek houses only or the entire campus
Goku
entire campus I already tried this trick
Maverick
ok
Goku
according to 5 star i am a Ph.D student living in University Village
hehehehe
Maverick
-_-
Maverick
weren't you the one talking about everybody taking responsibility for their own actions?
Goku
huh? what does that have to do with this?
Maverick
Think about it, if everybody cheated the system, what happens? The people that the system was created for, do not benefit. Funds are misallocated
Goku
it's pizza, NOT SOCIAL SECURITY
Maverick
The only difference is degree. If you have x principles, you should apply them to everything.
Goku
the difference is I get pizza now and social security I might never get
Maverick
and if everybody did what you are doing, then nobody will get the campus special
because the company can't afford it
Goku
not my problem
Maverick
that's the point!!! THAT'S WHAT PREVIOUS GENERATIONS SAID ABOUT SOCIAL SECURITY!!!
"Not my problem". Now look at the fix we're in
Goku
well we are all dying in 2 years so I don't give a shit. Lets go pretend make out
Maverick
and if we don't? and if the world doesn't end? Then what?
Goku
then yay more pizza
Maverick
not if you cheat the system
Goku
I'll just go and scam dominos then until I'm done with all the pizza joints in this town.
Maverick
pretty soon, only the very rich will be able to afford pizza
Goku
at that point I move to a new city then repeat the process
Maverick
practice what you preach my dear

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

HAPPY FIRST BIRTHDAY!!!

Dear Readers of my blog,
I want to take this time to thank you so much for all your comments and feedback the past year. I started this blog after taking a class on war literature. One of the books we read was "My War Killing Time in Iraq" by Colby Buzzell. He kept a blog while he was in Iraq and later turned his blog into a book. Now he's kind of a Gonzo writer. I originally intended this blog to be socially satirical since I was someone who is rather oblivious to popular culture and what I am aware of, I don't particularly like. Hence the somewhat ironic title "Living Under a Rock". But I've noticed I need to work on improving my writing to make the satire a little more specific.
The URL was a statement of where I was in my life at that time. I was for some unbeknown reason, I was thinking of the movie title "Love in the time of Cholera" and from there I was thinking about how I was in love during a time of war and I was thinking "Love in the Time of War" but that was too long so I shortened it to "loveinwar". I still think it's a very nice juxtaposition in an abstract sense even though I have personally gone onto a new stage in my life- one that includes neither 'love' in the deeper sense or war.
I also intended this blog to be very anonymous- no personal stories, no identifying information, etc. Somewhere along the way, that has changed. Now this blog is kind of a public diary for me. A place where I can organize my thoughts and then share them with the world. I'm also surprised I've been able to keep this blog fairly well updated. Go me!
Happy birthday my little blog. May you and I grow together and never forget where we have been. To my readers, thank you for your support, comments, and I hope you guys keep reading my thoughts and ideas and sharing yours with me.
Love,
Maverick

Monday, November 29, 2010

The Harvest Moon


This is a poem for someone whom I care about very much. He wrote one for me and now this is mine for him. It was inspired by a conversation that we had while I was on my way home for Thanksgiving. I haven't been able to write for a long time- not since I wrote a few sad poems about my ex- so I'm a little rusty. I love you Sam. You've helped me through a very difficult time in my life and I just want to let you know how much you mean to me.

Why can’t I see the harvest moon
In my lover’s eyes?
Why must I be in my room
All alone tonight?
Does he know how I feel?
Oh how it burns!
I want him to be here
Where I await his return.
In my room
all alone I wait patiently
By the light of moon
Watching dreamily
Waiting for you.
Tonight under the harvest moon
Our love shall consume
All doubt from my soul
Because you would have told
Me all I ever needed to hear.
I no longer have fears,
And as I near the lake
I feel my insides quake
When I see you standing waiting, smiling.
Suddenly I feel you holding
Me close saying ‘I love you”
I whisper ‘I love you too’.
And in your eyes I see the harvest moon.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Veteran's Day 2010


Istis semper fidelis meas gratias dedi.

I want to take a moment out of my day and thank all the service men and women- past, present and future- for their service. I've had the honor and pleasure of knowing a few guys who have served both in Iraq and Afghanistan and they say the same thing- they felt like it was their duty and that if they could go back, they would. The ones that couldn't go back all say the same thing- they feel like they left a job undone. That is real commitment. So for all you do and all you are- THANK YOU!!!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Opposing Forces

Newton's Law- To every force there is an equal and opposing force.

If we assume this axiom to be true then we can conclude that the anarchists in the Tea Party movement are the equal but opposite force of the socialist Democrats. Too harsh? Let's take a look, shall we?
All throughout the ages, when one movement has seemingly gained too much influence in the hearts and minds of the masses, an opposing force comes to combat it and eventually takes its place as the dominating factor. I'm going to focus on Western culture simply because I'm more knowledgeable about it. (If you have a problem with this, please write an accompanying article focusing on Eastern, African, Latin etc culture and I will direct people to it.)
During the Dark Ages, after the fall of the Roman Empire, basic knowledge such as reading and writing was limited to those in the church. (Does not apply outside Western Europe). The counterrevolutionary force was The Enlightenment. Upper-class white men all of a sudden were required to use reason to gain knowledge as opposed to religion. Reason was valued above any other quality. If something could not be scientifically explained, then it had no value in society. After many years of the Enlightenment being the dominating way of thinking, the Romantic era came about in opposition to the Enlightenment. The Romantics said that there was more to life and more ways of looking at the world than simply through the cold, unfeeling scientific lens. So their movement focused on feelings and emotions and beauty and "sublime". Skip ahead a few years to after the Holocaust and World War 2. What happened in the world of theater? You had plays like "Waiting for Godot" coming out. Plays that wander about seemingly without any kind of direction or point. Plays that ask the question "What if this is it?" My professor was asking if a Christian, or any person with deeply held religious beliefs could bear waiting for nothing that could ever come. These sentiments sprang from a kind of hopelessness and disbelief that something like two world wars and the Holocaust could happen in a 'civilized' and 'modern' world. Generations died. How could this have happened?
Flash forward to 2010 and the mid-term elections that just passed. The anarchist Tea Party movement is calling for an end to socialist Democrats plans. I'm not going to support one or the other here. All I'm going to say is things are going to get really ugly really fast. And do you know who's going to suffer the most? Us. "We the people of the United States" are the ones who will continue to pay the price of our government's feuds. I'm not sure when they stopped working for us, or listening to us, but they did. Both Democrats and Republicans. Get ready for nothing to happen. Get ready for a lot of broken promises- more than usual; get ready for the end of America as we have known her for so long. No more will we be a country of progress and innovation but rather a country of stagnation, corruption, and only a small percentage of people living a decent life.
All the empires have fallen. Am I going to witness the fall of ours?

We all know what goes up must come down.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Hey Baby they're playing our song

I've recently started dating someone new. That's not to say that I'm completely over my ex. He knows that, and he's ok with it. He's so good to me and, I'm not going to lie, I really like having someone I can see everyday. I thought I couldn't be in a relationship with someone so close because they'd drive me crazy. I'm glad to know and admit I was wrong! This song list is in no way reflective of his musical tastes. As the relationship grows and progresses, I'm sure I'll be adding songs.

*Way Back Into Love- Music and Lyrics
I needed to find a way back into love. I have been hurt, hurt someone, and thought that I wouldn't find anyone any time soon. He's willing to help me make that transition.
*Mine- Taylor Swift
There's a line in there about "I remember we were sitting there by the water". We were sitting by the water when he first put his arm around me. We've come a long way since then.
*Crazier- Taylor Swift
I know I have two Taylor Swift songs. He drives me crazy but in the good way! I get the feelings this song talks about, the tone is the melody in my heart when he's around.
*Underneath Your Clothes- Shakira
I'm running out of reasons to cry. You are exactly what I need at this time; you are so good to me and I care about you as you are, who you are.
*Fireflies- Owl City
The night we first kissed, there were fireflies all around us. It was so incredibly romantic; I'm such a hopeless romantic. No matter how much I'm hurt in Love, I still believe in it.
*If I Fell- The Beatles
My favorite band. I guess this is actually a song for the both of us. We were initially so afraid of hurting each other, uncertain of the repercussions, the future.
*Halo- Beyonce
Baby I can see your halo, you know you're my saving grace. Remember those walls I built? They're tumbling down and they didn't even put up a fight. You're everything I need and more.
*Good Enough- Evanescence
I'm in the process of forgiving myself for my past sins and I guess I'm good enough that someone can love me, flaws, mistakes, and all.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

The Nuances of Life



You ever have those moments when the full symbolism of something in your everyday life hits you? I have a few such examples.

1) I had a beloved little Quaker parrot named Truffaldino. My mom had found him. At the same time, my beloved was getting ready to leave for Iraq. He came back, we went through all the crazy Army bureaucracy bullshit, all the consequences of being out in the front lines etc. Then we break up and that same day my mom calls me and tells me that Truffaldino flew away. It was like Truffaldino was the symbol of our love that escaped from us. I had that bird for the bulk of the relationship and then he flew away when it ended.

2) Last night, I got dumped and the song I wanted to hear was Carrie Underwood's "Cowboy Casanova". One of the lyrics say "A snake with blue eyes". This guy has blue eyes and he saw himself as a snake. I realized the connection as I was listening to the song. All I could say was "Fuck."

I could sit here and talk about how art gives our lives order and points out all the subtleties in our lives we miss because we are too busy occupied with the bulk of the problem. But I'm not. Maybe it is the artist in me that sees all these nuances while everyone else would simply see coincidence, an over-active imagination and point out that the subconscious affects our choices including my choice of songs. I'm sure there are more examples, I just don't feel like digging through the recesses of memory for them.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Goodbye Love soundtrack

For the past few months I have slowly picked songs as a kind of goodbye soundtrack to my ex. I never pick the same songs for different guys, and I try and match the lyrics and mood to the circumstances. The songs range in styles from pop to musicals to country and ballads. They are in no particular order. Usually I include a little information about the songs, why I chose them etc. but I'm not going to do that this time. I can't really bring myself to open up here. Perhaps at a later time, I'll post the poems I wrote in the course of our 3 1/2 year relationship. No promises however.

Already Gone- Kelly Clarkson
Already Gone- Sugarland
Breathe- Taylor Swift ft Colbie Caillat
Big Girls Don't Cry- Fergie
How To Save A Life- The Fray
Forgive Me- Evanescence
Goodbye My Lover- James Blunt
More Than A Feeling- Boston
What I Did For Love- A Chorus Line
Unfaithful- Rhianna
I Told You So- Carrie Underwood and Randy Travis

A couple of these songs I actually didn't like when they came out, or quickly got tired of them soon after they came out due to excessive radio play. But now they have such meaning to me that I had to include them on the list.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Fire and Ice



I took this picture at Mammoth in Yellowstone. The only editing I've done was to add a little mark to protect the picture. Please do not take this picture and claim it as your own. Click on the picture to see a larger version of it.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Koran burning on 9/11

In the small, usually quiet, town of Gainesville, an event that has not yet happened is already capturing the attention of the nation. Terry Jones and his small congregation of 50 people is planning on having a Quran burning bonfire to 'commemorate' September 11. Many people have voiced their opinions including Hillary Clinton, Michael Bloomberg, Joe Liberman, Eric Holder, and Gen. David Petraeus. Here's my opinion: I think it's very sad, very closed minded, and quite frankly against God therefore hypocritical. This man, this group has no idea what he's talking about. It's not the religion that should be condemned, but the radicals that manipulate the religion and use it for political purposes that are extreme and not at all reflective of the true values of the society. Oh gee, kind of like him! He's exhibiting the same exact hatred that he's protesting against. The irony is, he doesn't realize it. One of my dear friends actually fought in Afghanistan and he separated religion from the issue of who the enemy was. The enemy was not the religion, or even the majority of people who followed this religion; the enemy was, and continues to be, those extremists who always mess it up for the rest of the group. All it takes is that one bad apple, doesn't it? Another really sad fact is that the world is letting this man control us. How could 50 people control the world like this? Many of my fellow classmates are saying that we are giving them the attention they want. I have to agree with them. Yes they are radicals, yes they are offending a lot of people, and yes they plan to have this event even though the fire department denied their requests but this should not have become the world's focus to the extent that is has become because the problem is now compounded.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Thought of the Day

How much knowledge did the human race lose at the onset of the dark ages? We've lost thousands of plays from the Greeks. This can be inferred from the fact that Dionysus festivals were held every year? Plus there are fragments of plays left. The Egyptians definitely knew something about math and science. There is also all the medicinal herbs that every culture had. The Cubans still retain some of this knowledge as evidenced by "los cosimientos" of chamomile tea- the tea that cures everything. The people of Columbia have mate (pronounced mah-teh with an emphasis on the second syllable), another cure-all. It is believed there are a couple lost Shakespeare plays. It makes me wonder how much more 'advanced' our civilizations would be if we didn't lose, burn, and just generally destroy everything. Only thing is, this is always happening, not just simply during the Middle Ages. Think of Soviet Russia, they changed all the textbooks not simply to brainwash people into living and breathing the party, but because they knew that knowledge was dangerous. We may have had to’re-invent the wheel'. It's sad how ignorance and fear possess people to make decisions that affect not only themselves, but the world, a society. How much do we really know? Can we ever regain what has been lost?

*Note- the title links to a picture that is NOT mine. I just thought it went nicely with the post. Hope the owner's not too mad. <3

Monday, August 30, 2010

Cheap and Lazy Beauty Advice part 2

Ok, so I thought of a couple more tips and tricks.

1) If you've just finished blow drying your hair and ironing it, chances are, it's still a little frizzy. Get a dryer sheet and run it through your hair. This doesn't work if your hair is extremely frizzy. If your hair is that frizzy, chances are it's dry and needs heavy duty conditioning. See my previous beauty post for curly hair care because you need that product.

2) Severely chapped lips.
Winter's coming up. If you live in cold climates (I don't know why you would willingly) you know how dry and chapped your lips get. Put petroleum jelly on your lips before you go to sleep and the next morning you will notice an improvement. If they are not too bad, by the next day you will have totally soft, kissable lips. Of course, if your lips aren't dry, you can still use it as a moisturizer. Your lips get wrinkled too by the way. This is especially true if you are a smoker.

3) Another acne cure
Dab toothpaste (any kind) on your pimples. This treatment isn't as effective for me, but if it works for you, awesome! Everybody's skin is different so one form of treatment doesn't work for everybody.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Cheap and Lazy Person's Beauty Advice

Hey girls,
I usually don't read fashion magazines but every once in a while I have one on hand and I look at it. After reading the sex advice sections, I flip over to the "385 new looks" section. One thing I've noticed about all of these looks is they are time consuming, hard, and expensive! (Or at least, for me they are because I'm cheap and lazy.) So, I've decided to share some tips with you, things that I've tried. I'm not getting paid for any of this by the way.

1) For acne/blackhead removal
Yeast. I swear it works. I know it sounds gross, and honestly it kind of is, but it works quite well. Buy dry yeast that you can find in a supermarket. They usually come in 6 little packages or so and they are not frightfully expensive. I don't recommend the rapid rise yeast though. It doesn't work as well and when I explain what you have to do, you'll understand. When you're brushing your teeth to get ready for bed, get a small bowl and empty only about 1/2 of one package of the yeast into the bowl. Add a couple drops of water and mix it until it's a thin paste. Not too watery though. Spread the yeast onto your face like you would a cream. The rapid rise yeast will dry too quickly and will render your face immovable. When you do move your face, it'll crack and leave you looking like some kind of warrior with war paint on. You want the yeast to be moist enough to soak into your skin I guess. It shouldn't feel like dried up face paint. You leave it on all night. Yes, you actually have to sleep with this gunk on. The next morning, simply wash it off with soap and water. I have noticeable blackheads on my nose and after I do this yeast treatment, they didn't reappear for a week or so. It also left my skin clear and even. The nice thing about the yeast treatment is that it's all natural and you don't have to do it for a long time to see results. You see results after the first time and you don't have to do it every night, or every week.

2) Curly hair care
I have curly hair. Natually. It really bothers me that those "75 new hair-dos" are for girls with straight hair. I can't cut my hair in layers, my hair has enough volume as it is! And I refuse to straighten my hair because that takes over 2 hours, it doesn't look good, and I'm lazy. So, thanks to my roommates last year I have discovered an amazing product! Really, it's like God's gift to my hair. Only problem is, I've only ever been able to find it at Wal-Mart. It's called Cantu, it sells for about $6 for 16 fl. oz. and it's in the ethnic section of the hair care aisle. It's a shea butter leave-in condition. It's now the only product I use. I wash and condition my hair and then when I get out of the shower and have squeezed all the water out of my hair, I separate my hair into sections and put the Cantu in starting at the roots and go all the way down to the tips. That's it. Because I have a lot of hair, it takes a while, but now that I have the hang of it, I can do it much faster. It takes about 20 minutes or so. The beauty of Cantu is that I can put it on, and go out with my hair still wet and it won't get frizzy. I used to use mousse. When I'd put it on and go out with my hair still wet, my hair would pouf up and shrink. Cantu also brings definition to my hair and holds it like a gel. I decided to change my curl pattern by twisting them with my fingers to get those doll curls and they I still have them a few days later. I told you, I swear by this product. Nothing has ever worked for my hair, so it's really nice to find something that works that won't break the bank.

3) Dark circles
Sometimes they are caused by allergies, other times genetics, or lack of sleep is to blame. I don't really have dark circles under my eyes, but at the inner corner of my eyes it's a little dark and it makes me look tired all the time. My 4th semester of college I took a theater make-up class; each session we learned a new technique. Old age, changing our features, wounds, etc. One of the first days was beauty. It wasn't pretty, going out to the club make-up- it was how to change our faces to achieve ideal beauty. Oval face, symmetry of the features, smooth skin. So to cover up darkness under the eyes they gave us this yellow concealer. I loved it so much I asked where I could get some. They told me Sally's sells it and I ran out to get some. It cost about $6. It comes in lipstick form so it's easy to handle. I know I should use a sponge or a brush or something, but I don't. I just apply it under my eye, spread it out with my finger and then apply my powder foundation on top of it. Besides making my eyes brighter, I also use it as a primer for my lids.

4) Red spots
Another thing I learned in the aforementioned class was the magic of green concealer. This one I also bought at Sally's for the same price as the yellow concealer. Do not use it over a large area, it's only meant for spots. After you apply it, dab at it to blend it and remove the excess. A couple taps of your finger ought to do it. Apply your foundation/powder as usual.
The reason yellow and green concealers work is because of the color wheel. Dark circles are purplish and yellow is the color opposite purple on the color wheel. When combined, the colors cancel out. The same is true of red and green.

5) Cleaning braces/appliances
I went through treatment for a long time. I almost feel like an expert in orthodontics because, I swear, I went through just about everything. You name it, I probably had it. At one point, I had a retainer that I couldn't remove because it was glued to the roof of my mouth. So, to keep my mouth clean, I would rinse with one part hydrogen peroxide and one part water. When I finally finished with my entire treatment, I didn't have the stain of the braces on my teeth. The hydrogen peroxide mixture is a good way to whiten teeth.

6) Getting rid of bug bites
A few years ago I went to Mexico and got stung by fire coral. OUCH! When I went and asked what I should do about it, I was told to put vinegar on it. It took a while to heal, and I smelled like a salad, but it worked. The acid that's in the vinegar neutralizes the baseness of the bite. Vinegar also works on bug bites. It takes away the itch and bump in about a day. The area might still be a little red, but it won't itch and it'll be completely healed the day after. Ok, I know this isn't really a 'beauty tip' but who likes itchy, bumpy, red legs or arms?

7) My personal beauty advice
Lucky seven because I can't think of anything else right now. Your best way to look and feel beautiful on the cheap is to smile. Smile from your face, your mind, and your liver as Ketut from the movie "Eat Pray Love" said. Seriously, a smile is the most dangerous weapon in your arsenal ladies. Guys, you too. I never leave home without my smile.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Inception- My Reaction


Before my 3 week vacation, I heard the DJs on the Paul and Young Ron show discussing the movie "Inception". One of them said that he didn't get it, but he liked it. They also were discussing how it's one of those movies that you have to see a couple of times to "get it". Honestly, I really had no desire to see the movie- I'm just not a sci-fi girl. But when my friends asked me to go see it- we are all former IB students, mind you- I agreed.
Sitting in the movie theater, munching on my free small popcorn I said to myself
"Pay attention to every little detail because that's where the answers lie." The first 20 minutes or so did jump around a lot, but I accepted it and stored as much information as I could. The rest was fairly simple to understand. The scriptwriters did a lovely job of explaining 'inception' and 'extraction' and how the dream-world works through DiCaprio's character. He has a number of monologues that give the audience the necessary information they will need to understand the whole movie. Without giving away too much of the movie, I will say this- "Inception" is one of those movies that if you don't pay attention to the dialogue and the exposition you will be lost. After that, it's a matter of keeping track of all the layers of the dream and following Cobb's (DiCaprio's character) past as it haunts him and continually pops up.
Us three IB students at one point looked at each other and the same thought went through our heads. "Damn! Why didn't this movie come out when we were doing our TOK journals?" TOK is a branch of philosophy known as epistemology or the study of how we know things. I swear we took a class in high school that questioned how we know what we know. This is one of the many themes present; what is real and what isn't real. It goes even further by making us question what reality is. Is it possible to have multiple realities? The movie is very philosophical-but there is more to it than that. It was a great action film. It wasn't over-the-top ridiculous if you accepted the world the director has created. There were times of action and times of rest when the characters went about their daily lives. Although CG was used, it didn't stink of it. The limbo dream world of Cobb was very artistic. I felt like I had stepped into a Dali painting.
Another element to the movie dips into the realm of philosophy but has some very practical aspects. Think of inception as subliminal messages. You know the theory- imperceptible messages flashed over and over again supposedly make you think of the message as if it were your own idea. "Inception" goes further than that and takes it from a simple advertising scheme to life-changing decisions in a person's life. Planting ideas in someone's head so deeply that they believe they came up with the idea on their own and they are not conscious of how the idea came to be. Imagine what kind of world we would live in if corporations, the military, hell even individuals had that kind of power...scary.
Anyways, a 'real life' inception is discussed in Weaponized Culture. The post is entitled "Inception and the Fantasies of ‘Top Secret America'" . No worries, the author of this blog actually has qualifications, unlike me.
The movie ends ambiguously. Personally, I thought that made the movie stronger and opens up the field for philosophical discussions with your friends afterwards. Can we ever really know?
As a side note, Leonardo DiCaprio has come out with two movies in one year that were fantastic and had me glued to my seat. This other really good movie was "Shutter Island". Secondly, does anyone know if 'Inception' is supposed to be a franchise or not? I thought I heard that it was intended that way, that it might be, but I don't know. I don't think there needs to be a sequel, prequel, or anything. This is a stand-alone flick that comes back to where it started. All the questions that needed to be answered were answered. If they weren't, that was Nolan's choice and added to the movie's theme.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

The magic behind the drive-thru

I am convinced that whoever invented the drive-thru was Japanese. For those of you who have never worked in the fast food industry, let me explain. When you type in the order it pops up in the right panel. This would be fine if when the next order came in the first order would move one panel closer to the left. However, since Japanese read from right to left, and a Japanese invented the drive-thru the most logical conclusion that can be drawn dear readers, is that what one thinks is not true. Instead, the first order stays in the rightmost panel, the second in the 3rd panel from the left, the third in the second panel from the left, etc. In essance, one reads the orders from right to left. Very confusing, especially for someone who was almost literally thrown into the drive-thru position. (That's what she said.) While Henry Ford invented the assembly line, the Japanese perfected it. (Nevermind the Toyota debocle.) Next you have to press a whole bunch of buttons that you eventually memorize and it's transmitted to a screen where hopefully someone is around to help you prepare the food. By the time the person hasa driven up to your window of enchantment the food has magically appeared behind you. You make change, hand them their food, wish them a good day and the car, faulty brakes and all, I mean the customer gets their food.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Big Brother is Watching


Right now, I feel watched. Winston Smith would know how I feel. Imagine if you can, if you dare, some part of your past constantly coming back to annoy you. No, not haunt. It's not some terrible and dark aspect of your past coming back to haunt you, but rather a part of your life that doesn't mean what it once did. A part of your life that you've outgrown. You don't hate it, but you certainly don't want to revisit that part of your life for too long or too often.

This past won't leave me alone. Every year or so it comes back like a boomerang and no matter how I tell it to go away, it doesn't seem to comprehend. Winston, they are all around me. They follow me; I'm too dangerous for them to let me live, but it's too risky for them to try and kill me. Every precaution I take has been thwarted; every barrier has been infiltrated. The last safe place is destroyed. Even this note is a big risk that could cost me my life.

Even now I see his face; a face that has been tainted by his own actions. If he had left well enough alone I wouldn't despise that face. His voice echos in the silence of my own mind. In that voice I hear the lies and manipulation; I hear the begging and veiled threats, the immaturity. I hear what I once thought was love but I know better now. He was obsessed and still won't let me go.

That obsession follows and haunts me; it comes back through the years. Winston are you still there? Did you ever notice that 'haunting' and 'hunting' are only one letter apart?

Friday, May 21, 2010

Underrated and Underappreciated

No folks this post is not some emo rant about how no one understands me. Taking a cue from MadDogBV's post entitled "Wheel of Music" I've decided to compile a list of some songs that are not as well known by well-known artists, or obscure artists with obscure songs. There is no criteria other than what I have said above. Mind you, I've chosen songs that occur to me therefore this is a great probability that I have missed some great songs that deserve to be on this list. Now without further ado, here's the list.

10) Eternal by Evanescence- This is an instrumental song complete with piano, guitar, and the sounds of a storm. It's off their first (and very limited) album entitled 'Origin'. Many of the songs that were on their 'Fallen' album can be heard here in an earlier state. As a side note, I think Evanescence has a lot of great songs that are not as well known and show a different side of her personality and musical prowess. Most of those songs are on 'Origin' and the 'Evanescence EP'.

9) Everytime by Britney Spears- Before you guys whip out the torches and pitchforks to hunt me down for this one, let me just say this is a very pretty and heartfelt song. I do remember it got a lot of airplay several months after her 'In the Zone' album was released but she's not as well known for this song as she is for her more upbeat, catchy, and raunchier songs. I've noticed that she has about 1 ballad type song in her albums that conveys a more vunerable Britney. Yes, Britney is one of my guilty pleasure artists. That's my 10 year old side coming out.

8) I Will by The Beatles- My favorite band of all time. This song is on their self entitled album more commonly referred to as "The White Album". If I remember correctly it comes at the end of the second album. It's a short, sweet, and simple acoustic song sung by Paul McCartney (he and I are going to get married, he just doesn't know it yet). I have a soft spot in my heart for acoustic songs and this one made the list because it's not as well-known as some other songs. Honestly, the White Album is more of a development of the individuals as opposed to their earlier albums which were a development of the band, so the songs on this album tend to be more "John" or more "Paul" or even more "George" and the songs don't have the other members to kind of balance them out. I Will is kind of a throwback to their earlier materials with the advantage of maturity.

7) Cancao Do Mar by Dulce Pontes- This is a Portuguese song so the only way I know what it's talking about is because I've looked up the translation of the song's lyrics. How did I find out about this song? Sarah Brightman has a song called "Harem" that uses the same tune as Cancao and someone pointed this out in the comment section of Youtube. So I decided to look up this song. Needless to say, I fell in love with the wistful tone and powerful, emotionally charged voice of Dulce Pontes. Again in the comments section someone pointed out that this song captures the Portugueses' relationship with the sea; full of sorrow at the loss of lives to its force, awe at its turbulence and calm and majesty, and the dependence on it for trade.

6) Thank You by The Redwalls- At this point, I have probably lost many of you. Who the heck is the band? I heard about this band from a professor (he's a grad student who taught one of my literature classes. You can check out his blog "Weaponized Culture"). Anyways, he told me about this band because they sound exactly like the Beatles, but they are from Illinois! In the video, Logan Baren has an early Beatles look both in mannerism and dress. It's an inspired look as opposed to an impersonation. I don't think they are signed anywhere anymore, and I have no idea where you can find their album(s), but they are on youtube. They have an authentic sound; no synthesizers, no auto-tuning, nada.

5) St. James Infirmary by Louis Armstrong- We all know the song "What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong. But in the course of bluesing I have come to know this haunting song. I think I heard once that this was originally an English folk song, but I don't know. If it was, Louis has given it his signature trumpet and a bluesy sound. It's a great blues dancing song. It's got a sexy rythm, but don't listen to the lyrics or else you'll realize how depressing and morbid it is.

4) Baby I'm Yours by Barbara Lewis, Cher, Arctic Monkeys, Debby Boone- The only two versions of this song I've heard are the ones by Barbara Lewis and The Arctic Monkeys. It's a really sweet little song, probably not too hard to learn on guitar, although on piano the left hand's a bitch but thankfully it's the right hand that carries the melody. So it's one of those songs you can sing to your girlfriend, or boyfriend, and they will swoon. Unless they are hard-hearted and don't have a single romantic bone in their body. The Arctic Monkeys version is a tad faster and easier to sing than Barbara Lewis'. She uses a little more range and embellishments to her voice. But both have their charms and add different dimesions to the song.

3) Candle on the Water by Helen Reddy from Pete's Dragon- This is an old Disney movie that I saw many years ago. I don't remember the main plot, but I remembered the sub-plot that this song is related to. I had dedicated this song to my ex when he was going through some rough times. It's amazing what comes back to you across time; the subplot of this movie is the same type as my relationship was. That I'm-in-love-with-you-and-I'm-willing-to-wait-for-you-even-though-I-don't-know-if-you're-ever-coming-back type of relationship. This song captured that undying love and devotion that I felt.

2) Whaddya Want by Casey MacGill- This is another song I've been exposed to through swing dancing. It's a fun song to dance too that won't tire you out, but isn't so slow that you'll get bored. The lyrics are a bit raunchy but subversively so and it offers some dip/pose opportunities during the song. I must mention this has NO relation to the Adam Lambert song of the same name. You cannot find this song on youtube in its entirety; the closest you get is a little boy sitting in the car singing along.

1) Travelin' Soldier by Dixie Chicks- This song is a huge tear-jerker for me and is the epitome of what I think of when I said 'underrated and underappreciate songs by well-known artists'. This song came out and was being promoted at the time of the (in)famous comment by Natalie Maines. Obviously, it quickly fell out of favor even though it's a cover. I love the extended concert version with the drums playing a very military style drum. It tells an all-too-common war love story that extends beyond the Vietnam War era the song is set in. Even if you don't agree with the Dixie Chicks and their opinions you have to appreciate their talent and their ability to deliver a song.

I hope you take the time to listen to at least some of these songs. I listen to these songs fairly frequently and really enjoy the fresh sound that goes with a song that doesn't get a lot of radio play. I've tried to pick songs across genres to really give you a sense of what I listen to.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Doctor, what's the diagnosis?

"Doctor, what's the diagnosis?"
"I'm afraid I don't have much good news. This patient doesn't have a heart." The doctor sighed and started to turn away. Stopping he surveyed the patient one last time, closed his eyes and rubbed his greying temples. "Yes, all the classic symptoms. This is a textbook case. There is nothing I can do for her." Sighing once again, the doctor walked out the door.
The nurse looked quizzically after the doctor, not really sure what to do. Should she schedule an emergency surgury? The doctor didn't seem too worried. She looked back at the dark-haired girl lying on the gurney. She was a little pale, but that could have been the lighting, she was smaller than average, but that was nothing too disconscerning either. The nurse looked a little more intently and gave a gasp. There was a hole in the girl's chest. There was no blood, not even coagulated blood. In a cartoon, it would have been a comical sight. Yet, even in cartoons there was a touch of tragedy when the character lost their heart in love. So unreal, yet so true.
*Cue 'Hole in my Soul' by Aerosmith* Lights fade on current scene and cue montage of girl's relationship*

Monday, April 26, 2010

Diamond Bullet

After three and a half years of being in some state of togetherness, my boyfriend and I have decided to call it quits. But this post isn't about the details; it's not about the story of our love, so if you're looking for a tragic love story or a romantic comedy then this post is not for you. This post is about the lessons I've learned and the wisdom I've gained from this relationship.
The first and probably most important thing I learned was that it really is better to have loved and lost than to never have loved at all. A cliche, I know, that's why I never believed it; but now I realize that if you don't feel this way, it's because you haven't really loved. Not every relationship is going to end with this sentiment. Some relationships are going to end with you thinking "Thank God I'm finally out of that shitty relationship!" Others are going to leave you crying for months. But there are some that as much as it hurts you you're still happy that it happened. You wouldn't regret anything that you did or did not do. You and your partner would have shared such a profound and powerful love and connection that by the time it ends there's nothing left. If you get out of a relationship and you feel like there's still something left, then chances are someone held back. If you leave it all on the dance floor of love, then you come away thinking "I've given it my all. There was nothing else for me to give. It just wasn't meant to be."
The second thing was actually discussed in my Shakespeare class when we were studying Romeo and Juliet. (For the record I hate this play.) None of us could believe that people could fall in love in a week's time. It didn't ring true to us, and a great majority (if not the entire class) felt that it was ridiculous. But the professor said something that stuck with me; that it's not the length of time that the relationship lasts, but how deep the love was. Most of us by this time (early to late twenties) had already been jaded by love. Maybe even more than once. But Juliet had never been jaded. Romeo had, but it was immediately forgotten when he fell in love with Juliet. This brings me to the next thing I've come to realize which is, you've never been in love until you really fall in love. Stay with me here. When you really and truly fall in love with someone, it simply blows every other experience you may have had out of the water. I thought I loved my other boyfriends. What did I know at 14, 15, 16? It was only when I fell for John*, and I couldn't get over him, and I felt like there was still something there that I realized that this was love. I was willing to wait for him to come around and realize that there was still something greater, something more. I loved him so much that when he came back from Iraq, I would have done anything for him. It killed me that I couldn't take his pain upon myself. If I had the chance to take his PTSD upon myself, I would have done it willingly and happily. I would have done that just to see him smile again. To hear him laugh. To have him be the person I loved so much again. But I couldn't do that, so I stayed by him and supported him to the best of my abilities. If this sounds a little one-sided let me balance it. He trusted me. He trusted me with his life, with his emotions, and with intimate knowledge of himself. He opened up his heart, his mind, his soul, and his life to me. He never held anything back. Not a big deal? It takes a lot for him to do that. It has to be a very special person for him to do that. I consider myself a very lucky person that I was able to see the side of him that I did see.
I am so happy this relationship happened. It was very difficult at times and I know that many of my friends and family will be very happy when they find out the relationship has ended. None of that matters. What matters is it happened. I experienced the kind of love that some people spend their whole lives searching for. Sadly, some people never find it. But I was able to love someone with all my heart and have that love reciprocated. The course of true love never did run smooth but in the end the love you take is equal to the love you make. I won't forget, can't regret what I did for love.

*Names have been changed to protect identities.
The title of this post comes from Marlon Brando as Col. Kurtz from the movie "Apocalypse Now". It is meant as a moment of clear insight. An epiphany. Any other interpretation is not intended.
Please see the song "What I did for love" from A Chorus Line.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Men and Love, Sex, Relationships

Since my "Failure of Love" post has been generating so many comments, I've decided to post an article I found. As always comments are strongly encouraged. Plus, I think a little science will add an interesting twist to the discussion we've been having.

Decoding the Male Brain

By Michelle Burford

It's the mystery that has befuddled women for centuries: Why do men behave the way that they do? Neuropsychiatrist Louann Brizendine, claims to have cracked part of that code in her new book, "The Male Brain: a Breakthrough Understanding of How Men and Boys Think."

While Brizendine concedes that the male and female brains share plenty in common, she whisks readers away on a tour through the male life span and demonstrates how the male brain is profoundly different from the female brain at nearly every stage. The point? Just about every behavior we've noticed in men -- from a tendency to analyze rather than empathize to the seemingly insatiable desire to ogle female body parts -- has a biological basis that Brizendine hopes will lend women a little insight on the men they love.

AOL: In your experience, what's the one thing that women most often misunderstand about men's behavior?

Louann Brizendine: Women don't quite understand some aspects of the psychological and emotional meaningfulness of sex to men. The sexual part of a man's interaction with a woman is how he expresses and feels love for her. I'm not talking about the kind of hit-and-run sex some men have with women they don't really have feelings for. But when a man is already falling in love with a woman, sex is what seals the deal.

When a woman sees that look in her man's eye that means he wants sex, she might be like "Oh, gosh … I'm suddenly tired." But she probably doesn't know that if she turns him down in a harsh way, he'll likely take that to mean that she doesn't love him -- even if it's just in that moment. Of course, it's rare that that's the case -- every woman who's in a relationship has, at some point, said, "Not tonight, honey." Yet when a man hears that sentence, it's as if he's hearing, "I don't really care for you."

AOL Health: In your book, you write that the area in the hypothalamus that's tied to sexual pursuit is larger in men than it is in women. Is this an excuse for philanderers like John Edwards and Tiger Woods?

LB: At conception, we all start out with female-type brain circuits; then at eight weeks of gestation, the tiny testicles start pumping out huge amounts of testosterone that marinates those circuits and turns them into a male brain. In males, the brain's area for sexual pursuit becomes two and a half times larger than in the female. And when a boy reaches puberty, the fuel that runs that area of the brain is testosterone. Between ages nine and 15, a boy's testosterone level increases by 200 to 250 percent, so for most of his adult life, a male will have 10 to 15 times more testosterone than females do. He's running at full throttle! But this isn't an excuse for abnormal or pathological sexual behavior in men. We all have the capacity to murder, but we learn how to show restraint. Philanderers may be hardwired with a strong sexual drive, but they don't get a pass for acting in an uncivilized fashion. They give all men a bad name.

AOL Health: It's not exactly shocking that men have a stronger sex drive than women do. What are women supposed to do with that information?

LB: A woman will call me up and say, "You've gotta save my marriage -- my husband is threatening to leave if I don't get more interested in sex!" When the couple is sitting in front of me, I'll say ask the man, "How do you know your wife loves you?" He'll say, "Because she wants to have sex with me!" But when I ask the woman the same question, she answers, "Because he wants to cuddle and talk with me." It's usually a big aha moment for both. Understanding the biological state of another person can very helpful -- then, we can stop blaming each other for being different.

AOL Health: While we're on the topic of biological differences, can you explain men's tendency to ogle random women -- also known as "the man trance"?

LB: Ninety-five percent of male sexual interest is visual. As young as age 12, boys start having fantasies of girls' body parts. They don't know that other boys are having the same fantasies, so they often feel alone, or like they're a pervert. It's important for moms to understand that this is the normal developmental curve of males. I have a son who's 19, so I've lived through this.

Just at the age when boys are starting to fantasize about female body parts, girls are often becoming obsessed with makeup, fashion and trying to be sexy. Yet this doesn't give males permission to, say, catcall or ogle females who are walking down the street. Parents need to help their boys learn how to behave in a civilized and socially appropriate way.

AOL Health: You call the male brain a "lean, mean, problem-solving machine." Can you explain that?

LB: That has to do with how a man processes the emotions he notices in his partner. There are two emotional processing channels in the human brain: the mirror-neuron system, which is related to displaying emotional empathy, and the temporal-parietal junction, a cognitive system that serves as a hub for searching the entire brain to find a solution fast.

The male brain doesn't wallow in the mirror-neuron system as long as the female brain does. So when a man sees his partner's face in distress, he quickly jumps into the use of his temporal-parietal junction and says, "Honey, here's what you should do." That's why I put a little yellow sticky on my husband's computer that says, "Honey, I know how you feel." It's scripted, but it makes me feel better when he says it before launching into solutions. He even started using that line with his adult daughter -- and he confessed to me the other day that it seems to be working!

AOL Health: You've said that men can fall in love just as hard as women do and sometimes more so. What is it about the male brain that allows men to fall so deeply in love -- and what are the gender-specific signs of that love?

LB: Sexual activity releases lots of dopamine in the human brain -- and that stimulates bonding and attachment between partners. The male brain has more dopamine than the female brain, and though we don't know all the details of how the male brain functions during sexual activity, we do know this: When a man falls in love with a woman, he actually incorporates her into his sense of self. Everything she likes or wants, he takes those things to heart as if they were his own, and he wants to give her those things. That's how he expresses love -- by providing. For men, the sexual part of that love is intense: With the release of oxytocin after intimacy, the protective mode in the male is greater than it is in the female. So in that sense, men fall harder in love.

AOL Health: As boys grow into men, some become fathers and develop what you call the "daddy brain." How does the male brain change during parenthood?

LB: The thing that surprised me most in doing the research for my book was discovering how the daddy brain gets formed. When a man's partner becomes pregnant, she starts to have huge hormonal fluctuations, and that stimulates her sweat glands to make different pheromones. Those pheromones waft across the bed into the man's nostrils and actually change the hormones that he releases. His prolactin level goes up by about 20 percent, and his testosterone level goes down by about 30 percent.

The hypothesis is that this lower testosterone level keeps the man close to the nest and prepares him to stop chasing skirts and become interested in his baby. Non-dad, pre-pregnancy brains have been scanned and then compared, eight or nine months later, to daddy brains. The scans show that a new dad's ability to activate the auditory circuits in his brain to hear an infant's cry has improved greatly. So these hormones prime his brain to take care of his baby. That's the whole purpose of a hormone -- to make a certain behavior more likely. So I worry about dads who are aren't around a lot, but that doesn't mean these men can't catch up in developing the daddy brain once they're home.

AOL Health: At what stage of life are men's and women's brains more alike than they are different?

LB: Around age 60, our hormones are more equivalent. The woman has a little more testosterone and a lot less estrogen, whereas the male has less testosterone and a little more estrogen. Testosterone levels in men begin to decline between ages 40 and 60 as they go through andropause, [also called male menopause]. Men usually still have a greater sex drive than women do -- but around 60, we're as close as we'll ever be in terms of the hormones that are running our brain circuits. So here's one hypothesis: The reason some men become more patient or more willing to get closer as they age is because they have higher levels of estrogen, which stimulates the brain to make oxytocin, the cuddle hormone.

In addition to noticing these hormonal changes, we also have to recognize this: Experience shapes the brain. The nature-nurture debate is dead because every experience we have -- and especially those experiences we repeat -- actually changes the brain's circuitry. By the time we are 60, we've had a lot of life experiences -- and those experiences have changed the architecture of the brain.

When you reject your partner's sexual advances, you hit the guy more deeply than he will ever admit to you. If you're going to turn him down, find a way to do it gently. It's one of the most loving things you can do.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Take a look inside my soul...

This is what I asked for.
Then why does it hurt so
e'ry time I see photos?
Damn, why'd I let you go?
We haven't been apart long
I'm already writing songs
I know it's entirely wrong
but tonight I will be strong.
I can't give in to temptation
even though I miss sensations
of loving hearts' palpitations
when you looked in my direction.
I wish you were here tonight
and I wish with all my might
that I could have the foresight
to pick better times to fight.
I hate that you're away.
There ain't a thing to say.
I knew this back in May
that this would be the way.

If I wanted to be with you
I would have a lot to endure.
More than I thought I ever could.
More than I thought I ever would.

I tried but my strength gave out.
Never have I had so much doubt
sadly I have lost the route
and I had to stand and shout
I can't do this anymore!
This pain hurts me to the core
I can't take this anymore.
And so I walked out the door.

I don't know if I'll come back
my mind's been thrown outta whack.
I think I need to stand back
and see what it is I lack.
Please know I love you
you're my dream come true;
this I gotta do
for me and for you.
Come June we will know
where our love will go
and our lives will show
we loved each other.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

A MLIA moment


Every once in a while, something happens that just makes you feel like dancing for joy at your own good fortune. Maybe you won $100 playing the lotto. Maybe that cute girl in your class looked at you and smiled. Or maybe you're like me. I was walking to go get food before class. And there it was, like the Geico stack of money, just sitting there, waiting for me, my own stack of money. I bend down and pick up my prize. I count it later- $19. I feel like I got rewarded for getting out of bed. MLIA

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Failure of Love


Do all epic love stories have tragic endings? Look at Romeo and Juliet. There were 5 deaths. Antony and Cleopatra both end up dead. Then there's the story of Dido and Aeneas; I could identify with Dido a couple years back. Both in the Christopher Marlowe and Virgil versions of the story it is a depiction of unrequited love. She gives him everything, he swears he loves her, marries her, then leaves her because Destiny is calling him elsewhere. Let's see, what other epic couples are there? Tristan and Isolde were the precursors to Guinevere and Lancelot. These two couples were never meant to be but somehow were. Hero and Leander; Leander would swim every night across the strait and Hero would set up a lantern in her tower to guide his way, but one night a storm came, blew out the light, and drowned him and she jumped from her tower in grief.
Is it because the lovers must die to be together that makes these stories epic and the love so profound? Is it because we somehow associate happy endings with easy, frivolous, and passionless love? How many times have you gone to see a romantic comedy and at the end thought to yourself "That doesn't happen in real life." Aside from the fact that it's a movie, why do we compare our love to that of Romeo and Juliet's which had a tragic ending instead of say...a Disney prince and princess where there is a happily ever after? Maybe it's because the men don't really show up until the end, after the woman has suffered and endured so much for her love. Have you ever noticed that? We never get the guy's perspective. It's always the woman dreaming of her love and waiting for him to just kind of show up, meanwhile she's dealing with family issues, identity issues, living situations, etc. and then her dream love shows up and takes her away and all the problems go away. For once, I would love to see a love story from the guy's perspective because I always wonder, when guys have a crush on a girl, what do they do? Do they think about her? Do their hearts start beating crazily when they see her go by? Do they hope that she'll look at them? Do they think about how they're going to tell her? I would write the story, but I'm not a guy, so I don't know how guys think. I would love my male readers' input on this and maybe I will write the first ever Disney prince story. I'll actually give him a real name, not Prince Charming.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Random funny things I've heard people say

These are things I have heard people say in regular, everyday conversation. Enjoy!

*The air is hidden- Ashley A.

*One of these days I'm going to play it on the safe side and do something crazy to my hair.- Berenice G.

*Skin is to guard you from protection.- Michael G.

*Communism is an orgy; everyone has to share.- Annie W.

*I walked all the way to the hospital. By foot.
That's what walking usually implies.- Berenice G. and myself.

*I'm going to strangle you in that wireless headset.- Daniel G.

*Hello Pot. I'm Kettle.- Stacy G.

*Put your arms around her like you love her; not like it's a mannequin.- Ashley A.

*Feminine beauty- it gets ugly before it gets pretty.- Me

Monday, March 22, 2010

This is what goes on in my brain!

The air burns my skin
The water hurts my eyes
The earth scrapes my soles
The fire consumes me

My mind sees all
My mind can hear you
My mind reaches for you
My mind controls the world

You can set me free
You can kiss me
You can walk away
You can kill me

We can change the world
We should run away
We would do that
We can't be

----------
Please do not ask me what this is about, I honestly have no idea.
I can tell you that I was thinking about the song "The End" by The Doors, a song that was also used in the movie Apocalypse Now. Other than that...it's up to you. Actually, crap, I shouldn't have said that. It takes away the mystery and allure of the work. Damnit. Oh well. Hope you enjoyed it. Please, if you ever use this poem, quote it, reference it, or anything of that nature please please please give me credit! Thank you

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Jersey Shore Train-wreck

Let me make one thing clear from the beginning of this post; I am not going to bash the show because I have never seen it.
Jersey Shore. Everyone's talking about it. Everyone is watching it. People can't seem to get enough of it. We are all love to escape our daily trials by living vicariously through the rich and glamorous. Yet the only thing I hear about the show is how bad it is, how absurd it is, how people only watch it to make fun of it. Now I'm willing to accept what I will call "the train-wreck phenomenon" which is rubbernecking to get a better look at some horrible situation simply out of curiosity. Very scientific definition, I know. We've all experienced this at some point. Traffic on one side of the highway has slowed down because there's an accident on the other and people feel the need and the urge to slow down and look at the accident, or whatever is left of it. I get it, Jersey Shore is so bad you can't help but watch it. But the train-wreck phenomenon only lasts for a few moments. After a while, your curiosity is satisfied, you can't really see anything, there is nothing left to see after a time.
If it really as bad as people say it is, shouldn't it have been pulled off the air already? Is Jersey Shore a car wreck where one's curiosity is satisfied after a few moments? Or is it a train wreck where there is so much damage it takes a lot longer for the mind to process it? Where it is so awful that it commands our attention; a sight that you do not want to behold but you find yourself staring and taking in every horrible, twisted detail?

Monday, March 15, 2010

Alice in Wonderland



Over spring break I went and saw Tim Burton's newest work "Alice in Wonderland". I must say, 3-D has improved dramatically from when I was a kid. I remember watching 3-D movies with those paper glasses with the red and blue lenses, remember? And only some of the things would pop out at you, like a cat's paw, or a dragon's head or something. But now thanks to the wonders of technology it's the whole movie! (As a side note, if you go, make sure to get there early so you're not stuck sitting in the front row like I was.) This new and improved 3-D makes you feel like you're actually in the room with the characters and hence, even more involved with the characters and their struggle.
Being a theater geek I was enamored with the costumes and make-up. I doubt the costumes are 100% accurate of the times; why is Alice's dress so short in comparison to those around her? But the essence comes through. Think of it like steam punk; it's inspired by Victorian clothing, but with a modern twist. There is a mixing of styles and each character is given their own style and their personalities are clearly seen in their mode of dress. The make-up in brief is calling to me to try and replicate it. I especially want to try and replicate the Mad Hatter's make-up. I loved all the colors used especially around the eyes.
Although the movie had Burton's signature dark and shadowy and gothic style, it seemed a little bit less so than normal. (Maybe because Disney had a hand in it?) Personally I liked it that way. I like to be able to get a good look at the costumes and in some of his movies like 'Sweeney Todd' I couldn't really do so because it was so dark and shadowy.
This new Alice lost much of Carroll's puzzles, riddles, and humor. Strangely enough, the animated Alice in Wonderland had some of that. You would think that the teen and young adult oriented movie would include more of that since an older audience member would catch on quicker than a child. But that's how it is. Yes, I do think that younger children (say younger than 6) should be excluded from this movie because it is a little bit scarier than the animated Disney version.
One thing that I did notice (damn you I.B.) was that red vs white rose imagery was lifted straight from English history portrayed with some fudge by Shakespeare in his Henry VI cycle of history plays. I'll spare you having to read them; the red and white roses are the symbols of the House of Lancaster and House of York respectively during the famed War of the Roses from 1455-1485. I feel so smart :).
All in all, an entertaining and visually pleasing movie. You don't have to think too hard about it, and it's definitely going to give you ideas for your next Halloween costume.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Tim Tebow's Future part 2


So I was thinking as I was walking home a few minutes ago about Tim Tebow and the Dolphins and a comment that was left on that article. Tim Tebow probably won't make it as a first string QB as is, but he might make a really great second stringer. Then I thought of how the Dolphins sometimes use a two quarterback system. Chad Henne is the regular quarterback, but every once in a while, Pat White will be put in and he'll run a good 4 yards or so, sometimes he'll throw the ball, and after his 1 or two plays he's taken out and replaced by Chad Henne. Now Pat White is pretty small in this day of huge quarterbacks. But Tim Tebow has that toughness and quickness to be able to execute these plays. These are the kinds of plays Tebow is really good at. If the Dolphins want to continue this semi two quarterback system, or even develop it further, Tim Tebow is probably the best pick out there.
This brings up the question of how the dynamics of the game are going to change. When the Dolphins first came out with the Wildcat, they were unstoppable (Sorry Belichick) and it took a while for teams to adjust. I know the Dolphins did not invent the Wildcat, but before this it was not commonly used in the NFL. Now, because of the Dolphins employing it, teams now have to prepare their defenses for it. By that same token, if the Dolphins start employing a two quarterback system, the defense of any team will have to work twice as hard and prepare for two different styles and two different mentalities and logic. They will have to learn two different individuals and adjust to a wider spectrum of opportunities.
In the meantime, Tebow could be taught and groomed to perhaps one day take on the role of star quarterback while still participating in the game. Now the question of money, will a franchise be willing to invest that much money on someone who might not initially give good returns? We'll see what coaches and GMs think as the draft unfolds. But it's not too much of a color change from orange and blue to orange and teal. :)

Monday, March 1, 2010

Tim Tebow's Future


The NFL draft is a little over 1 month away and I can't help but follow what's going on with Tim Tebow. He was a force to be reckoned with in college. He has the arm strength (ignoring technique) to throw long passes, he can run very quickly, and he's tough; he's not afraid to get down and dirty. But he brings something else that I think a mediocre team needs: heart. If you watch him on T.V. you only get a glimpse of his energy and charisma. I've seen him play a number of times at The Swamp. He really puts a lot of effort out there, he infuses everyone around him with energy. It was a thrill and a joy to watch him grow and develop as a person and as a player. When he first started, when he couldn't find someone, he'd run. By the end of his senior year, he was waiting and looking, scanning the field to find his man. Then, at the last minute, if no one was open, he'd run. He's a 'team player' and after spending over 3 years in the spotlight, he still continued to be a team player. I'm not going to pick out T.O. specifically but an over-sized ego gets in the way of what you're doing. It becomes all about "me me me". Tim is a natural leader and he inspires confidence in his team, in himself, and in all he does. What does this quality amount to? For a strong team, not much. Why would you need a leader when you have a great system and great people in that system? A team like the Colts would not need a Tim Tebow. (Not that Peyton Manning is going anywhere) But a team like the Dolphins, or Tampa Bay, or Jacksonville (among others) might benefit from someone like him.
However, the criticisms are valid. He takes way too long to throw the ball and you can't expect not to get intercepted when you are throwing from your waist. Why he throws like that is beyond me. What's even more mind boggling is why the coaches as UF have done nothing to change his throwing style. But I'm beating a dead horse. What truly scares me is one of the things I praised earlier. His toughness and his enjoyment in contact. That may be fine in the college world where football players are generally smaller. But something happens once they go to the NFL, maybe it's the water, but they get huge. Did anyone see the last Dolphins game last season? After Chad Henne went down they put in little Pat White. He ran and collided helmet to helmet with Ike Taylor of the Steelers and subsequently suffered a concussion. Now Tebow is bigger than Pat White so if he did take a hit like that, it might not be as bad, but I think you see what I'm driving at.
I have not watched the other quarterbacks so I'm not going to compare them but I am going to say that my composite quarterback would definitely have the heart of Tim Tebow.
As a proud member of the Gator Nation, I wish him the best!

Friday, February 26, 2010

Isolated in a Crowd

With all the new and improved ways of keeping in touch with people, I find myself isolated in this sea of technology. People come and people go, promising to keep in touch, but never doing so. Oftentimes, there is no explanation, no fight, and no reason whatsoever. Other friends tell you of better ways of keeping in touch with people, but these are merely fads that come and go along with those friends that came with the new ways of communication. I have learned the hard way who my real friends are; look at my call log, I talk to the same 5 people, those are my real friends. Everyone else is merely scenery that comes and goes as I run my course. Try as I might to make that scenery part of my life permanently, I find that many times they slip through.
How is it that the more avenues of communication we have, the less we actually tell people? How many conversations have you had that consisted of "Hey what's up? Not much, just here bored...(insert random stuff here)”. That is hardly a memorable conversation; there is no real exchange of information, no connection. Most conversations lack depth and actual thought process. We don't remember what the person we are talking to has told us because it's all meaningless and we throw it out of our minds. We become more isolated the more we try to connect.
I’m tired of giving people excuses for not really keeping in touch. I’d much rather talk to someone on the phone or face-to-face; it’s easier to pick up meaning with as many context clues as possible. Sarcasm and irony are two of the hardest things to write and pick up in writing. Granted, some people are very good at subtle sarcasm that only other really sarcastic people can pick up on, but for the most part, sarcasm is easier to pick up when there’s a voice involved, not merely the written word.
Are we so afraid that others will not approve of us that we can no longer express exactly what we feel? That we have to hide behind “w/e” or “lol” when we’re not really laughing, just because we don’t have anything else to say? Can we no longer think of intelligent things to say to others that we have to talk about the everyday complaints and grievances? Are we afraid to really talk?
I refuse to give excuses, if you want to talk to me; you know how to get in touch with me, call me, e-mail me or message me on AIM or MSN. I think I have enough online addresses, if they are not good enough for you, fine, then I will know that I’m just another friend on your interminable lists of so-called “friends”; just another face and name but not a real person. I am more than what my online profile says but you would never know because we have lost touch with one another. We have drifted apart in this sea of technology and most of us would never even notice…

Saturday, February 20, 2010

An interestingly lighthearted article


Where in the nursery rhyme does it say humpty dumpty is an egg?

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the king's horses and all the king's men
Couldn't put Humpty together again....does not tell us at all that Humpty was an egg. However it's etymology has a number of variations, and it was in Lewis Carroll's 1871 book "Through the Looking Glass" (that used this rhyme), where the book's illustrator John Tenniel first drew Humpty as an egg, sitting on a wall.

An 1810 version of the rhyme also does not explicitly state that the subject is an egg because it was originally posed as the riddle as such:

Humpty Dumpty sate on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall;
Threescore men and threescore more,
Cannot place Humpty dumpty as he was before.

Furthermore, "humpty dumpty" was an eighteenth-century reduplicative (linguistic root) slang for a short and clumsy person.

I got this article from:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091225041850AApxALK

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Happy Commercialized Love Day!


I must give credit to my friend Victoria for giving me that phrase. Guys, it's that time of year again! Time to buy overpriced flowers, boxes of chocolates that you know will come back to haunt you in the form of "I'm so fat!", the cheesy balloons, the red and pink stuffed animals that will only be hurled at you if there is a break-up, and the expensive dinner that your wallet will be feeling for the next 2 months. No, I'm not single, I just don't want my guy to feel compelled to buy me flowers just because it's the end of the second week of the second month. The entire symbolism of the holiday has been grossly warped into appearances that can be purchased at street corners, drug stores, and on-line. Does giving candy really show love? No, but we are led to believe that it does by the very mentality that we have been instilled with. We are a consumer-based society. Our economy thrives on people buying stuff, throwing it away, then buying more stuff.
I love stuff too. Don't get me wrong. My mother can tell you I have so much 'junk' that it sickens her. You put me inside a Tiffany & Co store and I'm mesmerized. I love pretty dresses, especially the prom dresses. And I love chocolate and flowers. But if my boyfriend bought me these things because it was a specific day and because he felt compelled to, then it loses the sentimental value. One Christmas he got me a Killer Rabbit plush. It made me laugh and it means a lot to me because he knows me that well. Plus, it gave me something to cuddle while he was in Iraq. Another Christmas he gave me a bead bracelet he made for me. He used my favorite colors and I hardly ever take it off because the sentimental value is exponentially greater than its monetary value. Is it lame? To the outside viewer, absolutely. But I don't care.
You know what I find really sweet? The random phone call just to say he loves me. We've been together for quite a while, so there's no need to impress me anymore, but he still finds ways to make me smile and show that he's thinking of me. In fact, I told him to make it seem as if Valentine's Day doesn't exist. I told him I just want him to call me and tell me that he loves me just like he does everyday.
Valentine's Day shouldn't be about outdoing your girl's friends expectations, or other guys. It's not about the flashiest presentation of your love. It's not about how big, but rather how well you know your girl. Make it mean something. Don't let it be just another box of candy and bunch of flowers. Get creative. Go on a limb. Make it sentimental, not necessarily cheesy. Don't tell her you love her with the puppy that says "I love you". Show her and it's up to you to know her well enough to know how to do that. If she has a story to tell her friends about the item, it means more.
To all the guys out there, good luck this V-day!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Give love to get love?

Is it better to love fully and deeply despite the possibility of getting hurt or is it better to guard feelings jealously and only give love away in small fractions but never give it all? I should clarify and state that when I say 'love' I mean it in the most general sense; love for a friend, a family member, another human being even. I don't mean the weak-kneed, heart pounding, butterfly kind of love, but rather a desire to forge a connection with someone. A few experiences have demonstrated to me that it might be wiser to refrain from opening my heart and giving love to get love in return. True, it is foolish to hope for reciprocated sentiments but should it be actively discouraged? Should we deliberately be more suspicious of people and only be courtious to those around us and offer some of our emotions and love to a very select group of people? This would certainly give more value to love acquired from a person of that philosophy. As the old saying goes 'easy come easy go' therefore by extension, whatever comes with difficulty must be worth more.
Perhaps it is fear that keeps most people from ever being able to open themselves up for the kind of love that is so trusting of the basic good in the vast majority of people. A love of man springs from the belief that most people are basically well-intentioned and not out to harm those around themselves. I know that if I had to go back to those points in my life where it might have been wiser to refrain from being so open and loving I wouldn't change anything. I would still open my heart to people because I always think of the archetypal Wise Man. So full of love and compassion and trust; so child-like and innocent, never being jaded by the bad in the world. I know I won't always get the love and connection that I try to make, but at least I made the effort and maybe, just maybe, that person will remember me for it. I think the Beatles said it best "And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make". Or think the ending scene in the movie Bugsy Malone; the last chorus was used in a Grand Theft Auto-style Coca-Cola commercial that premeired in the 2007 Super Bowl
"You give a little love
And it all comes back to you
(Da da da ra da da da)
You know you gonna be remembered
For the things you say and do
(Da da da ra da da da)"

Friday, January 29, 2010

No Distance is too Great

As those of you who follow my blog might know, I want to be a writer. So, I'm posting a poem I wrote a few months ago. Please don't expect Whitman or Dickenson but feel free to comment constructive critisism like "This line needs a different word here". If you write something mean like "This poem sucks" that's not helpful to me.
Anyways, hope you enjoy it.

I rarely see the smile in your eyes
and I can count on my hands
How many times we haven’t been apart.
Somehow a bond has been formed,
A long lasting love sown
And you and I are so close.
No matter how many miles between,
No matter how long it’s been
Since the last time I’ve seen your face
Our love still binds our hearts.
No distance is too great
And only serves to make
Each meeting so grand.

Monday, January 11, 2010

An Expansion of your Musical Library- Ludo



For those of you who are looking for new bands and music, I want to recommend a band that I've been listening to for nearly a year now. This band is Ludo. They are from Missouri and have 3 albums out. They are not that new, considering that their first album was released in 2004, but they are relatively unknown. When their name is typed into Pandora, similar bands are All-American Rejects, but don't let that give you any impressions. Ludo's lyrics are a tad bit fantastical, but funny, they usually tell a story and are unique. They are classified as "alternative rock", but that label doesn't mean anything to me. Even their break-up songs are funny like "Goodwill Hunting By Myself". Yes, they are talking about the movie, but the music video has nothing to do with the movie; it has ninjas and stick horses and ice cream. Very random, very fun, very creative lyrics like "Why should I watch Matt Damon cry without her at my side I pined" This song can be found on their album "You're Awful, I Love You". Another unique track on that album is "Love Me Dead"; it's the epitome of a love-hate relationship. My favorite line "You're born of a jackel, you're beautiful". They also have an EP called "Broken Bride" and it is a rock opera. The basic story is the narrator lost his wife in an accident and spent a number of years building a time machine to go back and save her, but first he lands in pre-historic times, then he goes too far into the future and goes to an apocolypse and the only way to stop a take-over by the devil is to sacrifice his machine. As repayment, the angels take him back to the morning his wife died. What does he change? Listen to the song to find out. Even thinking of it brings that sting to the corners of my eyes. You can find the whole album in sections on Youtube. While there are religious references in this album, do not let that turn you off. To counterbalance, Ludo has a song called "Girls on Trampolines". Here's the chorus "They've got more beer than I've ever seen and they've got girls on trampolines. They've tapped 10 kegs since 9:15 and they've got girls on trampolines. WOOOH!"
Check them out and I hope you like them as much as I do.