• it’s only fair

    February 6, 2007
    Uncategorized

    if brni has a map, i have to have one too

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  • make them stop!!!!

    February 2, 2007
    Uncategorized

    global warming:

    the scientific community came out in one, dire voice proclaiming that global warming is a FACT, is OUR FAULT, and must be addressed within the next 10 years or we will have no way out.

    and the bush admin said it refuses to make energy cuts mandatory.

    cervical cancer:

    a short while ago, we found out that cervical cancer is caused by human papilloma virus, which is sexually transmitted. now, Texas wants to FORCE sixth grade girls to be vaccinated against this virus.

    EXCUSE ME but NO!
    this vaccine was fast-tracked through approval. do YOU really trust the FDA and Merck to insure the safety of this vaccine given their track record (i.e., vioxx)? but more importantly, do you really think the government has the right to force women to be vaccinated from something that MEN carry?

    methinks Merck is trying to recoup their losses and they are using our cervixes to fix their bottom line.

    *ahem*

    i think it’s time to give full voice to RAGE AGAINST THIS MACHINE! especially us women. we are not Merck’s guinea pigs and our children’s world should not be destroyed by short-sighted, immoral government slaves to oil.

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  • drawing lessons

    January 23, 2007
    Uncategorized

    I used to be a watcher when I was little. I was very intent about it and almost never smiled. I earned the name, “the old woman” because of it. I could be very still, watching what the larger people in my life did, not really understanding, just taking it all in. When I was outside, I watched the animals and plants as well. Especially the birds. I tried to will them to come to me. I begged them without words, just yearning, but they stayed in the trees. I began climbing trees to get to them, but they took to the sky.

    I had one tree I especially liked. It lived in our front yard, set down the hill a bit, away from the house. I knew this tree as well as I knew my own room. I could climb it and perch way up, where the branches swayed with what little weight I had to offer. It was peaceful up there and I was safe from the looks and questions and demands my parents and the others had for me. I was safely content to be up in a tree rather than down there, with the other children, where I always felt I had to defend myself from their prying eyes and loud mouths.

    I wouldn’t call my internal world a happy one. No, it was more a feeling one full of sighs and wishes. Looking, watching, examining, figuring things out, longing to be part of the world of feathers, fur, branches and bark. The external world, the world of people pulling and pushing, harshly proclaiming their displeasure at my reluctance to talk to them was simply too loud for me to handle. There was no respect for the boundaries of my world. They just burst into my space anytime they felt like it, even when they could see that it caused a great deal of distress and pain.

    All I wanted to do really, was draw everything I saw. So I peered at everything and recorded what I saw on paper. I had to, there was no choice in the matter. It was what I was. It was why I was. And they even used that against me as punishment for being quiet.

    My father hated the way I did everything. He even hated the way I ate my food. “Don’t just eat all the peas at once. Take a bite of the peas…now take a bite of the potatoes…now eat some of the meat,” he would bully me as we sat at the table. Every meal was a misery. If I didn’t like the look of a thing, he made me taste it anyway. If I didn’t like what I tasted, I was a fool or a liar or some other name that would send him into a tirade, pushing away from the table with disgust to go sulk in the living room, or possibly out the door to the nearest bar.

    So, when I had done some thing, a thing I can’t even remember, but a thing so absolutely awful that only a quiet child of 5 could do, he took away my pencils and my pads of paper. He told me I couldn’t draw for 2 weeks. I drew too much anyway, and I drew all the wrong things the wrong way. So he took the thing I truly needed to survive in the world away.

    It hurt. Oh, how my hands hurt! There was nothing I could do to ease the pain — I still remember looking at my hands, holding them close to my belly, trying to ease the tension, the ache of not drawing. Crying in my room, begging my mother as she stood on the other side of the door, “Please, please, I have to draw. My hands hurt.” I think she understood because she smuggled a pad of paper and a pencil to me, through the crack of the door, telling me not to let Dad know. Later, I heard them yelling. Mom telling him how wrong he was, he telling her terrible things about all of us. The fighting went on, building in intensity and cruelty as it always did, until finally, Dad slammed out the door and Mom retreated to the kitchen to cry at the table.

    I stayed in my room, listening and drawing, waiting for the sun to come up so I could climb into my tree.

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  • ouch ouch and right on

    January 20, 2007
    Uncategorized

    just found this — a little late, but the sting is just as strong.

    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/011207A.shtml

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  • the power of symbols

    January 18, 2007
    Uncategorized

    The Doomsday Clock.

    The smartest people in the world think we’re doomed, and they made a clock back in 1947, four years before I was born, to show the not so smart how much time we had left if we don’t change our warring ways.

    tick
    tock
    tick
    tock

    Oh yes, this has always been a scary thing. The simple, benign hands of a clock; the regular sound of ticking and tocking; the swing of the pendulum.

    Why is this so scary? Edgar knew.

    Add darkness. Add a pit. Add the inevitable end of the world as we know it.

    The scientists and other smart people are worried. They might even be angry, I would bet. I know I am. I grew up with this fake clock, the one that the smart people use to tap the ignorant between the eyes, to wake them up. The smart people know that we need symbols to make things real. But I’m afraid that the deciders and the occupants and the ones who have the big, fat sticks aren’t moved by symbols anymore. The ones we think are reasonable have so much money in the oil barrels that they are willing to destroy the environment and the world be damned. The ones who don’t want the western devils to dip their sticks in their oil are so fanatical that they would like nothing better than to blow themselves up and take the rest of us with them and the world be damned.

    They don’t realize that the planet can make out just fine without us. Life as WE know it is what’s threatened, OUR world, not the earth itself. The earth, the planet, will be fine. New magic is in the works.

    hmmm…those life forms didn’t work out as well as hoped. Here, these should do a bit better.

    Steven Hawkins thinks that global warming is more immediately dangerous than nuclear war, and the clock ticks.
    While our greed and stupidity warms the globe with the foul discharge of burned blood, and the clock tocks.

    I’m sure the powers that be in Washington, Korea, Iran, wherever, don’t give a damn. No, they are so full of power, so secure in the knowledge that they are saving the world (resources) for their own ends (as in bottom lines) that they don’t see the truth behind the symbol. They don’t hear the dying world, they don’t smell the rot that is just under their noses. What the rational failed to prove, the greed of capitalism has made impotent. They broke the magical grip of the symbol. The clock has no hold on them anymore. Greed broke its arms.

    http://www.thebulletin.org/minutes-to-midnight/

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  • potty emergency

    January 12, 2007
    Uncategorized

    I had to go to the bathroom. But that woman was there, sitting with my mother at the kitchen table. The powder room was just beyond the kitchen, off the laundry room by the back door. This was the room where my mother had installed a sink to wash womens’ hair. You know, the kind of sink where you sit down in front of it and leaning back, ease your neck into the molded support. The women would come to the back door, where my mother took care of them. She washed, cut and set their hair. She had a regular beauty parlor dryer and even a large contraption for them to sit in while she “permed” their hair so that the tight curls she shaped their hair into would last an entire week.

    Oh, but I had to go so very bad and the woman was in the kitchen and another was in the laundry room under the dryer. I stood there hoping, squirming, dying for my mother’s attention to get me to the bathroom before I had an accident. Holding my three year old pussy, I tap-danced frantically in the entryway to the kitchen.

    “What is the matter with you?” she asked. I couldn’t tell her without the woman hearing.

    taptaptap

    “Linda, what is wrong with you?”

    Oh God, Mom, please…I can’t, I can’t
    “Can I go to the bathroom?” I hissed as loud as I could without being heard.

    “What? You have to tinkle?”

    Oh God oh God yeeessssssss.

    “Linda, you do not have to ask. If you have to go, JUST GO!”

    And I ran. I ran as fast as I could while holding on as tight as I could. I ran past the woman sitting at the kitchen table and I ran past the woman under the dryer and I ran into the powder room and I sat on the toilet without taking my panties off because that would have been too much too late, and I peed through my panties into the toilet bowl.

    And then I had to figure out what to do. My panties were wet, soaked through and I couldn’t leave them on. I pulled on the toilet paper roll, wadded a long length of it up and tried to wipe. Still wet, dripping wet. I had to get them off. I inched my way to the rim of the seat, tucked my thumbs under the elastic waist and tugged and wriggled. Slipping off the seat, I pulled the wet panties down my legs, over my socks and shoes and off, onto the floor. My legs, socks and shoes were now steaked with urine and the panties were puddled on the floor.

    I took my shoes off, peeled the little white, ruffled socks off, and stood there, transfixed in the middle of my wet mess. Trapped. I couldn’t leave the powder room without my shoes and socks and panties. The women. My mother. I pulled down more toilet paper and wiped my legs as dry as my three year old hands could manage. I squatted down by my puddle and with the very tips of my fingers, pulled everything tight together, trying to think, trying to figure out how to wrap it all into a small package and hold it tight to my middle. If I could do that, I could possibly shrink myself down and around it all and tip toe as quiet as nothing and skirt through, unseen, past the women, past my mother, then dash up to my room and hide my mess in the darkest corner of my closet.

    “Linda!” my mother banged at the door, “What are you doing in there?”

    Oh no, please no.

    “Open the door, Linda, now, or I’m coming in.”

    Please, don’t. Oh please, not now.

    The door swung in as I crouched around my wet things. And my mother, loud with concern, assessed the situation and said, “Why didn’t you just go to the bathroom when you had to tinkle?”

    The women.

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Croneswood Art

art and nature tangled in thorny vines of vulture bones and crow feathers.

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