In honor of not having posted for a year, here is some more hot literary smut for the one person reading my blog:
My boyfriend found this for me and expressed his desire to build it for me (as a monument, I suppose, to my love of books). Unfortunately, he also expressed his lament that he has a one-story house and would need to move in order to build such a miracle....
Friday, December 18, 2009
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Wishing People Happy ............ Holiday for Holidays They Don't Happen to Celebrate
I had an interesting professor in college. He was tough and not so much fun to talk to after class but still, he was a brilliant professor and knew his stuff. He taught one of my 19th century British poetry classes. One day I was discussing my paper with him after class. It was the last day of class before the Thanksgiving Holiday and so as I started to walk away, I wished him a Happy Thanksgiving and gave him a smile.
He gave me a deadpan look in return. Continued to stare me down. Then he gave a sort of slow shake of his head, turned around, and walked away.
Now, I know that my professor is of British origin. But he lives here. If I remember correctly, he's lived here for years. It is likely he has U.S. citizenship now. He has no plans anywhere in the near future to move away from the U.S. Why is it rude for me to wish him a Happy Thanksgiving? If I were in England and it was Guy Fawkes Day or anything else, I wouldn't get offended for someone telling me to enjoy the Holiday.
Am I missing something here?
I suppose the reason this really stumped me is because Thanksgiving is such a generic holiday to me. Yes, its origins lie in the first settlement at Plymouth and the first dinner with the Indians but it has evolved into a holiday that seems it can offend no one, with the possible exception of people suffering from eating disorders or those who literally do not like food. It's a day of Thanks. The holiday that it has become has very little to do with being American at all -- it's just about being thankful.... It's about spending time with family. And, unlike every other holiday including Easter, which is about the rising of Christ, it is the only one that is not overly-commercialized. I mean, yes, green bean, fried onions, turkey, and other food establishments of the like do do well this time of year because of mass food consumption, but I mean, come on, it's only dinner. There are no Thanksgiving cards, no Thanksgiving baskets with Thanksgiving decorated items. There are no Thanksgiving presents or Thanksgiving fireworks (which is a little sad)....
I'm writing this badly just to get it off my mind but seriously, did I miss something?
He gave me a deadpan look in return. Continued to stare me down. Then he gave a sort of slow shake of his head, turned around, and walked away.
Now, I know that my professor is of British origin. But he lives here. If I remember correctly, he's lived here for years. It is likely he has U.S. citizenship now. He has no plans anywhere in the near future to move away from the U.S. Why is it rude for me to wish him a Happy Thanksgiving? If I were in England and it was Guy Fawkes Day or anything else, I wouldn't get offended for someone telling me to enjoy the Holiday.
Am I missing something here?
I suppose the reason this really stumped me is because Thanksgiving is such a generic holiday to me. Yes, its origins lie in the first settlement at Plymouth and the first dinner with the Indians but it has evolved into a holiday that seems it can offend no one, with the possible exception of people suffering from eating disorders or those who literally do not like food. It's a day of Thanks. The holiday that it has become has very little to do with being American at all -- it's just about being thankful.... It's about spending time with family. And, unlike every other holiday including Easter, which is about the rising of Christ, it is the only one that is not overly-commercialized. I mean, yes, green bean, fried onions, turkey, and other food establishments of the like do do well this time of year because of mass food consumption, but I mean, come on, it's only dinner. There are no Thanksgiving cards, no Thanksgiving baskets with Thanksgiving decorated items. There are no Thanksgiving presents or Thanksgiving fireworks (which is a little sad)....
I'm writing this badly just to get it off my mind but seriously, did I miss something?
Friday, November 21, 2008
Economic Optimism
PANIC! That's a catchphrase at work, coined probably by Lori, the Director of Operations. We always seem to be under some ridiculous last-minute deadline when a client calls in wanting the world created in 7 minutes rather than 7 days. Whenever someone mentions the deadline or we get a new graphic e-mailed to us, Lori says "panic." She has posters all over her wall with panic written on them -- ways to avoid panicking. Once, right after I started working at TG, I asked her if she likes panicking. She quickly told me the point was NOT to panic.
I'll admit I've picked up the catchphrase. Which brings me onto our topic: the Economy. I wish people would stop panicking. I know it's easy for me to say because I'm 25 and I won't retire soon -- I don't have to worry about how my 401K is going at the moment. I'm not really invested in the stock market, so it does not directly affect me that stock prices are falling (though the inevitable large indirect effects are pretty terrible). I just.... it seems that the Economy does worse when everyone panics. Why not just practice some economic optimism? Make safer investments but try to do things that help the economy grow.
There is a wonderful quote that I got from Daren's Quote of the Day (which you can subscribe to by sending an e-mail to
DarrensQotD-subscribe@googlegroups.com -- free publicit, Darren)
"This is not 1929, and we’re not going into a Great Depression. More than 1,300 banks failed in 1929-1930, and we’ve had only 15 bank failures so far this year. Unemployment was 25% then - versus about 6% today. When FDR took over in 1933, a shocking 44% of all montages were in default. And the stock markets? What is it now, down about 35-40%? From the late 1929 to mid-1932, the Dow Index dropped 90%. People, let’s all calm down. It’s pretty awful out there, but we’re not headed for a Depression."
-Joe Garrett of Garrett, Watts & Co.
It does a good job of expressing my sentiments. I admit I am no economist but people need to calm down. We seem to be at an age where stockholders and business persons expect and demand constant growth and increased profits. There reaches a point where you can't continue to grow business into new markets to make a profit -- if you are good at what you do and your business has value, then you should be able to sell a core product in a certain number of markets and be successful. I have to wonder why all these gigantic corporations were allowed to merge, citing that they needed to in order to remain competitive. Instead of being competitive, they are monopolistic giants with too much of the American, and inadvertantly global, economy tied into them. The era big business is not over -- but business doesn't need to be quite this big. CEOs don't need to have compensation packages of the hundreds of millions even when they fail.
I know these are simplistic ideas about the economy -- I know I'm really making a controlled rant at this point, with little real informatione except what I glean from the news and from conversation with friends and coworkers at the proverbial water cooler. But surely there is a smart way to deal with this. Surely there are productive ways to fix this rather than pointing fingers. If the government is going to do anything, it should look at long-term solutions.
Makes me want to write my congressman. Don't bankrupt the country; don't bailout companies and put them back in the black. Give them what they need to stay afloat and ask them to do the hard work of figuring out how to keep their companies alive without firing all of the workers who actually do the companies' work.
But let's come up with solutions instead of panicking.
I'll admit I've picked up the catchphrase. Which brings me onto our topic: the Economy. I wish people would stop panicking. I know it's easy for me to say because I'm 25 and I won't retire soon -- I don't have to worry about how my 401K is going at the moment. I'm not really invested in the stock market, so it does not directly affect me that stock prices are falling (though the inevitable large indirect effects are pretty terrible). I just.... it seems that the Economy does worse when everyone panics. Why not just practice some economic optimism? Make safer investments but try to do things that help the economy grow.
There is a wonderful quote that I got from Daren's Quote of the Day (which you can subscribe to by sending an e-mail to
DarrensQotD-subscribe@googlegroups.com -- free publicit, Darren)
"This is not 1929, and we’re not going into a Great Depression. More than 1,300 banks failed in 1929-1930, and we’ve had only 15 bank failures so far this year. Unemployment was 25% then - versus about 6% today. When FDR took over in 1933, a shocking 44% of all montages were in default. And the stock markets? What is it now, down about 35-40%? From the late 1929 to mid-1932, the Dow Index dropped 90%. People, let’s all calm down. It’s pretty awful out there, but we’re not headed for a Depression."
-Joe Garrett of Garrett, Watts & Co.
It does a good job of expressing my sentiments. I admit I am no economist but people need to calm down. We seem to be at an age where stockholders and business persons expect and demand constant growth and increased profits. There reaches a point where you can't continue to grow business into new markets to make a profit -- if you are good at what you do and your business has value, then you should be able to sell a core product in a certain number of markets and be successful. I have to wonder why all these gigantic corporations were allowed to merge, citing that they needed to in order to remain competitive. Instead of being competitive, they are monopolistic giants with too much of the American, and inadvertantly global, economy tied into them. The era big business is not over -- but business doesn't need to be quite this big. CEOs don't need to have compensation packages of the hundreds of millions even when they fail.
I know these are simplistic ideas about the economy -- I know I'm really making a controlled rant at this point, with little real informatione except what I glean from the news and from conversation with friends and coworkers at the proverbial water cooler. But surely there is a smart way to deal with this. Surely there are productive ways to fix this rather than pointing fingers. If the government is going to do anything, it should look at long-term solutions.
Makes me want to write my congressman. Don't bankrupt the country; don't bailout companies and put them back in the black. Give them what they need to stay afloat and ask them to do the hard work of figuring out how to keep their companies alive without firing all of the workers who actually do the companies' work.
But let's come up with solutions instead of panicking.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Inaugural Post: Explanation of My Blog Title
Initially, I struggled with blogging. What would my blog be? Personal? Detached from my normal life? A place where I share the day's events or where I merely post third-party responses to what's going on in the rest of the world? I couldn't reconcile these two ideas to my blog, so I created two. This blog is for general thoughts on the world, for things I find, for critiques and praise of mankind and the world. It is not about me -- it is not about my daily life or what I do or who I'm dating or anything of that personal nature. It is personal to the extent that I cannot take myself out of my own writing. But this is the place where I will try to write something worthy of someone else reading. I am not saying that that is the purpose of blogging -- anyone's blog is whatever they make of it. After careful consideration, this is what I choose to make of mine. Perhaps divided within myself, I give multiple voices to the world.
I first posted this my other blog and it is the inspiration for the title and purpose of this blog:
I remember the first time I saw Beauty and the Beast (the animated film). The library in the Beast's mansion was heaven. I could never imagine having that many books to read. I was eight years old and I was already a lover of books. Even then, that library meant everything to me.
I first posted this my other blog and it is the inspiration for the title and purpose of this blog:
I remember the first time I saw Beauty and the Beast (the animated film). The library in the Beast's mansion was heaven. I could never imagine having that many books to read. I was eight years old and I was already a lover of books. Even then, that library meant everything to me.
In addition, I identified best with Belle than any other Disney "Princess" because we both had long brown hair, liked to sing, and LOVED books. And, like her, I always found myself very misunderstood by the general public. My dream library in the mansion I will never have includes a library almost identical to the one in Beauty and the Beast -- all hardback or leatherbound books. Books on top of books from floor to ceiling with those ceiling-high climbing ladders attached to the bookshelves for easy access. I thought I may never see anything like that library but it seems that even Disney gets its inspiration from somewhere.
The above is HAUGHT. Some of the prettiest libraries in the world. I thought I had enough reasons to want to travel the world -- turns out I only perpetually add to the stack. I must go to these libraries.
Ahh, and I said wouldn't post anyting personal! Well, the explanation was personal. Next post I shall get down to business. *smile*
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