bewize: (Default)
2022-04-21 09:24 am

Rambling Along

My "write whatever I think will be fun" approach to a potential [community profile] marvel_bang story has netted me 4000 words. I've also gone down some serious rabbit holes including:

* Rent in Manhattan
* Gay Bars in Manhattan
* Making up Memes on my own
* Text message conversations conventions
* Teenage slang

*****

This crossed my phone yesterday and I'm obsessed with it.




*****

I knew, but just "lightbulbed" the fact that Taiki Waititi is the driving creative force behind Our Flag Means Death and the upcoming Thor movie. I'm here for all of it, at this point.


*****

I'm on day 4 of "wear pirate eye make up to work" and I think I've just about nailed it. I watched a video yesterday and had so much fun recreating parts of it today. Ha!

*****

One of my BFFs lost her job yesterday. It was both unexpected and expected, but still a shock. Sucks.

*****

If I had time, I would both learn more make up and learn to edit videos. Maybe when I retire? LOL!

*****

I'm also thinking about signing kiddo and me up for martial arts. We could both benefit from it.
bewize: (Default)
2022-02-11 09:49 pm

@TheFridayFive

In an effort to be better about journaling again... I'm going to try and participate!

I think I'd gotten to a place of assuming that people don't care about what I think/have to say (not in a "Guess I'll Go Eat Worms" kind of way, but in a "we're all so busy!" kind of way), but I like reading about random stuff people write and maybe you do to. If not, skip! LOL.

See [community profile] thefridayfive to join the fun!


1. What's your favorite candle scent?

I was obsessed with Fresh Balsam from Bath and Bodyworks at Christmas. I burned an entire large candle in a month after it was gifted me by a coworker. It was just gorgeous. It also sparked an interest in keeping nice candles burning in my house and I just placed an order for mini-candles from Voluspa. I ordered the following:

Eucalyptus & White Sage
Wildflowers
Goji Tarocco Orange
French Cade Lavender
Kalahari Watermelon
Suede Blanc
Gardenia Colonia -
Moso Bamboo
French Linen

In writing this, I also see that Bath and Bodyworks has a Sea Salt and Balsam candle that I bet is also amazing.

2. Do you have an artistic or crafty hobby? What is it?

I like to write fiction and fanfiction. I sometimes dabble in other things, but I'm not really good at any of them - scrapbooking, collages (vision boards), doodling in the margins of my work notepads.

3. What's one weird way you save money on food?

We eat leftovers at my house. And I bulk cook vegetables on the weekend so we have plenty of options all week and I don't have to throw anything away!

4. Do you collect anything weird or unusual?

Umm. No? Just stories about the random weird, funky, and wild things I've done in my life. XD

5. Do you fear the deep ocean, or does its unknown depths excite you?

Context, please! In my bed? I'm excited. Shipwrecked at sea? Fear! In general, I would love to scuba dive as much as possible between now and my inevitable ending. :)
bewize: (Default)
2022-02-01 12:34 pm

February: Do Nice Things For Yourself




So, I hope this meme shows up. Then I hope it makes you laugh. Then I hope it makes you think, because it made me think.

I realized a few things:

1. I am pretty amazing.
2. I should treat myself like I'm trying to keep myself happy.


So, I really thought about it.

Then I bought myself flowers. And nice perfume because I like it and it makes me so happy. And then I bought myself a ticket to a concert I really want to see.

Life is short.

Would *you* stand outside the house in the rain to make you happy???

Do it.

It doesn't have to be spending money. Make yourself a dinner you enjoy. Listen to the album you like. Watch a movie you're interested in. Take some YOU time and do something FOR YOU. Don't shoehorn in other things - like housework. Actually treat yourself like you're trying to make yourself happy.
bewize: (Default)
2022-01-10 09:35 pm

Snowflake Challenge Day 4

Snowflake Challenge promotional banner featuring feet in snuggly socks, a mug of hot chocolate, a notebook with 'dreams' written on the cover, and a guitar. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.


In your own space, make a list of things that you wish existed in fandom or elsewhere, and/or that you'd like someone to create or do for you.

I would like a long(ish) fic for Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends that takes us through Peter, Bobby and Angelica's lives from the point of going to college and finding each other, to being an established threesome. I would like any single piece of this to exist in short form, if the long fic is too big an ask.

I would like Bobby Drake fic that explores his motivations with sensitivity and depth, in any universe.

I would like a meaty adoption fic where Alberto Scorfano is taken in by Massimo Marcovaldo, who shows Alberto what a good father is like. I would like hijinks with Guilia and her new brother, too. I would also like to see how they deal with the prejudice against "sea monsters." (I have seen the short and I want a WHOLE LOT MORE.) (This is from Pixar's Luca.)

I would like to finish my two longer WIPs that are so close to being done.

I would also like to finish my Jonny Quest Small Fandom Bang fic and have anyone but me be interested. Heh. But, mostly I just want to finish it.

I'd like to move the rest of my fics to AO3.
bewize: (Default)
2022-01-10 08:09 am

Snowflake Challenge Day 3

In your own space, put some favorite characters into an AU, fuse some favorite canons together, talk about your favorite AU/fusion tropes, or tell us why AU/fusions aren’t your cup of tea.

This question threw me for a loop as I tried to differentiate between fusions and crossovers. I don't know that I have a good working definition for each, but... crossovers were my jam at one point. I still love one that's really well done.

Generally speaking, I don't read a ton of straight up Alternate Universe fics. I don't go for the coffee-shop/college/cooking show thing that I see a lot of right now. I don't dislike them, but they don't usually grab my interest.

I *adore* a good "divergent universe" fic where Character A makes a different decision and this is what happens.

I don't read a ton of gender-swap. I will read slash, het, ace, etc. without even a pause and it doesn't pull me from the canon, so to speak. If I have a strong pairing bias, I may skip stories that pair one of those characters with someone else, but I don't think that's usually a problem.

All this said, I've written a ton of crossovers.

I'll link to some of them that are on AO3, but this isn't even close to my list or even my favorites.

Lessee:

Spy Smut - An Offer of Friendship - Burn Notice/James Bond. This was written for a porn battle and kicked off my interest in this particular pairing. I have a much longer story that I've not moved to AO3 yet, but will eventually!

This one is more a fusion, I think. Darwin Awards (The One In a Million Remix). I wrote this one recently and it's very much a "knock the rust off piece" for me, but it was fun! X-men: Alternate Universe Movies/Jurassic World Trilogy.

I'm kind of appalled that's all I have on AO3. I have a lot left to move, clearly.

I wrote a lot of Psych/X-men, too. I also have a Big Bang fic that was Supernatural/X-men Movieverse (loosely). And I wrote an X-men Noir AU that I really thought was on AO3 and isn't. So... I guess I'd better buckle up and get busy moving stuff over.
bewize: (Default)
2022-01-03 09:18 pm

Snowflake Challenge Day 2

Snowflake Challenge promotional banner with image of gingerbread Christmas trees, a silver ball, a tea light candle and a white confectionery snowflake on a beige falling-snowflakes background. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.


Challenge #2

In your own space, set some goals for the coming year. They can be fannish or not, public or private. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.


Fannish Goals

Keep writing. Finish my Small Fandom Big Bang.

Keep writing stuff that is me having fun. No stress writing.

Other Goals

Finish C25K. Keep running. Maybe try and run a 10K. Or more? Don't get ahead of yourself.

Keep working on the Flylady system and keep working on getting my house in order.

Take two vacations with family and maybe a girl's weekend/solo trip? Something.
bewize: (Default)
2021-11-02 04:41 pm

November Experiment

After finishing 10% Happier, I decided I had nothing to lose by trying to meditate for 5 minutes a day during November.

I cannot do it without music, but Pandora offers several "meditation music" options, so it may be a cheat, but... *shrug* It may also just be a starting place.

One of the things Harris mentioned in the book was to see what thoughts arose and whether there was anything you can do about them.

I note the following types of thoughts:

* Physical discomfort (aches, pains, etc.)
* Concerns about my SO and his job
* Thoughts about how I can't meditate
* Random thoughts about work, food, life, etc.
* Thoughts about how I need to do X better

That is the rough universe of thoughts that intrude, but I can see a pattern already.

What can I do about them:

* Self-care (yoga, stretching, doctors, massage, exercise, movement)
* Help with some activities (putting in grades) and emotional support (which means more self-care, so I have more to offer)
* Dismiss these as self-defeating waste of time
* Acknowledge and push aside until a better time, focus on those things in a dedicated way when it is time
* Try and reframe as cheering, not belittling, and again focus on those things in a dedicated way when it is time

The acronym Harris gave was RAIN: The book outlines the mindfulness tool, RAIN, an acronym for a four-step process: recognize, allow, investigate and nurture.

That concept was the one that really got me interested. What thoughts are rampaging in my brain that I might be able to harness better and use to my benefit, instead of my detriment?
bewize: (Default)
2012-04-26 11:51 am

100 Things Challenge: 10 Things I Like

I've been wracking my brain trying to think of what to write for this challenge and my love of lists is coming to my rescue for now. And, I also thought, "start small" and had the idea to do a list of 10 things that I like that I suspect people take for granted. Also, as an FYI, these are things that have the effect of making me feel better when I'm down, make me feel like you know me and care about me, and also, just have a wonderful rejuvenating factor to them. They energize me when I need to keep going and may not know exactly where I'm going to find the strength to keep going.


1. Coffee. Yes, this is cheating, what with the caffeine and all, but I love coffee. I love the way it smells. I love the way it tastes. I love the way it makes me feel - like the whole world can pause just long enough for me to drink it and take away a moment of peace and me time.

I like my coffee black. I don't use sugar, only splenda, if I do decide to sweeten it. Sometimes, I will add cream. I like real cream. I also like whipped cream, if it's a special occasion. If it's cold, I'll take my coffee hot. If it's hot, I'll take my coffee cold.

I'll drink it Irish, too. And with desert, and with breakfast, and at 2 in the afternoon. I'd drink it at night, but everyone fusses at me, so I've switched to decaf for those evening when I just can't stand it.


2. Movies. I love going to the movies, because they are engaging, distracting, and provide an often-times much needed break from the insanity of real life. I don't have much time for movies, but it's a shame. If you can make me make time, do it!

I like going to the theater. I like the big screen. I prefer movies that I pay that much for to have awesome special effects. I like action and adventure. I like super heroes. I love fantasy and magic.

I don't like love stories that promise happy endings that don't exist. I don't like horror films that are gory. I do like ghost stories.

I like movie soundtracks and epic is always better. I love popcorn. If we're at home, I adore pickles and popcorn. (Blame my mother.)

3. Patios. I love to sit on patios. I like them in restaurants a lot, but I love them in people's houses, too. I like being outside and still being comfortable. I like drinks (of any sort) on patios.

I don't like smokers, but I'll tolerate them. I love bonfires. I like grilling out. I like roasting marshmallows, as long as someone else will eat them. Hot dogs on the grill are my favorite food. Shut up.

Music is good. Dancing with me on a patio is better. Curl up with me on a swing and I'll be happy and content for hours. Snuggle with me if I'm cold. Let me lean on you even if its warm. I'll do my best not to sweat on you. ;)


4. Baths. Bubbles are good. Lush bombs are better. Reading in the bathtub is an awesome thing. Hot water, lots of it, that I can run over my toes and feet anytime the tub needs a warm up makes me happy. So do hot tubs.

Candles, music, a glass of wine - these will make the bath experience even better, but at the heart of it, I need a clean tub and warm water. Fuzzy towels, robes, etc. for when I get out are also good. :)

5. Hugs and pets. I will stay still for as long as I physically can if you pet me. I love hugs. I love having my hair played with. Now, there is a big caveat here - if I don't know you, or just met you, don't be overly handsy. That's just uncouth. But if you're my person, and you know you're my person, hug me, damn it.

6. Music. I love music, especially live. I will see anything live (although, I'm not really that fond of jazz... but I can deal with it). I like to dance, especially if I've had a drink. I like the symphony and the opera and the ballet. I like rock and roll. I like hip hop and rap. I like pop.

Sing to me, and I will die of giggles but at the same time, love you forever.

Note - I don't do karaoke. ;)

7. Baseball. I like going to the games. I like going to ANY games. I like t-ball and I like the pros. I like small town leagues. I like baseball movies and baseball stories and the history of the US as told through baseball.

I will cheer the Braves, boo the Yankees, and respect the hell out of anyone who isn't a fair weather fan.

8. Surprises. I don't mean big "Hey, guess what, I'm moving!" kinds of surprises. I mean little things like, "I saw this and thought of you" and "I think you'd like this place I'm taking you" and "This seemed like you."

Write me stories. Send me pictures. Do something for me and I will be excited.

9. Show me something unexpected. An old man playing his trumpet in the town square. The magic of train whistles in the middle of the night. The wonder of fairy lights twinkling in the gloom. The sound of a baby's laugh, the purr of a cat, the lightening zap of an old couple holding hands. Show me pretty gardens. Show me swing sets hidden in the middle of the urban jungle. Graffitti is glorious, modern art is confusing, and amazement in the mundane is my favorite thing in the world.

10. Just... listen when I want to talk. Don't push me when I don't. Be my friend and mean it when you say you love me.
bewize: (Default)
2011-04-19 01:58 pm

It was a FIRE FIGHT!!!!

I just walked into my house from my whirlwind trip to Rome to see my dad/spring his minion from jail/etc. I'm on the phone and I walk in and see two of the cats staring at me, but I think nothing of it. Then I see a pile of... something on the floor. Hairball. Great.

Then I see a while lot of... something... scattered around, but there's a blanket next to it and I decide that it must be string or something. Then I round the corner and see a third cat looking at me suspiciously. Another hairball.

Then I see *it*.

Only, I have no idea what *it* is. I approach with caution and find, to my horror, a dead bird. I think it's a sparrow.

So, now I'm left with a better understanding of what the stuff on the floor is (feathers), why the house is destroyed, and why the cats all look jumpy. What I cannot understand is where the HELL did the bird come from???

I was in a hurry this morning, but there is NO WAY I would have missed a bird flying around. Doors were closed. Windows were closed and have screens.

I guess it came down the chimney, but damn! That bird picked the wrong fucking chimney.



RIP, birdie. RIP.

(And, please, don't be like a zombie bird or something. That will really ruin my night tonight.)

ETA: I've been informed that dead sparrows in a house when you can't tell where they came from are actually harbingers of death. So, well... not much I can do about that little fact, is there. *woes*

LOL. If this is it, folks, it's been a hell of a ride. I hope I go with less trauma than the birdie!
bewize: (Default)
2011-02-07 09:31 am
Entry tags:

I take things in stride. That's what I do.

I'm not taking this in stride and I think I'm officially "having a moment."

So... if anyone has anything nice to say to me today, I could really use it and would appreciate it.

I will be over here, frantically cleaning and otherwise distracting myself from my "moment."

ETA: I'm completely fine. This is a mental moment of my own making - and it's not necessarily bad, I'm just having a moment about it.
bewize: (Default)
2011-02-04 12:44 pm

LJ Idol 12: My Kaleidoscope

Ahhh, Friday. It has that weekend sort of feeling to it already and I can’t wait until the day concludes and I can officially kick of the weekend. I have plans, even. I’m going out with a bunch of friends to celebrate Chinese New Year.

I’m pausing now in anticipation of the comment that I have most often received in response to this pronouncement – “I didn’t know you were Chinese!”

It’s said with a grin, perhaps even a smirk, and a pointed look at my very white, very Irish features. Note that I didn’t say very “American” features.

I realize that I am about to tread on treacherous ground, but that’s never stopped me before, so here I go. I’m American and I’m white. The two are not mutually exclusive, but nor are they synonyms. I’m distinctly not Chinese, though – there is no denying that, not that I would; not that I would expect anyone to deny their heritage or pretend to be something other than what they are.

The interwebs of late have been filled with thoughtful meta about race in general, race in America in particular, the difference between race and culture, appreciation for diversity and the dangers of cultural appropriation and I’ve read a lot of it with various degrees of agreement, discomfort and annoyance.

I’m white. I’m American. I’m going out to celebrate Chinese New Year.

The group of friends going with me includes other white people – Protestant, Catholic and Jewish, black people – with and without African heritage (because it turns out that people who are from the West Indies do not appreciate being called African American), Mexicans, Peruvians, Indians, Bengalis, Lebanese and a host of assorted mixed race folks who quite openly revel in their mixed-raceness.

Oh, and yes, even Chinese people.

For the past five years, we’ve all gotten together to descend on our favorite Chinese restaurant in the city, where we’ve long known the owner and his entire (extended) family. We laugh and joke and carry on. We tell stories. We drink. We eat an absolutely ridiculous amount of food, most of which is not offered on the menu, but is prepared by our chef and his mother from their retinue of favorite dishes for the occasion.

We discuss topics ranging from trash TV (bring on the next season of The Real Housewives of Atlanta) to traditional Chinese food and medicine. We tell stories of our travels, ranging from the fact that the restaurant owner sneaks Viagra with him when he goes back to China, to the fact that one of our youngest attendees spent a semester in Ireland and will be spending a semester in Argentina. We talk jobs, we talk families, we talk current events, we just basically talk a lot.

We even talk food. We compare and contrast our favorite foods (quite a few fans of Indian food!) and the differences between cultural cuisines. Several members in our group own restaurants and most of us have waited tables, so large parts of the discussion center around the differences in the types of crowds that visit steakhouses versus those that visit Chinese restaurants.

As for the holiday itself, Mr. Jou, our host, has described it a festival to celebrate family and friends. The restaurant is decked out in lanterns and we conclude our meal with shots of alcohol set alight (rather than firecrackers, which he used as a child). We toast to each other, to the future, to the end of another winter, to friendship and to good fortune. We revel long past the close of business (last year we didn’t conclude until 4 a.m.) and then we all go our separate ways and back to our lives.

I’ve done some reading about “traditional” Chinese New Year, because I was curious as to how the celebration originated. I don’t pretend that it has the same cultural significance to me that it does to someone who is Chinese, or has Chinese heritage. How could it? I’m not Chinese.

But I’m also not blind, nor oblivious. There are very large immigrant populations from all over the world in the city that I call home. I can travel down one highway and see Little Korea, Little China, Little Viet Nam, Little Mexico and Little India all within a few miles. I see these cultures and I grow curious. I want to visit the shops and eat in the restaurants. I wear jewelry and clothes that I buy from these shops, despite the fact that they are certainly not part of my heritage.

I don’t speak the language. I don’t understand the depth of the history. I don’t always know exactly where the home-town of the shopkeeper is. And yet, I don’t consider my participation to be cultural appropriation, either.

The United States used to be described as a melting pot. I am aware that that term has come under intense – and justified – scrutiny of late. No one wants to be forced to leave behind their cultural identity and take on someone else’s. Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but assimilation is the worst sort of insult.

I struggle sometimes to know where the line is – and when I read posts from people on the internet expressing their frustration at (usually and almost always specifically stated ‘white’) interlopers, I get uncomfortable, because I don’t want to be accused of “appropriation.”

Still, this is the city where I live – this is my city. These are my neighbors. These are my friends. Being involved with them doesn’t feel like appropriation. It feels like community.

Is it worse to attend Chinese New Year celebrations as a white person, or stay home with disinterest? What if you’re Japanese? Or Indian? Or Mexican? Or Peruvian? Or black? Or racially Chinese, but culturally southern? Or bi-racial?

I’m going to make mistakes, because I’m human. I’m going to be oblivious to social cues, because I’m sometimes oblivious. I’m going to hurt the feelings of someone from a different race than mine, because I only know how to be white. I’m trying, and whether that counts for something or not, it’s the truth.

I don’t know where the line is between cultural appreciation and cultural assimilation, or when I can legitimately say that something that is traditionally a part of someone else’s culture has become an important and anticipated part of my own life. I may throw the question out tonight at dinner between the spring rolls and the baby octopus and see what answers I get.

There are a lot of things I don’t know and I’m probably “doing it wrong,” but I do know one thing - I’ll be damned if I miss out on this year’s Chinese New Year celebration.




This entry was written for Topic 12: Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery at [livejournal.com profile] therealljidol. I assume voting will take place later this week. Everyone should check out all the good entries!
bewize: (Default)
2010-12-28 09:53 pm

PSA: Don't be a Douchebag, PR Person

You know what? If you're famous enough that you have a PR person, can you please make sure that zie is not a douchebag? Because when zie is a douchebag, I assume you are as well.

And if your PR person is a douchebag and I've never even heard of you? THEN I KNOW YOU ARE A DOUCHEBAG AS WELL.

Kiss my ass, PR person. Kiss my ass.
bewize: (Default)
2010-12-25 08:53 pm
Entry tags:

Year In Review: 2010 - This is my life... it explains it all, really.

This is the first sentence/few sentences from the first post of every month this year. (This is my life. And it sums up perfectly my year. God, no wonder I'm tired!)

January: I have all the usual resolutions - exercise more, eat less, lose weight, save more money, etc. But, I'm not going to resolve about those. They'll just depress me.

February: 10 Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed. One fell off and hit his head. Mama called the doctor and the doctor said: "This is the strongest antibiotic on the market right now. Normally, I'd give you five days, but this is getting ridiculous, so I'm giving you 10. If you're not better by next Tuesday, call me. Me. And get me on the phone so that we can have a conversation back and forth."

March: So, I'm watching the third snowfall of the year from the giant window in the living room. About 80% of the people who may be reading this just burst out laughing, but hey! In Georgia, that's a BIG DEAL! (Ironic, because it's snowing right now! Glee!)

April: Have a Good Friday. No, really. Have one! Other than the fact that it took me 45 minutes to find a place to make reservations for Easter Sunday lunch, the day is going well. I've got baseball tickets for tomorrow and Monday. Whee!

May: Good Lord... So, Thursday happened. It wasn't bad, it was just busy. And then Friday and... you get the point.

June: Two Things: 1. I am home safe and sound. :) 2. I am in need of new living arrangements. I'd like either: a cheap place to rent in Decatur or a roommate who will help make any Decatur rental cheap.

July: I am not in a good mood and am just looking to start a fight.

August: I don't think therapists talk to you about your balloon popping phobias, do they? Guys, that's a line of actual conversation I just had. V suggested that I try Xanax, but I already have a 'script for that. She thinks I should take it more often and not let it sit in the cupboard.

September: After I left yesterday, apparently the shit hit the fan. Or at least S hit the bookshelf and toppled a shelf of books, then prevented Asshole Attorney from running for his life by blocking the door. (He did not touch Asshole Attorney.)

October: *headdesk* So remember when I talked abut paying off the Damn Discover Card a few days ago? Well, I made a balance transfer and then sent my entire "bonus" straight to Discover Card, which was great right up until I just realized that I forgot to cancel the payment coming out of my bank account.

November: I'm going to ramble a minute about my godson, so excuse me for it. But... last night was his first trick or treat and watching him experience reminded me of all the wonderful things about Halloween that got lost when I reached the age of alcohol and parties.

December: I'm so brain dead. I should have gone to bed at least an hour ago, but then Top Chef came on... *fails*.
bewize: (Default)
2010-12-15 12:06 am

Thoughts on Food

So, I ran across this post recently talking about "food shame" as it relates to cultural experiences, particularly those relating to non-white people in Western countries. There are links to several really good posts, all discussing the instinctive knee-jerk shame that comes when someone says "yuck" to something you like to eat.

In an attempt to address this, [personal profile] glass_icarus is organizing a Food Carnival and has put out a prompt dealing with holidays. So, this is to my fellow southern USers, what foods do you consider particularly southern that you eat on the holidays? Because there is NO WAY I'm missing out on this event and I want to be able to contribute.

It's strange, because when it comes right down to it, I can think of a lot of "southern" foods, but I'm not actually sure which foods are only southern. Many tasty goodness type of edibles have made their way beyond the Old South.

So, ladies and gentlemen on my flists, hit me up with your favorites. You may be treated to an event wherein I make some of them and invite people over to eat. (AND BRACE YOURSELVES, BECAUSE I'M NOT THE BEST COOK! HAHAHAHA!)
bewize: (Default)
2010-12-04 12:44 pm

LJ Idol 05: Words in the Winds of Time

Have you ever heard of a man named Sullivan Ballou?

I hadn’t until this week, when through a series of random occurrences, I went looking for a song by Audra Mae called Sullivan’s Letter. I found first the text of his letter to his wife Sally. Sullivan was a major in the United States Army, who spent the night before his unit marched to the first Battle of Bull Run, where he and 93 of his men perished, writing a letter to his wife Sally and saying goodbye.

Now, 150 years later, the man named Sullivan Ballou has entered popular culture, not through the fact that he was an orphan who put himself through several prestigious schools, nor for the fact that he was a politician, nor even for the fact that he was a respected attorney and military judge. His two children have faded into the mists of time and most people probably do not know or care about him at all. But his words, oh, his words. They seized me by the heart and shook me to my unromantic core.

Lest I should not be able to write you again, I feel impelled to write lines that may fall under your eye when I shall be no more.

When was the last time I wrote to the people I loved and really spilled my heart on the page like that?

The answer is simple – I never have.

I cannot describe to you my feelings on this calm summer night, when two thousand men are sleeping around me, many of them enjoying the last, perhaps, before that of death -- and I, suspicious that Death is creeping behind me with his fatal dart, am communing with God, my country, and thee.

Life is short, shorter than we even can imagine. I would not guess that many of us reach the end of our journey with gratitude, and for too many of us, we reach the end with a sense of surprise.

Sarah, my love for you is deathless, it seems to bind me to you with mighty cables that nothing but Omnipotence could break.

How many of us wish that we had such words to cradle us in our grief? Yet, how many of us make ourselves vulnerable enough to speak them?

But, O Sarah! If the dead can come back to this earth and flit unseen around those they loved, I shall always be near you; in the garish day and in the darkest night -- amidst your happiest scenes and gloomiest hours - always, always; and if there be a soft breeze upon your cheek, it shall be my breath; or the cool air fans your throbbing temple, it shall be my spirit passing by.

Sarah, do not mourn me dead; think I am gone and wait for thee, for we shall meet again.


I do not know is Sarah ever felt Sullivan’s breath on her cheek, or if she could feel his presence watching over her and their two sons, but I can imagine the strength she took from his words. I can imagine the crinkled paper of the letter after she had unfolded it from its hidden place in her home and read the words for the thousandth time.

It makes the casual and indifferent farewells of daily life pale in comparison. I try and make sure that the people I love know that I love them, but I rarely let them know what they mean to me.

When I left home this morning, my roommate interrupted my stressful thoughts about the thousand and one things that I had to do today to say, “I’m glad you’re my friend.”

It may not be a letter that will memorialize her though time, but it made my day a great deal better. So, I will make myself a promise, a vow of sorts, to be better about telling people that they are not an afterthought. I will tell them that I love them. I will tell them that I care.

And if tomorrow proves to be the day that I depart for the Great Unknown, I will try the ones that I love with the certainty that somewhere, if possible, I am still loving them.


This entry was written for Topic 5: Afterthought at [community profile] therealljidol. I assume voting will take place later this week. Everyone should check out all the good entries!
bewize: (Default)
2010-10-18 09:54 am

Oh My God

It's Monday.

Again.

WTF?!

************

This weekend was quiet and that was great. I alternatively avoided going out to dinner/out for drinks/to the beer festival/to a party and assorted other things that I felt like I "should" do, but that I just didn't have the energy for.

I still don't have energy.

My chest is croupy and all the running has drained me to nothing. Except the fat - that's still hanging on for dear life. *rolls eyes*

************

It was gorgeous this weekend. I did see pumpkins (bought some) and the air show at the base - didn't even have to leave the neighborhood. The planes were all overhead. It was insane. I've never seen one before but holy cow - it was a mix of terrifying and surreality and sheer amazement.

I know that they are instruments of war and destruction, but there is an unbelievable beauty and grace about those planes that makes me think that even in the midst of our self-destruction, humanity seeks out the best parts of ourselves and highlights it.

Mattie was not impressed. They were loud and it scared him. He hid his face and cried. Bless.

***********

I finished the run 2.2 miles everyday for a week plan. I ran 15.4 miles last week. Holy cow. I have to say - it got a lot easier through sheer repetition. I need to kick up my speed though. A lot.

I brought my running stuff to go to ASC after work today - if I feel like it - and try and see if I can't bust out a few 11.5 minute miles. If I walk between them that should help. But it's getting embarrassing that I'm not improving when I'm putting so much effort into maintaining.

I shall skip my "I'm frustrated" rant in favor of silence.

***********

Verizon pissed me off. I may switch to AT&T and get the damn iPhone, which is what I wanted in the first place. And the patronizing manager that I exchanged words with yesterday can suck it.
bewize: (Default)
2010-10-06 09:44 pm

Donald Duck takes on Glenn Beck




Glenn Beck responded, in his douchebag way, accusing everyone against him of being a communist. *rolls eyes*

But in fairness, I shall post the vid.

bewize: (Default)
2010-09-22 11:03 pm

Boobies

In lesson 2 of belly dancing, we learned the head slide, the shoulder shake, the shoulder roll, the chest circle and the camel and reverse camel.

For all chest moves, you basically lead with your boobs. It was an amusing experience, but it was also kind of touching. One woman, in a moment of frustration, said that she'd spent the last 57 years learning how NOT to draw attention to her breasts and she wasn't sure she could unlearn that.

It really drove home just how much women are taught to be ashamed of their bodies.

I am going to be really glad that I took this class, I think.

Well, glad and sore as hell. Thankfully, I stole obtained some 600 mg Ibuprofen. I'm pretty sure I'm going to need it.
bewize: (Default)
2010-09-16 11:06 pm

Things for Sharing

So I can close the tabs on my computer before I sleep tonight. *nods*

Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man from Brandon McCormick on Vimeo.



Ummm. Amazing. I really have no words for this, except that it proves that the future of film may actually be on the internet.

******************




Ikea. Wow, that's all I can say. Wow. And I mean that in the best of ways! Ikea lets 100 cats loose into the store just to see what happens. And it's awesome!

******************

For anyone who has ever needed a pocket Scott Summers. IDEK, but this is adorable. ♥

******************

Green Lantern has Glo Balls? He should probably see a doctor for that. *snicker*
bewize: (Default)
2010-09-13 02:17 pm
Entry tags:

Betelgeuse Cluster

Apparently, Dreamwidth names its clusters after star systems and such. I find this idea unbelievably charming.

[personal profile] bewize is a member of the Betelgeuse Cluster. Where are you?