Seeking definition…

You scored as Cultural Creative. Cultural Creatives are probably the newest group to enter this realm. You are a modern thinker who tends to shy away from organized religion but still feels as if there is something greater than ourselves. You are very spiritual, even if you are not religious. Life has a meaning outside of the rational.

Cultural Creative

81%

Postmodernist

75%

Idealist

69%

Romanticist

63%

Existentialist

56%

Fundamentalist

31%

Modernist

31%

Materialist

19%

What is Your World View?
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Nothing like a writing contest!

It is a short story contest with prizes including publication in an anthology, a real one, not one of those that just inserts your poem on page 39 and sells you a copy for $89.99 plus shipping. And if you are one of the top 10 that make it into the anghology, you will even get a free copy of the book and a discount on up to 20 more copies for your friends and cousins.
So turn off the war news, put away the Free Cell, and break out your metaphors and similes. You have to write your story of no more than 4,000 words about someone or something being exposed to the contents of those bins the airlines are having everyone dump their liquids and gels into. It is a little scary, if you remember why we are doing this in the first place. The alleged – not charged — terrorists presumably had some idea of the effect of what they were planning to mix. We don’t think they planned it to be a good effect, but it was predictable. Who knows what will come out of the dump bin?
The rules and submission link are at http://www.ItComesFrom.blogspot.com, and the anthology name will be It Came From Airport Security.

A student of history

Fred Kaplan at Slate is commenting on Condi Rice’s tendency to classify herself as a “student of history” who sees the world in such a grand scheme of time that nothing can be done/evaluated/judged in the present. He has this quote:

I’m a student of history, so perhaps I have a little more patience with enormous change in the international system. It’s a big shifting of tectonic plates, and I don’t expect it to happen in a few days or even in a year.

So people can bomb each other for oh, say, even a year, and then it will take us 20 or 30 years to say whether we think it was a good idea. That is, since we are students of history, we need to have this patience with bombs.
I’ve been hanging around students of history long enough to know know that they do not necessarily refer judgement of all present decisions and actions to some distant future. They usually have enough examples from the past to be pretty opinionated, and they don’t mind telling you about it. Condi Rice is past her sophomore year — she is a national leader who should at least think something. The history she knows has apparently given her no criteria to help her decide whether an action is good or bad. An actual student of history in her position might use examples from the past to inform the present. She is refusing to process in present time the information that is before her, and I will hazard a guess that history will say she was just along for the ride.

Not to be too critical…

The sign has changed. It now reads “SIGN BROKEN / MESSAGE INSIDE THIS SUNDAY.” Now there is a message on the sign, so the sign is not broken. It seems to me that the sign genie is again asserting that something is so when it is obviously not so. I think I have spotted a trend.

Say What?

I am sure that it would be interesting to know exactly when churches stopped putting their meeting times and some words of welcome on their signboards and started making up puns and enigmatic messages. It would also be interesting to know why they switched over.
I travel a particular area of Interstate 81 frequently, and once stopped to photograph a church signboard message that read “JESUS – HIS BLOOD’S FOR YOU.” This week that sign said “FREE TRIP TO HEAVEN – DETAILS INSIDE.” Then there was the church near my home that put up for the week before Mother’s Day “ITS MOTHERS DAY, SO HAVE A NICE DAY ALL YOU MOTHERS.”
Today, caught without my camera, I stopped to write down the words from another church signboard. It says “LIBERTY LIES MORE IN THE CHOICE MADE THAN IN THE RIGHT TO MAKE THE CHOICE.”
All I can figure about this statement is that these folks need a dictionary. And a history book or a newspaper might help as well.

A New Leaf




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Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer.

My Alocasia x Amazonica (Thanks to Dr. George Treadwell at Emory & Henry College for the name) is unfurling a new leaf!

Peaches getting ripe!




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Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer.

The peaches are smaller this summer, but they are getting ripe. The mockingbirds that hatched in the holly tree nearby are sure that they own this tree also, so I will have to fight for some of the peaches.

The Gas War

Well, I finally bought a new car. I have a long commute to work with no possibility of public transportation, so I spent some time looking for a car that was dependable, was comfortable for me, and had good gas mileage.
I didn’t get a Prius because I spend most of my driving time on the highway, and the fuel efficiency of the Prius on the highway is not much better than the car I bought. It charges its electric system when you use the brake, and I don’t hit the brake too often between the entrance ramp and the exit ramp. I don’t speed, but I am a steady driver and you just don’t brake much on the highway. The second day I drove my new car a groundhog ran across the highway in front of me, and I would have generated some electricity then if I had been driving a Prius. But ordinarily the groundhogs just wave as I go by, they don’t run into the road. So I don’t brake much. So I didn’t buy a Prius.
But I did think about one. I thought about how I might spring for the extra money if it could charge its battery on the highway.
People who know me know that I am a little wierd when I start thinking about how some little ordinary thing might be done with what we have at hand. I have been that way a long time, and I can’t help it. Some things work and some do not.
One invention that did work came from watching my little one try to drink from his Evenflo bottle while riding in a car seat. He could hold the bottle, but he looked really uncomfortable tipping his head back to get the liquid to the nipple. I thought about this problem for a day or two, then I cut a big hole in the nipple, inverted it in the bottle, screwed on the ring, and pushed a drinking straw through the hole. The straw fitted snugly, the bottle was spill-proof, and the child could sit up and drink. I credit this early version of the sports bottle/squeezer with helping my children learn to read (books not being printed on ceilings, ordinarily), and it did turn heads in restaurants. I didn’t patent the thing, but my children and the children of my friends who caught the idea had squeezers long before the first one was on the market.
Now I’m thinking about how to charge the electric motor in that Prius. I figure it needs a little spoiler on the back end with some little windmills built into it and linked to a small generator. I don’t know why that wouldn’t work. Put your window down at 60 mph and see how much wind you have out there. Or maybe the little windmills could hide behind the grille or be built around the headlights. Or my son says you might be able to add little ramscoops to the sides.
I don’t know why that wouldn’t work.

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Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer.

New Camera!

Dragon Lily




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Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer.



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Originally uploaded by Thirdlayer.

Thanks to Hayes Lavis for naming the flowers!

The bright orange lily is an amaryllis. In my experience it is easier to grow and propagate than other amaryllis, and the blossom stalk is very tall compared to other varieties I have. This plant just continuously sprouts new bulbs and withstands all kinds of mistreatment — it will winter over dry in a dark corner with no attention and blossom in the summer, or it will bloom repeatedly when kept year-round as an ordinary house plant. It will bloom in clusters (see photos) or single, and as the bulbs grow larger more blossoms will form on a single stalk. The latest cluster that I photographed had 22 blossoms on 6 stalks, 3 or 4 blossoms each.

The purple stinky flower, arum dracunculus vulgaris, common name Dragon Lily, is in the arum family, related to the “carrion or corpse flower.” Hayes provided a link from which bulbs can be purchased, if you want to enjoy the lovely fragrance. I noted that the people selling the bulbs don’t tell you the flower stinks. And to be fair, only the flower stinks, and only for a day or so. The leaf is beautiful, and the giant flower is dramatic and colorful. But it is probably best not to plant too many of them, and not too near the door….