so what were you for Halloween?

I love Halloween. I have a box of costumes that I’ve made over the years — a unicorn, Betty Boop, a box of candy, an alien star ship captain, a Hogwart’s faculty member, a Christmas elf…. A few years ago, I really wanted to be Xena, but, being twice her age, I figured it was wise to let that one go. This year I was Medusa, with pipe-cleaner snakes bobby-pinned onto my head (and one hanging over my ear) and a witchy outfit. Two dance places that I go to had costume parties, so not only did I get to dress up, I got to dance.
med6.jpg
Tomorrow, on All Saints Day, I get to take my mom to mass; and then again on All Souls Day, of course, so she can pray for all of the dear (or not so dear) departed. While she gets into the Catholic thing, I sit there and meditate, breathe, relax, space out. Before I know it, it’s over; she’s done her duty and I’ve lowered my blood pressure.
Medusa does Mass. Heh.

Vote off the major party rows!

The names of many of the individuals for whom I’m planning on voting will appear on the ballot under political parties OTHER than the two major ones. For example, in New York State, we have a Working Families Party that reflects my values and that lists many of my favored Democratic candidates in their Row. So, rather than voting for them under the Democratic Row B, I will flip the stwitches under for them in WFP’s Row H. It’s one way of voicing my dissapointment and dissatisfaction with the major political parties.
Sometimes the people I want to vote for don’t all appear under the Working Families Party, so I’ll search out my favorite candidates under the Green Party or the Liberal Party — and sometimes even the Libertarian Party, just so I don’t support the mainstream power brokers.
That I’m using my one vote to voice two opinions.

b!X in SF on Saturday

According to b!X:
For what it’s worth, I will (as previously stated) be in San Francisco for the anti-war march this Saturday. I arrive via Greyhound bus at 9:30 AM and will promptly be heading to Mad Dog in the Fog to partake of the Greedy Bastard for breakfast. I have not had this meal in over five years, and despite the crunched schedule (the first rally begins at 11:00 AM), I simply refuse to miss out on the opportunity.
So, stop by for breakfast. Or email me for my cellphone number if you’re going to be at the march. I’ll be in SF until 8:00 PM Saturday night, when I board the return bus to Portland.

PR for the Vote

Regime change.gif
Go here to download a free copy of this poster and then display it where it will get the most visibility.
If everyone who’s worried about Bush’s plans votes on November 5, we can engage in a little “regime change” of our own. The good news is that a majority of the people in this country are concerned. But that doesn’t matter unless they voice that concern at the polls.
If enough of us download these, print ’em up, and stick them on our car or in our windows, we can begin to create a culture of engagement and patriotic dissent. We’ll amplify our voices. We’ll help to elect the candidates who can help us out of this mess. And we’ll help to fire the ones that are on board for Bush’s endless war.

THIS ONE’S FOR b!X

In the past, I’ve done on and off-line rituals (in conjunction with other bloggers) for well-known posters such as Marek and RageBoy and Mike Golby. There is a strange empowering magic that happens when people join their hearts on someone’s behalf and manifest that caring in something tangible (or at least, visible).
On Friday b!X will be 33 years old. It’s a meaningful number and a meaningful point in his life it seems.
So, this time, it’s for b!X, and I’m asking all of my blogger friends to join me in creating an earth-moving ritual that will propel him into the self he was meant to be.
This is what I’m asking you to do: Read what he wrote and my comment. Then put together a digital image or phrase that is your wish/prayer for him and email it to me. I will put all I get together into a virtual magical artifact and post it. And I will ask all of you to link to it or post it yourselves on Friday, October 25th. All of that blogger energy out there at the same time just has to have some cosmic effect.
Ordinary magic. Extraordinary people.
ADDENDUM: Having been overwhelmed with the responsibilities of my own small life, and having not maintained my usual visits to the sites of fellow bloggers, I had not picked up the thread about Wonder Chicken

“Men are always wrong…about women.”

The above is a quote from a superbly produced play, “A Killing’s Tale,” written by my ex-husband and b!X’s dad. The play, a murder mystery set in the Globe Theater during Shakespeare’s time, has Shakespeare deliver the above line.
The play deserves a post all of its own, but that’s not where I’m heading with this. I saw the play with a couple who are good friends of mine. I’ve known the woman, a lawyer and child advocate, for years; her live-in male companion has been with her for the past several years, and so I’ve gotten to know him through her.
The three of us went to dinner before the play, and, because we were going to see a play by my ex-husband, the conversation naturally meandered toward relationships and why they work and don’t work. Now, the woman in this couple is liberal, feminist, creative, childless, and previously divorced. The man has kids from a previous marriage, is intelligent and well-read, and has a wry sense of humor. And he takes great pleasure in asserting Neanderthal attitudes about relationships and women. Yet, they seem to have a good time together.
She says it’s because he makes her laugh, they enjoy doing the same kinds of things together (like taking me along with them to see a play); he doesn’t care if she shaves her legs or under her armspits; he doesn’t expect her to cook or clean (he’s neater than she is and so he often does the cleaning). Neither tries to make the other into something he/she is not.
But she also says that if they had met during an earlier stage of their lives, they would have hated each other. They could never have raised children together. But they are at that last partnership stage of life where it’s not necessary to agree on a lot of things. What one looks for is companionship, a sharing of everyday things good and bad, a good friend who makes you laugh and will travel with you even though he doesn’t really like to fly.
They both loved the play — which is full of wit and witticisms, has two strong women characters, and includes lots of relevant sub-themes, including homosexuality, religious censorship, and the complexities of male-female relationships. As the Shakespeare character demonstrates, talented playwrights do not necessarily good husbands make.
(I have to say that lately I am double posting what I write here onto Blog Sisters as well. These days, I seem to be inclined to turn my back on the big disturbing polictical picture — which seems so removed from anything that I can influence — and focus more on the small, personal and interpersonal interactions that, to me as of late, seem more real and ultimately momentous.)