October 21, 2008

listings

Over the years, I've accumulated a following of various catalogs. Clothes, especially, but there are other kinds as well.

But the catalog I got in the mail today is one of a kind in my long list of order offers. And I don't know how or why they got my name. I can't help wondering if someone put my name on their mailing list just to annoy me.

I mean, this is what this slick catalog is selling:

-- a 20 CD set of lectures entitled "The Hand of God in the History of the World."

-- a read-aloud series for children: "How God Sent a Dog, Stopped Pirates, ande Used a Thunderstorm to Change the World."

-- a book: "Passionate Housewives Desperate for God."

WTF!!! I guess their marketing guru never got a look at the sidebar of this blog.

Oh, and then there's "The Wise Woman's Guide to Blessing Her Husband's Vision."

Now I'm grinding my teeth!

In between all of this, pages of miltary, detective, construction, outdoor, and battle costumes and tools for boys. And what do the girls get? Equal pages of cutsy dresses and dolls, baking sets and aprons, tea sets and crochet gloves AND a book on "How to Be a Lady."

Groan. Nausea. Twitches.

And. AND. This, and I quote from the blurb on "Return of the Daughters":

For the first time in America's history, young ladies can expect to encounter a large gap between their years of basic training and the time when they marry...if they marry. Now Christian girls all throughout our country are seriously asking: What's a girl to do with her single years?

This documentary takes

... viewers into the homes of several young women who have dared to defy today's anti-family culture in pursuit of a biblical approach to daughterhood, using their in-between years to pioneer a new culture of strength and dignity -- and to rebuild Western Civilization, starting with the culture of the home.

I have to admit, the writing in this catalog is good, the presentation skilled. And that even makes it more scary. I am not linking to its website because I don't want to give it any additional visibility.

Finally, the back cover:

A Creation Celebration. ... each episode will build your appreciation for the brilliance of God's design and will teach you how to dispel evolutionary myths...

Evolutionary myths!!!

This is one catalog that I'm going to feel great pleasure in throwing into the recycle pile. That is, after I rip off the address label and stick it in the mail with an order to take my name off their !@#$% list.

Categories: bitchingbooksconspiracy theoriescultureeducationfamilyfeminismnon-beliefreligionsciencestrange world
Posted at 12:11 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

September 11, 2008

Harper's Wacky Tuesday on Thursday

I used to do one of these every week, feeling that it's good to keep life on this planet in wacky perspective. So, here, are some news bits you might have missed (and/or that I think bear repeating).

Satellite images revealed that global-warming-induced melting had left the North Pole an island.

The jobless rate rose from 5.7 percent to a five-year high of 6.1percent, with more than 84,000 jobs lost in August.

Despite McCain's opposition to earmarks, Palin,when mayor of the 6,700-resident town of Wasilla (known tostate troopers as Alaska's "meth capital"), hired lobbyist Steven Silver to help win federal earmarks totaling $27 million. It also emerged that Palin, 44, received her first passport in 2006.

"Paris Match" published a glossy eight-page spread of Taliban fighters wearing the uniforms of the French soldiers they had killed.

Virginia Tech students were falsely told by the local registrar of elections that if they voted at college their parents would no longer be able to claim them as dependents on their tax returns, and that they could lose their scholarships and their health- and car-insurance coverage.

Tens of thousands of copies of a Swedish food magazine were recalled after an error in a recipe for apple cake sent four readers to hospitals with nutmeg poisoning.

A British teenager's head swelled to the size of a soccer ball after she consumed a Baileys chili-tequila-absinthe-ouzo-vodka-cider-and-gin cocktail.

For the first time in a century, a month passed without a visible spot on the sun. An ice age, said scientists, may be forthcoming.

The Victorian Aboriginal Education Association warned Australian girls not to play the didgeridoo because it was "men's business" and could lead to infertility.

The author of the book "100 Things to Do Before You Die," having completed about 50 of the things on his list, fell, hit his head, and died.


To read additional bits and for links to authenticate any of the above go here.

Categories: cultureha hapoliticsreligionstrange world
Posted at 12:08 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

May 2, 2008

I don't believe in yesterday

Yesterday was the "National Day of Prayer."

In acknowledgment of the occasion, I quote here from my favorite scientist/atheist's weblog, Pharyngula.

I can scarcely believe my country is officially pandering to such willful stupidity — elevating evangelical kooks to positions of prestige, trumpeting the virtues of sectarian religion, and actually crediting the successes of America to the fact that a subset of deluded, demented fools sit on their asses and beg an invisible man to protect us and help us kill people in foreign countries. What a waste, and what an encouragement of further waste.

I feel like just declaring this the official National Day of Derangement and writing it all off, maybe spit in the soup of people who say grace, or flip off any group I catch trying to do a collective exercise in ritual invocation of nonexistent beings, but the Minnesota Atheists have a more productive idea: they are calling this a National Day of Reason and are setting up to demonstrate in the Minnesota capitol in St Paul today. They actually have a prime position, and all the legislators leaving their workplace to join in the National Day of Inanity will have to troop by them. In my dreams, these politicians would feel a little sense of shame at the foolishness of the official events, but in reality, I'm sure they won't.>
Categories: non-beliefpoliticsreligion
Posted at 12:27 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 25, 2008

just a clot of nirvana

I got linked to this from a newsletter I get, and I'm sharing it here because it is a description, by a brain scientist, of the kind of experience she had that others might attribute to sensing "god."

Still others, back in the days of "dropping acid," often described something similar.

And others, yet, tried to achieve it through Transcendental Meditation.

It's not in the mind; it's in the brain.

Listen in as brain scientist Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor tells of the spiritual experience she had during her own stroke. This euphoric experience transcends all formal religions and has been pointed to by quantum physics for years. Watch the video.

from here:

....she was conscious as she lost the left half of her brain. She remembers the day clearly, when she eventually curled up into a ball and expected to die. "I was shocked when I awoke later," said Taylor,... [snip] "I couldn't talk. I couldn't understand language. I lost all recollection of my life and lost all perception of my physical presence -- I was at one with the universe.

Categories: creativityhealthreligion
Posted at 12:41 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

February 28, 2008

equal opportunity irreverence

gunnuns.jpg

Categories: ha hapoliticsreligionstrange world
Posted at 7:25 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

January 19, 2008

one weird morning

My cat is throwing up on my mother's rug while she's in the bathroom having a dementia meltdown.

My brother is yelling at me because I took his clothes out of the dryer (and put them in a laundry basket) so that I could put my mother's clothes (that I gathered and spot sprayed and washed) in the dryer.

I finally get my mother settled in her recliner to watch the Catholic mass on EWTN. The priest is already in the middle of his sermon, disparaging global warming because of something to do with God putting the sun up there for us.

While I make my mother lunch, I am half listening to what the priest is saying, and it sure sounds like unrealistic nonsense to me -- admonitions to live by the Church's rules, a disempowering assertion of who's the real boss of you.

I can't see how any of that sermonizing can be of much help to anyone searching for guidance in how to give personal meaning to the actual time he/she spends on this planet.

What I believe is that where psychology and spirituality (not religion) overlap , it is at that broad intersection where one can discover one's own power as an individual living in this place at this time. I am not using the word "spirituality" in any theistic sense, but rather in the sense of our animating energy, whatever it is that inspires us, awes us, puts a fire in our bellies. One's own "spirit." "Soul."

The shaman of ancient cultures knew how to create that intersection. I think that the best of today's therapists understand how to do that for today's seekers.

Categories: caregivingreligion
Posted at 2:55 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

January 18, 2008

poor Tom

Tom Cruise has taken a lot of criticism from a lot of fronts. And now there's a video of him extolling Scientology viralling around the internet. (There's no such word as "viralling" but I think it captures the spiraling viral video phenomenon.)

It seems to me that Cruise is, indeed, the poster boy for how Scientology works when it's successful. He's confident in himself and his decisions -- enough to carry on his purposeful life despite harsh criticisms. He feels a sense of humanitarian responsibility and he acts on that sense. He's learned to be a positive thinker and the kind of person who actually practices what he preaches. His energy is focused, his goals ambitious, and he has a support system that really does provide philosophical as well as practical support.

Hmm. What would happen if all "religions," all philosophies, were able to provide that kind of practical and motivating support?

I don't think that you have to be a Scientologist to achieve those senses of confidence, caring, and contribution. But it's hard figuring it all out by yourself, hard keeping motivated, hard remaining positive in a negative environment.

Scientology seems like the ultimate support system for individuals serious about attaining their dreams. Unlike many other spiritual approaches, it seems to prod you to get off your duff and DO. Not just contemplate, but ACT. And, more importantly, it gives you the psychological tools to enable you to move ahead in your chosen life's path.

As a young man, my father read Norman Vincent Peale's "The Power of Positive Thinking." and Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People." Throughout his life, he made good use of what he learned from those books.

From what I've read about Scientology, it seems to build on the techniques put forth in those two books, and it puts its own spin on the process of self-actualization.

There are many successful members of Scientology, and many of those are from the fields of the performing arts, which are very competitive and stressful.

I imagine that Scientology's "can do" philosophy has helped them persevere in their chosen careers, helped them to overcome obstacles to success. No wonder that so many of them have found a psychological and "spiritual" home in Scientology.

My Dad had Norman Vincent Peale and Dale Carnegie and his Polish Catholic parish. Together, they worked for him.

Tom Cruise has Scientology.

Hey, it works for him.

Categories: religion
Posted at 6:42 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)