30 June 2010

true 'killer whale'...

Giant predatory whale named for 'Moby Dick' author...

2 hours, 28 minutes ago

By Raphael G. Satter, The Associated Press

LONDON - Scientists have discovered an ancient whale, whose bite ripped huge chunks of flesh out of other whales, about 12 million years ago — and they've named it after the author of "Moby Dick".

The prehistoric sperm whale grew to between 13 and 18 metres (up to 60 feet) long, not unusual by today's standards.

Unlike modern sperm whales, Leviathan melvillei, named for Herman Melville, sported vicious, tusk-like teeth, some 36 centimetres (14 inches) long.

The ancient beast evidently dined on other whales, researchers said in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.

They report finding a skull of the beast in a Peruvian desert.

The researchers named it in tribute to the 19th-century author, and his classic tale of the great white whale, which includes frequent digressions on natural history that punctuate the action.

"There is a chapter about fossils," one of the paper's authors, Olivier Lambert of the Natural History Museum in Paris, said.

"Melville even mentions some of the fossils that I studied for my PhD thesis."

Anthony Friscia, a paleontologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, who wasn't involved in the discovery, said scattered finds of huge fossilized teeth had long hinted at the ancient whale's existence.

Without a skull to fit them in, the creature's shape, size and feeding habits remained a mystery.

"The fact they have found the entire jaw — well, almost the entire skull — is what's pretty unprecedented," he said.

The ancient beasts "were the killer whales of their time, although on a much grander scale," Friscia said.

"They were close to the biggest things around."

Friscia said he thought the choice of a name was fantastic.

"You gotta love any time you get a nod to literature in taxonomy," he said.

"It was a big whale, so why not?"

___

Online: http://www.nature.com/nature

This artists' rendering provided by the journal Nature shows ...

This artist's rendering provided by the journal Nature shows a raptorial sperm whale, Leviathan melvillei, attacking a medium-size baleen whale off the coast of the area now occupied by Peru.

Scientists have discovered an ancient whale whose bite ripped huge chunks of flesh out of other whales about 12 million years ago, and they've named it after the author of 'Moby Dick'. (AP Photo/Nature, C. Letenneur)

crutch...

smartCrutch...

smartcrutch.jpg

These are the best crutches in the world, no hyperbole.

If you've ever used traditional crutches you might remember how painful they were to the hands and/or underarms.

Not these.

I first got them after a pair of forearm crutches became so painful to the hands.

By redesigning how and where you hold them, they reduce pressure to the underarm and hands.

Like traditional crutches they are adjustable based on your height.

I had an articular cartilage tear in my knee (femur, specifically), necessitating microfracture surgery, and subsequently used these crutches for 2.5 months.

Being able to ambulate comfortably made the many challenges of recovery much less stressful.

When I first got the crutches I adjusted the arm rest angle to my desired setting and never felt like changing it.

Over time I adjusted the height to be a little lower when I was non-weight bearing, as I felt it easier to get around without the tips hitting the ground.

When I began weight bearing with a single crutch, I liked it a little longer to more easily reduce weight on the operative leg.

I probably would have done the latter two adjustments with any type of crutch.

As for wear, the crutches have held up well.

The foam on the arm rest has compressed somewhat, but is still comfortable and I don't think it would compress further.

Anyway, it is something that could be easily cut away and replaced with a similar material by the user if that became necessary.

Other aspects of the crutch do not show signs of wear after 2.5 months of use.

The other thing that's awesome about them is that you can safely go up stairs by actually holding the railing!

By setting the arm cuff angle to about 70-80 degrees, it allows you to hold the unused crutch in the hand of the side that's using a crutch for support leaving your other hand free to hold the railing.

Incredible.

-- Gus Gustafson

I had knee surgery and have to be on crutches for 6 weeks, completely non weight bearing on one leg.

After one week on standard forearm type crutches (more common in many places than the underarm ones you see in the USA), my hands were KILLING me from all my 160 lbs being put on my palms.

I found these smart crutches, and have done some major walking on them: NO PAIN.

I will say I feel slightly more unstable on them, compared to the regular forearm crutches, but I also have them set to 70% to put all my weight on my arms, and almost none on my hands, which may contribute to that feeling.

For me, they were well worth the cost, even if my insurance won't cover them, which I may still be able to get.

-- M. Clifford

[Note: Someone posted a thorough video review of the smartCrutch at Less Than Four, an online community for amputees. --OH]

smartCrutch
$125 per pair

Manufcatured by and available from smartCRUTCH

fake. . . . .



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wirkit...




funny pictures of cats with captions

clearly...



The Grizzwells Jun 30, 2010...

utes...




funny pictures of dogs with  captions

buy used...

21 Things You Should Never Buy New...

by Wise Bread

29 June 2010

Provided by:
usnews

If you're looking to get the most value for your dollar, it would do your wallet good to check out secondhand options.

Many used goods still have plenty of life left in them even years after the original purchase, and they're usually resold at a fraction of the retail price, to boot.

Here's a list of 21 things that make for a better deal when you buy them used.

[Slideshow: 10 Things to Splurge on This Summer.]

1. DVDs and CDs:

Used DVDs and CDs will play like new, if they were well taken care of.

Even if you wind up with a scratched disc and you don't want to bother with a return, there are ways to remove the scratches and make the DVD or CD playable again.

2. Books:

You can buy used books at significant discounts from online sellers and brick-and-mortar used book stores.

The condition of the books may vary, but they usually range from good to like-new.

Of course, check out your local library for free reading material.

3. Video Games:

Kids get tired of video games rather quickly.

You can easily find used video games from online sellers at sites like Amazon and eBay a few months after the release date.

Most video game store outlets will feature a used game shelf, as well.

If you're not the patient type, you can rent or borrow from a friend first to see if it's worth the purchase.

4. Special Occasion and Holiday Clothing:

Sometimes you'll need to buy formal clothing for special occasions, such as weddings or prom.

Most people will take good care of formal clothing but will only wear it once or twice.

Their closet castouts are your savings:

Thrift stores, yard sales, online sellers, even some dress shops, offer fantastic buys on used formalwear.

5. Jewelry:

Depreciation hits hard when you try to sell used jewelry, but as a buyer you can take advantage of the markdown to save a bundle.

This is especially true for diamonds, which has ridiculously low resale value.

Check out estate sales and reputable pawn shops to find great deals on unique pieces.

Even if you decide to resell the jewelry later, the depreciation won't hurt as much.

6. Ikea Furniture:

Why bother assembling your own when you can pick it up for free (or nearly free) on Craigslist and Freecycle?

Summer is the best time to hunt for Ikea furniture--that's when college students are changing apartments and tossing out their goodies.

7. Games and Toys:

How long do games and toys remain your child's favorite before they're left forgotten under the bed or in the closet?

You can find used children's toys in great condition at moving sales or on Craigslist, or you can ask your neighbors, friends, and family to trade used toys.

Just ensure to give them a good wash before letting junior play.

8. Maternity and Baby Clothes:

Compared to everyday outfits you can wear any time, maternity clothes don't get much wear outside the few months of pregnancy when they fit.

The same goes for baby clothes quickly outgrown.

You'll save a small fortune by purchasing gently used maternity clothes and baby clothes at yard sales and thrift stores.

Like children's games and toys, friends and family may have baby or maternity clothing they'll be happy to let you take off their hands.

[See 20 Things You Should Never Buy Used.]

9. Musical Instruments:

Purchasing new musical instruments for a beginner musician is rarely a good idea.

(Are you ready to pay $60 an hour for piano lessons?)

For your little dear who wants to learn to play an instrument, you should see how long his or her interest lasts by acquiring a rented or used instrument to practice with first.

Unless you're a professional musician or your junior prodigy is seriously committed to music, a brand new instrument may not be the best investment.

10. Pets:

If you buy a puppy (or kitty) from a professional breeder, it can set you back anywhere from a few hundred dollars to several thousand dollars.

On top of this, you'll need to anticipate additional fees and vet bills.

Instead, adopt a pre-owned pet from your local animal shelter and get a new family member, fees, and vaccines, at a substantially lower cost.

Just know what you're getting.

11. Home Accent:

Home decorating pieces and artwork are rarely handled on a day-to-day basis, so they're generally still in good condition, even after being resold multiple times.

If you like the worn-out look of some decor pieces, you can be sure you didn't pay extra for something that comes naturally with time.

Don't forget, for most of us, discovering a true gem at a garage sale is 90% of the fun!

12. Craft Supplies:

If you're into crafting, you probably have a variety of different supplies left over from prior projects.

If you require some additional supplies for your upcoming project, you can join a craft swap where you'll find other crafty people to trade supplies with.

If you have leftovers, be sure to donate them to your local schools.

13. Houses:

You're typically able to get better and more features for your dollar when you purchase an older home rather than building new.

Older houses were often constructed on bigger lots, and you also get architectural variety in your neighborhood if the houses were built or remodeled in different eras.

14. Office Furniture:

Good office furniture is built to withstand heavy use and handling.

Really solid pieces will last a lifetime, long after they're resold the first or second time.

A great used desk or file cabinet will work as well as (or better than) a new one, but for a fraction of the cost.

With the recession shutting down so many businesses, you can easily find lots of great office furniture deals.

15. Cars:

You've probably heard this before:

Cars depreciate the second you drive them off of the dealership's lot.

In buying a used car, you save money on both the initial cost and the insurance.

It also helps to know a trusty mechanic who can check it over first.

This way, you'll be aware of any potential problems before you make the purchase.

[See 20 Tips for Cleaning on the Cheap.]

16. Hand Tools:

Simple tools with few moving parts, like hammers, hoes and wrenches, will keep for decades so long as they are well-made to begin with and are well-maintained.

These are fairly easy to find at neighborhood yard or garage sales.

If you don't need to use hand tools very often, an even better deal is to rent a set of tools or borrow them from a friend.

17. Sports Equipment:

Most people buy sports equipment planning to use it until it drops, but this rarely happens.

When sports equipment ends up on the resale market, they tend to still be in excellent condition.

Look into buying used sporting gear through Craigslist and at yard sales or sports equipment stores.

Clean it all well.

18. Consumer Electronics:

I know most folks like shiny new toys, but refurbished electronic goods are a much sweeter deal.

Consumer electronics are returned to the manufacturer for different reasons, but generally, they'll be inspected for damaged parts, fixed, tested, then resold, at a lower price.

Just make sure you get a good warranty along with your purchase.

19. Gardening Supplies:

This is an easy way for you to save money, and all you need to do is be observant.

Take a look outdoors and you'll likely find such gardening supplies as mulch, wood, and even stones for free or vastly reduced prices.

Used garden equipment and tools are also common goods at yard sales.

20. Timeshares:

Buying timeshares isn't for everyone, but if you decide it suits your lifestyle, purchasing the property as a resale would be a better deal than buying it brand new: on average, you'll save 67 percent on the price for a comparable new timeshare.

If you're new to timeshare ownership, give it a test run first by renting short term.

21. Recreational Items:

It's fairly easy to find high ticket recreational items like campers, boats, and jet skis, being resold.

Oftentimes, they're barely used at all.

As long as they're in safe, working condition, they'll make for a better value when purchased used than new.

Lynn Truong is the co-founder and Deals Editor of Wise Bread, a blog dedicated to helping readers live large on a small budget.

Wise Bread's book, 10,001 Ways to Live Large on a Small Budget, debuted as the #1 Money Management book on Amazon.com.

tomb...

Egypt finds evidence of unfinished ancient tomb...

2 hours, 32 minutes ago

By The Associated Press

CAIRO - Egyptian archaeologists who have completed excavations on an unfinished ancient tunnel believe it was meant to connect a 3,300-year-old pharaoh's tomb with a secret burial site, the antiquities department said today.

Egyptian chief archaeologist Zahi Hawass said it has taken three years to excavate the 570-foot (174 metre) long tunnel in Pharaoh Seti I's ornate tomb in southern Egypt's Valley of the Kings.

The pharaoah died before the project was finished.

First discovered in 1960, the tunnel has only now been completely cleared, and archaeologists discovered ancient figurines, shards of pottery and instructions left by the architect for the workmen.

"Move the door jamb up and make the passage wider," read an inscription on a decorative false door in the passage. It was written in hieratic, a simplified cursive version of hieroglyphics.

Elsewhere in the tunnel there were preliminary sketches of planned decorations, said Hawass.

Pharoah Seti I (1314-1304 B.C.) was one of the founders of the New Kingdom's 19th Dynasty known for its military exploits and considered the peak of ancient Egyptian power.

His tomb is famous for its colorful wall paintings.

Seti's son Ramses II built grandiose temples and statues of himself all over Egypt.

Hawass speculated that the tunnel and secret tomb were not finished because of the pharoah's death, but may have inspired a similar strucuture in Ramses II's tomb.

In this undated photo released by the Egyptian Supreme Council  ...

In this undated photo released by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities 30 June 2010, Antiquities chief Zahi Hawass is seen inside an unfinished 570-foot long tunnel (174 meters) in Luxor, Egypt.

Egypt's antiquities department has announced the completed excavation of the tunnel, first discovered in 1960 and possibly meant to be a secret tomb, stretching away from the main tomb of New Kingdom Pharaoh Seti I (1314-1304 B.C.), in the Valley of the Kings. (AP Photo/Supreme Council of Antiquities) ** EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO SALES **

adult...



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beeber!




funny pictures of cats with captions

rampant stupidities... GRRRRRRRRR

Botched circumcisions kill at least 40 in South Africa...

2 hours, 13 minutes ago

JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - Botched circumcisions, performed during traditional initiation rites in South Africa, have killed at least 40 boys, and put more than 100 in hospital this month, a health official said Wednesday.

The boys, taken into the bush and circumcised as part of traditional rites of passage, died from gangrene, dehydration, and pneumonia, said Sizwe Kupelo, health department spokesman for Eastern Cape province.

The Eastern Cape is one of South Africa's poorest provinces, and among the few areas where boys are still sent into secret schools for circumcision ceremonies to mark their passage to manhood.

Boys die every year from botched circumcisions by ill-trained traditional surgeons in rural areas.

Last year in the Eastern Cape, 91 boys died from complications of circumcisions, 55 of them in June, when the winter initiation season is at its height.

Kupelo said practitioners of the rite circumcise up to 50 boys, with the same knife, without sterilizing it in between.

"They use herbs to clean, hence this thing becomes gangrenous and infected," he told AFP.

He said some practitioners also botched circumcisions because of a lack of training.

"In some cases, boys were not circumcised but mutilated," he said.

The latest death occurred Tuesday in the town of Tsolo, where a 19-year-old initiate died, shortly after being admitted to hospital.

Kupelo said the problem is not the tradition itself but the way it was being practiced in the eastern region of the province.

"In that area there are no elders involved, it's only youths that are running with this thing," he said.

"There's also an element of commercializing this whole thing.

"There are no seasoned and experienced traditional surgeons.

"Everybody's just doing it for profit purposes, and there's no proper coordination."

The death toll prompted traditional leaders to declare a moratorium on circumcisions in parts of the province earlier this month.

Kupelo said health authorities have been visiting initiation schools to treat the boys' wounds and take them to hospital if needed.

Copyright © 2010 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved.

A boy screams while a doctor circumcises him. Botched  circumcisions ...

A boy screams while a doctor circumcises him.

Botched circumcisions performed during traditional initiation rites in South Africa have killed at least 40 boys, and put more than 100 in hospital this month, a health official said.

Photo:Fayez Nureldine/AFP

frenz...




funny pictures of dogs  with captions

upgrade...

Hurricane Alex new blow to oil spill efforts...

2 hours, 38 minutes ago

By Kristen Hays

HOUSTON (Reuters) - The season's first Atlantic hurricane is disrupting cleanup of BP's massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, delaying plans to boost containment capacity, and threatening to push more oily water onshore.

The Gulf oil spill disaster has reached day 72, with environmental and economic costs to tourism, wildlife, fishing and other industries still mounting and the future of BP, the London-based energy giant, far from clear.

Local residents are braced for heavy rains and flooding from Alex, which strengthened into a hurricane late Tuesday.

The storm was on track to make landfall near the Texas-Mexico border late on Wednesday.

Obama administration officials continue to beat a path to the Gulf region, the latest being Vice President Joe Biden.

"We're not going to end this until everyone is made whole," Biden said in Pensacola, Florida, on Tuesday.

INTERNATIONAL HELP

With strong winds, waves as high as 12 feet and flooding rains on the way, controlled burns of oil on the ocean, flights spraying dispersant chemicals and booming operations are on hold for now, officials said.

The State Department said it would accept offers of help from a dozen countries and international agencies to contain and clean up the spill, including two high-speed skimmers and a fire containment boom from Japan.

Although Alex will not make a direct hit on oil platforms in the Gulf, the storm is potent enough that several companies have evacuated rigs.

About a quarter of oil production and 9.4 percent of natural gas output in the Gulf of Mexico have been shut, U.S. officials said.

Work continued for the time being at the BP oil spill site, about 50 miles 80 km off the Louisiana coast -- siphoning crude oil to surface containment vessels, flaring natural gas and drilling two relief wells.

U.S. government officials estimate 35,000 to 60,000 barrels are gushing from the blown-out well each day.

The current containment system can handle up to 28,000 barrels daily.

The planned addition could raise that to 53,000 barrels.

BP UNDER FIRE

BP's market capitalization has shrunk by about $100 billion since its Deepwater Horizon drilling rig sank in 5,000 feet of water on 22 April, two days after an explosion and fire killed 11 workers.

The company's shares have lost more than half their value, but have seen sporadic bargain-hunting on the way down.

Its London-listed stock was up 5.5 percent at 319.5 pence on Wednesday, and the New York shares were indicated to open higher.

The stock's slide since late April has also sparked talk of a possible takeover bid by rivals ExxonMobil or Royal Dutch Shell.

BP has been criticized for cutting corners on aspects of the well design, while Anadarko Petroleum Corp, which owns 25 percent of the well, has distanced itself from the spill, saying it was not consulted about the practices and procedures used on the rig floor.

A spokesman for BP said on Wednesday that Anadarko had been given daily reports highlighting problems encountered with the well, the plans for its design, changes to the plans and the decision to use only six stabilizers when cementing the well, a decision criticized by U.S. lawmakers last week.

"We kept Anardarko abreast of what was going on each morning," the spokesman said.

Anardarko was not available for comment, but a spokesman earlier told the Financial Times:

"What we knew was, the design, the long string, and use of centralizers all met industry standards if executed properly."

Many Gulf Coast businesses, meanwhile, are on the verge of buckling as summer tourists stay away.

Local authorities are also bracing for a mental health fallout.

Louisiana officials have asked BP to pay $10 million to help provide counseling to local residents.

A U.S. appeals court set 08 July for oral arguments on the Obama administration's request to stay a ruling that lifted its six-month moratorium on deepwater oil drilling.

A federal judge blocked it at the request of drilling companies, saying the suspension was too broad and arbitrary.

FLOODED ROADS

Swathes of southern Louisiana and Mississippi are under flood watches through late Wednesday. Coastal areas are also seeing unusually high tides.

Along the Mississippi coast, exasperated drivers were forced to take detours along some busy beach roads to avoid oily water splashing onshore.

Strong northern winds and high tides pushed tar balls and waves of dark brown mousse patties over several seawalls that line major beach roads.

"I have had enough. Now it is coming up on the roads.

"Next the oil will be in our homes.

"Just watch.

"This is Hurricane Katrina all over again, just worse," said Kelly Mills, an area resident.

On Louisiana's Bay Baptiste, whitecaps were visible in the distance as the outer bands of Alex began to move into the region.

Several marshes were only partially boom-protected, with oil coating the bottom of reeds as crabs covered in crude scurried on nearby marsh islands.

A thin sheen of oil covered much of the bay's water.

"Because of the spill, any effect from the storm will be bad," said Michael Dardar, 48, of Raceland, Louisiana. "High waves will drag oil over and under the boom."

(Additional reporting by Cyntia Barrera Diaz in Mexico City, Ernest Scheyder in Bay Baptiste, Louisiana, Leigh Coleman in Ocean Springs, Mississippi; Joshua Schneyer and Ryan Vlastelica in New York; writing by Ros Krasny; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Copyright © 2010 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved

A sea turtle covered in oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill  ...

A sea turtle covered in oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill swims off Grand Terre Island, Louisiana in this 08 June 2010 file photo. REUTERS/Lee Celano/Files

mating...



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noos ...




funny pictures of cats with captions

mouse/bull...


The Mouse and the Bull...

A BULL was bitten by a Mouse, and, angered by the wound, tried to capture him.

But the Mouse reached his hole in safety.

Though the Bull dug into the walls with his horns, he tired before he could rout out the Mouse, and crouching down, went to sleep outside the hole.

The Mouse peeped out, crept furtively up his flank, and again biting him, retreated to his hole.

The Bull rising up, and not knowing what to do, was sadly perplexed.

At which the Mouse said, "The great do not always prevail.

"There are times when the small and lowly are the strongest... to do mischief."

~Aesop


http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/thumb_201/1193772114h8Wx85.jpg

last...

nebber...



funny pictures of dogs  with captions


agreed ...



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ceremony...


30 June 2010

Nourishing and Cleansing...

Performing Daily Ceremony

We can engage in daily practices that include ritual and ceremony, reminding ourselves, throughout the day, of the sacredness of this life.


When we perform or participate in rituals and ceremonies, we enter into a state of mind different from mundane consciousness.

Ranging in significance from bedtime stories to weddings, ceremonies and rituals are acknowledgments an event, or period of time, has special meaning.

As a result, they can have the effect of drawing us into the moment, inviting us to pay closer attention, and tune into the subtle energies always present but often go unrecognized.

In addition, as we perform the same actions we have performed before, and will perform again, we immerse ourselves in a river of continuity that extends back into the past and forward into the future.

Many of us have distanced ourselves from rituals that may have seemed too constricting, or too attached to an organized religion we have chosen not to follow.

However, we can reclaim the practices of ceremony and ritual to good effect, imbuing them with our new consciousness, and we do not have to wait for a big event to do it.

We can engage in daily practices that include ritual and ceremony, reminding ourselves, throughout the day, of the sacredness of this life.

In fact, if we look closely, we will see our days are already made up of rituals, from the time we wake up to the time we retire.

We do not need to change anything, except our perspective, to imbue our day with an air of ceremony.

Most daily rituals revolve around nourishing and cleansing, both of which have always been sacred acts.

With this in mind, we may pause before each meal, close our eyes, and say a silent thank you to the universe that provides.

If we want to get more elaborate, we can light candles, or bless our food.

Similarly, as we wash ourselves in the morning and evening, we can choose to see the grace in this act of cleansing and purification as we release what has passed, and prepare ourselves for the new.

We can be as simple or as complex as we like, so long as our attitude is one of reverence for this sacred moment... in this sacred life.

For more information visit dailyom.com

This article is printed from DailyOM - Inspirational thoughts for a happy, healthy and fulfilling day.

Register for free at www.dailyom.com

Performing Daily Ceremony


© 2004-07 DailyOM - All Rights Reserved

29 June 2010

bernita at stacia's...



What Stace had to say, 29
th June 2010


Guest Blogger: Bernita Harris!

Oooh, this is so exciting!

I know a few of you already know Bernita Harris, from around the wide wide internet, but if you don’t, here’s a little introduction.

Back when I first started blogging as December–well, actually, I found Miss Snark, and wanted to comment there, so needed to set up a Blogger blog, and that’s what I set it up as–I noticed this particular commenter there, this very smart and gentle and funny lady named Bernita. And then she started showing up on my blog, which was a surprise–a lovely one, of course, but a surprise nonetheless. (The fact that other people started showing up on my blog as well surprised me every time.) So of course I started reading her blog, and it was delightful and smart. This went on for a couple of years. Bernita was there to cheer my every success, and the success of everyone else in her wide circle of friends; people are simply drawn to Bernita.

Occasionally Bernita would post snippets from the book she was working on, a fun paranormal about a character named Lillie St. Claire. And I always thought they were great; snappy and fun, well-written, interesting…and I was right. Bernita finally submitted the book to Carina Press, and they of course snapped it up, and now you can buy DARK AND DISORDERLY, a delightful book by a truly delightful lady. I urge you to do so.

So without further ado, here’s Bernita’s post (with occasional comment from me in brackets, just for laughs).

No Sex? What Do You Mean, No Sex?

Stacia, you blessed girl, thank you for having me here today.

A recent poll at Dear Author indicated that 30% or so of readers skim sex scenes. I don’t understand that. Once the basic plot has been established, I’ve been known to skim until I get to the sex scenes! I dearly want to know how the writer has used intimacy to explore and develop the relationship. I have nothing against sex scenes. Dear me, no. [Oh, sure, you say that. But I still feel betrayed--SK]

But. There is no explicit sex in Dark and Disorderly. I admit it. Erotic fail! Oh, there is body-to-body contact and nothing chaste about it either—like this:

“You warned me you were a danger, Leannan, and I think this is what you meant,” he said, and fitted his wicked mouth to my open one. His wicked tongue. Instant lust. I wanted to wrap my legs around him, lock my ankles and pull him tighter. Public place with people passing by be damned, indeed.

I despised myself for that impulse. I despised him for my impulse.

So I bit him.

And it’s not that Johnny doesn’t try to get lucky, more than once:

“Nathan didn’t like to kiss,” I mumbled. “He didn’t like face to face…” Why had I said that?

“Selfish, stupid bastard,” said Johnny, pressing my fist against his chest, moving my hand in slow circles against the sleek fabric of his sweater, then sliding my fingers slowly lower toward his belt. “I like it very much. I like to watch a woman’s face when I make love to her. Lillie, let me take you home.”

As you can see, I took Stacia’s “How To Be A Sex Writing Strumpet” course–and failed. (There’s something puzzling and contradictory about getting an “F” for that, though.) [I hardly think that's failure--SK]

However, Lillie has some quaint, old-fashioned attitudes and though she is strongly attracted to the big, ugly lunk of a psi-crime detective; in the scene above she’s known Johnny Thresher barely a week. A very confusing, busy, dangerous week at that, with a zombie bursting through the front door, a grave-robbing and a riot and so on. She suspects Johnny might be just looking for a casual lay; but at the same time she has the feeling he’s not the sort who thinks with his balls. And there is the additional problem of her husband rather recently and indecently dead and who doesn’t want to stay that way. A husband who, while not destroying her libido, obviously, fractured her sense of worth as a woman. Lillie is cautious because she had been impulsive before; she’d been taken in by smooth flattery once.

Even though sex and death, sex and danger, are irreversibly entwined in our psyches, hot ’n torrid, pick the horizontal/vertical surface of your choice, did not seem to fit with the characters or the plot at this time. Dark and Disorderly does not contain explicit sex. Violence, now, and ghosts and bodies and murder, that’s a different case altogether… [Sigh. I guess violence and ghosts and bodies and murder and grave-robbing work as substitutes.--SK]

Dark and Disorderly: The Adventures of Lillie St. Claire, a paranormal suspense by Bernita Harris, is available from Carina Press, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and most places where ebooks are sold. The first chapter is a free download here. You can find me at An Innocent A-Blog, and I’m on Facebook, somewhere.

Tagged: , , ,
Posted in Guest Post | Say Something | Link |

bucks...

funny pictures of dogs with  captions

allergic...



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wipe...



Cartoon by Bob Englehart - Comment on this cartoon

Senator Robert Byrd, 1917 - 2010
by Bob Englehart -
Comment on the column

I haven't done a memorial cartoon in awhile, partly because there have been so many big issues to draw about, and partly because there haven't been any well-known people who've died recently that I had a good gag about.

In the editorial cartoon biz, we call a cartoon idea a gag even if it's not supposed to be funny, like an obituary cartoon.

Every day I have to weigh my choices, and I usually come up in favor of the living over the dead.

Democratic Senator, Robert Byrd, was famously a member of the Ku Klux Klan, when he was a young man, because that's how you got elected to the senate, in the South, back in the bad old days.

He has repudiated...

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clean it!


How to clean stainless steel...

By Emily Hsieh, Shine staff

With so many kitchens decked out in stainless steel these days, you’d think there’d be more options for fantastic made-for-stainless cleaners on the market.

If you’ve ever shopped for said products though, you’d probably agree the choices are pretty dismal.

I’ve tried a couple different aerosol sprays, but they were so chemical-laden I always wound up with a splitting headache after using them, and the nagging feeling inhaling the fumes was generally just a bad, unhealthy idea.

I was thrilled to see this post on unplgged.com recently, which outlines some simple mild-but-effective solutions to get stainless steel sparkling:

Zoya (Flare)

For light cleaning (like fingerprint stains and little smudges), try a window cleaner.

To amp up the cleaning power, you can also use vinegar (seriously, what can’t this stuff be used for?!) and buffing spots gently with a microfiber cloth.

Bar Keeper’s Friend—which I’ve been meaning to try for years now after hearing so many people rave about the stuff—is also said to work wonders on stainless steel, and unlike some of the other, more abrasive powder formulas out there, this one won’t leave scratches.

For heavy duty cleaning, use Soft Scrub with a washcloth on the more stubborn spots.

You can also get in there with a Magic Eraser, but be sure to do so with a light hand, and don’t go against the grain of the metal or risk leaving marks.

Commenters on unplgged also attest to the effectiveness of furniture polish (one specifies the "orange oil kind") on stainless steel, and some also suggest rubbing a light coat of olive oil onto the surface after it has been cleaned, to prevent future smudging.


cheap. . .




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The Grizzwells Jun 29, 2010...

what disturbs our blood...

Book Review: What Disturbs Our Blood: A Son’s Quest to Redeem the Past, By James Fitzgerald...

National Post Staff

05 June 2010


What Disturbs Our Blood: A Son’s Quest to Redeem the Past
By James Fitzgerald

Random House Canada
499 pp.; $34.95

Reviewed by Steve Noyes

In What Disturbs Our Blood, James Fitzgerald has exhumed the story of two notable Canadian physicians — Fitzgerald’s father, Jack, and grandfather, Gerry — who succumbed to progressive debilitation, after laudable careers.

Jack died in 1970 after a long decline into mental illness and drug addiction.

Gerry, the founder of two of Canada’s key public-health institutions — the School of Hygiene, at the University of Toronto, and Connaught Laboratories — committed suicide in his hospital bed in 1940.

This sad tale sweeps through the 20th century’s struggle with science, race, and class, providing a record of a son’s and grandson’s courageous attempts to understand the past.

Courageous, because I infer, from the preponderance of documentation and the paucity of family comment, that Fitzgerald’s family may not have appreciated his efforts.

The family memoir begins badly — with a welter of clichés, gothic adjectives, and overblown narration:

An Awful Secret is loose in the Fitzgerald household, and young James is Terribly Sensitive to it.

Be patient: As he warms to his story, Fitzgerald’s prose becomes cleaner, more evocative.

For all the early overwriting, an important aesthetic effect has been achieved:

Fitzgerald skilfully writes around the absence of the grandfather (he isn’t mentioned until page 87) in the family mythos.

Yet that absence fairly pullulates throughout the book.

The rhythm of What Disturbs turns on two great tidal bores of fact and memory, one cycling backward through the stories of the author’s grandfather and father, the other cycling forward through the history of 20th-century medicine.

A great deal of forgotten debris is washed up.

It is easy to forget how people from different backgrounds and social strata lived in the early 20th century.

Although sensitive to the repressive effects of his own privileged upbringing, Fitzgerald is clear-eyed about the racist origins of the first efforts to address today’s concept of the “social determinants of health”.

This passage illuminates attitudes toward the denizens of St. John’s ward, Toronto, 1913:

“The influx of ‘dirty foreigners’ had terrified the largely homogeneous, white, Anglo-Protestant, middle class; they vilified the slum as a breeding ground for disease and immorality where a destitute, degenerate underclass of over ten thousand poor Italian, Jewish, and Polish immigrants — a population three times denser than London’s slums — recklessly indulged in animal sexual appetites.

"The ghetto was judged intrinsically pathological, rife with contagious disease, graft, sloth, pauperism, harlotry, Sabbath-breaking, gambling, alcoholism, theft, swearing, and sexual abuse of children.”

This is expertly set against Fitzgerald’s portrait of the medical class in Canada — their cricket and rugby fields at Upper Canada College, their debutante parties, their working vacations in Europe.

Then, too, ideas of class and race loom large in Fitzgerald’s description of the professional war between Sigmund Freud’s “talking cure” and physiological treatments for mental illness.

Freudian analysis lost; electroshock, insulin shock and lobotomy won, and the ascendant school’s underlying philosophy was eugenics, the purification of the race by weeding out the mental defectives.

An uneasy tension suffuses the narrative:

On one hand, the Nazis, the forced sterilizations of Alberta mental patients, the cruel treatments; on the other, Fitzgerald reaches, time and again, toward race as the explanation of the tragic fatal flaw, the madness, that destroyed his relatives, a flagrant, stalking Irishry that rose from the peat bogs of Mother Eire to choke his progenitors at the height of their careers.

Nazis and racial cleansing, the Irish and madness — these stereotypes were popular, and there is no reason to believe Fitzgerald’s father and grandfather didn’t hold with them, which makes their mental illnesses even more poignant.

We come to learn an insistence on family pride in a repressed upper-class household can significantly cancel out the social determinants of health.

There are also interludes where Fitzgerald reminds us of his sensitivity to his absent father figures through his dreams; it is how he shares in the tragic grandeur of his forebears and ennobles his quest.

But the dreams are rather pat, and they turn around the withholding of the family “secret” from the frightened child; they don’t evoke much but symbolism — an awkward gloss on the real, which stands powerfully on its own.

What Disturbs Our Blood is beautifully orchestrated, with the counterpoint of Gerry and Jack’s stories; the author’s discoveries slowly unearthing layers of meaning; the medical achievements set against the stifling silence of madness.

The confluence comes at a remarkable point where all the scientific shades in Gerry’s memory — the Bantings, Bests, Farrars, Joneses, Freuds — file forward to berate him and pronounce him guilty “… of slitting open the brains of cadaverous Irish lunatics, probing the tissues with his gleaming lancet for the mythical microbe of madness; guilty of eradicating the immigrant ghetto of St. John’s ward, supplanted by the sterile hospital where he now lies; guilty of failing to bring his influence to bear …”

What Disturbs Our Blood is a fascinating, multi-layered history of 20th-century medicine, and a passionate inquiry into a family’s tragedies.

It’s a banshee of a book.

alex threatens...

Hurricane Alex to hamper BP's oil spill containment...

1 hour, 44 minutes ago

By Kristen Hays and Tom Bergin

HOUSTON/LONDON (Reuters) - Tropical Storm Alex is expected to reach hurricane strength today, with high winds and vast waves set to hamper BP Plc's latest efforts to contain the largest oil spill in U.S. history.

Shares in London-based energy giant BP fell a further 1.7 percent a day after sources said the New York Federal Reserve was probing potential systemic risks posed by the company, and after the company had to deny Russian government claims it was planning to sack its chief executive.

Analysts at JPM Morgan Cazenove said the huge fall in its share price, currently languishing at a 14-year low, made it a potential takeover target.

"The market has lost sight of the intrinsic value resident in an asset-rich company like BP.

"We very much doubt keen-eyed industry players have lost sight of BP's value," JP Morgan Cazenove's, Fred Lucas, wrote in a research note, citing Exxon Mobil Corp and Royal Dutch Shell as the most likely acquirers.

Most analysts have so far said a takeover is unlikely as long as BP's potential liabilities remain so uncertain.

The Gulf oil crisis is in its 71st day with no firm end in sight.

The economic and ecological costs -- to tourism, wildlife, fishing and other industries -- continue to mount for four states along the U.S. Gulf coast.

Alex was forecast to move slowly away from the Yucatan Peninsula over southern Gulf waters and curl northwest away from major oil-extraction facilities to make a second landfall in northern Mexico mid-week.

It is not expected to hurt oil capture systems at the BP oil spill or the company's plans to drill a pair of relief wells intended to plug the leak by August, a BP executive told reporters in Houston.

Waves as high as 12 feet would delay this week's plans to hook up a third system to capture much more oil, said Kent Wells, BP executive vice president.

U.S. government officials estimate 35,000 to 60,000 barrels are leaking from the blown-out well each day.

BP's current containment system can handle up to 28,000 barrels daily.

The planned addition would have raised that to 53,000 bpd, said Kent Wells, a senior vice president with BP.

Deep below the ocean floor, drilling of a pair of relief wells intended to plug the leak for good by August will continue "unless, unfortunately, a storm heads directly our way," Wells said.

The first relief well is now tantalizingly close to the blown out well -- just 20 feet.

BP said Monday it will be drilled another 900 feet before an attempt is made to intercept the rogue well.

BP's market capitalization has shrunk by $100 billion since the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig sunk in 5,000 feet of water on 22 April, two days after an explosion and fire killed 11 workers.

The company continues to publicly stand behind Tony Hayward, its embattled chief executive.

On Monday, sources told Reuters the New York Federal Reserve has been monitoring firms' exposure to BP to ensure, if the oil giant buckles, it will not put the global financial system at risk.

Top U.S. officials continue to beat a path to the Gulf region, responding to criticism President Barack Obama and his administration responded too slowly to the crisis.

Vice President Joe Biden heads to the region today.

Polls have given Obama low marks for his handling of the disaster, although not as low as those given to BP.

'GEOLOGICAL MONSTER'

On Monday, former President Bill Clinton told CNN Obama was getting "a bum rap".

The failed well is a "geological monster" and if efforts to cap the leak should fail, the U.S. Navy might have to blow it up, Clinton added.

As crude oil and dispersants float on the surface of the Gulf, crews are battling to keep filth off beaches and away from wildlife breeding grounds.

Rough weather, created by Alex, would be just the latest blow to the hard-hit region.

Parts of the Louisiana shoreline are under a coastal flood watch through Wednesday evening.

High tides could be two to three feet above normal in some locations.

Skippers and deckhands at the public marina in Pointe-a-la-Hache, Louisiana, said they were worried about what impact the water's already high level will have if Alex pushes foul weather toward them.

"If a storm comes with the tide, then it's going to be an issue," said Robert Whittington, who has worked at the marina for 20 years.

"We're just waiting to see what happens."

In Ocean Springs, Mississippi, residents angry about BP's slow spill clean-up took it upon themselves to pick up tar balls making landfall.

After waiting hours for clean-up crews, young children and their parents began digging up large patches of the oil with sand toys and shovels.

"That is all we had to use and we were not going to sit around and wait for BP to pick this mess up.

"It is our home," said area resident Marty Wagoner.

(Additional reporting by Jane Sutton and Michael Peltier in Miami, Leigh Coleman in Mississippi, Ernest Scheyder in Nairn, Louisiana, and Joshua Schneyer and Kristina Cooke in New York; writing by Ros Krasny and Louise Heavens; editing by Sitaraman Shankar)

Copyright © 2010 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved

Egrets with oil stained feathers from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico stand on a barrier island in Cat Bay near Grand Isle, Louisiana.

The first major storm of the Atlantic season looked set to miss the oil spill as it barreled through the Gulf of Mexico, offering some respite to BP as its disaster costs soar. Photo:Joe Raedle/AFP

gain...



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power...


29 June 2010

Echoes of Power...

Sacred Vows

When you make a promise, a subtle, powerful shift takes place in your soul, where the best intentions are housed.


Speech is a vehicle for vows, but the sacred vows we speak are more than just words.

When we make a promise, a subtle, powerful shift takes place in our souls where intentions are housed.

A vow is both a tool we employ in order to facilitate transformation within ourselves and an expression of will.

To take an oath is to communicate to the universe, and our deeper selves, our commitment to the principles most important to us.

Fulfilling a sacred vow, whether it is as complex as "'till death do us part", or as simple as "I promise", challenges us, exercising our will power and aiding personal growth.

When we speak a sacred vow out loud, rather than reciting it in our minds or recording it on paper, our voice projects our promise into the deepest reaches of the universe.

It is important we remember a vow made, with the sincerest of intentions, has the power to carry on past our earthly lifetimes.

A well-chosen vow encourages commitment and dedication.

The presence or approval of a spiritual teacher is not necessary to success, as true oaths are a product of the heart.

A sacred vow, once spoken, becomes a part of your existence... forevermore.

Your view of the world around you may change, and your predominant thoughts and feelings will no doubt evolve with time, but the spirit in which your oaths were spoken will remain unaffected.

It is up to you to determine how you will stay true to your vows while your inner- and outer-world existence is transformed.

Your strength and character will inevitably be tested as circumstances make keeping promises increasingly challenging, but after you have shown yourself steadfast many times, your appreciation of the sanctity of vows will be cemented in your mind and soul.

For more information visit dailyom.com

This article is printed from DailyOM - Inspirational thoughts for a happy, healthy and fulfilling day.

Register for free at www.dailyom.com

Sacred Vows


© 2004-07 DailyOM - All Rights Reserved

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