| The Rabid Librarian's Ravings in the Wind | |||||||||||||||||
![]() Should I be concernedthat when measured, my rear end (if you include the curve around) is as wide as a piano ?Eeek!!! Eilir raved on
21:13
Seen on a T-shirtyour quote for the dayI'm not suffering from insanity; I'm enjoying every minute of it. PS Y, Let me know if you can read the complete entries now. Oh, and a quick update...I'm working theoretically three jobs at the moment, plus all the stuff I do that's not technically work but sure seems like it, so that's why I haven't blogged much. It also means that Cerys, my dog, has gone into doggie daycare with some loving pack members, and it seems to be working out well. She's happier, which makes me happier. The cats, on the other hand, are just rather pissed (although thankfully not literally, because being cats, that's always a danger) with me and cling to my pillow at night. (Three of us--one pillow. Fun). But I feel better because they have each other and frankly cats mostly nap during the day anyway, and I give lots of love every chance I get, for it is unwise to make a cat cranky, and besides, what can I say, they're my babies. Anyway, that's all for now. Have a great (long, for those in the US) weekend. Oh, and happy birthday Sunday for my grandmother. She'll be 81! Eilir raved on
09:40
Farewell to a man who made classy films of bygone erasIsmail Merchant, doyen of the film industry, passes awayThus ends the partnership of Merchant-Ivory and their bevy of beautifully cinematographed offerings. Although Jim Ivory was primarily the one who directed, none of those films with their exquisite depth, talent, and sense of history could have been made without Merchant, responsible for the money side of things...the hiring, the fund-raising, the actual producing. Eilir raved on
14:33
A colleague from Chicago has offeredsome knitting needles to fuel my habit. Thank you, L!Eilir raved on
09:51
I really likeMarc Broussard's 'Home'. It has wonderful percussion, a great blues sound, but for some reason I only hear it on the radio really late at night. I have to admit I crank up my radio to catch all the words as I drive. It's obvious he's absorbed the genre of music into his very pores, but I'd never have thought he was 22 from his voice. It's great to hear someone so...into...a song. That's the only way I can describe it. It reminds me a little of a friend's talent, only with a rougher style, and it definitely takes me back to where I grew up, Louisiana. I'll definitely have to check out his other music.Eilir raved on
09:02
Kudos to Orbitzfor its game-show themed TV commercial targeting lesbian and gay travellers during episodes of Will & Grace. It was amazing to see a commercial specifically aimed at gay people on the air in the middle of the afternoon. It was a teensy bit stereotypical, but not bad all around.Eilir raved on
18:38
Back after a hiatusrelated to the move. I cannot say enough about how refreshing America's Best Moving & Storage was after the fiasco of Tuesday. Their men were friendly and courteous, took no breaks, got everything moved within a couple of hours, and were much cheaper. Needless to say, they got a tip. They really came through when the other movers dropped the ball (see the previous diatribe for that story).So, it's been tiring and at one point I was up for 24 hours straight and went about 48 with only 7 hours total sleep, but now there's just a couple of carloads to take care of and the unpacking to do. (The thought of unpacking makes me a little weak in the knees.) I'm sure I've lost weight over the last few days, even eating mainly at McDonald's. I've certainly been working off the calories. Sorry for no updates during that time; I really wasn't near a computer. But I'm back, and hopefully I'll find something to spout about. Eilir raved on
09:25
Something funnyThanks, N., for passing this on.
Eilir raved on
09:22
Why I will never use or recommendTwo Men and a Truck - Lexington, KYA review based on actual experience:
Save your money and make your move less stressful by skipping these folks. I'd like to say it was just this group, but both teams dropped the ball and I've heard reports of other moves from acquaintances that run from, 'oh, they're okay, but a little vulgar' to 'the cops had to be called because of the way they treated so and so'. I suppose you're okay if you have just a few items (although that's hardly worth the trouble, when a friend with a pickup who works for pizza is much cheaper). Or perhaps they're okay if you're a good ol' boy or from a similar racial or social group or just meek enough to go along with any snafu that arises. At least that's my opinion (so nevermind suing me for libel, I'm just relating my experience and reviewing the work as I saw it). You're welcome to ignore it if you like. This was my first adult experience with movers (we moved a lot when I was a kid). It wasn't a good first impression. Hopefully the new moving company will be more professional (they are at least cheaper). In the meantime, thanks to E for really coming through and helping to get some necessities to the new place in the meantime--you made the day...a day that's thankfully over. I've been up for 24 hours followed by about 2 and a half hours of sleep, so hopefully this is at least coherent. So how was your Tuesday??? :) Eilir raved on
09:49
Came across thisNational Anxiety Foundation, Helping Sufferers of Panic, Anxiety and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and was intrigued since it's based here in town. I may see about volunteering with them, since I have a vested interest due to OCD, social anxiety, and other anxiety issues for which I'm under treatment (and doing well, I might add).Eilir raved on
13:00
Busy-ness this weekToday I'm working my main job and training at the temp phoneathon one. Plus, I'm preparing things for tomorrow, which will be the culmination of a move for which I've been preparing for weeks. I'll be off galavanting across town for that. Then there will be the aftermath to deal with. In all, I'm going to be very busy over the next six weeks, with the three jobs and unpacking. I found out the other day I can stay at the distance learning job at least until they hire a new teacher to replace my boss (who's getting married and moving to San Francisco). That means I can still get some hours in per week until the end of the summer, depending on how another job possibility turns out. I'll know more about that on Wednesday. Thursday I plan to work and then spend some time relaxing.In retrospect it's good that I didn't get to go to the MLA conference. Who has the time??? :) Eilir raved on
09:39
Back on EarthOur intrepid gaming group has now managed to return to the Earth of the Dreamlands (of Cthulhu Mythos fame, see horror by HP Lovecraft or the game by Chaosium if you have no idea of what I speak). We also avoided being assassinated by our misogynist captain, and now we're trying to outrun the ships sent from the Moon to destroy us. Meanwhile, Nyarlothotep was not able to eat our souls, we destroyed the Man in the Moon (temporarily), his betrothed, his servant, and his library, and generally speaking although we are at least back on Earth we're by no means safe, and we've royally pissed off both the Crawling Chaos and his minion.I love this game. This was followed by the penultimate episode of the season for 'Charmed', where a daemon finally managed to get the Book of Shadows (played by Oded Fehr, Ardath Bey from the movie The Mummy, who I really think is hot). Yikes! The day's fictional endeavours were complete with 'Mystery!', a Miss Marple story, 'What Mrs McGillicuddy Saw'. It was a good Sunday overall. Yes, this is what I do for fun and relaxation--that and read, which I haven't had time to do of late. Eilir raved on
22:25
Documentary timeI:
Eilir raved on
23:59
I'm off work todayand busily taking care of some things, so no major blogging today. Will resume as soon as possible.In the meantime, happy Friday the 13th. It's been immensely lucky so far. Plus, I got a phone call out of the blue yesterday that could mean something very, very good if it pans out. Will give the details when I know more, but just keep your fingers crossed for me for now...it could mean finally being solvent and self-supportive if it works out. Eilir raved on
10:33
Nifty Aegyptology newsIs this the face of Tutankhamun?A team of American, Aegyptian, and French scientists have worked with deep scans of King Tut's mummy to produce three different yet similar versions of what he may have looked like, mostly with differences of the nose and ears (the soft cartilage areas). The images also show that ancient portraits in line with the actual body's features. The face shows a young man with chubby cheeks and his family's overbite, with a receding chin. They also believe that rather than a blow to the head, he may have been killed by gangrene setting in quickly after suffering a broken leg. They also discovered that he was a healthy 19-year-old who had not suffered childhood illnesses that left any lasting effects and was about 5' 6". Here are more links... Face-to-Face with King Tut Tutankhamun Riddle Solved Face of Tutankhamun Reconstructed The French is probably the most life-like attempt; the US one was done without any knowledge of whose skull it was from which they worked. Eilir raved on
13:50
The buzzthroughout medical librarianship is the approaching MLA national meeting. Once again, I find myself staying home as others enjoy the excitement. I've been a medical librarian for eight years and a librarian for twelve. The closest I ever came to attending a national conference was as a student when we were all set to go down to New Orleans, stay cheaply at Tulane, enjoy the whole conference for 25 bucks (student rates), and one of our professors was going to drive us down in a van, so it would have cost almost nothing. Everyone else backed out. :(This year I had some hope of going to San Antonio since I knew that I could stay with relatives, but my travel budget is nil and I wouldn't have been able to afford the conference rates and travel costs. So, well, here I am. One of these days I will go, I hope. Until then, the medical librarian lists will be quiet except for those of us left behind, and who knows how many interlibrary loans at small institutions will shut down. Oh, well, someday... Eilir raved on
13:27
Kudos to Time magazinefor it's story The Cruelest Cut about the practice of cutting, a behaviour that many people, especially young women, engage in as an attempt to feel emotions or block out emotional pain. It usually involves cuts with a razor or knife on the arms or other parts of the bodies. In short, it's self-mutilation.Cutting and other forms of self-harm are an important diagnostic criterion for borderline personality disorder, although not everyone who cuts themselves is borderline. I understand the impetus to cut, although I'm not a cutter. I do have the urge to do it, have imagined doing it and have even gone through the motions without actually cutting, but I can usually find something else to do instead. Sometimes I do something constructive, but my main alternatives are to eat or to pick at my arms to the point that they are scarred. When I finally confessed this to a friend one day, he was horrified. It makes no sense to a rational person, I suppose. But it isn't rational. It's a way of blocking out the world for me. I don't know if the picking is due to the obsessive-compulsive disorder or borderline personality--both of which I've been diagnosed as having--but I do know when I am under stress I do it more. The times I have the urge to cut are when I'm at my most emotionally labile. When I'm not actively doing it, though, I'm embarrassed by my weight and by rough skin on my arms, and it's a viscious cycle as I become more acutely aware of my body and what I've done to it. Then I think of ways to control my eating or otherwise get some control over my life, and I worry sometimes that I'll develop an eating disorder, if my binge eating itself doesn't count as one. Yeah, I'm a mess. But hey, someone has to write these sorts of things so that others can know their not alone, right? And somehow despite everything I manage to get through each day, hold down 2-3 jobs, and maintain contact with the people who are important in my life. So I guess that says something. We all have daemons. These are some of mine, the result of whacky brain chemistry and a background of abuse. Eilir raved on
09:10
Well, that makes senseAP Wire 05/10/2005 Gay men respond differently to pheromonesThey respond similarly to women in brain imaging studies done with pheromones. In fact, they respond strongest to pheromones of other gay men, whereas heterosexual women and men and for that matter lesbians respond least to gay pheromones. One more tally in the genetics vs. learnt behaviour as a means of explaining homosexuality. So do bisexuals respond indiscriminately to everybody's pheromones? Or just to gay same-sex or straight opposite-sex odours? Hmmmm. I think my brain is flawed; I seem to be attracted to gay men, more's the pity. Anyway, it's an interesting study; I hope they keep up the investigation. Eilir raved on
09:41
NiftyCreation of Black Hole DetectedA flash of light accompanying a gamma ray burst heralded the merger of two neutron stars to create a small black hole--an event that took place 2 million years ago, but unfolded for us just yesterday. Eilir raved on
09:01
I Should Have BetI always pick a grey horse, if there is one, in the field for the Derby. No, it's not scientific at all. I just like grey horses. If there isn't a grey one, then I go with black. Nevermind that the only grey, Giacomo, was 50-1 odds.Of course, I didn't actually see the paper which listed the colours until right after the Derby was won. But if I'd been at a Derby party this year, I would probably have put in a little bet for Giacomo. Wow. Apparently he's named for Sting's son (his owner is in the record business). The fact that he came up grinding from 18th position has some excited about how he'll do in the longer races of the Triple Crown. All I know is, my (figurative) money is on the grey horse. Eilir raved on
09:09
Man's (or Baby Girl's) Best FriendStray Dog in Kenya Saves Abandoned BabyThe dog found the baby in a plastic bag. She carried it across a busy road and through barbed wire to a shed where she was keeping her own puppies. Eilir raved on
09:04
Always rememberMarch a way to feel loss, reaffirm lifeEilir raved on
10:11
A librarian-related GarfieldThe Vault StripOkay, it's stereotyped, what's new. But I did think it was funny. Eilir raved on
09:23
Hmmm...an interesting bit of health newsStem Cell Findings Could Shine Light on Fertility ProblemsAdult ovarian stem cells can be transformed into mature eggs capable of being fertilised. Although in early stages of investigation, data suggest that this might be an alternative for some women facing fertility issues. Since it deals with stem cells taken from adult ovaries, it avoids much of the heated debate over embryonic stem cells and their uses. Eilir raved on
09:37
I've been a Bookcrosser for awhileand one of the reasons I like this community so well is the wording of the release alerts:
Much nicer than the kill-you-dead-and-ask-questions-later robot, no? I've mostly released, and I have an entire pile to be released soon, but I haven't caught any yet. Here's hoping I do soon. Eilir raved on
15:10
I'm on cloud nine by associationAfter many trials and much expectation, D's baby boy is here! JMK was born last night and I'm just ecstatic for the happy family. Poor D is no doubt exhausted and sore, but I dare say that everything she's gone through has been worth it. D used to have a blog that chronicled some of the issues she dealt with in trying to have a baby. Since it was linked here, you may have read it--it was called 'Open Escape'. Now all those hopes and dreams--and all the tribulations on the road to motherhood--have come to fruition. Congratulations, D & E, and welcome to the world, baby J. I'm going to give mum a bit of a rest before checking on her tomorrow, but it is the perfect Mother's Day gift, don't you think?Eilir raved on
09:44
Sounds like Johnis having some of the same problems I was the last couple of weeks. Money-food-meds-dental work...it's a balancing act, and his is worsened by the sheer rigour of trying to get a dentist who is accepting new National Health patients.Send him some encouraging thoughts! Meanwhile, I'm sitting in a building of mirrored glass and a robin keeps attacking his reflection. I don't think he's hurt himself yet, although it makes a remarkable squeaky noise when his beak scrapes the glass. I feel like that robin some days. How about you? Eilir raved on
18:01
The last of my active corpses has been posted(boy, that title seems odd if you didn't know what I was talking about). :)Listening to: 'I Dreamed a Dream'; 'Lovely Ladies', Les Mis An Exquisite Corpse: elementa/not here/in big cups/out there Again, we all kept with a space/moon theme. Weird. Eilir raved on
09:20
This was a good set of things to rememberListening to: 'The Bishop'; 'Valjean's Soliloquy', Les MisérablesJ sent this to me. It was attributed to the Dalai Lama. I don't know if that's really the case, but they definitely are things to consider and incorporate in life, and several are things that my own mentor has tried to teach me.
Eilir raved on
09:06
The comments of the Rabid Librarian are © by Elisabeth Eilir Rowan and are the author's own opinions, sometimes curmudgeonly, although rarely malicious. They should not be taken as representative of any other individuals, group, or organisation. Whilst I try to keep my facts straight, this is a journal and not meant to be definitive. Feel free to quote if you like, but please give me credit for anything I wrote and a link back here would be appreciated. Video content is the property of the various copyright holders and I do not in any way mean to imply that I am taking credit for them--rather I enjoy them and want to share what I am watching and comment upon them. I have tried to provide links to creators and artists when I can. Thanks.
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