5.17.2024

the romantic person has a desperate confidence

    I re-took the Riso-Hudson Enneagram Type Indicator (RHETI) Sample test this week, having taken it once before—my first results are here—and discovered that my type has changed!
 
 
    I'm now a Four, when I used to be a Five. I don't necessarily think that I have changed, so much, except that I answer questions more honestly now. 
 
    Of course, I'm dying to know what types my friends are. If you do take the test (which took me around 5 minutes), please share your type with me!
    What follows is from the website, with pertinent bits (to me, of course) in italics - and especially apt statements in bold. Comments welcome!
 
The Romantic (the Four) 
Romantics have sensitive feelings and are warm and perceptive. 
 
How to Get Along with Me 
• Give me plenty of compliments. They mean a lot to me. 
Be a supportive friend or partner. Help me to learn to love and value myself. 
Respect me for my special gifts of intuition and vision. 
Though I don't always want to be cheered up when I'm feeling melancholy, I sometimes like to have someone lighten me up a little. 
Don't tell me I'm too sensitive or that I'm overreacting! 
 
Fours as Children Often
 
have active imaginations: playing creatively alone or organizing playmates in original games 
are very sensitive 
• feel that they don't fit in 
believe they are missing something that other people have 
• attach themselves to idealized teachers, heroes, artists, etc. 
become anti-authoritarian or rebellious when criticized or not understood 
• feel lonely or abandoned 
 
What I Like About Being a Four 
my ability to find meaning in life and to experience feeling at a deep level 
• my ability to establish warm connections with people 
admiring what is noble, truthful, and beautiful in life 
my creativity, intuition, and sense of humor 
being unique and being seen as unique by others 
having aesthetic sensibilities 
• being able to easily pick up the feelings of people around me 
 
What's Hard About Being a Four
 
experiencing dark moods of emptiness and despair 
• feelings of self-hatred and shame; believing I don't deserve to be loved 
feeling guilty when I disappoint people 
feeling hurt or attacked when someone misunderstands me 
• expecting too much from myself and life 
fearing being abandoned 
• obsessing over resentments 
longing for what I don't have 
 
 [the title quotation is by F. Scott Fitzgerald, from This Side of Paradise, and reads more fully as follows]
“I'm not sentimental--I'm as romantic as you are. 
The idea, you know, is that the sentimental person thinks things will last
—the romantic person has a desperate confidence that they won't.”

5.16.2024

how many times do I have to tell you people, I'm a businessman—make me an offer!

Average rating: 6.75. That means, in this case, 3 good ones and a meh+.

The Big Bad Swim (2006)
The Big Bad Swim (2006) - "A group of Connecticut residents with aquaphobia attend an adult education swim class, hoping to conquer their fears. Among the students are Amy (Paget Brewster), a calculus teacher in a failing marriage, and Jordan (Jess Weixler), a blackjack dealer and stripper whose younger brother, David (Avi Setton), constantly follows her with a video camera. Depressed instructor Noah (Jeff Branson) manages to bring hope to the students as they learn to swim, while a romance develops between him and Jordan."
source: DVD
I watched it because: it's been far too long since I've seen it
IMDB: 6.3/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: N/A% Audience: 75%
my IMDB: 9/10
notable quote: "And, I'm not really an astronaut."
MPAA rating: NR
directed by: Ishai Setton
my notes: I love this film. It's a slow, sad, charming, funny, smart, thoughtful, romantic, depressing, enlightening thing. Mmm.
overall: very highly recommended

Cradle 2 the Grave (2003)
Cradle 2 the Grave (2003) - "Master thief Anthony Fait (DMX) pulls off a major jewel heist and somehow manages to escape from the SWAT team that's pursuing him. A Taiwanese agent named Su (Jet Li) is on Fait's tail and wants to take him down so that he can retrieve the stolen black diamonds. But when Fait's daughter (Paige Hurd) is kidnapped by a rival criminal and Su's ex-partner (Mark Dacascos), Su must work with Fait to save the thief's daughter and get his revenge in the process."
source: DVD
I watched it because: I'm in an action mood
IMDB: 5.8/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 26% Audience: 52%
my IMDB: 6/10
notable quote: "What are you, some kind of kung fu James Bond?"
MPAA rating: R
directed by: Andrzej Bartkowiak
my notes: I've got a soft spot for this film. Jet Li is quietly powerful, DMX is righteous fury. Anthony Anderson is hilarious and versatile as Tommy, and Tom Arnold (Archie) is funny, and vital to the story. Gabrielle Union (Daria) can fight like a demon - and the train sequence is steamy. There are some weak bits (Kelly Hu is a one-note character, and some of the effects are dated) but overall it's a winner. The fight in the rain is mindblowing.
overall:  recommended

He Walked by Night (1948)
He Walked by Night (1948) - "Roy Morgan (Richard Basehart) is a burglar who listens in to radio police calls, allowing him to stay one step ahead of the cops. After Morgan kills a police officer, Sergeants Brennan (Scott Brady) and Jones (James Cardwell) have little success in putting the clues of the case together. But when Jones is wounded in a shoot-out with Morgan, Brennan employs all facets of detective work, including forensics and informants, to find the elusive and clever criminal."
source: streamed on Vudu
I watched it because: I haven't seen a cop movie in a while
IMDB: 7.0/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 82% Audience: 62%
my IMDB: 5/10
notable quote: "And now the killer changed his tactics, his modus operandi. It would baffle the police. They always expected burglars to remain burglars, not go in for stick-ups. they'd never tie this up with him. While wearing a variety of disguises, coming and going like a shadow, ready to kill if cornered, he struck the bottle stores in a one-man blitz that had the robbery detail dizzy. "
MPAA rating: Approved (TV-PG)
directed by: Alfred L. Werker, Anthony Mann
my notes: pretty shallow. Jones was the most interesting character, which is saying something. It's not terrible but I certainly wouldn't seek it out again.
overall: only mildly recommended

The Blind Side (2009) - "Michael Oher (Quinton Aaron), a homeless black teen, has drifted in and out of the school system for years. Then Leigh Anne Tuohy (Sandra Bullock) and her husband, Sean (Tim McGraw), take him in. The Tuohys eventually become Michael's legal guardians, transforming both his life and theirs. Michael's tremendous size and protective instincts make him a formidable force on the gridiron, and with help from his new family and devoted tutor, he realizes his potential as a student and football player."
source: DVD
I watched it because: I like sports movies, and this is one I hadn't seen
IMDB: 7.6/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 66% Audience: 85%
my IMDB: 7/10
notable quote: "'...we want to know if you would like to become part of this family.'
    'I kinda thought I already was.'"
MPAA rating: PG-13
directed by: John Lee Hancock
my notes: one review called it "undemanding entertainment that lacks a great deal of subtlety but is continuously entertaining and emotionally involving," which describes it perfectly. I liked it, though it would have been nice to learn more about Michael, theoretically the main character of the story. I'm partial to Tim McGraw, and enjoyed lots of secondary characters. It's a good one.
Academy Award winner: Best Actress—Bullock
Academy Award nominee: Best Picture—Gil Netter, Andrew A. Kosove, Broderick Johnson
overall:  recommended
 
[the title quotation is from Cradle 2 the Grave]

5.15.2024

life is to be lived, not controlled; and humanity is won by continuing to play in face of certain defeat

Would you prefer to be a better athlete, businessperson, cook, lover, or moralist?    of those limited choices, I would choose to be the lover. It probably incorporates parts of all the others, anyway. The athletic bit goes without saying, right? Businessperson because, in love as in all other human interaction, it's at least somewhat ruled by negotiation and compromise. As for cook, that's the application of creativity to the best things we can do. Finally, the moralist. I think it's possible to be a fine lover and a moralist at the same time, because a moralist is not without sin - it's "one who follows a system of moral principles." Moral principles are not incompatible with sex; it just requires flexibility and finesse.
 
Would you rather date a jock, CEO, chef, sex therapist, or minister?
     a CEO. Athletes make me uncomfortable. Chefs work terrible hours. Sex therapist... nope. Just no. And, a minister? Not at all likely to be interested in me. 
    Besides, it would be novel to date someone in charge of something, both capable of and comfortable with making decisions.
 
Would you send your child to an expensive school if you knew that they would become a truck driver anyway?     I'd rather be a truck driver than have nothing better to say for myself than "I went to an expensive school." The world needs truck drivers! Being a truck driver - or having any other practical job - is not a let down; far from it. It can be rewarding, lucrative, interesting and fun, and greatly appeals to people with certain attributes, like self-sufficiency, time- and stress-management, reliability, and good communication. Hmm, that sounds like most managers I've known.  
 
Would you rather live in a society in which everyone gets the same education or one in which select people receive a great one?    
equality v equity
arguably I do live in each of these societies at once, depending upon who you ask. (I'm addressing only K-12 here, by the way. Higher education is its own minefield and can be handled elsewhere.) Some people believe that education standards have resulted in "everyone getting the same education", while others believe that it might provide equality only, leaving 2/3 of students with a view of a wall rather than a game (see image at right). 
    I believe that education is not as much what's given to you, but what you do with what you're given. Each of us learns in slightly different ways, though. I benefit from time to work on my own, while some people learn more from interacting with others. Some by watching, some by doing. In that way, we ought not to give "the same" education to everyone. 
    But, should anyone - any select people - receive a great education, to the detriment of others? No. That's just not cricket.
 
Would you turn down a great job offer from a company with questionable ethics?
     yes, if I had the luxury of choice. I worked for a company that, while not rising to the point of "questionable ethics" is definitely not as clean as they pretend to be, or even as clean as they think they are. There's probably nothing willfully illegal going on there, but, negligent...? Yeah. And I wouldn't work for them again, because that stuff leaves a stain.
 
Would you say that happiness is found or made?     ayep, both. Some things happen to a person, you know? You can be walking down a sidewalk, minding your own business, and stumble upon a hundred dollar bill blowing in the wind. That would make me happy, for sure, and I've done nothing to "deserve" it except to hear a crinkle under my foot. 
    True enough, it's more likely to make happiness. Go out looking for pretty flowers, spend time in congenial company, eat delicious food. Read good books (maybe even more than once). Watch movies that YOU like, rather than the ones that other people think you should. Take a long shower. Sleep in. Get a massage, rather than spending that money on something you "should" pay for. Reach out for it, instead of waiting for joy to fly through the sky and land on your arm.
 
Would you say that the more power you have to control life, the richer it is?     not at all! Control doesn't please me. Power doesn't, either. In fact, I think that the less power & control I have, the richer my life really is.
 
[from Would You?: Questions to Challenge Your Beliefs; the title quotation is by Ralph Ellison, from Invisible Man]

5.14.2024

I’m looking for kissing, and to move forward a few paces on the game board

3. What are your goals for the next six or even 12 months?     have I mentioned that I'm not goal-oriented? Just reading this question makes me cringe. Life is just so changeable, y'know? You can make plans - goals - and find them dashed on the rocks by fate. Weather is unpredictable, ruining picnics. Jobs can be lost, unexpectedly. Other peoples' priorities shift. Pandemics arise. Setting goals is like making sandcastles. It feels good, like something real is being created. But relying on those things to be there in an hour or a day or six months? Foolish.
 
the Mr Kitty Show
10. Who or what inspires you?    a friend who's a regular walker. An ex who's a phenomenal photographer. Mr. Kitty, a feline influencer who was adopted at an unhealthy weight and has been working hard (including with a water treadmill! How cool is that?) to get fit.
 
17. What keywords bring your blog the most organic traffic?     "bacon eroticism"
 
24. What is your blogging process from start to finish?     lately, I blog while I'm watching continuing education webinars, laptop on my lap and iPad on the table next to me. Adding movies to this mix is definitely more than my brain can handle at once, so I'm focusing on Q&A posts, interspersed with some essays (which I will launch periodically and then forget about before posting, so they end up as floating drafts that I eventually revise and post), some poetry, and maybe some photo-essays. The quizzes come from anywhere I can find them, online or (lately) in print or e-books. 
    I try to pre-post at least 3 days in advance, in case things come up to disrupt the flow, but it's not rare to be scrambling to finish something right before bed. 
    I'm also working through all my old posts—which will take a while since there's well over 5000—to sort out dead links, ill-advised references, and missing tags. It's not going to change much but helps me sleep better at night.
 
5. Favorite card games     Gin Rummy and Hearts
 
31. What do you wish you’d known before you started in your niche, industry, or career?      I wish that, before seriously considering law school, I'd become aware that the sort of writing that the law requires would forever change my personal writing, too. That my prose would become terse, my vocabulary convoluted, and some of my assertions hard-lined and aggressive. I think that I can still write like a normal person whose brain hasn't been fried by law school, but I know that I don't always follow through.
 
38. Where have you been lately? What did you learn from the experience?     this last weekend, I went with a friend to see a surprisingly large number of greenhouses in a little town about 30 minutes away. We picked a start at random and worked our way through about a dozen - and then gave up on the remaining 1/3 so we could have lunch and sit down for a while! 
    It was a beautiful day. Birds were singing, sun was shining, and every person we encountered was in a good mood. The area where we traveled includes a significant population involved in a traditional religion and way of life, so there were everywhere horses, particularly attractive farms, and also some delicious-looking baked and preserved goods. There were also numerous pets around (see photo at right), which was charming and fun.
    I was reminded that getting out in nature boosts my mood. I learned that the temptation to over-buy outdoor plants is strong within me. It became ironically clear that many, or prehaps most, outdoor plants are suitable for full sun - with the exception of two that I had purchased from a school fundraiser. (My outdoor plants area is vehemently full sun.) I discovered that my companion was easy to wander with, not always the case of course. Neither of us spent a lot of money ($30 total, including lunch), which reaffirmed our intention to treat it more as "seeing plant museums" than "a shopping trip." And I got delightfully grubby, walking around so much on gravel and barn yards and dirt floors, so my shower afterward felt especially wonderful!
 
45. If you could time travel to witness any event in history, which event would you choose, and why?     the Nuremberg Trials, because it's the perfect storm of history and law - as well as an era when women's clothing would have especially suited me
 
10. Favorite board games    Tripoley - as adapted by my dad's side of the family - and Chinese Checkers
 
[from What to blog about: 101 Irresistible blog ideas (with a couple of randoms); the title quotation is by Laini Taylor, from Night of Cake & Puppets]

5.13.2024

the blue bowl of their preference

"What becomes of former lovers? Do they dream of us
dreaming of them? Do we wander in like stray thoughts
now and then? Once they spill us out of the blue bowl
of their preference, do we slide away, cease to be that
person whom they've loved? Is it a small death somehow,
and between lovers, a limbo, until the next lover, divine,
conjures from the void of self some other person whom
he needs to love?"

[Joan Connor {1954- } from 'Tide Walk', in How to Stop Loving Someone: Stories]

5.12.2024

we never know the quality of someone else's life, though we seldom resist the temptation to assume and pass judgement

If you could anonymously and safely destroy any one person's reputation online through various postings, would you?     in a heartbeat
 
crystal ball
If a crystal ball could tell you the truth about any one thing about yourself, life, the future, or anything else, what would you want to know, and why?
     I want to know if I'm on the right path. That's not a very specific question, and would probably not result in a very clear answer. Crystal balls are, in my mind, closer to a Magic 8-ball than a high definition monitor.
 
If ads could be tailored so effectively to your personal desires and concerns that they'd be nearly irresistible, would you want to ban them?     it's quaint that there are still people alive who don't know that ads are personalized in that way, now. Ads are ubiquitous and overwhelming, and the psychological warfare that goes on to assail every person with endless advertising is a billion-dollar industry. It's not "marketing" anymore, which is "the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large."
too many ads
I think the key word there is "offerings." Modern advertising is not being offered, but instead being bombarded, targeted, blasted, and "laser-focused" for maximum efficiency - to the benefit of the seller, not to the potential buyer. 
    So, yeah, I do want to ban them. I want to ban cart-reminders ("did you forget to click 'place my order'"?), buy-alikes ("people like you like this!"), delivery updates ("it's 7 stops away!"), endless self-serving satisfaction surveys, and all the rest of the unending flow of commercialism that is thrust down our throats.
 
Would you buy special high-tech sunglasses that screened out billboards and other advertising to leave a pristine visual landscape?     definitely! Especially if I could use them as a filter for photography. Nothing ruins a shot like a random road sign, power line - or billboard.
 
incognito mode
If all online interactions and Web browsing had to be under your real name and would be recorded and archived, how would it alter your use of the Internet and the way you communicate with people?
     good God that would be AWFUL. Not only would I be in boatloads of trouble, but I would also be exposed as the scattered and occasionally dumb person that I really am. How many times a week do I web-search a word in order to verify its spelling? And that's the most innocent example of what I would not want to be generally known!
 
Would you be willing to undergo a relatively safe surgery to implant a permanent cardiac monitor that would detect the telltale signs of an impending heart attack and summon medical help before it occurred?     yup. Pretty sure I'm going to die of a heart attack, so an early-warning system would be welcome.
 
Do you think kids should be sheltered from unhappiness?
     definitely not. Unhappiness is part of life, and can be fuel for positive change. Even worse, though, kids who have been sheltered often turn out to be brats or worse, incapable of "surviving" adulthood without a lot of help.
    Also, as the image at left puts in such a delicate way, kids who are over-protected develop all kinds of reason to lie. They learn quickly that they don't want to disappoint (or can't risk the ire of) their parents. 
    Where will they be when the parents aren't there with the bubble-wrap?
 
Does it bother you when people like you because they think you have qualities you don't actually have?     well yeah, obviously. I don't want to be admired for an illusion. There's a whole generation of guys who were lured by the Miracle Bra and woke to something completely different. What's the point of allowing that misapprehension to persist? 
     The problem that arises here, though, is that the issue is not usually as apparent as a pneumatic undergarment. How do I know that you like me, much less what the deciding "qualities" that brought that about might be?
     
 [from The Book of Questions; the title quotation is by Tami Hoag, from Dark Horse]

5.11.2024

he who is not contented with what he has, would not be contented with what he would like to have

Would you say you are more proud of your accomplishments or of your character?     character, for sure. I would rather be celebrated for whom I am, at a basic level, than what I've done that's considered an accomplishment. After all, what someone else considers a success might, to me, be just a task done, or worse, something with accompanying negative connotations. For instance, I started grad school in August 1994, did my two years of coursework, researched my thesis subject...and then left. I went to law school, studied for and passed the bar exam, and started a professional job. Only after all that was settled did I get back into the thesis, finishing the research, writing, and working through the seemingly endless rounds of editing. I earned the M.A. in June 1994. It was not exactly my finest hour, getting that degree. Am I proud of it? Not really. But I am proud of being tenacious, internally-motivated, and dedicated.
 
Would you say that a good relationship depends more on common interests or on passion?     passion, for sure. I don't mean physical passion (though it doesn't hurt), but personal passion. Deep interest in something. Playing chess, rebuilding classic cars, becoming fluent in another language. Practicing an instrument. Reading mystery novels. Participating in a soccer league. Growing house plants, breeding racing snails, cooking a different cuisine. The kind of thing you can get excited about, and talk excitedly about with another person - whether they share your excitement in that topic or not, sharing the talk and the time...that's a good relationship, to me. 
 
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Spirals
Would you tend to buy something for its quality or for its label?
     a familiar label often correlates with quality. I'm not a label snob, but I'm also not going to spurn a national brand to be thought less commercial, more granola. For instance, I have a childlike fondness for boxed macaroni and cheese (rarely!), and though I've tried other brands - both the high class upgrades and the even cheaper bargain versions - I prefer the familiar dark blue box.
 
Would you say that sloth or greed is the worse vice?     sloth, for sure. I'm no Gordon Gekko, but I can see the inherent value of greed as a motivator. If something is good, then more of it is often better. Sloth, on the other hand, is hard to get behind. Relaxation is good, of course, but laziness for the sake of itself is nobody's friend.
 
Would you choose to know everything about your mate?     good God, no. I don't want to know everything about anyone. Close relationships are awesome, and so is a little mystery and unspoken thought. Overlap is boring.
 
chutzpah
Would you rather have more brains, more beauty, or more chutzpah?     I probably have "enough brains," or at least I've accepted that it's unlikely that I'm gonna sprout some new, bigger brains. As for beauty, it would be swell to suddenly transform into the kind of woman that others consider beautiful, but it ain't gonna happen. Therefore, I gratefully accept the offer of more chutzpah, and promise to put it to good use. 
 
Would you be a better teacher or student?     student, by far. I have no patience (or facility) for trying to explain anything to anyone. And anyway, I love being a student. Learning things from people who have knowledge to share - that is one of the best feelings in the world.
 
[from Would You?: Questions to Challenge Your Beliefs; the title quotation is from Socrates]

5.10.2024

sing, cry, dance, laugh and live intensely, before the curtain closes and the piece ends with no applause

IF... 
 
fuzzy blankie
...you had to choose the one thing that gives you the most comfort, what would you say? 
  
     fuzzy blankets
 
...you could have one extra hour each day to do only one thing, what would you do in that hour?     write, whether here on the blog or elsewhere. Tasks and other responsibilities often take precedence over what I want to be doing
 
...very good friends were visiting your town, where would you take them to eat, if money were no object?     there is one top-tier restaurant in town, and I'm not a huge fan. It's good, albeit pretty weird, but far more expensive than it is good, and definitely not comfortable. (The interior design is industrial, angular, and hard. And dark as f#$%.)
    I would take very good friends to the barbecue place, owned by a high school friend, which I adore. And to the pizza place, launched in 1958, where the crust is crispy and the sauce is delicious. And to the Mexican place that's further west - closer to my home, actually - where the food is full of flavor, hot, and fast.
 
waterfall envy
...you could personally see one natural phenomenon that you have never seen, what would it be? 
    ooooh, a waterfall! I've never seen a real one, just the river control deals that look more industrial than natural. I very, very much want to see a real one someday.
 
...you could have one new store added to your town, what would it be?     any clothing store for adult women. For no reason that I can understand, it's been nearly impossible to launch and keep up such  a thing afloat since I was in high school. If you can't buy it at Target or the farm n' barn, you're gonna be driving for it.
 
Charles Chaplin
...you could be given the complete film library of the work of a single actor, who would you pick?
     Charles Chaplin. I've got a few of his films, but would love to have access to all of them, including the shorts.
 
...you had to choose the hour of day when time goes slowest, what would you say?     that's easy: the last hour of the workday (typically 2:00-3:00 PM) drags as if each movement of the second hand is a torment. I would swear that at least some of the time, the clock at least stops if not actually moves backward. Why, I wonder? Where do we get that sort of skewed perspective?
 
 [from If2: 500 New Questions for the game of life; the title quotation is by Charles Chaplin, from Charlie Chaplin : Interviews]

5.09.2024

love is supposed to be based on trust, and trust on love, it's something rare and beautiful when people can confide in each other without fearing what the other person will think

If... 
 
one definition of trust
• you could have more faith in one thing, what would it be?
     other peoples' affection and care for me
• you could erase one thing from your conscience, what would it be?     ending my marriage. It was sad and stressful - but also transformative, positive (read: "for the best"), and amicable. That makes an awkward twist in the relationships that surrounded us, too. Some people saw me being happy, which I certainly was in some ways. I felt relieved and proud, sometimes excited about the new path that I was taking. Of course, I also felt terrified and sad and guilty.... And so did he. A little less of the happy side, honestly, because it had been me who took the first step. 
    I would love to be able to erase some of that remorse. To know that he, at least, absolves me.
• you could have changed one thing in the life of someone now deceased, what would it be?     I would have been with Chris when he died. I am overwhelmed by guilt and anger, to think that he died alone.
anger
• you could eliminate the anger in someone you know and replace it with inner peace, who would you choose?
    DG. Pretty sure he wouldn't identify himself as angry, but it seems to me that there's a layer of that in there somewhere. Lots of reasons for it, from what I know, and insufficient opportunity to express it, much less resolve it.      
    Love can be troubling.
• there was an occasion in your life when you wish you had used less candor, when would it be?     oh Hell yes, so many times. Like every single job interview I've ever had, where something I said features strongly on those lists of "shit NOT to say at a job interview."
too much candor
   
And the conversation I had with Nick's mom when I dropped off all the crap he'd left at my apartment, the last time we broke up. I brought it all in a big black garbage bag, clunked it on the floor in their living room, and proceeded to tell her WAY too much information about how our relationship had detonated. 
cat hug
    And the decade of TMI conversations I had with Fluffy K., who finally had to—ever so gently—let me know that confession can be a compulsion, essentially attention-seeking, and that there's a difference between 'not telling everything' and 'keeping one's own counsel.'

• you could alter other people's perception of you, what would you change?             I would like to not be seen, by anyone, even in memory, as primarily a bosom
• you were to name the most comforting way to be touched by another person, what would it be?     a real hug, the kind that goes on a little longer than the socially required variety, that is warm and affectionate.

[from If: Questions for the Soul; the title quotation is from E.A. Bucchianeri, from Brushstrokes of a Gadfly]

5.08.2024

...if they kill me? / I'll be miserable for days

Poor Marie drags the average rating down to 6.25.

Marie Antoinette (2006) - "An Austrian teenager marries the Dauphin of France and becomes that country's queen following the death of King Louis XV in 1774. Years later, after a life of luxury and privilege, Marie Antoinette loses her head during the French Revolution."
source: DVD
I watched it because: I was curious
IMDB: 6.5/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 57% Audience: 56%
my IMDB: 2/10 (DNF)
notable quote: "'So, I hear you like to make keys as a hobby?'
    'Yes.'
    'And do you enjoy making keys?'
    'Obviously.'"
MPAA rating: PG-13
directed by: Sofia Coppola
my notes: this movie has multiple personality disorder. Is it history? Is it a teen romp, as evidenced by the Converse sneakers and Siouxie and the Banshees-esque soundtrack? Is it comedy, or farce? Is it an exploration of the subjugation of women? Is it a colorful feast for the senses?
    Nope. It's just a fucking mess - and, worse than that, it's boring. Nothing happens! Ugh.
Academy Award winner: Best Costume Design—Milena Canonero 
overall: not  recommended

Infernal Affairs (2002)
Infernal Affairs (2002) - "Idealistic police cadet Chan Wing-Yan (Tony Leung) is recruited by Police Superintendent Wong (Anthony Wong) to go deep undercover as a member of the criminal Triad society. Into the same cadet class, crime boss Hon Sam (Eric Tsang) installs new Triad member Lau Kin Ming (Andy Lau) to become a long-term mole for the gang. A decade later, both have risen through the ranks in their respective aliases—but when both of their covers are in danger of being blown—a game of life and death ensues."
source: DVD
I watched it because: I love Andy Lau's work as a director, and Tony Leung Chiu-wai is a terrific actor (previously reviewed here)
IMDB: 8.0/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 94% Audience: 95%
my IMDB: 8/10
notable quote: "I'll dream of you, Officer Yan."
MPAA rating: R
directed by: Andrew Lau, Alan Mak
my notes: based on the same screenplay as The Departed (2006), in a lot of ways this is the better treatment. Scorsese overdoes, while Lau is a minimalist. Long scenes with no music, almost no sound, compare favorably to the huge body-count and incessant F-bombs. This movie is beautifully shot, thoughtful, and tense as hell.
overall: highly recommended

The Hustler (1961)
The Hustler (1961) - "Story features Fast Eddie Felsen (Paul Newman) and his adventures in the world of professional pool. Fast Eddie is a young hopeful on his way to challenging Minnesota Fats (Jackie Gleason) for his world title. When he starts getting feelings for a woman he gets into a dilemma."
source: DVD
I watched it because: any excuse to watch acting this good (also reviewed here)
IMDB: 8.0/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 94% Audience: 93%
my IMDB: 8/10
AFI: 10 Top 10 (2008) Sports #6
notable quote: "Look, I've got troubles and I think maybe you've got troubles. Maybe it'd be better if we just leave each other alone."
MPAA rating: Approved (TV-PG)
directed by: Robert Rossen
my notes: bleak, beautiful, and smooth. George C. Scott is chilling.
Academy Award winner: 
• Best Cinematography, Black and White—Eugen Schüfftan
• Best Art Direction—Set Decoration, Black and White—Harry Horner, Gene Callahan
Academy Award nominee: 
• Best Picture—Robert Rossen 
• Best Actor—Newman 
• Best Actress—Piper Laurie 
• Best Supporting Actor—Gleason 
• Best Supporting Actor—Scott (refused even to be nominated) 
• Best Director—Rossen 
• Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium
overall:  recommended

Wild Card (2015)
Wild Card (2015) - "Nick Wild (Jason Statham) is a Las Vegas bodyguard with lethal professional skills and a personal gambling problem. When a friend is beaten by a sadistic thug, Nick strikes back, only to find out the thug is the son of a powerful mob boss. Suddenly Nick is plunged into the criminal underworld, chased by enforcers and wanted by the mob. Having raised the stakes, Nick has one last play to change his fortunes...and this time, it's all or nothing. "
source: DVD
I watched it because: it's been way too long since I saw it last (October 2015, not reviewed)
IMDB: 5.6/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 32% Audience: 29%
my IMDB: 7/10
notable quote: "'Guess you haven't liked Vegas much, huh?'
    'You're not supposed to like Vegas. It's just this creeping virus that people catch sometimes.'"
MPAA rating: R
directed by: Simon West
my notes: welp, there's really nothing like watching a woman who's been brutally attacked going after her rapist with a sharp pair of garden shears.
    It's not high-class cinema, but it's a good story, well told, and I like it. The casino fight scene is one of the best I've seen, and Stanley Tucci's a treat.
overall:  recommended
 
[the title quotation is from Wild Card]

5.07.2024

the bizarre notion that something can be counter-intuitive, even outright alien, and still be really good

"Irreconcilable Differences & No Need to Compromise" by Shai White-Gilbertson, an article from Elephant Journal about being different from the person you're closest to. 
 
“Wait! Wait!” 
The words seemed to come out of him involuntarily, as some kind of reflex, and they made me look up from what I was doing. 
My husband had already been moving toward his office to search for something, and was now saying, “Just a second…I’ll find a piece of scratch paper…” I watched him go with question marks in both of my eyes. 
He reappeared in the doorway, triumphant, to find me still pressing a pen to the margin of a newspaper, about to draw a few circles, just to get the ink flowing. I was going to write out a card to someone and didn’t want the first letter to have a big, weird glob of ink in it. In reaching for the newspaper, I’d somehow caused this flurry of reaction and learned something: I’d married a nut. 
Why on earth would anyone care if I scribbled in the margin of a local newspaper? 
This is pretty much what I asked: “So, you only want these little marks to be on designated scratch paper? You mean, for real—that’s a thing for you?” He struggled to explain…it had something to do with preserving the best state, the native integrity, of things. It wasn’t something to carelessly and irretrievably mar on a whim, even if the thing in question was a highly disposable thing. I am sure I stared at him with disbelief, because he tried again, referencing one of my favorite authors next. 
“You know how you would never write in one of your Anne Lamott books? It’s like that, only I draw the line at a different place.” 
I have to say, it was an excellent attempt to communicate an idea that I was just not getting. It’s a great strategy: find the point where values are shared and then extrapolate. 
However, instead of having a moment of communion with my dear and earnest husband, I got up and went to one of the many bookshelves in the house. I pulled down my copy of Bird by Bird, written by Anne Lamott. The subtitle accurately claims that it is about writing and life, big topics to be able to tote around in paperback form. There was a period of time—at least six months—when I carried it with me pretty much everywhere; if there is a book I could recognize blindfolded, it would be this one. 
Once I’d pulled it off the shelf, I opened it to reveal a collection of completely inscrutable notes. Phone numbers, room numbers and mysterious phrases littered the first page. I have no idea what any of them refer to. I pulled down another book, as cherished as any in my personal stash. It was a gift from a friend who has since died, but who was rather angelic to start with. There is an inscription in the front from her, and the book was purchased for me because she knew that reading a library copy had marked an important turning point in my life. It’s a cornerstone book in my collection. The title page is half missing, the bottom part torn out to use as scratch paper and left behind somewhere, I don’t know where. 
What I can see at a glance is that these are the books I’ve loved most. They haven’t retained their pristine state. They are battered and bear the marks of having been within reach on many different occasions. I can see that they have been part of daily life; they were within reach time and again because I wanted them close by. My way of marking them as chosen, as valued, has been to materially fold them into my own story. My husband’s way of valuing things is to honor their individual and intrinsic specifics, to protect those specifics from the whirlwind of life; his things don’t get dinged once they are under his care. 
We don’t actually have a shared value to use as a starting place on this one. 
It’s a delicate spot for a couple to harbor such a difference; a lot could go wrong. It would be so easy to accidentally insult one another with the best and purest of intentions. It’s fascinating to me that (mostly) we don’t. What lets us co-exist peacefully in our house isn’t always commonality, it’s acceptance. Specifically, acceptance of the bizarre notion that something can be counter-intuitive, even outright alien, and still be really good. 
Here’s what I have noticed about being loved by someone to whom details matter: 
He knows every angle of my features, every half-expression that crosses my face. He can tell at a glance whether I am fine, or struggling, or struggling but pretending to be fine. Whether someone else has scribbled on me or whether I have carelessly treated myself as disposable, he knows when something is off. When my outline is nicked, it registers immediately. 
This is the way he loves the world. 
As for me, details make me itch. I think in big, bounding loops and would rather go hungry than follow a recipe. I’m always and forever asking my husband if he has any big dreams I can throw myself behind, anything I can fuel with whatever is at hand. 
This is how I love the world. 
What intrigues me is how far two people can get despite differences that can’t be bridged, even with the sincerest of conversations. It makes me think that there are principles on which larger kinds of peace can stand: like world peace, just to pick the obvious one. Sometimes I’ll take any scrap of hope that we, as a species, can tolerate and even care for each other. 
Sometimes that hope is found at home, just two people loving the world differently and together." 
 
Many of the people I love the most - my brother is an excellent example - are also the very least like me. Saying the words (not necessarily I Love You, but even things like Thank You and You're Welcome and Spending Time with You is Fun) is important to me, but not the same for them. They express that stuff in different ways. They do nice things for me, especially things that I cannot (or will not) do for myself. They share the wealth, in whatever way they can (veggies from the garden, or "extras" from a big meal or baked treat). They shut up and listen while I say that stuff that I need to say. 
    At times, I'm resentful of that difference. I want the words, too. I want less struggle for understanding. I want...all sorts of things. Trying to put aside the resentment to remember the difference, and the rewards that it brings.
 
[the title quotation is from the article]

5.06.2024

a hybrid signal, a lighthouse: both shelter and warning at once

What's the most ridiculous rule you've ever had to follow?     my high school has a large parking lot for students, and a couple of very small parking lots for faculty and staff. Throughout my time there, I parked my car in the student lot maybe 25 times, total. The rest of the time that I drove, I parked in the lot behind the music wing. In my last year, we were supposed to buy student "parking permits," which I never got around to doing. That was probably what made it possible to keep up with my nefarious practice, since the permits made it clear from a hundred feet away that a vehicle was a student's; no permit meant my car blended easily.
    I did it because it was a pain to carry all my crap from the car to the building, and the longer distance made it more pain. Procrastination and unavailability of spots also contributed. Thinking it was a stupid rule that only stupid people followed was probably the main reason, though. I never once got a ticket or a warning or towed, so was it really a "rule" anyway? 
 
Have you ever been on a Ferris wheel? What could you see from the top?     never, never, never. It would be impossible to surmount my fear of heights and nascent claustrophobia at the same time.
 
cherry pie for breakfast
If you had to eat dessert for breakfast, what would you have?
     that's easy: cherry pie. It reminds me of some of the best weekends of my life.
 
Easier said than done: what do you find easy in theory but difficult in practice?     reading only to the end of the current chapter before going to bed. It's a lifelong failing.
 
If your life depend on leaping across an eight-foot gap between high rooftops, would you attempt it?     God no. I could maybe do 5 feet at a run, but even that would be borderline impossible.
 
What would be the hardest thing about living in a lighthouse?     nothing. As long as there's internet access and Amazon delivery, I can't imagine anything better.
 
What pajamas did you love the most when you were younger?     a pair of light-blue fleece footies (no flap). I wore them until they were all fuzzed into pill-balls and so short that I couldn't stand to my full height.
 
[from 3000 Unique Questions about Me; the title quotation is by Ocean Vuong, from On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous]

5.05.2024

it is always the imagination that wins over the will, without exception

If you could "uninvent" one thing in the world so that it would no longer exist, what would you choose?
     Artificial Intelligence. It scares me on so many levels, and the implications are literally unimaginable. The damage that could be done to the financial system, infrastructure, law... even art and basic communication. I'm not digging a bunker to hide from it, but I'm also deeply disturbed by it.
 
If you could reverse one sports call in history, which one would it be?     it's not exactly this, but, the time out with no time outs that ended the 1993 NCAA championship game. It's always best for sports when a game, tournament, whatever, is won with action rather than a mistake of any kind. 
 
Lawrence
If you had to live the rest of your life in a place that you have never lived in before, where would you live?     northeastern Kansas. The weather is temperate, it's pretty, there's a lot to do, and the vibe suites me. I've never been unhappy there.
 
If you could have chosen your own first name, other than your current one, what would it be?     anything but the one I've got. I think it's cursed.
 
If you could be instantly fluent in one other language that you currently do not read or speak, which would it be?     Spanish. Beyond the facility of speaking with others, it would increase my earning power dramatically.
 
If you could give a single piece of advice to the automobile industry, what would you tell them?
     men and women are not the same size or shape, and building cars for men means that they are practically inaccessible to women. Ever try to get into a pickup made in the last decade, without a ladder? Or try to lift something out of the back of an SUV, that's not right near the tail? Or wash a windshield, without getting soaked and dirty? We end up making do, often very awkwardly, like lefties in a world built for right-handers.
 
If you could receive all the products from a single company for free (but could not resell them), which company would you choose?     Apple, of course. I've never purchased an Apple product on its first run, and more often than not am 3 or 4 versions behind the current model. It would be nice to have the most up-to-date camera technology and battery usage on one's phone, and to always use the lightest and fastest laptop.
 
[from If...Questions for the Game of Life; the title quotation is from Émile Coué]