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dryad

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Everything posted by dryad

  1. I use a Platypus hoser, with duct tape over high-stress areas (don't know if that actually helps or if it's just a psychological boost). The only time it ever leaked was when I didn't screw the hose on tight enough. Oops. Never had any punctures.
  2. dryad

    Alternative Healing

    Ditto what lI1|1! said about herbal medicines. Dosage of the active ingredient is highly variable and often unknown. Many modern pharmaceuticals were originally isolated from natural sources. Just because something is natural doesn't mean it's safe. I've never heard of "color therapy", but it is well known that different colors have different effects on your mood. Never underestimate the mind-body connection.
  3. I may be able to bail out of work early on Fri afternoon, like 2 or 3 pm.
  4. Yup, geek and proud of it!
  5. Looking to carpool and be good to the earth. I plan to head up there Fri after work and come back Sunday night. I have room for 1 or 2 more people in my car, depending on how much stuff they're packing.
  6. I'm neither English nor German. It seems that you tend to confuse what people LIKE with what people ARE.
  7. Now, why would those 2 things go together?
  8. I like English weirdos.
  9. Monster House kicks ass! What about Junkyard Wars? That's pretty cool. I love all those shows where weird people build weird shit.
  10. Yeah, seeing all the really hideous projects is what makes it so entertaining! Trask, it's great to see that you're not too macho to admit that you watch it too.
  11. Yup, Trading Spaces is really gay. See, like I said, great show!
  12. Football sucks. "Trading Places" is great.
  13. Just get the Mormons to do it! Seriously, I have a friend who has some neighbors across the street that often host teenage Mormon missionaries. These teenagers, in addition to proselytizing, also engage in some service projects. Apparently they thought that my friend’s unkempt yard was such an eyesore that they would be doing a public service by mowing his lawn and weeding and whatnot. He was a little embarrassed that his yard got so bad that random Mormons are knocking on his door volunteering to take care of it, but hey, free yard work, couldn’t say no to that.
  14. That reminds me of a friend of mine... She'd go out with some guy, break up, decide she hates guys, go out with some girl, break up, decide she hates girls, go out with some other guy... etc. She cycled through this at least a dozen times by now. I'm sure she's legitimately bi, but the bottom line is that she just has bad taste in mates, regardless of what gender they happen to be.
  15. dryad

    Shitty Job???

    He must have been pretty disappointed to not have been involved in the field testing.
  16. North Face "Middle Triple" 3-layer gore-tex jacket, blue, mens size medium. Just in time for winter. Old-skool hardshell with all the bells and whistles. A few years old, but excellent condition (has been sitting in my closet unused for the past 1.5 years). $100 or best offer (retails for > $400). Just too much jacket for me, and too HUGE.
  17. Solo hike somewhere, haven't decided where yet.
  18. OK, here's my take. I think that as soon as sex is treated as anything other than a rompin' good time (for example, as a commodity or as a political statement), all sorts of bad things happen. People's feelings get hurt and the relationship enters a downward spiral of passive-aggressive back and forth bullshit. I also think that everything is too damn complicated and people should just be honest. I have no desire to go back to the 50's but there is something to be said for a time when a guy could just go up to a girl and say "I think you're neat, want to go out for a chocolate malt?" And I do consider myself a feminist, BTW. And I also think that porn is fine, kink is cool, and Luna bars are yummy.
  19. Speak for yourself, dude.
  20. dryad

    Holier than Thou

    I know it's considered uncool to actually judge art, and go ahead and call me an elitist, but "Piss Christ" is a joke. To demonstrate what you think of something by dipping a photo of it in urine is just plain juvenile, something worthy of Beavis and Butthead. I don't think that a little bit of sophistication should be too much to ask in art. That piece of crap shouldn't be in a gallery not because it's controversial, but because it's simply BAD ART . In general, I think it's easy to make something that's beautiful, it's easy to make something that's controversial (or thought-provoking, or whatever), but it's really hard to do both. Guernica and the others mentioned above are both, which is what makes them great works. I think it's really unfortunate that in much of contemporary art, the ability to generate controversy has become a subtitute for quality.
  21. dryad

    Holier than Thou

    Catbird, this IS though-provoking. You're thinking about it now, right? Scrambler, very true about judging art in context. Without context, the Mona Lisa would be just a picture of some chick with a weird smile. I respect the artist's intention here, but at the same time I think the artistic merit of this work is hampered by its complete lack of subtlety or complexity. The archetype of the lecherous priest dates back to medieval times, and this sculpture really isn't saying anything new. It seems designed mostly to inflame, rather than inspire legitimate discussion. Or maybe the artist intended to inspire legitimate discussion and failed. But hey, that's just my take. Bad art is still art.
  22. source: http://www.salon.com/sex/feature/2003/10/01/marlowe/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No intercourse, please -- we're enlightened Sensitive, feminized and resentful, today's young men no longer have the sexual authority to please a woman -- no matter how much oral sex they perform. - - - - - - - - - - - - By Ann Marlowe Oct. 1, 2003 | It was after seeing "Thirteen" and noticing the display rack of handcuffs at Sam Goody on Sixth Avenue that it hit me: The polymorphously perverse, gender-is-just-a-construct future that radical feminists and academics used to dream of has actually arrived. Men no longer have any authority, either in their own eyes or in women's, the genders are distinguished socially mainly by stuff they buy, and eroticism has fled from the bedroom to the store. It's sexier for most of us to go shopping than to make love, and so we do. As a friend said when I told her I'd spent much of the weekend in bed with a man, "Who has time for that? The weekend is the only chance I have to do my shopping." And handcuffs -- well, seeing them at Sam Goody made me wistful. Once upon a time, you could still shock a guy by pulling them out. I suspect that there's a connection between the collapse of masculine authority and the mainstreaming of S/M; neither gender is too good at distinguishing power and authority, and nostalgia for male authority can translate into fetishizing symbols of power. Women secretly want men with authority, but they fall for insecure passive-aggressive guys who view every aspect of life as a power struggle, or for cranky killjoys or petty sadists. The collapse of the patriarchy was supposed to make women happy -- we were supposed to get more sex, freer sex, better sex, more loving sex and better relations between men and women. If you went to an Ivy League college in the last 20 years or had a professor who did, you probably heard something about this. But instead men treat women worse than ever, women are retreating to 1950s notions that sex is something men like, and the nearly successful effort to stamp out gender contrast has made upper-middle-class American sex miserably dull, with or without handcuffs. Men and women are just too much alike stylistically now for much erotic energy to arise from their conjunction. This is especially true of those in their 20s. Here's a relevant confession: Ever since I've been in my early 30s I've tended to date younger men. I'm now 45, and in the last five years I haven't been able to get interested in men in their 20s, no matter how cute or buff. Men in their 20s -- well, the Ivy League, professional sorts I meet, with their yoga classes and exquisite sensitivity about treating a woman any differently from a man -- just aren't masculine enough to be bedable. Thus the legacy of two decades of feminism in academia. Younger people have bought into the idea that your lover or spouse is a friend of the opposite sex -- although one who will exhibit bad manners you wouldn't expect from your friends' pets, much less your friends. The bad manners and androgyny go hand in hand; along with the erotic aura, tenderness and respect have disappeared. These young guys feel free to admit to physical fears, grooming preoccupations and social anxieties their fathers had the good sense to conceal, if they had them. They dress like overgrown toddlers, in oversize T-shirts and baggy pants, clothing that begs you not to take them seriously as grown-ups. They're pussy-whipped and tamed by 30, but just below the surface they seethe with hostility and resentment at women, because they're quite aware that their girlfriends or wives treat sex as a commodity to be doled out in return for something better. Neither the young men nor the young women enjoy it as much as they were told they would. Maybe the situation is worse for the women because, after all, it's the men who are more like women, not the women who are more like men. The women have won, if you've won when you have worse sex than your grandmother did. Secretly they don't find these men very exciting, either. And they don't feel feminine when they're with them. What does "feminine" mean anyway, besides the result of a lot of grooming rituals drag queens can do too? Maybe it means having a baby. Sex is for corralling a man long enough to secure a "commitment" and then a baby. The new joylessness: Talk with someone in their 20s about marriage and they bring in the word "work" in the first three minutes. I didn't think like that when I was with a man for seven years in my 20s, and I don't recall that my friends did either. This "work" goes along with the ubiquitous use of the word "relationship" in the romantic sphere, a word first used for a sexual connection in 1944, according to the OED; before that it was only used in a business context. And now that the patriarchy's gone, everything isn't pleasure, as radical theorists imagined, but business. It makes perfect sense that the most popular sex act among younger people is oral sex, which lends itself so well to exchange. One for you, one for me. Check any online dating service and you'd have the impression that the male sex organ was the tongue. A recent scan revealed that of the 4,108 men on Craig's List seeking women for "casual encounters," 209 used the word "fuck" in their ads, 219 referred to their "tongue" and 363 to their "oral" predilections. Heaven knows what the rest of them planned to do in bed. Oral sex is what American women say they want, and they have their men trained to do it, but do either men or women really prefer it to intercourse? No one dares say it, but the clitoral orgasm might be as much a myth as the vaginal -- or as little. If you return to the original article that debunked the idea that women enjoy fucking, Anne Koedt's "The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm" (1970), you'll notice that she gave no medical evidence for her belief that the clitoris rather than the vagina is the source of female sexual pleasure. You'll also notice that she has a strong aversion to the vagina. It's one thing to say that women only have clitoral orgasms, but one doubts the sanity of someone who writes that "women need no anesthesia inside the vagina during surgery." Who's first in line for that? My bet is that just as many or more women have orgasms from fucking as from oral sex while many others don't have either and fake them. That's right, they fake the clitoral orgasms their boyfriends congratulate themselves on having the sensitivity to bestow. If we're ready to believe that many women fake vaginal orgasms, even over many years with their husbands, why are we so sure some women don't fake their clitoral orgasms too? It's likely that many men believe they can tell more easily that way -- and that, not some extraordinary new access to kindness and generosity, might be the source of the new male "enthusiasm" for oral sex. But pin them down and they'll admit they can't be sure. Meanwhile, women who have orgasms from being fucked have learned to be quiet about it. Fucking is a suspect preference these days, as handcuffs used to be; after all, everyone knows that penetration is politically incorrect, involving all sorts of issues of gender difference and dominance and submission. Women who want a man to do what only a man can do in bed have to stick to over-40s or men from the Third World who haven't heard that they're supposed to pretend to like cunnilingus. But most American men have to pretend if they want to get laid, just as many women over the millennia have pretended to enjoy intercourse. Nothing I say is meant to deny that oral sex is pleasurable for some people to give as well as to receive. But cunnilingus can be interpreted just as fucking can and neither is simple. Each has a cultural role. And just as some people like fucking partly for its cultural baggage, some people like cunnilingus for its associations or its lack of them. The new American ideal is an equal relationship, satisfying our craving for justice and for simplicity. When I hear American women in their 20s and early 30s talk about their boyfriends, they seem preoccupied with whether they do 50 percent of the dishes and whether they spend 50 percent of the time talking about their problems and anxieties. Of course this is compensation for years of institutionalized unfairness, but it also sounds a lot like a defense against the powerful feelings they have for the men they love. And so with oral sex. It fits the 50-50 ethos better than fucking. It also fits our new suspicion of deep emotions. Another reason fucking is out of fashion is that it makes us feel too much. Part of the appeal of oral sex -- and why it is rapidly becoming a favorite of teenagers -- is that it's lite sex. No one loses control, loses track of where they are, forgets that music is playing, screams, or weeps, when someone performs oral sex on them. But fucking stirs deep emotions that go to our core as animals and humans. And with the absence of tenderness and trust between men and women, we're more and more inclined to banish deep emotion from our post-patriarchal lives. What's often lost in the insistence on equality is quality -- how the people feel about each other, how much love they can give each other. We now feel queasy about the romantic language of our ancestors, who used the metaphors of slavery and devotion unabashedly. But is there another language with which to speak of love? Love does involve two people putting themselves in the power of each other. We've forgotten that what we are looking for between men and women is fairness and compassion, not identity, and there can be justice between people who acknowledge that their balance of power is unequal. The heterosexual act of love does involve women putting themselves literally in the power of men. And we no longer trust enough to do so. salon.com
  23. If this is such a widespread yet elusive species, every remaining scrap of forest needs to be protected now. Sounds great to me!
  24. Similar story on Easter Island. Now that's a cautionary tale if there ever was one. (article) So what's the moral here? That human stupidity is universal?
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