Hiding Stuff...
Just in case you needed to know how.
Here is where I ponder.
Here is where I write.
Here is where I get on a soapbox and rant away.
Reading through the BBC News website this morning, I came across a sobering article:
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I know my blogging has been infrequent, and I hope to cure it soon. Hopefully, this little ditty on utter nonsense can grease the wheels again...
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Little People - A tiny street art project
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Here's just one little tidbit to add to the odd science of the day.
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Just one more thought for today (then my quota of three has been filled).
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I have often asked myself the question, what is the end goal of a free person's life? To get high and watch television. Thankfully we have nothing more to strive for. After all, ignorance is... something. I forget. Eh, it doesn't matter. (Article found at Edge.)
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Marrying the sciences, letters, and the arts into a new humanism. (Found via 3quarksdaily). A really fascinating train of thought, that wonderfully is not too far off from what I think about the world and humanity. I guess I'm one step of the way there with my Bachelor of Arts in Political Science degree. As always, a little research leads to more and more ideas filling my mind. Once again, the world and its history appears cyclical while at the same time, progressing in whatever direction it goes in. A return to the renaissance may be due, of course following a great dark period of our development in the Western world. I think I'll just go stoic and bide my time. Either way, I am sure I will read more of Señor Pániker when I can.
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This morning, I was pouring over the local listings on Craigslist and found myself about an hour later at a lady's house the next town over. While making our transaction, the question arose as to why I was free in the late morning on a Tuesday. The woman guessed correctly that I'm in education, and she brought up a common question asked in the area: what do you think of year-round schedules?
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Thank Grammar Girl once again, for now my only quest in life (since my boy minds his Ps and Qs now) is to use the term 'mondegreen' in a sentence. Well, other than that one. While I think it happens quite often, I suppose mishearing my wife doesn't quite count.
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Last evening, the family and I partook of the latest Pixar film, Ratatouille. I will admit I was a tad skeptical on how good it would be before going to the theater. After all, this film had some tough acts to follow (I still think Finding Nemo is one of the best movies ever made, animated or otherwise.) So I walked in with my expectations a little low.
We entered the theater a few minutes after the show started, and the room was quite dark for being a part of an animated movie. The three of us managed to find our seats and took in what we could of the opening plot. Immediately I was taken aback at how realistic the scenery was, and it continued to develop in its quality as the movie progressed. The elements, especially water, were particularly well done. And the camera angles! Oh my, they were quick and fluid and fun, especially when taken through the perspective of a rodent's location and how quickly everything swaps around when trying to evade a waiting cart. Oh, and I think the animators captured the look of a soaking wet rat perfectly.
But the movie was far more than simple eye candy. Here is where Pixar excels over all: they make good movies. The medium is what is it, but the quality of the plot and characters are grand. While others may not care for the pretense of a rat wanting to be a cook, I liked it. Plus it lends to a greater point, and surely the driving home of a principle of doing what you have a passion for, even when it's not what is customary or common, is a good thing. The theme was tied in at multiple places, and I liked the reinforcement at different while not beating it over the head.
I walked away happy, having both enjoyed the movie personally, and knowing my son had just seen something of high quality. It struck such a chord personally that I was thinking of it the next morning while taking a shower. My only beef is, while the movies Pixar makes are wonderfully mature (not necessarily adult or for a specific age group), they have let a few instances of curse words slip. Now, I'm not one to usually care for censorship, and even was one who came of age during television's destruction of decency (6th graders watch Family Guy for goodness' sake!) But when everything else is so good, the world 'hell' sticks out in my ears. But, c'est la vie.
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