Tuesday, November 17, 2009

guts

It is interesting when you get a fresh perspective of yourself from a new acquaintance. Even at this reasonably accomplished age, I am still able to find myself anew.

Recently, I have been fortunate to gain the friendship of an interesting character. A smart, quick-witted, young “old chap” of a guy whose creativity and open-minded ideals speak volumes for his generation. At his age I was not nearly as wise, worldly, cultured, present, or relevant as he is. Even now his intellect far exceeds my own, and his ability to perceive others astounds me. He is very deliberate with his words, often taking what seems to me to be far too long to respond to my often off-kilter banter. But always following his reflection, he delivers an astute, provocative discourse on whatever topic I had mindlessly rambled into. Seriously, the guy can talk me under the table…and that is saying something.

And I must admit he is a bit off, as well. Regardless, or perhaps in spite of those facts, I find him very interesting.

As it goes with most new friendships there is the crush period. The time where everything about the new friend is fascinating and we often try to find a bit of ourselves in our new pal. And so my new friend has attempted to find fascination in me, and has asked for the privilege (his term, not mine) of reading some of my writing. I initially waved him off, figured he would find what he wanted or give up. But, after the third very polite request, I obliged.

It is strange; I can write for an unknown audience without fear. I can put it out there for the world to read, all of it…without a second thought. Yet when I directly hand over a few poems to my new friend, I am paralyzed.

As I said, my new friend is very perceptive. So, when I stuffed a few of my poems in his hand and continued on about the weather, he immediately detected my insecurity. He saw in my rushed speech and downcast eyes that I was nervous. And while I waited for him to speak, to interrupt my prattle, I reeled. He placed the pages face down on the table, then said “Ah yes, I see I was correct. You are an exhibitionist and shy, both.”

Which really put me to thought…what purpose am I serving with these characteristics, if characteristics do in fact serve us?

I suppose that those opposing characteristics, that in my case are so apparently extreme, benefit each other. I can only imagine that my unchecked exhibitionism would undoubtedly lead me to my depraved end, and that my need to slap the world in the face keeps me from becoming a total shut-in.



p.s. what you got in you; what it takes.

18,890 comments:

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Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TODAY I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

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HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO, TONIGHT I

Anonymous said...

Ò.Ò

Anonymous said...

I like bread & butter
I like toast & jam
I like what my baby gives me best
I like a little Mayo on my hands

Anonymous said...

and in my hair


and on my tongue


and in my tummy. ;)











Nothing like some good vitamin e rich Mayo.

Anonymous said...

If you have an acne problem, a cold or want to repel blood suckers try the Garlic Mayo.

Anonymous said...

To love someone is nothing. To be loved by someone is something. To be loved by the one that you love is everything.

Anonymous said...

.

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO ""

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Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

HEY MAYO: (BAD JOKE)

HEY SS (WORSE JOKE)

Anonymous said...

come back Mayo. Really come back. Please.

Anonymous said...

saw a bunny rabbit? heard a coyote howl? bought tickets from telecharge to see memphis on broadway? got laid for the first time in this century?

elena said...

Someone obviously needs a hug

Anonymous said...

I wish I had heard a coyote howl last night. That's a sound I haven't heard in a while.

When I lived in LA there were so many of them that it got to the point where I felt they were singing me to sleep at night. I miss them. :(

elena said...

Hi 7:57

We have lots of coyotes here. So many in fact they run in packs and occasionally attack house pets. Sadly we also have stay dogs that run in packs too. They can be very vicious.

I do have to agree though the howl of a coyote can be almost hauntingly beautiful.

Anonymous said...

Ô.Ô

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

saw a bunny rabbit? heard a coyote howl? bought tickets from telecharge to see memphis on broadway? got laid for the first time in this century?
<i


Don't be jealous anon.

Go stand by the side of quiet road.

Maybe you'll see a bunny rabbit, hear a coyote howl and get laid for the first time this century yourself. Might even make a few dollars to buy your own ticket to the musical Memphis.

Anonymous said...

You still wake up sometimes, don't you? You wake up in the dark and hear the screaming of the lambs.

Anonymous said...

Has anyone here seen Memphis?

I'm going to NYC for 5 days in October and I'm having a tough time trying to decide which shows to go to.

I'm definitely seeing the off-Broadway Production of Angels in America (marvelous play and Zachary Quinto is playing the role of Louis) and I'll probably see the revival of La Bête because I adore David Hyde Pierce and Mark Rylance. I want to see La Cage Aux Folles and I still haven't seen Billy Elliott so that's a must. I admit I'm curious about American Idiot and I can't decide between it and Memphis. American Idiot got better reviews, but you can't always trust critics.

Recommendations?

Anonymous said...

I do wish we could chat longer, but... I'm having an old friend for dinner. Bye.

Anonymous said...

Don't forget the Chianti.

Anonymous said...

◄‡:)

Anonymous said...

Oh no 10:30. That's not a good idea.

Old friends are the other, other white meat. They taste like chicken.

10:24 should have a nice Chardonnay or Pinot Blanc with an old friend.

Anonymous said...

Oh how silly of me. Chianti goes with liver, preferably that of a census taker.

My bad.

Anonymous said...

10:24 didn't specify which part of an old friend they were having.

Perhaps they are having liver. In which case your wine recommendation is the better suggestion.

Anonymous said...

I wonder what wine goes best with brain.

Know any zombies we could ask?

Anonymous said...

:)

Anonymous said...

When you fall in love, it is a temporary madness. It erupts like an earthquake, and then it subsides. And when it subsides, you have to make a decision. You have to work out whether your roots have become so entwined together that it is inconceivable that you should ever part.

Anonymous said...

Because this is what love is.

Love is not breathlessness, it is not excitement, it is not the promulgation of promises of eternal passion. That is just being in love which any of us can convince ourselves we are.

Love itself is what is left over when being in love has burned away, and this is both an art and a fortunate accident.













Your mother and I had it, we had roots that grew towards each other underground, and when all the pretty blossom had fallen from our branches we found that we were one tree and not two.



Captain Corelli's Mandolin

Anonymous said...

checks stop watch

Anonymous said...

;)

Anonymous said...

+++

toujours said...

mayo,

yotsuba&! -- simply one the most charming manga i have ever read. art, characters, and story...it is always a tonic. i checked out the newest volumes from the library today, so you know i'm grinning.

hope you're doing well.

take care, and good night.

toujours said...

also, just wanted to say:

miss t., i'm not a big sports person, but since i've been an anglophile since i was old enough to pick up a bottle of malt vinegar and sprinkle it on my fish & chips, i'll be standing side-by-side with welshie cheering england on. *scooches up next to welsh anon*

elena, the weather here has been all sunny and clear...just the kind that brings out all the harley riders. these last few days the commute has been filled with reminders of you and mr. e. :)

ergo, i hope your weekend is a full one because of happy stuff, not because of stressy stuff.

hope everyone is doing well.

good night.

Anonymous said...

Goodnight. :)

:) said...

Well I, I still can remember times

When the night seemed to surround me

I was sure the sun would never shine on me

And I, I thought it my destiny

To walk this world alone but now you're here

With me

Now you're here with me



And I don't regret the rain

Or the nights I felt the pain

Or the tears I had to cry

Some of those times along the way

Every road I had to take

Every time my heart would break

It was just something that I had to get through



To get me to you

To get me to you



Well I, I still can recall the days

When I had no love around me

Makes me glad for every day I have with you

And I, I look in your eyes and know

I'm right where I belong

And I belong with you

Always belonged with you



And if I could I wouldn't change a thing

Wouldn't change a thing baby

Because your love was waiting there for me

Waiting there for me baby

elena said...

Night TJ

Sadly it has not been great Harley weather here -too much rain. Mr. E and I did take a short ride yesterday evening. It was so wonderful, the cool evening breeze, the smell of fresh cut grass...one scary moment was when a deer suddenly popped out of the woods and for a brief moment she ran along side the bike. Thank God she didn't try to cross in front of us. I really don't wanna kiss the pavement. LOL

Ergo - Hope you are having a great weekend and I hope to talk to ya soon.

Night anons

Night Mayo

Night SS

Night Jim Bob

(Not gonna say goodnight to Mary Ellen never did like that girl)

Take care everyone. I'm off to watch Easy Rider. I've never seen it and since I found the DVD at a garage sale today I thought what the heck?

Anonymous said...

:(
My head hurts.


Actually, every part of my body hurts & it hurts more when I lie down.
I iz in great pain. I got into a fight with a tree today and the tree won.

Delayed as the victory was. It's obvious now that the tree did win.

Anonymous said...

:/

Anonymous said...

Goodnight Mary Ellen!




















*don't want her to feel unwanted*

Anonymous said...

trees do have a habit of standing their ground

maybe you should employ another method next time

perhaps tickling

Anonymous said...

This tree is too stately to be ticklish. It did goose me with one of its branches though.

I don't know if the tree enjoyed it but I got my jollies for the day.

A little rough yet oddly satisfying!

Left visable scratches too.

Anonymous said...

I'm thinking about breaking out the chainsaw today.

It's those low hanging branches or me.

One of us is going down.

Anonymous said...

I'll say my goodbyes now. These things never work out well for me.


It's been nice knowing you 4:06. ;)

Anonymous said...

.

Anonymous said...

..

Anonymous said...

==

Welshie said...

Your mother and I had it, we had roots that grew towards each other underground, and when all the pretty blossom had fallen from our branches we found that we were one tree and not two.
Captain Corelli's Mandolin

Anon 11:22 that's so beautiful.

Reminds me of Jan and Elizabeth Morris. Theirs is a truly wonderful love story. One of their sons is the Welsh poet Twm Morys. Twm has often talked about how difficult it was for him having to witness his father undergo a sex change.

Here's a link to their story if anyone wants to read it.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1023991/Sex-change-couple-Writer-Jan-Morris-remarries-wife-wed-man-nearly-years-ago.html

I love this part;

The couple have already planned to be buried on a small island on the River Dwyfor behind their house, with the inscription on the headstone to read: 'Here are two friends, at the end of one life.'

Welshie said...

Oops! Sorry:(

Anonymous said...

Hi! :)

Anonymous said...

:)

Anonymous said...

I'm ready!

Anonymous said...

000

Anonymous said...

Its 2000 degrees outside and there aint shit on TV....

What a sorry ass state of affairs this is.

Anonymous said...

Tree down 5 limbs.

Me down 0 limbs!



uh huh uh huh
woop woop
uh huh





OUCH!


oof
oop
oww





Back and shoulders really not happy tonight. :/

Anonymous said...

It's worse when I sit. I better keep moving.

owwwww

Who has the bengay?

Anonymous said...

:)

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

The Genius of Todd Rundgren...but the sound is unmistakably....British I believe.

Anonymous said...

==

toujours said...

i went and read that article, welshie. what a wonderful story! and i loved their inscription. so romantic.

thanks for linking it. :)

toujours said...

mayo,

ok, so maybe reading yotsuba right before going to bed isn't such a great idea...i had the loopiest dreams all night long. when i woke up i actually lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, thinking wtf?

or, maybe it's actually a great idea, but only in rare cases when the conditions are right, and the stars are properly aligned, as an advanced shamanic technique.



in any case, be careful with what you put in your head before sleep. your brain, in particular, is unpredictable... who knows what might happen!

hope you're doing well, mayo, and happy.

sweet dreams.

Anonymous said...

Todd Rundgren FTW!

Even British sounding Todd Rundgren.

That song's so touching. ;)




The man really is a genius.
Cauze I Sez So and so sez you and Jim Steinman too.

Anonymous said...

There's a flame in the back of my mind
and it's burning for you all the time
’cause I just want to touch you
Do you want to touch me too?




Welp. That's what's been put in my brain tonight.



I just want to get inside you
If you’ll give just a minute to me (ooooh)



What dreams may come?

Anonymous said...

In Case you don't know whom Jim is

Anonymous said...

why
why
why
?

Anonymous said...

Keep on believing
and you'll discover baby

There's always something magic,
There's always something new
And when you really really need it the most
That's when rock and roll dreams come through

The beat is yours forever, the beat is always true

Anonymous said...

Goodnight. :)

Anonymous said...

RIP Jimmy Dean. Singer, sausageman, entrepreneur.

He was 81 years old.



By DENA POTTER, Associated Press Writer Dena Potter, Associated Press Writer – Sun Jun 13, 11:17 pm ET

RICHMOND, Va. – Jimmy Dean, a country music legend for his smash hit about a workingman hero, "Big Bad John," and an entrepreneur known for his sausage brand, died on Sunday. He was 81.

His wife, Donna Meade Dean, said her husband died at their Henrico County, Va., home.

She told The Associated Press that he had some health problems but was still functioning well, so his death came as a shock. She said he was eating in front of the television. She left the room for a time and came back and he was unresponsive. She said he was pronounced dead at 7:54 p.m.

"He was amazing," she said. "He had a lot of talents."

Born in 1928, Dean was raised in poverty in Plainview, Texas, and dropped out of high school after the ninth grade. He went on to a successful entertainment career in the 1950s and '60s that included the nationally televised "The Jimmy Dean Show."

In 1969, Dean went into the sausage business, starting the Jimmy Dean Meat Co. in his hometown. He sold the company to Sara Lee Corp. in 1984.

Dean lived in semiretirement with his wife, who is a songwriter and recording artist, on their 200-acre estate just outside Richmond, where he enjoyed investing, boating and watching the sun set over the James River.

In 2009 a fire gutted their home, but his Grammy for "Big Bad John," a puppet made by Muppets creator Jim Henson, a clock that had belonged to Prince Charles and Princess Diana and other valuables were saved. Lost were a collection of celebrity-autographed books, posters of Dean with Elvis Presley and other prized possessions.

Donna Meade Dean said the couple had just moved back into their reconstructed home.

Anonymous said...

With his drawled wisecracks and quick wit, Dean charmed many fans. But in both entertainment and business circles, he was also known for his tough hide. He fired bandmate Roy Clark, who went onto "Hee Haw" fame, for showing up late for gigs.

More recently, a scrap with Sara Lee led to national headlines.

The Chicago-based company let him go as spokesman in 2003, inciting Dean's wrath. He issued a statement titled "Somebody doesn't like Sara Lee," claiming he was dumped because he got old.

"The company told me that they were trying to attract the younger housewife, and they didn't think I was the one to do that," Dean told The Associated Press in January 2004. "I think it's the dumbest thing. But you know, what do I know?"

Sara Lee has said that it chose not to renew Dean's contract because the "brand was going in a new direction" that demanded a shift in marketing.

Dean grew up in a musical household. His mother showed him how to play his first chord on the piano. His father, who left the family, was a songwriter and singer. Dean taught himself to play the accordion and the harmonica.

His start in the music business came as an accordionist at a tavern near Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., where he was stationed in the 1940s. After leaving the Air Force in 1948, he fronted his band, the Texas Wildcats, and drew a strong local following through appearances on Washington-area radio.

By the early 1950s, Dean's band had its first national hit in "Bummin' Around."

"Big Bad John," which is about a coal miner who saves fellow workers when a mine roof collapses, became a big hit in 1961 and won a Grammy. The star wrote it in less than two hours.

His fame led him to a string of television shows, including "The Jimmy Dean Show" on CBS. Dean's last big TV stint was ABC's version of "The Jimmy Dean Show" from 1963 to 1966.

Dean in February was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. He was to be inducted in October and his wife said she thinks he was looking forward to it.

Dean became a headliner at venues like Carnegie Hall and the Hollywood Bowl and became the first country star to play on the Las Vegas strip. He was the first guest host on "The Tonight Show," and also was an actor with parts in television and the movies, including the role of James Bond's ally Willard Whyte in the 1971 film "Diamonds Are Forever."

Besides his wife, Dean is survived by three children and two grandchildren, Donna Meade Dean said. Arrangements have not be made, but it will be a private service, she said.

In the late '60s, Dean entered the hog business — something he knew well. His family had butchered hogs, with the young Dean whacking them over the head with the blunt end of an ax. The Dean brothers — Jimmy and Don — ground the meat and their mother seasoned it.

The Jimmy Dean Meat Co. opened with a plant in Plainview. After six months, the company was profitable.

His fortune was estimated at $75 million in the early '90s.

Having watched other stars fritter away their fortunes, Dean said he learned to be careful with his money.

"I've seen so many people in this business that made a fortune," he told the AP. "They get old and broke and can't make any money. ... I tell you something, ... no one's going to play a benefit for Jimmy Dean."

Dean said then that he was at peace at his estate and that he had picked a spot near the river where he wanted to be buried.

"It's the sweetest piece of property in the world, we think," he told the Richmond Times-Dispatch. "It sure is peaceful here."


___

AP Entertainment Writer Chris Talbott in Nashville contributed to this report.

Anonymous said...

,

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

BP just stopped the oil leak. They put a wedding band around the pipe and it quit putting out!!

Anonymous said...

pa dum-bum...ching!

Anonymous said...

Hi. :)

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

:]

Anonymous said...

good news


faster than a tar ball


the plan

Anonymous said...

CONGRATULATIONs Daryl Waters David Bryan & MEMPHIS!



# Best Original Theatre Score Award was won by “Memphis”

# Best Orchestrations: Daryl Waters and David Bryan—”Memphis”

Anonymous said...

like a poet needs the pain

Anonymous said...

z

ergoproxy said...

good morning!!!

Hope everyone is well.
We ended up going camping over the long weekend. Now I need sleep!! lol
had a great time, weather was cold but only really at night, and I had the tent full of blankets for us, which I burrowed under to sleep. We camp very comfortably but it was so nice to get home last night and have a proper long hot shower and not smell like wood smoke anymore.
Awesome fun playing pictionary around a campfire, going for walks and the kids for bike rides, and just sitting around relaxing.
It's raining today as well, so we were obviously smiled upon for the last 4 days.
:D

current events said...

Obama makes play to look 'tough enough' on spill

On his fourth visit to the region in two months, President Obama will get his closest look yet at the devastating Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Later this afternoon, he's scheduled to tour the oil-ravaged Alabama coast by ferry.

It's a trip driven by political optics. The White House wants to counter critics who say the administration isn't doing enough to facilitate the spill cleanup and hold BP accountable. By being on the ground in the region, Obama hopes to roll back the longstanding media narrative depicting him as personally too aloof in his handling of the disaster. As that perception has taken hold with the public — 71 percent of respondents in a new USA/Gallup poll say that they don't believe that Obama has been "tough enough" in dealing with BP and the oil spill — the White House has been more determined to persuade the public that Obama is showing a firm hand in the Gulf crisis.

Speaking to reporters at a staging center in Theodore, Ala., Obama defended his administration's response and vowed to help return the region to the "gulf way of life." Still, he allowed, it wouldn't happen overnight. Unlike Hurricane Katrina, Obama said, the spill is "simply not one catastrophic event" but an "ongoing assault" that has to be "constantly watched, constantly tracked." "It's going to be painful for a lot of folks," Obama said. "But I promise you this, we are going to do everything we can... to leave the Gulf Coast in better shape than it was before."

The question in the short term, however, is how close Obama will actually come to the devastation. This afternoon's boat ride will mark the first time the president has actually been close to the sludge itself. Two weeks ago, the president was photographed holding a tar ball that had washed ashore near Port Fourchon, La. — but that beach had been cleaned in advance of Obama's arrival by dozens of BP workers.

So far, Obama has not gotten close enough to the epicenter of the spill to see beaches blackened in sludge or oil-covered pelicans — something that Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal escorted reporters to see last week. Nor is he likely to get much closer to that sort of devastation today. Kicking off his two-day tour of the region, Obama spent the morning in Gulfport, Miss. — where beaches have largely escaped the spill's effects. Tomorrow, he'll tour Pensacola, Fla. — a city preparing for sludge to stain its beaches later this week.

[Photos: Haunting images of the oil disaster]

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told Yahoo! News that Obama's focus on this trip is touring regions that are, or are about to be, affected by the spill. And Gibbs emphasized that the president is mainly intending to speak to local officials in the region. "Thankfully there isn't a ton of damage in Mississippi, but it's still a state impacted by the spill," Gibbs said in an email. "(The) Alabama barrier islands are a bit of a mess today, and over the next few days, Pensacola will be fairly bad."

Still, Obama is likely to come under criticism for avoiding Orange Beach, Ala. — a city dubbed "ground zero" in the latest cleanup efforts, as waves of oil have washed ashore in recent days. Local officials there, including Mayor Tony Kennon, have been critical not just of BP but of the federal government's handling of the crisis, saying the Coast Guard didn't do enough to prevent oil from moving toward the beaches.


— Holly Bailey is a senior political writer for Yahoo! News; Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs reporter for Yahoo! News.

Anonymous said...

You'd have to be pretty tough not to be affected by that image.

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

.

Anonymous said...

*Big Sigh*
Yeah Well...What the fuck ya gonna do. Right?

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

paint pictures of birds & sell them on facebook!

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

Bret Michael Dykes, whatta name.

Anonymous said...

(May 27) --

Dear Audubon Society:

As you all are aware of, the oil spill in the Gulf is devistating (sic). My mom has already donated a lot of money to help, but I have an idea that may also help. I am a decent drawer, and I was wondering if I could sell some bird
paintings and give the profits to your organization.

My mom is in touch with an art gallery where I live. She is going to sell them there. I also am hoping to go to Cornell in the future. I want to become an ornithologist. I know a few species of birds. I also acknowledge that this is breeding time for plovers, terns, etc.
I will do all in my strength to earn money. All I need is your okay.

Here is a picture of a northern cardinal as a sample.

Thank you for your time.

Olivia Bouler, 11 years old and willing to help



So began Olivia’s "Save the Gulf" campaign. The fifth-grader from Islip, N.Y., loves birds and the gulf region, where her grandparents live.

She told AOL News she was "really upset" when she learned about the oil spill and the attendant threat to birds.

"I really needed to do something," Olivia said.

Inspiration arrived quickly. "I’m no James Audubon, but I can draw," she said. And so Olivia sat down and wrote her letter to the Audubon Society, including a painting.

http://www.gnn.com/article/bird-lover-olivia-bouler-11-painting-to/1086136

11-Year-Old Draws for Gulf Relief

So many people across the U.S. want to help with the oil spill, especially an 11-year-old girl who used her talent of drawing to help with Gulf relief. Steve Hartman has tonight's "Assignment America."

Anonymous said...

That's initiative & heart. :)

Anonymous said...

;

Anonymous said...

$100,000 so far.


The tears & sobs of a little angel finding an oiled feather on beach. :(



That kid's alright. Better than alright. So are the people who are buying her bird paintings.

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

◄▐:)

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

Let me guess....they're done in oil.

Anonymous said...

No. They're drawn in heavy lead pencil then painted over with watercolors.

You would know that if you had watched the video or read Olivia's story.

She's an internet sensation thanks to tonight's CBS news story.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

Goodnight. :)

toujours said...

mayo,

tonight, it's just good night, because my brain is a tired, echoey place...

so hope it's a good one, filled with the best of whatever fills your nights.

and sweet dreams.

('cause you gotta have sweet dreams.)

ergoproxy said...

Mayo
An older blonde woman heard through a friend that taking a milk bath is good for the skin, will cure stretch marks and make her beautiful again. So she left a note for her milkman to leave 15 gallons of milk instead of the usual amount.
When the milkman arrived, and read the note, he felt there must be a mistake. He thought she probably meant 1.5 gallons so he knocked on her door to clarify the point. The woman came to the door, and the milkman said, "Yes ma'am, I found your note to leave 15 gallons of milk. Did you mean 1.5 gallons?"
The blonde said, "I want 15 gallons. I'm going to fill my bathtub up with milk and take a milk bath."
The milkman asked, "Do you want it Pasteurized?"
The blonde replied, "Nope, just up to my boobs, I can splash it in my eyes."
much love EP xx

SS
So this pirate walks into a bar with a steering wheel in his pants. Confused, the bartender asks "Hey bud, why do you have a steering wheel in your pants?"
"I don't know" the pirate says, "but it's driving me nuts!"
lotsa love EP xx


goodnight blogbelieve, see you in my morning
♥xx♥

Anonymous said...

///

Anonymous said...

Hi. :)

ergoproxy said...

good morning!

current events said...

INNOCENT!



Bloody Sunday report blames British soldiers fully

By PETER MORRISON, DAVID STRINGER and SHAWN POGATCHNIK (AP) – 59 minutes ago

LONDONDERRY, Northern Ireland — Relatives of 13 Catholic demonstrators shot to death by British troops on Northern Ireland's Bloody Sunday cried tears of joy Tuesday as an epic fact-finding probe ruled that their loved ones were innocent and the soldiers entirely to blame for the 1972 slaughter.

The investigation took 12 years and nearly 200 million pounds ($290 million), but the victims' families and the British, Irish and U.S. governments welcomed the findings as priceless to heal one of the gaping wounds left from Northern Ireland's four-decade conflict that left 3,700 dead.

Thousands of residents of Londonderry — a predominantly Catholic city long synonymous with Britain's major mass killing from the Northern Ireland conflict — gathered outside the city hall to watch the verdict come in, followed by a lengthy apology from Prime Minister David Cameron in London that moved many locals long distrustful of British leaders.

The probe found that soldiers opened fire without justification at unarmed, fleeing civilians and lied about it for decades, refuting an initial British investigation that branded the demonstrators as Irish Republican Army bombers and gunmen.

Cameron, who was just 5 years old when the attack occurred, said it was "both unjustified and unjustifiable."

"I couldn't believe it, I was so overjoyed," said Kay Duddy, clutching the handkerchief used to swab blood from her 17-year-old brother's body that day. Jackie Duddy, the first of the 13 killed, was shot in the back.

"Never in my wildest dreams would I ever envisage a British prime minister would stand up in Parliament and tell the truth of what happened on Bloody Sunday," Duddy said.

"David Cameron told the world and its mother that Jackie Duddy and the rest of the deceased and injured were innocent people. They were totally exonerated today," she said.

One by one, relatives of the 13 dead and 15 wounded went to a podium, huge black-and-white pictures of their dead or wounded relative displayed on a massive television screen. Each declared their relief that the demonstrators were found innocent and the elite soldiers of the Parachute Regiment solely to blame.

"Thirty-eight years ago a story went around the world ... that there was gunmen and bombers on our streets, and they were shot and killed. Today that lie has been uncovered," said Kate Nash, whose 19-year-old brother William was shot fatally once through the chest.

"Unjustified and unjustifiable. Those are the words we've been waiting to hear since January the 30th of 1972," said Tony Doherty, whose father, Patrick, was fatally shot as he crawled away from gunfire. The fact-finders rejected soldiers' claims that Doherty had been carrying a gun by digging up photos of Doherty seconds before he was hit and showing he was unarmed.

"The victims of Bloody Sunday have been vindicated, and the soldiers of the Parachute Regiment have been disgraced. Their medals of honor have to be removed!" Doherty declared to cheers.

The Bloody Sunday Inquiry, authorized by then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair in 1998 in the run-up to the negotiation of the Good Friday peace accord that year, was led by English judge Lord Saville. He gave the ex-paratroopers, now in their 60s and 70s, broad protections from criminal charges as well as anonymity in the witness box, citing the risk that IRA dissidents might target them in retaliation.

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

:)

Anonymous said...

Who wants coffee?
Uh oh

Anonymous said...

0

Anonymous said...

LMFAO @ the tv right now.

Anonymous said...

That was just sad.

beyond unattached, disaffected & tacky.

Anonymous said...

^the presidential address

ergoproxy said...

That was so good that the British govt admitted bloody Sunday wasn't justified and that they were innocent. So long to wait but such a wonderful vindication finally.

Anonymous said...

Fuck CBS and their sexist bullshit.

Anonymous said...

Which part was sexist?

Why do you watch CBS anyway?

Anonymous said...

==

Anonymous said...

Dear blog, die already.

Anonymous said...

Dear blog, die already.

current events said...

It's always good when government & people take responsibility for their actions, acknowledge their mistakes, issue apologies & try to make amends.

Though nothing will bring back the 13 innocent Irish demonstrators who were shot to death that day or take the pain away from their families, the other 15 people shot, their families & the wounds of an entire community at least they have finally been exonerated.

Partial justice has been served. Some healing can begin.




What CBS sexist bullshit? Did they fire Katie Couric?


Current events was called away & needs the full report & evidence of sexist bullshit.

Anonymous said...

No Mr. Bond, I expect you to die!!!

Anonymous said...

Did I miss a new sexist commercial? Was it a new Trojan vibrating touch one?


That's not sexist. That's empowering.

Those commercials encourage women to take control over their own bodies and their own sexual pleasure.

It lets women know that they don't need a man. They can do it all for themselves.





Anonymous said...

Is 10:36/37 suggesting harakiri?


That would be the 2nd time I heard someone make that suggestion to other people this week.

Anonymous said...

Well, in the Asian culture we do things differently. During the Samurai days, we just give you a knife and ask you to commit harakiri.


So much better than simply telling someone to go fuck themself!

Anonymous said...

Well, in the Asian culture we do things differently. During the Samurai days, we just give you a knife and ask you to commit harakiri.


So much better than simply telling someone to go fuck themself!

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