Patty and I had dinner with people last night. It was good and funny. It also tired us out. Tonight it's work, then laundry and packing and stuff for Chicago. All focus all the time. Also, yes, White Collar and Covert Affairs. More Buffy and Angel soon!
Oh hey, I made it to the final three in WIAD. Eeek. I feel like I'm on Project Runway, no challenge wins and going to Bryant Park.
Significant updates coming to my Dragon*Con schedule soon.
Everyone should check out this piece on Tiger Beatdown that's actually several months old but I just got linked to today. It starts as a review of a book I have no desire to read because it sounds annoying. But the piece isn't really a book review, it's more about how we do discourse on the Internet. Note, I am not offering this to you in the spirit of "Oh, I have been wrong!" but in the spirit of "this sort of shit weighs on me all the time; there are no right answers more often than I'd like to think; sometimes I really hate myself; I try to do good; Good works -- very much including mine -- can be motivated by all sorts of things including spite and insecurity; God, there really is a lot of crap out there that needs to be called out; sometimes, this isn't fun anymore; please, tell me this is all hard for you too."
That said, check out Keith Olbermann's Special Comment on the Muslim Community Center slated for lower Manhattan. This is a long one, complex, and goes to a lot of places. In some ways its far from Olbermann's best rhetoric, because it's so all over place, but I respect its meanderings because he says a lot of things in it that are right to say, that another writer might have left out because it makes for a less efficient argument. It is also, among other things, in places a difficult listen, especially if you lost someone at the WTC. But it's worth listening to, all the way through.
Things I'm not linking too because they are from the department of the obvious: "Only children as social as peers" and "Teen sex doesn't always hurt grades."
I've spent the past year and a half, much of it obsessively, trying to navigate between truth, virtue, and my own experience, and I am screamingly sick of the whole claustrophobic thing.
I hang onto the idea that living well with people is a goal worth pursuing, that the anti-racist/anti-sexism conversation has a medium-sized piece of it but no more than that, and the game isn't nearly over yet.
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Date: 2010-08-17 08:51 pm (UTC)I've spent the past year and a half, much of it obsessively, trying to navigate between truth, virtue, and my own experience, and I am screamingly sick of the whole claustrophobic thing.
I hang onto the idea that living well with people is a goal worth pursuing, that the anti-racist/anti-sexism conversation has a medium-sized piece of it but no more than that, and the game isn't nearly over yet.