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General Update and a rant. [Dec. 3rd, 2009|07:19 pm]

mahdi
Elli is recuperating from her most recent eye surgery; all looks well.

Tegan is being Tegan: a mix of wonder, delight, and occasional dips into aggravation--in other words, she's two.

Me? I'm ok. Waiting to hear about Grad School, waiting to see if I'll be able to afford it if accepted, doing my best to counteract the stupid crap my student teacher gets taught in his teaching program while simultaneously reinforcing the good he gets.

Which leads me to an aside--my in-laws think I'm a good teacher because I fly in the face of some standard Education beliefs--but they really, in my opinion, and basing this on the conversations I've had with them, don't actually understand WHY I am against some ideas, nor do they even know why they agree with me. It seems that any time I mention doing something the opposite of what the "Education Industry Stance" is, they think that makes me a good teacher.

This infuriates me, because they don't know a good teacher from their asses, most of the time--not at the high school level. They just don't like the "Teacher's Union," because of their political stance more than anything, so they automatically loathe most teachers. Just because I don't agree that starting every class with a verse is a good idea doesn't mean I'm a good teacher--I could still suck donkey balls, and guess what? The awful, awful teacher who was fired last year? He ignored many of the same things I do. Didn't make him a good teacher.

Drives me batshit. While I don't agree with all the things education boffins tell us, there is good research behind a lot of the things my father-in-law hates--and he won't admit that in some cases.

This is somewhat related to my feelings towards well-meaning friends who just assume I'm good because they know me. Unless you've watched me teach, you don't actually know how good I am at it. Even the evidence the school uses is suspect; some of my students would score at the top levels even if all I did in class was stand at the front of the room and tell knock-knock jokes. And some would still rank at the bottom if I was the best teacher on the planet. (Contrary to most teacher movies--and I love them as much as the next guy--not all students can be brought up to grade level by a good teacher who cares. It may not be PC to say it, but some kids are just dumb. Or incredibly unprepared for the rigor of high school, which may not make them dumb, but it's the same result in the end. And no matter how much I care, some kids won't try.)

Anyway. Rant over.
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Public service announcement! [Dec. 2nd, 2009|03:54 pm]

fascinoma
Today's Malady now has a Twitter account. I'm more active there - by far - then I am with the blog, but I also tweet when there's a blog update.
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LiveJournal Major Notes: LiveJournal: The First Decade, AIDS vgift fundraiser, LJ_Photophile poll! [Dec. 3rd, 2009|03:21 pm]

news

[theljstaff]
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LiveJournal: The First Decade

Just in time for holiday shopping, we're thrilled to announce the release of our ten-year anniversary anthology. Published by Blurb.com, the book showcases a decade of extraordinary talent drawn from LiveJournal users around the world. This must-read compilation features stories, memes, photos, comics, editorials, graphic content, and more, including:

  1. Excerpts from Oh No They Didn't (a/k/a [info]ohnotheydidnt), the largest community on LiveJournal, covering celebrity gossip, entertainment news, and pop culture
  2. A look at post-Katrina New Orleans from the journal of Poppy Z. Brite
  3. Gripping narratives, including a poignant reverie on a blind date
  4. Photography that spans the globe, ranging from old-fashioned Polaroids to underwater photography
  5. Mouthwatering dishes from [info]food_porn

What began as a late-night inspiration back in Brad Fitzpatrick's college dorm in 1999 has grown to encompass nearly 25 million users worldwide, with journals and communities covering every conceivable hobby, passion, and topic. To get your copy, please visit the Blurb Bookstore. For updates and entries from book contributors, please join [info]lj_turns10.

Tweaks and enhancements

  • You can now ban a user from all of your communities and journals at once. To access this feature, hover over the person's userpic and choose Ban user everywhere from the drop-down menu.
  • Follow LiveJournal on Twitter!

Give a little to help a lot!

In honor of National AIDS Awareness month, we've added a new charitable vgift. For each red ribbon you purchase for $2.99, we'll donate 100 percent of gross proceeds to IAVI.org (the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative) to support the development and global distribution of an affordable HIV vaccine (we'll cover credit card fees). You can read more about IAVI at [info]lj_cares. While we're on the subject, we raised $740 from our November fundraiser for Love Without Boundaries, which supports emergency healthcare and adoption of Chinese orphans. We thank you for helping us help others.

Photos of the week

We're back with more incredible pictures from our super-talented LiveJournal photographers. Congratulations to [info]ilya_gorokhov, who is the winner of our very first [info]lj_photophile poll.

We hope you'll continue to post, vote, and comment! A gentle request: Please post only one photo at a time and limit size to 350x350 (so images display properly on friends pages). And now, without further ado, get ready to cast your ballot and view more awesome user content after the jump!

Read more... )

Curtains

Thanks, again, for joining us. Stay safe and snug out there!

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Yeah. I’m a fan. [Dec. 2nd, 2009|11:31 pm]

mortaine
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Elizabeth Donald is a writer. A good one. She writes horror and sexy stuff and more horror. Her most recent book is a zombie novel called The Cold Ones (review here), which I’ve been anticipating reading, but couldn’t justify for shelf space until I recently won it in a charity auction.

Like most good, not-bestseller-yet authors, Ms. Donald doesn’t have an enormous market for her short stories. But she deserves one.

I could argue right now that we all deserve one, but I’ll leave it at this: Elizabeth is a good writer who writes stuff that’s enjoyable to read.

This week, she has posted some of her short stories for sale on her website. They’re $2.50 each, about the price of some spendy coffee.

I encourage you to buy one of her short stories. If you’re a NaNoWriMo participant, right now you’re probably looking for two things: 1) something to take your mind off the exhausted draft you’ve just finished, and 2) some hope that a freelance writer can still make it in this world. If you’re a holiday shopper, you’re probably looking for something not-too-time-consuming to relax after shopping and wrapping up presents.

For $2.50, you can have that.

If you do download one of Elizabeth’s stories, please feel free to drop me a note here and let me know what you thought. I’d love to hear, and I know she’ll be checking comments to see who bought and what they think.

Note: I have no financial relationship with Elizabeth except as a satisfied consumer of her work and as a personal friend. We’ve gone out to dinner once in St. Louis. She’s lovely in person as well as on the page.

Cross-posted from Mortaine's Blog. You can read it or comment on it here or there.
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November Books [Dec. 1st, 2009|11:55 am]

mortaine
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#41: Persuasion by Jane Austen. It’s Jane Austen. Nuff said.

#42: The Princess by Claire Delacroix. Medieval-set romance novel.

Cross-posted from Mortaine's Blog. You can read it or comment on it here or there.
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Etiquette, Weddings, Holidays, and Buying Local [Nov. 28th, 2009|01:06 pm]

mortaine
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A Tip for Future Brides:

If you’re going to have a seating chart/schematic (which you don’t have to do, by the way– most guests at a wedding are grown-ups who can decide for themselves who to sit with), it is perfectly acceptable to have an odd number of guests at a single table. When the caterer tells you that the table “seats 8,” that doesn’t mean that you have to seat 8 people there– you can seat 7, especially if you have 3 pairs of married friends and one single girlfriend who isn’t bringing a date. You can even have the table set with only 7 place settings, so there’s extra room and the single girl doesn’t feel so acutely the lack of a date.

How to Have a Low-Cost Christmas

And a day late for Black Friday, but hopefully not for the rest of the holiday season, I’d like to offer the following suggestions for a low-cost Christmas:

  • Use tissue paper for wrapping paper. John and I have been doing this for years. The tissue costs about $2 for 100 sheets of white paper. Decorate it up with string, twine, yarn, or ribbon (if you’re feeling expansive). Use 2 sheets to wrap if you want the tissue to be opaque. Each person can have their own color of yarn tying the present together. Or, use brown butcher paper and string– it’s a classic look that your recipients will appreciate.
  • Do not buy any Christmas ornaments this year. Ornaments are overpriced. If you don’t have any ornaments left from last year, see what you can make-do with at home. Cut out some snowflakes from white paper and string them on some yarn as ornaments (tip: iron the snowflakes after cutting so they lie flat). String popcorn on a thread for garland– this classic look really impresses people when they visit you, though it’s not recommended if you have dogs or popcorn-loving cats. You want a theme for your ornaments? The paper is white, the popcorn is white, snow is white– what more do you need?
  • Take all the candles you currently own, put them out in safe candle holders, and light them for your lights in the evenings. If you don’t have candles, some inexpensive votives or tea lights (I can usually find a bag of 100 unscented tea lights for about $5) is safe and effective.
  • If you really love decorating in color for the holidays, put out the red and white stuff. You can leave them up until Valentine’s Day.
  • Find a mantle or book-case and tape or string all your Christmas cards on it. It looks festive, it honors those who have sent you cards, and at the end of the season, you don’t feel like you need to hold onto the Christmas cards– you can throw them out!
  • You don’t need a tree. I will repeat this, in case you missed it: You. Don’t. Need. A. Tree. One year, John and I taped a strand of lights in a vaguely tree-like shape as our Christmas tree. We haven’t had a tree for the past 2 years. If you need a tree, go to an arboretum and visit one. Or stop in any store, anywhere– they’ve all had their trees up for weeks.
  • If you have cable TV, chances are you have some “all music” stations. Put on the Holiday channel for an hour or so at night if you absolutely have to. OR put on the classical channel. It “feels” like Christmas music without annoying you with retail flashbacks. Your local public radio station probably plays classical music as well, if you’re without cable.
  • Print out your own calligraphy-font gift tags onto heavy paper (20 lb. stock) and cut them out to attach to the presents you give out.
  • Don’t give presents. Again, John and I have done this for a couple of years now. We donate to Heifer.org and PlanUSA as gifts to the adults in our lives, and then save our spending for the dozen nieces and nephews.
  • Little kids love to open presents, but…. have you noticed that little kids are often more generous than adults? Consider sponsoring an animal at a wildlife charity, for example– sponsorships often come with a certificate and a stuffed animal, which most kids are happy to receive as their present, and knowing the rest went to something meaningful is great, too. In fact, sometimes, kids are just not into the thing inside the present so much as they’re all about the act of opening it. You can set up an entire treasure hunt for the kid just to find the present to be opened.
  • Participate in holiday potlucks. Every time someone invites you to a holiday potluck, go. Bring a dish, or don’t– if there’s more than 8 people coming, there will be enough food to accommodate an extra (mooching only works if you don’t bring guests with you, and you should only do it one out of every 5 or 6 parties). On December 25th, stay home and make a normal meal. Since you’ve been eating ham, turkey, cranberries, stuffings, and all the trimmings at all the potlucks all month, you just won’t miss them on the 25th.
  • Correlating to the above item: go grocery shopping 4 days before the holiday, and stock up. Then don’t go until 2 days after the holiday. Your sanity will thank you.
  • Coordinate with your family and do a name-draw Christmas. Everyone draws one name and buys the presents for that person. I would love for my family to start doing this (perhaps next year). It would be less expensive for all of us, and we could make the rule something like “everyone over the age of 15″ or something, so the kids still have the fun of opening stuff. Maybe organize a separate one for the kids, too, so each kid draws another kid’s name and they don’t have to buy or make presents for Mom, Dad, siblings, and cousins.
  • Do not neglect birthdays at Christmas. Better to spend $20 on a birthday present and $20 on a separate Christmas present than to spend $40 on one combined present. That $40 item is probably overpriced anyway. Wrap birthday presents in non-holiday paper (this is, again, why tissue paper is so helpful!)
  • And for those who are thinking of giving me a present for Christmas, here is a final cost-saving tip: don’t. I don’t need anything, honest. I bought my work clothes already, and we’re not moving for a while, so we still won’t have any space. See the above links for charitable donations, if you’re really inclined to spend money on me. Or make me a snowflake and send it early in the season so I can hang it on my RV. You don’t even have to iron it– send it folded so it fits in a standard envelope. I would love to hang a bunch of snowflakes on the RV this year– I put all my holiday ornaments into storage last year, and I don’t want to buy any. Also, please note that my cat doesn’t need Christmas presents (my sister is thinking of making dried banana chips for him, and that’s plenty of present for him, believe me). And John is also extremely zen about gifts and holidays. You really want to make his holiday season fantastic? Donate whatever you thought about spending on him to the ACLU. I am not kidding– he would love that gift. His favorite T-shirt is the one with the Bill of Rights on it.

Updated Contact Info

My mailing address, for snowflakes, letters, Christmas Cards, or just any correspondence you need to send to me is now:

Stephanie Bryant
848 N. Rainbow Blvd. #685
Las Vegas, NV 89107

This replaces the South Dakota address. I have no fear putting this on the Internet. It’s my business address, essentially a mail box forwarding place, so nobody stalking me is going to endanger me by going there. Just don’t send flowers, please– they don’t re-mail very well, and we don’t pick up the mail very often.

Yesterday Was Buy Nothing Day

Yesterday, I failed at Buy Nothing Day, but I felt I remained true to the spirit. I went to the local yarn shop and bought yarn (it’s still 2009). I ran out of yarn for some hats I’m making for some of the aforementioned nieces and nephews for the holidays, and there were specific colors I wanted, because I found a great hat for my nephew, who is 16 today). I went out to a LYS (local yarn shop), one I haven’t been to before. The owner was very helpful– really, too helpful; if I’d never knitted before, I would have really appreciated the help and advice, but mostly, I was just looking for a map or some suggestions about how the shop was organized. At one point in the conversation, she suggested that Michael’s might carry the kind of yarn I was looking for (washable wool). I explained that I wasn’t really interested in shopping at Michael’s. I don’t like their selection of yarns.

What I did not say was that Michael’s always smells like tacky plastic to my nose. Everything there is made in China, and it smells like it. I have this same problem at Target.

I did not say that I always feel like they want you to buy uncreative assembly kits rather than actual crafting supplies. They don’t even carry eyes– what kind of crafting store doesn’t have eyes! How am I supposed to make toys without proper safety eyes? Oh, yes, I know. I’m not supposed to. Instead, I’m supposed to buy a doll or teddy bear from Michael’s, and then dress it up in stuff bought at Michael’s. Lame.

I did not point out that if I shop at Michael’s, all but a tiny fraction of my money goes to corporate HQ. If I buy from the local yarn shop, the local yarn shop owner gets my money to spend in the community. I know Las Vegas doesn’t have the same Main Street America problems with our money not staying here, but I think the principle of shopping local is still a valid one. Plus, as overblown and chained-out as Vegas is, people really do come here in part for a unique experience. You can now gamble in most of the United States, so when people go to Las Vegas, they are going for something they don’t get at home. They won’t get that if everything is walmartized.

Also, John bought some butter yesterday. But we needed it for the popcorn.

Edit to add: Germane to this post is this bit of yarn-shopping advice from the Crochet Liberation Front.

Cross-posted from Mortaine's Blog. You can read it or comment on it here or there.
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Of Men, and breaking gender roles, and other Manly Things [Nov. 26th, 2009|11:47 pm]

mahdi
I'm not your typical straight(ish) married guy with a kid.

I bake more than my wife does, I love cooking that ISN'T barbecuing (though that's fun too), I'm not at all into sports (except the version of football my countrymen insist is soccer, and in that I'm strictly a spectator), and I have no interest at all in hunting.

BUT. You knew there'd be a but, right? But I like guns. And I like being around a group of male friends and doing "guy" things. And the older I get, the more I find I want certain things to happen.

I want to go out to dinner once a month or so (maybe every other month, the frequency is less important than the existence of the event) with a group of guys. I want to go on a camping/hiking trip with only guys maybe once a summer. I want to go bowling with the guys sometimes, or playing lazer-tag, or even playing X-Box games on my couch.

Thing is, I also do (or would like to do) these things with women friends, too--but there's just something about being out "with the guys" that I never thought I'd like, but I find now that I do. Maybe that's because I'm married and have a daughter and need to get away from feminine energies. Or maybe I'm just not as "enlightened" as some thought I was. Or maybe--just maybe--there IS something about hanging out with male friends that is different.

Here's the thing--while I can say a lot of things in front of Katie, LABS, Elena, Rachel, or Kate, I won't say some things that I WILL say to Morgan, Miles, Jim, Ed, or Richard. Things I kind of WANT to say, and rarely can. Things I want to discuss that I don't feel right about discussing in totally mixed company.

Anyway, what do y'all think?
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