Monday, April 23, 2007

liberate me!

This is a picture of a woman who won the London Marathon yesterday. Yep, look closely. She has underarm hair. Now I know she's from China, and maybe social expectations are different than they are here, but I wonder how the media in posh London accepted this free-spirited soul.

And it makes me think of other situations where women either intentionally or unintentionally brush up against expectations we sometimes have for them. Tiffkin and I saw an article last month from a woman who was teaching young girls that bras were medically dangerous and demeaning, and how she wished we had a world where we didn't need them. That's similar to the valedictorian of my high school class, who told us in her graduation speech that she hadn't shaved her legs in two years.

Now on the complete opposite end, in Mexico we saw a woman who was the epitome of a self-made goddess: long, cotton blonde hair; an obvious breast augmentation; a tummy tuck; a constant string of "elegant" cigarettes; a wealthy, snoody man at her side; and the most telling feature: a deep deep suntan that only was enhanced through the hours she spent laying outside. The tan was the thing that kept getting us, like she was scoffing at the sun and the world, defying the danger and throwing caution to the wind. She was brown on the outside, brown on the inside, plastic, inflated and dyed. In some ways, I guess she is completely free from outside expectations, or you could say that she was even more submissive to them.

We're often judged by how we change who we are when we relate to different groups of people. What is the definition of healthy liberation?

Saturday, April 07, 2007

under a rock, up in a tree

On Thursday, I led a team of international students around campus on a scavenger egg hunt. We were given an egg at the beginning, and inside was a clue that gave us a hint as to where we could find our next clue. One was on a painted bench, one under a stripe-tied statue, one in a campus locker, one at the feet of George Mason, and one at the campus information desk. For the second year in a row, my team was the winner!


My dad sent me an email that said, "I was watching T.V. this morning and saw a different kind of Easter Egg Hunt. In Key Largo, they were hunting Easter Eggs off shore and finding them among the coral and ocean floor structures. Can't say that I have done that yet, but sure would like to try it sometime. So where would you pick for new location of Easter Egg hunting?"


And to that, I ask you the same. What would be a new way to spice up the practice of Easter Egg hunting?

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

a random quiz while eating hamburger helper

1. if you were to create an entirely new brand of frozen foods, what would you make?

2. if you could have one of the following in your house, what would you choose? A. 12' hot tub B. 70" plasma tv w/surround sound C. laundry shoot with automatic cleaning system D. an entire pantry system that swiveled on a lazy susan

3. if you could pet any animal at the zoo, which would you pet? which would you NOT pet?

4. let's say an elderly relative miraculously gave birth to a bouncing baby boy/girl, and in her senility, she let's you choose the name. what would you choose?

5. if you were to undertake one of these adrenaline-pumping aquarisks in the next year, which of these would you choose? A. Cliff diving B. Speedboat racing C. whale riding D. shark fishing E. Underwater photography in caves

Monday, March 26, 2007

and coming in third

Today we saw a commercial on the weather channel for an upcoming show entitled "The 100 Biggest Moments in Weather." It made me think about the importance of lists and rankings in our culture, and how it's one thing to talk about a person or thing that was "pretty interesting," or "above average," or even "outstanding," but how it fails to captivate our attention as if we were to call it the greatest/biggest/tastiest/sexiest/most scenic/most substantial person or thing in the entire neighborhood/city/state/world. One word can make an item stand out, possibly much farther than it ever intended to stand out.

So with that I wondered what other lists we could come up with. What list could we create that would find an audience in the world, even if it was just for the fact that we called it the greatest? We'd need experts in each field to debate these rankings on tv of course, but do you think we could build a following for ............

Top 10 Worst Horse Stall Disasters
20 Moments in Knitting That Took Your Breath Away
The 100 Greatest Bullfighters of All Time
The World's 20 Most Important Math Problems
Top 15 Most Unromantic Flowers (and the guys who gave them)
5 Best Uses for a Lima Bean
20 Most Useful Things to Do While Debilitated by Kidney Stones
100 Most Annoying Sounds on the Planet
15 Great Moments in the History of Pet Breeding
State's 20 Most Handsome Poodles

Sunday, March 04, 2007

rise and shine!

I admit I have trouble getting up in the morning every now and then. The more comfortable the bed, the better the covers-tempurature ratio, the greater the hindrances the night before in getting a full, satisfying span of rest, the unispiring appointments to go to in the morning ..... the excuses can add up easily. Sometimes it helps to have a little prodding to get out the door.

When I was little, my mom used to give one call into the room (hey, it's time to get up!), and then would come in and pull back the curtains. If I was having additional trouble waking, she would come in and sing:

Mr. Sun, Sun,
Mr. Golden Sun,
Please shine down on me.

The other day I employed the tried and true "Skillet and Spoon" method to wake someone from her dreaminess. What methods have you used, or have been used on you? What method do you least prefer?

Monday, February 26, 2007

across the border, over the hedge

It's always amazing to me that certain songs/stories are known by people from all over the world, some with completely different backgrounds. How is it a joke I heard as a kid was a joke heard by a kid in Connecticut? How is it I can meet someone in Virginia today who knows the same stories my Sunday School teacher told me when I was a kid in Wyoming? It just seems strange.

Tiffkin and I found out we both know this random song:


Little Bunny Foo Foo
Hopping through the forest
Scooping up the field mice
And boppin' 'em on the head

Down came the good fairy and she said

"Little Bunny Foo Foo
I don't want to see you
Scooping up the field mice
And boppin' 'em on the head.
I'll give you three chances
And if you don't behaveI'll turn you into a goon!"

The next day:
Little Bunny Foo Foo
Hopping through the forest
Scooping up the field mice
And boppin' 'em on the head

How is it some random stories/songs travel so well? Any instances where you were surprised someone knew something you knew?