WIGGLE YOUR TUMBLR NAME(S) AROUND.
OUCH! BLATANT HERO
“THAT DESECRATER.” oh.
i also entered “ellen theresa” and got “LETHAL, SERENE.”
A POETRY THRASHES
My full name makes REMARK TRAGICAL ACHE
WIGGLE YOUR TUMBLR NAME(S) AROUND.
OUCH! BLATANT HERO
“THAT DESECRATER.” oh.
i also entered “ellen theresa” and got “LETHAL, SERENE.”
A POETRY THRASHES
My full name makes REMARK TRAGICAL ACHE
A Slow Books Manifesto: Read books. As often as you can. Mostly classics.
Why so much emphasis on what goes into our mouths, and so little on what goes into our minds? What about having fun while exerting greater control over what goes into your brain? Why hasn’t a hip alliance emerged that’s concerned about what happens to our intellectual health, our country, and, yes, our happiness when we consume empty-calorie entertainment? The Slow Food manifesto lauds “quieter pleasures” as a means of opposing “the universal folly of Fast Life”—yet there’s little that seems more foolish, loudly unpleasant, and universal than the screens that blare in every corner of America (at the airport, at the gym, in the elevator, in our hands). “Fast” entertainment, consumed mindlessly as we slump on the couch or do our morning commute, pickles our brains—and our souls.
That’s why I’m calling for a Slow Books Movement (one that’s a little more developed than this perfectly admirable attempt).
In our leisure moments, whenever we have down time, we should turn to literature—to works that took some time to write and will take some time to read, but will also stay with us longer than anything else. They’ll help us unwind better than any electronic device—and they’ll pleasurably sharpen our minds and identities, too.
To borrow a cadence from Michael Pollan: Read books. As often as you can. Mostly classics.
Aim for 30 minutes a day. You can squeeze in that half hour pretty easily if only, during your free moments—whenever you find yourself automatically switching on that boob tube, or firing up your laptop to check your favorite site, or scanning Twitter for something to pass the time—you pick up a meaningful work of literature. […]
If you’re not reading slowly, you’re doing yourself—and your community—a great wrong. As poet Joseph Brodsky said in his 1987 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, “Though we can condemn … the persecution of writers, acts of censorship, the burning of books, we are powerless when it comes to [the worst crime against literature]: that of not reading the books. For that … a person pays with his whole life; … a nation … pays with its history.”
Read more. [Image: Reuters]
You know something? As lovely as this sounds in theory. As catchy as that motto is. No.
Let me tell you about classics, long, thousand page novels, spiraling stories about love and betrayal and society and repression. I can tell you about them because I’ve read lots and lots and lots of them. Name one and I’ve probably read it. If I haven’t, I probably will. But I didn’t love all of them. I didn’t even like quite a few of them, and fewer still have changed my life or bettered my person.
The books that stayed with me and that I value reading are the ones that make me feel something, the ones that make me, if only momentarily, escape to a different sort of life. Sometimes it’s short stories. Sometimes it’s old and sometimes it’s contemporary and sometimes it’s something in between. It’s Richard Yates’s trembling middle class suburbia. It’s Colette’s free spirit and petulant eroticism. It’s David Wojnarowicz’s rage and desperation, which you will never, ever find in an English Literature curriculum. It’s stories about sex and seemingly unremarkable people’s extraordinary moments.
And you know something? I read them fast, on subways, in between places, for moments at a time. Or I read them for hours in bed with a cup of tea. It doesn’t matter—reading isn’t something to be ritualized, fetishized, it’s something you do for the pure joy of it. And sometimes it isn’t books. It’s essays, blog posts, even heart breaking 140 characters or less, tweets.
So: Read. When you want to. Mostly good books. But always ones that make you feel, think, and long to be alive. Not to keep the canon of 100 greatest books of all time alive, but to know, to remember, that you’re human, that you feel—that you’re not alone.
YES YES YES YES YES
#In a terrifying world where Hollywood is populated by men and women who aren’t real #Comes the heartwarming story of one actress who wasn’t afraid to look like an actual human being #This spring #Prepare to fall in love with #Jennifer Lawrence #in #~SHIT THERE’S A NORMAL PERSON IN HOLLYWOOD~ #Coming to cinemas near you
If by “look like a normal human being” you mean “look like an extremely beautiful normal human being” I will agree with you.
I’m pretty good about hanging at the edges of fandoms and having all the feels while not letting it poor out like crazy. But with hunger games I have been reading all the reviews I can find and looking at all the gifs, and watching fan made clips, and harassing friends who haven’t read the books and I JUST CAN’T RESIST. I get so excited about stuff all the time that I feel fangirling about all of it would drive everyone crazy. but I just love books and movies and good actors and music and there are so many things to squee about like social movements and media and creative tools and funny comics and math jokes and maybe that would be a better focus than the crazy need to argue with people about social issues which has been a large amount of time on the internet. I mean, I am probably just upsetting myself more than I am teaching anyone or changing their mind, so maybe getting really excited about pop culture is healthier. Pop culture is sort of always laughed at for being goofy and excessive and vain, but it still is really important and has a huge impact on peoples lives in good and bad ways and you know, there are great stories out there, that mirror reality, but also just stand on their own. Gah, I am rambling like crazy but maybe someone understands. I LOVE THE HUNGER GAMES IN WORDS THAT I DON’T KNOW AND RAMBLES AND LASDKFASDKFSKDF ALL THE FEELS.
Today I watched a lot of Haley G Hoover videos. I tried watching some of her stuff once before and didn’t really get in to it, but today I found a lot of videos I love, like this one.
Snowstorm at dusk inspired nails from earlier in the winter.
I think I saw another video that was a part of this campaign last term. Tres Bien.
I really like this selection of colors. Almost bought golden dragon a couple days ago.
That time I tried to use a sticker to make a heart stencil and then painted over the pink with a shimmery pale pink instead of clear and turned the whole thing in to a barbie color. Actually, I think I gave up on the hearts half way through…
Fancy rainbow nails with silver stripes!
I like how branches look against the sky.