Batfort

Style reveals substance

Month: January 2019 (page 2 of 2)

vox day owen benjamin did nothing wrong youtube

Since my first post on search results was so much fun to write, I wanted to do another one. Since then, I’ve paid more attention to what people are search, and have also started getting more traffic.

The combination has produced some great searches.

 

nct taeyong regular irregular

Don’t lie. You were looking for pictures of Taeyong’s glorious sandy-blond mullet, weren’t you. It’s okay. There’s no shame in loving a k-pop mullet.

 

kimye 2018

The one time I had no idea what to post so I posted a pic of Kim and Kanye….

 

measurement of creative achievement chronbach

I learned something new today: “Cronbach’s alpha is a measure of internal consistency.”

If we apply that to the Creative Achievement Questionnaire, a Jordan B Peterson product, I’m going to guess there’s probably not much.

 

imagehosting pol

I’m flattered, but if you have to search that phrase you probably shouldn’t be on /pol/ in the first place.

 

chanyeol fashion 2018 style

Chanyeol’s style in 2018 is about what it’s been in past years: Vetements, Vetements, Vetements.

(Disclaimer: Chanyeol is my bias.)

 

howcan you ward off scurvy in a carnivorous diet

Trick question—you don’t have to. (Also, the phrase “ward off” makes it sound like scurvy is a vampire, stalking through the night on its way to hunt you down and reveal all of your past wounds. Muahahahaah.)

 

jordanetics review

I got you covered: A Very Personal Review of Vox Day’s Jordanetics

 

exo bad dream vocal appreciations

I kind of regret not waxing more poetic about this song when I reviewed the album. It’s by far my favorite, and shows off their vocals in a musical context where you might not expect it. The harmonies are stacked thick. Baekhyun’s enunciation is pleasing to the ear. But most of all, Chen gets to show off with a cadenza that interrupts the entire song.

(Disclaimer: Chen is my bias wrecker. He might wreck his way into becoming my actual bias.)

 

never use literally

Literally” has become a filler word, a word that is complicit in turning the meaning of things upside-down. “Literally” does not deserve this fate.

 

kicking carbs going straight carnivore diet

Go for it, dude. I will warn you: the keto flu is real. If you are at all sensitive to wheat, brace yourself. Withdrawl is not for the faint of heart. I’m not as tempted to cheat because I don’t want to go through that again.

 

npc meme

if(man.Color) == (man.Orange)
Man.Bad==true;

 

vox day owen benjamin did nothing wrong youtube

I’m not going to ask how in the world did you ended up at my blog instead of on Vox’s stream, because I appreciate the click. Why not both?

 

Taeyong is an aesthetic unto himself

Just when you thought he couldn’t look even more like an anime character…

Taeyong of NCT at the 2019 Idol Star Athletic Championship

He goes and matches himself to the field and the NCT lightstick. SMH.

My eyes are happy to look at the reds and greens and neon yellows, all nicely saturated and balanced. Even the vaguely repeating stripes of the track and his tracksuit scream harmony. This picture is so complete. There’s nothing superfluous or distracting, simply great content. And you can imagine him skipping along, hair bouncing.

Taeyong has long been known for looking like an anime character. His bleach-white hair in NCT’s debut video (“The Seventh Sense“) started comparisons to the character Jack Frost. Taeyong responded by dressing as Jack Frost for SM Entertainment’s annual Halloween party. The next year, he went as a Cardcaptor Sakura character.

Gotta love a guy who knows his strengths and plays to them.

Opiates make me stupid

There is a personal essay that could be written connecting my recent journey to the oral surgeon to deal with an emergent situation and subsequent prescription of hydrocodone, my journey to health by stripping most opiate-acting foods from my diet, and the larger obesity crisis in America. It could probably be a really interesting piece about systemic brokenness and the potential for healing.

You will not read that piece now.

Why?

Because I’m on hydrocodone, and hydrocodone makes me stupid.

Thank you, and goodnight.

Appreciation Post: Dog transformation videos

Some days are below average. Maybe you have a caffeine headache. Maybe you just got started on antibiotics. Maybe there’s an extra-pushy guy trying to convince you that you should go on another date after you said you weren’t interested.

For those days, there are dog videos on YouTube.

There is something about these, where they take a rescue dog who’s in bad shape and love them and heal them, that just speaks to my suburban-raised, earnest little heart.

Really tho, I appreciate the time and effort that it takes to rehab these dogs—mostly because it’s something that I’m not suited for. The first and last time I volunteered at an animal shelter….well, let’s just say that I’m not good with dogs who aren’t friends.

Even though they’re dogs, seeing stories like these illustrates how important your health is, and how long the healing process can take. Dogs that look older than their chronological years—dogs with no energy—dogs who are sad—they all have a chance to feel better, to run and play and be happy.

It just takes time, and healing. In healing there is hope.

The Reader: Funding the future of research and sushi for cats

Meghan Caughill

New year…same ol’ me. Have you ever felt that making a big change to your lifestyle—like moving or getting a dramatic new hairstyle—will also change you on the inside? I’ve been guilty of that for many years. Surely THIS TIME I’ll get my new apartment decorated and keep it in impeccable shape. It never comes to pass. I keep repeating patterns of thought and behavior, so of course the past repeats itself! I hadn’t yet done the work to change.

I have high hopes for 2019, but so far I’ve been lying low. I’m avoiding the work—the early stages are always so painful. But like sore muscles after the gym, you (and I) have to work through the discomfort to get somewhere worth going. I have muscles now, after going through the gym. What will I have after going to art gym for 6 months? Let’s find out.


» How gorgeous are these cyanotype notebooks???

» Michigan State is a bellwether for things to come in academia. Universities are full of people who like to avoid responsibility and making difficult decisions. Structurally, the fiefdom model (only each discipline has the authority to oversee itself) provides lots of room for shady things to develop. Combined with the cult-like devotion that most universities foster, any misdeeds open a powder keg of bad emotions.

For colleges and universities, tragedies of this scale more commonly take the form of fatal accidents or mass shootings. In such cases, campus communities tend to pull together rather than split apart. The failure of a leader as a moral actor, however, elicits a different kind of grieving. This is an angry grief, a confusing sorrow that tempers enthusiasm for the institution with a kind of quiet shame. It is a phenomenon that finds its singular historic parallel at Pennsylvania State University, where top administrators were criminally charged with covering up the crimes of a serial sexual predator.

As at Penn State, where Graham B. Spanier served for 16 years as president before he was fired and later convicted of endangering the welfare of children, Michigan State struggles to come to grips with what the Simon era means now. Her prosecution brings that struggle to the fore in ways that her long-serving colleagues had not fully anticipated, opening a dam of emotion and ambivalence.

» Ignore all the art-school-ese and this is some pretty cool internet-based art.

» You reap what you sow: “My daughter asked me to stop writing about motherhood. Here’s why I can’t do that.” Check the comments; they’ll say everything that you’re thinking and more.

» Investigators are starting to root out the infiltrators of the alt-right (aka the ones designed to make the alt-right look and act more extreme than they really are)

» I’m not a fan of any type of feminism but this article makes some very good points: “This is everything wrong with mainstream feminism

» That isn’t to say that I don’t love women. Many women are doing cool and interesting things, like Riva-Melissa Tez. I like her ideas about funding research, and that she’s actually doing something about it.

We really need to improve incentive structures between groups. How can we give other people access to fundamental research? When you read academic papers, researchers are incentivized to keep private the exact details that would explain the breakthrough. I’m opposed to people being private about discovery, even though I understand it would be suicide to do the opposite. I love today’s emphasis on being open source, but we need more incentives for following through. Right now, you need to be altruistic or charitable to be open source. There is no cost benefit. We don’t live in a world where individuals get rewarded for contributing to society. Instead, the message is, contribute to your own thing and you’ll be rewarded for it. Then use that money to contribute to society. That process is too slow in my mind.

» “Gen Z Is Forgoing College To Attend Trade Schools

» If you’ve ever wondered why the world is a hall of mirrors, this article will help explain why. (Please note that I do not endorse all of the theology. The bit on mimetics is great, tho.)


 

Watercolor Practice

Roughly a year ago, I started doing bodyweight workouts in my living room. 20-min circuits took me 40 minutes to finish. I couldn’t do half the exercises because I was too weak. It was embarrassing. But it happened in the privacy of my living room and nobody saw me but me.

Later, I started a bodyweight-to-failure routine. Eventually I felt comfortable enough to exercise in public, so I joined a gym and started a weightlifting program. Now physique has changed enough that friends and family notice the difference. I’m slimmer, more muscular, and generally happier with how my body looks, feels, and performs.

When I started Batfort, there wasn’t an internet living room that I could practice in. Sure, I could have done a lot of practice offline…but that’s a journal, not a blog. The only way to practice blogging is to do it, otherwise known as “practicing in public” or “publishing the learning curve.” Or, being okay with making a fool out of yourself in public.

The thing about internet traffic is, though, that nobody cares at first. You don’t get any traffic—and why should you?—which is discouraging even though you know it’s going to happen. Now, the traffic for the first 5 days of January has already surpassed all the traffic for January 2018, a few people have left comments, and posts have been linked to by other bloggers. There are still many things to improve (especially, and always, the quality my writing) but this is now an honest-to-goodness blog.

Sounds like it’s time for a new challenge!

One of my goals for the year is to build up a portfolio of art—specifically, watercolor and/or pen-n-ink—that I could submit to an art gallery or coffee shop for review. Ultimately I’d like to be accepted for a show of some sort, but I recognize that is out of my control to some extent. At the very least, I’d like to get to the Tolkien-like ability to illustrate my own writing if I want.

While this is a skill that I could work on entirely in the privacy of my living room, I’ve learned that “practicing in public” is helpful in many ways. I like documenting the process, which allows me to see how far I’ve come. Taking the time to step back and reflect on the process might help me learn faster. And, I find that doing things in public creates more accountability in my own mind.

So here’s the plan: Roughly each week, I’ll post a round-up of watercolor projects that are interesting. I don’t want to spam every day, and neither do I want to post the boring stuff like color swatches (with the above exception) and studies.

I’ll write a little about what I learned, but I will refrain from criticizing each piece. We all know I’m just starting out.* Ain’t nobody critiqued me doing push-ups on my yoga mat, so I’ll give myself that space to get better at watercolor, too.

Without further ado, exhibit A:

I’m quite pleased that it looks pretty much like the forced-bulb Amaryllis that served as my still-life model tonight, and with how well the wax-covered bulb turned out.

Things I learned:

  • If it’s still even a little bit teeny wet, the watercolor will bleed
  • Don’t color over watercolor with markers if you want a “natural” look
  • Black makes dull shadows—try a different method next time

 

 


*Full disclosure: Just as I did, in fact, know how to do a push-up prior to working out regularly, I’ve taken a few art and drawing classes in the past and am not starting from total scratch with watercolors.

Three images…

…that are unrelated in content but visually similar.

 

Maybe it’s the color palette.

The view from the other side of Christmas

I was way liberal with my diet in December. Between the tropical vacation, the death of a family member, and the holidays, I rediscovered that I am an emotional eater.

Instead of holding to the straight and narrow path, I ate delicious goodies. Cheese, dark chocolate, gin & mineral water, a spoonful of guacamole, and coffee coffee coffee.

Nothing too horrible (God forbid I eat a blueberry!) but definitely a lot o things on the “no” list.

Everything was delicious. I regret nothing.

I will say, however, that on the other side of things I can feel the inflammation creeping back into my brain.

  • My bowels hurt, when they didn’t before.
  • My brain is foggy, when before it was fine.
  • My mood is down, my sleep less efficient.
  • Overall no bueno.

Time to return to the path.

2019 Theme: Seek

Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you: For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.  —Matthew 7:7-8, King James Version

 

Last year, I didn’t make any resolutions. What I did was continue some ongoing personal challenges, and set myself some bigger goals. Instead of concentrating a bunch of effort at the beginning of the year (I started rather lazily, actually) I ended up concentrating effort in the middle of the year (June/July), which built up into a very satisfying momentum. I ended up hitting all of my goals, and got healthier to boot.

This year, I decided to take that idea and expand on it a little bit. There are some activities that I want to try and some larger projects that I want to tackle, but I much like the low-and-slow approach to building a life.

Because there are some mindset issues I want to tackle, I’m trying out the idea of a theme for the year. It took a while to whittle down a bunch of ideas to one simple word, but it came to me this afternoon.

My theme for 2019 is SEEK.

The unspoken subtext is to seek what is, not what should be or what might be or what I wish to see. Seek what currently exists to find.

This means not jumping to conclusions. This means not assuming that I know things when I don’t. This means being curious. This means refraining from judgment, instead taking the time to explore and learn more. This means putting aside my constant need to intellectualize things and to just experience things. Intensely, inquisitively, but being present in the moment.

Here are some of the ways that I’ve already interpreted this word. In 2019, I intend to seek:

  • new opportunities (to add value, to make money, to meet people)
  • a new skill
  • contentment (with what currently exists, not focusing on what doesn’t exist yet)
  • ways to connect (with people, or to put two disparate ideas together)
  • the best in people
  • the Kingdom of God (to see the Spirit and the Truth in things)
  • to deepen and to grow (in my faith, in relationships, in my community)
  • the limits of my time and the boundaries I place on myself
  • solutions, rather than more reasons why

I don’t have many “what to dos” yet, but I like this list of “how to do it.” Reframing my conundrums (being too negative on myself and needing to pay more attention to people and relationships) in this way has made me think of new ways of approaching old problems in my life.

Not long after the word SEEK popped into my head this year, I went to get coffee. With “seek to connect with people” fresh on my mind, I decided to smile at a guy in line. He turned out to be a match from a dating site who I had “liked” a few days ago. We had a nice conversation (we’ll see where it goes)…but the triple-word score synchronicity is enough to tell me that I’m on the right track.

Like I said before, I’m not going to push it this year. Instead, I’m going to keep this idea at the forefront of my mind. It’s already gotten me thinking differently, and acting differently.

Moving back to more concrete goals, I’ve set myself three main challenges: do something social at least once a week, complete a larger project or trip each month, and start using the Flylady method to learn how to be a better housekeeper.

Some goals include: get good enough at art to submit my work for consideration to a coffee shop or gallery, go flyfishing, follow through on the backpacking trip that my dad and I have been talking about for years, set up an LLC for this blog, and learn how to bind a book.

The rest I’ll make up as we go along—what good would the year be if I planned everything now?

There’d be nothing to seek later!

The Reader: K-pop Style, Postmodernism, and Internet Inversion

Happy new year, y’all! I didn’t think 2018 was all that bad, but I’m looking forward to doing productive things and thinking grateful thoughts in 2019. This time of year, more than ever, has me thinking about future plans and how to coax the tiniest wisps of potential into crackling flames. Creativity is not a zero-sum game—so let’s create together, shall we?


» 15 k-dramas always worth rewatching—I can vouch for a few on this list.

» The internet is a house of mirrors.

» It’s always funny to me that Korean pop songs are often written by Americans and Europeans—the final product sounds so different than Western pop music. This article has little insights into why.

With Korea, we like to do things that push the boundaries, not super generic, because they’re very musical. Things like that translate a lot better than they do in America.

» He’s not the only fashionable one of the group, but certainly the most flashy. I enjoyed this interview with Taeyong of NCT 127’s stylists.

» Introducing the concept of the “Sexy Baby.”

» Poking holes in the narrative of “Interdisciplinary work will save us:”

I think the answer is that a distinction basic to my argument — the difference between good interdisciplinary work and bad — isn’t as widely recognized in literary studies as it should be. It is as if some members of the profession believe that, once one steps outside of one’s discipline, one also abandons the standards by which one’s work might be judged.

» Disney ruins just about everything, including copyright law. The public domain is finally getting bigger, after a 20 year Mickey-induced hiatus.

» Long read alert: Postmodern Religion and the Faith of Social Justice.

» Cait Johnstone has 21 thoughts on Julian Assange:

18. Anyone who participates in the ongoing smear campaign against Assange and Wikileaks is basically just saying “Extremely powerful people should be able to lie to us without any difficulty or opposition at all.”

» It’s only a matter of time before a drone takes down a passenger plane. (And then then drone fun is over.)

» Truth is Beauty posted a list of keywords to help figure out your style ID. I like this because it helps connect adjectives with the category—bringing the abstract down to a more practical level when you’re evaluating clothes and building outfits.

I’ll double-check this determination by asking myself, “Is this outfit refined (Classic)? Is this outfit comfortable (Natural)? Is this outfit sexy (Romantic)?”

Yes, yes, yes.

I may take an extra moment to rule out the other four essences by asking myself, “Is this outfit otherworldly (Ethereal)? Is it innocent (Ingenue)? Is it avant-garde (Dramatic)? Is it playful (Gamine)?”

 

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