Batfort

Style reveals substance

Author: childlike empress (page 9 of 67)

One of these things is not like the others

Looks like there was a little glitch with YouTube this morning.

 

But don’t worry, YouTube fixed it.

 

 

I wonder when they’re going to fix this one:

 

 

A week or so ago, I was looking for a clip from one of the Trump/Clinton debates. I usually try to watch political topics on MAGA-friendly channels, but I couldn’t find a single one in the search. It was all mainstream media.

Just like the media piled on those Catholic high school boys and then made fun of them for not being sufficiently sophisticated in dealing with the media, things like this expose the twisted mentality behind so much of what’s going on in our world today.*

“The algorithm” pulls stunts like this expecting we won’t notice, and then when we DO notice we’re deemed paranoid.

 


*Yes it’s a weird sentence structure, but it’s there for a reason. I blame the underlying pattern—and the architect of that pattern—more than I blame the people who are carrying out the pattern, who are usually useful idiots.

 

Appreciation Post: Gosford Park

I love the movie Gosford Park.

Let me tell you why.

  1. It’s a beautiful movie. I must confess to loving the “upstairs/downstairs” aesthetic, but this movie is just beyond. The clothes are gorgeous without being costumey. The camera meanders through scenes and lingers over little details. Light and shadow actually matter.
  2. The cast is brilliant. Charles Dance is an absolute treasure.
  3. It showcases the reality of upstairs/downstairs. While it seems like writer Julian Fellowes has dedicated his life to smearing the British aristocracy, it’s striking to me how many parallels exist between the “upstairs” folks in 1932 and the “director” folks in 2019. There’s a huge gulf between the people at the top who put their names on things and the people downstairs who do the work. In the words of Detective Stephen Fry: “I’m not interested in the servants; only people with a connection with the dead man.”
  4. It’s subtle. Nothing is explained—it is shown. (Until the murder is solved at the end, of course. Then we get a few explanations.) This is one of those movies that I can watch multiple times and find something new each time. Some people hate this type of movie. I am not those people.
  5. The accents are lovely. /Hi, I’m American
  6. It’s a good reminder of just how little justice is done on this earth. Much of the time, the authorities don’t really care. People can be counted on to act in their own best interests, and true selflessness is rare.
  7. Slow-burn melancholy romance is the best kind of romance.
  8. It’s delightfully planned out, but executed quite naturally. Like how there are not one, but two sets of mis-matched couples—where if they paired up and swapped spouses everyone would have been a whole lot happier. So much duality, but since it’s never explained, you have to work it all out for yourself.
  9. It’s not often that I find fictional characters that I identify with. Mary Maceachran is one of those characters.
  10. Helen Mirren’s speech on the gift of anticipation speaks to my soul.

What gift do you think a good servant has that separates them from the others? Its the gift of anticipation. And I’m a good servant; I’m better than good, I’m the best; I’m the perfect servant. I know when they’ll be hungry, and the food is ready. I know when they’ll be tired, and the bed is turned down. I know it before they know it themselves.

And that’s it, really. It’s a movie that requires attention from the viewer—a puzzle that extends beyond the murder mystery.

The Reader

Overhauling the “worlds” diet sounds like the worst kind of paternalism. The world has not asked the “experts” for help. 

Taffiny Elrod


» Describing veganism as a cult is not far off, apparently.

» It’s not retail that’s dying. It’s our imagination.

The details are what distinguish the real thing from cheap imitation. In an age of manufacturing ​en masse​ and copycat e-commerce, the feeling of true connection is one thing that can’t be knocked off. It comes from within your brand, from celebrating what makes you who you are. Retail’s not dead. You just have to remember to feel for your own pulse when you try to reimagine its future.

 

» According to data science, it’s time for war again.

» Ludwig Wittgenstein: Portrait of a Genius

» Dermatologists tell us to avoid the sun. But what if it’s a lack of sunshine that’s making us sick?

When I spoke with Weller, I made the mistake of characterizing this notion as counterintuitive. “It’s entirely intuitive,” he responded. “Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years. Until the industrial revolution, we lived outside. How did we get through the Neolithic Era without sunscreen? Actually, perfectly well. What’s counterintuitive is that dermatologists run around saying, ‘Don’t go outside, you might die.’”

» Requiem for a Dream: RIP Aaron Swartz

» Placing the USA on a collapse continuum 

» On Brexit, bureaucracy, and the deep state

 

 

 

What’s your self-love language?

If you’re on the internet these days, you’re probably aware that “self love” is a big thing right now. Somehow there’s this idea that if we all just loved ourselves more, the world would be a better place. The problem, in this school of thought, is that we’ve forgotten how to love ourselves and/or that we practice unlovely acts toward ourselves constantly.

The solution to this, from one camp—usually the Millennial-pink feministas—is self-care. Usually in the form of a spa day, or accepting your fat self for who she is, or some extra-special “me time” (if you know what I mean). Escapism of some form.

From another camp—the ‘words can be magic’ camp—the problem is self talk. We talk to ourselves negatively all the time, and that is the source of our problems. “If you talked to your friend like you talk to yourself,” says Mike Cernovich, “You wouldn’t have any friends.” Start talking to yourself like you would a friend, and things will change.

These are both good ways to deal with the constant barrage of negativity we get from the world, and from ourselves. We need rest, a little bit of escapism, and encouragement.

What does love look like?

There is a brand of Christian self-help focused on “love languages.” It’s this idea that people have 1 or 2 primary ways that the feel or receive love: words, actions, physical touch, gifts, or time. In order to strengthen your relationships with others in your life, you find out both yours and your partner’s love language, so that you can communicate in a way that “feels” right to the other person. (Google it if you want to learn more, there’s a quiz you can take.)

Knowing your own love language can also help you communicate your own needs in a way that’s actionable. With the greater self-knowledge, you can understand why sometimes you can easily brush it off when someone wrongs you, but other times it cuts to the bone.

Differing love languages are why sometimes the things that we do that would make us feel special (such as gifts) fall a little flat (if the other person’s primary love language is quality time).

So if we know that people have different preferences for receiving love, and we know that it’s important to love ourselves, perhaps we should consider loving ourselves in a way that resonates with us.

Use your top “love language” to practice self-care.

While I love the idea of changing the voice in my head from negative to positive, working on that never quite seems to change my ~internal narrative~. Maybe this is because “words of affirmation” is at the bottom of my love language list. To me, words are just words. They don’t mean anything unless you do something about it.

One of the things that I struggle with most is keeping my house tidy. I often feel “too busy” to do the daily chores that keep a house clean and sparkling—and then I feel bad about myself for having an untidy house. It’s a terrible feedback loop. Perhaps, for me, doing “acts of service” for myself—ie, doing things each day to keep my house clean—is a form of self care. And guess what? My #2 love language is “acts of service.”

So here’s what I’m thinking: by knowing ourselves, we can re-frame what self-care looks like so that it actually works for us and our lives.

This list is me brainstorming. Please add your thoughts in the comments!

Words of Affirmation

  • Re-framing our mental narrative
  • Daily affirmations
  • Positive quotes as artwork
  • Having a “theme” word for the day/week/month/year
  • Writing yourself letters
  • Journalling

Acts of Service

  • Re-framing daily chores as ways to love yourself
  • Thanking our past selves for doing work*
  • Working out regularly**
  • Maybe creating little rituals around things like prayer, bedtime, etc.
  • Making a point to front-load schedules and activities so you’re doing things that you want, rather than being reactive to deadlines (aka thoughtful planning)

Physical Touch

  • Dry brushing
  • Regular massage or pedicures or facials or sauna time
  • Investing in quality skincare products
  • Only purchasing clothes or sheets with fabrics that feel good to you
  • Hobbies that involve tactile sensations (knitting, rock climbing, fingerpainting)
  • Fix the drafts in your house and keep it at a good temperature

Quality Time

  • Meditation and/or journalling
  • Taking long walks in nature
  • Unplugging from social media for a day/weekend/week/whatever
  • Blocking out time for yourself in your calendar
  • Maybe something like yoga would be good, time to check-in with your mind and body

Receiving Gifts

  • Re-framing grocery shopping as a gift to yourself
  • Wrapping up your lunch like a present (cute bento box, anyone?)
  • Staying in the “present” moment 😉
  • Leaving yourself little surprises to find in the future, like wrapping up a trinket with your summer clothes when you store them for the season
  • Investing in cosmetics that feel like little gifts every time you use them (like luxury brand lipsticks)
  • Y’all, gifts are not my love language—suggestions?

 

I’m excited to try out this approach to self-care. My top 2 love languages are physical touch and acts of service, so I’ll be dry brushing (which feels sooooo good) and working on re-framing my daily household chores as an acts of service and love.

If you try this out, let me know how it goes for you!

Discussions of self-care often creep a little close to “self worship,” so I’ll end with this: it feels right that in order for you to love your neighbor as yourself, you must first love yourself. But let’s not forget that we love because God first loved us. The love that shines through us ultimately comes from Him, so the ultimate self-care is fixing your hope on Jesus Christ.

 


*A friend of mine washes dishes for her future self, and then, when she goes to use the clean dishes, thanks her past self.

**Obviously working out is one of the basics of self-care. Exercise is good for your body no matter your personal love language. I’m including it in “acts of service” because that’s where it fits best.

It’s gotta be exhausting

…the way these wannabe wizards run around casting spells all day.

They repeat these words over and over and OVER like their words will somehow shape reality.

The interesting thing is that, while I do believe that words have impact on reality (especially the reality in our own minds), ultimately words are just…well…words. Especially when you’re up against someone who is better at words than you are, and someone who has millions of prayers at his back.

The circus around Trump has birthed some really great compilation edits, so I really can’t be too mad.

Exposes these clowns for who they really are.

The Reader: New Year’s Health Craze Edition

Oh hey there

Last week, I quit coffee again. Not banishing it from my life, just recognizing that I should not be dependent on it. After the headache subsided, life continued as usual. It always strikes me how much things don’t change in your life, even after you make a change. Inertia, even applied to things like quitting coffee or going to the gym.

Anyway, I gave myself a reprieve this weekend because I was meeting a friend. Coffee for me and tea for her. That was this morning. Now, in the evening, I’m not in a great frame of mind. Darkness has settled over my brain. Neurons are not happy. The world is ending. I don’t know what it’s like for you, but for me—coffee depression is real.

If that’s not a warning sign, I don’t know what is.

 


 

» I had already quit drinking coffee regularly before I read this article, but it’s fascinating—and alarming—how much we neglect our sleep.

“People are stunned when I tell them the quarter-life of caffeine,” he says. “It’s 12 hours. So if you drink a coffee at noon, at midnight a quarter of that caffeine is still in your brain.”

“And what’s the zero life?” I wonder. “When does it leave your system?”

“Somewhere between 24 and 36 hours.”

» Oh, and don’t forget: our sedentary lifestyle is killing us. (If you can get past the tone of the article, it’s an overview of how exercise is an add-in to lives of leisure.)

» “The Weight I Carry” is an essay about being fat, and wishing to not be fat. This is why Rule #1 is Don’t Get Fat.

» Hmm, I sense a theme here…. Let’s switch things up a bit.

» Earth’s magnetic poles are shifting and scientists have no idea why

» Peter Thiel is teaching a class on Sovereignty and the Limits of Globalization and Technology

» Maker or Manager? Your schedule impacts the type of work that you do.

Each type of schedule works fine by itself. Problems arise when they meet. Since most powerful people operate on the manager’s schedule, they’re in a position to make everyone resonate at their frequency if they want to. But the smarter ones restrain themselves, if they know that some of the people working for them need long chunks of time to work in.

» Pot may not be as safe as they tell you. #tellyoursonthis

» No idea if this is a hoax or not, but it’s pretty cool: ‘Wounded rare tiger seeks human help’ at remote border post on Chinese-Russian frontier. (Also a reminder that Russia is freaking HUGE.)

» I’ve been reading about fasting and this book chapter is interesting: How and When to Be Your Own Doctor: Fasting. The author’s views are pretty extreme but I’m caught by the idea that fasting forces the body to burn through fat stores and deal with the trapped toxins within, instead of carrying them around forever.

» Louis C.K. is not OK

 

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.

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