Archive for July, 2010

Playlist: what’s on my iPod

July 8, 2010

Stocked up with new (and new-to-me) releases for summer listening:

Scissor Sisters, Night Work
Bettye LaVette, Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook
Mary Gauthier, The Foundling
Herbie Hancock, The Imagine Project
Natalie Merchant, Leave Your Sleep
Court Yard Hounds
Laurie Anderson, Homeland
The Black Eyed Peas, Elephunk
Nellie McKay, Obligatory Villagers
The Addams Family
Original Broadway Cast recording
Sid Selvidge, I Should Be Blue
Pat Metheny, Orchestrion
Various Artists, Shortbus
Devo, Something for Everybody
Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, Gurrumul


In this week’s New Yorker…

July 8, 2010

…my very favorite thing is the cover.


After that, I also enjoyed learning this little tidbit, courtesy of Hendrik Hertzberg’s freewheeling Talk of the Town piece inspired by the World Cup moment of mania:

“Soccer,” by the way, is not some Yankee neologism but a word of impeccably British origin. It owes its coinage to a domestic rival, rugby, whose proponents were fighting a losing battle over the football brand around the time that we were preoccupied with a more sanguinary civil war. Rugby’s nickname was (and is) rugger, and its players are called ruggers—a bit of upper-class twittery, as in “champers,” for champagne, or “preggers,” for enceinte. “Soccer” is rugger’s equivalent in Oxbridge-speak. The “soc” part is short for “assoc,” which is short for “association,” as in “association football,” the rules of which were codified in 1863 by the all-powerful Football Association, or FA—the FA being to the U.K. what the NFL, the NBA, and MLB are to the U.S.

Quote of the day: OMENS

July 8, 2010

OMENS

Always interpret every omen favorably.

— Angus Stocking

Photo diary: beach day

July 7, 2010

great day at Gunnison Beach with Allen, Andy, Randall, Erick, Mathew, Paul and Carlos (Omar and Brian left earlier than we did)

we took the Seastreak ferry from 35th Street, glimpsing lower Manhattan from the East River

Sandy Hook has the oldest lighthouse in the country

we didn't get on the ferry we wanted to come back on because it was already full

Allen had to cancel an appointment and threatened to whoop my ass (not!)

we took the bus to the Bird's Nest to while away an hour with margaritas

and sailed home as the sun went down

Quote of the day: VICTIM

July 6, 2010

VICTIM

The core issue of the Victim is whether it’s worth giving up your own sense of empowerment to avoid taking responsibility for your independence…The primary objective of the Victim archetype is to develop self-esteem and personal power…To help direct your responses to all of your experiences and relationships, say “I am committed to my own empowerment. What choice can I make here that will serve my own empowerment?” Name the problem or threat you need to overcome and the power that you need to possess in order to do so. Keep your eye on the truth that everything and everyone in your life is there by Contract to assist in your spiritual maturation.

— Caroline Myss, “The Four Archetypes of Survival: Child, Victim, Prostitute, Saboteur”