Thursday, June 26, 2008
Sarah's Selections
On why the Supreme Court should be part of your decision making when voting for President: "As you contemplate what you want the next Supreme Court to look like, ask yourself what happens when judges are sidelined—or when they're chosen for their inclination to sideline themselves. If we really want to restore the rule of law in America, then we'd better vote for a president who believes that we call it the Supreme Court for a reason."
Phenomenal article examining the media's coverage of first ladies: "The real, and more interesting, question here is how, specifically, the spouse is fair game: How should we cover the candidate’s wife—as a political figure unto herself, or as an appendage to the campaign? Do we cover her (or, to be fair, him—but Bill Clinton is a statistical outlier in every sense) only as she relates to her husband, or, instead, as she relates directly to us? And if the answer is “both,” then where does the one stop and the other begin?"
This is pretty lawyerly and a bit dorky but just the same Wermiel was my con law professor and it's a pretty big "OH SNAP!" to Scalia so I'm including it:
"I am reading the decision in Heller as fast as I can and will post my thoughts as soon as possible. The headline is that the court decided 5-4 (no mushy plurality here) that the D.C. handgun ban and the trigger-lock requirement violate the individual right to bear arms as protected under the Second Amendment. But I must first pass along this rather brilliant observation from professor Stephen Wermiel from American University, who wonders why none of the dissenters cautioned the majority that today's decision "will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed." (Boumediene, Scalia, J. dissenting.)"
Really great editorial on how Ivy League educations aren't all they're cracked up to be: "The world that produced John Kerry and George Bush is indeed giving us our next generation of leaders. The kid who’s loading up on AP courses junior year or editing three campus publications while double-majoring, the kid whom everyone wants at their college or law school but no one wants in their classroom, the kid who doesn’t have a minute to breathe, let alone think, will soon be running a corporation or an institution or a government. She will have many achievements but little experience, great success but no vision. The disadvantage of an elite education is that it’s given us the elite we have, and the elite we’re going to have."
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
I knew there was a reason I liked Tim McGraw
Apparently, he saw the guy he pulled up on stage rush the front and hit a woman. So, first he calls security and when they don't come fast enough him and his crew pulled him out of the audience. Then I guess they exchanged some words because he pulls back and almost clocks the guy. His crew then steps in and rushes the guy offstage. Freaking awesome.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Hillary's Return
I swear I'm on CNN with Hillary so much they should offer me a job. I'm towards the end of the clip. Don't mess my act of kindness when I let my someone else step in front of me in line.
Of course my kindness was rewarded. Hillary reached through to shake my hand and I told her we missed her. She thanked me and then exclaimed, "I love your daisies!" (In case you can't see in the video, I'm wearing daisy earrings in her favorite color of yellow of course!)
Could she be any more amazing? Doubtful.
Sunday, June 22, 2008
My Aunt Carolyn
Christmas in Kentucky
Originally uploaded by SarahorNicholas
Last Saturday, my great-aunt Carolyn passed away. She was 73, and her loss was and still is profoundly felt.
I flew to Kentucky the next day to be with my family as we all celebrated her life and mourned her passing. We told stories and distracted ourselves when the stories were too much. I learned things about her that I had never known, but mainly had my notions of her strength and compassion confirmed.
She was a lot of things to a lot of people but here is what she was to me.
Growing up, so the story has been told to me a hundred plus times, my Uncle Joe (as in "Uncle-Joe-and-Aunt-Carolyn," one word) would call up my mother and matter-of-factly inform her that she needed to drop me off at their house. They had not seen me in a couple of days and she could go off and do any old thing she wanted, as long as it involved dropping me off first.
I would spend hours to days being doted on and fed. Aunt Carolyn doing the former and Uncle Joe the later if memory serves. She would buy me Barbies, Barbie Vans, Barbie Salons, Barbie Pools. She would read me stories or play the piano while I sang along. I was taken along on anything from basic errands to church revivals. When they moved to Florida, going to see them became a trip in itself.
It would be almost 10 years before they had grandchildren of their own , and I gratefully filled in as a surrogate until Courtney and Zach showed up. Aunt Carolyn loved me unconditionally and I felt that love no matter how far away she was or how long it had been since we'd seen each other. Whenever I thought of all the people praying for me - praying me safe, praying me successful, praying me happy - Aunt Carolyn was the first person I always thought of.
She valued family above all else and undertook to preserve and protect it in her own way. To say she liked to take pictures is to say Shakespeare liked to write. She preserved the present with a dedication unmatched in our family - a sisyphean task in a group where the commandment to "Look this way and smile!" elicits only groans and complaints, if not full out sprints and dodges.
She also protected the past. She knew the story of every great-great grandparent, aunt, and even cousin. If that weren't enough, she could point them out in the antique photos she carefully kept and cataloged. When others in her generations couldn't tell a CPU from a JPEG, Aunt Carolyn scanned and labeled hundreds of family photos - understanding the power of new technology to safeguard these images.
I inherited my love of ancestry from her and I am so grateful that I spent several hours with her last summer learning the connections and stories that otherwise would have been lost. Of course, I know her knowledge went beyond those few hours but all I can do now is piece it together from notes on the back of pictures and more traditional sources, instead of hearing it from her.
Her love of family was not limited to her own blood and I learned at her funeral how many other lives she touched. She was always anxious to find a connection with everyone she met and if it wasn't there, she forged it herself.
I still giggle at the memory of her first interaction with Nicholas. She sat down beside him at a family gathering and asked him, "Now, Nicholas, where are your people from?" To say he was confused would be a vast understatement. He offered that his mother and father lived in Atlanta. She persisted, "Now, I know some Hollands over in Caldwell County. Are you kinned to them?" More befuddlement from Nicholas.
No matter. If his family weren't from her neck of the woods, she wanted to know where they were from. She continued to question him about his family and his life as if knowing Nicholas better was all that mattered. In that moment, I suppose it did.
I hope I inherited far more from this woman than a love of family history and the lyrics to "I Shall Not Be Moved" and "I'll Fly Away." I hope I can be as faithful as she was to the values of God, family, and compassion. I hope I can give passionately to my marriage and my career - racking up decade after decade to their service. Above all else, I hope I can become worthy of my Aunt Carolyn and all those prayers she sent my way over the years.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Day Five: Why are we doing this again?
So, he made black bean cakes with rice and avocados. It was really delicious and I would have felt yucky and stuffed if we'd eaten pizza. We're going to a barbecue and dinner party this week so caving is inevitable but we at least can say we made it an entire work week.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Day Four: Nana to the rescue
Luckily, Nicholas found these little beauties. That's right - no diary, no eggs, no refined sugar, no gluten cookies! And miracle upon miracle, they actually taste good. They are going a long way towards not making me feel deprived. I'm still just taking it day by day, but I'm feeling hopeful.
Sarah's Selections
Favorite part: Where the housework ratio is two to one, the wife-to-husband ratio for child care in the United States is close to five to one. As with housework, that ratio does not change as much as you would expect when you account for who brings home a paycheck. In a family where Mom stays home and Dad goes to work, she spends 15 hours a week caring for children and he spends 2. In families in which both parents are wage earners, Mom’s average drops to 11 and Dad’s goes up to 3. Lest you think this is at least a significant improvement over our parents and grandparents, not so fast. “The most striking part,” Blair says, “is that none of this is all that different, in terms of ratio, from 90 years ago.”
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Day Two: The Veggies Arrive
Bull Run Farm CSA
Originally uploaded by SarahorNicholas
So, today we picked up our first harvest share from Bull Run Farm! It was so exciting to wait in line and pick out all our veggies.
I was a little worried at first because one of my coworkers told me she had picked up veggies from the same farm and that they had been "really dirty." Luckily, I quickly remembered that vegetables grow in the ground, not in the produce aisle. ;)
We got scallions, pac choi, greens, tat soi, basil, oregano, garlic skape, sorrel, chives, and our egg share. Nicholas made a delicious stir fry of the pac choi and garlic skape for dinner.
I'm glad the veggies have arrived but I'm not sure how much easier they are going to make the 21-day cleanse. The second day was no easier. I'm still hungry. I still have a headache.
And I really, really want a cookie.
Dude, I'm on The Daily Show!!!
The Daily Show
Originally uploaded by SarahorNicholas
I don't know why this is so much cooler than CNN or Fox News, but it totally is!
Monday, June 09, 2008
Oprah's 21-Day Cleanse: Day One
Oprah says, "Jump!" I say, "How high?"
Oprah says, "No alcohol, caffeine, sugar, gluten, or animal product." I say, "Sure! I can do anything for 21 days, right!?!"
I might have been a tad hasty.
The day started out fine. I had buckwheat flakes with soy milk and banana. It was yummy and filling - not that much different from regular cereal. However, as the day progressed, I got hungrier and started to go into what I'm pretty sure is sugar withdrawal. I ate lots of trail mix, had a salad for lunch, and yummy tortilla soup for dinner, but the low grade hunger/headache persisted.
Oprah says the goal is progress not perfection.
So, yeah, we'll see.
Sarah's Selections
You can never accuse Bill Maher of being boring.
The first time I burst into tears about Hillary.
The second time: "The next woman candidate will have a better shot at the White House because of the tireless efforts of Hillary Rodham Clinton."
Most accurate description ever of complimenting women on their clothes. I always compliment perfect strangers (it was a New Year's Resolution from a couple years ago that I just kept doing) and this is totally true.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Hillary
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Gossip?
Peruse the cover to your left. It promises to give you the juicy details about the birth of Angie and Brad's new twins. Only one problem – they haven’t been born yet!!! This can only mean that the article is a complete and total work of fiction.
I’ve always stuck up for celebrities when they complain about the gossip machine and I don’t read these magazines or perezhilton.com or whatever. But when a celebrity said, “They make things up. There is not an ounce of truth to these stories.” I always thought, “Oh come on, there’s got be something there or elsewhere would it come from.”
But obviously I was wrong and the stories are coming from out the editor’s asses. I mean there was NO delivery. Angelina is still walking around pregnant as the day as long.
Something tells me this isn’t quite what the Supreme Court had in mind with the public figures exception.
Tuesday, June 03, 2008
Sarah's Selections
Beyond infuriating.
Great article on MSNBC's obama bias. Favorite quote: "Rather, by giving "the personal" precedence over "the political," the network was using Hillary Hatred to fuel its coverage in a similar fashion to how Fox News uses Democrat Hatred to excite its viewers."
Article from last week's New York Times Travel section on how awesome Tunisia is!
Just when you thought the human race was moving forward...
Now, don't get me wrong. I love Sex and the City but I think this article makes a very valid point about portrayal of women writers in the media. Favorite part:"What provokes such fury, over Carrie Bradshaw, and -- for a flash -- over Gould (barring a book deal and TV show that will turn her meanderings into cultural furniture) is that in a media landscape in which there are a severely limited number of spaces for women's writing voices, the ones that get tapped become necessarily, and deeply inaccurately, emblematic -- of their gender, their generation, their profession."
Sunday, June 01, 2008
This weekend
Shenandoah National Park
Originally uploaded by SarahorNicholas
Nicholas and I have had a really wonderful weekend.
Mine started off with a bang. My friend Molly and I went to see Sex and the City: The Movie and it was AWESOME! My biggest complaint is I wanted more. I could have sat through 8 hours with a movie about each character.
On Saturday, we had lazy day. I slept in and we went out for a nice brunch at Open City. Then, we went to see the new Indiana Jones movie, which was fun. Not groundbreaking or earth-shattering, but fun.
Today, we woke up and went out to Shenandoah National Park. We brought Maggie and she did great on the almost 6 mile hike - although she is zonked out on the floor at the moment. We hiked to a big waterfall and ate a picnic lunch. It was a bit of a haul towards the end but we made it!