Thursday, August 31, 2023

Fossil Daddy

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fossil-daddy-lgbtqa-paleontologist_n_64073d31e4b029d8701870bd

https://youtu.be/Jwn4R8WZHt4

Caesar Crossing the Rubicon, Illuminated medieval manuscripts at the British Library, Royal 18 E V f. 330v; Source: British Library Website, PD-Old-100.

 Crossing The Rubicon

The way we are living, timorous or bold, will have been our life. Seamus Heaney

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We take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude.

Cynthia Ozick

“What we remember from childhood we remember forever - permanent ghosts, stamped, inked, imprinted, eternally seen.”
Cynthia Ozick

“If we had to say what writing is, we would have to define it essentially as an act of courage.”
Cynthia Ozick

“To imagine the unimaginable is the highest use of the imagination”
Cynthia Ozick

“No, no, sometimes a person feels to be alone."
"If you're alone too much," Persky said, "you think too much."
"Without a life," Rosa answered, "a person lives where they can. If all they got is thoughts, that's where they live."
"You ain't got a life?"
"Thieves took it.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl

“A writer is dreamed and transfigured into being by spells, wishes, goldfish, silhouettes of trees, boxes of fairy tales dropped in the mud, uncles' and cousins' books, tablets and capsules and powders...and then one day you find yourself leaning here, writing on that round glass table salvaged from the Park View Pharmacy--writing this, an impossibility, a summary of who you came to be where you are now, and where, God knows, is that?”
Cynthia Ozick

“It seemed to Rosa Lublin that the whole peninsula of Florida was weighted down with regret. Everyone had left behind a real life. Here they had nothing. They were all scarecrows, blown about under the murdering sunball with empty ribcages.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl
 
“I read in desperate snatches in the interstices of the Quotidian, and dream of finding three uninterrupted quiet hours to think, moon, mentally maunder, and, above all, write. I am pursued by an anti-Muse; her name is Life. Her homely multisyllabic surname is often left unenunciated, but to certain initiates it may be whispered: Exigency.”
Cynthia Ozick

“The imagination is a species of knowledge, knowledge that can take the form of discovery.”
Cynthia Ozick

“I write in terror...I have to talk myself into bravery with every sentence, sometimes every syllable.”
Cynthia Ozick

“Consider also the special word they used: survivor. Something new. As long as they didn't have to say human being. It used to be refugee, but by now there was no such creature, no more refugees, only survivors. A name like a number -- counted apart from the ordinary swarm. Blue digits on the arm, what difference? They don't call you a woman anyhow. Survivor. Even when your bones get melted into the grains of the earth, still they'll forget human being. Survivor and survivor and survivor; always and always. Who made up these words, parasites on the throat of suffering!”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl

“Cultivation, old civilization, beauty, history! Surprising turnings of streets, shapes of venerable cottages, lovely aged eaves, unexpected and gossamer turrets, steeples, the gloss, the antiquity! Gardens. Whoever speaks of Paris has never seen Warsaw. [...] Whoever yearns for an aristocratic sensibility, let him switch on the great light of Warsaw.”
Cynthia Ozick

“Admittedly, there is always a golden age, the one not ours, the one that once was or will someday be. One's own time is never satisfactory, except to the very rich or the smugly oblivious.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Din In The Head

“James (like the far more visceral Conrad) seizes your life. ”
Cynthia Ozick, Trust

“People who mistake facts for ideas are incomplete thinkers; they are gossips”
Cynthia Ozick

“It had always been my habit-- privately I felt it to be an ecstasy-- to enter, as into a mysterious vault, any public library. I was drawn to books that had been read before, novels that girls like myself had cradled and cherished. In my mind-- I suppose in my isolation-- I seized on all those previous readers, and everyone who would read after me, as phantom companions and secret friends.”
Cynthia Ozick, Heir To The Glimmering World
 
“If a novel's salient aim is virtue, I want to throw it against the wall.”
Cynthia Ozick

“I work from a different theory. For everything there's a bad way of describing, also a good way. You pick the good way, you get along better.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl

“The novella will be called, I think, “The Messiah of Stockholm.” It takes place in Stockholm. I’d better say no more, or the Muse will wipe it out.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Messiah of Stockholm

“This is what travelers discover: that when you sever the links of normality and its claims, when you break off from the quotidian, it is the teapots that truly shock.”
Cynthia Ozick

“Because she fears the past she distrusts the future — it, too, will turn into the past.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl

“Lie, illusion, deception, she said--was that it truly, the universal language we all speak?”
Cynthia Ozick, Dictation: A Quartet

“The Germans are sentimental. Their word Heimweh. The English say homesick; the same in plain Swedish. Hemsjuk. Leave it to the Germans to pull out, like some endless elastic belt of horrible sweetness, all that molasses woe.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Messiah of Stockholm

“...this is very nice, cozy. You got a nice cozy place, Lublin."

"Cramped," Rosa said.

"I work from a different theory. For everything, there's a bad way of describing, also a good way. You pick the good way, you go along better."

"I don't like to give myself lies," Rosa said.

"Life is short, we all got to lie.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl

“She thought: How hard it is to change one’s life. And again she thought: How terrifyingly simple to change the lives of others.”
Cynthia Ozick, Foreign Bodies

“The ground was scorched, the streets teemed with refugees, and these Americans were playing at fleeing! As if they had something to resent, to despise, to scorn, to run away from! As if they weren't the lords of the earth.”
Cynthia Ozick, Foreign Bodies

“By replacing history with fantasy, the Palestinians have invented a society unlike any other, where hatred trumps bread. They have reared children unlike any other children, removed from ordinary norms and behaviors.”
Cynthia Ozick

“You can never tell how genes ricochet.”
Cynthia Ozick, Foreign Bodies

“Brilliant students make good aides.”
Cynthia Ozick, The Puttermesser Papers

One must avoid ambition in order to write. Otherwise something else is the goal: some kind of power beyond the power of language. And the power of language, it seems to me, is the only kind of power a #writer is entitled to. CYNTHIA OZICK

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Strange Society Priority

https://www.thedailybeast.com/book-banners-are-now-trying-to-close-public-libraries

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/08/31/gulf-uae-ozempic-weight-loss/

Julian Hatton Paintings, Wow!

 Mystic,  2022, 60 x 60 inches, oil on canvas - painting by Julian Hattonhttp://www.julianhatton.com/

http://www.julianhatton.com/pdfs/JulianHatton-catalog-2023-3-31-23-web.pdf

Little Red Riding Hood

 

Bull Riding Shotgun in the City

video Norfolk, Nebraska

Rearview

They sped by and my eye caught the tail plate. I know that number, I thought but the rear view mirror had a Puerto Rican Flag hanging. I watched them. They turned around with speed and authority in the dirt parking lot and came back. I smiled and waved because it was my friends the undercover guys. Nice decoy, I thought, the haircuts and driving style gave you away!

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

“What do we have from the past? Art and thought. That's what lasts. That's what continues to feed people and give them an idea of something better…” Susan Sontag

Bella

 May be an image of mastiff and bull terrier

Pumpkin & Marshmallow Sibling Felines

 at Dog Orphans of Douglas Massachusetts https://www.facebook.com/humanedogs/

Rookie

It was Hamill's first day on the job on the Hasternack Police Force. His blue uniform pressed and black shoes all polished. Haircut fresh. He kissed his teary mother and wife goodbye and drove his black Ford truck to headquarters.

Hamill would be partnered with Ducan, the more experienced cop five years older than him.

Not only is it a blue moon it's a holiday weekend, should be a busy night, Ducan said. They drove around the city. Calls started coming in. One call caught their ears.

Rooster heard crowing on 90 Wester Street. Inside the apartment.

They knocked on the door and a short round woman answered.

My name is officer Ducan and this is officer Hamill. Can we come in?

Hamill could see over the woman's shoulder, blood everywhere.

A muscular shirtless husband stepped out from the kitchen with a cleaver.

My husband, he doesn't speak much English, the woman said patting her sweaty hands on her bright flowered dress. We were having ceremony, she said.

The blood was spattered all over the kitchen.

Ma'am the call said a rooster lives here.

We were making dinner, she said.

You can't keep a live farm animal in the city apartment, it's against the department of health regulations.

He is not live.

Officer Ducan saw feathers everywhere in the bathroom and kitchen. The rooster's head lay on the kitchen cutting board. The decapitated bird body was in the sink.

A person is a fool to become a writer. His only compensation is absolute freedom. He has no master except his own soul, and that, I am sure, is why he does it. Roald Dahl

Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious. George Orwell, 1984

If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.

 George Orwell

The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history. George Orwell

In a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act. George Orwell

language is cluttered up

To write or even speak English is not a science but an art. There are no reliable words. Whoever writes English is involved in a struggle that never lets up even for a sentence. He is struggling against vagueness, against obscurity, against the lure of the decorative adjective, against the encroachment of Latin and Greek, and, above all, against the worn-out phrases and dead metaphors with which the language is cluttered up.

GEORGE ORWELL

Casey Pool 41 Prospect St, Milford, MA 01757

 Photo

5 Million Bees

 story

Phillippe Petit!

 https://i.pinimg.com/originals/99/06/e3/9906e33a7df83c6c0010709b5dab1695.jpg*

“If the writer is a sorcerer, it is because writing is a becoming.” —Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari (Image: Remedios Varo’s Creación de las aves (Creation of the Birds), 1957)

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Colette

  colette1

https://bigother.com/2019/01/28/colette-on-writing-passion-solitude-despair-and-more/

Art, Birthday, Nonfiction, Writing Anton Chekhov on Life, Love, Death, Writing, Happiness, and More

“I try to catch every sentence, every word you and I say, and quickly lock all these sentences and words away in my literary storehouse because they might come in handy.” “It's not a matter of old or new forms; a person writes without thinking about any forms, he writes because it flows freely from his soul.”

https://bigother.com/2019/01/29/anton-chekhov-on-life-love-death-writing-happiness-and-more/

Barbara Brown Taylor Quotes

“To make bread or love, to dig in the earth, to feed an animal or cook for a stranger—these activities require no extensive commentary, no lucid theology. All they require is someone willing to bend, reach, chop, stir. Most of these tasks are so full of pleasure that there is no need to complicate things by calling them holy. And yet these are the same activities that change lives, sometimes all at once and sometimes more slowly, the way dripping water changes stone. In a world where faith is often construed as a way of thinking, bodily practices remind the willing that faith is a way of life.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“The problem is, many of the people in need of saving are in churches, and at least part of what they need saving from is the idea that God sees the world the same way they do.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“People encounter God under shady oak trees, on riverbanks, at the tops of mountains, and in long stretches of barren wilderness. God shows up in whirlwinds, starry skies, burning bushes, and perfect strangers. When people want to know more about God, the son of God tells them to pay attention to the lilies of the field and the birds of the air, to women kneading bread and workers lining up for their pay. Whoever wrote this stuff believed that people could learn as much about the ways of God from paying attention to the world as they could from paying attention to scripture. What is true is what happens, even if what happens is not always right. People can learn as much about the ways of God from business deals gone bad or sparrows falling to the ground as they can from reciting the books of the Bible in order. They can learn as much from a love affair or a wildflower as they can from knowing the Ten Commandments by heart.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“Wisdom is not gained by knowing what is right. Wisdom is gained by practicing what is right, and noticing what happens when that practice succeeds and when it fails.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“Every human interaction offers you the chance to make things better or to make things worse.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“No one longs for what he or she already has, and yet the accumulated insight of those wise about the spiritual life suggests that the reason so many of us cannot see the red X that marks the spot is because we are standing on it. The treasure we seek requires no lengthy expedition, no expensive equipment, no superior aptitude or special company. All we lack is the willingness to imagine that we already have everything we need. The only thing missing is our consent to be where we are.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“I have learned things in the dark that I could never have learned in the light, things that have saved my life over and over again, so that there is really only one logical conclusion. I need darkness as much as I need light.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Learning to Walk in the Dark

“As a general rule, I would say that human beings never behave more badly toward one another than when they believe they are protecting God.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“...new life starts in the dark. Whether it is a seed in the ground, a baby in the womb, or Jesus in the tomb, it starts in the dark.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Learning to Walk in the Dark

“Whoever you are, you are human. Wherever you are, you live in the world, which is just waiting for you to notice the holiness in it.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“What is saving my life now is the conviction that there is no spiritual treasure to be found apart from the bodily experiences of human life on earth. My life depends on engaging the most ordinary physical activities with the most exquisite attention I can give them. My life depends on ignoring all touted distinctions between the secular and the sacred, the physical and the spiritual, the body and the soul. What is saving my life now is becoming more fully human, trusting that there is no way to God apart from real life in the real world.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“According to the Talmud, every blade of grass has its own angel bending over it, whispering, “Grow, grow.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“I know plenty of people who find God most reliably in books, in buildings, and even in other people. I have found God in all of these places too, but the most reliable meeting place for me has always been creation. Since I first became aware of the Divine Presence in that lit-up field in Kansas, I have known where to go when my own flame is guttering. To lie with my back flat on the fragrant ground is to receive a transfusion of the same power that makes the green blade rise. To remember that I am dirt and to dirt I shall return is to be given my life back again, if only for one present moment at a time. Where other people see acreage, timber, soil, and river frontage, I see God's body, or at least as much of it as I am able to see. In the only wisdom I have at my disposal, the Creator does not live apart from creation but spans and suffuses it. When I take a breath, God's Holy Spirit enters me. When a cricket speaks to me, I talk back. Like everything else on earth, I am an embodied soul, who leaps to life when I recognize my kin. If this makes me a pagan, then I am a grateful one.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“If churches saw their mission in the same way, there is no telling what might happen. What if people were invited to come tell what they already know of God instead of to learn what they are supposed to believe? What if they were blessed for what they are doing in the world instead of chastened for not doing more at church? What if church felt more like a way station than a destination? What if the church’s job were to move people out the door instead of trying to keep them in, by convincing them that God needed them more in the world than in the church?”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“What I noticed at Grace-Calvary is the same thing I notice whenever people aim to solve their conflicts with one another by turning to the Bible: defending the dried ink marks on the page becomes more vital than defending the neighbor. As a general rule, I would say that human beings never behave more badly toward one another than when they believe they are protecting God. In the words of Arun Gandhi, grandson of Mohandas, 'People of the Book risk putting the book above people.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“...salvation is not something that happens only at the end of a person's life. Salvation happens every time someone with a key uses it to open a door he could lock instead.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“I have learned to prize holy ignorance more highly than religious certainty and to seek companions who have arrived at the same place. We are a motley crew, distinguished not only by our inability to explain ourselves to those who are more certain of their beliefs than we are but in many cases by our distance from the centers of our faith communities as well.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“The only real difference between Anxiety and Excitement was my willingness to let go of Fear.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Learning to Walk in the Dark: Because Sometimes God Shows Up at Night

“With so much effort being poured into church growth, so much press being given to the benefits of faith, and so much flexing of religious muscle in the public square, the poor in spirit have no one but Jesus to call them blessed anymore.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“There comes a time when it is vitally important for your spiritual health to drop your clothes, look in the mirror, and say, ‘Here I am. This is the body-like-no-other that my life has shaped. I live here. This is my soul’s address”
Barbara Brown Taylor

“If I had to name my disability, I would call it an unwillingness to fall. On the one hand, this is perfectly normal. I do not know anyone who likes to fall. But, on the other hand, this reluctance signals mistrust of the central truth of the Christian gospel: life springs from death, not only at the last but also in the many little deaths along the way. When everything you count on for protection has failed, the Divine Presence does not fail. The hands are still there – not promising to rescue, not promising to intervene – promising only to hold you no matter how far you fall. Ironically, those who try hardest not to fall learn this later than those who topple more easily. The ones who find their lives are the losers, while the winners come in last.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“I am not in charge of this House, and never will be. I have no say about who is in and who is out. I do not get to make the rules. Like Job, I was nowhere when God laid the foundations of the earth. I cannot bind the chains of the Pleiades or loose the cords of Orion. I do not even know when the mountain goats give birth, much less the ordinances of the heavens. I am a guest here, charged with serving other guests—even those who present themselves as my enemies. I am allowed to resist them, but as long as I trust in one God who made us all, I cannot act as if they are no kin to me. There is only one House. Human beings will either learn to live in it together or we will not survive to hear its sigh of relief when our numbered days are done.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“once I gave up the hunt for villains, I had little recourse but to take responsibility for my choices ...Needless to say, this is far less satisfying that nailing villains. It also turned out to be more healing in the end.”
Barbara Brown Taylor

“I know that the Bible is a special kind of book, but I find it as seductive as any other. If I am not careful, I can begin to mistake the words on the page for the realities they describe. I can begin to love the dried ink marks on the page more than I love the encounters that gave rise to them. If I am not careful, I can decide that I am really much happier reading my Bible than I am entering into what God is doing in my own time and place, since shutting the book to go outside will involve the very great risk of taking part in stories that are still taking shape. Neither I nor anyone else knows how these stories will turn out, since at this point they involve more blood than ink. The whole purpose of the Bible, it seems to me, is to convince people to set the written word down in order to become living words in the world for God's sake. For me, this willing conversion of ink back to blood is the full substance of faith.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“In a quip that makes the rounds, Jesus preached the coming of the kingdom, but it was the church that came. All these years later, the way many of us are doing church is broken and we know it, even if we do not know what to do about it. We proclaim the priesthood of all believers while we continue with hierarchical clergy, liturgy, and architecture. We follow a Lord who challenged the religious and political institutions of his time while we fund and defend our own. We speak and sing of divine transformation while we do everything in our power to maintain our equilibrium. If redeeming things continue to happen to us in spite of these deep contradictions in our life together, then I think that is because God is faithful even when we are not.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“All I am saying is that anyone can do this. Anyone can ask and anyone can bless, whether anyone has authorized you to do it or not. All I am saying is that the world needs you to do this, because there is a real shortage of people willing to kneel wherever they are and recognize the holiness holding its sometimes bony, often tender, always life-giving hand above their heads. That we are able to bless one another at all is evidence that we have been blessed, whether we can remember when or not. That we are willing to bless one another is miracle enough to stagger the very stars.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

“The effort to untangle the human words from the divine seems not only futile to me but also unnecessary, since God works with what is. God uses whatever is usable in a life, both to speak and to act, and those who insist on fireworks in the sky may miss the electricity that sparks the human heart.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“Although I never found a church where I felt completely at home again, I made a new home in the world. I renewed my membership in the priesthood of all believers, who may not have as much power as we would like, but whose consolation prize is the freedome to meet God after work, well away from all centers of religious command, wherever God shows up.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“The world for which you have been so carefully prepared is being taken away from you,' he said, 'by the grace of God.' (Walter Brueggemann)”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

“I had done everything I knew how to do to draw as near to the heart of God as I could, only to find myself out of gas on a lonely road, filled with bitterness & self-pity. To suppose that I had ended up in such a place by the grace of God required a significant leap of faith. If I could open my hands, then all that fell from them might flower on the way down. If I could let myself fall, then I too might land in a fertile place.”
Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith

Now and then it’s good to pause in our pursuit of happiness and just be happy. Guillaume Apollinaire

To make bread or love, to dig in the earth, to feed an animal or cook for a stranger—these activities require no extensive commentary, no lucid theology. All they require is someone willing to bend, reach, chop, stir. Most of these tasks are so full of pleasure that there is no need to complicate things by calling them holy. And yet these are the same activities that change lives, sometimes all at once and sometimes more slowly, the way dripping water changes stone. In a world where faith is often construed as a way of thinking, bodily practices remind the willing that faith is a way of life.

Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

I swam outside on top of a wooded hill tonight. It was glorious and cold!

Writing is a lonely occupation at best

Writing is a lonely occupation at best. Of course there are stimulating and even happy associations with friends and colleagues, but during the actual work of creation the writer cuts himself off from all others and confronts his subject alone. He moves into a realm where he has never been before — perhaps where no one has ever been. It is a lonely place, even a little frightening.

RACHEL CARSON

Mental Health for Ukraine

 https://reasonstobecheerful.world/mental-health-telehealth-ukraine-war/

What Are Monkey Dishes?

The foodservice industry includes countless terms and phrases that most people might not be familiar with. One such term is "monkey dish." Based on the name, you might think that monkey dishes are plates that are shaped like or even intended to serve monkeys. In truth, the concept of a monkey dish is much simpler, and you have almost certainly used one before without even realizing it. Below, we’ll investigate what a monkey dish is, how they earned their name, and what differentiates them from ramekins.

What Is a Monkey Dish?

A monkey dish, also called a monkey bowl or monkey plate, is a small bowl with a flat bottom that serves a variety of uses. Monkey dishes can be found in many colors and styles and are used in most restaurants, diners, cafeterias, and bistros across the globe.

What Is a Monkey Dish Used For?

Due to their small size and simple design, monkey dishes are perfect for a number of different uses. Whether you're using them in the kitchen or as part of a table setting, these versatile dishes are a valuable addition to any collection of dinnerware. Below, we've listed some of their most common uses:

  • Serving sauces and condiments that accompany a main dish
  • Serving smaller dishes and appetizers like applesauce and hummus
  • Holding smaller ingredients or toppings, such as fruits, nuts, and other small foods

Why Is It Called a Monkey Dish?

Although monkey dishes can be found in restaurants around the world, it’s difficult to determine exactly how they got their name. There isn't a conclusive answer as to where the name comes from, but there are many interesting stories regarding its origin. Here are three of the most popular theories that attempt to explain how monkey dishes got their unique name:

  1. Kept by street performers: Some say that the name came from organ grinders in the mid-1800s. Organ grinders were street performers that would play music using a barrel organ. It was common for organ grinders to have pet monkeys that would dance to the music and collect tips from people passing by. Some people theorize that these dishes are called "monkey dishes" because they resemble the bowls that the monkeys would use to collect money.
  2. Made from monkey bones: Another theory states that monkey dishes were originally made from the skulls of monkeys, which gave the pieces their name.
  3. Used to test for poison: Hundreds of years ago, kings and queens would have monkeys test their food to see if it was poisoned. A piece of each food would be given to the monkey in a small bowl to taste test, hence the name.

Monkey Dish vs. Ramekin

Monkey dishes are similar to ramekins, but there are a few key distinctions. Here are some of the differences between monkey dishes:

  • Depth: Typically, ramekins have higher walls on the side and are deeper than monkey dishes.
  • Width: In most cases, monkey dishes feature a design that is flatter and wider than ramekins.
  • Oven Use: Ramekins can be used in the oven, but monkey dishes are meant only for serving food.

Despite the mystery surrounding their origins and the fact that many people use them without knowing, monkey dishes have grown to become a useful and popular piece of dinnerware. Whether you’re serving small appetizers, distributing sauces, or organizing condiments in an eye-catching manner, monkey dishes are an essential product to have on hand.

Posted in: Product Spotlights|By Richard Traylor

I should reread this every time I have a social event

 Brenda Ueland Tell me More

It is when people really listen to us, with quiet fascinated attention, that the little fountain begins to work again, to accelerate in the most surprising way.
I discovered all this about three years ago, and truly it made a revolutionary change in my life. Before that, when I went to a party I would think anxiously,“Now try hard. Be lively. Say bright things. Talk. Don’t let down.” And when tired, I would have to drink a lot of coffee to keep this up.
Now before going to a party I just tell myself to listen with affection to anyone who talks to me, to be in their shoes when they talk; to try to know them without my mind pressing against theirs, or arguing, or changing the subject. No. My attitude is, “Tell me more. This person is showing me his soul. It is a little dry and meager and full of grinding talk just now, but presently he will begin to think, not just automatically to talk. He will show his true self. Then he will be wonderfully alive.”
Sometimes, of course, I cannot listen as well as others. But when I have this listening power, people crowd around and their heads keep turning to me as though irresistibly pulled. It is not because people are conceited and want to show off that they are drawn to me, the listener. It is because by listening I have started up their creative fountain. I do them good.
Now why does it do them good? I have a kind of mystical notion about this. I think it is only by expressing all that is inside that purer and purer streams come. It is so in writing. You are taught in school to put down on paper only the bright things. Wrong. Pour out the dull things on paper too — you can tear them up afterward — for only then do the bright ones come. If you hold back the dull things, you are certain to hold back what is clear and beautiful and true and lively. So it is with people who have not been listened to in the right way — with affection and a kind of jolly excitement. Their creative fountain has been blocked. Only superficial talk comes out — what is prissy or gushing or merely nervous. No one has called out of them, by wonderful
listening, what is true and alive.
source http://physics.uwyo.edu/~ddale/research/REU/2016/Tell_Me_More.pdf

Poland investigates train mishaps for possible Russian connection By Loveday Morris

 https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/08/28/poland-hacking-trains-russia/?itid=cp_CP-4_2

A face without freckles is like a night without stars

Netherlands red head festival

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66632465

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Why Do So Many Men Avoid Doctor’s Visits?

Experts share tips for getting over the resistance.

Last year, my husband Tom received this memorable text from his father: “FYI, getting brain surgery tomorrow. Don’t worry. I’ll be fine.”

This was the first we had heard about his brain surgery. When Tom phoned his dad and asked why he wasn’t told sooner, my father-in-law had a clear explanation: He’d delayed his visit for so long that, when he finally saw a doctor, his symptoms had progressed and he was immediately booked for the procedure. (Happily, he fully recovered and is fine.)

It appears that this is a shared trait among the men in my family. Over the summer, my husband pretended an abscess on his back didn’t exist until it resembled a dolphin’s dorsal fin, and he ended up in Urgent Care, still protesting that it was probably a bug bite.

Many men, of course, are more diligent about regularly seeing a doctor than those in my family. But a 2022 Cleveland Clinic survey of 1,000 U.S. men found that 55 percent said they don’t get regular health screenings. Men of color were even less likely to see a doctor regularly — a full 63 percent dodged routine visits.

Another 2022 poll, conducted by Orlando Health, found that a third of the men surveyed thought they didn’t need checkups, while 65 percent believed they could skip seeing a doctor because they’re “naturally healthier than most people.” (This prompted Dr. Thomas Kelley, an Orlando Health family medicine specialist, to point out that it is “statistically impossible for the majority of men to be healthier than the majority of men.”)

Women, on the other hand, are significantly more likely to make an office-based visit, according to 2018 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It’s well documented that, compared to women, men are much worse at preventive care,” said Petar Bajic, a urologist at the Cleveland Clinic.

Some men shy away from seeing doctors because they fear receiving bad news, said Dr. Joseph Alukal, urologist and director of Men’s Health at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia. Some men might also “fall into the trap of just sticking our head in the sand,” he said. My father-in-law, for instance, ignored his blurred vision and headaches for months.

But avoidance can make the anxiety and fear worse, said Nora Brier, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. And if a patient waits until symptoms are severe, “it does tend to propagate a stigma that they should be scared of the doctor’s office,” Dr. Bajic said.

There are other reasons men might delay checkups, Dr. Alukal explained. In his experience, health issues are “very rarely discussed with other men.” And many young men, he added, aren’t conditioned to make regular doctor visits the way that young women are encouraged to schedule annual OB-GYN appointments.

Diana Sanchez, a professor of psychology and department chair at Rutgers University, has found in her research over the years that men who have more traditional beliefs about masculinity are less likely to use preventive care or seek medical treatment for injuries and infections — because they tie this resistance to bravery and self-sufficiency.

As those men get older, however, this reluctance to get routine medical care can have serious consequences, Dr. Alukal said. Men die younger than women, according to data from the C.D.C., and some of the leading causes of death — like heart disease and diabetes — are conditions that doctors screen for during routine checkups.

If you are a doctor-resistant man, like my husband and his dad, here are a few ideas that may help you inch closer to making that appointment.

Even if you’re willing to visit a doctor, finding one that you trust can be a challenge. You can ask friends and family members for recommendations, or use platforms such as Vitals, an online physician booking site where patients can leave detailed ratings.

When you decide on someone, “see if you have rapport with the person, if you’re feeling like the provider is warm, or matches your personality style,” said Dr. Brier. And if you’re uncomfortable with a doctor, “get a new one,” she said. Even if you are limited to a particular practice, there might be other physicians on staff that meet your needs.

Check to see if your initial visit can be done virtually, said Dr. Alukal. “It’s better than nothing, and it’s a great place to start if it gets you closer to coming in and seeing me,” he said. After this first visit, he has found, patients are less resistant to an in-person appointment, because he has already created a relationship with them.

Be open with your doctor about any fears you have, Dr. Brier advised. “If you have worries about family members’ illnesses or the way they were treated when they had diagnoses, share them,” she said.

Heading into the office is still essential, Dr. Bajic said. Some conditions, such as high blood pressure, which is a major risk of heart disease, can only be diagnosed during a physical exam, he said.

Skin conditions are often noticed during physical exams, too — and men are more likely than women to develop melanoma by the age of 50, according to the American Academy of Dermatology.

And symptoms such as erectile dysfunction can be the first sign of a more significant issue, and often warrant a more thorough checkup, Dr. Alukal said, adding that erectile dysfunction can precede more serious problems, like a heart attack.

“It’s not uncommon that, when a man sees me for some urination-related issue, that I may end up diagnosing him with conditions like diabetes or undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea,” he said.

So get a date on the calendar, said Dr. Brier, and bring a loved one along for support — whether it’s a partner, a friend or even a kid. And consider snagging the first appointment of the day to avoid prolonged jitters and the impulse to cancel.

As for routine appointments, Dr. Bajic used a car analogy for his patients: “If they’re good about doing regular maintenance on their car, they should be good about doing regular maintenance on their body,” he said. (Instead of an oil change, prioritize a cholesterol check.) The Mayo Clinic has a short list of recommended annual screenings for men.

“The more you do the thing you fear, the easier it’s going to be,” Dr. Brier added.

Tom’s dad didn’t enthusiastically run to the doctor; his wife nearly threw a net over him and dragged him there. If you also have a reluctant man in your life, Dr. Alukal suggested being persuasive without guilt-tripping or shaming.

Tell your loved one how much you care about them and how much you want them to stay healthy, he said. “There aren’t too many people who are going to fight back too hard when they hear something like that,” he added.

Our Gina!

U.S. Does Not Want to ‘Decouple’ From China, Commerce Chief Says

Gina Raimondo, the commerce secretary, also emphasized U.S. concerns over harsh treatment of foreign companies and national security issues in a meeting with top officials in Beijing.

Gina Raimondo, the secretary of commerce, meeting with Premier Li Qiang, China’s second-highest official, in Beijing.
Credit...Pool photo by Andy Wong

Ana Swanson and

Reporting from Beijing

Gina Raimondo, the U.S. secretary of commerce, told Chinese officials on Tuesday that the United States was not seeking to sever economic ties with China, but she expressed a litany of concerns that were prompting the business community to describe China as “uninvestable.”

Ms. Raimondo, who oversees both trade promotion and U.S. limits on China’s access to advanced technology, spoke with several of China’s top officials on Tuesday. That included meeting with Premier Li Qiang, China’s second-highest official, and Vice Premier He Lifeng, who oversees many economic issues, at the Great Hall of the People, next to Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing.

Ms. Raimondo said she had pressed Chinese officials on a variety of challenges facing American businesses operating in China. Companies have expressed concerns about long-running issues like intellectual property theft as well as a raft of newer developments, like raids on businesses, a new counterespionage law and exorbitant fines that come without explanations, she said during an extended interview with reporters on a high-speed train from Beijing to Shanghai on Tuesday evening.

“Increasingly, I hear from businesses China is uninvestable because it has become too risky,” she said.

Ms. Raimondo said after the meetings that she had raised the various concerns of U.S. companies like Intel, Micron and Boeing, but that she “didn’t receive any commitments.” Beijing scuttled Intel’s acquisition of another semiconductor company earlier this month by not giving the deal antitrust approval. It has also severely restricted some of Micron’s semiconductor sales in China since May and has halted almost all purchases of Boeing jets over the last several years, mainly choosing Airbus aircraft from Europe instead.

“I was very firm in our expectations. I think I was heard,” she added. “We’ll have to see if they take any action.”

Ms. Raimondo also asked for China’s cooperation on broader threats like climate change, fentanyl and artificial intelligence. The Chinese in turn asked for the United States to reduce export controls on advanced technology and retract a recent executive order that bans new investments in certain advanced technologies, Ms. Raimondo said. The commerce secretary said she had refused those requests. “We don’t negotiate on matters of national security,” she said.

Still, Ms. Raimondo tried to assure the Chinese that export controls applied only to a small proportion of U.S.-China trade, and that other economic opportunities between the countries should be embraced.

“This isn’t about decoupling,” she said. “This is about maintaining our very consequential trade relationship, which is good for America, good for China and good for the world. An unstable economic relationship between China and the United States is bad for the world.”

The official Xinhua news agency said late Tuesday that Premier Li had told Ms. Raimondo that economic relations between China and the United States were “mutually beneficial.” But he also warned that “politicizing economic and trade issues and overstretching the concept of security will not only seriously affect bilateral relations and mutual trust, but also undermine the interests of enterprises and people of the two countries, and will have a disastrous impact on the global economy.”

Ms. Raimondo’s visit is part of an effort by the Biden administration to stop a long deterioration in the U.S. relationship with China and restore communications. She is the fourth senior Biden administration official to travel to China in three months.

Her conversations with Chinese officials — which ranged from issues of national security to commercial opportunities for tourism — attested to both the economic potential of the trading relationship and its immense challenges.

Chinese officials have welcomed her visit as an opportunity to reduce tensions and air their concerns. Seated in a red-carpeted reception room on the second floor of the Great Hall, Mr. He said at the start of their meeting that he was ready to work with Ms. Raimondo, and hoped the United States would adopt rational and practical policies. She responded by laying out what the Biden administration sees as its priorities.

“The U.S.-China commercial relationship is one of the most globally consequential, and managing that relationship responsibly is critical to both our nations and indeed to the whole world,” Ms. Raimondo said. “And while we will never of course compromise in protecting our national security, I want to be clear that we do not seek to decouple or to hold China’s economy back.”

On Monday, Ms. Raimondo and China’s commerce minister, Wang Wentao, met and agreed to hold regular discussions between the two countries on commercial issues. Those talks are set to include business leaders as well as government officials. The two governments also agreed to exchange information, starting with a meeting by their senior aides on Tuesday morning in Beijing, about how the United States enforces its export controls.

Earlier on Tuesday, Ms. Raimondo met with China’s minister of culture and tourism, Hu Heping. That meeting came less than three weeks after Beijing lifted a ban on group tours to the United States that it had imposed during the pandemic, when China closed its borders almost completely for nearly three years.

The two ministers agreed at the meeting that the United States and China would host a gathering in China early next year to promote the travel industry, the latest in a series of business promotion activities that Ms. Raimondo has been organizing.

Travel from China to the United States remains at less than a third of prepandemic levels, the United States Travel Association, an industry group, said on Saturday.

The number of nonstop flights between the two countries is still less than a tenth of its level before the pandemic. Chinese airlines carried most of the passengers between the two countries before the pandemic. But after Beijing frequently blocked American carriers’ flights to China during the pandemic because of Covid cases aboard — while allowing Chinese carriers’ flights to continue — the Biden administration began insisting on strict reciprocity.

Following the retirement of many pilots and flight attendants during the pandemic, American carriers have struggled to meet travel demand within the United States. They have been slow to restore long-haul services to China, which require many crews to operate, although United Airlines announced recently that this autumn it would increase the frequency of flights from San Francisco to Shanghai, and would resume flights from San Francisco to Beijing.

Senior American officials have previously tended to fly between Beijing and Shanghai during visits to China, but the Commerce Department decided to move its sizable delegation by train on this trip. Huge Chevrolet Suburban sport utility vehicles carrying Ms. Raimondo and her aides pulled straight up onto the train platform to unload them into one of China’s high-speed electric trains, which travel for long stretches at 217 miles per hour, or 350 kilometers an hour.

The trains travel from Beijing to Shanghai, a distance comparable to the journey from New York to Atlanta or Chicago, in as little as four and a half hours, depending on how many stops they make. The trains, usually with 16 or more passenger cars, depart several times an hour in each direction.

Ana Swanson is based in the Washington bureau and covers trade and international economics for The Times. She previously worked at The Washington Post, where she wrote about trade, the Federal Reserve and the economy. More about Ana Swanson

Keith Bradsher is the Beijing bureau chief for The Times. He previously served as bureau chief in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Detroit and as a Washington correspondent. He has lived and reported in mainland China through the pandemic. More about Keith Bradsher

Putting her mental health first, Simone Biles sticks the landing

 Putting her mental health first, Simone Biles sticks the landing


Simone Biles at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in San Jose on Sunday. (John G Mabanglo/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

When Simone Biles stuck the landing of her final tumbling pass on Sunday to win a record-breaking eighth national title, she added to her legend by achieving one of the greatest comebacks in U.S. sports.

Gymnasts rarely get second acts, especially at the age of 26. Yet as she so often has, Ms. Biles made the incredible look effortless.

The last time we saw Ms. Biles compete at a major event was the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 when she withdrew from the competition because of a mental health crisis. The backlash was harsh. She was called a quitter and blamed for costing the United States a gold medal. (The team won silver without Ms. Biles.) But she knew and trusted herself enough to stand up to her critics and, without apology, explain: She had the “twisties,” a dangerous condition in gymnastics meaning the brain and the body are not in sync.

Ms. Biles put her mental health first. Other athletes rallied around her. So did many of the more than 57 million American adults and rising number of teenagers suffering from mental illnesses.

And in another supreme act of courage, she testified alongside three fellow gymnasts at a 2021 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the system that, as she put it, “enabled and perpetuated” the sexual abuse they had suffered at the hands of team doctor Larry Nassar. “To be perfectly honest, I can imagine no place where I would be less comfortable right now than sitting here in front of you and sharing these comments,” Ms. Biles said.

The most decorated gymnast in U.S. history has been showered with accolades, including becoming the youngest person to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom. About four months ago, she got married to National Football League player Jonathan Owens.

But instead of retiring, the one so often called “the greatest of all time” has come back to the sport she loves and helped redefine. She looked better than ever at the U.S. championships in San Jose, where her nearly flawless athleticism made it seem as though the law of gravity does not apply to her. She added more artistry to her routines and performed such difficult moves that she finished almost four points ahead of the silver medalist.

She also devoted a lot of time to high-fiving and cheering on younger competitors (many of whom idolized her for years and credit her for inspiring them to do more in the sport).

Ms. Biles didn’t just silence her naysayers. She dropped the mic on them. She shattered another record. She pushed the boundaries of gymnastics — again. And she reminded the world that putting mental health first is key to success.

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