koryos:

I saw the statement ‘every living thing has sexual desire’ just recently (aimed, of course, at asexual individuals) and it makes me fairly angry. Not just because it’s invalidating and incredibly rude, but because has this person ever met, like, a bee? I mean, that’s literally an animal that comes from a species where the ratio of nonbreeding to breeding individuals is as high as 60000:1.

This sort of knowledge isn’t necessary at all for an asexual human to feel that their identity is valid, of course, but it just cheeses me off when I see smug assholes touting their own ignorance about biology.

(Oh, and bees aren’t the only species where nonreproductive individuals vastly outnumber reproductive individuals. It’s found in creatures from insects to birds to mammals. Also, since the asshole used the phrase ‘every living thing,’ it’d be a good time to point out that when you tally up all life on the planet, the number of sexual species is barely even visible as a sliver on the pie chart. I wrote a whole dang article on the matter.

We can’t quantify whether or not animals that don’t breed feel no sexual desire, but the entire concept that you can’t succeed unless you breed is ludicrous when you examine the success of species such as, say, ants and termites.)


Tags:

#asexuality #the power of science #it’s a good article #I recommend it

romanitas:

me: [grabs you by the shoulders]

me: [looks into your eyes]

me: [whispers] there was no lava when mt vesuvius erupted in 79CE and destroyed pompeii and herculaneum

me: [runs off yelling about pyroclastic flows]

 

#pompeii#herculaneum#mission statement of my life#the moment i saw lava#in that jon snow pompeii movie#i was like WOWW NO WATER U DOIN#there would be no BODIES if there was LAVA#the ash is what helped preserve it hargle bargle#happy volcano day#omg ancient stuff#biggest pet peeve


Tags:

#geology #volcanoes #pyroclastic flows are *scary* shit

We have a Tumblr now!

{{previous post in sequence}}


ds9rewatch:

This is the Tumblr mirror (not the goatee’d or pleather’d kind) of the ds9-rewatch Livejournal community. You might have seen our post last month. If not, here’s the basics: each week, we gather in our chatroom to watch an episode of DS9 together. It’s all the fun of hanging out watching TV with your friends, but with more typing and less having to be on the same continent as each other.

We hold three rewatches each week (schedule here), so if you miss one you still have a chance to join in for that episode. The next rewatch time coming up is the third one for “Emissary”, so if you act fast you can still get in at the very beginning of this cycle! (If you do miss this one, don’t let that stop you from joining in later. I didn’t learn about DS9 Rewatch until the first cycle’s “Duet”, and I did fine.)

As I mentioned above, this blog is going to mirror the LJ, so that those of you who check your dashboard a lot more often than your friends page can still keep an eye on what’s going on with us. Reminder posts, links to discussion posts (please leave your discussion comments on the LJ post, not on Tumblr), and notices of special extra rewatches are just some of the things you’ll be able to find here!

Please spread the word about our community! The more people who join in, the livelier our conversations will be!


Tags:

#Star Trek #DS9 #signal boost #oh look an original post #(more or less) #ds9rewatch

ink-splotch:

Let’s talk about an Ariel who walks away—limping, mouthing inaudible sailors’ curses, a sea-brine knife in her belt.

Ariel traded her voice for a chance to walk on land. That was the deal: every time she steps, it will feel like being stabbed by knives. She must win the hand of her one true love, or she will die at his wedding day, turn to sea foam, forgotten. The helpful steward tells her to dance for the prince, even though her feet scream each time she steps. Love is pain, the sea witch promised. Devotion calls for blood.

But how about this? When the prince marries another, nothing happens. When Ariel stands over the prince and his fiance the night before their wedding, her sisters’ hard-won knife in hand, she doesn’t decide his happiness is more important than her life. She decides that his happiness is irrelevant. Her curse does not turn on the whims of this boy’s heart. 

She does not throw away the knife and throw herself into the sea. She does not bury it in the prince and break her curse—it would not have broken. She leaves them sleeping in what will be their marriage bed and limps into a quiet night, her knife clean in her belt, her heart caught in her throat. Her feet scream, but they ache, too, for the places she has yet to see. 

Ariel will not be sea foam or a queen. There is life beyond love. There is love in just living. Her true love will not be married on the morn—the prince will be married then, in glorious splendor, but he had never been why she was here.

Ariel traded her voice for legs to stand on, a chance at another life. When she poked her head above the waves, it wasn’t the handsome biped that she fell for. It was the way the hills rolled, golden in the sun. It was the clouds chasing each other across blue sky, like sea foam you could never reach.

(She does reach it, one day, bouncing around in the back of a tinker’s cart, signing jokes to him in between helping to tune his guitar. They crest up a high mountain pass and into the belly of a cloud. Her breath whistles out, swirls water droplets, and she reaches out a hand to touch the sky. Her feet will scream all her life, but after that morning they ache just a little bit less). 

I want an Ariel who is in love with a world, not a prince. I don’t want her to be a moral for little girls about what love is supposed to hurt like, about how it is supposed to kill you. Ariel will be one more wandering soul, forgotten. Her voice will live in everything she does. She uses her sisters’ knife to turn a reed into a pipe. She cannot speak, but she still has lungs. 

Love is pain, says the old man, when Ariel smiles too wide at sunrises. It’s pain, says the innkeeper, with pity, as Ariel hobbles to a seat, pipe in hand. At least you are beautiful, soothes the country healer who looks over her undamaged feet. The helpful steward had thought she was shy. Dance for the prince even though your feet feel stuck with a hundred knives.

Her feet feel like knives but she goes out dancing in the grass at midnight anyway. She’s never seen stars before. Moonlight reaches down through the depths, but starlight fractures on the surface. Ariel dances for herself.

She goes down to caves and rocky shores. Sometimes she meets with her sisters there. Mouths filled with water cannot speak above the sea, so she drops into the waves and they sing to her, old songs, and she steals breaths of air between the stanzas. She can drown now. She holds her breath. She opens her eyes to the salt and brine. 

Ariel uses canes and takes rides on wagons filled with hay, chickens, tomatoes—never fish. She earns coins and paper scraps of money with a conch shell her youngest sister swam up from the depths for her, with her reed pipe, with a lyre from her eldest sister which sounds eerie and high out of the water. The shadow plays she makes on the walls of taverns waver and wriggle like on the sea caves of her childhood, but not because of water’s lap and current. It is the firelight that flickers over her hands. 

When she has limped and hitched rides so far that no one knows the name of her prince’s kingdom, she meets a tinker on the road with an extra seat in his cart and an ear for music. He never asks her to dance for him and she never does. She drops messages in bottles to her sisters, at every river and coastline they come to, and sometimes she finds bottles washed up the shore just for her. 

They travel on. When she breathes, these days, her lungs fill with air.

Some nights she wakes, gasping, coughing up black water that never comes. There is something lying heavy on her chest and there always will be.

Somewhere in the ocean, a sea witch thinks she has won. When Ariel walks, she hobbles. Her voice was the sunken treasure of the king’s loveliest daughter, and so when they tell Ariel’s story they say she has been robbed. They say she has been stolen. 

She has many instruments because she has many voices—all of them, hers; made by her hands, or gifted from her sisters’ dripping ones. Ariel will sing until the day she dies with every instrument but her vocal cords. 

She cannot win it back, the high sweet voice of a merchild who had never blistered her shoulders red with sun, who had never made a barroom rise to its feet to sing along to her strumming fingers. She cannot ever again sing like a girl who has not held a dagger over two sleeping lovers and then decided to spare them. She decided not to wither. She decided to walk on knives for the rest of her life. She cannot win it back, but even if she could, she knows she would not sound the same. 

They call her story a tragedy and she rests her aching feet beside the warming hearth. With every new ridge climbed, new river forded, new night sky met, her feet ache a little less. They call her a tragedy, but the tinker’s donkey is warm and contrary on cold mornings. The tinker’s shoulder is warm under her cheek.

Her feet will always hurt. She has cut out so many parts of her self, traded them up, won twisted promises back and then twisted them herself. She lives with so many curses under her skin, but she lives. They call her story a moral, and maybe it is.

When she breathes, her lungs fill. When she walks, the earth holds her up. There is sun and there is light and she can catch it in her hands. This is love. 


Tags:

#The Little Mermaid #storytime

“The wall will fall in…it is falling!” by Miguel Furlock

exasperated-viewer-on-air:

I received a phone call from a close friend in the Catalonian television, TV3. “Miguel, you have to come to our HQ, we need you for urgent translation. Something big is going on.”

I took a cab and 15 minutes later I was in the studios. Everybody was like freaking out, they were running like hens around. My friend came running to my encounter and rushed me through corridors to the central studio.

“But what is going on, Tony?”, I asked him on the run. “The wall will fall in … it is falling!”, he shouted to me. “You will have to translate the German feed into Catalan.”

Wtf… the wall… what wall? I thought about a huge natural disaster, but couldn’t remember any wall that would arise such attention. Maybe in the Alps?

Before I could ask again, I was sitting on an edge of a table, got the headset put on, the technician asked me to talk so to adjust it, gave me an OK… and then I had a chance to look at the screens. I saw a huge crowd in all of them. I still was unable to recognize anything.

“Here comes the feed”, cried my friend and my ears got filled with the voice of a hysterical German commenting in loud voice.

“Go, start translating. We are in the air in … 3, 2… go, go!”

And I just started. German to Catalan is not easy, and in the bewildered state I was, receiving the German input in really bad conditions made me even more insecure. My words didn’t seem to make any sense, but I kept on with the simultaneous translation committing one mistake after the other, sweating and at the same time feeling cold.

Then it struck me. It was the wall, THE WALL. It was not falling, but hundreds of people from both Germans were sitting or standing on it, smashing it, shouting, greeting, embracing each others…

I stopped translating. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. It seemed so completely faked or unreal… I mean The Wall was so much WALL… it just would never disappear. My mind went in all kind of colors and my mouth wide open.

One of the guys in the studio understood what was happening to me, while nearly all the others were trying to force me to keep on with the translation. He took a microphone and asked me what I was feeling.

So I started to express that, whatever “that” it was. I don’t remember any of my words, which were delivered to hundreds of thousands of Catalonian homes.

I still can’t believe it. You know… that I know, that we all know… but most of you haven’t lived with THE WALL, its unbreakable presence, its evil and disgusting symbol of hate. It was meant to be something eternal, and a terrible result and sign of a war our fathers had loaded on our shoulders. A permanent reminder of guilt, a three dimensional tattoo we all Germans were meant to carry and expose at all our movements, words or thoughts, actions taken or not. And then, all of a sudden, it was gone.

Maybe liberty doesn’t really exist. Only the path to it, filled with all kinds of restrictions and limits. But I know that we will always find a way to break those walls, may it take us one or ten thousand years to do so. And it is not our generation that really advances from such changes. We have got that wall still inside us. The reminder stays in place.

But our sons and daughters… they don’t. The wall wouldn’t catch them, too.

(source here)


Tags:

#Berlin Wall #anniversaries #history #the kind of history nobody bothers to tell you about #because they remember it and they never put two and two together to realise that *you* don’t already know #(which I suppose is the other side of ‘the wall wouldn’t catch them too’) #(I think to this day our teaching of history is still aimed at Boomers) #(the history books stop where *their* recollections begin) #(not where *ours* do) #(I’m sick of history books that end at World War II) #(give me books that end at the new millennium) #(hell) #(give me books that end at Katrina) #(at the Indonesian tsunami) #(at the earthquake that is officially called Tohoku but that everyone knows as Fukushima) #(err on the side of telling me things I already know) #(because *somebody* needs to hear it) #(and I might still learn something) #tag rambles