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    <title>sakura_senshi: transience and strife</title>
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    <updated>2008-06-24T23:47:08Z</updated> 
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        <title>As sala&#39;amu alaikum*</title>   
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        <published>2008-06-24T23:47:08Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-24T23:47:08Z</updated>
    
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        <h1><span style="font-size: 0.64em;">I&#39;ve always been proud of the fact that the first Muslim representative in the U.S. Congress is from Minneapolis. Even though I don&#39;t live in Keith Ellison&#39;s district (which primarily covers the predominantly African-American neighborhoods of north Minneapolis) I&#39;ve supported his work and <a href="http://www.keithellison.org/">campaign for re-election</a>. </span><br /></h1><p>I also was a supporter of Barack Obama from the beginning of his campaign and am proud of that as well. But there have been issues with his campaign that have been bothering me, and I&#39;m not talking about the pastors from his former church in Chicago. Obama has been distancing himself from Muslim voters and even Keith Ellison, who if you met him is so mainstream (doesn&#39;t wear a head covering, doesn&#39;t use a Muslim/Arabic name) you couldn&#39;t tell him from his Protestant neighbors in Minneapolis. </p><p>I know about the stupid email sent out by the Clinton campaign and the smears that are now being generated from ex-officio McCain supporters: Obama was sworn in on a Koran---which Keith Ellison actually did, with hardly a ruffled King James Bible in the bunch---Obama attended a madrassa, Obama has friends among former Weathermen and terrorists. But you don&#39;t get rid of slander by running away from it. You confront it with the truth, and build your campaign on that. No facade of lies will stand up against that which is solid and right. </p><p>You also don&#39;t dump your friends because they wear hijabs and pray in mosques and might look funny to the <a href="http://www.mcsr.olemiss.edu/%7Eegjbp/faulkner/glossarys.html">Snopes</a> back in Yoknapatawpha County. I think one thing Obama needs to get over is the concern that he looks foreign or won&#39;t appeal to working class voters. The economy is driving the working class, a shrinking demographic in the United States unfortunately, to the Democrats. But Obama will kill his own message of hope and unity if he continues to snub certain groups based on their unpopularity with the American media. </p><p>From the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/24/us/politics/24muslim.html?pagewanted=all">New York Times, June 24, 2008:</a><br /><h1><br /></h1><h1>
Muslim Voters Detect a Snub From Obama

</h1>
 
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Muslim women at an Obama rally in February. Last week, two Muslim women were not allowed to appear behind the candidate.
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<div class="byline">By <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/e/andrea_elliott/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More Articles by Andrea Elliott">ANDREA ELLIOTT</a></div>

<div class="timestamp">Published: June 24, 2008</div>














	 <p>As Senator <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/o/barack_obama/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Barack Obama">Barack Obama</a>
courted voters in Iowa last December, Representative Keith Ellison, the
country’s first Muslim congressman, stepped forward eagerly to help.</p> 
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Barack Obama, on the altar at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, has appeared in synagogues this campaign but no mosques. 
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Mr. Obama with Representative Keith Ellison, Democrat of Minnesota and the first Muslim elected to Congress, in 2007. 
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A Jewish supporter expressing his support at Congregation Rodeph Shalom in Philadelphia in 2008. 
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 <p>Mr. Ellison believed that Mr.
Obama’s message of unity resonated deeply with American Muslims. He
volunteered to speak on Mr. Obama’s behalf at a mosque in Cedar Rapids,
one of the nation’s oldest Muslim enclaves. But before the rally could
take place, aides to Mr. Obama asked Mr. Ellison to cancel the trip
because it might stir controversy. Another aide appeared at Mr.
Ellison’s Washington office to explain.</p><p>“I will never forget the
quote,” Mr. Ellison said, leaning forward in his chair as he recalled
the aide’s words. “He said, ‘We have a very tightly wrapped message.’&#160;”
</p><p>When Mr. Obama began his presidential campaign, Muslim Americans
from California to Virginia responded with enthusiasm, seeing him as a
long-awaited champion of civil liberties, religious tolerance and
diplomacy in foreign affairs. But more than a year later, many say, he
has not returned their embrace.</p><p>While the senator has visited
churches and synagogues, he has yet to appear at a single mosque.
Muslim and Arab-American organizations have tried repeatedly to arrange
meetings with Mr. Obama, but officials with those groups say their
invitations — unlike those of their Jewish and Christian counterparts —
have been ignored. Last week, two Muslim women wearing head scarves
were barred by campaign volunteers from appearing behind Mr. Obama at a
rally in Detroit. </p><p>In interviews, Muslim political and civic
leaders said they understood that their support for Mr. Obama could be
a problem for him at a time when some Americans are deeply suspicious
of Muslims. Yet those leaders nonetheless expressed disappointment and
even anger at the distance that Mr. Obama has kept from them.</p><p>“This
is the ‘hope campaign,’ this is the ‘change campaign,’&#160;” said Mr.
Ellison, Democrat of Minnesota. Muslims are frustrated, he added, that
“they have not been fully engaged in it.”</p><p>Aides to Mr. Obama
denied that he had kept his Muslim supporters at arm’s length. They
cited statements in which he had spoken inclusively about American
Islam and a radio advertisement he recorded for the recent campaign of
Representative Andre Carson, Democrat of Indiana, who this spring
became the second Muslim elected to Congress. </p><p>In May, Mr. Obama
also had a brief, private meeting with the leader of a mosque in
Dearborn, Mich., home to the country’s largest concentration of
Arab-Americans. And this month, a senior campaign aide met with
Arab-American leaders in Dearborn, most of whom are Muslim. (Mr. Obama
did not campaign in Michigan before the primary in January because of a
party dispute over the calendar.)</p><p>“Our campaign has made every
attempt to bring together Americans of all races, religions and
backgrounds to take on our common challenges,” Ben LaBolt, a campaign
spokesman, said in an e-mail message.</p><p>Mr. LaBolt added that with
religious groups, the campaign had largely taken “an interfaith
approach, one that may not have reached every group that wishes to
participate but has reached many Muslim Americans.”</p><p>The strained
relationship between Muslims and Mr. Obama reflects one of the central
challenges facing the senator: how to maintain a broad electoral appeal
without alienating any of the numerous constituencies he needs to win
in November.</p><p>After the episode in Detroit last week, Mr. Obama
telephoned the two Muslim women to apologize. “I take deepest offense
to and will continue to fight against discrimination against people of
any religious group or background,” he said in a statement. </p><p>Such
gestures have fallen short in the eyes of many Muslim leaders, who say
the Detroit incident and others illustrate a disconnect between Mr.
Obama’s message of unity and his campaign strategy.</p><p>“The
community feels betrayed,” said Safiya Ghori, the government relations
director in the Washington office of the Muslim Public Affairs Council.
</p><p>Even some of Mr. Obama’s strongest Muslim supporters say they
are uncomfortable with the forceful denials he has made in response to
rumors that he is secretly a Muslim. (Ten percent of registered voters
believe the rumor, according to a poll by the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/p/pew_research_center/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about Pew Research Center">Pew Research Center</a>.)</p><p>In
an interview with “60 Minutes,” Mr. Obama said the rumors were
offensive to American Muslims because they played into “fearmongering.”
But on a new section of his Web site, he classifies the claim that he
is Muslim as a “smear.”</p><p>“A lot of us are waiting for him to say that there’s nothing wrong with being a Muslim, by the way,” Mr. Ellison said. </p><p>Mr.
Ellison, a first-term congressman, remains arguably the senator’s most
important Muslim supporter. He has attended Obama rallies in Minnesota
and appears on the campaign’s Web site. But Mr. Ellison said he was
also forced to cancel plans to campaign for Mr. Obama in North Carolina
after an emissary for the senator told him the state was “too
conservative.” Mr. Ellison said he blamed Mr. Obama’s aides — not the
candidate himself — for his campaign’s standoffishness.</p><p>Despite the complications of wooing Muslim voters, Mr. Obama and his Republican rival, Senator <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/john_mccain/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about John McCain.">John McCain</a>,
may find it risky to ignore this constituency. There are sizable Muslim
populations in closely fought states like Florida, Michigan, Ohio and
Virginia. </p><p>In those states and others, American Muslims have
experienced a political awakening in the years since Sept. 11, 2001.
Before the attacks, Muslim political leadership in the United States
was dominated by well-heeled South Asian and Arab immigrants, whose
communities account for a majority of the nation’s Muslims. (Another 20
percent are estimated to be African-American.) The number of American
Muslims remains in dispute as the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/census_bureau/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about Census Bureau, U.S.">Census Bureau</a> does not collect data on religious orientation; most estimates range from 2.35 million to 6 million.</p><p>A coalition of immigrant Muslim groups endorsed <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/george_w_bush/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about George W. Bush.">George  W. Bush</a>
in his 2000 campaign, only to find themselves ignored by Bush
administration officials as their communities were rocked by the
carrying out of the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/u/usa_patriot_act/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier" title="More articles about the USA Patriot Act.">USA Patriot Act</a>, the detention and deportation of Muslim immigrants and other security measures after Sept. 11.</p><p>As
a result, Muslim organizations began mobilizing supporters across the
country to register to vote and run for local offices, and political
action committees started tracking registered Muslim voters. The
character of Muslim political organizations also began to change.</p><p>“We
moved away from political leadership primarily by doctors, lawyers and
elite professionals to real savvy grass-roots operatives,” said Mahdi
Bray, executive director of the Muslim American Society Freedom
Foundation, a political group in Washington. “We went back to the base.”</p><p>In
2006, the Virginia Muslim Political Action Committee arranged for 53
Muslim cabdrivers to skip their shifts at Dulles International Airport
in Northern Virginia to transport voters to the polls for the midterm
election. Of an estimated 60,000 registered Muslim voters in the state,
86 percent turned out and voted overwhelmingly for <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/james_h_webb_jr/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Jim Webb.">Jim Webb</a>, a Democrat running for the Senate who subsequently won the election, according to data collected by the committee. </p><p>The
committee’s president, Mukit Hossain, said Muslims in Virginia were
drawn to Mr. Obama because of his support for civil liberties and his
more diplomatic approach to the Middle East. Mr. Hossain and others
said his multicultural image also appealed to immigrant voters.</p><p>
“This is the son of an immigrant; this is someone with a funny name,”
said James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute, who is a
Christian who has campaigned for Mr. Obama at mosques and Arab
churches. “There is this excitement that if he can win, they can win,
too.”</p><p>Yet some Muslim and Arab-American political organizers
worry that the campaign’s reluctance to reach out to voters in those
communities will eventually turn them off. “If they think that they are
voting for a campaign that is trying to distance itself from them, my
big fear is that Muslims will sit it out,” Mr. Hossain said.</p><p>Throughout
the primaries, Muslim groups often failed to persuade Mr. Obama’s
campaign to at least send a surrogate to speak to voters at their
events, said Ms. Ghori, of the Muslim Public Affairs Council.</p><p>Before
the Virginia primary in February, some of the nation’s leading Muslim
organizations nearly canceled an event at a mosque in Sterling because
they could not arrange for representatives from any of the major
presidential campaigns to attend. At the last minute, they succeeded in
wooing surrogates from the Clinton and Obama campaigns by telling each
that the other was planning to attend, Mr. Bray said. (No one from the
McCain campaign showed up.)</p><p>Frustrations with Mr. Obama deepened the day after he claimed the nomination when he told the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/american_israel_public_affairs_committee_aipac/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.">American Israel Public Affairs Committee</a>
that Jerusalem should be the undivided capital of Israel. (Mr. Obama
later clarified his statement, saying Jerusalem’s status would need to
be negotiated between Israelis and Palestinians.)</p><p>Osama Siblani,
the editor and publisher of the weekly Arab American News in Dearborn,
said Mr. Obama had “pandered” to the Israeli lobby, while neglecting to
meet formally with Arab-American and Muslim leaders. “They’re trying to
take the votes without the liabilities,” said Mr. Siblani, who is also
president of the Arab American Political Action Committee. </p><p>Some
Muslim supporters of Mr. Obama seem to ricochet between dejection and
optimism. Minha Husaini, a public health consultant in her 30s who is
working for the Obama campaign in Philadelphia, lights up like a
swooning teenager when she talks about his promise for change.</p><p>“He
gives me hope,” Ms. Husaini said in an interview last month, shortly
before she joined the campaign on a fellowship. But she sighed when the
conversation turned to his denials of being Muslim, “as if it’s
something bad,” she said. </p><p>For Ms. Ghori and other Muslims, Mr.
Obama’s hands-off approach is not surprising in a political climate
they feel is marred by frequent attacks on their faith.</p><p>Among the incidents they cite are a statement by Mr. McCain, in a 2007 interview with <a href="http://beliefnet.com/" target="_">Beliefnet.com</a>, that he would prefer a Christian president to a Muslim one; a comment by Senator <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/hillary_rodham_clinton/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Hillary Rodham Clinton.">Hillary Rodham Clinton</a>
that Mr. Obama was not Muslim “as far as I know”; and a remark by
Representative Steve King, Republican of Iowa, to The Associated Press
in March that an Obama victory would be celebrated by terrorists, who
would see him as a “savior.” </p><p>“All you have to say is Barack
Hussein Obama,” said Arsalan Iftikhar, a human rights lawyer and
contributing editor at Islamica Magazine. “You don’t even have to say
‘Muslim.’&#160;”</p><p>As a consequence, many Muslims have kept their
support for Mr. Obama quiet. Any visible show of allegiance could be
used by his opponents to incite fear, further the false rumors about
his faith and “bin-Laden him,” Mr. Bray said. </p><p>“The joke within
the national Muslim organizations,” Ms. Ghori said, “is that we should
endorse the person we don’t want to win.”</p><p><br /></p><p>*Peace be upon you. The traditional greeting used among Muslims.<br /></p>    <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        <title>I don&#39;t think so.</title>   
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        <published>2008-06-24T01:40:02Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-24T12:22:36Z</updated>
    
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        <p>I&#39;ve expounded on this before, but just to remind y&#39;all: St. Paul, MN is host this year to the Republican National Convention on September 1-4. One of the most Democratic cities in the Midwest (and some might say the deadest---Omaha has more nightlife than we do; FARGO is livelier than we are) is going to be invaded by thousands of members of the Party of the Right. </p><p>A number of people I know are saying they plan to be out of town that week. Nothing personal---they might even consider renting their houses out to visiting Republicans---but they don&#39;t want to deal with the crowds, the traffic, the tear gas. I&#39;ll be working then, unfortunately, and won&#39;t be able to leave, if only because most of the colleges around here open before September begins. (Booo. Why we can&#39;t wait until after Labor Day like the kids is beyond me.) Also, I might be playing hostess to some people who believe in the exercise of free speech and would like to show the Republicans their displeasure with party policies of the last 8 years. Still up in the air right now, but I&#39;m laying out my apartment decor with the view that I will be having guests here. </p><p>It&#39;s a nice place to have guests. Sunny. Overlooks a green sward of lawn and an intersection with a painted design. (See photo.) Convenient to two major bus lines to downtown, lots of little neighborhood shops and restaurants, and if you must, a Wal-Mart and a Super Target.
    
    
    

    
    
    
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 </p><p>But you have to share it with a cat who makes damn sure you know who the boss is here. (See photo.) She likes kicking kitty litter all over the bathroom floor and watching the humans make &quot;Eww&quot; noises as they walk with bare feet towards the shower.</p><p>But anyway, I thought it kinda funny that<a href="http://www.startribune.com/politics/20653709.html?location_refer=Homepage:highlightModules:5"> today the mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul (both Democrats, one an Obama supporter, the other a former Hillary supporter who&#39;s thrown his hat in with Obama) are appealing to the good citizens of both cities</a> <a href="http://www.gopconvention.com/volunteer/general.aspx">to volunteer for various duties at the Republican Convention</a>: greeter, traffic director, directions giver, where to eat lunch or dinner recommender, etc. They say they don&#39;t care what your party affiliation is. They just need you to be friendly and perky. </p><p>The convention organizers are saying they need 8,000-10,000 volunteers (the number seems to vary with website, but the official GOP convention website says at least 8K.. Last count, they had 6,000. </p><p>I was thinking for a moment, just out curiosity and because it would make such great blog material, of signing up. But then I said, nah. </p><p>The temptation to do major mischief would be too much. Giving the wrong directions to everyone regarding bus routes and hotels. (Send them all to North Minneapolis, one of the hardest hit neighborhoods in the foreclosure crisis, as well as struggling with gang and youth-committed crime.) Tell them all that Minnesotans love the Green Bay Packers and to be sure to mention that when they go to one of the sports bars around here. Tell them all that <a href="http://www.ratebeer.com/beer/pigs-eye-pilsner/28963/">Pig&#39;s Eye Beer</a> is terrific! (With a name like that, it&#39;s got to be good!) Directing retirees from suburban Arizona and Texas to University Avenue for a great bowl of pho noodles or BBQ beef sandwiches. Which is true. Some of the best restaurants in the area are on this street.<a href="http://www.littleszechuan.com/"> My favorite Chinese restaurant in town, Little Szechuan</a>, is on University. You just wouldn&#39;t want to eat in certain sections after dark, particularly on the blocks closest to the Capitol. You know that if you are a local. If you weren&#39;t, well....[shrug]. </p><p>I could go on and on. But it just wouldn&#39;t be fair to take advantage of hapless out of towners. </p><p>I also don&#39;t think I would pass the security clearance screening. But that&#39;s another post.</p>
    
    
    

    
    
    
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<p></p><p><br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>I hear funny noises. Hopefully not from dead people.</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="I hear funny noises. Hopefully not from dead people." href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/i-hear-funny-noises-hopefully-not-from-dead-people.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="I hear funny noises. Hopefully not from dead people." href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/i-hear-funny-noises-hopefully-not-from-dead-people.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="I hear funny noises. Hopefully not from dead people." href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fad693d6aa0004" />                <id>tag:vox.com,2008-06-22:asset-6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fad693d6aa0004</id>
        <published>2008-06-22T20:06:34Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-27T19:30:19Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
            <uri>http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
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        <p>I realize when you first move into a new place, there&#39;s this period of adjustment where you get used to the eccentricities of the space: the instant disappearance of the shower spray when someone flushes the toilet (or worst, one water temperature disappears, leaving you either freezing or scalding to death); the one window that won&#39;t close unless you jiggle it just so; the mysterious electrical switch that doesn&#39;t seem to turn on anything but is sitting in a fairly prominent part of the room. But some things are just weird and aren&#39;t meant to being gotten used to. </p><p>I moved into an apartment that is one quarter of an old Victorian mansion, built in the 1870s. Sometime in the earlier part of the 20th century the mansion was cut up into four apartments to house students and visiting professors at Hamline University. Then my landlord, the current owner, bought the place and decided to convert it back into a mansion, albeit by today&#39;s McMansion standards the house is pretty modest. But being a landlord---he owns several other buildings and townhomes in the area---he decided to keep one apartment as a revenue-generator, a small unit on the second floor, my little pied a terre. It still has the features of a house---it&#39;s the first apartment I&#39;ve ever lived in with a fireplace and windows on three sides of the building---and I can hear the goings on of the family, particularly the teenagers, with whom I share the second floor. (I hear a lot of giggling and &quot;SHUT UP!&quot; and occasionally an electirc keyboard and Led Zepplin.) There&#39;s a communicating door between my living room and the teenagers&#39; rooms, which I keep blocked up with boxes of books. 
    
    
    

    
    
    

    
    
    

    
    
    
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</p><p>(My landlord doesn&#39;t like it---he says he can&#39;t get access to the apartment when he needs to. With my permission. of course. But then why does he have a mirror leaning against the door on the other side, which was discovered by Eliza? I suspect it&#39;s a good way to find out if the tenant&#39;s been nosy as well.) </p><p>The family&#39;s attic is above my living room. It&#39;s usually quiet, unless my landlord decides to pull his suitcases out or move junk in for storage, which he was doing a lot of last week. But now the family is out of town on vacation for two weeks. So I have the house to myself. I think. </p><p><em>I think</em>. I know that someone else has the key to the house: the landlord asked me to bring in the mail and whatever else shows up on the doorstep, so I bring it all into the kitchen and toss it on the island. On the first evening I noticed on the island a note to someone named Sharon with a bunch of &quot;The Best of Saturday Night Live&quot; DVDs under it, and sure enough, Sharon came in and got the videos. I heard the very stiff, hard to open back door bang, a light series of footsteps, and then a car take off. </p><p>Then last night, around 10 p.m., I could hear someone walking around in the attic. Sharon?</p><p>If so, she needed to go on a diet. It was a heavy, deliberate tread, and the floorboards squeaked. But whoever it was took about six steps. Then it stopped. </p><p>Eliza meowed. &quot;Go up and see who it is!&quot; Though she had this look on her face, a little fearful. She used to have a similar look on her face when we were dealing with <a href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/neighbor-wars.html">Gollum</a> in the old apartment, so I thought maybe she was just associating the upstairs noise with her previous experiences. But it was a little creepy. </p><p>I was tired though, and not in the mood to deal with the landlord&#39;s acquaintances walking around the house.&#160; So I took a bath and had a cold beer. Began reading Neil Gaiman&#39;s <em>Fragile Things</em>, which as it turns out wasn&#39;t a good idea before bedtime. The last time I read a Neil Gaiman book at night, his young adult novel <em>Coraline</em>, I couldn&#39;t put it down, and I couldn&#39;t sleep afterwards either. The story I read last night, &quot;Keepsakes and Treasures,&quot; wasn&#39;t especially scary, but it was disturbing in a Neil Gaiman kind of way. He&#39;s really good at evoking these images that appear in your head about five minutes after you&#39;ve turned off the light and shut your eyes, thinking you&#39;re too sleepy to dwell on a house filled with old women in black robes. Which is what happened to me after I went to bed.
    
    
    





        




    



    
    
    





        




    



    
    
    





        




    



    
    
    





        




    


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</p><p>Anyway, I&#39;m lying in bed trying to go to sleep and not think about Neil Gaiman. It&#39;s about 2 a.m. and I really am tired. The day was hot and I did a lot of physical work. I had accomplished a lot but I still had to clear out my bedroom, which was still filled with boxes and Rubbermaid plastic containers. Eliza patrolled the apartment for awhile, then jumped on the bed to take her spot next to my pillow. Then we both heard a loud thump. </p><p>Crap. Sharon&#39;s come in really late. Though that wasn&#39;t the door. It was like someone dropped something heavy on the floor, either in the teenagers&#39; rooms or in the attic. </p><p>&quot;Meow.&quot; Eliza nudged me a little. &quot;I think you should go out there and investigate.&quot; No, I think I should cover my head with a pillow and pretend it didn&#39;t happen. Hmm, did I remember to lock the door on the apartment? That flimsy little doorknob button lock? Did I put enough boxes against the communicating door? Maybe I should push the oakwood bookcase against it as well. </p><p>THUMP. THUMP. This time it sounded like heavy footsteps. Whoever it was, was back in the attic. </p><p>Then there was silence. Which is another weird thing, because if there was someone up there, you would eventually hear him or her going down the stairs. </p><p>This morning I had to go up and check. I don&#39;t like walking through other people&#39;s houses and viewing their personal stuff lying in heaps, especially after the haste of packing for a long vacation, but I wasn&#39;t going to just sit and let my imagination run wild with this. I come from a family that believes very strongly in the supernatural---my paternal grandmother was a barely literate peasant girl from a fishing village, and she saw the world, especially after dark, as a place filled with spirits, demons and ghosts; my mother also used to tell me stories of things she had seen and heard when she was living in Japan, of strange lights appearing on the riverbank and moving slowly along the pathway, of family curses and stones that murmured at night and dead relatives coming back to visit, which is why we had to leave food and flowers out for them at the family shrine every night. It sounds funny talking about this in the light of day, but when you grow up with ghosts at your dining table, you develop a cosmological view about death that&#39;s um, not very mainstream. When I began reading Edward Gorey and Shirley Jackson, I felt right at home. Things lurking in the shadows were, uh, a part of life.
    
    
    

    
    
    
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 </p><p>But I get up to the attic, and the door is locked. I couldn&#39;t open it. It&#39;s not a super secure deadbolt type lock or anything, but it would discourage the casually curious from trying to get in. </p><p>So: who or what was making those noises last night? Partying squirrels? Really big spiders? The wind blowing a loose shutter back and forth? </p><p>I&#39;m going to leave a bowl of rock salt and water next to the communicating door tonight. In feng shui, that&#39;s supposed to absorb all the negative <em>chi</em> in a house. Just in case. Right?&#160; &#160; &#160;  </p><p><br /> <div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>WTF! Browser jacking?</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="WTF! Browser jacking?" href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/wtf-browser-jacking.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="WTF! Browser jacking?" href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/wtf-browser-jacking.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="WTF! Browser jacking?" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fa9681624e0003" />          <id>tag:vox.com,2008-06-22:asset-6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fa9681624e0003</id>
        <published>2008-06-22T18:37:36Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-27T00:10:46Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
            <uri>http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
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        <p>I just posted a reply to a comment on one of my posts, and after hitting the button I was suddenly directed to &quot;Please support our sponsor&quot; ad for a timeshare rental company. </p><p>Did anyone else experience this? Or do I have a spyware bug installed on my PC? </p><p>Kinda spooky. You would think vox would be able to prevent this....or maybe they were responsible? (Frowns and scratches chin.)<br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>QotD: Summer Solstice</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="QotD: Summer Solstice" href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/qotd-summer-solstice.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="QotD: Summer Solstice" href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/qotd-summer-solstice.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="QotD: Summer Solstice" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fa968138cc0003" />              <id>tag:vox.com,2008-06-22:asset-6a00d41423c29b3c7f00fa968138cc0003</id>
        <published>2008-06-22T06:40:56Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-22T18:32:49Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
            <uri>http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
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        <blockquote><p>Yesterday was the summer solstice for those of us in the Northern Hemisphere. How did you celebrate the arrival of summer and the longest day of the year? </p></blockquote><p>
I unpacked more stuff out of boxes. Remind me not to move for another five years. Every time I move, things I really need or miss disappear, while junk that should have been tossed years ago suddenly appear out of nowhere. </p><p>I hung up some pictures and found some more places to store my books, which made me feel a lot better about being here. I keep thinking I made a mistake deciding to stay in Minnesota for another year, that I should have hightailed it for the left coast or someplace on the eastern seaboard. But every time I see the sun streaming through the windows in this apartment and Eliza sitting in one of them, looking utterly content, I think this is okay for now. </p><p>I weighed Eliza: she&#39;s up to 5.5 lbs., up from the 4.7 she weighed a week ago. I also know she&#39;s gaining weight as every time she jumps on my lap and sits there for about ten minutes, I have this vague feeling I&#39;m working out, or at least exercising the abs as they try to push against this furry medicine ball.
    
    
    

    
    
    
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</p><p>(It&#39;s also hot, so having her sit on me today was like having a fur throw on my lap. In winter that wouldn&#39;t be so bad, but when it&#39;s 80 degrees in a west-facing living room, it gets kinda sauna-like. My landlord did leave this air conditioner in the middle of my bedroom, promising he would put it up before he took off for D.C., but he didn&#39;t. So instead of cooling us off, the AC simply serves to make it harder to haul boxes out of my bedroom as I have to lift everything over it. And I don&#39;t want to attempt to try to put it in myself, as I&#39;m afraid I&#39;ll drop it on top of someone from the second-story window.)</p><p>I was supposed to attend a poetry reading tonight to greet the summer, but I was covered in dust and sweat and hadn&#39;t eaten anything since noon, and I didn&#39;t feel inclined to rush around showering and trying to eat. Yes, there was food at the soirée, but I hate trying to make up for a missed dinner by stuffing my face with horses&#39; doovers. I mean, hors d&#39;oeuvres. You always look like a pig, overfilling this little paper plate with itty bitty quiches and spinach dip and fruit chunks.</p><p>(I had a boss, a newspaper editor, who prided himself on his ignorance of French and anything that smacked of urban sophistication. He would deliberately mispronounce words like hors d&#39;oeuvres: hence, horses&#39; doovers. It got annoying sometimes---he would mangle Japanese words like sushi (&quot;slushy&quot;) and sukiyaki (&quot;sucky yucky&#39;)---and I doubt if he would be able to get away with his sort of humor in this age of multiculturalism. Yet ironically, he was promoted to travel editor before I left the newspaper business for good. Explains why newspaper journalism is going down the toilet in more ways than one.)</p><p>So I made a tofu and veggie stir fry, and after I cleaned up the kitchen I took a warm bath followed by an ice-cold rinse. It felt really good.
    
    
    

    
    
    
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&#160; </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        </content> 
    <category term="qotd" scheme="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/tags/qotd/" label="qotd" /> 
    <category term="summer solstice" scheme="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/tags/summer+solstice/" label="summer solstice" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Civic slacker.</title>   
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        <published>2008-06-18T01:40:08Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-20T04:14:32Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
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        <p>I can&#39;t believe it: I haven&#39;t even lived a year in this wretched county, but I have been called to jury duty on July 28.</p><p>I know, I know, don&#39;t lecture me about how this is a civic responsibility, that some day I may be sitting in the docket and hoping that an intelligent, thoughtful, compassionate person like me (ha!) will be serving on my jury, willing to give me an even break. But this is the 4th goddam time I&#39;ve been called to serve. It&#39;s almost like clockwork: every 6 years I get this stupid letter saying in not exactly inviting terms, &quot;You have been called to jury duty. You must fill out this questionnaire within 10 days: it is a felony not to do so, and may result in your being served a notice of contempt of court....&quot; 
    
    
    

    
    
    
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</p><p>By the time you get through reading it, you feel as if the cops are going to appear on your doorstep any minute and cuff your hands behind your back, then frogmarch you to the back of the squad car. &quot;You&#39;re under arrest, ma&#39;am. You&#39;ve been ordered to come to the district courthouse for jury duty.&quot;</p><p>Personally, I don&#39;t believe that the juror selection process is entirely random. I&#39;m always meeting these little old retirees who exclaim, &quot;Why, I&#39;ve lived here all my life and I&#39;ve never been called to jury duty! I&#39;d love to serve if they asked me!&quot; So why haven&#39;t they been called? Why can&#39;t there be this volunteer list where people who WANT to serve on a jury can sign up and put down dates where they&#39;re free to come in?</p><p>My own suspicion is they see my name and say, &quot;AH HA! She&#39;s not from around here! If we call her in, we&#39;ll meet our diversity quotas for the month.&quot; If I changed my name to something a little more common around here, like say, Johnson or Anderson or Peterson (gut Scandahoovian names, dese),&#160; I&#39;d bet the likelihood of my being called in would drop to zero. Because let&#39;s face it, <a href="http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/27000.html">Minnesota is 90 percent white: Asians make up less than 4 percent of the entire population</a>, and the county claims it is hard to find an Asian American resident who speaks fluent English and who doesn&#39;t need to burden the court with a translator. Asian immigration began late in Minnesota---the first Japanese Americans here were Nisei who came to Fort Snelling for officers&#39; and translators&#39; training during World War II;&#160; but the first real wave of foreign-born Asian immigrants came with the end of the Vietnam War, when Vietnamese, Cambodian, Laotian and Hmong peoples came to Minnesota as refugees. While the kids who were born here are competent English speakers, there are still many within this population who have trouble with secondary-level English, the kind you would need to sit on a jury.</p><p>&#160;(I had a heck of a time when I first moved here in 1980 convincing people here I wasn&#39;t a refugee---in fact I was approached several times and asked if I wanted to attend ESL classes or apply for public aid. Thanks loads, but I speak English just as badly as your average American citizen, at least that&#39;s what my British friends used to tell me.)</p><p>Anyway, I am filling out the questionnaire, and it&#39;s a little hard for me not to want to answer in the affirmative questions like, &quot;Do you suffer from an mental illness or disability?&quot; &quot;Have you ever served time for a felony? If so, have you completed your probation period?&quot; &quot;Are you unable to speak English?&quot; Though my best defense may be financial hardship. I was unemployed for three weeks, for mothermarysakes. I&#39;m working now, but the scoring center won&#39;t pay me if I get called off to duty for one week, and the county only pays $20 a day for serving on a jury, whether you get called or not. </p><p>(You spend a lot of time just sitting around waiting for a judge to call you: my worst experience was serving the week before Christmas in 2001, when none of the judges was crazy enough to call a trial right before the holidays. <em>They</em> don&#39;t want to sit in the courtroom on Christmas Eve. So why call us in, on a week when we got the ugliest blizzard of the year? I came in two hours late, and when I tried to whimper out my story of sitting in snow-bound traffic all morning, the court clerk said, &quot;Just get in there and get your number. No judge has called a jury yet anyway.&quot; So we sat, and sat, and sat....I finally had the presence of mind to bring in my Christmas cards and write an entertaining letter to my relatives and friends about how I was spending the holidays in the courthouse. Which just made everyone upset, since none of them bothered to read the letter to the end. I was bombarded with phone calls on Christmas Eve, and none of them was wishing me a merry Christmas. &quot;What were you arrested for? Do you need a good lawyer? Who&#39;s watching the kids while you&#39;re in jail?&quot;---that from my mother.)</p><p>I&#39;m all for the system of being tried by a jury of your peers, but I think there&#39;s something horribly wrong with a so-called random selection system that calls the same people over and over again. I&#39;ve done my duty already, dammit! Go call my friend across the street, who&#39;s never served. Or a bunch of retirees from the public housing building up the street. Or some of the unemployed guys who sit around the library all day pretending to search the want ads while they&#39;re napping behind the newspaper. Shuffle the names a little harder, or at least put a lifetime limit on the number of times the county can call you to serve. All they&#39;ve done is make me mad and broke.<br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Aftermath</title>   
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        <published>2008-06-15T14:16:53Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-15T14:16:53Z</updated>
    
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            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
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        <p>This was stupid: after my blathering on and on about the storm, it began um, storming. I suddenly realized I had left the windows in the stairwell open just outside my apartment, so I ran out to shut them. Then I shut the kitchen window because the curtains there were blowing horizontal into the room. </p><p>Then I ran back to the living room and found this:</p>
    
    
    

    
    
    
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<p>
I left the window behind that shelf open about six inches, but the wind that came through there was strong enough to blow all the DVDs out. I also found a 300-page paperback lying across the room, about 10 feet from where I had it set. </p><p>And papers---pffft, forget about them. Everywhere. Like snow, except messier and requiring sorting. Not that they were organized when the storm hit. I wonder if Wells Fargo will accept an excuse like, &quot;The thunderstorm blew the statement away.&quot;</p><p>Eliza of course thought nothing of it. I mean, her human being was taking care of things. Not her concern. </p>
    
    
    

    
    
    
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<p>
Not that I was expecting her to close the windows or pick up papers for me. But I thought she might be a little shaken by the thunder, which sounded like bombs going off above our roof. </p><p>Then again, she was living under a dumpster during some really ugly weather. I suppose she figured she was dry, fed and had me looking after her. So why should she break a nail over this?<br /></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>So where was this guy when I was in San Francisco?</title>   
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        <published>2008-06-13T03:26:34Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-14T02:38:34Z</updated>
    
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            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
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</div><p>I originally heard this story on NPR&#39;s <a href="http://theworld.org/taxonomy_by_date/2/20080612">The World</a> and thought it was terrific, even though it was clear a lot of people thought his performances were just a novelty. I love Texas swing and old prewar country music (the kind you hear on the soundtrack of &quot;O Brother Where Art Thou?&quot;) so to discover I have this musical soulmate on the left coast was both funny and surprising.</p><p><span class="featuretext"><p>Country music is the most popular format
on commercial radio stations in the United States. Actually, most
country stations play something that&#39;s closer to pop than country. The
subject of today&#39;s Global Hit sings the real stuff. But you&#39;d never
mistake him for Hank Williams or Merle Haggard. Julie Caine reports
from San Francisco.</p>
<p>In the late 1960&#39;s a Tokyo high school student heard a sound unlike anything he&#39;d ever heard before.</p></span><p>HIRANO: &quot;I clearly remember that image of sound coming through the radio.&quot;</p>
<p>It was the lonesome yodel of country music legend, Jimmie Rodgers, and it changed Toshio Hirano&#39;s life. Forever. </p>
<p>HIRANO: &quot;Even before I even understood the lyrics, I felt so close
to the ground, somehow. And his yodel, very dusty, you know, dusty
yodel.&quot; </p>
<p>REPORTER: Do you yodel? </p>
<p>HIRANO: Yeah, I try to imitate him.&quot;</p>
<p>They say imitation is the highest form of flattery. But Hirano is not just a copycat. </p>
<p>He left Tokyo in 1974 right after graduating from college, and came
to the United States. He says he wanted to see this country because of
the music. </p>
<p>HIRANO: &quot;That happened here! In this land. In that region. With these people.&quot;</p>
<p>He spent the summer riding a bicycle through the hills of Appalachia
- learning old time tunes and playing his banjo on the back porches and
in the honky tonks of the American South. </p>
<p>He eventually settled in San Francisco. Now 57, he works as a
teacher&#39;s aide for students learning English as a second language. By
night, some 40 years after American country music touched him so
deeply, Toshio Hirano is busy returning the favor. </p>
<p>We&#39;re at a live music club in San Francisco&#39;s hip Mission District.
Over a hundred people are crowded into the bar, filling it to capacity.
Lanky and beanpole thin, Hirano is grinning from the stage.</p>
<p>He&#39;s wearing a blue and white checkered shirt and a skinny, red cowboy tie. A weathered guitar is slung around his neck. </p>
<p>On the wooden dance floor, couples laughingly take a stab at the two-step.</p>
<p>VOX : &quot;You know initially what maybe gets some people in the door is
a novelty factor, it&#39;s a Japanese-American guy singing old Jimmie
Rodgers, and then once you&#39;re in the door, you recognize how brilliant
he is and how good it is.&quot; </p>
<p>&quot;Like he doesn&#39;t just sing the country song, like he sings the
country song with the same sort of American spirit in which it was
written, I think.&quot;</p>
<p>...And it&#39;s usually singing about heartache, and that&#39;s something everybody can feel, right?&quot;</p>
<p>Hirano doesn&#39;t perform any original songs - but he has painstakingly memorized about 120 classic country tunes.</p>
<p>HIRANO: &quot;I listen, I absorb it, digest it.&quot; </p>
<p>In Japan, music fans are true fanatics - copying in exacting detail
every possible nuance of a singer&#39;s style. But Hirano did more than
join a fan club and mimic an artist. He&#39;s taken his fanaticism to
another level. He&#39;s become a kind of country music evangelist. </p>
<p>HIRANO: &quot;Ninety percent of people who are in the bar or café, don&#39;t
know about the music I&#39;m singing. But they still listen to me, listen
to what I do, even though they don&#39;t know. And some people seem to like
songs I play. And they say, I like that song. So I start thinking, wow!
I may be reintroducing the old American music to the people.&quot;</p>
<p>He recalls what one fan said to him after a show.</p>
<p>HIRANO: &quot;Hey Toshio I saw you two months ago here. You know what?
After I listened to that Jimmie Rodgers song, I liked it and then I
went to buy Jimmie Rodgers CD. (laugh) That was the best one, right,
best comment, best result (laugh). Mission accomplished kind of thing.&quot;</p>
<p>For The World, I&#39;m Julie Caine in San Francisco.<br />
</p><span class="featuretext"></span><span class="featuretext"></span></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Adjusting to home. </title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Adjusting to home. " href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/adjusting-to-home.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Adjusting to home. " href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/adjusting-to-home.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
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        <published>2008-06-12T03:27:12Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-16T01:25:51Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
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        <p>So Eliza has been home now for three days. She goes through two cans of Fancy Feast a day, but turned her nose up at the prescription diet food her vet made me buy. I told the vet Eliza wouldn&#39;t touch the stuff, but the doc insisted she [Eliza] needed a high-calorie diet. I opened a can and gave it to Queenie Cat this morning for breakfast, and of course, she let out a loud kitty sneeze all over the food (75 cents a can) and began meowing loudly at me. &quot;You gotta be kidding, right? What happened to the Fancy Feast Beef in Gravy? or the Gourmet Grilled Chicken? Don&#39;t hold out on me.&quot; 
    
    
    

    
    
    

    
    
    
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</p><p>(I wish my doctor would put me on a high-calorie diet. &quot;You&#39;re too thin! You need to eat more ice cream. Banana splits. Pizza. With everything. Triple-decker grilled cheese sandwiches and fried eggs, sunny side up.&quot; )</p><p>Eliza didn&#39;t exactly walk away with a clean bill of health. The wound at the base of her tail was the result of some animal, either a dog or another cat, biting her. It&#39;s healed pretty well, but we have to go in 30 days from now to have her blood checked again for feline leukemia and other contagious diseases she may have picked up from the bite. Her kidney function is also &quot;compromised&quot;---there were elevated creatinine levels in her blood---but the vet said that was typical for an older cat and we could control it with diet. (Though we&#39;ve been down that road with our first cat, Katsu, whose kidneys began failing when he was just 9 years old. The vet prescribed this low-protein cat food which of course Katsu hated because it had so little meat in it. He was still energetic and frisky, but in the years we had him he rarely ate the prescription food, preferring instead to chase Eliza away from her dish of regular cat food and bolt that down before we could shoo him away. I doubt if Eliza misses Katsu very much.) But the vet also thought we needed to focus on fattening Eliza up, so all else is on hold until I can get Eliza up to at least 6 pounds. She&#39;s only 4 pounds now---there are kittens less than a year old who are heavier than her---and she was 8 when she ran away. Losing half her body weight in three weeks can do permanent damage to her internal organs, though everything besides her kidneys was working fine. Her digestive system seems to work just dandy: I was cleaning out her litter box this afternoon---I promised the landlord I would keep the place scrupulously clean, since his main beef with cats is litter box odor---when she leaped in and right in front of me proceeded to evacuate her bowels.</p><p>&quot;Thank you loads, ma&#39;am. Can I take that for you?&quot; asked her amazed and sarcastic owner. She sniffed and flicked her tail at me. &quot;Hmph. You didn&#39;t expect me to use a dirty box, did you?&quot;&#160;  </p><p>Yup. Everything is back to normal. Now if only I can figure out where to put all these books I&#39;ve got piled all over the apartment, we&#39;ll be good to go.</p><p><br /> 
    
    
    

    
    
    
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<div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>QotD: Why I Blog</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="QotD: Why I Blog" href="http://sakurasenshi.vox.com/library/post/qotd-why-i-blog.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
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        <published>2008-06-12T02:35:34Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-15T18:04:26Z</updated>
    
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            <name>sakura_senshi</name>
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        Why do you blog?<br /><span style="font-size: 0.8em;">Submitted by <a href="http://littleduckling.vox.com/" class="enclosure-inline-user" at:enclosure="inline-user" at:user-xid="6p00e398b6c3370003" at:screen-name="littleduckling" at:delegate="people-connect" at:user-pic="http://up7.vox.com/6a00e398b6c337000300f48cf06a910002-75si" >littleduckling</a>.</span> </p></blockquote><p>
It started out as an economical way of updating family and friends on what was going on with my daily life---I was in graduate school and working 30 hours a week, so there wasn&#39;t much time left over to call or email people about the latest crisis, and there were <em>a lot </em>of those last year. It&#39;s still a good way to let people know I&#39;m still alive, albeit I seem to have a lot of friends (mostly over 50, sigh) who never go online and who have to be told over and over again what a blog is, and why the internet is not a continuous sewer of pornography, spam, viruses and phishing scams.</p><p>(&quot;It&#39;s a <em>what</em>? Why would you want to keep something like that? You don&#39;t know who&#39;s going to read it. Some pervert might try to email you naked pictures.&quot; This was an actual conversation with someone who&#39;s <em>younger</em> than me, in her late 40s. I kept thinking she was beginning to remind me of my mother, if my mother had any idea what the internet was.)</p><p>I don&#39;t think my life is exceptionally interesting. I try to write as if it were, heh, but I don&#39;t want to become one of those bloggers who have to share with the world every torn hangnail and heart-rendering encounter with squirrels and strangers. I read the Times&#39; Magazine article about <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/25/magazine/25internet-t.html?_r=1&amp;ref=magazine&amp;oref=slogin">Emily Gould</a>, who blogged about every possible detail of her personal life and as a result lost her boyfriend, her job, and whatever privacy was left to her. That wouldn&#39;t happen here, as I am consciously protective of my family and my home life: but I can see the ethical problems involved in keeping a blog where you criticize friends, coworkers, and various family members, or write about things that aren&#39;t really yours to share. (Psst! Family secrets! Coworkers&#39; most embarrassing moments! Minutiae about my friends&#39; personal hygiene or problems!) Obviously you can use the vox privacy guards to keep everyone except your neighbors or friends and family from reading your blog, but still, do I have to tell people about my mother&#39;s Alzheimer&#39;s, or my felonious black-sheep relatives? My father, if he were even slightly interested in going online (he&#39;s not), would probably die reading this stuff. Or more likely, kill me. And I suspect it would be richly deserved.</p><p>Anyway, it&#39;s still a good way to keep most people in my circle updated. And to the friend who thinks I get emailed &quot;naked pictures&quot; from perverts, alas, no such luck.&#160; &#160;  <br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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