cukursēne
03 July 2013 @ 04:16 am
gaviles, fanfaras un sajūsmas spiedzieni  
mana mazliet novēlotā ideja, ka kaķi meklēt jāiet rīta agrumā, mazā gaismiņā, kamēr vēl nav apkārt ne mašīnu, ne cilvēku, kas izbiedētu, bet jau ir gana gaišs, lai pamanītu jau pa gabalu, atmaksājās. magone ir mājās un paēdusi, pat neizskatās nekā īpaši traumēta, ja neskaita nosušķējumu un vispārēji paaugstinātu tramīguma līmeni, rīt līdz ar mājas pavasara vasaras tīrīšanas nobeigumu varēšu mēģināt izmazgāt arī kaķi, haha, vai varbūt labāk nē, lai mazgājas pati ar kanēļa palīdzību.
tagad tikai jācer, ka viņa nesāks, kompensējot par prombūtnes laiku, čurāt visos stūros utml, nebūtu jau nekāds brīnums, patiesībā. katrā ziņā, jūtos ļoti atvieglota par situācijas atrisinājumu, vismaz tagad man atkal ir visi mājās :D
 
 
cukursēne
03 July 2013 @ 08:48 pm
 
Stories matter. Stories are how we make sense of the world, which doesn’t mean that those stories can’t be stupid and simplistic and full of lies. Stories can exaggerate and offend and they always, always matter. In Doug Rushkoff's recent book Present Shock, he discusses the phenomenon of “narrative collapse”: the idea that in the years between 11 September 2001 and the financial crash of 2008, all of the old stories about God and Duty and Money and Family and America and The Destiny of the West finally disintegrated, leaving us with fewer sustaining fairytales to die for and even fewer to live for.

This is plausible, but future panic, like the future itself, is not evenly distributed. Not being sure what story you're in anymore is a different experience depending on whether or not you were expecting to be the hero of that story. Low-status men, and especially women and girls, often don't have that expectation. We expect to be forgettable supporting characters, or sometimes, if we're lucky, attainable objects to be slung over the hero's shoulder and carried off the end of the final page. The only way we get to be in stories is to be stories ourselves. If we want anything interesting at all to happen to us we have to be a story that happens to somebody else, and when you’re a young girl looking for a script, there are a limited selection of roles to choose from.


//Laurie Penny