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So, did the Empire Fall…or Strike Back?

A few months ago I blogged about a book I was reading for one of my book clubs: Empire Falls. Didn’t hate it, didn’t love it – whatever – but a random thought occurrred to me yesterday as I watched a Star Wars special on The History Channel. It was an interesting special – and fun because it covered so many details I discussed as an English Lit teacher in high school (ah, feels like something I did in another life). In fact, many of the points made in the feature could have been taken directly out of my lecture notes on archetypes and the hero’s journey – hey, why didn’t they interview me for this show?!? Who’s this Peter Jackson guy anyway (psst- by the way – did you see him? Holy Cow that man has lost some weight, at least 2 or 3 hobbit’s worth! Way to go, P.J.!) Two of my favorite observations from this special are: 1 – Jabba the Hutt is like a dragon from middle age folklore, with a lair, chained damsels, and hoarded gold to boot. 2: there are NO women in the Empire (hmmm…now that I think about it, there were no women on the Death Star, and I never saw a Stormtrooper with boobs.)

Ok, ok, back to my rather banal observation: oddly enough, it doesn’t have anything to do with Star Wars directly – I just happened to be musing over the hero/villain concept and all that. For some reason the character of Mrs. Whiting came to mind – and I thought about how she rules the town of Empire Falls and controls its citizens. She is, in fact – very much like Lionel Luthor of Smallville/Superman fame. Too bad I couldn’t have drawn this parallel before the book club meeting – it might have made for a more lively discussion. Can you think of other books with a family like the Luthors? Big money ruling small town and all its denizens?

Calling all nerds!

To the annual nerd convention video game geek convention Midwest Gaming Classic! As I mentioned recently, the husband is a fan of computers, video games, and all things operated by a joystick…well…most things.

So we take a mini vacation to Wisconsin where hubby can indulge in an arcade wonderland – and I can relax in the hotel spa.  Smart move to host this thing at a hotel with a spa and pool! Those video game guys may be nerds – but they understand that a nerd’s wife needs to be kept happy too.

They just posted some video clips from last year’s dorkfest  event: and if you check out the first clip, you can see hubby and daughter enjoying some video game bonding time. To preserve your sanity, you can speed thru the nerdage to 1:00 – where they’re at. Or maybe you like that horrid music and all the nerd footage – maybe you do.

It Costs Nothing to Pay It Forward –

– and the rewards are so great! I’m talking about the commerce of compliments. Real ones – not made for personal gain or out of guilt or obligation. Giving someone an honest heartfelt compliment is a wonderful gift…for that person, and for each person they encounter after that, and the people those people encounter. So, in a way – there is some personal gain to be had by complimenting someone in such a manner: the glow of satisfaction in knowing you have made at least one person’s day better…and possibly many, many more.
This whole thought came to me because today I was shopping with my daughter at “The Circle Store” (also known as Target). A woman came up to me and told me she loved my outfit – that I looked really beautiful and could be a model. She said it so sincerely, it was just so sweet of her, and it really made me feel beautiful too! I’ll probably never see that woman again – but she gave my confidence a much needed boost and put me in a better mood. Thanks lady in Target!

So go ahead – tell a stranger they have beautiful eyes, great taste in shoes…whatever! Sure, they might think you are a crazy weirdo, but they’ll still appreciate it!

Yeah! I’m cool!

At least my daughter thinks so. I was so incredibly flattered when, the other day, she came home from shopping with my husband – excited to show me what she bought: a ruffled prairie skirt very similar to the ones I favor in warmer months. “I’m going to dress like you, Mama” she told me, and my heart swelled with love and tenderness at the thought that this sweet, beautiful little girl I am blessed to call daughter wishes to be like her mama.

Do I dare use Nair?

I have always thought of myself as smarter than the average bear  human…but I never claimed ownership to a healthy serving of common sense. I have a habit of acting before I think, looking before I leap, if you will.

Such was the case yesterday, when I was in a hurry to shower and change so the fam could go out for dinner. My husband is rather particular about my legs – God bless the man for thinking they are sexy – but if they are even slightly stubbly, he runs screaming. If I could afford it I’d get laser treatment in a heartbeat – but anyways – I decided to try some Nair cream – hoping it would help speed things along…I was in a hurry and really didn’t rinse my hands too well before moving on to washing my hair…when suddenly it dawned on me, I may be washing my hair with a HAIR REMOVAL PRODUCT!!! I quickly rinsed my head, scoured my hands, and began pulling on strands to test for damage. Images flashed through my mind – I could see myself emerging from the shower…bald, my hair in wads on the tub floor.

Thankfully, the crisis was averted – it’s a good thing that stuff doesn’t work all that well in the first place, I had to do a quick shave after the Nair – but I admit, my legs were silkier than usual. Luckily, my scalp was not.

I’m joining the ranks –

Of Harry Potter fans who have made the jump and posted predictions about what will happen in Book 7. I can honestly say these are my own thoughts, which I did not beg, borrow or steal from another site. To be honest, other thank J.K.R.’s own site, I have never been to a Harry Potter site!

I did however, just finish reading the book of predictions published by mugglenet.com, which is apparently THE Harry Potter fan site. Can you believe I borrowed this from my MIL? Or, more accurately, hubby borrowed it, and after that, I just had to read it too.

It was a fun little book – I was quite impressed by the main author/webmaster of mugglenet – who started the 20 million hit/month website when he was 12! The kid was homeschooled, which is quite encouraging for my plans to homeschool my own kids – til middle school at least. Anyways, aside from sounding like a 5-paragraph structured high school research paper, the chapter breakdowns, musings, and, of course – predictions were interesting. Most of the arguments and debates my husband and I have had over the books were included. I have never read a HP book, exactly – I’m holding out to buy my first books for when it comes out in a COMPLETE box set. But I have listened to all 6 books on audio, a really awesome way to spend long drives, or painting your house, or working out – reader Jim Dale is INCREDIBLE!!! If you are an HP fan, and have not listened to the audio versions yet, I highly recommend giving them a try. Listening to the books together with the husband would spark lots of discussion, and it was neat to see someone else offer thoughts on these same topics.

With that being said, I still came away with a few thoughts and ideas that were not specifically mentioned in the book – which leads me to the actual topic of this post MY OWN HARRY POTTER PREDICTIONS FOR BOOK 7 (bum-bum-bum…….):

My main one deals with the debate raging over whether or not HP is, himself, a horcrux. I say he is…but here is the catch – Harry himself is not a horcrux, but his scar is. I think that it is the scar itself that holds a piece of big bad V’s soul, and by destroying that horcrux, Harry will lose the scar that has marked him as “the boy who lived” and finally, he will be able to live his own life, free from the mark of Voldemort (both literally and figuratively).

Another prediction I have actually came to me while I was reading the mugglenet prediction book: in it they ponder how Dumbledore came to be in possession of James Potter’s invisibility cloak, and why Dumbledore had that strange look of triumph in his eyes when Harry tells him how Voldemort regenerated himself with Harry’s blood to circumvent the magic of Lily’s love. I think Dumbledore was there the night Lily & James died: he either arrived on the scene in the invisibility cloak as Voldemort was killing Lily, or he came soon after – searching the remains of the house for clues (and perhaps finding the cloak). That’s where he was while McGonnagall was watching the Dursley house as cat sentinel, and where he was coming from when he arrived that evening. This will be important because – A: if he was there at the time Lily was killed – he either played a role in stopping V from killing Harry, or saw something that leads him to think Voldemort’s regeneration won’t be the success he thinks. or B: if he went to the house to search for clues afterwards – perhaps he found evidence that led him to the same conclusion – by regenerating using Harry’s blood, Voldemort has somehow made a fatal error. Either way, I believe Dumbledore made an appearance at Godric’s Hollow that fateful night, and it will play a role in book 7.

As for some of the biggies: will Harry die (I say no) is Snape a “good” guy (I say no, hubby says yes – and he’s probably right), and is Dumbledore truly dead (again, I say no, and hubby says yes, and he’s probably also right about that.)

Until July – when we can gorge ourselves on Harry Potter mania!

Keeping the 80’s alive.

Hubby is happiest when surrounded by the Golden Age of video games: the 80’s. Pac-Man, Mario, Link – these are his loves. I swear, if he was standing beteen Miss December and a hairy hag with a stack of vintage Nintendo games, there’d be no question whose merchandise he’d be ogling.

His lust for all things 16-bit (is that a vintage video game term?) makes it easy to buy presents, and with the help of e-bay & Hot Topic, I have managed to score some pretty cool gifts for him in the past: a pac-man lunchbox, phone, t.v. tray, DK toys from Japan, vintage collector’s cards – to name a few.

For something special for his b-day this year, my daughter and I plotted to come up with a surprise – a Nintedo themed cake: my daughter chose the character: Mario! A friend of mine who runs her own cake business created it for me, and IMO, she did a great job! So now we have to decide what next year will be, Link or Donkey Kong? Hmmmm.
Drumroll please…here it is: the awesome Super Mario Bros. Cake!

I might as well face it…

…I’m addicted to love blogs. It’s true, I can’t believe what a time snatcher reading blogs/message boards has become! I get up early (usually by 6am) and somehow manage to lose all track of time for at least 2 hours – Argh! Like any addiction, the more I read, the more pages and blogs I find to read, and the more time I spend reading them. It all started because I was looking for more info, contacts, etc for writing (since I really want to get moving on publishing my own stuff) but it seems I am spending a lot more time reading about other writers than doing any actual writing of my own. Not to mention my own blog – where I am now, obviously, instead of working on the novel.

So, what’s a girl to do? Some of my parenting magazines mention a technique to use on kids who watch too much t.v.  – to earn an hour of t.v., they first must do an hour of homework (or chores, or physical activity – you get the idea). I think I need to parent myself and do this: from now on, I must log an hour of writing before getting an hour to dig into e-mails, blogs, and my favorite message boards. It will still be 2 hours of computer time, but time better spent!
Now all I have to do is get an hour of exercise in after that and I will be a happy girl.

Princess College

Yep. That’s where my daughter told us she wants to go: Princess College. “And what will you learn at Princess College?” my husband asks. To which my daughter immediately replies, “The butt shake.”
Hm. So this is what our 529 $ is being saved for: butt shakes and tea parties at Princess College.

Dear God, we are in sooo much trouble.

A rose by any other name…

What’s in a name? I just finished reading The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri. Yes…for my book club. Yes…we are going out for margaritas to discuss it tomorrow night – but we don’t just get drunk – we really do talk about the book, REALLY!

The book was recently made into a movie, that’s out in theatres now, I think. Same director who did Monsoon Wedding – which I really enjoyed, so I’m hoping to go see with this flick with the book club gals, and maybe go for a drink afterwards.

Though the story itself wasn’t incredible, and actually was quite depressing, since you had to watch the protagonist go through a series of broken relationships – it was very interesting. I learned quite a bit about Bengali culture and tradition, and all the details about choosing names and the importance of names in their society was fascinating.

Lahiri’s focus on names, coupled with her main character’s struggle with his own name – made me remember my own issues with my name.

My mother is of Jewish heritage, and it is tradition to name the next born in the family after the most recently deceased – not the same name, exactly, but usually the same first initial. My mother’s Uncle Meyer passed away not long before I was born – so it was to be “Matthew” if I was a boy – and “Melissa” if I was a girl…however, there already was a Melissa in the family, so my parents decided on “Melanie.” But wait – my mom went to school with a girl named Melanie, and I guess they didn’t get along too well, because she couldn’t allow me to have the same name as this other girl – hence, I became “Melonie.”

Growing up, this alteration in spelling drove me crazy. When I did find bookmarks or stickers or little license plates with my name on it – it was of course, always spelled “Melanie.” The difference in spelling used to bother me – but as I grew older, I began to appreciate it – and its uniqueness. I also like the way it looks with my last name; creating a smooth conformity of vowels. My husband and I chose a unique name for our own daughter – and that was not any easy choice to make! I don’t regret it though.

That was another thing this book reminded me of – the whole process of choosing a name for your child. Sure – it’s easy to think up names you’d like to name your potential off-spring when they’re just a possibility – but when the actual event is imminent and you know you’re responsible for choosing the name that will identify, define, and shape another human being’s life – well, the task becomes more daunting. One of the first things a pregnant woman is asked is, “Do you have names picked out?” My husband and I refused to discuss our choices with anyone – we talked about it sure, and accepted suggestions with, what I hope was a decent amount of grace, but kept our decisions to ourselves. Too many people feel obligated to give their opinion on the choice of name – and, well – it’s not their kid! I really liked the name, “Aishling” a Gaelic name meaning “dreamer, poet.” Hubby wasn’t too keen on it, so between us, the name morphed into “Aishtyn” (like Ashton) and…you know, to us it seems perfect.

Maybe one day Aishtyn will go through a phase like I did in second grade, where I was in love with “K”names – and wanted to be called, “Katrina” or “Kathleen” or, Lord help me, “Kandy.” Maybe she will wish she was an “Emma” or an “Ashley” or something popular like the names of her cousins, but hopefully, she will come, as I have – to accept and love her name, as a part of herself – of who she is.

That, perhaps – is the most important question of Lahiri’s book: does your name help define who you are – what you become? It is an interesting thing to consider, if you lived your life under a different name – would you be the same person you are today? Live the same life you are living now?

Hmmm…I bet if I had been named Kandy, my life would pr-ooo-bably be different. Just a guess!