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Posts tagged with "catholic"

Four things, one of which is a hair update

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First, a hair update:

Remember when I said the cut was good enough? I lied. It's horrible. Horrible and brutal, and it's going to take a long time to grow out enough to be okay. It will take longer to grow out enough for me to go looking for another stylist who can handle a razor. I've already gotten some recommendations, though.

Second, an interlude of dog blogging:

Today Mister Bones and I went on an expedition to find balls for his found ball collection. We only found one - a Darth Vader Basketball. He played with it in the front yard - running with his back legs and controlling the ball with his front legs and mouth. I had to go retrieve it from the street, the neighbours yard, the street again, and the other neighbours yard. Finally he punctured it! And then his mouth got stuck, because he'd inadvertently created a vacuum with his teeth. But my dad and I pulled it off and deflated some of the air so it wouldn't happen again. After that he took a break and had some ice water before going back to closely supervising my dad as he washed the car. Mister Bones helps my dad wash the car by sitting in the backseat after the backseat has been vacuumed.
Also, Mister Bones recently got a doggy pool, but more about that later.

Third, there also may be more about this later:

By 'this', I mean something very loosely (barely) connected with the video.

Fourth, dispatches from church:

We're going trilingual soon, which is cool. The third language will be vietnamese. Also, the vietnamese community in my parish recently ordered a statue from Italy and placed it in the chapel where the tabernacle is located. There are two candle boxes on either side, which means that now we are finally a real Catholic Church, because we weren't before. The end.

Television!

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So I am at home now. One of the comforts of home that I can enjoy this summer is television. My parents switched cable providers in my absence, and now we have more channels.

Earlier I watched about five or seven minutes of Queer as Folk on LOGO, as a sort of anthropological experiment. It was very dated and contrived; I felt like I was watching Saved by the Bell.

There is a guy on The Daily Show discussing Obama's preacher in context, but not really in context. From what I hear, some of the religious figures McCain associates with are crazier.

Now I've been distracted from The Daily Show by the Science channel. They have a silly logo that is meant to look like a periodic table box with an atomic symbol. The program is about the Solar System, and totally more interesting to me than The Colbert Report. I'm fairly sure that fact means I'm supposed to be having some kind of college-student-quarter-life-crisis-identity-freak-out right now. Oh well.

Today was actually rather productive. I finished tweaking the brand new GUAS website, and I'm rather proud of myself. I've never actually done anything like that before, beyond the occasional HTML markups on this blog. Except that they aren't really HTML, because they use []'s instead of <>'s and slightly different tags. Anyway, I am particularly pleased with the header; this makes up for some nagging technical issues that aren't currently in my power to fix. Joe and I figured out the error problem on the GUAS listproc, so now I'm the only person who gets them, and after today I won't have to send out anymore spam test messages. There is one more thing I want to test, but it can wait.

I am almost done with the first season of 30 Rock. And because now on the Solar System program they are discussing the possibility of water on other planets (and therefore carbon based life forms) I will link to this AP write up of an interview by Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, S.J. with L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican's newspaper. Rev. Funes is the director of the Vatican Observatory, and discusses the implications of the possibilities of extraterrestrial life for Catholic teachings. Apparently this (aliens) is also one of those things that people get irrationally worked up about.

I seem to be particularly enamored of the bold tag today.

EDIT - Today for breakfast I had scrambled eggs, wheat toast with butter and grape jelly, bacon, and orange juice. This is notable because the eggs tasted like eggs, the toast tasted like toast, the bacon tasted like bacon, and the orange juice tasted like orange juice. Eating non institutional food is like eating for the first time. Everything tastes delicious. Kraft Mac & Cheese is even better when you have fresh grated cheese to toss into it.

EDIT EDIT - I have made this entire post courier new. Because I felt like it. And that might be my favourite font right now - see the GUAS website header.

Citation

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I'm reading "Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to Unions Between Homosexual Persons" for my last ever Catholic Ethics paper. Not last ever Catholic ethics paper in general, but last ever paper for that specific class. It was promulgated by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in June of 2003, back when Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger was still called Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger.

I was inspired to blog not by any of the fun and interesting legal and theological issues it discusses, but by a matter of citation. At this point, I'm kind of burnt out on any phrase that starts with the word gay. This includes gay sex, gay marriage, gay adoption, gay rights, gay porn, gay abortions, gay unicorns, whatever. I feel like that's all I've been discussing or thinking about for at least half a semester and I would rather do something else. Like take a nap, or play with Mister Bones.

Yes, I am aware I signed up for a queer studies class. And I absolutely don't regret it (or the blogging about blogging). Queer ≠ Gay, so that's different. And the first half of the semester was fine, when that queer studies class was the only class which involved discussing phrases which start with gay.

This isn't supposed to be a homophobic rant. Because I don't have the energy to rant right now, and because I'm not homophobic. But I think maybe it was starting to sound like one to people who don't know me. The point is that I'm burned out on gay right now. Not queer though. Just gay.

Anyway, the passage that caught my attention, in No 4:

Nonetheless, according to the teaching of the Church, men and women with homosexual tendencies “must be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided”.(7)

Footnote (7) refers to "Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on the Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons" which was created by the same Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in October of 1986, also back when Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger was still called Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger.

Clearly, I'm not assuming that he was the only person responsible for writing these documents. But his is the prominent signature, and as the head of the CDF at that time, I think it is fair to assign him primary responsibility for documents promulgated under his supervision regardless of the degree of his direct involvement.

At any rate, this passage inspired the following two questions: 1- If you quote yourself, do you really need to cite yourself? And 2- If you want to reuse your own words, who says you have to quote yourself anyway?

I saw the pope, and then I called my grandmother.

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Going to see the pope made me want to be Jewish. [More on this later.]

Later that night, I went to mass, and solved a great mystery.

Has anyone seen a go-card? It has my face and some collegiate looking buildings on it. My face conveniently obscures the ugly library. I kind of really need it back, especially since I can't get another one until Monday.

A quote from Jewish Ethics:

Even after the tuition is paid, are you learning anything? If you’re not, it’s because you’re not suffering. - Rabbi A---------. Fun stuff.

Tartulian? Tertullian!

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I was sitting in Epistles yesterday for the first time in at least a week and doing my very very best to stay upright and conscious (it was a struggle). I noticed that someone sitting beside me had a paper on their desk, ready to present should the opportunity arise. And in the paper, my esteemed classmate has name dropped Tertullian. All well and good - I occasionally enjoy name dropping Tertullian. Except that it was not all well and good, because she spelled it Tartulian, instead of Tertullian. After a while, when my mind started working properly again, I was baffled. At first I thought perhaps she had heard it in class and sounded out the name. That happens. But a logical sounding out of Tertullian would have to include the first 'e' - there's no way to make the jump to an 'a'. So it would have been Tertulian, unless she had heard it from someone who couldn't pronounce it. But that is unlikely, as most people who are aware of Tertullian are at least marginally aware of Latin pronunciation, and the name Tertullian is anglicized from the very similar Latin. I concluded that she must have gotten it from a written source, which also made more sense with the context of the sentence. That means that she had read Tertullian or about Tertullian - which means that she had seen, with her eyes, the name Tertullian. I am still confused about this now, while sitting in Baked & Wired a day later.

This week I have pulled at least two all nighters which were not separated by a full and sufficient night of sleep. Hence the struggle to stay upright. I say 'at least two all nighters' because I'm not actually sure - there may have been more. Wednesday to Thursday I was trying to write two essays and also fit in a research assignment my professor had assigned me and only me on Tuesday. It wasn't a large one, but it would have been extremely daunting if I hadn't run into a reference directing me to the exact page I needed. One of the papers was for the previously mentioned Epistles class. It was due a week ago (more than a week ago, now) I missed class because I was sick, although I had been researching it. The idea was to finish the research and write the paper last night - but I was up all night using two to three times the sources I normally would because I couldn't find anything that related to the topic in the places where I was supposed to be able to find material relating to the topic. And then I went to class, prepared to throw myself upon the mercy of my professor, and found out I'd completely misread the topic.

At one point in that process I was so stressed out that I knew I needed a walk. So I combined the walk with the need for breakfast and coffee and went to B&W. This was on Thursday morning. I was stressed out enough that I got there before they opened (even though I shouldn't have, based on the time it was when I left). I waited on the bench outside of Barnes & Noble on M st. At 6:59 I heard sirens, and decided to wait on the off chance that there was a fire truck. (Just go with it.) There wasn't a fire truck, but there was a presidential motorcade. Which involves many many sirens. I have filled my siren quota for probably the next two years.

Very much awake, I continued on in my quest for coffee. There was a very well executed leaf in my latte. As for the umbrella cookies I mentioned - apparently there was something wrong with the shape of them? I'm not sure - it looked fine to me. They had white frosting and blue and clear sprinkles on the umbrella part. The sprinkles were reminiscent of snow and rain, but not in a gross wintery mix way. In an adorable way. The frosting was sweet, but not too sweet. Not as sweet as the cupcakes, at any rate. They had a homemade taste with interesting undercurrents of ingredients I won't tell you about. But you should try them, and figure it out for yourself. Because they are awesome, and unique.

This morning, I woke up to the sound of fire drill. For anyone not familiar with the sound of fire drill, it is much less pleasant than the sound of sirens. I live in a dorm designated for hearing impaired students, which means our fire drill is different. It is made up of multiple sounds, one of which is very distinctive. I don't really know how to describe it except that it's a bit lower, very grating, and it makes me lose my mind a little bit. Seriously. It is very difficult to remain coherent, and doing so requires lots of focused counting. Very fast focused counting. Lots of it. The first time I heard one I found myself outside without shoes, socks, outerwear, glasses, my room key, my card to get into my building, or my phone. It was also exceedingly cold. Today, I retained enough composure to decide that going out for coffee and breakfast was better than standing around in the quad. Either way I wasn't going to get back to sleep. I only forgot my ipod (for work) and socks, which I consider a significant accomplishment.
Anyway, I had a strawberry cupcake for breakfast at B&W. Awesomely good as usual, especially mixed with latte. The latte had a spade in the foam. I read Kaddish by Leon Weiseltier, which I had to abandon at the beginning of the semester in favour of classes.

I apparently have a ticket to be in the same general location as the pope. I had a rather high fever, and I didn't actually think I would get one. But it seems that it was a ticket-request situation rather than a first-come-first-serve-limited-number-of-tickets situation. They encourage us to wear Georgetown branded clothing. I think I'm going to try to get my hands on one of the 'I [heart] Jesuits' shirts that some group has been selling though - even if the idea is stolen from elsewhere. Word on the street is that when Georgetown people go to Catholic they get treated badly. No idea why. So, that may or may not be interesting. The ticket is strange. There is a dove on it, which is nice except for the part where the dove looks decapitated. And there's a photo of Benedict on it, which is nice except for the part where he looks like he's being held at gunpoint by an unseen assailant. While smiling.

I've ended up back at B&W this afternoon, because I'm predictable. Also because J-- is here. The hibiscus mint tea is great, and so was the carrot cake cupcake. Actually, the carrot cake cupcake might be my new favourite. It isn't as sweet as the others, and because it is carrot cake the texture and flavour are more complex. The carrot is definitely fresh, and the raisins aren't overly plump or overly dry/gritty. Good stuff. J-- for some reason has a problem with carrot cake cupcakes. He thinks carrot cake should only be in cake form. Perhaps it's the 'cake cupcake' construction he takes issue with. I don't know. But I do know that he's silly for refusing to try it.

I'm going to get around to blogging about the lemon cupcake and the red velvet cupcake. And the combination of red velvet cupcake and hot mint tea. Really. I swear.
September 2008
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