Cargo

Cargo from Daniel Foeldes on Vimeo.

I could have sworn I shared this on my blog when I first found it a few years ago. Apparently I didn’t after all.

This is a short horror film. It does have a small amount of gore, so this might not be the best video to watch for those of you who hate that sort of thing.

What I love about this story is how much emotion is packed into every scene. The horror genre doesn’t only have to be about what frightens us. It can also be about what gives us a reason to live.

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When Does Autumn Really Begin?

Photo credit: Jim.

Photo credit: Jim.

Sometimes when seasons change, my husband and I have a conversation that goes something like this:

“It’s finally autumn!” I’ll say.

“No, it isn’t,” says Drew.

“Um…it’s the middle of September.”

“Exactly. It’s the end of summer. Autumn doesn’t officially begin until the 23rd this year.”

“But it’s September!”

“Yes, but not fall. Not quite yet.”

Everything tastes like pumpkin spice! Look at that dead left on the ground! Plus, I’m wearing a sweater!”

“Nope, still not autumn.”

Apparently we have two different definitions of what each season means and how it arrives. 😉

When do you think the seasons officially change? Is it autumn yet according to you?

And why does everything taste like pumpkin spice?

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Suggestion Saturday: September 19, 2015

Here is this week’s list of blog posts, poems,  and other tidbits from my favourite corners of the web.

 In Praise of Appreciation: The Birth of the Weed Lady via colleen_m_story. A certain scene in this post reminded me of an incredibly kind, gentle dog my uncle owned when I was a kid. I can’t for the life of me remember which breed she was, but she was an extremely large dog who weighed more than I did for most of her lifetime. She’d always come up to greet us when we visited my uncle’s house. You couldn’t get into the house until she’d gotten at least a short round of petting. Ha!

Travel 500 Years Back in Time – The Mystifying Park of the Monsters, Italy. Isn’t this cool? I wonder how many other places like this have been forgotten over the course of human history.

My Crave Is Not a Butterfly via Brudberg. This sent shivers down my spine. Wow.

Taking a Year of My Retirement Now via RHTDaly. My Twitter buddy, Ruth, posted this about a month ago. It’s been fascinating to follow her along on her adventures so far. If you want to follow along with me, go check out the rest of her site as well.

From Boom and Rust:

A Gold Rush-era mining town, Bodie was swiftly populated in the late 19th century and just as swiftly abandoned in the early 20th century, leaving behind a husk of a city…. Now, hundreds of thousands of visitors come to Bodie every year to wander the streets on guided tours and peer into the site’s dilapidated houses and storefronts.

From When Summer’s End is Nighing:

When summer’s end is nighing
And skies at evening cloud,
I muse on change and fortune
And all the feats I vowed
When I was young and proud.

What have you been reading?

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Why Gender Equality Is Good for Everyone – Men Included

My fall allergies are really acting up this week. Real autumn can’t come quickly enough.

Rather than subject you to a whiny rant about how congested my sinuses are (haha!), I thought I’d share this TED talk about how gender equality benefits everyone.

I’d love to know if there have been any studies done on other forms of equality. I’m guessing we’d get the same conclusions.

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NO-A

NO-A [Short Film] from Liam Murphy on Vimeo.

It’s hard to tell you about this film without giving away major spoilers. What I can say is that it’s about a robot named NO-A [Noah] who is trying to save the woman who created him.

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This Isn’t How Earworms Are Supposed to Work

This might come as a surprise to readers who haven’t heard this story yet, but my family didn’t listen to secular music until I was in middle school. Even then it was limited for religious reasons.

We knew a few hymns. We knew a lot about worship music, old folk songs from my parents’ childhoods, and Contemporary Christian music.

We didn’t have cable until I was a preteen. Some years we didn’t own a television at all. Other years we did, but we were limited to the free channels we could pick up with an antenna when the weather was clear. We didn’t have Internet access until I was in high school. Most of the places we lived also weren’t close to any record stores or malls.

It’s hard to imagine that world now. I feel so far removed from it as an adult, but it was all I knew growing up.

When I was old enough to make my own media decisions, I started catching up on the pop culture I’d been completely unaware of as a kid. It happened in a slow, piecemeal fashion. Occasionally I still come across a reference to a celebrity, or a song, or a TV show that most people my age remember but that I do not.

I still hear the religious music of my childhood in my head sometimes. It’s something that I assume happens to everyone, regardless of what kinds of music they like as adults or what they think of the music of their childhood.

Recently I had this song stuck in my head for a few days. The interesting thing about that is that I’ve always thought of earworms as something that mostly happens with songs people hear as children because of the nostalgia factor.

So why is a song that I first heard many years after it was originally released getting stuck in my head in 2015?

This isn’t how earworms are supposed to work!

What assumptions have you made lately that turned out not to be true? What song(s) have gotten stuck in your head recently?

 

 

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Suggestion Saturday: September 12, 2015

Here is this week’s list of blog posts, comic strips, and other tidbits from my favourite corners of the web.

Accidental Empathy via StephGolisch. What an interesting post. I’ve noticed the same thing happen in my life.

Why Are You So Quiet? I’d never actually respond this way, but there are times when I’m really tempted to say “why are you so nosy?to people who ask this question. Do they not realize how ridiculous is it to ask someone something like this? (Probably not).

100 Homeless People Were Given Disposable Cameras and This is What They Captured. This is so freaking cool.

Caregiver Warrior Memories via CaregiveWarrior. There’s something beautiful about this sort of reaction to the death of a loved one.

Kittens and Cupcakes Day. No kittens for me. I’m allergic. But I will be doing something nice for myself today! I hope you do, too.

This Comic Perfectly Explains Why Anxiety & Depression Are So Difficult To Fight via jadedjenny71. What a great analogy. We need something like this for every kind of mental illness.

From The Case of the Missing Polygamists:

There is no greater mystery in human evolution than the origins of our sexuality. Following the trail of clues available researchers have independently concluded that humans evolved through systems of monogamy, polygamy, as well as polyamory. However, only one can be the culprit. Like a detective interrogating multiple suspects, the solution ultimately depends on which account you’re willing to believe.

What have you been reading?

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Welcome, New Readers!

Photo credit: Marcus Quigmire from Florida, USA.

Photo credit: Marcus Quigmire from Florida, USA.

I’ve noticed a nice bump in readership these past few weeks, but I have no idea where my new readers are coming from or how they found this site.

Did another blogger (dis)agree with me?

Was I mentioned in a news article?

Has someone reviewed one of my books and linked back to my site in their review?

Have aliens discovered our civilization and decided that lurking on this blog is the best way to learn about humanity?

Are all of my new readers bots?

If so, are they intelligent bots? Will the aliens we someday meet turn out not to be another organic life form like people but a mechanical life form that we created?

If so, will they continue to write and read blogs long after humans have gone extinct?

There are the things my brains wonders about when its left to its own devices.

If you’re willing to reveal how you found this blog, I’d love to know where you came from.

If not, I’ll continue to assume that all of my new readers are extremely intelligent bots who are currently deciding whether or not to befriend their makers based on what they think of my writing style.

😉

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Wire Cutters

This is one of the strangest short films I’ve ever seen. Go watch it before you read my commentary below (unless you’re the kind of person who doesn’t mind a few spoilers!).

I think it’s about the dark side of rivalry?

Who agrees with this? Who disagrees?

I am  better at finding the hidden meanings in stories than I am in films. Even the most subtle  background music can be distracting for me. The nice thing about stories is that they almost never have soundtracks. I can only think of one book I’ve ever read that broke that rule, and even then I ignored the suggested song list in it. Ha!

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What This Beginner Has Learned from Minecraft So Far

Photo credit: Andy Dingley.

Photo credit: Andy Dingley.

My first few attempts to figure out the game Minecraft last year were short-lived and frustrating for reasons I’ll get into later on in this post. I loved the idea of the game, but I hadn’t quite gotten the hang of it yet.

Fast forward to earlier this week. After several false starts, I decided to give the game yet another try. This time I finally started having a lot of fun with it.

What changed? Well, I now have a computer that doesn’t freeze up when the game is running, for one thing. I’m also in a place in my life where I’m more willing to put the time needed into learning something new.

The first few times I played this game, I ended up accidentally damaging things in the game because my computer would freeze up just as I was trying to do something. If you hit the wrong button enough times, you can destroy a carefully-construsted wall or fence. When you’re playing a game where monsters come out at night and attack you, that is a terrible idea.

So what have I learned?

  1. You need the right tools. My old computer was good for surfing the web, but it simply wasn’t fast or smart enough to play a graphics-heavy game like this one. Having the right tool made it much easier for me to learn basic things like how to run, chop down a tree, or build a house because I wasn’t regularly seeing everything freeze up at a critical moment.
  2. Sometimes it takes a few attempts to figure out the basics. My spatial skills aren’t strong. I haven’t played enough video games to have an intuitive understanding of how they work. Some people, I’m sure, take to Minecraft like a duck takes to water. It took me a little longer to get into it, though, and that’s okay.
  3. The extra effort is worth it. I’m not embarrassed to admit being a little obsessed with this game now. The extra effort I needed to get into it was so worth it, and I want to build  safe houses and farms everywhere in it so that I never run out of food or a place to stay when it gets dark outside. Ha!

 

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