The Bog of Lost Scholars

25 November 2003

Surah 20: Ta Ha

Filed under: Religion — Castiron @ 17:03

(Apparently nobody knows what Ta Ha is supposed to mean. I can’t help thinking “tee-hee” when I see it….)

This Surah includes the life of Moses, the fall of the angel Iblis (the Islamic parallel of Lucifer — I wonder which story came first?) because he would not bow down before Adam, and the story of Adam and Eve. (It’s interesting to see that in this version, Adam and Eve are clearly equal sinners in the Fall, as opposed to the Jewish/Christian version where Eve was the first to sin.)

One nifty passage, from the story of Moses: The magicians of Firon [Pharaoh] cast down their staffs, which turned into snakes; Moses cast his down, and his consumed theirs. Then:

70. And the magicians were cast down making obeisance; they said: We believe in the Lord of Haroun and Musa.

71. (Firon) said: You believe in him before I give you leave; most surely he is the chief of you who taught you enchantment, therefore I will certainly cut off your hands and your feet on opposite sides, and I will certainly crucify you on the trunks of the palm trees, and certainly you will come to know which of us is the more severe and the more abiding in chastising.

72. They said: We do not prefer you to what has come to us of clear arguments and to He Who made us, therefore decide what you are going to decide; you can only decide about this world’s life.

21 November 2003

Friday Five: Five Things….

Filed under: Random Ramblings — Castiron @ 14:53

Friday Five:

  1. List five things you’d like to accomplish by the end of the year.
    1. Finish revising Book 2 and get it in the mail.
    2. Finish one more backlogged craft project.
    3. Scrape the grungy paint off the eaves and at least get some primer on there.
    4. Get at least halfway through the Great Inventory Project.
    5. Brush up a bit on my clarinet playing.
  2. List five people you’ve lost contact with that you’d like to hear from again.
    1. A high school friend who moved to England and whose address I lost.
    2. A college acquaintance who I’d never gotten to talk much with before, but who I had a great evening chatting with when a group of us went to a renfaire.
    3. A music camp friend who was just an all-around cool person.
    4. An oboist/cymbal-playing friend from college band who shared my bemusement with the old cover of McKinley’s Beauty (“are those HORNS?”).
    5. Another music camp friend who was just an all-around cool person.
  3. List five things you’d like to learn how to do.
    1. Play a brass instrument.
    2. Read Qu’ranic Arabic.
    3. Build furniture.
    4. Rollerblade.
    5. Cook tasty food at home without spending a lot of time or money.
  4. List five things you’d do if you won the lottery (no limit).
    1. Endow a series at the Press.
    2. Endow a church music chair in UT’s music school, and name it for my mom.
    3. Give UT a big huge donation that is solely to be used for maintenance and repairs, and name it for my dad.
    4. Buy a hybrid car.
    5. Donate money to my alma mater so that they can install a women’s bathroom on the ground floor of the physics building, if that problem hasn’t already been remedied.
  5. List five things you do that help you relax.
    1. Listen to music.
    2. Walk.
    3. Do needlework.
    4. Reread stuff I’ve written.
    5. Visualize scantily-clad 25-year-old Harry Potter clones bearing trays of Leonidas chocolates.

18 November 2003

Soap

Filed under: Crafts — Castiron @ 13:30

I finally decided to try soapmolding for the heck of it. (I can’t bring myself to call it soapmaking when it doesn’t start with fat and lye.)

It’s fairly easy; you just melt the soap in the microwave, pour it into the mold, and let it cool. You can pour a layer of one color, let it cool, and add a second layer in another color; you can also put chunks of different colored soaps in. Some books also suggest embedding objects in the soap to make unique gifts, but I’m slightly skeptical. (Have you ever noticed that “unique gifts” is a code word for “useless pieces of junk”?) I look at those glitters or rose petals and think, “imagine that piling up in the plumbing.” I’ll stick with the plain soap for now.

There were only two difficulties. The first was not so much the soap as the cat. It is wise to keep felines away from your soapmolding area. It is also wise to work on a flat surface that is impervious to soap and water, and to not put a towel or cloth over your working surface. (You can scrape partially hardened soap off the table and remelt it, but if it’s permeated a kitchen towel, you’re out of luck.)

The second — I can already tell that one of these molds isn’t going to survive more than a couple more uses without cracking. This probably isn’t so bad for a craft that I’m only going to do a few times, but if I were going gung-ho into production, I’d want to invest in some sturdier and more flexible molds that let the soap out more easily.

At any rate, it’s turned out quite well, and I think I’ve found what I’m making my coworkers and my son’s teachers for Christmas.

17 November 2003

Kachinas and Muppets

Filed under: Religion — Castiron @ 17:56

When I was a kid, my parents got us this big book about American Indians, a wide-ranging overview of tribes in various regions. It was one of my favorite books to browse. The varying customs and ceremonies; the many ways that different tribes hunted or grew foods, the wide range of kinship patterns — fascinating. That book was a great introduction to the fact that “American Indians” and “Native Americans” are terms that lump together a whole bunch of people with nothing in common besides being on this continent before Europeans were.

It’s kind of funny that out of all the different customs that should’ve seemed strange to ten-year-old me — odd-sounding foods harvested in harsh conditions; unusual initiation ceremonies; ritualized wife-swapping; human sacrifices at a chief’s funeral — the one that I had most trouble getting my mind around was the section about Hopi kachina dancers, masked and costumed dancers representing gods and spirits. From fuzzy memory, when kids came of age, a special private kachina dance was held for them, and after the ceremonies, the dancers removed their masks, and the kids discovered for the first time that the dancers were men they knew. Then each kid got a chance to look through a mask and see the world as a kachina saw it, and the boys were afterwards eligible to become kachina dancers themselves.

I didn’t get it. Hadn’t they always figured that these were people? What’s so special about looking through a mask — won’t the world look just the same as it does through eyes? It just seemed like a completely alien custom.

It wasn’t until I was in my early twenties that I finally made a connection between kachina dancers and something in my world. A couple years after Jim Henson’s death, I was watching a show about his life and works, and for the first time in my conscious memory, I saw Henson on camera operating Kermit the Frog.

If anyone had asked me before then, I would have said that of course I knew the Muppets aren’t real; they’re just puppets, felt and fur and foam, operated by humans that you can’t see on camera. But seeing Henson with Kermit on his arm, and Frank Oz with Miss Piggy on his…I discovered that no, I hadn’t really known, because it was a shock to see that indeed, Kermit is not an independent entity.

Even now, when I’m watching Sesame Street or my Muppet Show DVDs with my son, it doesn’t entirely register. I can make myself see the hand motions and imagine the puppeteer just below the bottom of the screen, but it’s an effort. Kermit and Ernie & Bert and Miss Piggy and Big Bird and the Count and Fozzie and Cookie Monster and Gonzo….they’re all real to me, in a way that puppets on other shows aren’t. (Barney’s just somebody in a costume to me. The inhabitants of the realm of Make-Believe on Mister Rogers — they’re obviously just puppets. Between the Lions? Good puppets, but puppets.)

I wonder how many people my age, the first generation raised on Sesame Street, have the same unconscious impression. I wonder how many of us see the Muppets as, certainly not gods (they’re way too fallible) (although then again, comparing with some pantheons, they might fit right in), but at least as living beings, spirited entities, part of our common mythology. I wonder how many of us, seeing Henson and Kermit, felt the collapse of an assumption we hadn’t realized we had.

I wonder how many of us, while sorting laundry, have put a sock over our hand, and pushed in the toe to make a mouth, and tried to experience the world as a Muppet experiences it.

11 November 2003

Welcher Down

Filed under: Music — Castiron @ 19:05

The wild rehearsal/concert week is finally over. JFK was very enjoyable; the piece sounds really good with orchestra, and that conductor is just amazingly precise. If I worked with him too often, I’d lose the habit of counting measures, because he’s so good at indicating when you should come in.

I wish we could hear a recording of the concert; apparently the composer at least was very happy with the performance, and the audience seemed to respond well. We got standing ovations both nights, but I’m not sure whether it’s because we actually earned it or just because the symphony audience traditionally gives standing ovations.

A side note: At one rehearsal, I overheard one of the older choir members explaining to the young’uns just why JFK’s death had shaken the country so much. “It’s not just that he was assassinated. It’s that during his term, he made us all feel like Americans could do great things; he gave us hope and optimism. And then he was shot.” As someone whose parents hadn’t even met when JFK was assassinated, I found that a helpful perspective on the piece.

Next up: Mendelssohn’s Elijah, end of March, with the university symphony and another fabulous conductor with an entirely different style — my quick summary would be that the city symphony’s conductor has an Augustan style, while the university symphony’s conductor uses a more Romantic style. (He’s the guy who makes me think Jim Carrey crossed with Miles Vorkosigan.)

(Now I’m visualizing the two conductors in Regency drag, playing Elinor and Marianne from Sense and Sensibility. It’s clearly time for me to get away from the computer.)

A Thousand Things

Filed under: Dejunking and Organizing — Castiron @ 17:56

The great home inventory project just passed a thousand items. (It’d be a lot more, but I got lazy and decided not to enter each color of perle cotton individually, though I might go back and at least count the skeins….)

And looking at my table of locations to inventory, I’m maybe 5% finished.

There is a reason why this house, which could have easily held a family of five or six when it was built, feels like it can barely hold two people now. It’s because one of the two people has too damn much stuff! (The other person is perfectly happy with at most two suitcases worth of possessions, assuming the DVD player’s in one of the suitcases. He’s not the problem.)

On the bright side, every time I go through a drawer or shelf, I end up getting rid of a couple things; it’s not much, but it does clear out some space. And later on I’ll have the database to scan when I want to see how much I have and where it’s hiding.

7 November 2003

Surah 19: Mariam

Filed under: Religion — Castiron @ 20:22

The slow Qu’ran slog continues. Surah 19 tells, among other things, the Islamic version of the conception and birth of Jesus. That was quite interesting — I didn’t know that the Qu’ran uses the virgin birth as well, even though in Islam Jesus is a plain human and a prophet rather than the incarnation of a deity (and in fact, this chapter has some verses saying “how come you people say God has a son? God doesn’t work that way!”) The bit about Jesus in Mary’s womb telling her to shake down dates from a palm tree is resonant of an old English carol about the unborn Jesus telling the cherry tree to bow down and give his mother fruit. I wonder whether the two stories draw from the same source or are just independent ideas? (And one curiosity: Mary/Mariam is refered to as “the sister of Haroun”, or Aaron; I don’t know of a Christian tradition where Mary had a brother Aaron, though I’m not that up on Marian studies, but it’s an interesting parallel with Mariam and Haroun the siblings of Moses.)

This Surah also has a bit about Abraham abandoning his father’s false gods for the true God, and the story of the birth of John the Baptist, though he’s not a baptizer in this version.

One interesting verse: 19:86. And We will drive the guilty to hell thirsty. An appropriate image for a desert culture…..

Austen, About Austen, About Austen’s Brothers’ Vocation

Filed under: The Castiron Reading Journal — Castiron @ 20:12

Recent reading:

Jane Austen, Northhanger Abbey. Still a fun book; Catherine’s an ignorant person, and I like Jo Walton’s idea of a cyberpunk NA where Catherine has a stupidity chip, but she’s very sweet and good-hearted.

From Austen’s writing to writing about Austen: Claire Tomalin, Jane Austen: A Life. First biography I’ve read of Austen, and quite interesting and readable. Only one flaw: I haven’t read much biography, so I don’t know if the “X’s letters don’t say, but he/she surely must have thought Y in relation to Z” is a common thing for biographers to say, but it drives me up the wall, and that general phrasing is used annoyingly often in this book for my tastes. I don’t mind if a biographer writes, “X presumably thought Y” or “it’s quite likely that X thought Y”, but when they start writing “of course X thought Y, even though we don’t have anything that clearly supports this!” I start throwing book against wall. It’s that science background coming out, I suppose. If you weren’t in that person’s head, and you don’t have something in their words that says “I thought Y about Z”, and you don’t have other data from the person’s personal writings or even from other people’s recollections that supports the idea, then you’re just guessing and you should label it as such.

From Austen’s seafaring brothers to seafaring stories: C. S. Forester: Ship of the Line and Flying Colours. The next two Hornblower books. Hornblower commands a ship patrolling the Mediterranean, does cool stuff, gets captured, escapes, and does more cool stuff. I took a long time to get through Ship, but then finished FC in an evening — what great action! And what a cool character Hornblower is — phenomenally competent, but he’s so bad at noticing how phenomenally competent he is, and so modest about it, that I never get the “yeah, yeah, Another Super-Heroic Character” feeling.

5 November 2003

Oh, and while I’m thinking about it….

Filed under: Random Ramblings — Castiron @ 20:24

I did indeed get the site up on 1 November.

Music to Soothe the Savage Gut

Filed under: Music — Castiron @ 19:50

Long ago, on the Public Radio International show The Record Shelf, Jim Svejda did a two-part episode, “Everything You Wanted to Know about Classical Music But Were Afraid to Ask”. One of the questions he addressed was, “Can music really cure the common cold?” (And the answer can be summarized as “if you really believe this, you haven’t been to a concert lately.”)

Comparing how I felt at the beginning of last night’s choir rehearsal with how I felt at the end, I can now affirm that music, whatever it may do to the common cold, can be quite effective in ameliorating the effects of mild stomach bugs. (Although for strict scientific accuracy, I must admit that an equally large factor was the visual stimulus of the orchestra conductor, here to rehearse with us for the first time. Dear me, that man’s cute. Lovely speaking voice, too.)

So I’ve now survived the first night of our five days’ rehearsal/performance madness. Four more to go. (We’ll see how long I manage with seeing my son only in the morning before I put him on the bus; if I get desperate before Saturday, I’ll have dinner with him or something.)

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