
11/11/10
Jimmy Baldwin: Stirring the Waters by Darryl Pinckney | The New York Review of Books

James Baldwin
James Baldwin, New York City, 1976
FROM THE NOVEMBER 25, 2010 ISSUE
Jimmy Baldwin: Stirring the Waters
Darryl Pinckney
Life never bribed him to look at anything but the soul, Henry James said of Emerson, and one could say the same of James Baldwin, with a similar suggestion that the price for his purity was blindness about some other things in life.
Baldwin possessed to an extraordinary degree what James called Emerson’s “special capacity for moral experience.” He, too, is persuasive in his antimaterialism. Baldwin, like Emerson, renounced the pulpit—he had been a fiery boy preacher in Harlem—and readers have found in the writings of each the atmosphere of church.
It’s not that Emerson and Baldwin have much in common as writers. Harlem was not Concord. Except for his visits to England, Emerson stayed put for fifty years and Baldwin spent his adult life in search of a home.
Yet Baldwin and Emerson both can speak directly to another person’s soul, as James would have it, in a way that “seems to go back to the roots of our feelings, to where conduct and manhood begin.”
11/9/10
CBC News - Books - Johanna Skibsrud wins Giller Prize
Only 800 copies of The Sentimentalists were originally printed by small publishing house Gaspereau Press in the first run. The book's inclusion among the Giller Prize finalists forced the small five-person operation to print about 1,000 copies a week in an attempt to keep up with demand.
A Giller win usually leads to an explosion in sales, so the small press may face a struggle in the weeks ahead.
Skibsrud's first poetry collection, Late Nights With Wild Cowboys, was published in 2008 by Gaspereau Press and was shortlisted for the Gerald Lampert Award. Originally from Scotsburn, N.S., she now lives in Montreal.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/11/09/giller-prize-2010.html#ixzz14rRz2abt
11/8/10
A Modest Proposal
A Modest Proposal
for Preventing the Children of Poor People in Ireland
from Being A Burden to their Parents or Country,
and for Making them Beneficial to the Public
by Jonathan Swift10/30/10
Why Are We Sleeping by Kevin Ayres
And it ends with a curse;
Making life easy,
By making it worse;
My mask is my master,
The trumpeter weeps,
But his voice is so weak
As he speaks from his sleep, saying
Why, why, why, why are we sleeping!
People are watching,
People who stare;
Waiting for something
Thats already there.
Tomorrow Ill find it ,
The trumpeter screams,
And remembers hes hungry
And drowns in his dreams, saying
Why, why, why, why are we sleeping!
My head is a nightclub
With glasses and wine;
The customers dancing
Or just making time;
While daevid is cursing
The customers scream!
Now everyones shouting,
Get out of my dreams!
10/1/10
Pets Make Us Feel Good
http://lumq.com/03/can-an-animal-make-you-healthy/
The term animal assisted therapy is to be distinguished from the more familiar practice of animal assisted activities, which refers generally to pet visitation at hospitals and residential care facilities.
Animal Assisted Therapy is part of a formal and carefully designed treatment program with specific and measurable objectives that matches one animal to one patient. Under the guidance of a trained medical professional, patients with severe mental and/or physical disabilities are encouraged to interact with a therapy dog under the supervision of a trained dog handler.
The patient’s interaction with the dog is increased gradually. Initially, the patient may merely observe the dog or touch it. As the patient becomes more responsive and confident, activities may include brushing, attaching collars and even walking the dog. Progress records are maintained as milestones are met and exceeded.
Studies have shown that therapy pets motivate people to participate in therapeutic interactions. Dogs are not judgmental, they don’t hassle or pressure their partner and they have endless patience. Further, simply because they are animals and require care, the patient grooming them or walking them is made to feel useful.
The benefits and expectations of animal assisted activities, or pet visits, vary according to the needs and conditions of the patients being visited. Pet visits are less formal; they do not follow a particular treatment plan or schedule and they are not usually set up on a one pet to one patient scenario.
Pet visits are common to hospitals, assisted living homes and nursing homes. They are often nothing more than a way to entertain people or to change their routine and brighten their day.
On the other hand, when visited by a pet some people who have basically shut themselves off from human interaction will begin to work their way back to reality. Apparently the pet stirs emotions in them that have been lying dormant. Examples have been given where patients who have not spoken a word in over a year will begin to talk to the visiting dog.
Now that pet therapy has become a proven and documented reality, institutions are beginning to capitalize on this phenomenon with the “resident pet.” This term refers to a cat or a dog that becomes a permanent resident of a particular facility and is usually given free run of the place.
Each resident benefits from a proprietary interest in the animal and looks forward to assisting in its care. In some cases, a full course of therapy has been designed around the care and feeding of a resident pet. The residents meet to discuss what must be done and develop their own charts and schedules to accommodate the pet’s needs. However, staff must be constantly on the alert to avoid problems of jealousy and feuds over the pet’s affections.
The attributes and characteristics that comprise a good visiting dog or therapy dog have more to do with temperament than training. Not to say that the dog will not need training in basic obedience, but that is normally sufficient except in extraordinary situations.
Patients and residents react to the dogs in a variety of ways. Some are effusive, some impulsive and others are shy. Therefore, the dogs must be ready for anything. It surely wouldn’t do for a dog to lunge away or growl if a patient makes a loud noise or reaches for them abruptly. When selecting a dog for these purposes you would not necessarily want an animal that is high strung or one that is too laid back to get up and socialize.
Numerous studies have documented the benefits of pet therapy. Pets have been used in treating AIDS patients, cancer patients, the elderly and the mentally ill. One study determined that petting a dog can lower blood pressure and another found that pets can reduce stress related illnesses.
A study at City Hospital in New York noted that heart patients who owned pets lived longer than those without pets. Owning a pet was found to be more significant to long term survival than the presence of even a spouse or friends.
Pets make us feel good. They comfort us, allow us to be ourselves and give those of us that need it a reason for living.

9/30/10
Wretchedness
9/29/10
ADHD
New study claims ADHD 'has a genetic link'By Jane DreaperHealth correspondent, BBC News
The first direct evidence of a genetic link to attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder has been found, a study says.
Scientists from Cardiff University, writing in The Lancet, said the disorder was a brain problem like autism - not due to bad parenting.
They analysed stretches of DNA from 366 children who had been diagnosed with the disorder.
But one clinical psychologist argued that what happened in children's early years was more crucial than genetics.
At least 2% of children in the UK are thought to have attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Affected children are restless and impulsive. They may also have destructive tendencies, and experience serious problems at school and within family life.
The researchers compared genetic samples from ADHD children, with DNA from 1,047 people without the condition.
They found that 15% of the ADHD group had large and rare variations in their DNA - compared with 7% in the control group.
Professor Anita Thapar said: "We found that, compared with the control group, the children with ADHD have a much higher rate of chunks of DNA that are either duplicated or missing.
"This is really exciting - because it gives us the first direct genetic link to ADHD.
"We have looked at lots of potential risk factors in the environment - such as parenting or what happens before birth - but there isn't the evidence to say they're linked to ADHD.
"There's a lot of public misunderstanding about ADHD. Some people say it's not a real disorder, or that it's the result of bad parenting.
"Finding this direct link should address the issue of stigma."
The researchers stressed that there is no single gene behind ADHD, and the work is at too early a stage to lead to any test for the disorder.
But they hope the study will help unravel the biological basis of ADHD. This could eventually lead to new treatments.
The work was largely funded by the Wellcome Trust, with extra support from the Medical Research Council.
The chief executive of a charity and support group ADDIS, Andrea Bilbow, said: "We are very excited. We've always known there was a genetic link - through studies and anecdotally.
"This paper will help us deal more confidently with the sceptics, who are always so eager to blame parents or teachers. It shows there is a definite genetic anomaly in children with ADHD."
But the study has been criticised by the clinical child psychologist and broadcaster, Oliver James.
He cited studies which looked at the effect of anxiety among pregnant women, and disturbed early relations between mothers and their babies.
He said: "Only 57 out of the 366 children with ADHD had the genetic variant supposed to be a cause of the illness.
"That would suggest that other factors are the main cause in the vast majority of cases.
"Genes hardly explain at all why some kids have ADHD and not others."
Do you have experience of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder? Do you have a child with ADHD? Send your comments using the post form below:
9/28/10
Empowerment: Amra Shakti Shalli - We Are Powerful
9/19/10
Blues Music
Wasted Life
Vigil for woman killed after shoplifting assault
Last Updated: Sunday, September 19, 2010 | 11:25 AM CT
CBC News


9/16/10
The Playful Search For Beauty
She even has a playful way of giving her talk in front of a large audience.
Hard Times
9/12/10
Janis Joplin- Down and Out
Janis Joplin singing "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out" from album "This Is Janis Joplin"
Lyrics:
Well, once I lived the life of a millionaire, spending my money, no, I didn't care
Takin' my friend John out for a mighty good time
Buyin' high-priced liquor, champagne and wine
Then I began to fall so low, didn't have a friend, nor no place to go
If I get my hands on a dollar again
I'm goin' to hold on to it until the eagle grins
Soon as I get back up on my feet again, everybody wants to be my long-lost friend
It's might strange, without a doubt
Nobody wants you when you're down and out
Lord, soon as I get up on my feet again, everybody wants to be my long-lost friend
It's mighty strange, without a doubt
Nobody wants you when you're down and out
That's what I mean, when you're down and out
9/11/10
Bill Sikes
He is one of Dickens's most vicious characters and a very strong force in the novel when it comes to
having control over somebody or harming others. He is portrayed as a rough and barbaric man. He is a
career criminal associated with Fagin, and an eventual murderer. He is very violent and aggressive, prone
to sudden bursts of extreme behaviour. He owns a bull terrier named Bull's Eye, whom he beats until the
dog needs stitches.
Dickens describes his first appearance:
“ The man who growled out these words, was a stoutly-built fellow of about five-and-thirty, in a black
velveteen coat, very soiled drab breeches, lace-up half boots, and grey cotton stockings which enclosed a
bulky pair of legs, with large swelling calves—the kind of legs, which in such costume, always look in an
unfinished and incomplete state without a set of fetters to garnish them. He had a brown hat on his head,
and a dirty belcher handkerchief round his neck: with the long frayed ends of which he smeared the beer
from his face as he spoke. He disclosed, when he had done so, a broad heavy countenance with a beard of
three weeks' growth, and two scowling eyes; one of which displayed various parti-coloured symptoms of
having been recently damaged by a blow.”
His prostitute girlfriend Nancy tolerates his violent and lawless behaviour, perhaps because she, being a
thief since the age of six, needs stability in her life, and because she believes that she loves him.
When Sikes murders Nancy, thinking she has betrayed him, a mob hounds him through the streets of London
until he accidentally hangs himself while trying to escape. The murder is especially gruesome, and is one
of the most graphic, frightening, scenes Dickens ever wrote.
Sikes has almost no redeeming qualities, although Dickens does give him some shading: at the robbery in
the countryside, Sikes, rather than leave Oliver at the scene of his botched burglary of Rose Maylie's
house, picks him up and runs with him as far as he can. This, however, was as much for his own
self-preservation, as he eventually does abandon the seriously wounded boy and shows absolutely no
remorse about doing so. After he brutally beats Nancy to death, he apparently is capable of feeling
guilt—although this is essentially suspicion that Fagin lied to him about her betrayal, and fear of the
possibility of being caught. Sikes lives in Bethnal Green and later moves to the squalid rookery area of
London then called Jacob's Island, east of present-day Shad Thames.
9/10/10
9/7/10
Maytree » Invisible Chains
***NEW*** ENSLAVED AND EXPLOITED: The Story of Sex Trafficking in Canada from Hope for the Sold on Vimeo.
8/18/10
Non-Profit Societies
The mission of a charity is to feed the hungry, shelter the homeless, treat the addicted and provide free medical and dental care to the poor with respect for the human dignity of each individual.
What is Life?
What is Life?
It is the flash of a firefly in the night.
It is the breath of a buffalo in the winter time.
It is the little shadow which runs across the grass
and loses itself in the Sunset."
~Crowfoot on his deathbed, 1891
7/13/10
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
6/16/10
Murder
Human male skull with large caliber bullet wound to head. European male, 25 years of age, modern specimen, North America. Cast by us from an original skull that is in a North American medical school forensic osteology teaching collection. The appearance of projectile damage to bone is crucial to the differentiation of "entrance" and "exit" wounds. Typically, as a projectile like a bullet passes through a plate of bone (like that of the neurocranium), fragments of the bone follow. As such, there is a characteristic beveling (or open fanning) of the bone in the direction of projectile motion. Although not adequately visualized on the entrance wound of this specimen (without removing the calvarium), this phenomenon is beautifully illustrated in the exit wound of the left lateral occipital bone. Note also the radiating simple linear fracture which progresses obliquely and laterally away from the exit wound. Interestingly, the left orbital plate is not intact. This is important to recognize and consider for two reasons. Firstly, damage to bones in this region may be due to direct contact with the bullet, or the forces of gases expelled from the muzzle of a gun in hard contact with the head. Secondly, it may not be due to these factors at all, and may represent the violent secondary contact of the frontal lobes of the brain, thrust against this bony ridge when the brain is expanded and compressed by forces created with the rapid passage of a projectile through brain tissue. Our Bone Clones® forensic skull captures all the osteological and forensic details of the original.
For an analysis report (PDF format), a copy of which will be sent with the purchase of this specimen, go to BC-152-Report. Should you have questions or comments regarding the report, please contact us at reports@boneclones.com.
Human Male Skull with a 32-caliber Gunshot Wound
6/11/10
6/10/10
quotes
our aim too low, and achieving our mark.
N. Hill
Any fool can criticize, condemn and complain and most fools do.
Benjamin Franklin
An artist is an explorer. He has to begin by self-discovery and by observation of his own procedure.
After that he must not feel under any constraint.
Henri Matisse
For the creative soul cannot survive on past accomplishments, and so each day the artist must go forth
and face his fears and embrace the unknown.
Robert Rosenstein
If art was defined simply by the ability to draw, then my inkjet printer would be a greater artist than
Michelangelo
~Curtis Verdun
The world can only be grasped by action, not by contemplation. The hand is the cutting edge of the mind.
He who wants milk should not sit himself in the middle of a pasture waiting for a cow to back up to him.
Anon
Your only obligation in any lifetime is to be true to yourself. Being true to anyone else or anything
else is not only impossible, but the mark of a fake messiah.
Richard Bach
Live as if you’d drop dead in ten seconds.
Ray Bradbury
An artist can show things that other people are terrified of expressing.
Louise Bourgeois
If art was defined simply by the ability to draw, then my inkjet printer would be a greater artist than
Michelangelo.
Curtis Verdun
The only person you are destined to become is the person you decide to be.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To fake it is to stand guard over emptiness.
Arthur Herzog
Joseph Campbell
No road is too long for him who advances slowly and does not hurry, and no attainment is beyond his reach who equips himself with patience to achieve it
Jean de La Bruyer
My eyes were made to erase all that is ugly.
Raoul Dufy
A man’s worth is no greater than the worth of his ambition.
Marcus Aurelius
Think big thoughts, but relish small pleasures.
H. Jackson Brown
Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so.
Douglas Adams
I count him braver who overcomes his desires than him who conquers his enemies, for the hardest victory is over self.
Aristotle
A dream without a plan is just a dream. A dream with a plan may become a reality.
Hap Hagood
I don’t want to get to the end of my life and find that I have just lived the length of it. I want to have lived the width of it as well.
Diane Ackerman
The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.
Sylvia Plath
Unless commitment is made, there are only promises and hopes… but no plans.
Peter Drucker
I cannot expect even my own art to provide all the answers – only to hope it keeps asking the right questions.
Grace Hartigan
Nothing can bring you peace but yourself.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The world is moving so fast these days that the man who says it can’t be done is generally interrupted by someone doing it.
Elbert Hubbard
Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all.
Dale Carnegie
Master yourself, then you can master your world. Man is manacled only by himself; thought and action are the jailers of Fate.
James Allen
6/8/10
John Kasaona: How poachers became caretakers | Video on TED.com
John Kasaona is a leader in the drive to reinvent conservation in Namibia.
As the assistant director for the Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation (IRDNC) , Kasaona works on ways to improve the lives of rural people in Namibia by involving them in the management of the lands they live on -- and the species that live there with them.
Essentially, it's about restoring the balance of land and people to that of pre-colonial times, and allowing the people with the most interest in the survival of their environment to have control of it.
His work was featured in the recent film Milking the Rhino.