miscellany
Dec. 21st, 2015 08:01 amAngel
My mother had very elaborate Christmas cookies that she made with us kids: we made the recipe for sand tarts (a flat, roll-out cookie suitable for cookie cutters) from The Joy of Cooking, then iced the with almond-flavored white icing, then painted on them with very fine paint brushes and food coloring. (Some examples.) I have my own cookie cutters, but earlier this year my dad wanted to clear out the old ones we had as kids. I got the angel.

The great thing about cookies made with this cookie cutter is that because the connecting bits (neck, joint of the wings) and arms are so thin, often they get moved this way or that when you're moving the cookie dough from the counter to the cooking sheet. So the head will tip back (gazing heavenward) or forward (deep in prayer) or the wings will flex outward or move toward the body. If the dough gets too warm, then the angel can get elongated in the transfer to the cooking sheet, or shortened. It makes for a various collection. I'll try to post some.
Center versus Periphery
It's fun to think about which categories comprise the Bad Guys in tales. For example, in dystopian fiction, usually the State is Bad and the Insurgents are Good, though sometimes (as in The Hunger Games) all groups end up being Bad (which brings up a more fundamental Good versus Bad dynamic in Western fiction: that the Individual is Good and the State/Society is Bad--unless we're talking the horror genre or certain sorts of cop or detective fiction, in which case the State/Society is Good and the Individual may represent Eldritch or Some Other Sort of Bad. (Yes, I'm enjoying capitalizing things today.)
So I was thinking about the Center and the Periphery, specifically about the national government versus local governments, and I was thinking about cop shows. I was thinking about how they quite tidily feature both sides in both roles. In ones favoring the Center, the heroes are from the FBI or other national agency, and they're brought in to deal with a difficult case that the corrupt, ignorant, and inept locals don't have the wherewithal to deal with. In ones favoring the Periphery, the local force must manage to solve the case despite the interference of the arrogant, high-handed feds, who often have an endgame that's at odds with the local need for justice or solution of the case.
Helpful Pamphlet
Saw this on a rock. Someone left it out as a helpful message, maybe? But then days later I saw it had fallen off the rock and was rain soaked. Not all messages reach an audience that can receive them.

Okay, to work I go. I have a big job I need to finish by the end of the day tomorrow.
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Date: 2015-12-21 10:29 am (UTC)Good luck with your big job!
And Happy Holidays!
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Date: 2015-12-21 10:40 am (UTC)And happy, joyful, merry holidays for you and yours as well! (Hopefully we'll be in touch in the next few days, in any case...)
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Date: 2015-12-21 10:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 10:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 10:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 10:43 am (UTC)(I don't know if you linked to some examples, but the link didn't work for me)
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Date: 2015-12-21 10:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 10:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 03:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 11:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 12:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 12:32 pm (UTC)I really like your reflections on Center and Periphery-- surely that lens could profitably be used for American literature in general. Ah, Huckleberry Finn....
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Date: 2015-12-21 01:23 pm (UTC)How cool that you had the same cookie cutter! I was wondering if anyone else would have had it.
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Date: 2015-12-21 02:33 pm (UTC)It is awfully hard not to read through one's doctrinal lens.
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Date: 2015-12-21 01:20 pm (UTC)Good luck on your working things!
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Date: 2015-12-21 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-21 11:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 02:15 pm (UTC)It is indeed a great tradition to have grown up with <3
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Date: 2015-12-22 09:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 11:35 am (UTC)What were your other cookie cutters? We had a Christmas tree, a star, and a bell.
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Date: 2015-12-23 07:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 11:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 11:36 am (UTC)I am contemplating asking him whether he'd like to paint food colouring on smooth frosting, or apply crustiness. We have lots of varied crustiness to apply, surprisingly still viable. (I know because I checked it for Cub Scout usage earlier this month: it was acquired when I wrangled Halloween craft last year for the fourth grade, and the Sad Seahorse of Example demonstrated how slowly the frosting dried/stiffened.
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Date: 2015-12-23 12:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 01:45 pm (UTC)A few days later another boy asked what had happened to the Sad Seahorse of Example, so I said that Fletcher had eaten it. The boy expressed dismay about this, so I said, "Oh, no! It was the Seahorse's Destiny!" And the boy looked at me skeptically and said, Its Destiny? To be eaten by Fletcher [LastName]?"
Which still strikes me as funny.
The Sad Seahorse of Example seems to have demonstrated the Cedric the Lion effect.
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Date: 2015-12-23 02:14 pm (UTC)This made me laugh. It also made me remember the part in Back to the Future where the hero's father, trying to chat up the hero's mother (back when they're both teens), says "You're my density!" She looks at him in bewilderment, and then he corrects himself.
Since then I've always thought about destinies in terms of densities.
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Date: 2015-12-23 02:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 11:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 12:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-23 01:46 pm (UTC)