Friday, January 18, 2013

[SPOILERS] Jujube wins in my heart. . .

Watched Ru Paul's Drag Race and just finished it. My queen didn't win. . .but Jujubee is a winner in my heart. Tyra, probably "deserved" to win, but I just hated her attitude


Wednesday, January 16, 2013

DUE TO TIME CONSTRAINTS, SLOTH ASTRONAUT

I will not be able to write the post I wanted to. I will post it this weekend. To make up for it, here is a picture of a sloth astronaut




Monday, January 14, 2013

Book Review: Shinto

Buy it here
Due to time constraints caused by classes and work resuming, I will be doing a very abridged review.

TITLE: Shinto
AUTHOR: C. Scott Littleton
SCORE: 7/10
THE GOOD: This book would make a great text for those who haven't a single clue about Shinto or what it is about. It provides a very broad survey in easy to understand language with relatively interesting and relevant pictures. The reading level I would peg at around 7th or 8th grade, but don't let that deter you from the book, despite its simplicity it is very easy to read and quite entertaining

THE BAD: It doesn't really provide a lot of info. If one was looking to actively practice Shinto, this is not the book for him or her, it only touches upon the broad concepts and doesn't really indicate much of the practice of the religion other than the parading of the mikoshi and the order of purification of body parts before approaching a shrine or temple.

OVERALL: Get this book if you want to get a nice framework to study Shinto from. Avoid this book if you are well-acquainted with the religion and its basic concepts, as you will not likely get much out of it. I would highly recommend this book if you are wanting to help your teen (12-14) get interested in world religions.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Shrine to Dionysus Update

My shrine to Dionysus has grown these past few months and seeing as I didn't have time to compile some entertainment links, I think I'm going to take this chance to show it. A nice little basic set-up, very simple. I feel that anyone who wants to set up a shrine could follow the basic set up. One thing for burning incense, two bowls for offerings (one for libations and one for food offerings) one flame source, and one container to keep water in for creating khernips. Very basic and works well. The wine bottle, stones, and medals are votive gifts and thus not "needed" for the basic shrine set-up, but remember that votive gifts are a way of showing thanks, and thus any shrine you set-up will probably wind up with a few.




Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Predictions of Community

I've been thinking quite a bit about where the Pagan community as a whole is going, and where individual groups are going. Many of us try to pretend that our actions concern only us, but that simply is not the truth or case, our actions will inevitably affect those who we share the community with and will affect some individuals or groups desires to be associated with the neo-Pagan community and movement. I have a few predictions that I"m going to make, with the possible hope of bringing in dialogue and with the definite purpose of sorting my own thoughts about the whole issue out. Here are my predictions based on nothing more than my own observations. No divination was used, nothing like that.

  • Eclecticism in the general sense is probably going to die out. The community in of itself is probably going to cool down and settle to some sort of similar practice, theology, and cosmology. Variations will arise (see Theravada Buddhism vs Vajrayana Buddhism for example) but there will be some sort of common base. A group similar to ADF (if not ADF themselves) will likely be the torch-bearer for the whole she-bang. Smaller factional groups will likely arise, but they will share many of the "solidified" elements of their Pagan base and will remain in "brotherhood" with their religious "cousins"  Wicca will either be a large denomination or will be consumed by the large group that is the torch-bearer. We can easily see all of these tendencies by looking at your standard fare at a Pagan Pride Day or at a general Pagan convention.

  •  Reconstructionist religions will attach themselves (at least partially) to the Neo-Pagan movement until they are big enough to stand on their own. Reconstructionist groups, while very small, will have to rely on the Pagan "tent" to provide recruitment, limited-protection, and a limited sense of community. In exchange the general Pagan community will pilfer elements from the groups to enrich their own traditions. Reconstructionist groups will reach a "critical mass" point to where the members of the religion realize they don't need the Pagan tent anymore, and will slowly begin to distance themselves from the Pagan community and adopt a more "this is us, that is them" mentality towards the Neo-Pagan community. We are already seeing this trend beginning in the Asatru/Heathen communities in which many members are starting to cut ties with the Pagan community at large. Reconstructionist religions will also be forced to form some sort of unifying head for their particular religion (i.e. Asatru and Hellenismos would not have the same unifying head). This unifying group will provide a loose definition of what the religion consists of to outsiders, and will provide the members of the religion a means of building community and organizing themselves. Those who do not do this will remain small. 

  • Neo-Druidry and Wiccan traditions will either meld into one tradition or will both become large denominations for the Pagan community. We will start to see a sort of middle-ground between soft, hard, and archetypal polytheism and systems of theology and cosmology will arise which accommodates these strikingly different view points. "Borrowing" from other religions will begin to slow down and eventually cease (as in, completely new influences being brought in) as Paganism gets its own sense of "this is what we do"  

  • There will be a decrease in the acceptance and tolerance of traditions which are discriminatory in terms of gender and/or sexual orientation. Therefore, I predict that the Goddess tradition will either diminish in number or break away from the Pagan umbrella and that the Dianic tradition will greatly diminish in number. I am uncertain if they will become "extinct" but I definitely feel that they will be seen as "radicals" and "not really *us*" much as liberal-Christians feel about hard-right Evangelicals. 

     
Thoughts? Comments? Leave them below.

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Monday, January 7, 2013

CD Review-What We Saw From the Cheap Seats



REVIEW: WHAT WE SAW FROM THE CHEAP SEATS by Regina Spektor

OVERALL SCORE: 7.5/10
                What We Saw From the Cheap Seats is singer/songwriter Regina Spektor’s most recent album was released on May 29, 2012. The album overall has a more poppy feel than her previous albums, but still has the typical Regina style.
                The album opens with “Small Town Moon”. This song, I feel, sets a certain tone for  the rest of the album, the softer and more gentle verses being interrupted with a slightly harsher sounding chorus giving the song a sort of tension and energy, This is followed by the strange “Oh Marcello”, whose lyrics I cannot make heads or tails of. I think it might be about Hitler’s mom, but I’m not entirely sure. It also includes the hook from a Nina Simon song, and part of me wonders if the whole song was created as an excuse for that hook. We then come to the rather tropical feeling, but otherwise unremarkable song “Ne Me Quitte Pas”, which is actually a newer version of the one found on her album “Songs”.  The lyrics and tune are kind of catchy, but the song just feels pretty plain to me.  “Firewood” “Patron Saint” and “How” are all rather typical from what you expect from Spektor. Then we come to “All the Rowboats”
                This song actually gives me goosebumps. The lyrics and the feel of the song is kind of dark in of themselves, lamenting the fact that beautiful art never gets to be appreciated or used by people, but rather just gets stuck in stuffy museums. The price of greatness comes out to be a life of eventual boredom and stagnation which one might not have to face if they hadn’t achieved such greatness. The person is lost behind their art, they don’t become a person, but rather become an art piece. That being said, ole Regina got a little carried away with the percussion instruments and making explodey noises with her mouth in this one, so the ending of the songs falls a tad. . .flat, because of that.
                “Ballad of a Politician” is another example of Regina displaying her quirkiness that made me fall in love with her music.  “Open” is another haunting song, and easily my favorite on the album. “The Party” and “Jessica” overall are not good ways to end the album. Both are a sudden departure from the previous songs which we were hearing and are kind of unremarkable in a way.
                Now looking at the album in a whole, it is definitely going to be a lot more accessible to mainstream listeners. It only has a couple of quirky songs on it, but the majority of it seems a little too “poppy” for my liking. Nothing as bad as Ke$ha or Minaj (both of which I find laughable excuses for musicians) but the influence is there. The album has a slightly less varied “feeling” to it than previous albums like “Songs” or “Far”, but this doesn’t detract overall. I was slightly disappointed, but it is definitely worth adding to your collection, and might be a good introduction to Regina for the standard Pop listener. 

You can buy the album here


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Friday, January 4, 2013

Where'd I Go? (And New Posting Schedule)

WHELP. Turns out life got a bit crazy and out of hand at the end of the year, but I've resolved the issues, and will begin posting according to this new schedule.

MONDAY: Reviews! I will post reviews using a scale of 1-10 with 5 being average. Books and CDS will be reviewed regardless of how old or new they are. Video games will be reviewed as long as they are less than 6 months old or if they are older than 4 years old. Movies will be reviewed as long as they are less than 3 months old or as long as they are older than 10 years old.

WEDNESDAY: Thoughts and Musings(and personal stories)! This will be the day when I post any musings/ramblings or thoughts on religious, social, political, or other issues which no one will likely read or care about but I will post them anyway because I like talking to myself.

FRIDAY: Entertainment! Saccharine, mindless, and/or silly stuff will be posted these days. It won't have (much) commentary. I promise. Personal photos or other things may also be posted on this day.



Weekends I'll post whatever I please.

ALRIGHT Y'ALL! SEE YOU NEXT WEEK! HAPPY NEW YEARS

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A young man living in North Texas. He is an actor, a Hellenistos, and a proud member of Hellenion.