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I have something like $150 in credit at our local used book chain. Since my recent loss, I’ve been recommended a small handful of books, ranging from the helpful to the horrific. The best recommendation, though, came from a misreading of a title (Creative meaning from loss?) and a slightly askew book on a shelf. Making Loss Matter : Creating Meaning in Difficult Times was this book.

By the first page, I was already sniffling. I purchased the book right away, and read it over the course of a few weeks. As I went through the book, it occurred to me that anyone who has experienced a kind of loss could do well with this book. Rabbi Wolpe talks about the losses that everyone experiences. Loss of home, dreams, self, love, faith and life. Sometimes those losses encompass more than one of those things. Certainly, my own did.

Don’t let the fact that this is written by a religious man deter you, whether you consider yourself an atheist or non-Jewish. In fact, as a former Christian, atheist and solid agnostic, I found his views on faith and God unbelievably refreshing, especially compared to some of the previous books I’ve been handed that deal with my more specific kind of loss. In his chapter on Faith, Rabbi Wolpe writes:

The root of many problems of faith is a misunderstanding encourages by religion itself. We are often told that if only we are good, or act a certain way, God will reward us. Then we are struck by the losses of life. We see that there is no power that will save us from loss. Our means of navigating through the difficult times, the certainty of meaning, is snatched from us. If the universe has no guidance, whether we call it God or not, then how can our loss have meaning?

Establishing ourselves in the universe on the basis of quid pro quo cannot be right, however. There must be a better basis for relationship than the simple exchange of goods that some imagine is what being close to God is truly about. Meaning must be based on something deeper than my hope to be helped to success. Love is focused on the other, and on the transformation of the beloved to become worthier.

Rabbi Wolpe uses stories from the Bible, Jewish scholars, his own life and friends, history and literature to illustrate loss and it’s universal nature. These stories illustrate the unavoidable truth of loss, but also the ways those losses can create meaning in our lives and those of others. Personally, the book encouraged my own efforts to accept loss as a part of my life, but also to do something towards finding my own meaning in this cosmos.

I highly recommend this book. I believe it’s especially valuable for those who find themselves grieving, but don’t know what for, or why. This book is easy to approach, with a great deal of humanity and poignancy. I’m grateful to the person who didn’t quite put it back in the right place, for bringing it to my attention.

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Black Love

I was going over my last.fm while trying to figure out what to listen to next. My top music picks are similar to what I was listening to 15 years ago, with some additions. One of those is the Afghan Whigs.

Growing up in the Cincinnati area, I knew who the Afghan Whigs were. They played them on local radio, and I heard they were pretty cool. I passed by the albums at the used cd store more than a few times, and I knew they were chocked full of latent awesomeness – and I had rocked out to “Honky’s Ladder” on the radio.

Despite my curiosity with the Whigs after I saw their CD’s easily available in Dublin, Ireland in 1996, it wasn’t until 1999 that I remembered that the Afghan Whigs were worth devotional listening. This I have Lev (of BoingBoing Gadgets fame) to thank. He and I made the long trek across country to Burning Man in 1999, and of course every good road trip requires good tunes. I got reminded of the awesomeness of the Whigs on that trip and became desperately hooked.

I’m still hooked to all things Dulli (Greg, that is). I’ve loved the Twilight Singers, his solo work, and his joint project w/ Mark Lanigan, The Gutter Twins.

Black Love – which I’m listening to now, is still one of my favorite Whigs albums. I feel a need to listen to it from start to finish, every song in order, as if there is some divine completeness to it. The first song, Crime Scene Part One is perfectly bookended by Faded. Love, violence, sex, drugs and alcohol with an intense reverence to classic R&B, funk and soul played – this is what I love about the Whigs, and Greg Dulli.

Just thought I’d share – because hey, it’s my blog, and I don’t write in this thing enough.

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from Laughing Squid

They’re promising to rebuild the Man for the weekend burn. This just all seems ridiculous to me. Of course, this is because I went to Burning Man for the first time in 99, about 2 years after it was last “cool.” I went in 2000 and 2004, and my last burn was really not all that great. It was too big, and it was starting to show the stresses of the population. I really believe that once you get a certain population density, even for a brief period of time, like a week, you’re going to start having some of the same problems that other American cities have. I’m talking about everything from sanitation to crime. The larger the population, the more infrastructure by the Org required to keep things seeming like nothing has changed on the surface. The Man no longer sits on top of hay stacks, and now they have a well oiled emergency services and the risk of DYING at Burning Man is pretty low. Hell, the risk of an unintentional fire is pretty low. They put out the man in 26 min, and it was not fully consumed.

While I do think arson is bad, I find it amusing that Burning Man has been the haven for people who like to blow shit up, burn it, prance around naked, do drugs and give the finger to the Law. Burning someone elses art is also bad. The thing is, I don’t consider the Man art any more because it’s trademarked and a brand. And besides, it was MEANT to burn. Isn’t this just what the over-commercialized, over-run event needs? A reminder of how EPHEMERAL the event is supposed to be? It seems that one of the wonderful things about Burning Man is that the burn symbolizes the end and beginning — it’s a modern ritual in understanding impermanance and letting what’s burned stay burned, at least for the year. Why build another man to burn the same week?

One year. One Man.

To me, it just says, “How American.” This year is called “Green Man.” Some people have called for an increased emphasis on envioronmental sensitivity and sustainability wrt the event. There are a lot of resources poured into the event — fossil fuels, lumber and sanitation are just parts of the infrastructure, let alone what people bring in – RV’s, generators, etc. Whatever happened to dealing with a non-recouperable experience and moving on? I think in 2K one of the Man’s arms didn’t go up for the burn. Did that mean that it didn’t burn and we waited for it to be fixed? Sometimes things don’t happen the way we want. It’s not like the Temple doesn’t burn at the end of the week.

Whatever happened to packing up all your stuff with a tent and rations and water, going out and having a great time with the threat of death?

It’s just crazy.

I’ll repeat at the end of this: I don’t think it’s cool that someone lit the Man on fire early. I do think that people should just let it stay burned and not build another man. “Suck it up and deal.”

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Deliberate Consumption is my new favorite thing. So much my new favorite thing, that it really is the only topic I want to write about on this blog these days.

What I mean when I say “deliberate consumption” is that my intention for myself is to make deliberate, careful choices about what I consume. From just what I see in print advertising and total real-estate of shopping institutions, I would say that my demographic (nearly 30, femme, white, middle class woman) is probably the most sought after for dollars. I may be overgeneralizing, and certainly have no facts to back this up, just my own observation, which being a nearly 30, femme, white , middle class woman may be scewed towards what I notice and take interest in. I’m trying desperately to overcome the idea that I “need” something, and figure out where these desires come from, and what the product I’m desiring really does for me.
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Gwen Stefani’s company, Harajuku Lovers, has some pretty funky bags available at Macy’s. While checking in to Macy’s yesterday to get some cosmetics, I was struck by the gratuitously cute bags, but what really struck me was the LeSportsac bags. Holy crap! Supercute Tokidoki bags overwhelp the cute of Harajuku Lovers. The price is a bit higher, but then again, this is better design and more durable (at least, more durable looking.) I bought a shoulder bag for going around Japan in a month. I was so impressed with the designs on the LeSportsac bags, that I purchased a another designer bag for the spring designed by French designer Fafi.
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