Monday, January 21, 2008

Something borrowed, something fun, something true for me...


Are you a literature junkie? Take this test and find out! How many of these apply to you?


1. I have read fiction when I was depressed, or to cheer myself up.
2. I have gone on reading binges of an entire book or more in a day.
3. I read rapidly, often "gulping" chapters.
4. I have sometimes read early in the morning or before work.
5. I have hidden books in different places to sneak a chapter without being seen.
6. Sometimes I avoid friends or family obligations in order to read novels.
7. Sometimes I rewrite film or television dialogue as the characters speak.
8. I am unable to enjoy myself with others unless there is a book nearby.
9. At a party, I will often slip off unnoticed to read.
10. Reading has made me seek haunts and companions which I would otherwise avoid.
11. I have neglected personal hygiene or household chores until I have finished a novel.
12. I have spent money meant for necessities on books instead.
13. I have attempted to check out more library books than permitted.
14. Most of my friends are heavy fiction readers.
15. I have sometimes passed out from a night of heavy reading.
16. I have suffered "blackouts" or memory loss from a bout of reading.
17. I have wept, become angry or irrational because of something I read.
18. I have sometimes wished I did not read so much.
19. Sometimes I think my reading is out of control.


If you answered "yes" to four or more of these questions, you may be a literature abuser.


Affirmative responses to seven or more indicates a serious problem.

Once a relatively rare disorder, literature abuse, or LA, has risen to new levels due to the accessibility of higher education and increased college enrollment since the end of the Second World War. The number of literature abusers is currently at record levels.

Social costs of literature abuse: Abusers become withdrawn, uninterested in society or normal relationships. They fantasize, creating alternative worlds to occupy, to the neglect of friends and family. In severe cases they develop bad posture from reading in awkward positions or carrying heavy book bags. In the worst instances, they become cranky reference librarians in small towns.

Excessive reading during pregnancy is perhaps the number one cause of moral deformity among the children of English professors, teachers of English and creative writing. Known as Fetal Fiction Syndrome, this disease also leaves its victims prone to a lifetime of nearsightedness, daydreaming and emotional instability.

Heredity: Recent Harvard studies have established that heredity plays a considerable role in determining whether a person will become an abuser of literature. Most abusers have at least one parent who abused literature, often beginning at an early age and progressing into adulthood. Many spouses of an abuser become abusers themselves.

Other predisposing factors:
Fathers or mothers who are English teachers, professors, or heavy fiction readers; parents who do not encourage children to play games, participate in healthy sports, or watch television in the evening.

Prevention: Pre-marital screening and counseling, referral to adoption agencies in order to break the chain of abuse. English teachers in particular should seek partners active in other fields. Children should be encouraged to seek physical activity and to avoid isolation and morbid introspection.

Decline and fall: The English major Within the sordid world of literature abuse, the lowest circle belongs to those sufferers who have thrown their lives and hopes away to study literature in our colleges. Parents should look for signs that their children are taking the wrong path -- don't expect your teenager to approach you and say, "I can't stop reading Spenser." By the time you visit her dorm room and find the secret stash of the Paris Review, it may already be too late.

What to do if you suspect your child is becoming an English major:
Talk to your child in a loving way. Show your concern. Let her know you won't abandon her -- but that you aren't spending a hundred grand to put her through Stanford so she can clerk at Waldenbooks, either. But remember that she may not be able to make a decision without help; perhaps she has just finished Madame Bovary and is dying of arsenic poisoning.

Face the issue: Tell her what you know, and how: "I found this book in your purse. How long has this been going on?" Ask the hard question -- "Who is this Count Vronsky?"
Show her another way. Move the television set into her room. Introduce her to frat boys.
Do what you have to do. Tear up her library card. Make her stop signing her letters as "Emma." Force her to take a math class, or minor in Spanish. Transfer her to a Florida college.

You may be dealing with a life-threatening problem if one or more of the following applies:

*She can tell you how and when Thomas Chatterton died.
*She names one or more of her cats after a Romantic poet.
*Next to her bed is a picture of Lord Byron, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner
or any scene from the Lake District.


Most important, remember, you are not alone. To seek help for yourself or someone you love, contact the nearest chapter of the American Literature Abuse Society, or look under ALAS in your telephone directory.


by Michael McGrortyLibrary Dust


I guess it's just too late for me now! I answered "yes" to almost all of the above, plus I have 3 cats named for poets (ancient Latin, not Romantic, but still) and I am (was?) an English major!


What about you?

Friday, January 18, 2008

When the night has come...


Ah yes. We are languishing in the dark here. A quick joke for those of you who’ll get it:

John is walking around, minding his own business and thinking his own thinks when the Devil spots him. “Ah,” thinks the Devil. “Another soul for me to capture and torture.” Devil walks up to John and says “Good day, Mortal.” John looks at him and says: “Who are you?” The Devil replies: “I am the Prince of Darkness.”





“Oh!” says John. “I know who you are. You work for Eskom!”




Another one:



Breaking News: This morning word went out that the National Anthem of South Africa will no longer be "N'kosi sikelel' i'Africa". It is being updated to "Sounds of Silence" by Simon and Garfunkle (with the famous first line: "Hello Darkness my old friend..."

For those not In the Know: Eskom is South Africa’s power supplier. This company is completely (or almost completely) state (or government, it’s hard to know what’s the right term anymore) funded, plus they charge us, as consumers, an arm and a leg (seriously, we are one of the coutries that pay the most for electricity in the world) AND THEN it turns out that they do not have enough power for all of us who are paying for our electricity and in fact, will only have enough power in PERHAPS 8 to 10 years. This is because they didn't foresee that providing electricity to all of those who didn't have any (which is a laudable goal, don't get me wrong) would mean that capacity increases, and now they have too little power to go around, and have to make plans to build new power stations. Which will take AT LEAST 8 to 10 years until we have that extra power.

What about the meantime, I hear you ask.



Well, Eskom says. For now it’s rolling blackouts and Load Shedding (which is just a nicer way of saying: "We're cutting your power when we're needing power, so solly cholly"!)




The ironic part of this is when you try to access the schedule for the load shedding, the "service is unavailable". Talk about an understatement.




UPDATE: Eskom fixed the webpage, but I still have the pictorial proof, tee hee hee. Oh, and for this weekend, apparently the schedule is 90 minutes on, 150 minutes off, 90 on 150 off throughout the days on Saturday and maybe Sunday. Now I ask you with tears in my eyes: why do we even have electricity? And why are we paying between 18 and 14% more for this *lack* of electricity this year?

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Taking a break... from sleeping


Another fun thing about having kids is that sleep goes on a vacation... and sometimes it feels like it'll never return.

Just to sketch the scenario: we have two girls, one aged 4 months and one aged 2 and a half years. Sleep in our house (at least as done by me, as my husband would sleep through an explosion once he falls asleep) is pretty much non-existent in units of more than 1 hour at a time. And the horrible thing is, it's the older one that's having the trouble. I get up 3 times for her for every one time I get up for the baby.

The sad thing is, there was a time not so long ago when I thought she’d start sleeping through... and then she got chickenpox about 5 months ago, and ever since then her sleeping and mine have been demolished.

She wakes, crying, on average 6 to 12 times a night (from 7pm to 6 am). I’m going nucking futs here, and so is she! Any suggestions? Because pretty soon I’m going to go crazy!

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Wanted: calm and sanity - Reward Offered


I don’t know about you, but here mornings are the very definition of craziness. Oh, it starts innocently enough: huge brown eyes popping open and announcing to the world in general and me in particular:

“Time for get up, Mammia”. I reluctanty pry open my protesting eyes while she’s already holding a full-length conversation with the cat, including replies from said feline. I try to grumble (softly, so as to not wake the baby) “Logia, sleep some more, let’s sleep a little bit more,” but I know it’s useless. With an embattled sigh I pick up my cellphone-slash-alarm clock and peek at the time.

At this point, I fly out of bed, muttering expletives all the while, trying with very little success to prevent Logia from hearing it because of course I had meant to “snooze” the darn thing and instead had turned it off, so it is now 30 minutes later than it’s supposed to be.

“Farg!” Logan chimes happily. “Crêpe!”

Get the toddler, try to get her dressed. Consider buying some of those restraints they have in mental hospitals, the kind where you strap the patient to the bed. For those of you who’ve never had one: dressing a toddler is like putting clothes on a hyperactive and giggling squid who thinks escaping and running naked through the house is the absolute height of hilarity, and therefore puts all energy and resources to the achievement of that goal.

Finally, Logan is dressed. By this time I am dripping with the sweat of exertion, so into the shower we go, with helpful comments like “Mama naked” and “look your breast” to cheer me on. Should I try to keep her out of the bathroom, nuclear meltdown mode ensues, so I try to shower as quickly as is humanly possible.

The baby is still sleeping like, well, like a baby. With Logan in tow, I go into the spare bedroom, where I have set up my hair and make-up station. I did this so that the baby won’t wake when I dry my hair and apply my make-up, since Logan’s default volume seems to be “ear-piercing”. Trying to prevent the baby from waking is an excersize in futility, once Logan is up, so I haven’t even started drying my hair when the baby wakes and needs attention. So, I leave my hair the way it is and go to dress and diaper Katya.

Eventually I dress myself, and it’s usually only when we finally reach the car (having already locked the house, with Logan staring at everything and still trying to escape at each and every opportunity) that I realize that I never did my hair or make-up. Ah well. Into the car we go, and off to start a new day, and I am already exhaused. Again.

Ah well, it could have been worse. I could have had kittens in the house, causing the toddler to chase and terrorise them everywhere without end, meaning I have to look after them as well as her... oh wait. I do have that.
Am I the only one whose universe is run by a 2 and a half year old?