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homogenius



Last Updated: 4/7/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 26
Sign: Capricorn

City: Denver
State: Colorado
Country: US

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Wednesday, January 09, 2008 

Current mood:  restless

I should know by now that my body just doesn't function well without food for long periods of time, especially when that long period of time happens to be on a particularly tough and busy day at work. But, after almost seven straight hours of mind-numbing work, I met my beau for lunch and came back with all kinds of new energy and a half-way decent attitude to boot. Imagine that.

 

In other news, I got my lip pierced on Sunday and am still loving it although it work me up last night swollen almost as large as the ring that's in it. It seems to be doing better today, though. Also, last night it snowed and I got to experience the feeling of freezing cold metal in my face for the first time. That was interesting.  

 

There's really no point to this post.

 

So there.

Currently listening:
Sleep Through The Static
By Jack Johnson
Release date: 05 February, 2008
Tuesday, December 04, 2007 

Current mood:  energetic

A study released today by the Brookings Institute ranked America's 30 biggest cities according to their walkability. According to the report, Denver was ranked as the forth most walkable city in America, beating out Portland, Seattle, and New York (among many others). For a full list of rankings, look below.

 

In honor of the news, I'm taking my dog on an extended walk this evening to celebrate another sign that I made the right decision and to bask in the beautiful mid-60's weather. Love it!

 

  1. Washington
  2. Boston
  3. San Francisco
  4. Denver
  5. Portland, Ore.
  6. Seattle
  7. Chicago
  8. Miami
  9. Pittsburgh
  10.  New York
  11.  San Diego 
  12.  Los Angeles
  13.  Philadelphia
  14.  Atlanta
  15.  Baltimore
  16.  St. Louis
  17.  Minneapolis
  18.  Detroit
  19.  Columbus, Ohio
  20.  Las Vegas
  21.  Houston
  22.  San Antonio
  23.  Kansas City, Mo.
  24.  Orlando, Fla.
  25.  Dallas
  26.  Phoenix
  27.  Sacramento, Calif.
  28.  Cincinnati
  29.  Cleveland
  30.  Tampa, Fla.

 

Currently listening:
You Were Here
By Sarah Harmer
Release date: 29 August, 2000
Wednesday, November 21, 2007 

Current mood:deflated
Tuesday, November 20, 2007 

Current mood:  cold

Thanks Chris.

10 things you wish you could say to 10 different people right now:
1. I miss you. Come visit me so we can cook and shop and talk.
2. When I think about how much I love you, I have to fight off tears.
3. I'm so glad our relationship didn't ruin our chance at a friendship.
4. I know we're far apart now, but please stay close.
5. It might not have seemed like a big deal to you, but I don't think I can ever trust you again.
6. I'm so glad I met you.
7. Grow. up.
8. You showed me how to love myself and I attribute the success of my adulthood to the skills you taught me. I can't thank you enough.
9. Although you are good looking, I was never physically attracted to you.
10. I wish, I wish, I wish I could be sure, but I'm not.

Nine things about yourself;
1. I like to cook a lot, but you probably know this already…
2. My hands and feet are almost always freezing.
3. I hold myself to ridiculously high standards that I don't expect of other people.
4. For as critical as I am, I am also very understanding.
5. I always have a song stuck in my head.
6. I've probably thought about it.
7. Although I can be in charge, I like it when someone else takes control.
8. I am stubborn, sarcastic, opinionated and very loving.
9. I can never do just one thing at a time.

Eight ways to win your heart;
1. make me laugh.
2. love my dog.
3. enjoy food.
4. help with the dishes.
5. listen when I'm talking.
6. hold me close, but don't hold me down.
7. show up when you say you are going to.
8. be honest.

Seven things that cross your mind a lot;
1. What am I doing?!?
2. I wonder if secretly starving my dog without knowing it?
3. Do people think my apartment is a total sty?
4. I should go to grad school, but I don't know what I want to study.
5. Did I forget to do something really important?
6. I should exercise more.
7. Will the cost/benefit ratio of the tastiness of this food to the pain that it will cause me be worth it?

Six things you wish you never did.
1. Stop taking piano lessons.
2. Pass up photography class.
3. Date that alcoholic in college.
4. Took French instead of Spanish
5. Throw away my paintings.
6. Got into debt. For anything.

Five turn offs;
1. Alcoholism/substance abuse.
2. Intolerance.
3. Apathy.
4. Negative self image/talk.
5. Narcissism.

Four turn ons.
1. intelligence.
2. sense of humor.
3. compassion.
4. ambition.

Three smileys that describe your life.
1. :)
2. ?!?
3. XO

Two things you want to do before you die;
1. travel out of the country.
2. publish a book.

One confession.
1. I'm happier than I've ever been.

Currently listening:
Begin to Hope
By Regina Spektor
Release date: 13 June, 2006
Monday, November 12, 2007 

Currently reading:
Sick: The Untold Story of America’s Health Care Crisis---and the People Who Pay the Price
By Jonathan Cohn
Release date: 10 April, 2007
Wednesday, November 07, 2007 

Current mood:  annoyed



I know that I'm often complaining about something when I write these, but honestly, I have to talk about this.

 

Today I went to a very popular vegetarian/vegan website only to find a picture of a naked woman with the text, "Sophie Monk Bares All to Promote Vegetarianism."

 

Puke.

 

This couldn't have made me more nauseous if she were rolling around in a pile of raw chicken instead of the "sexy" bright red chili peppers that accent her ridiculously thin, fallaciously blond and buffed self. I know I'm the buzz killer here, but what, exactly does a naked woman's body have to do with choosing or not choosing to eat animal products? Honestly this site shows more respect for pigs than for women. WTF?

 

I guess if I had just stumbled across this independent of all the other images objectifying women and their bodies, I wouldn't have been so upset. But a series of posts about images of women as bathroom accessories on feministing.com had me on edge. Yeah, I guess those images coupled with this story on Big Brother Africa airing a sexual assault and then arguing that it wasn't sexual assault because you couldn't tell if the assaulted woman was conscious or not at the time.

 

More Puke.

 

I can only imagine that my feelings on this subject will deepen if I ever have a daughter, but as it stands, I have four younger sisters and it makes me sick to think that they will grow up in a society that tells them that they don't really have use beyond urinal décor or booby bull's-eye. I don't understand how as a society we can condone this type of treatment. I mean we wouldn't treat animals the way we treat women in this country. And who better to show us that than PETA? See? I just tried to find a random site for PETA and on it are side by side images of scantily clad women passing out PETA literature and then the faces of two pigs laying together in the grass. You see more naked skin on the women than the pigs and the pigs aren't even wearing clothes.

 

Objectify the woman, humanize the animal.

 

All of it makes me sick. Women's bodies are so amazing, and yet in addition to the everyday duties of working, healing, perpetuating the species, and dealing with every over-looked social problem (I mean how are things like healthcare and education "Women's Issues"?) women's bodies are also charged with selling products from watches to cars, shampoo, shoes, the list goes on. And don't even get me started on alcohol.  I'm just so tired of it. And I don't understand how people who make these ads or buy these products don't see that objectifying, violent images of women lead to violence against real women.  

 

I would make more sense of this, but I'm tired and sick to my stomach.

Currently reading:
The Art of Simple Food: Notes, Lessons, and Recipes from a Delicious Revolution
By Alice Waters
Release date: 02 October, 2007
Friday, October 26, 2007 

Oh you have to love the hypocrisy of some anti-choicers.

My new job, as many of you may know is in healthcare reform, and there has been all kinds of discussion about SCHIP – a program aimed at ensuring kids have access to healthcare services – came up for reauthorization. As is to be expected with any kind of political process, there has been all kinds of discussion around the bill and whether or not it will finally escape the president's veto. One little gem I somehow missed in all the back and forth was the story below. Turns out that when this crucial federal healthcare program for kids came up for reauthorization, a prominent anti-choice group refused to support it.

I just love the fact that a bunch of people who want to force women to carry unwanted pregnancies, don't really care about making sure that children who do make it into this world have access to extravagant things like vaccines.

According to an article in the hill NRLC thinks that providing healthcare to kids will lead to "government-sponsored euthanasia."

Obviously.

 

Anti-Abortion Group Will Not Support SCHIP

National Right to Life Committee, the well-known anti-abortion rights group, is under fire from anti-abortion Democrats in Congress for refusing to support the State Children's Health Insurance Program expansion bill. The new version of the bill passed in the House on Thursday with a vote of 265-142.

The bill is a re-worked version of the SCHIP expansion bill vetoed by President Bush earlier this month. The House fell 13 votes shy of overriding the President's veto last week.

President Bush is threatening to veto the new bill. Thursday's 265-142 vote is still short of the two-thirds majority required to override the veto. The bill has more support in the Senate, which approved the original bill 67-29, reports CQ.com.

Media Resources: CQ.com 10/16/07; Feminist Daily News Wire 10/3/07

Feminist.org: Your daily source for the feminist perspective on national and global events.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007 

Current mood:quiet

 

At 11:45am I set down to write this. I fully expected it to be at least 1:30 because already this morning I have:

 

* roasted an eggplant

* gone grocery shopping

* made breakfast

* turned my eggplant into baba ganoush

* made "late summer peach scones"

* soaked and started beans for a soup

* done all the dishes

 

All this and I only woke up at 8. I have the whole day off so I'll have to try to curb this cooking mania, or there won't be any room in my fridge.  If you live near me and like food, please come get some. I certainly won't be able to eat this all myself. 

Currently listening:
KCRW: Morning Becomes Eclectic
By Various Artists
Release date: 07 September, 1999
Thursday, September 06, 2007 

Current mood:  calm

I know this is kind of old, but I'm on a major food politics high again. Some interesting highlights -

* Producing a calorie of meat protein means burning more than ten times as much fossil fuels--and spewing more than ten times as much heat-trapping carbon dioxide--as does a calorie of plant protein.

* The United States alone slaughters more than 10 billion land animals every year.

* The livestock sector emerges as one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems.

* Animal agriculture accounts emits 37% of our methane, and a whopping 65% of our nitrous oxide, enormously effective greenhouse gases with 23 and 296 times the warming power of carbon dioxide, respectively.

Vegetarian is the New Prius

by Kathy Freston

President Herbert Hoover promised "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage." With warnings about global warming reaching feverish levels, many are having second thoughts about all those cars. It seems they should instead be worrying about the chickens.

Last month, the United Nations published a report on livestock and the environment with a stunning conclusion: "The livestock sector emerges as one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global." It turns out that raising animals for food is a primary cause of land degradation, air pollution, water shortage, water pollution, loss of biodiversity, and not least of all, global warming.

That's right, global warming. You've probably heard the story: emissions of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide are changing our climate, and scientists warn of more extreme weather, coastal flooding, spreading disease, and mass extinctions. It seems that when you step outside and wonder what happened to winter, you might want to think about what you had for dinner last night. The U.N. report says almost a fifth of global warming emissions come from livestock (i.e., those chickens Hoover was talking about, plus pigs, cattle, and others)--that's more emissions than from all of the world's transportation combined.

For a decade now, the image of Leonardo DiCaprio cruising in his hybrid Toyota Prius has defined the gold standard for environmentalism. These gas-sipping vehicles became a veritable symbol of the consumers' power to strike a blow against global warming. Just think: a car that could cut your vehicle emissions in half - in a country responsible for 25% of the world's total greenhouse gas emissions. Federal fuel economy standards languished in Congress, and average vehicle mileage dropped to its lowest level in decades, but the Prius showed people that another way is possible. Toyota could not import the cars fast enough to meet demand.

Last year researchers at the University of Chicago took the Prius down a peg when they turned their attention to another gas guzzling consumer purchase. They noted that feeding animals for meat, dairy, and egg production requires growing some ten times as much crops as we'd need if we just ate pasta primavera, faux chicken nuggets, and other plant foods. On top of that, we have to transport the animals to slaughterhouses, slaughter them, refrigerate their carcasses, and distribute their flesh all across the country. Producing a calorie of meat protein means burning more than ten times as much fossil fuels--and spewing more than ten times as much heat-trapping carbon dioxide--as does a calorie of plant protein. The researchers found that, when it's all added up, the average American does more to reduce global warming emissions by going vegetarian than by switching to a Prius.

According to the UN report, it gets even worse when we include the vast quantities of land needed to give us our steak and pork chops. Animal agriculture takes up an incredible 70% of all agricultural land, and 30% of the total land surface of the planet. As a result, farmed animals are probably the biggest cause of slashing and burning the world's forests. Today, 70% of former Amazon rainforest is used for pastureland, and feed crops cover much of the remainder. These forests serve as "sinks," absorbing carbon dioxide from the air, and burning these forests releases all the stored carbon dioxide, quantities that exceed by far the fossil fuel emission of animal agriculture.

As if that wasn't bad enough, the real kicker comes when looking at gases besides carbon dioxide--gases like methane and nitrous oxide, enormously effective greenhouse gases with 23 and 296 times the warming power of carbon dioxide, respectively. If carbon dioxide is responsible for about one-half of human-related greenhouse gas warming since the industrial revolution, methane and nitrous oxide are responsible for another one-third. These super-strong gases come primarily from farmed animals' digestive processes, and from their manure. In fact, while animal agriculture accounts for 9% of our carbon dioxide emissions, it emits 37% of our methane, and a whopping 65% of our nitrous oxide.

It's a little hard to take in when thinking of a small chick hatching from her fragile egg. How can an animal, so seemingly insignificant against the vastness of the earth, give off so much greenhouse gas as to change the global climate? The answer is in their sheer numbers. The United States alone slaughters more than 10 billion land animals every year, all to sustain a meat-ravenous culture that can barely conceive of a time not long ago when "a chicken in every pot" was considered a luxury. Land animals raised for food make up a staggering 20% of the entire land animal biomass of the earth. We are eating our planet to death.

What we're seeing is just the beginning, too. Meat consumption has increased five-fold in the past fifty years, and is expected to double again in the next fifty.

It sounds like a lot of bad news, but in fact it's quite the opposite. It means we have a powerful new weapon to use in addressing the most serious environmental crisis ever to face humanity. The Prius was an important step forward, but how often are people in the market for a new car? Now that we know a greener diet is even more effective than a greener car, we can make a difference at every single meal, simply by leaving the animals off of our plates. Who would have thought: what's good for our health is also good for the health of the planet!

Going veg provides more bang for your buck than driving a Prius. Plus, that bang comes a lot faster. The Prius cuts emissions of carbon dioxide, which spreads its warming effect slowly over a century. A big chunk of the problem with farmed animals, on the other hand, is methane, a gas which cycles out of the atmosphere in just a decade. That means less meat consumption quickly translates into a cooler planet.

Not just a cooler planet, also a cleaner one. Animal agriculture accounts for most of the water consumed in this country, emits two-thirds of the world's acid-rain-causing ammonia, and it the world's largest source of water pollution--killing entire river and marine ecosystems, destroying coral reefs, and of course, making people sick. Try to imagine the prodigious volumes of manure churned out by modern American farms: 5 million tons a day, more than a hundred times that of the human population, and far more than our land can possibly absorb. The acres and acres of cesspools stretching over much of our countryside, polluting the air and contaminating our water, make the Exxon Valdez oil spill look minor in comparison. All of which we can fix surprisingly easily, just by putting down our chicken wings and reaching for a veggie burger.

Doing so has never been easier. Recent years have seen an explosion of environmentally-friendly vegetarian foods. Even chains like Ruby Tuesday, Johnny Rockets, and Burger King offer delicious veggie burgers and supermarket refrigerators are lined with heart-healthy creamy soymilk and tasty veggie deli slices. Vegetarian foods have become staples at environmental gatherings, and garnered celebrity advocates like Bill Maher, Alec Baldwin, Paul McCartney, and of course Leonardo DiCaprio. Just as the Prius showed us that we each have in our hands the power to make a difference against a problem that endangers the future of humanity, going vegetarian gives us a new way to dramatically reduce our dangerous emissions that is even more effective, easier to do, more accessible to everyone and certainly goes better with french fries.

Ever-rising temperatures, melting ice caps, spreading tropical diseases, stronger hurricanes... So, what are you do doing for dinner tonight? Check out www.VegCooking.com for great ideas, free recipes, meal plans, and more! Check out the environmental section of www.GoVeg.com for a lot more information about the harmful effect of meat-eating on the environment. 

Kathy Freston is a self-help author and personal growth and spirituality counselor. She is the author of Expect a Miracle: Seven Spiritual Steps to Finding the Right Relationship. Her CDs offering guided meditation have been featured in W, Self, and Mode. Kathy and her husband, Tom Freston, divide their time between New York and Los Angeles.

Currently reading:
What to Eat
By Marion Nestle
Release date: 02 May, 2006
Thursday, August 30, 2007 

Current mood:  content



I know this is a couple days old, but I wanted to share an article I read in the paper the other day. Apparently Colorado is the leanest state in the country. Who knew? Maybe that's why I've lost 10 lbs since I moved here. Damn you peer pressure!!!

 

It's no wonder, though, that people here are thin. There is so much to do outdoors and Denver, at least, is a very bike-friendly city. In fact, I am borrowing a friend's bike for the weekend and can't wait to ride along the creek that runs through the center of the city. It's beautiful and apparently they do gondola rides in it.  

 

Last weekend I went on my first hike since moving here. It's wasn't too long, but the views were great and the company didn't totally suck. I posted the whopping four pictures I took, and am still waiting for the amazing picture of my dog passed out in the back seat of the car on the way home.  

 

More hikes and pictures soon to come!

Currently listening:
Say I Am You
By The Weepies
Release date: 07 March, 2006