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6.30.2009

KO is a sugah-daddy

*sigh*

So, I googled Keith Olbermann tonight. Partly because I have an unhealthy obsession with him and partly because it is helping me procrastinate (I should be writing a paper). Amid the hotness that are his headshots, I found out that he:

  1. was born in 1959, making him 10 years older than my hubby (I had guesstimated maybe 2-3 years tops).
  2. his girlfriend is my age (50/2) and HOT.

This leads me to believe that dreams really do come true. And I'm not the only 20-something year old to lust after KO.

Oh yeah, GO AL FRANKEN!!! Woot!

60 Senate Seats = It's our turn now, bitches!

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6.28.2009

Mr. Deity

So, DH found some gold on the Skeptic website today. Mr. Deity. I ended up watching every episode instead of working on my Kinky Friedman power point. But each episode is only 2-5 minutes long so it's not really that taxing.

Anyway, I know that I rarely watch videos online that people recommend in their blogs, but this is really worth it. Here is the last episode (season 3 episode 2) from their website. It's sacrilegiously delicious!

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6.27.2009

Regina Spektor

I'm in no way an expert on music. I depend on my friends who are music experts to tell me what is worth listening to. Ha. But I know this is some good shit. And I love Regina Spektor wholly. So here is her new video and below it I put an old favorite of mine also by her.




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6.26.2009

No Special Rights For Christians!

Something about the town I live in really pisses me off.

Sunday is my day of the week to run errands (and it used to be my day to work a double not too long ago). On Sundays, in my town and the next one over (where I used to work and now usually run my errands), I get stopped by traffic-directing law enforcement officers for 5-20 minutes at 3 different points on my commute. This made me late to work almost every Sunday, even if I added the expected time I'd be sitting in this unnecessary traffic. And it is definitely an inconvenience that usually incites road rage for me almost weekly now. The unavoidable road where this occurs is a 55 mph farm road with one lane going each way. The establishments who get this kind of special treatment? Churches.

My tax dollars are being spent to make church-going more convenient for the people attending. The traffic in front of the church is not dangerous, nor inconvenient, for those already on the road. It is only inconvenient for the church-goers to have to wait their god-damn turn to enter traffic from the church parking lot. How is this not infringing on my right to an expedient commute? So, just because I don't attend church, is my time less important?

In addition, this is not a volunteer post by the police department. I know a couple of the guys who get put on "traffic control" duty. There are always two paid officers at each location, directing traffic when church lets out, stopping those on the road to let all the church-goers out of their parking lot.

I'm sorry, but when does being a church-going Christian gain special privileges and protection paid for by the government? How can you bitch about being "persecuted" and "held down" by the same institution that literally stops traffic to give you the "right-of-way?" Don't even get me started on your protest of the "special rights and protections" that the "privileged" LGBT community is asking for. You know, like the right that everyone else has to get married and protection against hate crimes. Except the "special privileges" you decry are actually equal rights and protections that should cover all citizens, while blocking traffic so you can get your 9 1/2 screaming children to Chili's in time for lunch specials is most definitely a "special privilege" that no one (in their right mind anyway) would categorize to be an inalienable right.

I have an idea. Why don't you use some of your famous "Christian patience" and wait your eff-ing turn. Hey, maybe if you pray hard enough, God will open the roads up like he parted the Red Sea for Moses! Then my tax money can go to something actually beneficial to the community, like fixing the god-damn road you are so desparate to get onto and paying the police department to protect our citizens (all of them) from actual danger.

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6.25.2009

The "King of Pop" Died Today

Michael Jackson
August 29, 1958 - June 25, 2009
Rest In Peace

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6.23.2009

People Who Can't Spell On How Not Sexy I Am

I'm so excited...I've inspired someone to post on a Pennsylvania politics forum about how not sexy I am. The post was titled "Political Sexpot (or not)" and this "Nixon2012" dude told me to "google 'sarah palin' and 'jeans'" to see what a real "amerian woman looks like". No joke, you guys. He actually spelled American like that! The lack of upper-case letters is all "Nixon2012", too.

I'm guessing he really loved my Palin-inspired, "elitist" tagline for my blog.

I know I'm doing my job when I piss off people who can't spell "American". I think this makes up for all the comments my readers have been not writing. ;)

God, I love the internet. What could be better than free porn, social networking, cyber-stalking-made-easy, and political discourse (even if you can't spell!).

Being Amerian is fun.


P.S. The post has been knocked out of the forum (they only keep an archive up to a certain amount of posts) but if you google it, you can read the first line... :-p

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6.22.2009

Free Show

So, the "new" dress I got at the thrift store this weekend...turns out it is see-thru. I did not notice this until, wearing said dress, I was walking to class this morning. It is moments like these that really test your confidence. Your welcome, students and faculty of SCU.

At least I can hide in the library for the rest of the day...

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6.21.2009

Smart Women Are Sexy

I just found out I'm on the Dean's List for the Spring '09 Semester. That's right, bitches! I'm awesome!

Spring '08 - President's List (at the Community College I got my Associate's at)
Fall '09 - President's List (CC)
Spring '09 - Dean's List (SCU)

I'm rocking the world of academia. Woot!

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6.19.2009

Bible Dinos update

Oh yeah, and for those of you who are curious about that Bible Dino dvd...it was put on by Jerry Fuckface and the host (or "lecturer") was that Australian dude with the "creationism museum" that features sculptures of dinosaurs hanging out with humans (aka building of lies).

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Ana Marie Cox...I love you...

So here is the video I promised from The Rachel Maddow Show last night featuring my new soul mate, Ana Marie Cox. She's actually wearing a Dr. Suess T-shirt under her suit jacket. *Sigh* I'm in love.


Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

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My newest soul mate

I saw my soul mate on Rachel Maddow last night. She joked that the only news worthy thing about Senator Ensign's affair was the fact that a Republican actually got someone to sleep with him. I'll post the video clip later. I'm in love!

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6.18.2009

The Bible Explains Dinosaurs

So, this was nestled amongst the documentaries and NOVA science specials at the library:

I had to see it since the box is so mysterious (basically, a piece of printer paper). I bet someone just slipped it in there as a "ministry tool". Either way, you know it has to be entertaining... I'll let you know how it goes!
P.S. I really do have some awesome blogs stored away in my "noggin" but have been crazy busy with school (Daft Punk "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" is my summer theme song). I did get a 98 on my 4 25-pt essay question ModPoliThought midterm yesterday though (score!).







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6.15.2009

Motivation

Sexual desire is by far my greatest motivation (Thanks, hypothalamus and limbic system, for your seemingly non-stop input). I'm not saying that sex is the only thing that motivates me (Sorry, Freud), but it can definitely light a fire under my ass.

A hypothetical situation to help you better understand this concept: I would make the worst spy ever. I would sabotage the first mission assigned to me by using my "spyhood" to pick up potential lovers in this manner: "Hey, can I buy you a drink? *insert small talk here* Well, I can't tell you what I do for a living because I'm in espionage but you seem trustworthy....Want to come up to my room so I can show you the top-secret, classified documents I keep in my panties?"

Anyway, I watched a spy movie over the weekend and this was the conclusion I drew in putting myself in a spy-themed daydream.

I'd curse my double-Scorpio status, but I can't be a very good atheist if I put any stock in astrology. Although, I can say my horoscope is way more entertaining than the bible.

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6.08.2009

Summer I

Well, my first day of the Summer I semester started today. Both of my classes are awesome. My Psych Tests & Measurements class will be interesting and there are a couple of people from Dr. A's class last semester in it so I have some company. The professor is really sweet and cuts to the chase. I've heard great things about her classes so I'm content.

The professor of my Modern Political Thought class is awesome. He's a huge Obama fan. He asked the class if we knew who Mrs. Sotomayor was and no one could answer so I went ahead and repeated her resume, life story, and position (appellate judge). Am I the only person who listens to NPR?? Ha. He was impressed anyway. The class is going to be so awesome. All we are going to do is discuss political philosophy. I do that in my spare time! He also said he prefers to focus on the discussion aspect of the class and he will give us review sheets for the tests that will cover everything we need to know (in other words, no surprise questions). Sweetness. Tomorrow we are discussing Plato.

I also took advantage of SCU's fitness center finally. I knew if I didn't start today, I'd put it off forever. Dude, they have the most amazing treadmills ever. These fancy machines have built in A/C that you control, Personal TV screen with Cable (I watched Hardball with Chris Matthews while jogging), places to plug in your headphones, music channels, fitness tests, heart-rate monitors, and giant convience containers for water/phones/whatever. I'll go work out just to use these treadmills!

Anyway, it was a productive day. I now must go shower and read 60 pages of Strauss discussing Plato.

-Me

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6.07.2009

Anarchy on Welfare

I know someone who happens to be a self-proclaimed anarchist. I'm going to call this person "SPA" (self-proclaimed anarchist) to protect hu(man)'s identity (and my well-being).

The Merriam-Webster defines anarchy as "1 a: absence of government b: a state of lawlessness or political disorder due to the absence of governmental authority c: a utopian society of individuals who enjoy complete freedom without government 2 a: absence or denial of any authority or established order b: absence of order."

SPA goes to protests, doesn't vote, believes that there are enough people in the U.S. to revolt against the government (and win), and thinks that the U.S. government is a sham that should be overturned.
The protests I am okay with (against the Iraq war; against W.; etc.), although SPA thinks that China has a better government because they are communist. I do not know if SPA realizes protesting against the government in China gets you killed or imprisoned.

The belief that voting is just "giving into the system" and therefore boycotting SPA's voting rights to "fuck the system" is just silly. Voting is the only way we are able to manipulate "the system" since our votes decide laws, law-makers, authority, etc. "Fucking the system" by not voting is just downright silly.

There are not enough anarchists in the U.S. to stage a successful revolt against the government that would eliminate all government authority, as SPA believes there is. I asked SPA how many people that SPA thinks are proclaimed anarchists in the U.S. today. SPA told me around 750,000. I said, "Okay, let's double that to 1.5 mil just to be fair. If all of the 1.5 mil anarchists in the U.S. get 5 people to also join in this revolt, we now have 9 million people rising up against the U.S. government." I started to explain how that is only 3 % of the population (out of 306,613,878 as of 2008 according the the US Census Bureau). A majority of Americans are not going to risk losing their homes, freedoms, cars, boats, jobs, or whatever to join in with 9 million people to revolt against the government.

I have no qualms with SPA's opinion of the U.S. government. Everyone has a right to their opinions. And, at the time of this conversation, W. was still in office so I agreed.

Anyway, none of that is really the point. Just some background info on my anarchist friend.

Someone has recently informed me that SPA has been on welfare, WIC, and receives food stamps from our government for over a year. In addition to the Pell Grants for school, of course.

I have no problems with receiving assistance from the government, in any form. I give, I get back, people with more need than I receive assistance because I payed my taxes...it all works out. I think Pell Grants, welfare, WIC, food stamps, and the like are all wonderful programs. I'm glad to hear that this is working out for someone I know.

Of course, SPA would never admit they receive government assistance. I wonder if SPA knows that if an anarchist revolt were to succeed in overthrowing our government, the government assistance that SPA receives would no longer exist.

I just thought some of you might join me in enjoying this wonderful example of irony.

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Stay tuned...

I have entries stored in my noggin to be written after I sleep off the beers...


I will address (in no particular order):

  • A self-proclaimed anarchist on food stamps
  • The time I almost agreed with something Darth Cheney said
  • The Sexuality Spectrum

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S.M.I.L.F.

So today I found out that I am a Step-M.I.L.F. (or SMILF). I think it's a cross between a smurf and a hot mom.

That is all.

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6.03.2009

The New Whigs

I have been comparing the current Republican Party to the former Whig Party for a little while now. The comparison is easily made as the eventual dissemination of the Whig Party came from the exclusive, extremist attitude of the former political faction. Sound familiar? The Whigs also represented the "business" sector and "moralists" of the time. Sound like someone you know?

Anyway, I haven't really discussed this comparison with many people because it seems so obvious a judgement. I've only really mentioned it during pillow-talk sessions with various lovers (really, just my husband and Keith Olbermann). I know, politics doesn't generally make for great "afterglow" banter but it usually revs us back up for seconds (especially when Dick and Bush are involved).

I only feel the need to bring up my Whig-Republican discussion up now because Keith asked me if he could use it on the Countdown the other night. I told him that was fine but since he wouldn't cite me for fear of our torrid affair becoming public (though our partners know- one of the perks of being an immoral progressive: Orgies), I made him promise that next time we get together we can roleplay Sean Hannity & Glenn Beck having anal sex (You guess who gets it in the butt).

Anyway, he used my comparison last night and I feel he justly represented my argument with more wit and grace than I would have.

But just so you know, I thought of it first.

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You Hypocritical Bastards

This blog is only intended to address those who are celebrating, or trying to justify, the murder of Dr. George Tiller.

"It is estimated that up to half of all fertilized eggs die and are lost (aborted) spontaneously, usually before the woman knows she is pregnant. Among those women who know they are pregnant, the miscarriage [spontaneous abortion] rate is about 15-20%. Most miscarriages occur during the first 7 weeks of pregnancy. The rate of miscarriage drops after the baby's heart beat is detected." - National Institute of Health (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/MEDLINEPLUS/ency/article/001488.htm) (italics are mine)

There are an estimated 6 million known pregnancies in the U.S. each year (pregnancy.org).

So God is the most successful abortionist of all, it seems. At the rate of 50% of all pregnancies (including those undetected) being spontaneously aborted that would add up to about 4-6 million spontaneous abortions per year in the United States alone. Even if you only count the woman who know they are pregnant, the number of miscarried is equal to the number of terminated pregnancies each year (20% of 6mil=1.2mil).

The number of abortions, or terminated pregnancies, performed legally each year in the U.S. is 1,200,000 (pregnancy.org).

So God "kills" 3-5X as many "babies" as abortion doctors in the U.S. alone EVERY YEAR.

So stop trying to imitate the Taliban with your efforts to impose your beliefs on America.

If you don't believe in abortion, then don't have an abortion. This is a democracy, not a theocracy. Doesn't God call for you to obey the authorities placed in charge of the laws somewhere in the bible? (To save your time, Romans 13:1-7)

Extreme Christianity taking the form of violence is no different from Extreme Islam beliefs taking the form of violence (or any type of religiously-inspired violence). You are cherry-picking the parts of the bible that justify your small-minded judgements. How is this form of terrorism any different than the terrorism in the Middle East, or anywhere for that matter?

You fucking hypocrites.

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Insomnia

(Originally posted on 5/26/09 at 6:49 AM)

I am so sick of being an insomniac. Where did the time of sleeping for 10-14 hours a night on my vacations go?

Since school has been out, I've been lucky to fall asleep between 7 and 9am for a few hours.

The ambien doesn't work. The soft music, reading, tv background noise, nor complete silence/darkness works. I've tried it all. The glass(es) of wine in the tub, snuggling, not snuggling, moving to the couch...all failures. Bleh.

And it's not the kind of insomnia that could maybe allow me to be productive with the extra hours at night. It is more like desperate zombie-insomnia so I just lay there and be a desperate zombie trying not to think about how I'm not sleeping.

Other than that, everything is fine.

Dr. A asked me to be on his research team for a study he will be conducting. It is awesome. Dr. A is a cross between Dr. Drew Pinsky and Keith Olbermann. He's witty, liberal, atheist, brilliant, and charming (as far as I can tell). Not that any of that matters when it comes to people I will be working with/for/under but it all definitely raises my motivation to be the best research assistant ever. The experience won't look bad on my grad degree application either. ;)

Banana Mouse is thriving. He is no longer content to sleep on me. He just wants to tunnel through my clothes and try to explore the bed. He's a fast little bugger too. He's got a pimped out cage tho and watching him eat sunflower seeds is my new favorite tv show. Mission accomplished (except for that whole not staying put thing).

I have registered for 2 summer I classes and 2 summer II classes. Round 1 starts June 8 so I suppose I should actually do something productive with my time off instead of sitting around the house reading Al Franken books and watching House reruns but it's so damn tempting to do just that! So that is basically all I've been up to since school got out. Anyway, I suppose I'll go lay down and muse about not sleeping some more.

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Saving you a text message charge

(Originally posted on 5/01/09 at 12:01 AM)

I would have sent this mass-text but my phone's been dead for 2 days (i'm sure natalie and sarah are sooo disappointed haha).

Many people said America would elect a black president "when pigs fly."

100 days into Obama's administration and Swine Flu.

HAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAH oh man... that's awesome.

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Our "Christian" Nation

(Originally posted on 4/14/09 at 8:23 PM)

You know, if I hear one more right-wing conservative talk about our nation's "Judeo-Christian" values, I'm going to freak out.

Tonight, because I like to get views from all sides of the spectrum, I turned Fox News on and one of their talking heads (the arrogant Sean Hannity) was interviewing the recently resigned leader of Focus on the Family, James Dobson. They were, not surprisingly, picking apart every "anti-American" quote that President Obama has said in his recent travels overseas. They said many inflammatory non-truths, as usual, but what really got me going tonight was when they criticized President Obama for saying that America "is not a Christian nation."

Um, hello? America IS NOT a Christian nation! We are a nation founded on freedom of religion. That means that we are a nation of people who are free to worship (or not worship) whichever diety, whenever, and however we choose. True, almost all politicians today claim Christianity as their religion when asked, but that is politics! It doesn't mean we are a "Christian" nation.



What did our Founding Fathers say about religion?

“The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason.” Benjamin Franklin Poor Richard's Almanack, 1758

“I have found Christian dogma unintelligible. Early in life, I absenteed myself from Christian assemblies.” Benjamin Franklin.

“Religious controversies are always productive of more acrimony and irreconcilable hatreds than those which spring from any other cause. I had hoped that liberal and enlightened thought would have reconciled the Christians so that their [not our?] religious fights would not endanger the peace of Society.” George Washington Letter to Sir Edward Newenham, June 22, 1792 (Washington was a Deist, by the way).

“The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.” John Adams, Treaty of Tripoly, article 11

“But how has it happened that millions of fables, tales, legends, have been blended with both Jewish and Christian revelation that have made them the most bloody religion that ever existed.” John Adams, letters to family and other leaders 1735-1826

Jefferson wrote his own version of the Bible, removing all references to miracles and the supernatural. He did not believe in the divinity of Jesus, the miracles, the Trinity, or the resurrection.

“Millions of innocent men, women, and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burned, tortured, fined, and imprisoned, yet we have not advanced one inch toward uniformity. What has been the effect of coercion? To make one half of the world fools and the other half hypocrites.” Thomas Jefferson, Notes on Virginia

“The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as His father, in the womb of a virgin will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter.” Thomas Jefferson, Letter to John Adams, April 11, 1823

James Madison was the father of the Constitution, being the principal author. He made sure there was complete separation of church and state and that the government could not establish any official religion. His first veto as president was to veto a faith-based-initiative which would have given public taxpayer funds to a church to operate a charitable program. Even though the purpose may have been noble, he did not want to go down that dangerous slope of setting a precedent, which would have allowed public funds to go to a religious organization.

“In no instance have . . . the churches been guardians of the liberties of the people.”
“Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise.
” James Madison, April 1, 1774

James Monroe (5th pres.) - Deist

John Quincy Adams (6th pres.) - Unitarian

Abraham Lincoln (16th pres.) - None

Lincoln officially had no religion. Some reference books incorrectly specify this as “non-denominational” but this suggests non-denominational Christian, which is not true. Lincoln specifically stated that he belongs to no religion. In his early adult years he was a Deist.

“My earlier views of the unsoundness of the Christian scheme of salvation and the human origin of the scriptures have become clearer and stronger with advancing years, and I see no reason for thinking I shall ever change them.” Lincoln in a letter to Judge J.S. Wakefield, after the death of Willie Lincoln

“He was an avowed and open infidel, and sometimes bordered on Atheism...He went further against Christian beliefs and doctrines and principles than any man I ever heard.” John T. Stuart, Lincoln's first law partner

(All quotes and religious affliation information found at
http://antiwarrepublicans.com/foundingfathers.aspx)


So, those of you who claim our nation was "founded on Judeo-Christian values" can now see that this is definitely not the case.

Also from this awesome website, antiwarrepublicans.com, where I found all of this information consolidated (this is definitely the most a republican has ever contributed to one of my blogs ha), I learned something that I did not know before:


Some religious zealots in the U.S. point to the “In God We Trust” motto which is on our currency and the Pledge of Allegiance as proof that the Founding Fathers wanted this nation to be set-up on Judeo-Christian principles.

The truth is that the Pledge of Allegiance was created in 1892 and did not have the words “under God” added until 1954 almost 200 years after the birth of the U.S.

The “In God We Trust” motto was first added to coins in 1864 nearly 100 years after the birth of the U.S. It did not become the national motto until 1956.

Theodore Roosevelt (26th pres.) was opposed to having this motto on the U.S. currency (http://antiwarrepublicans.com/foundingfathers.aspx
)


Oh my god (no pun intended). So, there are people out there who argue this point again and again, about the "under God" addition to the Pledge of Allegiance as proof of our nation being a "Christian" nation (I know because I've argued with them!). And this gobbledegook wasn't added to the Pledge until 1954?!?! Turns out that adding "under God" to the Pledge was nothing but part of the fearmongering of the cold war era (http://www.msplinks.com/MDFodHRwOi8vb2xkdGltZWlzbGFuZHMub3JnL3BsZWRnZS9wZGdlY2g4Lmh0bQ==).

Anyway, Dobson/Hannity then went on (and on) about other reasons Obama isn't a "real American", but this unfounded criticism of President Obama rightfully saying that America is not a "Christian nation" was the most disturbing to me (I don't have the time or energy to express my outrage at the rest of the interview right now!). They were acting as if President Obama is anti-American because he's telling the truth about our country. And though I am not the least bit surprised to hear this kind of silly dissent on Fox "News", I can't resist the oppurtunity to call the Religious Right out on their misinformation-spreading tactics.

Especially since our Founding Fathers agree with President Obama.

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Way too busy for blogs...

(Originally posted on 3/28/09 at 1:51 PM)

hey guys, just dropping a line to say hi and that I just don't have time for anything these days.
School is great though and fascinating and exhausting.
See you sometime after may 12th. ha.

Me

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Rectal Exams and Ringtones

(Originally posted on 3/11/09 at 8:13 PM)

hey there

last week I had 2 of the most embarrassing moments of my life in the same day. Thought I'd share...

1st, I was bleeding...from the booty...so I went to the ER per DH's insisting. I was also in a lot of pain so probably good thing I went. Well, the doc I got was this huge Italian mafia-looking doctor with giant fingers. He had me "assume the position" and stuck one of those giant fingers entirely into my rectum...while the hottest nurse I've ever seen stood by and watched (DH tried to reassure me that "maybe she liked it" ha). anyway i was fine (nothing major, just stress-induced colon blockage ha).

2nd, While taking my PhysioPsych exam, my phone went off. I couldn't find it so the entire ringtone played. Twice. Not that big of a deal, right? happens all the time...

Well, my ringtone goes something like this (by Of Montreal):


Want you to be my pleasure puss

I wanna know what it's like to be inside you...


Thankfully Dr. A just laughed and pretended not to look up from his book but the entire class laughed. I now have flashbacks when my phone rings.

That's all. I'll post a pic of my blockage xray later.

- Me

Ps at least I got a 96 on the test!

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All the updates...

(Originally posted on 2/27/09 at 3:14 PM)

Well, Let's see...

Taking 15 hours at SCU this spring: Psychology of Women (should be named Liberal Feminism ha), Physiological Psychology, Abnormal Psych, Logic & Critical Thinking (A Philosophy class that teaches people to think like I already do :p), and Applied Stats.

Classes are all going well. All A's so far. My abnormal psych professor is super-hot. It makes getting up so early (8am start time) worth it just so I can stare at her.

I stay in SCU-Town 2 nights a week with my friend, Mel. I have classes 4 days a week so the commute is just too much. Plus we're in a couple of the same classes so we get some major studying done.

I got fired from my job yesterday. This did not come as a surprise. I hated that job and I would have fired me too. Apparently they didn't like the fact that I did my homework during my shift (there was nothing else to do, trust me. they just wanted me to stand there doing nothing...fuck a bunch of that). Plus they heard me say, on one of the tapes (security cameras with audio?? PSSSSHHAWWW), that the manager's daughter/bookkeeper was dumber than a post. She is. I know this because I was once a store manager and I knew everything about my store, not just how to kinda do some stuff, sometimes. I didn't know they were eavesdropping. haha. Anyway, I'm glad I got fired because I really didn't want to work this week.

I need a part-time job. I can't do the full time thing anyway.

Things at home are good. I miss the kids (I haven't been able to spend ANY time with them since school started). DH and I have been able to get a couple hours here and there in though and we're great.

That's about it, folks.

GO-BAMA!

- DH

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President Barack Hussein Obama

(Originally posted on 1/21/09 at 5:58 PM)

I am so proud to be an American. I have never felt prouder of America and her people.

I went to whitehouse.gov today to see which of Candidate Obama's policies differed from President Obama's agendas and I saw very little change. I am proud to have supported our President during his candidacy and will continue to support him in the future.

Yes, we did. And, Yes, we will succeed in turning this country (and world) into a better, more inclusive place to live.

PS how many presidents do you know of who would acknowledge that this nation is a nation of ALL faiths (and atheists!!!), not just a 'christian nation', in an inaugural speech? Only MY president, thus far! GOBAMA! :)

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Oh, Kurt...

(Originally posted on 1/08/09 at 9:58 AM)

...vonnegut. How I miss you so.

I have been reading and rereading Vonnegut again. What a great mind. I am glad that he left his mark on the world the way that he did so that I could discover it.

I wish he had been able to live forever.

Kurt Vonnegut is up in heaven now.

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Rock Bottom...

(Originally posted on 12/17/08 at 2:03 AM)
THE ROCK BOTTOM MARCH!



THINK! KNOW! ACT!


"Mass Actions on the 6th Anniversary of the Iraq War"


March 21, 2009



DFW FOR PEACE

Photobucket


(along with any other groups that wish to support)
will be hosting a local peace march to protest
The 6th anniversary of the Iraq War. The location will be at:


FORT WORTH CITY HALL
1000 THROCKMORTON ST.
FORT WORTH, TX

we will be marching to:

US Army Recruiting
819 Taylor St
Fort Worth, TX 76102



The march will come after a few special guest speakers
(will be announced shortly).

We are trying to get a heads up of how many people are going to be there so there is an event listing at:

http://www.msplinks.com/MDFodHRwOi8vd3d3LmZhY2Vib29rLmNvbS9ldmVudC5waHA/ZWlkPTU4NzM3NTQxMTc2JnJlZj1tZg==

If you have facebook please RSVP for this event and invite everyone on your friends list.




Repost this via email, myspace, facebook, livejournal,
etc...

If you want to make donations please
email dustin at dfwforpeace@gmail.com for procedures.


We need tons of volunteers!

Email me asap if you want to get involved (besides just showing up)

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Graduation Ire

(Originally posted on 12/12/08 at 9:30 AM)

So,

Today I am setting a predecent for a "insert my maiden/parents' last name here" in getting a college degree. Although I am working towards Ph.D. ,and this is only 1 of 4 degrees in my future, it is still quite the accomplishment. I've never graduated from anything before. My parents home "schooled" me (handed my the curriculum and answer books so I could teach myself) and refused to even get my my senior year of highschool, which ended up not mattering anyway because they never kept track of my credits. I would have had to get my GED anyway.

Growing up, I was taught that college was a "worldy endeavor" and would be a waste of time "in the Kindom of Heaven". College, education, and science was looked down upon in my family. My parents never asked me what I wanted to do with my life. They just constantly pressured me to be a musician, but would have accepted housewife as equally "honorable". I wanted to be a doctor, my parents tried to force me into the christian music scene. I got a guitar instead of an education. I was told I was supposed to become an "obedient and submitting wife" and not an educated and independent woman.

But somehow, against the odds, I said "Fuck you, mom and dad. I'm going to college," and I moved out, got my GED, and got into college without anyone helping me figure out how this was done (they don't have guidance counselors in home school). And I did it, I am now a college graduate.

So as I walk the stage today, in my honors regalia, with my proud husband and stepson looking on from the audience, I will accept my degree with the knowledge that I fucking earned this moment. And no one can take that away from me, not even my absent parents, who are saving the gas money it would take to see their daughter graduate from college to get them to a "gig" (aka open-mic night) at a coffee house that they play at weekly.

Thanks, mom and dad. I owe none of this to you.

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Our Mutual Joy

(Originally posted on 12/09/08 at 6:20 AM)

http://www.newsweek.com/id/172653

Opponents of gay marriage often cite Scripture. But what the Bible teaches about love argues for the other side.

This is a really good scripture-based counter-arguement to the "bible-based" opposition to gay marriage. Definitely would read if you find yourself getting into it with someone who quotes the bible a lot. It is much more effective to argue using your opponent's logic instead of your own (if you can).

- Me

PS don't you love the title?

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What I am grateful for in 2008.

(Originally posted on 11/27/08 at 11:03 AM)

This is the short list and it isn't necessarily in order (although I have to say that obama and my family are tied at 1).

1.) President-Elect Barack Hussein Obama II!!!!!! WOOOOOO!!!! We won! We won!

2.) The Tao te Ching

3.) Getting elected to the Dem. State Convention in Austin & meeting fellow Texans who think progressively.

4.) My wonderful husband and my 2 great step-kids.

5.) My therapist for being amazingly understanding, listening to me, and providing the outlet I needed to realize my self.

6.) Completing two 16hr. semesters with all A's.

7.) My friends. Especially my best friend, K.H., who
has never let me down and is always there for me.

8.) Getting to know myself and gaining the insight and respect I needed to get my ass in gear.

9.) Finishing my Associates Degree!! Finally...after how many years? 5?

10.) Treating my mental health like I treat my physical health and healing many wounds leftover from my youth.

11.) Becoming a more whole person.

12.) Becoming a better wife and mother.

13.) Love.

14.) Gaining 22 more House seats and 7 more Senate seats in the U.S. Congress. Go Dems!

15.) Getting to go to ACL

16.) Who Killed Amanda Palmer?

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bragging

(Originally posted on 11/4/08 at 7:48 PM)

I just got 100 on my last Statistics test, which is amazing seeing how I skipped a bunch of classes before this last test. Everyone was all "Oh, well lookie here, she shows up for the test" on Thursday. I bet they won't make fun of me when I "accidentally" flash my test score. :p

I still haven't gotten a grade lower than a 92 on anything I've turned in this semester. All my class avgs are 96 or above. Not drinking during the semester really works. I even feel smarter this semester.

I applied for Graduation. And applied to SCU. Woot!

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Cute Stepmom Moment!

(Originally posted on 10/14/08 at 5:13 PM)

I really don't have time to write a blog right now because I have a test, paper, and art project with 5 parts due tomorrow but...

I just had a really cute stepmom moment and I wanted to share.

In our house, my Phi Theta Kappa certificate and dean's list notification certificate are framed and hung on the wall (I worked hard, I want to show off my achievements!).

Well, my youngest stepson, #2 (11), is really proud of them. I didn't realize this until a couple weeks ago when I overheard him showing them off to his cousin and explaining how I always study and my grades are all A's. #2 and I have bonded over our shared ADHD diagnoses and I help him with tricks and shortcuts I have learned to help with schoolwork and tests.

Anyway, tonight, as I am working on my paper, #2 comes into the bedroom, proudly toting his latest report card with all A's & one B. He shows it to me and says, "Look at my report card. And I framed it!" He is grinning from ear to ear. I totally cuted out. I guess I don't really think of myself as one of the people that my stepsons look up to because of my limited time with them, but this moment showed me that #2 does look at me as someone he can relate to and emulate. So rewarding. :)

It's funny because when my sisters used to copy me when we were kids, I would get totally pissed. It is totally different when your kids (or stepkids) copy you. It shows that they think of you as someone they want to be like...at least in some ways.

<3>

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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Veteran’s Affairs, and one pissed off activist.

(Originally posted on 10/10/08 at 6:12 PM)

I am pissed. Irked. Enraged. Angry.

As some of you might know, and most of you probably don't, I am getting my Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology with a specialization in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in order to do volunteer work and advocate for war veterans who are suffering from PTSD. My father was drafted to Vietnam, both of my grandfathers were in WWII, and although they did not come down with PTSD, I personally know veterans who have. One of my main inspirations for this line of work is one of my best friend's dad, who was a medic in Vietnam (with a Purple Heart). He has been suffering from PTSD since he came back 30 years ago and the Veteran's Affairs hospital will not treat him for it*****(edited, see below). He can't even go to a movie or loud restaurant because of the extent of his traumatization. This kind of treatment from the VA is unacceptable, but is the only treatment they provide for PTSD.

The VA does not even recognize PTSD anymore. They call it "Adjustment Disorder" now (as mentioned in a letter from the TX Veteran's Affairs hospital in response to the elevated number of troops coming back from Iraq with PTSD in order to cut cost of treatment down). If you are not "coded" (diagnosed) with PTSD, you are not eligible for veteran's benefits or VA hospital treatment, so very few veterans with PTSD ever get treated. Especially since the Doctors doing the diagnosing for the veterans are employed by the VA as most veterans do not have another mode of healthcare. The number of veterans with PTSD going undiagnosed also includes the veterans who are afraid to mention their symptoms for fear of ridicule and embarrassment. It is time that we shine a light on this disorder for what it is. A real mental illness that requires real treatment (both therapy and medication) that is not something to be ashamed of and is more rampant than we can imagine. Almost one-third of troops coming back from Iraq suffer from PTSD, whether diagnosed, undiagnosed, or hidden.


This is what really pissed me off last night.

I was having trouble sleeping and started watching Keith Olbermann's countdown on MSNBC. One of the news pieces was about some recent comment by Cindy McCain (John McCain's wife for the politically challenged) about her husband and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. You can watch the Countdown's piece on these comments and an interview with a retired army captain about PTSD here. I had trouble embedding the video. Here is the direct quote from the Marie Claire interview.

MC: You met your husband after his POW days. To what extent is that still with you — or is it a part of history?
CM:
My husband will be the first one to tell you that that's in the past. Certainly it's a part of who he is, but he doesn't dwell on it. It's not part of a daily experience that we experience or anything like that. But it has shaped him. It has made him the leader that he is.

MC: But no cold sweats in the middle of the night?
CM:
Oh, no, no, no, no, no. My husband, he'd be the first one to tell you that he was trained to do what he was doing. The guys who had the trouble were the 18-year-olds who were drafted. He was trained, he went to the Naval Academy, he was a trained United States naval officer, and so he knew what he was doing.

This is incredibly insulting to our troops who have had the best training and have all voluntarily gone into service (especially in reference to Iraq and Ahfghanistan). How can she possibly say that PTSD is a result of involuntary service with meager training? This is incredibly insensitive and ignorant.

Olbermann had a retired veteran on his show to discuss PTSD with him. This was really awesome because Capt. Jon Soltz (Retired Army Vet) mentioned all of the reasons that I have become so active in bringing this issue to the attention of the media and public. He was livid over the comments from Mrs. McCain.

So, there you have it. Even if I were a Republican (that left a dirty taste in my mouth! Ha), and had planned on voting for McCain, these disparaging comments would have lost my vote.

*****edit- I was corrected. The original sentence said that the VA gave this man Xanax, but I was misinformed. They didn't even do that.

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Christian/Gospel singer Ray Boltz on coming out of the closet (Congratulations, Ray!!)

(Originally posted on 9/13/08 at 8:35 PM)

This is amazing. I have read about many Christian artists/celebs coming out recently but this is one of the best articles/interviews that I have seen so far. I have italicized key points.

Key changes

Gospel singer Ray Boltz shares coming out journey in this Blade exclusive

JOEY DiGUGLIELMO Friday, September 12, 2008

Ray Boltz wanted to do something nice.

He'd visited the mostly gay Jesus Metropolitan Community Church in Indianapolis and liked Rev. Jeff Miner, so he decided to give him a copy of his 1997 holiday recording, "A Christmas Album."

It was one of 16 albums Boltz, 55, recorded during a nearly 20-year recording career that saw the Muncie, Ind., native become one of the better-known singer/songwriters in Contemporary Christian Music, a genre born out of the Jesus Movement of the early 1970s that made singers like Amy Grant, Sandi Patty, Michael W. Smith and Steven Curtis Chapman superstars in religious music with occasional excursions into mainstream pop culture.

Boltz, with about 4.5 million LPs, cassettes and CDs sold, never made a splash outside of Christian circles but he never really tried. With a handful of RIAA Gold-certified albums, three Dove Awards from the Gospel Music Association (GMA) and a string of 12 No. 1 hits on Christian radio, Boltz is a household name in evangelical circles. "Thank You," a sentimental song about a dream in which a Christian thanks the Sunday school teacher who led him to embrace Christ, is his signature song. It was the GMA song of the year in 1990 and has become a staple of Christian funerals. Other Boltz trademarks are "Watch the Lamb," "The Anchor Holds" and "I Pledge Allegiance to the Lamb."

Boltz brought the Christmas CD with him to MCC-Indianapolis on that cold, sunny December 2007 day and slipped it to Miner on his way out with a note taped to it on which he'd jotted his e-mail address.

Ostensibly it was an innocuous thing to do, but for Boltz it was a big step. It eventually led to him opening up to Miner, one of the first times anybody outside Boltz's circle of family and friends knew his long-kept secret: Ray Boltz is gay.

"I didn't make a big deal of it," Boltz says during a 90-minute phone interview from his home in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. "But I was trembling. I'd kind of had two identities since I moved to Florida where I kind of had this other life and I'd never merged the two lives. This was the first time I was taking my old life as Ray Boltz, the gospel singer, and merging it with my new life. Emotionally it was kind of a big deal to think about that."

Ray Boltz was tired of living a lie.

He'd gotten to a point nearly three years before where he couldn't continue down the road his life had gone.

His 33-year marriage to ex-wife Carol was, he says, largely a happy one. It produced four children — three daughters and a son who are now between 22 and 32 — but family life and going through the motions of being straight had grown so wearying to Boltz, he was in a serious depression, had been in therapy for years, was on Prozac and other anti-depressants and had been, for a time, suicidal.

"I thought I hid it really well," he says. "I didn't know people could see what I was going through, the darkness and the struggle. After I came out to my family, one of my daughters said she was afraid to walk in my bedroom because she was afraid she'd find me — that I'd done something to myself. And I didn't even know they'd picked it up."

The Boltz family remembers Dec. 26, 2004 for two reasons: the tsunami in the Indian Ocean but also the tsunami that their husband and father unleashed when he told them what had been bothering him for so many years.

He hadn't planned a major announcement — but sitting around the kitchen table at his daughter's house, Boltz's son, Philip, asked him what was wrong.

"I thought, 'Well, I can just do what I always do and hide the truth or I can take a risk and be honest,'" Boltz says. "That day, with the tsunami, has become very symbolic in our family."

Nobody was sure, at the time, what the ramifications of the revelation would be, least of all Ray.

"It's hard to say I came out because I didn't have all the answers. I just admitted what I was struggling with and what I was feeling. It's hard to go, 'This is the point where I accepted my sexuality and who I was,' but I came out to them and shared with them what I'd been going through."

Continuing to pretend, Boltz says, was no longer an option.

"I'd denied it ever since I was a kid. I became a Christian, I thought that was the way to deal with this and I prayed hard and tried for 30-some years and then at the end, I was just going, 'I'm still gay. I know I am.' And I just got to the place where I couldn't take it anymore … when I was going through all this darkness, I thought, 'Just end this.'"

His family's reaction took time.

"I don't want to downplay it like it was just, 'Oh, well that's OK.' It was a very tough time for them too, but the bottom line was they loved me and they still love me … it's been an amazing journey of acceptance on their part … I was offered support and love from each member of my family, including my wife."

Humble beginnings

Ray Boltz was born in June 1953, the middle of three children (a fourth died shortly after birth) to William and Ruth Boltz. Ray's early religious experience centered around a small country Methodist church.

He discovered rock music in high school. Lying on his bed at age 17 hearing the Allman Brothers' "Whipping Post" awoke him to the possibilities of music. There was a smidge of budding radical in him — he participated in an anti-war rally; high school friends had gone to Woodstock, though he didn't. A hippie spin-off of sorts, the Jesus Movement was gradually making its way across the country from California.

Boltz injured his back in 1972 and was in the hospital when a visiting minister invited him to Jacob's Well, a Christian coffeehouse in nearby Harper City, Ind. When Boltz recovered, he checked it out, saw gospel group the Fisherman perform and had a life-altering experience.

"That evening had a profound impact on my life," he says. "I realized that this was the truth and that Jesus was alive … that's really where I made a commitment to Christ. I decided I could be born again and all of the things I was feeling in the past would fall away and I would have this new life."

He became a regular at Jacob's and met Carol Brammer at its upstairs Christian bookstore later that year. They attended Bible studies together and eventually wed in 1975.

Indiana — for some reason that's never been fully explored — had become a hotbed of Christian music. The Jesus Movement had a surge of early '70s activity in Boltz's part of the state and gospel music legends like Bill and Gloria Gaither, Sandi Patty, members of Petra and late gospel singer Rich Mullins all hailed from the Hoosier state.

His early years of family life were good ones and Boltz recalls them fondly. He worked for the state highway department and drove a snowplow truck while putting himself through college. He'd write songs and sing on weekends. After college he worked five years at a manufacturing plant.

A series of self-made indie cassettes of his songs, which he sold at concerts, made him realize the importance of having a producer/arranger and by the mid-1980s, he plunked "everything we had" into recording an album at Bill Gaither's Indiana studio.

Boltz financed "Watch the Lamb" for $11,000. It was picked up by Heartland Records in Orlando, Fla., and distributed by the CCM label Benson. He quit his job in 1986 and went into music full time. Boltz's career soared with the release of his second album, "Thank You" (1988).

He spent most weekends on the road and maintained a steady output of recording. Despite Contemporary Christian Music (CCM) having its unofficial headquarters on Nashville's Music Row, by the time Boltz became well known, his children were in school in Indiana and, like the Gaithers and Sandi Patty, he remained based there. He became well regarded for an unusual level of giving back, eventually donating some concert proceeds for orphanages in Calcutta, Sri Lanka and a home for abandoned AIDS babies in Kenya. Touring eventually involved a band, two buses and a semi-trailer truck and a crew of about 15 people with Ray headlining venues that sat between 5,000 and 7,500 people.

"Those were definitely wonderful, wonderful years," Boltz says. "There's absolutely no question about it … I believed what I sang but in the back of my mind, I always felt I could never quite measure up. So yes, they were good years, but there was also a lot of pain."

It got to the point by the early-to-mid '00s that keeping his homosexuality hidden had become an increasingly wearying notion.

"You get to be 50-some years old and you go, 'This isn't changing.' I still feel the same way. I am the same way. I just can't do it anymore.'"

There was some exploration of "ex-gay" therapy though Boltz never attended an "ex-gay" camp or formal seminar.

"I basically lived an 'ex-gay' life — I read every book, I read all the scriptures they use, I did everything to try and change."

Indirectly, this spilled out into his songwriting. Boltz says even though he never told his fans the specifics of his struggle, it added a dimension to his lyrics that resonated.

"It's there on every single record," he says. "That struggle of accepting myself and my feelings. There's a lot of pain there and it connected with a lot of people. They weren't struggling with the same thing necessarily but we all suffer with our humanity."

There were other signs that his music was connecting. He was shocked to see two kids from a Calcutta mission singing "Thank You" during ABC's coverage of Mother Teresa's funeral in 1997. He'd met Bill McCartney, the founder of Promise Keepers, a controversial religious group that advocates men being the head of Christian households, at a meeting and ended up singing in front of 1.3 million Christian men at a Promise Keepers rally ("Stand in the Gap") at the Mall in Washington in October, 1997. And one of the Christian teens killed in the Columbine High School massacre in Colorado in 1999 had been a Boltz fan and had performed choreography to his music. But on the personal side, the pain of the closet kept a tight grip.

His physical relationship with his wife hadn't been torturous. He says it helped that he felt genuine affection for her, if not sexual desire.

"Sex was based on the fact that we loved each other and I wanted to make her happy," he says. "I had sexual drives as well. You know, it's like I never had to talk myself into having a relationship with her or that I was going, 'Oh God, here we're going to bed again' — it wasn't that. I loved her and we had a very full life; it's just that inside, deep inside, it really wasn't who I was."Aside from sex, Boltz says this eventually took a toll on the couple's intimacy.

"It wasn't something that manifested itself in that we never had sex … but how can you truly be intimate with someone when you don't know who they are, when they won't reveal themselves to you … I thought if I can't say this to the people I love, then what kind of life is this?"

Retiring from singing, Boltz began slowing down in the summer of 2004. He quietly retired from singing, recording and touring. He and Carol separated in the summer of 2005 and he moved to Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. He only casually knew a few people there but thought it would be a good place to start a new, low-key life and get to know himself.

He and Carol Boltz remain close (their divorce was finalized early this year). She's become involved with the gay advocacy group Soulforce but declined, through Boltz, to be interviewed for this story. Not many in CCM seemed to think anything was awry. Boltz says people just assumed he was ready for a break after so many years on the road. Touring and wise investing had put Boltz in a comfortable place financially; it was important to him to make sure Carol had money, too, before moving.

The early months in Florida felt strange and different, but also liberating.

His faith was in transition — tenants he'd adhered to all his life suddenly were up for reconsideration, but there was a peace he hadn't felt before.

"I had a lot of questions [about faith], but at the bottom of everything was a feeling that I didn't hate myself anymore, so in that sense I felt closer to God."

Boltz declines to go into specifics about the first time he was with a man, but says he has been dating and lives "a normal gay life" now.

"If you were to hold up the rule book and go, 'Here are all the rules Christians must live by,' did I follow every one of those rules all that time? Not at all, you know, because I kind of rejected a lot of things, but I've grown some even since then. I guess I felt that the church, that they had it wrong about how I felt with being gay all these years, so maybe they had it wrong about a lot of other things."

As he sorted out his faith, Boltz began building a new life for himself. He took some graphic design courses. He found he could be almost completely anonymous in Ft. Lauderdale. The mullet he'd sported in the '80s was long gone and CCM had always been a somewhat insular community.

Boltz says the anonymity was a blessing.

"I didn't have to be who I was in the past. I didn't have to fit somebody else's viewpoint of what they thought I was. I could just be myself and I met a lot of wonderful people."

New directions

The name on the CD didn't register with MCC's Rev. Jeff Miner at first. And that was just fine with Ray Boltz.

Miner liked the Christmas CD and was so impressed he e-mailed Boltz and asked him if he'd ever thought about doing music full time.

Boltz laughed as he read the note.

"He obviously had no idea who I was and I just loved that," Boltz says. "I just said, 'Uh, yeah, I used to.'"

Miner showed the CD to the music leaders at MCC Indianapolis who, recognizing Boltz's name, were dumbfounded that he'd been to their church. When they mentioned some of Boltz's hits to him, Miner made the connection. Miner told Boltz if he was ever in the area again — Boltz makes regular trips back to the Midwest to visit family — that he was welcome to sing.

"I was scared to death when he said it," Boltz says. "But I finally got the courage and said, 'Yeah.'"

Boltz had no interest in rejuvenating his career but the same musical passion that had driven him since he was a teen, inspired him to use songwriting cathartically. The songs "I Will Choose to Love" and "God Knows I Tried," two of the most recent he's written, capture where he is now.

"I was so good at pretending/like an actor on a stage/but in the end nobody knew me/only the roles that I portrayed/and I would rather have you hate me/knowing who I really am/than to try and make you love me/being something that I can't" (from "God Knows I Tried").

This started a chain reaction of events that led to this story. Boltz performed at Miner's church to an enthusiastic reception. Miner then introduced him to Rev. Cindi Love, executive director of the Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, who'd just released a book called "Would Jesus Discriminate," a discussion of Christianity and homosexuality. Love speaks highly of Boltz, whom she met in May. "After I got to know him, I thought, 'This is one of the most sincere guys I've met in a long time,'" she says. "It's an especially rare thing to see for someone who's been in the music industry. He's just clearer. He's not jumbled up in ego." Love invited Boltz to join her at MCC Washington where he sang on May 25 and, even though it was not stated that Boltz is gay, the congregation connected with the songs. "I didn't tell them I was gay but I still felt like I was being authentic, that I could be who I was," Boltz says. "They all jumped up at the end of the song, clapping and all gave me hugs. It was pretty amazing." (Boltz will return to MCC Washington for a free concert at 3 p.m. on Sept. 21.)

Boltz is clear, though, about his reasons for coming out publicly.

"I really had no master plan here," he says. "I've just been trying to go with the idea that you can either live your life out of love or out of fear. I could just stay here in Florida and be pretty anonymous. I could go work at Wal-Mart or something where nobody knows who I am, but to me, that's kind of living in fear."

Though he's open to performing, Boltz says he doesn't plan to let this issue take over his life. "I don't want to be a spokesperson, I don't want to be a poster boy for gay Christians, I don't want to be in a little box on TV with three other people in little boxes screaming about what the Bible says, I don't want to be some kind of teacher or theologian — I'm just an artist and I'm just going to sing about what I feel and write about what I feel and see where it goes."

Anti-gay discrimination

Even though Boltz plans no triumphant homecoming to Christian music, there may be rough days ahead. The Contemporary Christian Music scene has traditionally held its artists to much higher standards than their pop counterparts and it's only been those who've shown repentance for their perceived sins, who have been able to rebuild their careers.

Joe Hogue worked for years as a CCM producer in Nashville with acts like Carman, DC Talk, BeBe and CeCe Winans and others, and found the calls for work completely dried up when he divorced his wife and came out. "There are a lot of closeted people in Christian music," says Hogue, who now lives in California and works with gay singers like Nemesis and Jason & DeMarco. "And, you know, it's not even really the artists that care about it so much, they just know their audience will."

No artist of Boltz's prominence has come out. A few minor CCM players have, but their decisions were hardly celebrated. Marsha Stevens, a Jesus Movement songwriter famous for the Christian folk song, "For Those Tears I Died," a favorite in youth camps and churches for decades, came out in 1980. She was famously renounced by Bill Gaither, whom she'd been photographed with at one of his "Homecoming" concerts, in 2006. Kirk Talley, a Southern Gospel singer (a slightly different genre than CCM, though there's some overlap of the players), confessed to struggling with homosexuality and came out in GQ in 2005. He's continued singing in churches but only because he's categorized his sexual orientation as a burden to be carried. Talley initially declined to be interviewed for this story saying he'd "been through enough hell," but did consent to one comment: "I will definitely be in prayer for Ray," he said in an e-mail. "He has no idea the crap he will have to endure." Others appear to avoid the topic altogether. Though it's not fair, of course, to assume a Christian singer who never married is gay, speculation has existed in fan circles for years that single CCM artists like Mark Lowry and Margaret Becker might be gay (Lowry has denied that he's gay; neither Lowry nor Becker responded to interview requests for this story).

Word records, which used to distribute Boltz's music, didn't respond to a request seeking comment. The Gospel Music Association, the organization that gives out Dove Awards, said via e-mail that "GMA is a trade organization that works for our members to promote gospel/Christian music, not a religious or political group. As such, we do not comment on the lifestyle choices of people in our community."

Gay Christian artists like Jason & DeMarco have never been embraced by the CCM community, but have found a degree of compensation for it in the gay community.

And things may be easing — when Christian DJ Azariah Southworth and Tony Sweet, a runner up on a gospel-music reality show, came out, reaction was muted. But neither have the prominence of a major CCM act. Even MCC's Cindi Love anticipates tough times ahead for Boltz."He needs to get through this initial coming-out process and just see how that feels," she says. "A lot of people will probably throw a bunch of stuff at his family. I pray they don't, but I bet they will."

Hogue, who worked with Boltz on his 1991 album "Another Child to Hold" and has helped him record a few new songs for a still-evolving possible new project, says he hopes for a day when Christians will see homosexuality as no more a perceived sin than it used to be for women to be ministers or for divorced Christians to hold leadership positions in churches.

"I like to hope for the best, but it will be slow moving," Hogue says. Boltz admits to some nervousness, but says ultimately, he isn't worried.

He doesn't want to get into debates about scripture and has no plans to "go into First Baptist or an Assembly of God church and run in there and say, 'I'm gay and you need to love me anyway.'"

For him, the decision to come out is much more personal.

"This is what it really comes down to," he says. "If this is the way God made me, then this is the way I'm going to live. It's not like God made me this way and he'll send me to hell if I am who he created me to be … I really feel closer to God because I no longer hate myself."

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"Eight is Enough!"

(Originally posted on 9/29/08 at 5:59 AM)

Wow...

I just got through watching Barack Obama give his acceptance speech for Democratic Presidential Nominee.

I'm a little speechless right now. I still have chills. I cried. I clapped. I grinned from ear to ear and yelled, "Yes!" in my livingroom. I am moved. I am inspired. I am ready to do whatever I can to get Barack Obama in the white house in January 20, 2009.

I feel so proud. I worked so hard over the last year to get Obama my party's nomination for President of the U.S.A. I've gone all the way to Austin as an elected state delegate for Obama and would have gone all the way to Denver. I talked to everyone I could. I donated to a political campaign for the first time. I volunteered for the first time. I was inspired by a "politician" for the first time.

Obama is our nominee and he -will- be our president. I have never felt to inspired to get involved with my government. All my life, I felt like I don't matter to my government. I'm the little person. As long as I pay my taxes, they do not care what I do or where I go in life. But Obama has been in my shoes. He knows what it is like to struggle through college. To be born into poverty. No other presidential candidate, in my lifetime, has understood -our- struggle. He -will- fight for us. Voting for Barack Obama is like voting for ourselves. We need the change that he can bring. That -we- can bring, as a nation, united together by our common struggles and concerns.

Barack Obama can't do this alone. We have to get involved. We have to vote - not just in the presidental elections but our senatorial, state, gubatorial, county, and city elections. We have to get involved with our community. We have to work to change our country along with our future president.

I have no more to say. Except, vote! Register by Oct. 4th if you are not registered already. In Texas, you have to register at least 30 days before any election to vote in that election. And don't give me that crap about "my vote doesn't count" or "why vote if the electoral college elects the president". We know by watching the last two elections that our vote DOES count. And how the electoral college works is that every state is given a certain amount of votes in the electoral college (in TX we get 34 per party - which we elect at the state convention- I know, I was there and Senatorial District #'s electoral college member is C.Y.). Whichever way the popular vote goes (Dem or Rep or Independent), the popular vote winning party gets to send their electoral college voters to the state in December to actually 'elect' the president. The people that we elected to the electoral college will NOT vote against our party.

So, please, get out there and vote this election year. Maybe you'll see me at the polls (I'll be handing out ballots). :-D

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Don't mean to offend...Really!

(Originally posted on 7/31/08 at 3:04 AM)

But what is up with all the Xtians and the unplanned babies? I suppose we should blame it on the "abstinence only" approach to making them....but isn't it common sense to use a condom/birth control? I thought it was, but maybe that was just me.

It just seems like every time I turn around, another person from my ex-church or past lifestyle (if being gay is a lifestyle then so is being Xtian, although being Xtian is actually a choice...but I digress) is pregnant, became pregnant the "one time" they "fell into temptation", or is getting married because they are pregnant and are waiting until after the honeymoon to announce the baby due in 4 months.

I have nothing against getting pregnant or premarital sex or Xtians (any way of life that inspires you to be a better person and makes you feel whole is fine with me). I just don't get how people who are 'abstaining until marriage' are always pregnant.

Maybe all the unplanned pregnancies that turn into shameful, make-shift brides and grooms are the reason the divorce rate in the church is higher than the divorce rates in any other group in the U.S..... Makes you think, doesn't it?

Just curious.

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This is devastating

(Originally posted on 4/12/07 at 12:44 PM)

Kurt Vonnegut, one of the - if not THE- greatest authors of all time has died today at the age of 84. I'm sure he is resting in peace.
If you have never heard of him, you need to get familiar with his work. I reccomend Cat's Cradle or Slaughterhouse Five. He has been my favourite author since the first time I picked up one of his books. I now own all of them and have read them all twice.
He was a brilliant free-thinker and 'religious skeptic'. He definitely deserved the respect he received in his lifetime.You can read the article on MSN about his life here
http://entertainment.msn.com/news/article.aspx?news=258339&GT1=9246&mpc=1
I would definitely reccomend taking some time out to remember such a great man today.

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