Us Vs. Them: It's Not A Question of Gender

I've been asked more than once if I'm a man-hater.

The answer is no, I'm a rapist-hater.

When I was a kid I grew up surrounded by male cousins, a predominance of males my age in my church, and most of my close friends were males. I distinctly remember going to a birthday party in kindergarten where I was the only girl, insisting on being the blue Transformer, and generally having a blast.

Not much changed as I grew older. Yes, things changed. We became aware that we were fundamentally different from one another. There were attractions as we matured, some weird confusion from time to time, misunderstandings and miscues... all the things that make life interesting.

But at no point did I ever hate men.

And I still don't.

Some of my closest friends are male (weirdly all their names start with J), and the election cycle  brought up  a lot of conversational fodder, as you can imagine. I don't necessarily agree with them - or they with me - all the time, on every topic. But we can converse, and I've said things to them that brought women's issues into a different perspective, and they've told me things that made me understand that men also have unique fears in social situations.

So often - and especially in the current climate - we find it easier to draw a line that separates us from them. We like the simplicity of assessing a person based on their gender or race, but real life - and real humans - are much more complicated than that.

I prefer to think in terms of decency, which is a choice we all have to make every day. No matter what we've done in our past, who we voted for, or whether or not we liked The Phantom Menace, we can choose to be decent today.

So no, I'm not a man-hater.

I'm a hate-hater.

Thursday Thoughts

Thoughts this week:

1) Digital money is a funny thing. My work doesn't actually pay me - they don't put money in my hand, they put numbers in a bank account for me. Then when I want to pay my bills I just give some of my numbers to somebody else. 

2) Somehow pinching your finger is one of the most painful things that can happen to you. I don't understand. Surely evolution should have eliminated some of those nerve bundles by now. Or maybe I should stop shutting my hand in things...

3) It's impossible to hold your tongue still. Look in the mirror for a long time with your mouth open and try to hold your tongue perfectly still. You don't control it. It controls you.

Wednesday WOLF - Days of the Week

I've got a collection of random information in my brain that makes me an awesome Trivial Pursuit partner, but is completely useless when it comes to real world application. Like say, job applications. I thought I'd share some of this random crap with you in the form of another acronym-ific series. I give you - Word Origins from Left Field. Er... ignore the fact that the "from" doesn't fit.

Today we're going to talk about days of the week! Obviously I've got a little fixation with those myself, as I have three of my posting days titled after them (Wednesday WOLF, Thursday Thoughts & The Saturday Slash).

So where do they come from?

You probably know we owe a lot to the Romans (and wow, do I ever mean A LOT), but our weekly calendar is downright Anglo-Saxon.

  • Monday - "Moon's Day" Not sure why night-time was a big deal at the beginning of the week. Maybe everyone just wanted to sleep in.

  • Tuesday - from "Tiw's Day" Tiw was the God of War in Norse Mythology. Unsure why Tuesday got that honor. Personally I'm more grumpy on Monday.

  • Wednesday - from "Wodin's (Odin's) Day" Odin being a Scandinavian / Norse God of war, battle, victory and death, among other things. Apparently making war was a big deal.

  • Thursday - is from "Thor's Day" Thor being the Norse god of thunder and lightning. 

  • Friday - "Frigg's Day" from the Anglo-Saxon goddess Frigg. No word on whether she's the goddess of pizza and beer, but that's how I roll. Especially after a week of making war and having bad weather.

  • Saturday - from "Saturn's Day." Saturn was the Roman god of agriculture, but also liberation. And honestly, that makes the most sense.

  • Sunday - "Sun's Day" For ancient sun-worshipping culture, this was a day of religious observation, which in turn was adopted by Christians to represent the resurrection of Christ. In Russian the word for Sunday literally translates as resurrection, whereas in other Slavic languages it translates as no work. And after my Saturday, that sounds pretty good.