#mood
A recent snap from my Instagram feed.
I’m a writer and a strategy consultant. Contact me for a consultation.
A recent snap from my Instagram feed.
I’m a writer and a strategy consultant. Contact me for a consultation.
I’m embarrassed to admit that I’m reading this book. Please don’t tell anyone.
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After buying a few necklaces from Cartography, I suggested that they do a Saint Lucy necklace. Saint Lucy is the patron saint of writers, among other things. As it turned out, they made one, which you can buy now. It’s seen here with my Warrior Woman / Joan of Arc necklace, also by Cartography.
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& saw a beast rise up out of the sea, having 7 heads & 10 horns, & upon his horns 10 crowns, & upon his heads the name of blasphemy pic.twitter.com/Xf2l2jAGWN
— Susannah Breslin (@susannahbreslin) November 20, 2016
Support the arts! Buy a digital copy of THE TUMOR, a "masterpiece of short fiction" by me, Susannah Breslin.
I'm not even sure what this article, "Skank Amateurs," is about, but it is fascinating.
"The idea that every time I do it, I’m 'getting in touch with God' or whatever is clearly meant to be a solvent for eonic strata of guilt and shame. But frankly, that daunting concept is a far more effective method of contraception than NFP. It’s bad enough worrying about whether or not I’ve shaved my legs …"
[Taki's]
"'When I finished up talking to her for that hour and a half ... I asked [her] how [she] wanted to be described,' Arnade remembers. 'She said, "As who I am: a prostitute, a mother of six, and a child of God."'"
[NPR]
Las Vegas reconsiders its nickname:
"'In Christianity sin refers to deliberate disloyalty to the divine,' Jameson said. 'Does Las Vegas foster individuals to miss the point of existence or to be separated from the living, loving presence of God more than other cities? Probably not.'"
The New York Times Lens blog has an interesting post on Thomas Alleman, who takes photos of sexy American Apparel billboards found in the urban sprawl of Los Angeles.
"The more he photographs these billboards, the more he wonders if we aren’t most disquieted by the inference that, in a postfeminist world, it still isn’t acceptable for the models to choose to engage in the process. Can they not make their own decisions about sexuality, as descendants of media manipulators like Madonna? He asked, rhetorically, 'Are we a little creeped out by these pictures because these are confident women who are empowered, who seem to be in charge of what’s happening to them?'"
[NYT]