Shared posts

11 Jan 20:59

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for January 07, 2014
11 Jan 20:57

Wednesday, January 01, 2014

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for January 01, 2014
11 Jan 20:50

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 19, 2013
11 Jan 20:50

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 17, 2013
11 Jan 20:47

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 11, 2013
11 Jan 20:44

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 10, 2013
11 Jan 20:43

Monday, December 09, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 09, 2013
11 Jan 20:42

Friday, December 06, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for December 06, 2013
11 Jan 20:39

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for November 28, 2013
11 Jan 20:31

montt en dosis diarias - -86

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

11 Jan 20:24

montt en dosis diarias - -69

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)
11 Jan 20:21

montt en dosis diarias - -62

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

11 Jan 20:11

Nada más que añadir

11 Jan 20:06

El viejo oso de la infancia

11 Jan 19:25

La palabra prohibido, significa hazlo sin ser visto

09 Sep 08:38

Wild Animal (The Simple Dog Goes for a Joy Ride)

by Allie
My simple-minded dog recently went on an unplanned adventure. Because the simple dog is so very simple, her adventure was alarming and horrible for everyone involved.  
Even in her normal, familiar environment, the simple dog exists in a state of almost constant confusion. 

She also appears to have very little control over what she is doing or why she is doing it.  For example, the other day, she was standing in the middle of the room just staring vacantly. Then she started turning in circles like she was preparing to lie down.   

But instead of completing a few rotations and then lying down like a normal dog, she got stuck in the repetitive motion and couldn't stop turning slowly in place. 

She is definitely not the type of animal that would thrive in the wild.
Unfortunately, she managed to escape one day while we were out walking, and she very nearly became a wild animal.  
In the park where we were walking, there is a large horse statue.  We had passed the statue many times without incident, but for some reason, on that day, the simple dog became highly alarmed by it.  

No one expects their dog to instantaneously develop an extremely specific fear of horse statues, and I was unprepared for her reaction, which was to sprint powerfully in the opposite direction. Unfortunately, what the simple dog lacks in cognitive capacity, she makes up in ground speed, and her sudden fleeing yanked the leash from my hand.  
I chased her all the way across the park and into an adjacent neighborhood. She ran into a partially fenced yard and, when her forward trajectory was interrupted by the fence, she began to gallop in giant, crazy circles just out of my reach.   
I'm fairly certain she had already forgotten what she was running from and had no idea what was going on, but there she was - propelling herself in endless loops around someone else's yard.  

After several minutes of tearing around in circles, she felt compelled to take off running in a straight line.   She didn't know where she was going, but she was going to go there really fast.  
I have spent a truly impressive amount of time teaching the simple dog how to respond to her name. I distinctly remember the self-congratulatory feelings I had when I thought I'd succeeded. I've done it, I thought.  I've overcome all of the obstacles and taught this animal her name, and now she will return to me like a falcon whenever I beckon her.  
But as I watched my dog disappear into the distance, I realized just how futile my efforts had been.  
I spent the rest of the day frantically trying to find her.  I drove around calling for her on the off-chance that she would actually respond.  I stopped random people on the street to ask them if they'd seen her.  It started to get dark and I imagined my poor dog, lost and scared - completely unable to make sense of what was happening to her.   

Finally, I got a call from a woman who had managed to catch the simple dog.  The woman said that she found the simple dog standing in the middle of the road, wagging her tail and barking at cars. She gave me her address and I drove over to collect my wayward animal.    
When I got there, the simple dog was curled up in a little ball on a towel on the woman's floor. I walked over to her and she looked confused.  

She had forgotten who I was.  She thought she lived on the towel.  

She was wet and dirty and she stunk like she had rolled on a dead animal.  There were burrs in her tail. She had puked up a pile of half-digested grass onto the woman's nice wood floor and was attempting to re-ingest it.   
Based on the evidence, her adventure went something like this: 

I helped the woman clean up the mess that my disgraceful animal had created in her home, then I thanked her and called my dog to go.  

The simple dog did not respond, so I picked her up and carried her out. 
 
I was glad to have her back, even though she didn't know who I was.  I couldn't blame her for forgetting.  A dog who becomes terrified by the mere existence of a stone rendering of a horse is not a dog who is well-prepared to absorb hundreds of unfamiliar sights and sounds, and I reasoned that she was most likely still in shock. I can only imagine how overwhelming the whole ordeal must have been from her perspective:

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the simple dog had trouble readjusting to being at home in the aftermath of her big adventure.  

Because of her cognitive handicap, the simple dog is at a unique disadvantage when it comes to coping with minor obstacles that most dogs would take in stride. For most dogs, getting a taste of freedom wouldn't be something that would cause a major shift in their perception of reality. But it absolutely ruined the simple dog. 
She had only been outside by herself for a few hours, but the staggering amount of new experiences had crowded out all her memories from before the adventure. 

As far as the simple dog was concerned, she had been snatched away from her life as a wild, towel-dwelling animal and transplanted to a strange wonderland filled with terrifyingly unfamiliar sensory bombardments.  

We have experienced these episodes a few times before.  From what I understand, they are a pretty normal consequence of disabled-dog-husbandry, and are usually pretty fleeting. But this one was different.  This time, the precipitating incident had been so extremely, entirely mind-bending that the simple dog had actually forgotten how to be a domesticated animal.
We had to teach her how to use the stairs all over again. 

Despite having been potty-trained for the overwhelming majority of her life, she started blatantly soiling the carpet right in front of us, as if she had no idea she was doing anything wrong.

She violently destroyed every toy she had - even her inexplicably-patriotic-themed squeaky owl toy, which is her favorite.  

And after she destroyed her owl, she grieved.  And we had to sew it up for her to avoid pushing her any further into psychosis.  

She forgot her name and how to sit and all of the various other things we'd spent so many hours carefully guiding her to understand.  

We did eventually manage to re-domesticate the simple dog. She re-learned stairs and how to not pee in the house and how to respond properly when her name is called.  She may not remember exactly who we are, but she seems to accept that she lives with us now.  She even plays nicely with her toys.  
But every now and then, she will stare wistfully out the window.        

And through the window, she will see the outdoors. 

And sometimes, when the shapes of the trees and grass and birds hit her brain in just the right way, she will feel the call of the wild deep within her soul. 
And it will trigger a relapse.  
09 Aug 21:11

Friday, June 28, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for June 28, 2013
09 Aug 21:06

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for June 19, 2013
04 Aug 00:54

montt en dosis diarias - -03

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

13 Jun 09:15

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Extremo_delirio

¿Madre o novia?

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for May 12, 2013
13 Jun 09:08

Sunday, June 09, 2013

Extremo_delirio

¿Operación bikini? Va a ser que no XD

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for June 09, 2013
13 Jun 09:03

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Extremo_delirio

You only live once...

Dark Side of the Horse by Samson for June 13, 2013
08 Jun 22:56

Guerra. - Calpurnio - El bueno de Cuttlas - 02.11.2012

by Calpurnio
04 Jun 12:53

Reseña: Norte y sur de Elizabeth Gaskell

by Beleth
Norte y sur de Elizabeth Gaskell
A través de la historia de Margaret Hale, una joven del sur de Inglaterra que por circunstancias familiares se ve obligada a trasladarse al norte, Elizabeth Gaskell plasma los conflictos sociales y políticos derivados de la revolución industrial en la Inglaterra de mediados del siglo XIX. Para la heroína, el sur donde ha nacido simboliza el idilio rural; frente a él, el norte es sucio, rudo y violento. Sin embargo, a medida que va penetrando en ese nuevo mundo y sus distintos estratos -desde Bessy, la joven obrera enferma y su padre, líder sindical, hasta John Thornton, dueño de una fábrica textil, por quien siente una creciente atracción, tendrá que ir corrigiendo sus prejuicios; y del mismo modo, su condición de mujer subordinada evolucionará hacia una madura aceptación de sí misma y de sus sentimientos.

Libro único Datos adicionales:
Editorial Alba
ISBN: 9788484282594
541 págs
30 €


Después de haber disfrutado muchísimo con Cranford, dicidí embarcarme en la lectura de los muchos otros libros que tiene esta autora, y Norte y sur fue el siguiente de mi lista. Como curiosidad, ambas fueron apareciendo por capítulos en la publicación Household Words de Charles Dickens.

En esta ocasión el protagonismo recae sobre una serie de personajes mucho más limitados que en Cranford. Tenemos a Margaret Hale y familia y al al Sr. Thorton y familia como principales piezas de este puzzle.
A lo largo de tres años, iremos siguiendo la trayectoria de Margaret, plagada más de baches que de felicidades, demostrando así que la vida por aquel entonces no era precisamente un camino de rosas. Es una novela más triste y oscura que Cranford, eso lo tengo claro. Veremos como Margaret está más acostumbrada a la cultura y costumbres sociales londinenses y como se siente un poco fuera de lugar cuando se ve obligada a mudarse a Milton desde Helstone. Estando una ciudad al sur y otra al norte, el viaje y los cambios entre ambas son lo que van a marcar casi toda la novela. 

La mayor parte de la novela se centra en Milton, un pueblo industrializado donde el cielo es gris, las personas son grises y hasta sus pulmones son grises de la mierda porquería que hay en el aire. Allí es donde Margaret, sin esperarlo, entablará amistades de lo más inesperadas y se encontrará con su "némesis", John Thornton. Y digo némesis porque durante el 90% de la novela entre ambos no hay más que chispas, conversaciones cargadas de ironías y malas contestaciones y hasta un poquito de desprecio. Margaret tiene una personalidad muy fuerte, es valiente, es también muy buena persona pero se le atreviesa John desde el primer momento. Eso sí, ya sabemos todos que del odio al amor hay un paso muy pequeño.

Cosas que me han gustado mucho de la novela: la ambientación y la relación entre los dos protagonistas. Me llegué a sentir agobiada por el denso y pringoso ambiente de las fábricas, sentí pena por los trabajadores y por la multitud de problemas que tienen. Irán apareciendo y desapareciendo muchos personajes y todos ellos tienen algo importante que decir, es fundamental prestarles toda la atención que se merecen. Me parece que la autora ha sabido retratar a la perfección ese ambiente industrial y además ha sabido explicárselo bien al lector de forma "universal", que no siempre pasa. Y en cuanto a la relación con los protagonistas, es fantástico ver como a partir de unas conversaciones que parecen más bien de enemistad y absoluto desprecio, van enamorándose uno del otro. Eso sí, el final me parece la cosa más sosa del mundo. Hubiera preferido ver algo más de pasión, cogiendo siempre este término con pinzas ya que pasión ahora y antes no tenía el mismo significado, algo que me hiciera sonreír un poco más, algo que me llenara. Reconozco que no está mal pero queda sosillo.

Como cosas que no me han gustado, aunque es complicado, reconozco que hay partes ligeramente aburridas. Descripciones, conversaciones sobre religión y creencias, alguna repetición, el tema de Frederick... No sé, hay cosas que parecen estar ahí para rellenar un poco. Que son importantes para comprender bien todo y empaparse del ambiente, eso no os lo niego, pero hubiera preferido leer más sobre otras cosas.

La forma de narrar de Elizabeth Gaskell es muy bonita, es poética, tiene ritmo, está cuidada y es algo que en Cranford me pasó un poco más desapercibido que aquí y creo que es precisamente por los personajes. En Cranford realmente las protagonistas eran todas las mujeres, aquí el pueblo es un personaje más que tiene además mucha importancia. La novela también es más extensa, no sé, se nota más.

Advertencia para aquellos que quieran animarse a leer esta novela en inglés. Se puede hacer, sí, y en general no es complicado pero cuidadito con los acentos pueblerinos que el de varios es para cortarse las venas y casi hay que leer las frases en voz alta para saber qué demonios están diciendo (viva la transcripción fonética... no).

Existe también una miniserie basada en esta novela y, como todas las de la BBC, es un complemento más que adecuado. Os dejo un poco de información por aquí. Yo ya la he visto y, a decir verdad, la relación entre los dos personajes principales me parece que tiene esa pasión que faltaba en el libro. Muy recomendable verla.

Si os habéis fijado en la ficha de características del libro, habréis visto que el precio es altísimo. Las ediciónes de Alba suelen estar muy bien y ser muy bonitas, pero siempre que veo un libro que no es de Alba minus (de bolsillo) me dan escalofrios. El libro merece muchísimo la pena y se lo pienso recomendar a todas aquellas personas que sé que les gusta la novela clásica, pero debido al precio me sentiré un poco culpable por ello. Yo lo leí en inglés, y la portada que os pueso entre el texto es la de mi edición, de la colección Penguin English Library que me comería todas con patatas. Por si os queréis animar, no es una edición cara y queda maravillosamente bien en la estantería y es suave.



03 Jun 07:16

cinash: I swear, by the angel, this is what popped into my head...



cinash:

I swear, by the angel, this is what popped into my head when I watched the new MTV exclusive on Jace. I just had to draw it. Jemima and Kevin sure have their hands full. 

Silly Jaime. Cookies are for mundanes. XD

I regret nothing. 

0-s-0 cinash

hee

03 Jun 07:15

the-manila-institute: TMI Wallpapers for larger version (x)













the-manila-institute:

TMI Wallpapers

for larger version (x)

03 Jun 06:49

montt en dosis diarias - 07

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

03 Jun 06:47

montt en dosis diarias - 15

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

03 Jun 06:33

montt en dosis diarias - 34

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)

03 Jun 06:32

montt en dosis diarias - 39

by noreply@blogger.com (montt)