Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
zero point
Zero, zero
The starting point
A reference point
A concept
A theme
An idea
A place
The start
The start
Origin
Beginning
Then deviation
Direction
Direction
Dedication
Destination
Decision
Degrees of change
Change the ways
Weigh the choice
Choose the path
And follow
Away and back
Bringing with it a storm of distraction
That confounds the ambiguous
And orders the flow
Divides the single
And claims to know
But it’s just a distraction
A chemical reaction
A fatal attraction
An unavoidable experience
What does it take then?
To return
To return
Restart
Rediscover
To realize
The start and end
And all within
Are just the layers to be peeled away
A face
A name
Sounds and voice
Touch and feel will all be wiped away
For zero point
The center
The balance
An understanding of what is
And appreciation of what was
An expectation for what’s to come
And to know it’s happened before
And it will happen again
Ancient Dominatrix?
Ancient Dominatrix Mite
Please click that article and read; its like 3 or 4 paragraphs long. Very concise. Very entertaining.
Now, it appears that this particular specie of ancient mite has the dominant sexual partner as the female; this is reversed for modern day mites.
What this begs us to consider is, what about human beings? We clearly live in a patriarchal society; males are expected to be the dominate partner (not that 100% follow this, but generally).
However, anthropology has taught us that humans did live in matriarchal societies at one point. Some Native cultures even continue that today.
So are human beings fighting for sexual dominance today still? Could we see a reversal back to matriarchy (UK citizens and Australians may say yes); or are we stuck in a patriarchy due to our inherent biology?
Which is better or worse? I personally feel like the power of the phalus is pretty damn strong, but I am a bit biased too.
What say you?
Please click that article and read; its like 3 or 4 paragraphs long. Very concise. Very entertaining.
Now, it appears that this particular specie of ancient mite has the dominant sexual partner as the female; this is reversed for modern day mites.
What this begs us to consider is, what about human beings? We clearly live in a patriarchal society; males are expected to be the dominate partner (not that 100% follow this, but generally).
However, anthropology has taught us that humans did live in matriarchal societies at one point. Some Native cultures even continue that today.
So are human beings fighting for sexual dominance today still? Could we see a reversal back to matriarchy (UK citizens and Australians may say yes); or are we stuck in a patriarchy due to our inherent biology?
Which is better or worse? I personally feel like the power of the phalus is pretty damn strong, but I am a bit biased too.
What say you?
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