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Imagining the Best

I'm in Chicago, just a little over 2000 miles away from my home in Northern California, and I just saw the most beautiful display of cultural appreciation. An African-American man and his Tibetan wife were wearing Indian saris pushing their I-want-to-eat-you-up crazy cute brown baby down Michigan Avenue in a baby stroller. And it looked so natural.  My imagination (as usual) is working overtime and I made up at least 10 stories about who they are, where they're from and where they are going all before I made it back to my hotel room from dinner at China Grill just now.
I do realize that there are some people that find it odd, unusual and maybe even insulting to see people wearing clothing from a culture that is not their own; however, I find it most beautiful. I really do.  And while I know I've probably asked this before (on my Facebook page for sure), I am yet again curious: What articles of clothing do you wear from a culture other than your own?  Do you consider it a celebration of culture to see - for example - a Latina in a kimono, a Caucasian woman in African attire or a Black woman in a sari? Without knowing the person intimately, it's hard to determine a person's motivation, isn't it? Maybe My Beautiful Chicago Family was born and raised in India? Maybe they're on their way to an Indian wedding. Or maybe they're like me, and they just love beautiful fabrics and clothing. (And yes, I own several saris.  In fact, my husband even wore the one I got him at our wedding.)
When I see beautiful cultural displays such as the one I've described, I choose to believe that there is some type of celebration going on. Truth be told, I want to go wherever they're on their way to or wherever they've just come from. But because that would be considered stalking (LOL), I choose instead to imagine the best...and not the worst....and that's simply because it makes me feel good.

the Un read

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they're stacking up.

this was last week.


& after a week of reading emails, blogs I mentally see the stack increasing-
granted some remain from last year. some are being read again. some have to be referred to-here and close by.

now reading Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey. just what I was looking for. I am hooked on the first few pages.
ongoing- Diana Cooper's Autobiography.


what do you really think of the Stieg Larsson books? Having read the first very recently, I thought not to read the second. Since a friend read it and loaned me a copy- I will go forward with the series. It is disturbing. Yes, I know that is the intended reaction, but still.

Have you read BLEAK HOUSE? No light Dickens- that.
If you have read any in my stack-tell me if it's worth it.

how are yours stacking up?

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Simone de Beauvoir: that Face

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I found that the first question that came up was: 
of what significance was it to be a woman?
I thought I could quickly extricate myself from the question.
I never had any feeling of inferiority...
(later) I had a revelation: this world was a masculine world,
my childhood had been nourished by myths forged by men...



photograph by the incomparable Irving Penn
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Interview With Rana Leader 100 Days

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Fur Necklaces or Pearl Necklaces with Barbed Wire

Dana Lorenz is the pretty-punk jewelry designer behind Fenton/Fallon and J.Crew's most recent collaborative jewelry collection. Trained as a painter, she started out creating necklaces for herself and friends, layering strands of pearls and Swarovski crystals with spikes and chains. Her jewelry has since appeared on the necks of a slew of A-listers and celebs (including Michelle Obama herself, last year).