about me.

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Everyone else has a website, so I figured, why not me too?   On this site, I'll describe myself and share my interests and ideas.

My Favorites...

Favorite Junk Foods: 
           Chocolate and Sweet 'n Hot Beef Jerky
 
Favorite International Cuisines:
       Thai Food and Authentic Mexican Fare
 
Favorite Thai Entrées:
          Green Curry and Gaeng Kee Lek (Cassia
          Leaves)
 
Favorite Mexican Entrées:
          Carne Asada Burrito with Beans (No Rice -
          Rice simply does not belong in a Burrito)
          and Cheese and Cilantro and Onions and 
          Tomatillo Salsa and a side of Pico de Gallo
          ~or~ Pork Carnitas Tacos in Flour Tortillas with
          Cilantro and Onions and Tomatillo Salsa.  (I
          started frequenting my favorite Mexican
          restaurant, El Taco Veloz, back in '97 when I
          started taking Spanish in college in my early 30s. 
          That is just far too late to learn a new language.
          I can still order a carne asada burrito and a 
          chicken quesadilla in Spanish, and I can
          say, "mi español es horrible."  That is pretty
          much the extent of my Spanish vocabulary
          after struggling with Spanish classes for two
          years.)  The clientele of El Taco Veloz is 
          overwhelmingly Hispanic, so I am assuming the
          food there must be relatively authentic.  Even if
          it is not authentic, I am a long time and loyal
          fan.   
 
Favorite American Entrées:
          Blackened Ribeye, Medium Rare, with a Baked
          Potato topped with Sour Cream and Cheese or
          Prime Rib, Medium Rare, with Creamy
          Horseradish Sauce and Baked Potato  
 
Favorite Pets:
       Cats (I have had cats but Mai Paeng, the lovely
          oriental shorthair mix seal tabby point with white
          paws, and Sable, the rumpled black kitty with
          long fangs and large ears and a short, fat Gila
          monster tail have both crossed the Rainbow
          Bridge.  Mai Paeng was prettier and smarter
          than Sable, but Sable was better equipped as a
          natural hunter.  Because she was of Siamese
          heritage, I wanted my oriental mix kitty to have
          an appropriately Thai name.  Mai Paeng [or
          Phaeng], or in Thai, ไหม แพง, literally means
          expensive, costly, or dear silk, but using poetic
          license, I prefer treasured silk.  Also known as
          Licky or Fat Tummy Kitty, she had smaller ears
          and fangs than Sable and a long, thin elegant
          tail.  I thought she so resembled a snowshoe cat
          except for the tabby stripes at the color points. 
          Prior to her being fixed, she was so emaciated
          looking like a true Siamese, but after her
          neutering, she filled out and was simply
          gorgeous.  I would have loved to have shown
          her, but I had had her declawed front and back. 
          So I believe that would have disqualified her. 
          Mai Paeng and I had a real psychic connection. 
          My cats were strictly indoor cats because they
          were declawed, but when I would carry Licky
          outside to get the mail, she would become 
          ecstatic as evidenced by a frenzy of face licking 
          and rubbing her forehead all over my face.  I  
          remember when I was once carrying Licky out
          to the mailbox, a neighbor of mine commented,
          "now that's true love," as he watched Licky
          kissing me and rubbing her face against mine. 
          She would play fetch with me, and my favorite
          game with her was hide and seek.  I would run
          and hide somewhere in my apartment, like
          behind the shower curtain or in a closet, and 
          she would roam around meowing and meowing
          until she found me.  It was utterly delightful. 
          Sable, aka Doo Doo Bottom [Doo Doo Bottom
          was not as attentive to her grooming as the 
          obsessive-compulsive Licky {hence the very
          fitting nicknames}] or Squishie, just was not
          bright enough for such activities, but she had
          street smarts.  She was smart enough to climb
          up in a pine tree about 30 feet in the air and
          meow over and over pitifully to make me feel
          sorry for her.  I think she knew that would seal
          the deal to adopt her.  Sable was a pitiful
          undernourished stray out in the winter weather 
          when I adopted her.  Isn't Sable the coolest
          name for a black cat ever?  Honestly, I don't
          care for black or orange kitties, but she needed
          to be rescued so her color was just not important.
          Just as when you buy a used car, the color of the
          vehicle is just not a priority compared to the
          mileage or the vehicle's mechanical condition. 
          In fact, if you end up with a used car with a body
          color that you like, that is actually just a happy
          accident.  Sable needed me.  That she was black
          was just irrelevant.  My favorite kitty color
          schemes are those with color points or solid gray
          or brown colored kitties.  The long hair kitties are
          very pretty, but I think their flat faces would take
          some getting used to not to mention their high
          maintenance grooming needs.  When I first took 
          Sable into my apartment, I had not intended to
          keep her.  I had wanted to find a home for her,
          but I was worried that the new owner would let
          her go outside unattended.  Since I had not
          intended to keep her, I tried not to become too
          emotionally attached to her.  That was a mistake. 
          Also, I was not sure of her age, but from her
          appearance, she looked like she was about six
          months old.  And, by then, it was too late to have
          the same emotional connection with Sable that I 
          had with Licky because I had adopted Licky from
          my hairdresser when she was weaned at nine
          weeks old.  When I took Sable in, she became
          the alpha cat even though Licky was older and
          bigger and my apartment had been her exclusive
          territory for a number of years.  I so hoped they
          would get along, but they usually would just fight
          or barely tolerate each other.  I think Sable was
          just an irritant to Licky who probably felt usurped
          by this young adoptee.  [I thought I would just
          mention some history of my beloved kitties.]) 
 
          A Pig (I would like to have one if Piggy would
          remain petite, but that probably is not realistic)
 
Favorite Musicians:
       Patsy Cline (the Nashville sound), and Robert
          Cray (blues)
 
Favorite Music Genre:
          The Blues (I just adore blues music.  The blues
          make me happy.  Perhaps that seems
          contradictory or counterintuitive, but when I
          listen to blues, it just lifts my spirit.  And then
          I want to sing along.)
 
Favorite Book:
       Gone With The Wind, the Pulitzer Prize winning
          novel written by Margarett Mitchell, published
          1936
 
Favorite TV Show:                                   
          "NOVA" (PBS) produced by WGBH Boston

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Favorite Documentary Film:
          The Natural History of the Chicken, 2000 (PBS),
          Writer and Director:  Mark Lewis
 
Favorite Movie:
          Gone With The Wind, 1939, produced by David
          O. Selznick of Selznick International Pictures,
          directed by Victor Fleming, screenplay written by
          Sidney Howard, et al. and starring:
 
                    • Vivien Leigh as Katie Scarlett (O'Hara)
                      Kennedy Butler
                    • Clark Gable as Captain Rhett K. Bulter
                    • Leslie Howard as Major George Ashley
                      Wilkes
                    • Olivia de Havilland as Melanie (Hamilton)
                      Wilkes  
 
          Gone With The Wind received ten academy
          awards including Best Picture (Selznick
          International Pictures (David O. Selnick,
          Producer), Best Director (Victor Fleming),
          Best Adapted Screenplay (awarded
          posthumously to Sidney Howard), Best
          Actress in a Leading Role (Vivien Leigh),
          and Best Actress in a Supporting Role
          (Hattie McDaniel, who played Mammie,
          was the first African American to win an
          Academy Award.  Hattie McDaniel won this
          honor competing against Olivia de Havilland,
          as Melanie, who was also nominated for
          Best Actress in a Supporting Role.        

Highest-Grossing Films Adjusted For Inflation*

Rank
Title
Worldwide Gross
(2014 $)
 
Year
1
Gone With The Wind
$3,440,000,000
1939
2
Avatar
$3,020,000,000
2009
3
Star Wars
$2,825,000,000
1977
4
Titanic

$2,516,000,000

1997
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Favorite Movie Quotations:
          "Get your stinking paws off me, you damned 
          dirty ape!"  (George Taylor played by Charlton
          Heston in Planet of the Apes, 1968)
 
 
          "As God as my witness...as God as my witness, 
          they're not going to lick me.  I'm going to live
          through this, and when it's all over, I'll never be
          hungry again.  No, nor any of my folk.  If I have
          to lie, steal, cheat, or kill, as God as my witness,
          I'll never be hungry again." (Vivien Leigh as
          Scarlett O'Hara, Gone With The Wind, 1939)
 
Favorite Movie Song:
          "Climb Every Mountain" (as sung by Kathleen
          Humphrey, singing in place of Peggy Wood as
          the Mother Abbess in The Sound of Music, 1965,
          by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein)
 
Favorite Christian Folk Song:
          "The New 23rd" from Pass It On, the
          official songbook of Campus Crusade
          for Christ International, Bill Bright, 1972. 
          Song written by Ralph Carmichael, Copyright
          1969, Lexicon Music.
 
          Because the Lord is my Shepherd, I have
          everything that I need. 
          He lets me rest in meadows green and leads
          me beside the quiet stream.
          He keeps on giving life to me, and helps me to
          do what honors Him the most.
          Even when walking thru the dark valley of death,
          valley of death,
          I will never be afraid, for He is close beside me,
          Guarding, guiding all the way, He spreads a feast
          before me. 
          In the presence of my enemies, He welcomes me
          as his special guest. 
          With blessings overflowing, His goodness and
          unfailing kindness shall be with me all of my life,
          And afterwards I will live with Him, I will live with
          Him, forever in His home, forever in His home.
 
Favorite Hymn:
          "The Old Rugged Cross," written by George
          Bennard in 1912. 
         
          On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross,
          The emblem of suffering and shame;
          And I love that old cross where the dearest
          and best
          For a world of lost sinners was slain.
          So I'll cherish the old rugged cross,
          Till my trophies at last I lay down;
          I will cling to the old rugged cross,
          And exchange it someday for a crown. 
 
Favorite Statistic:
          The earth weighs "6.6 sextillion tons , or
          6 600 000 000 000 000 000 000 tons.
          (Million, billion, trillion, quadrillion, quintillion,
          sextillion.) That’s 66 with 20 zeroes after it."
          (cdf-rom, and Herbert S. Zim. "A 13 Year Old
          Asks--what Is the Weight of the Earth? Answer!?"
          YAHOO! Answers. YAHOO!, 28 Dec. 2006. Web.
          24 Aug. 2015. <https://goo.gl/mscgLf>.)  I heard
          this fascinating number on the Ted Radio Hour
          on my local public radio station on a show called  
          Peering Into Space.  The speaker was Phil Plait
          who was discussing how 100 tons of asteroids as
          tiny rocks the size of grains of sand fall onto the
          earth from space on a daily basis.  But relative to
          the earth's 6.6 sextillion tons of weight, 100 tons
          of material daily even over the course of a
          "gazillion" years is infinitesimal.  Then it occurred 
          to me, how is the weight of the earth determined,
          that is, by what formula?  I mean, you cannot
          exactly set it on a scale, and I don't think the
          mythological Atlas would be much help.               
        

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My Interests...

I am insatiably curious and love learning.  To that end, I'm a prodigious fan of educational programming such as "Nova," "Frontline," "American Experience," "Scientific American Frontiers," and "National Geographic."  I'm fascinated with science, in particular, anthropology, and I'm also passionate about visual and performing arts. My dream-job would combine both science and art as in medical or forensic illustration or forensic sculpture. 

Most Admired...

Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton
Scarlett O'Hara
Leonardo da Vinci
Frederick Douglass
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Click above to sign my guestbook

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Favorite Links

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For the most beautiful graphics available on the web, see my other sites:

The Best of the Best Graphics on the Web II: Flowers II - Flower Pictures

The Best of the Best Graphics on the Web III: Flowers III - Roses

The Best of the Best Graphics on the Web IV: Flowers IV - Orchids

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Langenberg - Search and Get There Faster - a very handy search tool

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Google Product Search - to locate the best value for virtually anything 

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PC World Downloads - for clever, innovative, useful, and mostly-free software which is adware-free, spyware-free, and worm-free

Website Tools:

FlashVortex.com - Easy Flash animations for your website 

Banner maker

Create easy and fast professional looking buttons

Geo Visitors Map

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Leonardo da Vinci.  Lady with an Ermine, 1483-90.  Oil on wood, 53.4 x 39.3 cm (21 x 15 1/2 in). 
 Czartoryski Museum, Cracow.  Click above for larger image.
 

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The image below is a 3D stereogram.  Since I've finally learned
how to see these images in 3D, I've been fascinated by the 3D-  
effect that stereograms create.  To experience the 3D-effect, try
looking "behind" or through the image:  you must let your eyes
go out of focus.  (Squinting your eyes may help.) 
 

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Gene Levine.  Enbubbled, 2002.  3D stereogram.  For other stereograms from this prolific artist, click on the image above.

If he was alive today, I think Leonardo da Vinci would have experi-
mented with the 3D imagery of stereograms because, during his
lifetime, he developed groundbreaking techniques of perspective
to create the illusion of depth in his artwork.

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