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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 20:42:20 GMT -5
Wow! I just noticed that there are over 854 views of this thread. That freaks me out! I'm shy.
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Post by Justhad on Mar 2, 2006 21:09:45 GMT -5
Hey Maria! I have more for you!!
What would be your best advice to anyone about life?
Who on BTVS/ATS do you consider to be the best role model?
What are your feelings on parents/government blaming 'violent' and 'sexual' tv shows as being the problem with today's youth?
When you were in high school did you identify with any of the BTVS/ATS characters now that you look back on it?
Is there any female tv character that you consider to be a bad role model for young girls?
What is your favorite episode of Nip/Tuck?? (I heart Dr. Troy too!)
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 21:22:44 GMT -5
Hey Maria! I have more for you!! What would be your best advice to anyone about life? The older I get, the less I know. Life is very humbling. When I was 18 or 20, I thought the answers to life were really simple. But now I think what matters to each of us is so varied. When I was a teenager, my mom used to always tell me something that I thought was stupid. Later, when I realized it was true, it helped me a lot. She said, "Don't worry about what people are thinking about you. They are worrying so much about their own lives, that they aren't thinking about you at all." Another bit of insight that has been helpful is that, "Pain is the difference between your expectations and what is." If you have high expectations about a person, situation or event, you will inevitably be disappointed. More answers to come, Hadley.
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 22:12:17 GMT -5
Who on BTVS/ATS do you consider to be the best role model? Buffy. She bears an immense responsibility, while struggling with the dreams, desires, and pressures that all teens face. She has integrity, works hard, and has a good heart. Plus, she's smart, funny, and a devoted friend. She shows emotional vulnerability, which teens usually defend against with facades of judgment and sarcasm. Buffy shows them they can be open and still strong and admirable. When you were in high school did you identify with any of the BTVS/ATS characters now that you look back on it? I hesitate to say Buffy, because I was not as disciplined and upright as she was. But I was an outsider, while still being into style and dating. I dated guys from other schools or who were out of school. I pretty much had my own life and was quite independent of the social scene of my school, as well as of my family. Is there any female tv character that you consider to be a bad role model for young girls? I think it's disturbing that so many kids and adolescents watch shows with strong sexual and violent content. I think that Carrie Bradshaw and Samantha on Sex and the City are two really bad role models for young girls. It's funny, because Sarah Jessica Parker has commented that all the girls on the show are sluts, even Charlotte. She says that she's mortified when women approach her and say that their lives are just like Carrie's, because Carrie is such a slut. I don't like to label women as "sluts." That just SJP's word. The show focuses on casual sex, drinking, smoking, and finding one's identity through designer couture clothes and $500 pairs of shoes. It teaches girls that their value is in their looks. It teachers that personal fulfillment comes from compromising your self-respect to get the attention of men who have no respect for you. I enjoy the show for pure entertainment purposes. But I think children and adolescents take TV as prescriptive. Most kids spend more time watching TV than they spend with their parents. Children are getting increasingly sexualized at younger and younger ages. I don't blame that on Sex and the City. TV is full of sexual images. Daytime TV is full of them during the prime hours that kids watch. What is your favorite episode of Nip/Tuck?? (I heart Dr. Troy too!) I think the pilot. I loved when Sean and Christian are coming out of the grocery store with all the hams they are going to tie to the dead guy's body, and Christian's face has fallen on one side because the drug dealer shot him full of botox. Sean asks, "Are you having a stroke?" Was that the pilot? It was one of the first shows, anyway. The first season finale, when they give the drug dealer the full new face and he gets taken down by the FBI at the airport, because they gave him the face of one of the other guys in FBI's most wanted.
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 22:32:07 GMT -5
What are your feelings on parents/government blaming 'violent' and 'sexual' tv shows as being the problem with today's youth? I don't think that the youth is all bad. There are lots of wonderful kids. They are smarter and more savvy than my generation, or the generation before. It seems like the big problems are with entitlement and oversexualization. Many, though certainly not all, youngsters think that the world is supposed to be handed to them. From what I've gathered, much of this comes from parents who want their children's lives to go perfectly. They deny their children the vital experience of learning to deal with failure and overcoming disappointment. Successful people have said over and over that life isn't about succeeding, it's about continuing to try not matter how often you fail. As Mohammed Ai said, "It's not the going down that's wrong, it's the staying down." I think that sexualization of young children is a type of molestation. It violates children and makes them put the world and their identities in a context they are not prepared for. It doesn't mean that kids can't learn about sex gradually at the levels that they can understand it. But being bombarded with images of scantily clad women with unreal bodies indoctrinate kids into women being titillating sex objects. I think that violent video games, internet porn, and other expressions of extreme emotion as daily entertainment have a deep effect on people's psyches. Studies bear this out. Hopefully there is a balance of being in your children's lives enough to give them guidance and teach them to take pride in their value and accomplishments, rather than escape feelings of low self-esteem with images and expressions of violence and degraded sexuality. Just my opinion. I'm not against action or sex. But there are levels, types, and contexts that affect people differently. The more you are exposed to these images, the more desensitized you become.
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Post by Digital Leonardo on Mar 2, 2006 22:49:33 GMT -5
I agree about high school, though I am still in it, I wish I could do a few things and have been nicer to a few more people when I first started. Okay, some more questions!^^ - If you could have any one of the 'Charmed' powers, who'd you choose? (Piper, Prue, Phoebe or Paige) - If you were a TV show, what'd be your opening theme? - If you broke into song, what "Once More, With Feeling" song would you like to be singing? - Who do you think would win, Paige or Prue? - If you had the power, would you make Shannon Doriety (sp?) stay on for season 4 and so on? - Cordelia, Angel or Buffy character? - Spike, Angel or Buffy character? - Fill in the blank, "Digital Leonardo you ___________ so much!" (I am so full of myself^^) - What TV show is your guilty pleasure?
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Post by Justhad on Mar 2, 2006 22:55:02 GMT -5
Thanks for all the great answers Maria!!
So now I have some followups...
-Do you think it's more sexually charged animated shows like "Family Guy" who influence kids? Or things like "Alias?" I grew with Buffy from 4th grade on and always found myself defending Buffy, which was considered a violent show back then.
-Do you think celebrities create this image that you have to be thin, skinny, etc? And do you believe that celebrities are only negative, or do you think some can have positive influences?
-Would you consider Buffy influential on young teens?
Sorry to pick your brain again!
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 22:58:42 GMT -5
OK, Digi, I'm answering the easy ones first. Fill in the blank, "Digital Leonardo you _______ so much!" (I am so full of myself^^) Digital Leonardo you BEG FOR COMPLIMENTS so much! ;-) What TV show is your guilty pleasure? Celebrity Fit Club and *covers eyes in shame* Flavor of Love. Ahhhh!! Don't tell anyone.
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Post by lostguardian on Mar 2, 2006 23:11:52 GMT -5
Do you like Will and Grace? Friends? Aren't you sad all of the good shows are being cancelled. Favorite cd? Favorite sountrack? Were you upset that willow was put as last at the end of the credits? Do you have a big family or small family? Aunts? Uncles? Last movie you saw in theaters? summer or winter? How much do you spend at the theater?
P.S. Sorry if these questions are random.
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Post by lostguardian on Mar 2, 2006 23:13:11 GMT -5
Oh, and has buffy ever gotten you out of situations?
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 2, 2006 23:18:24 GMT -5
I agree about high school, though I am still in it, I wish I could do a few things and have been nicer to a few more people when I first started. Okay, some more questions!^^ If you could have any one of the 'Charmed' powers, who'd you choose? (Piper, Prue, Phoebe or Paige) I answered this one before, but Paige's power to orb. It would make life easier and so much more fun. Her power to heal would be awesome too. If you were a TV show, what'd be your opening theme? Probably "Black Velvet" If you broke into song, what "Once More, With Feeling" song would you like to be singing? I'm a big dork and I break out into song all the time. The one I find myself singing from OMWF is Sweet's "Once More With Feeliing." I think that's the best song from that episode. He's got a great voice. Who do you think would win, Paige or Prue? What a great question! Wow, I don't know. Paige can move things, AND orb, but then Prue has the whole astral projection ability. However, Paige learn astral projection at the end of last season. I think that Paige has beter powers, but Prue is more inherently violent. She was more of a physical fighter than Paige is. I think it'd be a terrific battle. Paige would probably only win because she could orb Prue into a volcano by just willing it. That was a fun one! Thanks Digi! If you had the power, would you make Shannon Doriety (sp?) stay on for season 4 and so on? No, I didn't miss her. But my ideal would have been Prue, Phoebe, and Paige. As I've said before, Piper's constant complaining grates on me. Poor Leo. He deserves better. Cordelia, Angel or Buffy character? - Spike, Angel or Buffy character? I'm sorry, Digi. I don't know what you are asking. Digital Leonardo, you ROCK so much! I'm tired tonight, but I'll answer more questions tomorrow. Hadley, you always make me think! I don't want to offend anyone with my opinions. I'm just trying to answer them as well as I can.
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Post by Digital Leonardo on Mar 2, 2006 23:24:24 GMT -5
XD orb Prue into a volcano! Love it! O.O! Paige learns Astral Projection!?!?! *covers eyes* I didn't read that!
Okay, for my last two questions...
- Do you see Cordelia Chase as a Buffy the Vampire Slayer character or an Angel character (like when you think Cordelia, which show do you throw her in?)
- Same as above, but for Spike. Do you see him as a Buffy the Vampire Slayer character or an Angel character?
(clearer?)
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 0:46:32 GMT -5
Hadley, I was thinking about my previous answers to you. I'm worried that I sound like I'm moralizing and proseletizing. I really don't mean to. My concern about the sexualization of children is that it leads to them objectifying themselves and others, both as objects of sex and of perfectionism. They judge and use each other. In addition, I think it makes people's sexuality lonely and desperate. It can make it difficult for people to really connect with each other on an authentic, truly intimate level.
And of course I think that celebrities can be positive influences in the world. They frequently are. I'm concerned that our society is celebrating only the most shallow aspects of people, lauding the Fabulous Life of so and so, based on money, luxury, and romantic liasons.
I believe that this leads people to search for gratification and happiness in things that can never give them peace. There is a lack of taking pride in one's own sense of values and being true to those values. Mainly, there is a dearth of a true sense of self and a deep connection with others. So people bounce from relationship to relationship, bed to bed, friendship to friendship. The increase in divorce, public raging, and family violence all points to some core damage in society's value systems.
I don't buy into the belief in either unbridled debauchery or unrealisitic Puritanical moralism. Those are two sides of the same coin. I just think that the expression of human sexuality for commercial uses has made it become a commodity that damages people's fundamental sense of self. Children are now being exposed to and adopting this at the earliest ages possible. This affects the very foundation of who they think they are and what they think they and life are about.
I hope that makes sense. I usually don't like to express my deeper opinions like this on a board. It's more what I would put into a book.
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Post by BuffyFanOne on Mar 3, 2006 1:17:01 GMT -5
We know what your favorite Musicals are but what is your favorite song from a musical...New and old?
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 9:10:34 GMT -5
Oh my goodness, Hadley. You had my brain going well into the night last night with all this stuff. Thanks for all the great answers Maria!! So now I have some followups... -Do you think celebrities create this image that you have to be thin, skinny, etc? And do you believe that celebrities are only negative, or do you think some can have positive influences? It's hard to say that it's specific celebrities faults that the ideal image is so skinny with surgical augmentation. If one celebrity didn't do it, they might not get the work, so someone else would step up to the plate. When I used to model in high school, I was 5'8" and 115 pounds. I was constantly being told by my agency that I needed to lose 10 pounds. At age 16 I had no idea how to be thin in a healthy way. I'd try not to eat much and I'd exercise a lot. I was always hungry, tired, and light-headed. I didn't last long in that business. I like to eat too much. My grandmother helped me to see that there was no reason to do it. I didn't need the money, because I had a college fund. But before that everyone had always encouraged me to model. People considered it a status thing. But it was absolute hell! I think in that business there are so many people desperate for the fame and work that they'd do anything the business dictates. A lot of people in the entertainment and fashion industries have the attitude that thinner is always better. When someone as skinny Alicia Silverstone, a size 4, was called "chubby" on the covers of magazines because she had a round face, and couldn't get work as a result, you can understand the kind of pressure there is. I think it's interesting that two of the skinniest, most disgustingly skeletal-looking women in Hollywood were both on David E. Kelly shows: Lara Flynn Boyle and Calista Flockhart. Courtney Thorne-Smith said that she quit the Ally MacBeal show because the pressure to get skinny on that set was too much. These women are picked apart by everyone from the public to casting agents. It's easy to get an eating disorder with a lot less pressure than that. I don't blame actresses. I feel sorry for them. I know how hungry a lot of them are. I really love that a few curvier women have been celebrated in the last few years, like JLo and Beyonce. I noticed at a recent awards show that Beyonce had lost weight. The hosts were talking about how she looked the best she's ever looked. That made me sad. She was never overweight, but was a good model for healthy curves. All of us get cues about what is normal and even ideal from our environment. Children are even more this way. Entertainment is only one aspect of the environment. Ideally, parents would make it a limited aspect. But we all know that doesn't happen with most families. However, if girls hear their mothers obsess about weight and dieting, the daughters will be much more obsessed with those things at an early age, regardless of their weight. And if male role models criticize a women's weight, then the girls tend to have more complexes about being fat, as well as an increased desire to look thinner for male approval. I've studied these issues a lot. What I've learned has made the biggest difference is how girls are raised to find their sense of identity. If they are encouraged and validated for their intellectual pursuits and displays of good character, then their external environmental cues become their internal dialogue. That means that they value intelligence and character the most. They feel proud of hard work, intellectual growth, and behaving like a person of integrity. However, if their families and other influences put them down or focus on their appearance (whether complimenting or criticizing it), then the girls become obsessed with getting attention any way that they can. If the family neglects of ignores them, then girls look more to the media and sources outside the media to see what qualities are valued by society, trying to meet those criteria. These are the ones who are the most at risk for eating disorders, becoming sexually active at an early age, teen pregnancy, smoking, and drug use. I've had clients who became sexually active as early as nine and got pregnant as early as 12. I don't mean to sound pessimistic. I think that there are still many young people who have stable values and are on healthy paths. But I think that there is just a greater percentage of people who are alienated from their families and are at risk for dangerous behaviors. Teen pregnancy rates may be down overall, but STDs are up, as is the use of the most dangerous drugs. In my counseling practice I saw crystal meth and heroine use among teens that was alarming. I saw women in their 20s who had children that were permanently damaged from the mothers using crystal while pregnant. And these aren't all ghetto people. Some of these girls were from middle class families. It's crazy. Back to your question about celebrities, I think that this culture has begun to worship celebrities in unbelievable ways. Realistically, these are just people who had to have a driving obsession to become famous. They strove for fame not because of love of acting or singing. They could have done those things more easily if they weren't trying to break into the big time. They wanted to be famous. They were willing to do anything to be famous. That's not a drive of a healthy person. So we are worshipping some of the most insecure, narcissistic people in the whole culture. I think that's something most people don't think about. But there are many celebrities who try to be positive role models. Some of the ones whose messages are the most healthy for girls, at least in their interviews, include Reese Witherspoon, Salma Hayek, Alicia Silverstone, Ashley Judd, of course Oprah Winfry, Susan Sarandon, and Jody Foster. We all get inspiration or invalidation from our environments. The media is one aspect of that. My feeling is that for many girls who are allowed to watch too much TV, it becomes the most powerful influence on their values and sense of self. I hope that all makes sense, at least to anyone who bothered reading this long-winded diatribe of mine.
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 9:26:22 GMT -5
-Do you think it's more sexually charged animated shows like "Family Guy" who influence kids? Or things like "Alias?" I grew with Buffy from 4th grade on and always found myself defending Buffy, which was considered a violent show back then. Oh my gosh, are kids watching The Family Guy? That's the most disturbing thing I've heard all year. That show is hilarious, but it shouldn't be watched by kids. I've never really watched more than five minutes of Alias. It kind of bores me, so I can't really comment on it. I think that Buffy is a violent show, but at least for me, the violence always seemed unreal. I think it's because it's usually violence against monsters, which are clearly not real. I tried to show Buffy to a friend, who was so freaked out by the monster makeup that she made me turn it off. My mother had the same reaction. I don't like horror movies at all, but the Buffy creatures always seem farcical to me. Except for the Gentlemen. Those totally freak me out. My point is that I guess I didn't consider Buffy to be real life violence. But I don't think it's more violent than many cartoons. I don't like the violence in cartoons. I think kids are naturally pretty violent. Whatever people want to believe, studies show that watching violent shows makes children more violent. However, I think that video games like Doom and others that are so graphic and put the child in the place of the person doing violence have a stronger effect on desensitizing children to violence and making them fantasize about doing violence to others than a show like Buffy does. -Would you consider Buffy influential on young teens? Sorry to pick your brain again! Overall, I think Buffy gives teens something very emotionally authentic to relate to. The metaphors are clear and relate directly to teens. If I were a parent, I wouldn't let an elementary school child watch it, at least not under 10. But, Hadley, I think that you can speak better to the positive influence it had on you. The values in Buffy are obviously much better than the values I got when I was in elementary school watching The Love Boat, The Dukes of Hazzard, and Charlie's Angels. The Angels may have had guns and been good fighters, but they were essentially vapid bimbos doing the bidding of a shallow playboy. And it was all celebrated as adorable that this guy was surrounded by a jacuzzi full of bikini clad girls, while his bikini clad "Angels" risked their lives and used their bodies to do his dirty work. Buffy's much more inspiring and guiding than anything I grew up watching, that's for sure. I think it speaks directly to the modern teen experience. Teens are out there fighting demons their parents don't know anything about. It's a truth. They are faced with great burdens of their identity, as well as choices that will affect the rest of their lives. And they are generally alone with these decisions. When I see how alone Buffy is in her every day life, it is exactly how I felt as a teenager, whether I had friends or a boyfriends, I still felt that I was doing the whole thing alone. I imagine that most teenagers feel that way. I think Joss made an amazing show that reaches teens at the core of their struggle.
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 12:31:06 GMT -5
Do you like Will and Grace? I like Will and Grace OK, but I think it should be called Karen and Jack. IMO, they are the funnier ones on the show. All the people on the show are so reprehensible that I don't watch it too much. I love friends. I've seen every episode countless times and my husband quote lots of stuff from that show. "Relaxi Taxi" "Flame Boy" "Every day, EVERY DAY." I still watch Friends sometimes. I think it's better than most other sitcoms, old or new. Aren't you sad all of the good shows are being cancelled? It's always sad when a favorite show is cancelled. For me it helps with the closure if it goes out on a good note. I was fine with Buffy ending. I hadn't been happy with the last 2 seasons, but the final few episodes were well done, and Chosen was by far the best series finale I've ever seen. Angel was a hard pill to swallow. I didn't get my hopes up too much for it being saved, but I put a lot of energy into sending postcards and emails after the cancellation. It felt like the show was better than it had ever been and there was at least one more fantastic season left to show. But I really enjoy watching David on Bones. Fox is moving it around and not showing it so much that I'm getting worried it's getting lost and will not be renewed next season. Fox isn't treating it well. I'm also really sad that the Book of Daniel was cancelled. It was an amazing show. I think it's tragic that extremists could misinterpret and destroy something that was both entertaining, authentic, and extremely touching. I listen most to a compilation of my favorite Sting songs that I burned myself. Recently it's been Chicago, but also Moulin Rouge. Grease is one of my all favorite soundtracks, too. I listened to it constantly when I was a kid. Luckily, I didn't understand what a lot of the words meant. When I revisited it as an adult. Eeek! That is some extreme language for a musical! Were you upset that Willow was put as last at the end of the credits? I never noticed. However, I tend to think of the last spot on credits as a special place of note. Often a featured actor, but someone less than the ultimate star, appears at the end. Do you have a big family or small family? Aunts? Uncles? I'm from a family of five kids. Three boys and two girls. I have a brother 11 years older than me whose a salesman and musician, divorced twice, a brother 9 years older who's a doctor, married 17 years to a mean chick. They have two daughters, 13 and 11. I don't visit them anymore because I can't take all the screaming. I have a sister seven years older who's married. She used to prosecute child molesters, but is now a stay-at-home mom with a 3 year old son and 6 year old daughter. I'm sure she'll go back to the DA's office when her youngest goes to first grade. I don't talk to her anymore because I can't take all the screaming. My younger brother is two years my junior. He has his PhD from UCLA and works in politics in Florida. His wife is a lawyer. They probably won't have kids. My father died 10 years ago. No one was sad. He was a horrible human-being. I hadn't spoken to him in 7 years. (He was the instigator of all the screaming, LOL). I was completely at peace with the relationship, so besides the shock of him dying at 65, it was not that big a deal. My parents were divorced when I was 9 and my mom is remarried. I'm very close to my stepdad and his daughter, who is exactly my age. He also has a son, whom I am not close to. My stepbrother has an infant son. I have tons of relatives on my dad's side, but only have contact with one cousin. The rest of them are kind of scary rednecks. Lots of screaming, cursing, and smoking. I only met them a couple of times growing up, thank God. I was close to my mom's parents, but they are deceased now. I am very close to my mother's deceased brother's son. I am much closer to him than to any of my siblilngs. My mother has a half brother, who has a family, but I haven't had contact with them in about 12 years. It's a whole thing between my mom and her brother. Last movie you saw in theaters? The Chronicles of Narnia. Before that was Pride and Prejudice. I liked P&P a lot. I'm a big Jane Austen fan. In San Diego winter is pretty nice. I probably like the spring the best. It's not too hot. But, here on the coast, it doesn't get above 90 degrees ever. If it's in the 80s, we complain. How much do you spend at the theater? I don't know if you mean how much time or how much money. I always get M&Ms at the movies. Frequency-wise, we go maybe once every couple of months. Much more often in the summer or if good movies are out. Tivo keeps us busy enough entertainment wise. I'm more likely to go out to Starbucks or go for walks by the beach with my husband than to to the movies.
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Post by Chosen_jeremie on Mar 3, 2006 12:44:38 GMT -5
Malibu or Vodka At the risk of sounding like Bones, I have no idea what that means. In first, in france Bones still not program and i asked you to know if you prefer malibu or vodka, there are alcools! lol
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 12:45:11 GMT -5
Oh, and has buffy ever gotten you out of situations? I think you mean, has Buffy inspired me to take certain actions in certain situations? I recently read someone's posts about how they ask themselves what Buffy would do in a situation. I think that's a cool idea, but I've never done it. However, I've been extremely inspired by the quote I referenced earlier from Angel about there needing to people who behave as if the world is the way it should be to show it what it can be. At times I've gotten very down about how messed up the world is. I try to have integrity and do the right thing, but often others do not show or respect loyalty and caring. I felt very discouraged about that last year. I had been betrayed by a friend I thought was my one true girl friend in the world. I had been there for her quite a lot and some things happened in a grad school project that really hurt me. When I asked her to tell me the truth about something, because a third person was saying my friend was against me, well, she told me she didn't want to talk to me anymore. It was so weird. I'd really thought we'd forged a close friendship over the previous year and a half. I asked her to just be honest with me. She cut off our friendship instead. That situation still haunts me today. I think that closeness is really rare. I have had lots of friends who say I'm the best friend they've ever had. But I've only felt that way about a couple of people. I feel sad that people can throw each other away so easily in this culture. So now I try to do what Angel said, to be the kind of person the world should be full of. And I try not to expect anything back. It hurts too much to be betrayed and abandoned. I try to give as much as I can, as long as it does not hurt me too much. And if people are kind now and again, it's just a big bonus. I don't expect it. I was raised with cruelty. I've known many cruel people. I had a bitchy, Cordelia-like shell myself when I was younger. I've worked to learn to be kind and patient. I try to surround myself with only kind, respectful people. When things get nasty, I try to resolve it with the communication tools I've learned. If that doesn't work, I try to distance myself. Back to the Buffy thing, I've always been someone who sticks up for the underdog, even back when my main way of communication was my sharp tongue. I'm very impelled to help people in need, though at times it has made my life worse, because I've pissed off authority figures. I try to do it as politically as possible. But when I have to I bend the rules to see the right thing done. I don't help people with fighting, like Buffy does. I usually help people with listening. And when necessary, with my communication skills, time, or money.
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Post by Girl Power on Mar 3, 2006 12:47:43 GMT -5
Malibu or Vodka At the risk of sounding like Bones, I have no idea what that means. In first, in france Bones still not program and i asked you to know if you prefer malibu or vodka, there are alcools! lol Jeremie, Bones is the archaeologist who works with Booth, David Boreanaz's character. Bones is very intellectual and is completely out of touch with pop culture. Whenever anyone on the show makes a pop culture reference, she says, "I don't know what that means." I don't drink, so I have not preference. I've had vodka before, but do not know what Malibu is.
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