MEPHALA'S LOFT

A woman's romance with motherhood, green living, finance, and this heady thing called life.

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Sunday, May 15, 2005
My baby Kaku and me

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My baby Kaku and me just yesterday

Relaxing Weekend

Although I had to work yesterday, it has been a relaxing weekend. Lazed around a lot in bed reading and started piling a stack of them beside my bed for easy reading again.

I finished Rage of Angels by Sidney Sheldon for the zillionth time. I notice as time passes I see the characters in a different light. For the first time, I sympathised with Mary Beth Warner and admired her strength and fortitude.

Started reading a book called The 9 Emotional Lives of Cats (I think) for the second time. Wonderful reading. I dozed off last night though after the first couple of chapters.

Saturday evening I went to Action City to find a gift for Jo and ended up with a small Sylvanian Families dollhouse for my sister-in-law too. Dinner at Mos Burger away from the maddening crowd. Bought some groceries and then headed home.

Took pictures (I was togged up) with all the cats when we returned home last night! It was a rare treat. Even managed to catch Kaku to snap a few shots! :D

Then we watched Without a Paddle (I've loved Seth Green since he played Oz in Buffy) and found it immensely fun and delightful.

Friday night we had dinner near Malay Village after buying cat food at Julia's. She asked if I was interested to have my cats appear on a cat food can and immediately suggested Tuxie! :o We were such flattered parents. Yes! We said and promised to send her his picture over the weekend.

Friday, May 13, 2005
Blythe Blog: W00t! The eyeballs have landed!

Tina's sent the eyechips (and 2 free gorgeous bangles) and they arrived yesterday! :D They're so cute! I can't wait to get home and do some eye surgery on the dolls.

Kittens and Fatboy Slim

Joker from Waverly Films is nominated for the MVPA Awards, which is like the Oscars of music videos. Another amazingly cute and beautifully directed short MTV.

I love my cat

A brilliant short film about a man and his cat. A must-watch for everyone! :)

Sick Days and Old Journals

Slept most of yesterday and feel vaguely human today. Found an old journal of 1998 while scrambling for some reading material. It was an interesting read.

I realise how journals aren't accurate records of a person's life.

You need to be in a certain mood to write, usually melancholic, archivey - I just made this up, meaning feverishly trying to immortalise (as much as paper or bytes are capable) one's life events as they pan out for posterity, or simply bored (that's when the meaningless quizzes get posted up). The times when you're having a ball are most likely not archived cos you're having too much of a good time to do so.

So when I'm dead (or heck, even alive), don't take my blog literally. :)

Wednesday, May 11, 2005
Science Fare by Philip C. Plait

(Quoted from: Bad Astronomy Blog by astronomer Philip C. Plait)

I know a place where the Sun never sets.

It’s a mountain, and it’s on the Moon. It sticks up so high that even as the Moon spins, it’s in perpetual daylight. Radiation from the Sun pours down on there day and night, 24 hours a day—well, the Moon’s day is actually about 4 weeks long, so the sunlight pours down there 708 hours a day.

I know a place where the Sun never shines. It’s at the bottom of the ocean. A crack in the crust there exudes nasty chemicals and heats the water to the boiling point. This would kill a human instantly, but there are creatures there, bacteria, that thrive. They eat the sulfur from the vent, and excrete sulfuric acid.

I know a place where the temperature is 15 million degrees, and the pressure would crush you to a microscopic dot. That place is the core of the Sun.

I know a place where the magnetic fields would rip you apart, atom by atom: the surface of a neutron star, a magnetar.

I know a place where life began billions of years ago. That place is here, the Earth.

I know these places because I’m a scientist.

Science is a way of finding things out. It’s a way of testing what’s real. It’s what Richard Feynman called “A way of not fooling ourselves.”

No astrologer ever predicted the existence of Uranus, Neptune, or Pluto. No modern astrologer had a clue about Sedna, a ball of ice half the size of Pluto that orbits even farther out. No astrologer predicted the more than 150 planets now known to orbit other suns.

But scientists did.

No psychic, despite their claims, has ever helped the police solve a crime. But forensic scientists have, all the time.

It wasn’t someone who practices homeopathy who found a cure for smallpox, or polio. Scientists did, medical scientists.

No creationist ever cracked the genetic code. Chemists did. Molecular biologists did.

They used physics. They used math. They used chemistry, biology, astronomy, engineering.

They used science.

These are all the things you discovered doing your projects. All the things that brought you here today.

Computers? Cell phones? Rockets to Saturn, probes to the ocean floor, PSP, gamecubes, gameboys, X-boxes?
All by scientists.

Those places I talked about before—you can get to know them too. You can experience the wonder of seeing them for the first time, the thrill of discovery, the incredible, visceral feeling of doing something no one has ever done before, seen things no one has seen before, know something no one else has ever known.

No crystal balls, no tarot cards, no horoscopes. Just you, your brain, and your ability to think.

Welcome to science. You’re gonna like it here.

The Dangers of Herbal Remedies

I have been most concerned about my Dad taking chinese medicine without consulting his doctor first. So many chinese medicines have been banned here after someone's died or has been irreversibly harmed, but does that really have to happen before extensive tests are done? No doubt some chinese medicines work, but without double blind tests, who knows.

Be informed before taking herbal remedies. Oh and by the way, homeopathy has been scientifically proved to be just a placebo. Save your money.

(Referral source: Anne's Anti-Quackery & Science Blog)

Read Anne's excellent entries on how Homeopathic Arguments are like Diluted Water (nothing is in them), how Nature is Not Necessarily Safe, and debunking The Myths of Herbal Tea.

For more info:

American Council on Science and Health - Facts and Fears
Homeopathy: The Ultimate Fake
Supplements Associated with Illnesses and Injuries
Harmful Effects of Herbs
The Doctor Is In

Down with Flu

Yep, it is back. The flu bug has chased me down and struck me in the head. My sinuses are blocked like a dam bridge and my brain's been replaced by wool (like ole Orca in the office). Strangely witty words emit from my mouth but they've obviously passed through a non-existent filter. Thankfully nothing offensive. ;)

After work it will be sleep for me... but for now an important task to complete...

New Jet Li movie Unleashed

This one sounds immensely exciting.

Posted at 15:59 by mephala
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