

One of my lovely customers sent me a message today with this link.
And here is my United/World of Love line:
My heart sank a little bit. The World/United States of Love line that I created is one of the reasons that I was able to quit my full-time job….
I hope Stevie realizes that there’s a great lawsuit here…
Than an evening spent with my best friend and favorite person in the world? Not much.
I like the fact that my favorite evenings are the ones we spend at home, cooking our own dinner, sitting down to enjoy it and then curling up to watch an episode of our favorite show.
I wouldn’t give them up for anything.
What are your favorite activities with a loved one?
Lloyd
I was reading a book called “Gregg Shorthand Manual Simplified” before class when another student walked up and said:
“That looks like the elvish writing from ‘Lord of the Rings’.”
“No, it doesn’t look anything like it,” I replied.
I could read elvish back in high school.
My fiancée’s response to this story: “No wonder you were single before me”
Hello Tumblr.
I am sorry that I have been inattentive of late. I guess I need to get my priorities straight and stop vegetating in front of the TV.
I have several posts that I need to make. I will endeavor to correct my lazy behavior.
Lloyd

“Or he’s not. I don’t care. He is still my son. And he is 5. And I am his mother. And if you have a problem with anything mentioned above, I don’t want to know you.
I have gone back and forth on whether I wanted to post something more in-depth about my sweet boy and his choice of Halloween costume. Or more specifically, the reactions to it. I figure if I’m still irked by it a few days later, I may as well go ahead and post my thoughts.
Here are the facts that lead up to my rant:
- My son is 5 and goes to a church preschool.
- He has loved Scooby Doo since developing the ability and attention span to sit still long enough to watch it.
- Halloween is a holiday and its main focus is wearing a costume.
- My son’s school had the kids dress up, do a little parade, and then change out of costumes for the rest of the party.
- Boo’s best friend is a little girl
- Boo has an older sister
- Boo spends most of his time with me.
- I am a woman.
- I am Boo’s mother, not you.
So a few weeks before Halloween, Boo decides he wants to be Daphne from Scooby Doo, along with his best friend E. He had dressed as Scooby a couple of years ago. I was hesitant to make the purchase, not because it was a cross gendered situation, but because 5 year olds have a tendency to change their minds. After requesting a couple of more times, I said sure and placed the order. He flipped out when it arrived. It was perfect.
Then as we got closer to the actual day, he stared to hem and haw about it. After some discussion it comes out that he is afraid people will laugh at him. I pointed out that some people will because it is a cute and clever costume. He insists their laughter would be of the ‘making fun’ kind. I blow it off. Seriously, who would make fun of a child in costume?
And then the big day arrives. We get dressed up. We drop Squirt at his preschool and head over to his. Boo doesn’t want to get out of the car. He’s afraid of what people will say and do to him. I convince him to go inside. He halts at the door. He’s visibly nervous. I chalk it up to him being a bit of a worrier in general. Seriously, WHO WOULD MAKE FUN OF A CHILD IN A COSTUME ON HALLOWEEN? So he walks in. And there were several friends of mine that knew what he was wearing that smiled and waved and gave him high-fives. We walk down the hall to where his classroom is.
And that’s where things went wrong. Two mothers went wide-eyed and made faces as if they smelled decomp. And I realize that my son is seeing the same thing I am. So I say, “Doesn’t he look great?” And Mom A says in disgust, “Did he ask to be that?!” I say that he sure did as Halloween is the time of year that you can be whatever it is that you want to be. They continue with their nosy, probing questions as to how that was an option and didn’t I try to talk him out of it. Mom B mostly just stood there in shock and dismay.
And then Mom C approaches. She had been in the main room, saw us walk in, and followed us down the hall to let me know her thoughts. And they were that I should never have ‘allowed’ this and thank God it wasn’t next year when he was in Kindergarten since I would have had to put my foot down and ‘forbidden’ it. To which I calmly replied that I would do no such thing and couldn’t imagine what she was talking about. She continued on and on about how mean children could be and how he would be ridiculed.
My response to that: The only people that seem to have a problem with it is their mothers.
Another mom pointed out that high schools often have Spirit Days where girls dress like boys and vice versa. I mentioned Powderpuff Games where football players dress like cheerleaders and vice versa. Or every frat boy ever in college (Mom A said that her husband was a frat boy and NEVER dressed like a woman.)
But here’s the point, it is none of your damn business.
If you think that me allowing my son to be a female character for Halloween is somehow going to ‘make’ him gay then you are an idiot. Firstly, what a ridiculous concept. Secondly, if my son is gay, OK. I will love him no less. Thirdly, I am not worried that your son will grow up to be an actual ninja so back off.
If my daughter had dressed as Batman, no one would have thought twice about it. No one.
But it also was heartbreaking to me that my sweet, kind-hearted five year old was right to be worried. He knew that there were people like A, B, and C. And he, at 5, was concerned about how they would perceive him and what would happen to him.
Just as it was heartbreaking to those parents that have lost their children recently due to bullying. IT IS NOT OK TO BULLY. Even if you wrap it up in a bow and call it ‘concern.’ Those women were trying to bully me. And my son. MY son.
It is obvious that I neither abuse nor neglect my children. They are not perfect, but they are learning how to navigate this big, and sometimes cruel, world. I hate that my son had to learn this lesson while standing in front of allegedly Christian women. I hate that those women thought those thoughts, and worse felt comfortable saying them out loud. I hate that ‘pink’ is still called a girl color and that my baby has to be so brave if he wants to be Daphne for Halloween.
And all I hope for my kids, and yours, and those of Moms ABC, are that they are happy. If a set of purple sparkly tights and a velvety dress is what makes my baby happy one night, then so be it. If he wants to carry a purse, or marry a man, or paint fingernails with his best girlfriend, then ok. My job as his mother is not to stifle that man that he will be, but to help him along his way. Mine is not to dictate what is ‘normal’ and what is not, but to help him become a good person.
I hope I am doing that.
And my little man worked that costume like no other. He rocked that wig, and I wouldn’t want it any other way.”
This kid is the most rockin’ Daphne ever. I refuse to hear arguments against that. Rock on kid!
Lloyd
(Source: travalicious, via pinkdinosaurs)

My parents are the best!
There is a restaurant in St. Louis called Charlie Gitto’s and they make a marinara sauce for distribution to grocery stores. I LOVE THIS STUFF. It is my favorite pasta sauce and I eat it as often as possible. Unfortunately, I moved to Washington, D.C. and Charlie Gitto sauce isn’t carried by any of the local grocery stores.
My dad sent me an email a few days ago that said I should expect a package. Well, that package came today and look what it was! 8 BOTTLES OF CHARLIE GITTO SAUCE!!! That will last me a very long time :-)
Thanks Mom and Dad! You guys rock!
Professor: You are a Christian, aren’t you, son?
Student: Yes, sir.
Professor: So, you believe in God?
Student: Absolutely, sir.
Professor: Is God good?
Student: Sure.
Professor: My brother died of cancer, even though he prayed to God to heal him. Most of us would attempt to…
I’m never a fan of people taking someone’s name and touting their personal point of view from it.
http://www.snopes.com/religion/einstein.asp
“It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.”
[Albert Einstein, 1954, from “Albert Einstein: The Human Side”, edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman, Princeton University Press]
While Einstein was known to believe, there is NO proof that this actually happened. The above quote is along the lines of several quotes from Einstein himself. He didn’t believe in the personification of God, but admired the structure of the universe and delighted in learning about how to mathematically model it in physics. His grand dream was to find the perfect equation (references to this can be gleaned from both Michiu Kaku’s book “Hyperspace” and Brian Greene’s “The Elegant Universe”). This kind of attitude makes him the LEAST likely person to play devil’s advocate to a taunting professor. Now, before you try and mark me as some kind of ‘non-believer’ that’s hating on those of the Faith, let’s take something into consideration here. Someone that believes in God wrote this and attached Einstein’s name knowing full well it wasn’t true. They lied and misrepresented Einstein’s thoughts, beliefs and created a caricature of all scientists and atheists at the same time. It’s true that there are rude atheists out to try and dissuade people from religion by applying science (not cool guys, just let people have faith in what they believe in). It’s also true that some of these people are scientists. A lot of people also forget that there are atheists out there that respect all religions and that there are also a lot of scientists that have faith in one religion or another. It’s hurtful to caricature them all in such a light. Rude people that try to make themselves feel better about the world by belittling others are the real problem, not atheism and science. See, this whole thing is a farce for several reasons. First off, who would keep such an accurate record of a debate between a professor and a then unknown student? I get home and my notes take the basic gist of what the professor spent 5 minutes explaining so that I can reference it against the readings if I need to brush up on a question. While short hand existed at the time, not many people could keep up conversational speed for more than a few seconds unless they were professional stenographers. So why would someone lie and create this and put it out into the void? They have a misguided belief that creating this lie will help them recruit others to their point of view and fend off the rude people that have created doubt in the people they put down. The best way to win people over is to show them the results of what you believe in. I have friends from several different faiths that I believe to be excellent representations of those religions. They all share the same qualities: Kindness, Patience, Helpfulness, Empathy, Understanding, Well-Meaning, and a generally good attitude. Clearly they are taking something away from their faith and religious communities that sustains and feeds them in a way that food, drink, wealth, and material goods have no angle on. I think that their ability to have this is awesome and I count myself lucky to have such friends. You can’t MAKE someone truly believe in something with lies, misdirection, or threats, so why bother? It only spreads hate when those people find out what you’ve really done. I think science and religion can co-exist peacefully without threatening each other because they have always had two different goals in my mind. Science is the observation and quantification of our universe. It asks “Who? What? Where? When? and How?”, but it doesn’t answer the question that religion asks, “Why?” Think about it. ”Why did lightning happen in the storm?” you ask. ”Well, there’s friction in the upper atmosphere and the charge difference between the clouds and the air completes a circuit and that completion is lightning,” someone replies. Ok, we’ve got the ‘what’ (friction), the ‘where’ (The atmosphere), the ‘when’ (the point at which the circuit is completed), and the ‘how’ (the transferring of charges is what creates the light and pattern), but nowhere in that sentence does it answer why it happened in that particular storm. The why question always boils down to “what is the point of this?” Science can’t answer that. Science isn’t geared for that kind of question. What’s the point of absolute zero being the absence of heat? Ask a thermodynamic physicist; I bet he’ll scratch his head. I believe in science, but I’m still working on the personal faith and religion thing because I’m still trying to find my own answer for why this all exists. What’s the point of the universe? I’d like to know and I know a lot of people have found their own unique and individual answers through faith and religion. And what’s the point of this rant? I’m more likely to think well of a Muslim that reaches out to help me up when I’ve fallen in the street than a Christian that tries to pressure me into their flock with threats of hell or anecdotal stories that don’t really prove anything at all. Who would you be more likely to learn about with those two options? Finally, I’d like tho share this link: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/10/1018_041018_science_religion.html P.S. Hate the terrorists that kill innocent civilians to be heard and not the religions in which they profess belief. Lloyd

The theme of the early Mountain Dew ads is that it was the juice that kept rascally hill folk perked up enough to go prospect, slaughter pigs, and toil in the hills of destitute poverty. Other tag line: “It’ll tickle your innards!”
Zippity Dew Dah.
(via madmenfootnotes, Laura)
Last spring, Laura and I drank a case of Throwback Dew featuring Willy the Hillbilly. I think I enjoyed the can as much as the “real sugar” and OJ.
I love this stuff.