Sarah Needs the Yahtzee Dice

The sartorially challenged should invite sympathy, not scorn.  Who plans Sarah Huckabee Sander’s outfits? I’d say the odds are good that Sarah has been rummaging through her own closet unfortunately. She may even reflect at length before getting dressed, picking up one dress after another, trying to figure out which style and color will best minimize her hips.

She does not seem to favor slacks.  She leans to solids. That’s the hips, again.

I know Sarah’s struggle. I too am a sartorially challenged woman of curves. When it comes to creating outfits, I just don’t get it. I have organized closets filled with clothes that flatter my skin color. I have jackets, sweaters, scarves, jewelry, pants, leggings, tunics, tailored shirts, t-shirts, sweaters, skirts and other random accessories. Yet, somehow, I still suffer from dressing dyslexia.

I pick matching pieces. I add accessories. I go to the mirror.

Then I ask: What went wrong? Like Sarah and other dressing dyslexics, I often don’t know. I can dress myself well enough so that I can tell the reflection in the mirror is … off, somehow. Like Sarah, I don’t exactly look bad. The shoes go with the pants go with the top, and the scarf ought to fit fine. The dress suits my shape and the tights seem basically harmless. Nevertheless, I can’t count the number of times I have shaken my head at the mirror, looked at the time on the clock, and said, “Oh, well. It looks intentional. Gotta go.”

Intentional. That’s my favorite word for some of Sarah’s outfits. I am sure she created what she had set out to create. But I have a tip for Sarah and other dressing dyslexics: Find the Yahtzee dice.

Awhile back, I created a new system for getting dressed. I’ll use it now. I pick up the black plastic container of six dice. I roll the dice. High dice wins. I arrange the dice in a row based on where they landed. The high dice is the last one in the row, a number six. I pick up three dice and roll again to get a sum total of sixteen.

Each dice represents a location. One stands for scarves, two for pants, three for the casual drawer, four for skirts and dresses, five for tops worth hanging up, and six for jackets and sweaters.  My roll says I have to wear the sixth item from the left in sweaters or jackets. I can use the sixteenth item in that section instead. (I can also say, “It’s fifteen degrees outside. This would be goofy,” and roll again.)

The original plan for the dice system involved closet cleaning. If I rolled an item I was unwilling to wear, that item went into the charity bag. The system worked pretty well and now I am almost entirely down to items that meet my standards, which might best be expressed as, “not ugly and has no holes.” The blue dress with the ruffles on the butt, though? That thing had to go.

Why am I still rolling the dice since my closet has been cleaned? Because much to my amusement, I started getting compliments on my outfits. Suddenly, adults and even middle school students started going out of their way to tell me that I looked good. The dice seemed to have much better taste than I did. Or maybe the dice made me think about clothing differently. When I start with a scarf, I often end up juggling pieces to get that scarf to work.

I’ll go to the closet now. Number six is a long, pale blue and gray sweater with a fringe, perfect for this day at home. I can go rummage through the casual drawer and then I’ll add some jeans. I don’t expect the total ensemble to be a “Wow!” moment, but people won’t be talking about me when I leave Walmart or step off the press podium, either.

“We can rebuild him. We have the technology,” Oscar Goldman said in the Six Million Dollar Man.  

Luckily for Sarah, the technology she needs can be captured in a black plastic cup.  Jiggle, jiggle, jiggle, a quick flick of the wrist. Then all she has to do is arrange the dice, count and coordinate. She might toss a dress or two into the Goodwill bag at the start.

Why dress yourself, Sarah, when random numbers can do it better?

 

Biographyjar Will Be Embracing Starbucks for the Holiday Season

The hashtag #BoycottStarbucks epitomizes an unattractive aspect of social media today.  Some woman is calling for a boycott of Starbucks because, horror, they have eliminated the peach and mango syrups. We are also supposed to boycott Starbucks because of the so-called lesbian Christmas cup.

Two girls appear to be holding hands on the cup. Are they lesbians? Transgender? Just girls holding hands? In some cultures, girls hold hands as they walk down the street because they are friends. To those persons protesting Starbucks agenda: Maybe you are right about that agenda. But maybe your interpretation says more about your mind than Starbucks alleged masterplan to change your sexual orientation.

Here at Biographyjar, we like the new cups. We are getting rather tired of the whining, too. No more peach for your favorite drink? Change drinks! Go to Dunkin Donuts. Or Panera Bread. Panera makes some smashingly delicious lemonades and fruit waters. You want to boycott the holiday cup? That’s your privilege. Try McDonalds. Or your local coffee shop. My nearby Caffe Bene does a mean job of blending matcha.

But please don’t try to start a mass movement over peach syrup. This is getting silly. A syrup-based boycott reeks of self-entitlement.

Global warming matters. Black lives matter. Saving the whales  and closing the achievement gap matter. Biojar will stand behind many movements. Biojar also supports trying to reach friends through social media to generate a groundswell of support for asking Starbucks to please bring back the peach syrup.

But #BoycottStarbucks over a missing drink? Boycotts are serious business. Nobody owes anybody a peach green tea lemonade.  C’mon, frustrated tea drinker. A little perspective out here?

Why not order mango or peach syrup online and pull out the old blender?

 

Medicating our Intuition

In the movie Robocop, Murphy and Lewis lay mired in a muddy pit at the end, both wounded. Murphy is lying on his back, trapped under fallen steel girders. As Clarence Boddicker goes in for the kill, Murphy extrudes a secret pointy spear and slices the evil Clarence’s carotid artery. Spurt, spurt. Evil is vanquished, at least for the time being. How do robotic engineers always know to include the secret pointy thing (or raygun or whatever) into their latest mandroids?

The clean-up begins, but we hardly ever film the clean-up.

Murphy! I’m a mess!” Lewis says.
They’ll fix you. They fix everything.”  Murphy — AKA Robocop — answers.
Yes, “they” fix everything. They are great at eliminating stress, for example. We may once have been a Prozac Nation. Now we are a Prozac, Lexapro, Cymbalta, Zoloft, Celexa, Wellbutrin, Effexor, Paxil, Elavil, Sinequan, Xanax and Prozac nation. I have left out Abilify and who can count how many other fix-it drugs.
They fix everything. Murphy’s story should give us pause, though. Was Robocop still Alex Murphy? Who are those crazy alien women with cat’s eyes and five-pound lips? And, most importantly, at what dose does Prozac fundamentally change a personality?
Seriously, when that thrum of anxiety or depression vanishes, who are you? Who will you be? Murphy, Robocop or the plucky sidekick? Murphy’s former wife? Hopefully you’re not the guy ramming his van into the convenient, toxic waste storage container, or the random-unlucky-guy who gets shot by the ED-209.
Yes, “they”  can decrease or even wipe out your stress.  They can make you feel like a new character in the film of your life. I want to share an observation, however. Physical symptoms are sometimes manifestations of intuition. Those physical symptoms may be the only connection to intuition some of us possess. Enough Xanax will shut down the fear that led to a prescription, but if life is creeping you out, you need to find out why.
“Your move creep,” Robocop says.

Who is the creep? Where is the creep? I recommend finding that out BEFORE you start blocking metabolic pathways. Once those pathways are blocked, you may find yourself baking orange scones for poor, lonely Clarence. He’ll take your scones, of course, along with who knows what else.

Insight from the Biographyjar: That flutter in your stomach? Those broken nights of sleep? That clenching of your jaw? Obviously those physical symptoms are telling you that you feel stressed. But what else are they telling you? The “what else” matters and the “what else” tends to get slighted.

They do fix everything. The next thing you know, you are encased in metal and covered with all sorts of nifty cybernetic attachments.  Or you are peacefully picking up a pill case every morning, which is fine if your world improves with the contents of that case.

Just be sure you hold on to your intuition long enough to identify the creeps. Who are the Clarences, Bobs or Dicks in your life? Where are they? Sometimes instead of fixing yourself, you might want to fix Dick instead. You might tell Dick where to go, refuse to listen to more of Bob’s crap, leave Detroit, or quit your soul-killing job.

Sometimes we can fix ourselves.

P.S. Don’t tell off your boss until you have the next job. Consider not telling off your boss at all since you may want that reference later.

Exploring Honey

Turnerdom began a quest awhile back. Sunset Grocery had put a premium honey brand on sale right after the clover honey spluttered its last farewell into a teacup. So buckwheat honey gained entrance to the tea cabinet. This led to the startling discovery that some honeys don’t taste remotely like the clover honey of my youth.

Buckwheat honey was fortunately delicious. I will warn readers to watch out for chestnut honey. I actually returned that jar.

What I like about the honey quest:

  1. It’s relatively cheap. How fast do we crank through a jar or bottle of honey? For the cost of two lattes, I can get a month of deliciousness. My-Husband-Albert-Who-Sucks-at-Dieting interferes when he pours himself straight teaspoons of honey, but mostly the honey stays around for awhile.
  2. Good in tea, cocoa, yogurt and many other foods. Honey works in lattes, too, although my palate does not find the coffee/honey combination tasty without a fair amount of milk in play.
  3. Depending on use patterns, a person could cut down on sugar or sugar substitutes.
  4. A quick treat that satisfies the sugar craving.  Honey can take the place of that piece of cheesecake. Of course, this benefit only holds if a person doesn’t start drawing lines of honey on top of the cheesecake.

Readers, when you get to SueBee section of the grocery store, why not change the cart up a bit? No offense intended to SueBee. I’ve enjoyed many bottles. But Wonder Flavor might be just a few feet away from that good old squeeze bottle. Buckwheat’s a good launch point.

Biographyjar suggestion for the day: Change the cart up a bit!

 

 

Mandroids MAY NOT Be the Biggest Threat

“I am not nuts. … I was right except for the mandroid thing, thank you.”  ~ Ron in Supernatural, upon learning he was right about the secret evil lurking around him.

Ron was right, but Ron got shot dead by a well-meaning, human security guard. It doesn’t matter how well you can detect demons if you let your alertness or even superpowers keep you from seeing the security guard behind you. Ron had found a way to identify demons, or mandroids  as he called them, but that did not save his life. Hubris can keep a person from knowing when to take cover.

Being right feels so satisfying we can forget to watch our backs.

Today’s slightly off-kilter life coaching advice:

Don’t be like Ron. Don’t fixate on the big stuff at the expense of all the tiny details of life. What makes you nervous in your own space? Take a few days to slow down when you are nervous. Identify the “why” behind that emotion. You can’t fix North Korea, but maybe you can manage a pesky coworker or two.

In fact, let Korea and the Mandroids go. Instead, figure out what you might do here and now to reduce your anxiety. If that involves baking cookies for a coworker and/or yourself, go get the chocolate chips. If that involves turning off the news, I support that move.

The season has changed and the floors are cold. Find your slippers. Find your happy movie.

In the between-spaces, try to identify what notches up your anxiety.

You can’t fix what you don’t see.

 

All the Many Mushrooms that Are Me

I think this might be the top of my head. I’m not quite sure. I have taken many fun photos lately. What does this picture tell us?

“She obviously has way too much time on her hands!”  is not the answer.

“She could use a bit more hair” is not the answer, either.

“Could be an alien lifeform” comes to mind.

Or “How can she be so many different sizes?”

Or “Why is she photographing little fungus people?”

Maybe, “Wow, I knew Cousin It was not the only one!”

Readers, feel free to come up with your own questions.

Here’s the actual point of this post, though: I made this picture. As we listen to the news, we should keep in mind that nowadays almost anybody can make up almost anything with enough tenacity and a few techno-chops — and I mean very few techno-chops.

My live reports from Mars will be coming as soon as my crew fixes the camera.

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