Through Being Cool

Salon.com Technology | On sale at Old Navy: Cool clothes for identical zombies!

Thanks to Elise for the link. My reaction to the article, though, is “Who cares?” I guess I’m well past being cool, and I’ve never been someone who worries about their fashion sense. What I like is that there’s a HUGE selection of CHEAP clothes for MEN, and that’s a rare combination. Well, I guess, not so rare, now. By the way, the first Old Navy store in Toronto will open in the spring of next year. And I’m baffled by the writer’s assumption that “conformity” is a terrible evil to be avoided. Certainly conformity of thought is not healthy, but where I buy my clothes and furniture? Come on. Most people I know who shop at Old Navy and/or IKEA do it because, in reality, those external things don’t mean that much to them.

Letting Go Of Mommy’s Hand

Yesterday, Heather told a story about her childhood. It reminded me of a story from mine. As a toddler, I used to sleep in the same room as my parents, and I remember that I couldn’t fall asleep unless I was holding onto my mother’s hand. I would stretch my arm out between the bars of the crib, and reach for mom’s hand. As I got older, and slept in a bed in my own room, the habit remained, only I would reach up and hold the bedpost until I fell asleep. I rationalized it as I grew into a 6 or 7 year old, thinking that if any bad men tried to kidnap me while I slept, they wouldn’t be able to pry my hand from the bed, and therefore, I’d be safe. It was during a family trip to Ireland when I was just turning 9 that I decided to “put away childish things,” forsaking both the bedpost and my nightlight. It is the first memory I have of consciously deciding to “grow up.”

Speaking of trips to Ireland, last March when I was in Dublin visiting family, I discovered two neat things about my family history:

  • My great grandmother O’Keeffe owned a house in Howth, just north of Dublin, and this house was a gift to her from Michael Collins’ mother. She (my great grandmother) was quite involved in Ireland’s struggle for independence, at various times sheltering Michael Collins and Eamon DeValera in her house in London, when she lived there.
  • I am related to Irish writer Brendan Behan, through marriage.

It’s probably not that unusual. Ireland is a small country.

More Interesting Blogfolk

I’ve been discovering more interesting blogfolk lately. Denise and Dinah are both very nice people with interesting weblogs. I’m adding both of them to my links. And Tom included me in his celebrity trash-digging, which is nice, actually.

I finally found:

  • PJ Harvey – Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea ($16.99)

I really really want to like this CD. I’ve been a big fan since the beginning (I paid $30 for her first CD, Dry, when it was only available on import from the UK), but she’s lost me as she’s drifted away from simple guitar and voice arrangements. This is better than her last, but still not up there with Dry or Rid of Me. I’m hoping it grows on me. She’s really decided to go with a whole Patti Smith sound. One thing that’s always bugged me is when non-American musicians try to adopt American music. U2’s Rattle and Hum still annoys me for this reason, and I’m hoping I can learn to like PJ again.