Monday, November 2, 2009

yes please

Delfina Delettrez skeleton hand bracelet:

via

Sociology 210

Is supposed to be about the history of sociological theory. My professor is a little French history professor teaching this class for the first time. I think he is swell because he likes to ramble and always has little anecdotes. Also, he talks about Brigitte Bardot:


Who is clearly a babe.

i heart guts

I came across this a while ago on some random blog, and am super happy I found it again. Seriously, I wish sex-ed classes would use this type of poster to describe the menstrual cycle.


Sunday, November 1, 2009

Dinosaur comics

Heh heh...

T-Rex educates his friends Dromiceiomimus and Velociraptor about genital terminology.

Pretty houses & cemetaries

When I grow up I want to live in a pretty house that looks like it has lots of stories to tell (and maybe a few ghosts to tell them).

Saturday, October 31, 2009

1991

Halloween in Yellowknife. People complain about it raining on Halloween? Welcome to my childhood, where mum needed to make costumes that would fit over our parkas.


PS: Clearly I am Sleeping Beauty. And apparently I was down with the pink dress over the blue.


ALSO!! This little boy just became my new best friend:

Sociology of Sexuality

I miss it. Here I am doing my sociology minor backwards, and I do not recommend it. Somehow going from really interesting material to the dry and must learn material just doesn't cut it. At least I get to finish up with a couple of good ones in the summer.

Anyway, as far as sexuality goes, this was probably one of the best memories I have from that class (from "The Death of the Stork: Sex Education Books for Children" by Wendy Simonds):
...Andry, Schepp, and Hampton's How Babies are Made (1979) and Baker's The Birds and the Bees" (1990) are more lackluster than the others in their descriptions of procreative sex:
The sperm, which come from the father's testicles, are sent into the mother through his penis. To do this, the father and mother lie down facing each other and the father places his penis in the mother's vagina. Unlike plants and animals, when human mothers and fathers create a new baby they are sharing a very personal and special relationship. (Andry, Schepp and Hampton, 1979).

When men and women mate, the penis becomes stiff and is inserted into the vagina, which has become larger and moist, ready to receive it. (Baker, 1990).


These authors make heterosex sound like a cross between directions for putting together a bookcase and a recipe for baking a cake. (I can't help but imagine the seductive dialogue, "Hey baby, I have some sperm I'd like to send you through my penis! May I insert it?" "Oh yeah, my vagina is large and moist, ready to receive!")
Seriously...this is what I studied.