Ravenclaw

Jun. 19th, 2003 08:53 pm
raven: [hello my name is] and a silhouette image of a raven (blood roses)
[personal profile] raven
I missed the interview with JK Rowling on BBC 2. Fu-uck.

And I am not in a truly spiffin' mood at present. I think I'm vicariously depressed, that is, if "vicariously" means what I think it means. Gah. I take it all back - all that's wrong with me is that I'm in a strange mood. I've been reading too much; getting stuck in my own head again. The problem is I tend to absorb styles of writing like a sponge - when I've read as many different stories as I have today, my own, simple, unfunny journal writing style seems to be hidden underneath a hundred million different varieties of fiction whirling round my head.

I can hear my mother in the kitchen, on the phone to one of her friends. She's just been saying, "...yes, you know, this new Harry Potter book... shops are opening at midnight and of course Iona is just so excited... Sanjeev's promised to take her, you know, he's promised her..."
Doncha just love it when your parents talk about you? Besides, this is the closest my mother will ever come to understanding life as a serial obsessive. I've never tried to explain slash, or even bisexuality, to her, due to her disturbingly homophobic tendencies. Ah, whatever. I didn't make this entry to bitch about my mother. We've been having unusually civil relations recently.

I spent the afternoon chatting to [livejournal.com profile] shipperkitten and [livejournal.com profile] hathy_col. We talked of many things, of cabbages and kings, mostly slashy in nature, and I enjoyed the sensation of just relaxing and not thinking about anything except the things I want to think about.

My mother keeps asking me what perfume I'm wearing - she says she can smell something nice on me. I keep telling her I'm not wearing any, 'cause that's the truth. I have a feeling the smell hanging round me might just be contentment - if fear has a smell, too, then why not?

Lastly, gacked from [livejournal.com profile] lady_of_asheru:





I'm from Ravenclaw!

Hogwart's Sorting Hat Quiz

made by The Genki Gang

vicariously

on 2003-06-19 01:33 pm (UTC)
ext_267: Photo of DougS, who has a round face with thinning hair and a short beard (Default)
Posted by [identity profile] dougs.livejournal.com
> I think I'm vicariously depressed, that is, if "vicariously" means what I think it means.

If you're depressed on someone else's behalf, without any reason of your own, then that's exactly what "vicariously" means.

<geek topic=church>
In the Church of England, the payment for looking after a parish is paid to the Rector. It's the Rector that "has the living".
But if the Rector was frequently absent, he'd put someone else in place to look after the parish in his absence -- a Vicar.
The Vicar isn't working on his own behalf -- he's working for someone else. He's working vicariously.
These days, of course, the vicar gets paid too.
</geek>

Re: vicariously

on 2003-06-19 03:00 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Trust you to know exactly what it means. The surprising thing is that I was right in my mental definition.
And thanks for the "vicar" definition - scarily enough, it was something I'd wondered about. *sigh*

Re: vicariously

on 2003-06-19 03:20 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com
Traditionally, I think, a Vicar is a vicar (acting "vicariously") when the parish church is based near where a monastery used to be. Back when the monastery was in full working order (ie, pre-Henry VIII) the Abbot/Abbess of the monastery was the spiritual head of the local community, and the parish priest was only acting as the vicar. Where there was never a monastery, the parish priest was the Rector. When the Rector or the Vicar pays another priest to carry out the parish duties on their behalf, the priest being paid is called a curate, which comes from the same root as "curator", and means, well, someone taking care of the parish.

on 2003-06-19 01:53 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] spiderdragon.livejournal.com
Well thanks to dougs for sorting that out.

I hate it when my parents talk about me and they think I'm not listening. Grrr.

I am a trifle confused. Indeed my brain understands thine theorem on bisexuality, but slash? Meaning? :S

Re:

on 2003-06-19 03:17 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Oh, god. Why do I get the feeling someone else on my friends list will already have explained it?

*looks at comments*
Looks like they're having an off day.

Anyway. Did Hannah explain what fanfiction is? If she didn't... well, it's fiction we the fans write, for no money and no acclaim, just our own personal amusement and the edification of the Internet, and we use the characters and situations we already know.

Slash is a particular type of fanfic, the type I specialise in. It involves relationships between two guys or two girls, but more commonly two guys. The name comes from the slash between the two names, for example, the slash I've been reading today was Sirius/Remus. I'm going to assume you've read Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - that's Sirius Black and Remus Lupin.

Damn. Hannah insisted I met you in person before introducing you to this particular facet of my personality... :)

on 2003-06-19 01:59 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] fragility-lily.livejournal.com
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/3004594.stm

That's a transcript of the JKR interview. I assume it's a complete trans, but don't bet Hawkeye's virginity on it.

on 2003-06-19 02:01 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] fragility-lily.livejournal.com
And:
http://icehouse.7dragons.net/

Scroll to the veeerrry bottom for a good, indepth sorting quiz.

Re:

on 2003-06-19 03:18 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
Thanks!

Bet Hawkeye's virginity on it?! *laughs*

on 2003-06-19 02:09 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] language-idling.livejournal.com
My main issue when my mother talks about me to her friends on the phone is that she has a tendency to exaggerate and make up details if she thinks they'll make things more interesting. I find myself in the background saying, "Hey, that's not how it was!"

I get that way when I'm reading alot, too. Then, I become insecure about my own style of writing. It's not a very ... pretty style of writing. Sometimes, I think I should be more whimsical, but then I wouldn't be me. Orwell ruined me for life at the age of 10 or so. Simplicity is best. :)

Re:

on 2003-06-19 03:20 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] loneraven.livejournal.com
My mother does that, too! It's aggravating in the extreme, when I'm nothing like the Perfect Daughter...

Orwell was a scary, scary man. I have only ever read 1984 once. Once was enough. *shudders*

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