Feh and Recipes.
May. 7th, 2008 09:10 amOh, it's the birth day for two people I quite admire:
janedavitt and
xochitl42! I hope today is lovely for you both. *staples a dollar to your b-day bouquet* Um, y'all don't do that up north, huh? (You should! It's fun. Plus? Free money, what?)
I've had this twitch in my eye about the whole "rise above it" and "always stay polite" type posts I've seen cropping up all over and I figured out why that gets under my skin. To me it smacks first and foremost of "be ladylike." Especially when I read somewhere that "dog piling" is a feminine trait. Um, excuse me? It's not called girl piling. And what, boys don't gang up against each other and beat the ever-loving tar out of one another? Or is it cool that they use their fists and we use words, which is bad, mm'kay? *sucks in breath* That's one of the most backward things I've read in a while, and I've read some stupidity over the past week. Don't tell me I should be polite. That being polite and watching my tone (ahem) is the key to winning an argument, or at least, the only way to be able to live with myself.
Maybe it's the Texan in me (Molly Ivins, any one? Ann Richards?) but I speak my damn mind. Do I mess up because of it? Yeah. Do I feel good about myself, because I say what I feel? Hell yeah. Have I hurt people? Yes. But I have no problem admitting mistakes and saying "I'm sorry" if I have hurt someone. Do I think you (who I'm talking to) will feel better knowing how I really feel instead of being a snitty, back-biting pompous snot? Yeah. I do, actually. Remaining ladylike and watching our tone is what leads (sorry, but it's true) to "Keep Sweet." (For those not following, that's what the fundie LDS women are taught. I'll let your minds fill in the blanks.) That crap makes me think of my devout Uncle who berated his daughters for not putting on some "damn lipstick and looking like a lady should look." Maybe it's because I grew up in a cultish organization (LDS) where women are taught to not work, to be quiet, to follow our men blindly, and we can only be honored if we are stay at home moms. To, you know, a million kids. [/exaggeration. only a thousand.] Read between the lines: Keep Sweet. (aka: shut the hell up and where's my dinner?)
I don't believe I have to suffer fools. I don't believe I have to always turn my cheek. (Hell, no.) I don't believe I have to always be polite. (Please note I'm Southern. I'm almost ALWAYS polite. But still. I can cowboy up, you know'm sayin'?) Notice I'm using "I don't, I feel" and I'm talking about me. I'm not telling the people at large how they "should" behave, or what is ultimately the way to be. This is how I feel. Take it for what it's worth, ignore it, it's your brain-meat. But please. Don't tell me how I "should" be. When I gave up my membership to one of the most misogynist religions/cults out there, I was officially done with people telling me how I should behave, I thank you very much.
Now who wants some yummy Thai recipes?
I was wary. I told my kids they wouldn't have to finish their soup if they didn't like it. They all had seconds. This was so refreshing and light... I'm going to have the leftovers cold today to see if that's equally as good. I modified the original recipe, and put in notes to remind myself.
SHRIMP AND LIME SOUP
1 1/2 lb raw shrimp
8 C water
6 small Keffir lime leaves or 1/4 tsp lime rind (this was the outside of one lime - I didn't have the leaves, obv.)
1 TBSP chopped lemon grass, or 1/4 tsp grated lemon rind (again, used the rind. Forgot to get the grass)
2 tsp. nam pla , which is fish sauce (We thought it needed WAY more. I put in 1/3 cup. Perfect balance.)
1/3 C lime juice (this was three limes for me.)
4 TBSP chopped cilantro leaves (two hands full)
3 TBSP sliced green onions (three stalks - they were massive, though)
1 red chili, seeded and sliced into 1-inch strips (I ommitted this because of the kids. I added red pepper flakes to my dish and that was tasty)
salt-pepper
slivers of green onion for garnish.
1. Peel the shrimp, de-vein if desired (eh) wash under cold water and pat dry. Set aside.
2. Heat water in large pot until boiling, add the rind/leaves/grass, whichever you're using, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the nam pla and cook another 5 minutes. (Mmm, the gym socks smell. *G* Tastes so good, though)
3. Add the shrimp and lime juice to pan and cook gently over low heat until shrimp firm up and turn pinkish. Take off heat.
4. Add chopped cilantro leaves, green onions, and red chili strips. Check the seasoning adding S&P if needed (a pinch of each at my end) and serve immediately. Garnish with onions, if wanted.
Serves 6. So. Freaking. Yummy. I do think it would be even better with the chili strips. But my kids are all "My mouth is burning!" and "It hurts, mommy!" and "I can't see, I can't see!" and "call 911." Whatever. They're so soft and weak. (Hahaha.)
Oh my gosh, my cookbook has a recipe for MONKEY. We're not trying that. :( Poor little :(|) It's Chiang Mai Jungle Curry, ftr.
SPICY SHRIMP CURRY contains no monkey.
3 1/4 C coconut milk (they have a recipe for making it on your own. Pfft. Note: get the FATTY kind, not the light kind. I know.)
2 TBSP green curry (ditto. Again I say: pfft. My store has it, and it's good. Note: this amount is HOT. If you don't like it that hot, make it tsps, not TBSP.)
2 tsp ground galangal (or ginger, fresh)
1 1/2 lb raw shrimp, shelled, de-veined if necessary. (Suck it up! Be a man and rub some dirt on it.)
2 TBSP nam pla (fish sauce)
rice to serve
Garnish: 1 TBSP green chili, cut into 1 inch strips, 4 basil leaves, shredded. (mmmmm)
1. Put the coconut milk in the fridge and chill for 1 hour, or until the milk fats rise to the top. Scoop about a third of the milk off the top and put it in a wok. Save the rest for later.
2. Bring the milk to a boil, then simmer, uncovered, stirring occasionally (no ass in that - got it in one \o/) until the coconut oil begins to bubble at the surface and the liquid reduces to a quarter of its original volume. Add the curry paste and galangal (ginger) and bring to a boil. Cook over medium to high heat until most of the liquid evaporates.
3. Pat the shrimp dry (so it doesn't pop/crackle and burn you) and add to wok, stir frying vigorously for 3-4 minutes until firm and pink.
4. Stir in the remaining milk and the nam pla and simmer for 6-8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Serve garnished with the chile strips and basil leaves accompanied or over rice.
Serves 4-6. Fan. Freaking. Tastic. You could shortcut with the coconut milk and use the lighter stuff, but you'll get a runny curry, and the flavor won't be as intense. On this dish, it really made a difference.
RICE VERMICELLI IN COCNUT MILK (sensing a theme? The kids love the coconut, what can I say. So does their mom.)
8 oz. rice vermicelli
2 tsp oil
2 eggs, beaten
2 C coconut milk (again, they want me to make this from scratch. Hahaha. No.)
1/2 C roughly chopped onions
8 oz. raw shrimp, peeled you know the drill
4 TBSP soy sauce
2 TBSP sugar
1 TBSP lemon juice
4-5 C bean sprouts (mmmm, crunchy)
3/4 C chopped green onions
Garnish: 3 TBSP chopped cilantro leaves, 2 red chilies, seeded and sliced
1. Soak the vermicelli in a bowl of warm water for 15- 20 minutes (um, I thought this was too long. I soaked mine for 8 minutes the first time, and it was fine. I also used boiling water from a tea-kettle, like the package said to do. *shrugs*) Bring a large saucepan to boil and the soaked vermicelli and cool, stirring occasionally, for 15 minutes. Drain the vermicelli WELL and set aside. (I have a large wok, so I used that, to keep from dirtying up another pan.)
2. Heat the oil in an omlet pan or small frying pan and add the eggs. Tilt the pan to form an omelet, lifting the side of the omelet to allow any uncooked egg mixture to flow underneath. Remove the cooked, set omelet from the pan and slice into thin shreds. Keep warm.
3. In a large wok or sauce pan, bring the coconut milk to a boil. Cook over high heat for 10 minutes, until a film of oil forms on the top. (I used the thinner milk for this, and it tasted just fine.) Stir in the onions, shrimp, soy sauce, sugar, and lemon juice. Cook for 5 minutes, then transfer half of the mixture to a bowl and keep warm.
4. Add the vermicelli to the remaining mixture inthe wok, mix well, and cook for 5 minutes. Stir in half the bean sprouts and green onion. Pile the vermicelli mix onto a serving dish and top with the reserved shrimp mixture and shredded omelet. Garnish with cilantro and chilies, serve with the remaining sprouts and green onions.
Serves 4.
I'm going to make this tonight, and this time add a few squirts of chile sauce (yuuuuuum) to the omelet for some heat without the chiles at the end, because again, the kids are pussies. :D Tomorrow we're making crispy noodles with more vermicelli. Emily (my 6 year old) is very excited to watch it blow up in the pan. \o/
A massive storm with hail and potential tornadoes is getting ready to roll through. How happy am I that I have a new roof now? Pretty happy. Also, Imma go batten down my hatches. Have a GOOD and HAPPY day today. *smooches*
I've had this twitch in my eye about the whole "rise above it" and "always stay polite" type posts I've seen cropping up all over and I figured out why that gets under my skin. To me it smacks first and foremost of "be ladylike." Especially when I read somewhere that "dog piling" is a feminine trait. Um, excuse me? It's not called girl piling. And what, boys don't gang up against each other and beat the ever-loving tar out of one another? Or is it cool that they use their fists and we use words, which is bad, mm'kay? *sucks in breath* That's one of the most backward things I've read in a while, and I've read some stupidity over the past week. Don't tell me I should be polite. That being polite and watching my tone (ahem) is the key to winning an argument, or at least, the only way to be able to live with myself.
Maybe it's the Texan in me (Molly Ivins, any one? Ann Richards?) but I speak my damn mind. Do I mess up because of it? Yeah. Do I feel good about myself, because I say what I feel? Hell yeah. Have I hurt people? Yes. But I have no problem admitting mistakes and saying "I'm sorry" if I have hurt someone. Do I think you (who I'm talking to) will feel better knowing how I really feel instead of being a snitty, back-biting pompous snot? Yeah. I do, actually. Remaining ladylike and watching our tone is what leads (sorry, but it's true) to "Keep Sweet." (For those not following, that's what the fundie LDS women are taught. I'll let your minds fill in the blanks.) That crap makes me think of my devout Uncle who berated his daughters for not putting on some "damn lipstick and looking like a lady should look." Maybe it's because I grew up in a cultish organization (LDS) where women are taught to not work, to be quiet, to follow our men blindly, and we can only be honored if we are stay at home moms. To, you know, a million kids. [/exaggeration. only a thousand.] Read between the lines: Keep Sweet. (aka: shut the hell up and where's my dinner?)
I don't believe I have to suffer fools. I don't believe I have to always turn my cheek. (Hell, no.) I don't believe I have to always be polite. (Please note I'm Southern. I'm almost ALWAYS polite. But still. I can cowboy up, you know'm sayin'?) Notice I'm using "I don't, I feel" and I'm talking about me. I'm not telling the people at large how they "should" behave, or what is ultimately the way to be. This is how I feel. Take it for what it's worth, ignore it, it's your brain-meat. But please. Don't tell me how I "should" be. When I gave up my membership to one of the most misogynist religions/cults out there, I was officially done with people telling me how I should behave, I thank you very much.
Now who wants some yummy Thai recipes?
I was wary. I told my kids they wouldn't have to finish their soup if they didn't like it. They all had seconds. This was so refreshing and light... I'm going to have the leftovers cold today to see if that's equally as good. I modified the original recipe, and put in notes to remind myself.
SHRIMP AND LIME SOUP
1 1/2 lb raw shrimp
8 C water
6 small Keffir lime leaves or 1/4 tsp lime rind (this was the outside of one lime - I didn't have the leaves, obv.)
1 TBSP chopped lemon grass, or 1/4 tsp grated lemon rind (again, used the rind. Forgot to get the grass)
2 tsp. nam pla , which is fish sauce (We thought it needed WAY more. I put in 1/3 cup. Perfect balance.)
1/3 C lime juice (this was three limes for me.)
4 TBSP chopped cilantro leaves (two hands full)
3 TBSP sliced green onions (three stalks - they were massive, though)
1 red chili, seeded and sliced into 1-inch strips (I ommitted this because of the kids. I added red pepper flakes to my dish and that was tasty)
salt-pepper
slivers of green onion for garnish.
1. Peel the shrimp, de-vein if desired (eh) wash under cold water and pat dry. Set aside.
2. Heat water in large pot until boiling, add the rind/leaves/grass, whichever you're using, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the nam pla and cook another 5 minutes. (Mmm, the gym socks smell. *G* Tastes so good, though)
3. Add the shrimp and lime juice to pan and cook gently over low heat until shrimp firm up and turn pinkish. Take off heat.
4. Add chopped cilantro leaves, green onions, and red chili strips. Check the seasoning adding S&P if needed (a pinch of each at my end) and serve immediately. Garnish with onions, if wanted.
Serves 6. So. Freaking. Yummy. I do think it would be even better with the chili strips. But my kids are all "My mouth is burning!" and "It hurts, mommy!" and "I can't see, I can't see!" and "call 911." Whatever. They're so soft and weak. (Hahaha.)
Oh my gosh, my cookbook has a recipe for MONKEY. We're not trying that. :( Poor little :(|) It's Chiang Mai Jungle Curry, ftr.
SPICY SHRIMP CURRY contains no monkey.
3 1/4 C coconut milk (they have a recipe for making it on your own. Pfft. Note: get the FATTY kind, not the light kind. I know.)
2 TBSP green curry (ditto. Again I say: pfft. My store has it, and it's good. Note: this amount is HOT. If you don't like it that hot, make it tsps, not TBSP.)
2 tsp ground galangal (or ginger, fresh)
1 1/2 lb raw shrimp, shelled, de-veined if necessary. (Suck it up! Be a man and rub some dirt on it.)
2 TBSP nam pla (fish sauce)
rice to serve
Garnish: 1 TBSP green chili, cut into 1 inch strips, 4 basil leaves, shredded. (mmmmm)
1. Put the coconut milk in the fridge and chill for 1 hour, or until the milk fats rise to the top. Scoop about a third of the milk off the top and put it in a wok. Save the rest for later.
2. Bring the milk to a boil, then simmer, uncovered, stirring occasionally (no ass in that - got it in one \o/) until the coconut oil begins to bubble at the surface and the liquid reduces to a quarter of its original volume. Add the curry paste and galangal (ginger) and bring to a boil. Cook over medium to high heat until most of the liquid evaporates.
3. Pat the shrimp dry (so it doesn't pop/crackle and burn you) and add to wok, stir frying vigorously for 3-4 minutes until firm and pink.
4. Stir in the remaining milk and the nam pla and simmer for 6-8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Serve garnished with the chile strips and basil leaves accompanied or over rice.
Serves 4-6. Fan. Freaking. Tastic. You could shortcut with the coconut milk and use the lighter stuff, but you'll get a runny curry, and the flavor won't be as intense. On this dish, it really made a difference.
RICE VERMICELLI IN COCNUT MILK (sensing a theme? The kids love the coconut, what can I say. So does their mom.)
8 oz. rice vermicelli
2 tsp oil
2 eggs, beaten
2 C coconut milk (again, they want me to make this from scratch. Hahaha. No.)
1/2 C roughly chopped onions
8 oz. raw shrimp, peeled you know the drill
4 TBSP soy sauce
2 TBSP sugar
1 TBSP lemon juice
4-5 C bean sprouts (mmmm, crunchy)
3/4 C chopped green onions
Garnish: 3 TBSP chopped cilantro leaves, 2 red chilies, seeded and sliced
1. Soak the vermicelli in a bowl of warm water for 15- 20 minutes (um, I thought this was too long. I soaked mine for 8 minutes the first time, and it was fine. I also used boiling water from a tea-kettle, like the package said to do. *shrugs*) Bring a large saucepan to boil and the soaked vermicelli and cool, stirring occasionally, for 15 minutes. Drain the vermicelli WELL and set aside. (I have a large wok, so I used that, to keep from dirtying up another pan.)
2. Heat the oil in an omlet pan or small frying pan and add the eggs. Tilt the pan to form an omelet, lifting the side of the omelet to allow any uncooked egg mixture to flow underneath. Remove the cooked, set omelet from the pan and slice into thin shreds. Keep warm.
3. In a large wok or sauce pan, bring the coconut milk to a boil. Cook over high heat for 10 minutes, until a film of oil forms on the top. (I used the thinner milk for this, and it tasted just fine.) Stir in the onions, shrimp, soy sauce, sugar, and lemon juice. Cook for 5 minutes, then transfer half of the mixture to a bowl and keep warm.
4. Add the vermicelli to the remaining mixture inthe wok, mix well, and cook for 5 minutes. Stir in half the bean sprouts and green onion. Pile the vermicelli mix onto a serving dish and top with the reserved shrimp mixture and shredded omelet. Garnish with cilantro and chilies, serve with the remaining sprouts and green onions.
Serves 4.
I'm going to make this tonight, and this time add a few squirts of chile sauce (yuuuuuum) to the omelet for some heat without the chiles at the end, because again, the kids are pussies. :D Tomorrow we're making crispy noodles with more vermicelli. Emily (my 6 year old) is very excited to watch it blow up in the pan. \o/
A massive storm with hail and potential tornadoes is getting ready to roll through. How happy am I that I have a new roof now? Pretty happy. Also, Imma go batten down my hatches. Have a GOOD and HAPPY day today. *smooches*
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:22 pm (UTC)I think you should try the recipe for monkey. I mean, monkey can't be all that far removed from blog-commenty people what tell you how "a real lady" behaves.
OMG I can totally see those little southern ladies with their eyebrows straining towards heaven, eyes tightly shut, in the universal sur-Mason-Dixon line gesture of dissapointed disdainful disapproval. (That's what Tri-Delt REALLY means.)
Screw them.
Some people aren't happy unless they're unhappy; some people aren't happy unless you're unhappy. Proven wrong. About everything. The way you live, the way you think. Your place in the world. The particular set of molecules you just happened to inhale this morning upon waking.
Screw them.
...Oooh, hey, sorry about that, I seem to be set to RANT this morning.
HOORAY for coconut milk! I lurve the stuff. If you boil chicken in it, with a little bit of salt and lime and lemongrass (and chili of your choice, yeah!), the Greek gods descend from Mt. Olympus and duly declare that ambrosia is crap.
And the chicken gets so moist that it's almost like a confection....
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:51 pm (UTC)Um, you wrote up a recipe for HAPPINESS there, you did. (I like to make a coconut-curry-chicken soup that's a little bit like that, but yours with the lemongrass and chile and lime? MMMMMM.)
Have a GREAT BIRTHDAY today!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:25 pm (UTC)All those recipes sound fantastic, and I have everything on hand except the limes and bean sprouts! Oh, and no monkey. The Oriental market was out. "Maybe next week," the monkey monger assured with a shrug.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:53 pm (UTC)And make sure they don't undercut you at the Asian market by pushing Baboon on you. It's just not the same.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:27 pm (UTC)Also I've found a really nice little Malaysian place in town. You would like. It is tiny and v reasonably-priced and does many things with shrimp.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 02:56 pm (UTC)Oooh, excellent point about speaking up online. I didn't think of it that way, and that makes sense.
Mmmm, Malaysian! Oh, so yummy. I'm a big fan of all the cuisine in that region. So fresh and delicious and flavorful. *mails myself to your place in time for dinner*
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 03:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 03:38 pm (UTC)o_0 STFU, you know?
(no subject)
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Date: 2008-05-07 03:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 03:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 03:51 pm (UTC)Your description of the Perfect Mormon Wife is so much different than Miss Perfect's BYU Drama MFA teacher- who is loud, rude, built like a tank, and has worked all her adult life, even with six kids. It's people like here that give me hope that LDS can normalize, but then, what? Wikk it be more like a protestant version of Rome, or Southern Baptists with a Temple, and which would be worse? Discuss?
Julia, 1/8 slice of toast and three pills from turning off the computer and starting launch sequence
eta, must remember to show Miss Perfect the recipes, as she starts cooking Sunday
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 03:53 pm (UTC)The BYU drama teacher is a rarity. Thank god she exists!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 04:53 pm (UTC)BUT.
If you push me and you cross a certain line with me, i will *fuck you up*, and it may even get physical. And i can curse like the daughter of a sailor, ah ha, so yeah, i'll go there if.
'Keep Sweet' makes me gag simply reading about it. Dear fucking *gods*, why do men hate women so?
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 05:37 pm (UTC)But yeah, the idea that at NO POINT in the argument, it's distasteful for me to get angry and cuss? No. And I'm like you: I can cuss. :D
Keep Sweet. What's sick, as
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 04:58 pm (UTC)Wanted to add...i *do* tell Monstrous to 'act like a lady' sometimes. And by that i mean - "Don't turn cartwheels in your skirt, please, in the front yard, dear gods." And also "Please sit up at the table and *close your mouth*, i have no interest in seeing how well-chewed your food is, plus, please, the chomping/slurping noises are putting me off my feed."
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 05:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 05:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 05:39 pm (UTC)It's just so opposite of the idea of what we're all doing here: finding our voice. Sometimes they don't come in pleasant, dulcet tones.
Just thought
Date: 2008-05-07 05:59 pm (UTC)Mae
<3
Date: 2008-05-07 06:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 06:04 pm (UTC)Ohhh, these recipes sounds yummy! This part of the last recipe is confusing me a bit, though: Bring a large saucepan to boil and the soaked vermicelli and cool, stirring occasionally, for 15 minutes. Do they mean to soak the vermicelli for x-amount of time, THEN boil it?
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 06:15 pm (UTC)Yeah, that's not happening at this end.
And yes - you soak the vermicelli, THEN boil it for this recipe. I've often used that noodle by only soaking it in the boiling water, like I mentioned in the side note. It does make them very very soft, which is the idea for that dish. (Yum Woonsen - I think I'm spelling that right - has the noodles with a bit more bite, so they just soak for a bit in hot water, not an additional boil)
(no subject)
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Date: 2008-05-07 06:21 pm (UTC)storms. bah. Ok, I lurves me the storms, usually. But not when they rip down parts of my trees. The same ones that the darn ice storms tore to shreds. I hate topping trees, but now my blasted Elm is SOOooooooo funky looking, I think topping may be the only way to salvage it. :pouts:
Seriously, between the ice storms and the thunderstorms, it looks like something a 2 year old designed with a bunch of tinker toys. Or maybe one of those squeezy stress toys like in the Mac commercials.
And a topped elm just looks funny anyway. There is just something inherently wrong with a 50 year old elm tree that's only 20 feet tall!
Ah, gotta love Texas weather!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 06:37 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 07:38 pm (UTC)ZOMG I want the soup and the curry and the vermicelli! I want it all! *holds breath, turns blue*
May those storms blow right on by you. And me. Knock wood.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 08:44 pm (UTC)I had the leftover soup for lunch and added a generous squeeze of chili sauce and THAT WAS WHAT IT NEEDED. To be utterly delicious, that is. (Instead of just delicious.)
Well, the wind is picking back up but there's sunshine, so WHO KNOWS. I hope you are safe! *battens your hatches, too*
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 08:38 pm (UTC)Thank you for the kind wishes ::hugs::
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 08:42 pm (UTC)I hope it's been lovely so far! *squish*
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 09:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 11:41 pm (UTC)I bet fried tofu would hold up for most of these, or just good old firm tofu. TOFU = PARTY IN MY MOUTH.
<3 <3 <3
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 10:56 pm (UTC)Nope. I think it's probably the proud female in you. One who has a head on her shoulders and knows how to use it. I'm from MA and I speak my mind also. It comes from being confident in who you are and not needing to hide behind the facade of politeness.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 11:42 pm (UTC)And let's hear it for us women that figured out how we can be women, be heard, and be AWESOME. *high fives you*
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 11:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 12:25 am (UTC)Your icon is fantastic, btw.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 12:06 am (UTC)Speaking as someone who tries to at least start polite*, and doesn't like confrontation...
FUCK that shit! All that translates as is "Don't argue with me, because you're female."
*Outside of my journals and one or two comms where I respond to posts regularly
no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 12:23 am (UTC)And lady, I like the cut of your jib. You were so patiently trying to be reasonable and helpful. *admires*
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 01:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 01:32 am (UTC)And oh my god, yes to your example. BAAAAAAH.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 04:05 am (UTC)HURRAH!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 12:29 pm (UTC)Now, if only there was a handbook or list of rules that reminded me of my duties and responsibilities as a woman...
And ha ha ha! I just... walked into a door, I'm so clumsy! *adjusts shades*
no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 07:31 pm (UTC)