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"make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler." -Einstein

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opposites to succession(?)


I'm going to attempt the life experiment of... doing the exact opposite of what I would normally do. I don't mean a strawberry margarita instead of a coconut. Or Sarah Palin over a rock in a box.

I mean real life choices.

This should go great.

I will take a coconut margarita though.
Read More 2 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

Readers with disorders

Ok -- I just want to dedicate one small post to reclaim my blog's prohibitions in blogworld. I've had this blog for about two months now. Since I am an adoptee, when I signed up, adoption-related issues are what I sought to write about at least some of the time and will continue to.

I will never moderate comments (unless I attract a real wayward fruit from the crazy train) because this is the internet, it's not supposed to be moderated and I'm not afraid of someone else with an opinion. After all, there are plenty of self-righteous crazies who have discovered the perks of blogging while buying children in bulk from third world countries at the same time.

But I just want to clarify because I've been getting some very annoying and not-very-original posts and personal emails from biased readers regarding my, so far, very brief posts about my views of my life as an adoptee and the whole business in general. These posts/emails are coming from people whom are not adopted themselves, but have adopted brothers, sisters, cousins, ex-girlfriends, dogs and neighbors.

I'm all for debate, in fact, I go looking for argumentative debate, it's a personal hobby of mine. But I prefer to argue with people who can form, you know, an actual thought in their head; a thought that's based on fact, research and maybe even personal experience if we're lucky.

So just a heads up to pro-adoption readers -- please, do continue to read my blog, I'd be very happy to hear your opinions and exactly how you formed those opinions... but if you base my life on what you know of your own adopted child's or your friend's aunt's daughter's adopted child, I'll have to kindly rip you a new one.
Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Nikki edit post

That one guy from the Bronx

I will always be in love with Al Pacino.

Growing up as the only adopted member of a predominantly Irish family, my unquestionable Italian-American heritage was more than obvious; my dad used to tell me my face resembled a young, female Al Pacino. Most girls would find this insulting, but I loved it. I'm weird like that.



Read More 11 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

A Christian nation? No... you made it that way.

While the President is addressing the economy and employment growth today, the religious zealot voters conservative voters are having child's play regarding President Obama's "cancellation" of the National Day of Prayer ceremony. Of course, as always, they are lost in that confusing corn maze of big words and punctuation.

Not that it should matter at all, but, his administration did not cancel the actual National Day of Prayer, or the freaking pancake breakfast that accompanies it (which takes place at the beginning of the year); he cancelled the ceremony.

The ceremony did not become "tradition" until a certain other cowboy was in Office... Ronald Reagan. It is a ceremony that usually includes a "pastor" or "reverend" (hence the evangelical/baptist crowd it targets) and the President would speak in a fashion resembling a State of the Union address. President Obama did attend the 'prayer breakfast' at the beginning of the year.

But his choice of attending the breakfast and even leading the room in prayer afterward, or personally contributing to the very Christian-oriented ceremony commemorating the Virginia miners last month, is just not pleasing to the neo-cons... They may say "it's not enough", but it will never be enough for them. This particular breed of voters will continue to fight this administration even after it is finished. Many of them would sacrifice their first-born to bring the Founding Fathers back from their graves. But I don't think they'd be pleased with the rulings of them.

Conservatives, to quote Bill Maher, seem to place the Founding Fathers on the same level as Jesus' apostles, think of them all as the Rat Pack. But again, the intellectual capacity of these people becomes obvious when their painted picture of the Founding Fathers does not match up with... the actual ideals of the Founding Fathers.

Everyone Those who read know the timeless quotes made by the F.F. dudes. Benjamin Franklin said, "A lighthouse is more useful than a church"; Thomas Jefferson said, "Christianity is the most perverted system that ever shown on man", James Madison wrote, "The fruits of Christianity are pride, indolence, ignorance and arrogance in the clergy".

The Founding Fathers were free masons (oh, and slave owners as well). The scary part is, if you confronted many conservatives with these facts, the crazy half would say Obama made these quotes appear, and the other crazy half would weave some type of dead end explanation into their hypothesis.

The whole conservative cultural war in this country is being passed off as a political war. It's not a political war; if it were politically-based it would require thought and rationalism, their war is based on prejudice, status-quo and their own interpretations of a 2,000+ year-old text. This is why religious leaders become politicians. Conservatives have no solid ground. Solid ground implies hard facts, and knowledge of those facts, their form of argumentation is constant falling, grabbing branches that aren't even there.

You can laugh at the antics or shrug it off, but what makes it real and not-so-funny is how much influence it has on our nation. Politics apply to everyone.
Read More 0 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

PostSecret... I love

I find the confession below hilarious. PostSecret (<-- click and indulge); it's one of the best things since the invention of zippers or sliced bread. The entire project paints the perfect picture of what human nature really is, without all those bullshit "customs" and "manners"; and keeps it short and sweet...



Read More 0 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

feliz cinco de mayo

Today, two words. Lime. Margaritas. That is all.


Read More 2 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

We're in charge, not them

Two stories have been, no exaggeration, devastating, in the past two weeks. And that is the oil spill in the Gulf Coast, an accident that was initially thought to be fixable but is now been declared a state of emergency by the administration; there is currently no official plan to stop the mess that continues to roll in with the waves. The spill itself is the size of Delaware. It's a tragedy for our wildlife, and seafood businesses throughout the entire South.

You can visit the CNN Impact page to learn how you can help with the recovery in your state.

The other story... the Arizona immigration law. No matter your political stance, it is truly one of those laws that is so blatant and obvious in a racist agenda, it makes you question how much progress we've really made. This law could deport natural-born citizens whom are the children of illegal immigrants. Most of these children go to school in the US and have never even been to their parent's country of origin.

Really, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer needs to be slapped in the face with a large, wet fish.

Please help break SB 1070. Change.org is and can be influential. Take one minute to vote and send an automated letter to your local state representatives. And if you're an Arizona resident, you can really do something about it, hit the streets to protest! Wish I could.
Read More 0 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

love that morning vibe




Read More 3 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

The Catholic Vote, for your consideration...



The above is an example why religion has no place in government.
The pro-life Catholic organization Catholic Vote continues to pump out seemingly homemade, sappy videos dedicated to a pro-life agenda to advertise their "Imagine the Potential" campaign. Some of these ads last year made it to national television. I tried to go to their site today but apparently, their website is "closed on Sundays" (I'm not kidding.)

Concerning this video, on a less important note and being an adopted person myself -- even as a kid I had memorized which celebrities and notable people were "adopted like me" (Nelson Mandela for example); but a lot of the artists, singers, actors and politicians shown in this campaign were not really adopted but raised by step parents or grandparents (Jack Nicholson, John Lennon). Of course they pulled a fast one by taking these world-changing-not-really-adopted-people for the wow factor.

That being said, their intention was obviously meant to sway the plans of the pregnant, high school mom-to-be from going to that abortion clinic downtown, because maybe her child can be adopted and grow up and free a nation.

Now, not to sound morbid or like a complete downer, but if we're going broadcast such propaganda, one must advertise the other side as well, because if the "positive" side is going to be given such value than the negative must also receive the same type of attention; we do the same with every other form of discussion or choice so why shouldn't it apply here?

A negative side of adoption, for example, is the very public fact that so many notable serial killers were adopted that it's become a psychological topic of discussion among psychology and crime enthusiasts (just Google "adopted serial killers", though you won't have to finish typing it as it is a popular topic of search on Google.)

Some will understand my sentiments but I'm full aware others would view the above facts as a contempt of the magical world of adoption as we know it. But this is what's wrong with society's view of adoption. It is viewed as a strictly glorious thing to happen. A woman in a crowded room says "we adopted a baby boy!" and the room will fill with gasps and smiles.

But the fact is that adoptees, especially as children, experienced a traumatic experience; they were abandoned, left, given up by their own mothers. This is not something to rejoice. It's something that can and should be helped, but it shouldn't ever be ignored, or even worse, celebrated... And that's just what this advertisement does, it not only celebrates it, but it condones it -- all for the sake of political favor.
Read More 15 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post

my new baby boy

I got a new puppy two weeks ago. Some man was giving him away on the street (people, don't do that). He's half pomeranian half yorkshire terrier. I call him Okie, which comes from "Okla" the Choctaw word for "red". He's mine only, my other two dogs belong to me and my parents. I consider him my first son.


Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Nikki edit post

rain, flood, gloom, youtube

Lazy, rainy Saturdays are great for productive, indoor activities. Like so:






Read More 0 comments | Posted by Nikki edit post
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a cup of ambiguity

  • nikki
      22, female, student, and one of the 2% of adopted people in the US.
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        • opposites to succession(?)
        • Readers with disorders
        • That one guy from the Bronx
        • A Christian nation? No... you made it that way.
        • PostSecret... I love
        • feliz cinco de mayo
        • We're in charge, not them
        • love that morning vibe
        • The Catholic Vote, for your consideration...
        • my new baby boy
        • rain, flood, gloom, youtube
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