In the 2003 film, as Peter Pan and Wendy Darling part, he to Neverland and she back home, Peter says: "To live would be an awfully big adventure."
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Day-Maker #80
After a brief hiatus, I return to share this day-maker, which brightened my morning Facebook stalking. Which Supreme Court justice are you? I'm Kagan!
Monday, May 6, 2013
Before My Final Final
According to this Lifehacker article, rereading, highlighting, and summarizing note are poor methods of studying. Instead, you should use good methods: taking breaks and spreading out studying. Please tell me I don't have to explain the entertainment value of these statements. Maybe today should be a day of one, long, effective study break...
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Addendum I: Vocabulary for Frank
Frank asked me what the phrase “gift of self” might mean,
with the disclaimer that as my “token non-christian reader” he didn’t
know. First of all, I want to give a
shout-out to the other non-Christians who read this blog – I know that at least
one other of my loyal 3.5 readers shies away from any religious
persuasion. Secondly, I want to give a
shout-out to those Christians/Catholics who might read this and think, “Well, I
don’t exactly know what ‘gift of self’ means either.”
It’s a hallmark John Paul II phrase, lifted especially from
his Theology of the Body, so there is no way I will do justice to it in one
post. If you really want to understand
the phrase, read Man and Woman He Created Them, JPII’s audiences on the
theology of the body compiled into one book.
And read it with a competent moral theologian by your side. (Ooh-ooh-pick-me-pick-me! I’m looking for a job!) I’ll do my best, however.
Gift of self, or self-gift, describes how persons relate to
each other. It means giving of oneself
in a full and free manner, an openness towards the other that says, “I am
yours,” and does not hold back. It is a
self-offering that is love. For JPII,
the preeminent example is the Trinity: the Father pours Himself out to the Son,
the Son reciprocates this love to the Father, and the love bursts forth to be
the Spirit.
For my non-Christian readers, or the Christians who haven’t
pondered the Trinity in this manner, the primary earthly example is marital
love. Husband and wife give themselves
to the other in a love that encompasses all aspects of their being. In the words of Scott Hahn, “this love is so
tangible that nine months later you have to give it a name.” It is total (hence, no divorce) and
life-giving (hence, babies) and consists of an orientation of oneself to the
other and a strong will for the good of the other.
I feel like I’ve been talking around it for long enough now
that hopefully this sheds some life on self-gift. If not, question away, and I will revisit the
topic – possibly while studying for my Theology of the Body exam!
Friday, May 3, 2013
Thoughts after Comps Season
Normally, I let exam grades fade into the past without comment, and the good disappear with the bad. Since I made comps such a big deal on here, however, I figure I should mention: scores came out! Everyone passed! Even this girl right here, who managed to impress her professors some. Thanks for the prayers and encouragement, loyal readers!
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
What I Have Taught My Feminism, Part III
(Go do your catch-up reading if you've missed Part II!)
The discomfort of my feminism as I write that who I am as a woman makes no sense except in relation to man (and again as
I type it, and again as I post it) is palpable.
I have, for years, been on a quest to find the true meaning of femininity. As a good feminist, I set out to find the
definition of woman without reference
to man. I found two extremes: defining woman by a
certain cultural/historical set of behaviors and values or collapsing gender
differences to create a false equivalency. I was unsatisfied wherever I turned. If we can define man without reference to
woman, shouldn’t we be able to do the opposite?
When I read the beginning of JPII’s Theology of the Body, it
hit me. I’d been getting it backwards.
Man was defined in isolation, woman with reference to man. I knew woman was misdefined, so surely the
approach to defining her was wrong; I needed to imitate the definition of man.
But what if the definition of man was wrong too? What if man
only makes sense in reference to woman? This is the claim I make: masculinity and
femininity are mutually referential
and only make sense in relationship with
each other. Bodily, this makes
sense. Our physical bodies anticipate
the opposite as complement. I propose,
once more following JPII, that our physical bodies give exterior shape to our
interior selves.
In this case, it does woman no wrong to explain who she is
with reference to (and in contrast to) man; it does man no wrong to explain who
he is with reference to (and in contrast to) woman. Indeed, any attempt at an isolated definition
will do an injustice to femininity or masculinity, It cannot but be a reductive view.
Does this mean that I have reached a perfect understanding
of femininity, which I can now fully explicate for you? Alas, no.
That is still a work in progress (though I hope to continue talking
around the question here for a while yet).
A lot more work and research are necessary before I get there. I am, however, making progress in developing
the proper framework for asking the question, which is necessary for finding
the answer.
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