Algerian Woman Links Tattoo Tradition and Song



Middle Eastern Tattoos: Then and Now 

Traditional Middle Eastern tattoos were done via a rudimentary method of pricking the skin and then rubbing in a mixture of smoke black or indigo. Mother's milk was used in the mixture, oftentimes, to give an esoteric benefit.

Designs were a combination of tribal identification and amulets to ward off evil or incur blessings. Similar motifs may be found in carpet designs. A vertical line marked along the chin signifies an engagement. When there was a mark on the tip of the nose, it may have signified either marriage or that a child had died and this was their way of protecting the spirit of that child.

Facial tattooing, especially, has gone out of favor in modern times. Usually only older women are seen with tattoos on their chin and forehead.

The reason? One source says, "body art markings, called lousham in Arabic or ahetjam in Tamazight, are no longer considered to be a pious Muslim practice and as a result very few younger women will carry these tattoos.

At one point, these tattoos were tribal markings of status and beauty, symbols that were borrowed from the complicated designs in the rugs; now most Amazigh women consider their tattoos to be a shameful reminder of a pagan practice." In past times in Iran, the upper class women would be tattooed with a beard-like pattern. This practice has passed away as well, but it is reported that "the demand for tattoos among Iranian and other middle eastern women has exploded.

Iranians who are tattooed, however, must keep them under wraps due to the authorities.

Despite the traditions of tattoos for certain tribal groups of Middle Eastern women, their religion, Islam, forbids tattooing. Non-permanent skin decoration in the Arab world in the form of henna decorations is very popular. Not all stories of the tattooed women are benign.

The sad history of the decimation and captivity of Armenians under their Muslim captors holds the story of stolen Armenian girls tattooed by their captors a story told in history and photos in the Genocide Museum.via

99% Invisible | Gimlet | jessica hopper#podcasts

What I Listened To

I’ve been playing catch-up with one of my favorite podcasts, 99% Invisible. A recent episode was about the effects of Operation National Sword, China’s initiative to essentially stop being the world’s trash dump, which has left nations scratching their heads while clutching their single-use plastic water bottles. What I loved most was listening to a replay of an older episode in the second half that touched on the strides of Taipei, Taiwan, which is literally cleaning up the city with musical refuse and recycling/compost trucks, binless systems, and the ownership citizens feel over their trash—almost no public garbage cans, people! They pocket that candy wrapper and take it home with them! The episode presents some great lessons we Americans can learn about our own attitude toward consumption.
via

Sandra

A world where artificial intelligence isn’t so artificial.

Helen thought her new job would help her forget her dreary hometown, but working behind the curtain on everyone’s favorite A.I. isn’t quite the escape she expected. via


jessica hopper 
Jessica Hopper is editor-in-chief of the Pitchfork Review and the author of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic.
“I have an agenda. You can’t read my writing and not know that I have a staunch fucking agenda at all times.”




Interview (Longform Podcast, 2015)
link

#WriteWhatScaresYou (swear word warning)

OK, this is my cue to let you know I need JUNE off. That means no posts... SORRY! 
WHY?
Here is why:




There will be cursing today. Run away if that bothers you. I don’t mind.

Do you worry what others think about you? Do you sit at your computer screen, paralyzed to type what you really want to say for fear of what your mom, husband, brother, friend, or best friend from second grade might say? Maybe you have shared your writing and been burned, relationships severed, friendships or family relationships strained or even ended.

Or maybe those around you are so threatened by the possibility that you will share your story that they actually threaten you.

Others people’s problems are other people’s problems.
Don’t take that shit personally. #WriteWhatScaresYou

Fuck that shit. As Cheryl Strayed says, you need to write like a motherfucker. What does she mean by that? Does she mean write with papers everywhere, cartoon balls of trash flying across the room, keys tapping to the beat of Copacabana? (Let’s hope not. We’ll never get that song out of our heads.)

No. She means that you need to own it. Own your shit. Write your shit.
Ignore the voices or others, get in your head, your heart, grab your soul and write the shit out of that shit.

[This resonates with me because that’s how I wrote Broken Places (my latest release) and Broken Pieces. Let’s deconstruct. KEEP READING THIS]



(Who loves you?) (I do!) (see you later alligator)

The surprisingly charming science of your gut | Giulia Enders

EXPOSED - USDA's Secret War on Wildlife



"EXPOSED"
Receiving Critical Acclaim from Prominent Individuals, Including Jane Goodall

 "I have just watched EXPOSED, and two emotions vie with each other: First, horror that cruelty of this magnitude and scale has been perpetrated, for so long, in the name of the American government. And second, great admiration for the brave men who, jeopardizing personal safety and future employment, spoke out against the atrocities that they saw perpetrated, and admitted having perpetrated themselves. This is the 21st Century. There is indisputable evidence that we are not the only beings on planet earth to know mental and physical suffering. For years I have heard stories of this kind of barbaric behavior – and now Americans will learn, through watching "EXPOSED," of the unforgivable actions of those who have exercised their power to cause untold agony to thousands of innocent fellow creatures on our planet. Congratulations to all involved in making this documentary. I hope it will be watched by millions." 
JANE GOODALL, Ph.D., DBE Founder, the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace

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WILD ROSE | OFFICIAL MAIN TRAILER

not so smart? #SurveillanceInvasion

Quote:

What we're dealing with (every. single. holiday.) is corporate manipulation through the internet that is throwing a bunch of symbolism around to generate the idea of religious rebellion (and consumer frenzy) (buy buy buy more more more)
Everyone knows smartphones spy on & record your entire life yet that doesn't appear to deter anyone from getting all stiff & erect when they unleash a new surveillance device on the buying public.

#NotOneDime 
#SurveillanceInvasion 

READ UP



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