lady_sarai (
lady_sarai) wrote2008-08-09 09:09 pm
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Entry tags:
Interest Meme!
Snagged from
ilyena_sylph:
Comment and I will pick seven of your interests for you to elaborate on!
Fishing industry: This--might require some explanation. ;) I have lived in southern Maine my whole life, never more than half an hour away from the ocean. My grandparents lived in Portland, which is still a large fishing community--the "working waterfront" is part of the tourist appeal. (It's also the largest city in the state.) You can't go far here without seeing places to buy fish or lobster (especially in the summer), and a lot of homes have buoys or lobster traps just--in the yard. Casco Bay has lots of islands, where a lot of lobstermen have lived for generations. (It is becoming more and more difficult to be a fisherman or lobsterman in Maine, and to live on an island or the coast while doing those jobs is even harder; a lot of those properties are owned by out-of-staters who come up for the summer and leave. ::sigh:: ) Anywho. The ocean and lighthouses and the waterfront have always been places I love; I feel better--calmer, more centered--when I can see and hear the ocean.
On top of all that, my Norwegian grandfather (mom's dad) served in the British Royal Navy during WWII before finding a job as a ship's engineer after the war. He wound up moving to Maine with his family when my mother was 8. He continued working on the waterfront and eventually became the Norwegian Consul for the state; he used to do a lot of work on Scandinavian ships coming in, especially as a translator and legal adviser. Very often, he would get paid or thanked for these things in... fish. Shrimp. Lobster. He used to put lobster at the foot of the stairs and let them crawl around and call my mom and aunt to come down the stairs, just to be funny. He had a lot of friends and contacts at the fish markets and wharfs--I remember going with him to get fish or shrimp at the docks when I was little. We didn't buy fish in fish markets or the grocery store until I was a teenager and he couldn't go get it for us anymore.
Before him, my great-grandfather (my grandmother's father--mom's mom's dad! Heh) was a whaling captain. A pretty successful one, too, I guess--there is a replica of his ship in the whaling museum in my grandmother's hometown (we went to visit Norway last summer and got to see it). And one of his much older brothers (he was one of 18!) was the first human to set foot on Antarctica.
I think I'm predisposed to love all things marine. ;) Some of my favorite things are lighthouses, fishing boats, lobster traps and buoys. My family and cultural histories just never gave me a chance. It's not really surprising that one of my favorite television shows is Deadliest Catch, or that my friends have LONG teased me that my Dream Man is a lobsterman. ;) My mother has a Thing for cowboys--I have a Thing for fishing. (Commercially, though. Recreational fishing does less than NOTHING for me. Go figure!)
Founders: By Founders, I mean the Founders of Hogwarts, in the Harry Potter books. I'll talk about HP in a minute, but my interest in fandom shifted between books 6 and 7; I think most everything about the trio and their generation--and MWPP's--had been said, as far as what I wanted to read/say. Or--I wanted to know how things ended, but I didn't want things Jossed, so I resisted writing future fic. So I started focusing on the Founders--especially after HBP, there was (and IS!) so much we don't know about them. The idea that they were all friends and had a horrific falling out... I am still intrigued. I have a bunch of unfinished Founderfic on my harddrive, including a whole epic spanning decades about Helga Hufflepuff. (Are we surprised that the Hufflepuff was obsessed about Helga? ;) Heh.) My favorite obscure and impossible pairing remains Helga/Salazar. I think it was doomed and tragic, but I love it. They're not as opposite as they seem.
I even cast them--see?

I call them my OTP of Doom.
Harry Potter: Oh, HP. I really do love those books--even the last, and the epilogue. I started reading them when I was 14 (I think--maybe closer to 15) and they were such a huge part of my high school and college years. It was my main fandom for so long, and I did love it. I went to four midnight release parties for the books, and for three of the movies. (Now, when I say it was my fandom, I mean I lurked. ;) I read a TON and wrote some--one my favorite fics remains one I wrote about the Fat Friar and Ernie MacMillan after Cedric's death. But I didn't really *interact* with the fandom--it grew around me and became frightening. But I was reading fic back before GoF was published. Oh, back when FF.Net was not The Pit.) I still read
minisinoo and
xenokattz HP fic, but for the most part, I've moved on.
Hector: Gah, Hector! That pic may say it all. ;) Honestly, though--Eric Bana played him in Troy and he was easily my favorite. I know the movie is horrible if you try to take it seriously from a historical or literary standpoint, but the eye candy is so nice. ;) This take on Hector hits so many of my buttons--a family man, protective brother, wants to live up to the expectations everyone has of him, wants to make his father proud, honorable, intelligent... And it's Eric Bana. I love him. He's my favorite part of the movie.
Pictures: I *adore* pictures and photography. Gah. I take far too many pictures when I get my hands on a camera, and I love it. I justify taking so many by the philosophy that it takes ten bad pictures to take one excellent picture. ;) I'm especially fond of candids and interesting compositions. One thing I really regret is never being able to take a photography course in HS or college--maybe someday I'll take one, anyway.
Raoul: From The Phantom of the Opera. I first discovered Phantom--and musicals--when I was 11. There was never a question of which leading man I liked better; the Phantom was a creepy, murderous stalker. ;) (And my favorite love song for ages was "All I Ask of You." When the movie came out--which I love--the sheer number and insanity of the mass of Erik/Christine shippers scared me. Yes, Gerard Butler is pretty and Michael Crawford's voice is that of an angel, but Erik the Phantom is a creepy, murdering, obsessive stalker. He scares me--like he's supposed to. (Probably doesn't help that I've read the novel.) Anyway, I like Raoul. ;) Particularly his movie incarnation.
UMF: Ah, UMF! The University of Maine at Farmington, where I graduated with my BS in Elementary Education in 2006. I loved it there. Although--our mascot? Was the Beaver. (Whatever joke you are thinking, I have heard it. ;) Particularly as women outnumbered men 3 to 1--half the school's population majored in Education.) It's in Farmington, Maine (duh) which is about two hours north-west of where I live. It's up by the mountains; I actually did my student teaching in the shadow of Sugarloaf, which is the biggest ski resort in the state. :) I'm a bit irked that I wasn't better prepared for how hard finding a teaching job would be--the school really made it seem like it would be a lot easier--but I have fond memories of my time there.
Also--the Olympics are here! YAY!!! I *adore* the Olympics and all things about them. They give me warm fuzzies and happy feelings.
Tonight, there is men's swimming and men's gymnastics.
Let's just say that I have most definitely found my Happy Place.
Yum.
ETA: DUDE JUST SAW A COMMERCIAL FOR HEROES AND O_O!!!! THAT GIRL!! SHE'S A SPEEDSTER!!!!!!! ::makes Bart/Flash noise::
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Comment and I will pick seven of your interests for you to elaborate on!
Fishing industry: This--might require some explanation. ;) I have lived in southern Maine my whole life, never more than half an hour away from the ocean. My grandparents lived in Portland, which is still a large fishing community--the "working waterfront" is part of the tourist appeal. (It's also the largest city in the state.) You can't go far here without seeing places to buy fish or lobster (especially in the summer), and a lot of homes have buoys or lobster traps just--in the yard. Casco Bay has lots of islands, where a lot of lobstermen have lived for generations. (It is becoming more and more difficult to be a fisherman or lobsterman in Maine, and to live on an island or the coast while doing those jobs is even harder; a lot of those properties are owned by out-of-staters who come up for the summer and leave. ::sigh:: ) Anywho. The ocean and lighthouses and the waterfront have always been places I love; I feel better--calmer, more centered--when I can see and hear the ocean.
On top of all that, my Norwegian grandfather (mom's dad) served in the British Royal Navy during WWII before finding a job as a ship's engineer after the war. He wound up moving to Maine with his family when my mother was 8. He continued working on the waterfront and eventually became the Norwegian Consul for the state; he used to do a lot of work on Scandinavian ships coming in, especially as a translator and legal adviser. Very often, he would get paid or thanked for these things in... fish. Shrimp. Lobster. He used to put lobster at the foot of the stairs and let them crawl around and call my mom and aunt to come down the stairs, just to be funny. He had a lot of friends and contacts at the fish markets and wharfs--I remember going with him to get fish or shrimp at the docks when I was little. We didn't buy fish in fish markets or the grocery store until I was a teenager and he couldn't go get it for us anymore.
Before him, my great-grandfather (my grandmother's father--mom's mom's dad! Heh) was a whaling captain. A pretty successful one, too, I guess--there is a replica of his ship in the whaling museum in my grandmother's hometown (we went to visit Norway last summer and got to see it). And one of his much older brothers (he was one of 18!) was the first human to set foot on Antarctica.
I think I'm predisposed to love all things marine. ;) Some of my favorite things are lighthouses, fishing boats, lobster traps and buoys. My family and cultural histories just never gave me a chance. It's not really surprising that one of my favorite television shows is Deadliest Catch, or that my friends have LONG teased me that my Dream Man is a lobsterman. ;) My mother has a Thing for cowboys--I have a Thing for fishing. (Commercially, though. Recreational fishing does less than NOTHING for me. Go figure!)
Founders: By Founders, I mean the Founders of Hogwarts, in the Harry Potter books. I'll talk about HP in a minute, but my interest in fandom shifted between books 6 and 7; I think most everything about the trio and their generation--and MWPP's--had been said, as far as what I wanted to read/say. Or--I wanted to know how things ended, but I didn't want things Jossed, so I resisted writing future fic. So I started focusing on the Founders--especially after HBP, there was (and IS!) so much we don't know about them. The idea that they were all friends and had a horrific falling out... I am still intrigued. I have a bunch of unfinished Founderfic on my harddrive, including a whole epic spanning decades about Helga Hufflepuff. (Are we surprised that the Hufflepuff was obsessed about Helga? ;) Heh.) My favorite obscure and impossible pairing remains Helga/Salazar. I think it was doomed and tragic, but I love it. They're not as opposite as they seem.
I even cast them--see?
I call them my OTP of Doom.
Harry Potter: Oh, HP. I really do love those books--even the last, and the epilogue. I started reading them when I was 14 (I think--maybe closer to 15) and they were such a huge part of my high school and college years. It was my main fandom for so long, and I did love it. I went to four midnight release parties for the books, and for three of the movies. (Now, when I say it was my fandom, I mean I lurked. ;) I read a TON and wrote some--one my favorite fics remains one I wrote about the Fat Friar and Ernie MacMillan after Cedric's death. But I didn't really *interact* with the fandom--it grew around me and became frightening. But I was reading fic back before GoF was published. Oh, back when FF.Net was not The Pit.) I still read
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Hector: Gah, Hector! That pic may say it all. ;) Honestly, though--Eric Bana played him in Troy and he was easily my favorite. I know the movie is horrible if you try to take it seriously from a historical or literary standpoint, but the eye candy is so nice. ;) This take on Hector hits so many of my buttons--a family man, protective brother, wants to live up to the expectations everyone has of him, wants to make his father proud, honorable, intelligent... And it's Eric Bana. I love him. He's my favorite part of the movie.
Pictures: I *adore* pictures and photography. Gah. I take far too many pictures when I get my hands on a camera, and I love it. I justify taking so many by the philosophy that it takes ten bad pictures to take one excellent picture. ;) I'm especially fond of candids and interesting compositions. One thing I really regret is never being able to take a photography course in HS or college--maybe someday I'll take one, anyway.
Raoul: From The Phantom of the Opera. I first discovered Phantom--and musicals--when I was 11. There was never a question of which leading man I liked better; the Phantom was a creepy, murderous stalker. ;) (And my favorite love song for ages was "All I Ask of You." When the movie came out--which I love--the sheer number and insanity of the mass of Erik/Christine shippers scared me. Yes, Gerard Butler is pretty and Michael Crawford's voice is that of an angel, but Erik the Phantom is a creepy, murdering, obsessive stalker. He scares me--like he's supposed to. (Probably doesn't help that I've read the novel.) Anyway, I like Raoul. ;) Particularly his movie incarnation.
UMF: Ah, UMF! The University of Maine at Farmington, where I graduated with my BS in Elementary Education in 2006. I loved it there. Although--our mascot? Was the Beaver. (Whatever joke you are thinking, I have heard it. ;) Particularly as women outnumbered men 3 to 1--half the school's population majored in Education.) It's in Farmington, Maine (duh) which is about two hours north-west of where I live. It's up by the mountains; I actually did my student teaching in the shadow of Sugarloaf, which is the biggest ski resort in the state. :) I'm a bit irked that I wasn't better prepared for how hard finding a teaching job would be--the school really made it seem like it would be a lot easier--but I have fond memories of my time there.
Also--the Olympics are here! YAY!!! I *adore* the Olympics and all things about them. They give me warm fuzzies and happy feelings.
Tonight, there is men's swimming and men's gymnastics.
Let's just say that I have most definitely found my Happy Place.
Yum.
ETA: DUDE JUST SAW A COMMERCIAL FOR HEROES AND O_O!!!! THAT GIRL!! SHE'S A SPEEDSTER!!!!!!! ::makes Bart/Flash noise::
no subject
(You can do me, but I'll probably just post my answers here, rather than posting it in my journal. :) )
no subject
And okay! Here goes: aladdin, avoiding stalkers, castlevania, cryptozoology, kosher cooking, reality tv and zionism.
(Also--Amazing Race!! Possibly my favorite reality show ever. Besides Deadliest Catch, of course. ;) Hee.)
no subject
Avoiding Stalkers: This is one I did in solidarity with a friend of mine. She was having trouble with this creepy girl she used to be e-friends with constantly trying to contact her. Eventually, she started to contact the friends of my friend to try to harass them into passing on messages. That friend of mine left LJ a while back due to issues with the site, and there haven't been any troubles since.
Castlevania: Really, this one just shows that I haven't updated my interests in a looooooong time. XD It's a video game series that I love, but I've never really done much with it.
Cryptozoology: One of my hidden obsessions. I'm a big believer that there's undiscovered species out there. It just makes sense. Humanity hasn't covered every inch of this globe. I'm not a big fan of stories of UFOs or ghosts, but when it comes to "mystery animals" my mind goes absolutely mad!
Kosher Cooking: This is an interesting one. I'm a not-particularly-religious Jew. I don't keep Kosher usually, except for obeying certain things like the Yom Kippur fast or the ban on eating bread during passover. But I have a lot of religious relatives, and my allergies to dairy make kosher meat cooking (no dairy allowed!) very appealing. So I'm always on the lookout for new recipes and restaurants.
Reality TV: OMG. I'm the biggest reality TV nerd alive, I think. Only competitive ones, though. I don't like the "relationship" shows or any of the ones that are just episodic. But I love the epic competitive ones like Survivor, Amazing Race, Big Brother, Hell's Kitchen, American Idol, America's Got Talent, and my new obsessions, Wipeout and Greatest American Dog. I actually planned to apply for the second season of Treasure Hunters, which was like TAR with more puzzles and less stunts, but it never went ahead. :(
Zionism: 95% of my relatives live in Israel, so I'm definitely fascinated by and supportive of the country. I'm deeply conflicted over the whole situation there (and oh, God, could I go on a rant about the current prime minister), but overall the country is never far from my thoughts.
Now, to finally try to update my interests!
no subject
Eeep! I'm glad she's not having problems anymore, but it's too bad she had to leave LJ. :(
::laughs:: It sounded intriguing! What an awesome name!
Heee--I would agree with you; they're always discovering new things in rainforests, after all! (And hey, why *not*?)
It can't be easy to keep Kosher all the time, I imagine--and ack! Dairy allergies must *suck.* :-P
Yay, a fellow reality tv fan! I usually get teased. Not a fan of the relationship ones, either, or the really trashy ones. Wipeout is hysterical, I have to say. I used to watch Big Brother, but I haven't seen the last two seasons. I have seen every season of Survivor, though. ;) And like I said--cannot WAIT for the next Amazing Race. Gah!! SO FUN. And I saw the first season of Treasure Hunters, I think! It was fun! :(
Heh, 95% of my family lives in Norway, so I definitely get that connection to another country! :)
Good luck! ;)
no subject
I figured you meant the hogwarts founders, but I wanted to hear what you thought. Thanks!
I love HP too, but yeah, I was never part of it.
Aaaah, that Hector. Yeah, he's candy.
I love the Phantom movie. And the musical, and about everything else.
*grins*
Aaah, okay, that explains the acronym.
I am loving the Olympics, too.
Go ahead, hon.
no subject
And now... classic movies, d/s, forgotten realms, honor harrington, paganism, role-playing, sephiroth. :)
no subject
I love the ocean, too, which is odd, as I've been landlocked most of my life except for two years in California. But after my semester at sea, being on a ship was SO AMAZING and I'd do it again in a heartbeat.
OMG the swimming was killing me. I have an Olympic crush on Michael Phelps right now. And I'm liking the gymnastics so far, really cool!
no subject
I would *love* to be able to do something like that, but--irony of ironies--I get horribly seasick! I can handle being on a boat if I'm on deck, but put me indoors and it's not pretty. =P
GUH SWIMMING!! I adore it. I've crushed on Ian Thorpe for ages. And Ian Crocker is from Maine! Obligated to root for him, you know. But Michael Phelps is so damn CUTE and he was looking for his mooooooooooooom! ::melts::
Though, honestly, I'm currently really rooting for Dale Oen--the Norwegians have never won a swimming medal! ::crosses fingers!::
Okay, your turn--brain terminal, cox and forkum, digimon!, hanami, hatrack river, mathnet and teenage mutant ninja turtles. :)
no subject
Aww, that's too bad about getting seasick! Dork that I am, I never really considered that until I was on the ship...turns out I don't, yay! ;)
Brain Terminal--a blog (right-wing) that I enjoy very much.
Cox and Forkum--a now-defunct (right-wing) political cartoon site.
Okay, fun ones now!
Digimon--uh, it was this show on Fox Kids, you might have heard of it...? ;) I figure that I can't hide from my geekdom and I can't bear to delete my Digi fics from my ff.n profile (I HAVE 102 REVIEWS ON MY KEKARI FIC FTW!!!), so I might as well keep Digimon in my interests. It was my second ever fandom, after all, and I will never regret the time I spent with those crazy kids of seasons 1 and 2. That's what really got me started on the Internet--DBZ just got me posting fics (and those I could bear to delete if I was in charge of the site where they're still hosted--WTF, the maintainer's been MIA for over two years. DIE GEOCITIES SITE, DIE!!!), but Digimon got me into a fandom, really.
Hanami is what the Japanese call the parties they have after the sakura (cherry blossoms) bloom. There's about one week when everything is white and pink and gorgeous and you get together with your friends and you drink sake and have picnics under the cherry trees. It's gorgeous and so much fun. Are you on Facebook? I posted a crapload of pics there if you want to friend me and take a look at them. (I can email you my name if you don't know it.) (Er, seriously no pressure if you are on Facebook but like to keep these two separate. I totally understand that.) I only got to have one season of hanami, but I loved it.
Hatrack River--wow, I need to update my interests list. Hatrack River is Orson Scott Card's website and I do like OSC's books, but he is a little bit of a crazy man. I used to go there a lot--it was fun to interact with an author FOR REALZ on message boards and stuff (I'm pretty sure he was one of the first to do that; the first I had experience with, anyway).
Mathnet--did you ever watch that show "Square One" on PBS? It was so awesome. Mathnet was a mini-show on that that parodied Dragnet--the two detectives were Kate Monday and George Frankley and they used math to solve crimes. It would always start with, "The story you're about to see is a fib, but it's short. The names are made up but the problems are real." I LOVED THAT SHOW SO MUCH.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles--I loved the cartoon of the '80s. ADORED it. Raphael was my favorite and he was so awesome. I used to want to go to NYC and order a pizza and somehow I would be able to find the Turtles. How? I don't know. It was one of those 1. Order pizza 2. ???? 3. Find turtles!! sort of plans.
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