Monday, March 16, 2009

....a glass half full...


There's something to be said about a glass half full.
About knowing when to say when. I think it's a floating line.
A barometer of need and desire.
It's entirely up to the individual.
And depends on what's being poured.
Sometimes all we want is a taste.
Other times there's no such thing as enough, the glass is bottomless.
And all we want, is more.

Pain


Pain, you just have to ride it out, hope it goes away on its own, hope the wound that caused it heals.
There are no solutions, no easy answers, you just breath deep and wait for it to subside.
Most of the time pain can be managed but sometimes the pain gets you where you least expect it.
Hits way below the belt and doesn't let up.
Pain, you just have to fight through, because the truth is you can't outrun it and life always makes more.

Growing up


I've heard that it's possible to grow up - I've just never met anyone who's actually done it.
Without parents to defy, we break the rules we make for ourselves.
We throw tantrums when things don't go our way, we whisper secrets with our best friends in the dark, we look for comfort where we can find it, and we hope - against all logic, against all experience. L
ike children, we never give up hope...

Rules of Intimacy


I wish there were a rulebook for intimacy.
Some kind of guide to tell you when you've crossed the line.
It would be nice if you could see it coming, and I don't know how you fit it on a map. You take it where you can get it, and keep it as long as you can.
And as for rules, maybe there are none. Maybe the rules of intimacy are something you have to define for yourself.

Fear of Failure


A couple of hundred years ago, Benjamin Franklin shared with the world the secret of his success. Never leave that till tomorrow, he said, which you can do today. This is the man who discovered electricity. You think more people would listen to what he had to say. I don't know why we put things off, but if I had to guess, I'd have to say it has a lot to do with fear. Fear of failure, fear of rejection, sometimes the fear is just of making a decision, because what if you're wrong? What if you're making a mistake you can't undo? The early bird catches the worm. A stitch in time saves nine. He who hesitates is lost. We can't pretend we hadn't been told. We've all heard the proverbs, heard the philosophers, heard our grandparents warning us about wasted time, heard the damn poets urging us to seize the day. Still sometimes we have to see for ourselves. We have to make our own mistakes. We have to learn our own lessons. We have to sweep today's possibility under tomorrow's rug until we can't anymore. Until we finally understand for ourselves what Benjamin Franklin really meant. That knowing is better than wondering, that waking is better than sleeping, and even the biggest failure, even the worst, beat the hell out of never trying.

The Fairytale of FAITH


You know how when you were a little kid and you believed in fairy tales, that fantasy of what your life would be, white dress, prince charming who would carry you away to a castle on a hill. You would lie in bed at night and close your eyes and you had complete and utter faith. Santa Claus, the Tooth Fairy, Prince Charming, they were so close you could taste them, but eventually you grow up, one day you open your eyes and the fairy tale disappears. Most people turn to the things and people they can trust. But the thing is its hard to let go of that fairy tale entirely cause almost everyone has that smallest bit of hope, of faith, that one day they will open their eyes and it will come true.
At the end of the day faith is a funny thing. It turns up when you don't really expect it. It's like one day you realize that the fairy tale may be slightly different than you dreamed. The castle, well, it may not be a castle. And it's not so important happy ever after, just that its happy right now. See once in a while, once in a blue moon, people will surprise you , and once in a while people may even take your breath away.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Julia Roberts - Allure Magazine




Julia Roberts's name is so synonymous with "movie star," it's hard to believe it's been forever since her last big starring role. Now she's back with two movies—Duplicity with costar Clive Owen and Fireflies in the Garden—and ready to talk about her life and loves. For more photos from her shoot with Michael Thompson in Malibu and the story "Domestic Goddess," pick up the March issue of Allure

Waarheid en Leuen


die aarde
draai regtig as iemand 'n leuen maak van jou wereld

nie dadelik nie
maar met tyd

soos 'n inkdruppel water kleur
sak dit in met tyd.

... en jou waarheid word 'n leuen

jou hart word 'n steen
jou oë leeg
oor een daad gepleeg

jou kop word lig
en swart word jou sig

die mes word uit jou hart gewikkel
asemhaling word 'n gesukkel
... en so besef jy weer

alles maak net seer

en die aarde
draai regtig as iemand 'n leuen maak van jou waarheid

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Beteken


BETEKEN - WASSERFALL

Die rots waarin jy geglo het, het gebreek in die nag.
Alleen en onverwags. Met niks om in te glo nie, en niks om voor te val nie, lewe jy 'n storm elke dag.
Moenie dat hulle jou verstaan nie.
Niemand weet dis wat jou laat bestaan nie.

Wat is die reen, wat is die nag?
Wat is die rede vir jou lag?
Wat het jy beteken vandag?

As alles om jou koud word.
As alles om jou breek.
Moet nooit jouself vergeet.
In die stilte van jou hart is 'n storm wat nog woed.
In die donker kry jy moed.
Moenie dat hulle jou ooit breek nie.
Die wind bedaar en niemand hoef te weet nie.

En jy's maar net 'n druppel in 'n baie groot rivier. Jy's maar net die rede vir my binneste se vuur

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Depp....Johnny Depp



W Magazine presents - Madonna - Rio Affair





Why Madonna Wore the Beckham Dress... and more


Costume designer Arianne Phillips, the stylist behind "Blame it on Rio," has been collaborating with Madonna for more than a decade, from the star's geisha-inspired period to her Patty Hearst look for American Life. Phillips, who also masterminded the clothing for Madonna's two previous epic photo portfolios for W (2003's "Madonna Unbound" and 2006's "Madonna Rides Again"), talked to us about the looks she chose for their latest collaboration.

The black zippered dress is so prominent in the story. What made you choose it and what did its designer (Victoria Beckham) have to do with it, if anything?
I initially chose this dress for the classic 50s-60s slim silhouette, which was what I was after for our story. I was also intrigued since it is from Beckham's debut collection -- I liked the "story" of one pop star to another. And I was pleasantly surprised at the high quality of the dress. The fabrication, details and fit are very well thought out.

Tell us about that graphic sequined dress. All the credit says is that it's vintage and from The Way We Wore, the vintage store in LA.
The dress is reminiscent of our initial inspiration for the shoot, the 1963 Jeanne Moreau film The Bay of Angels. It's from the select archives of Doris Raymond, the owner of The Way We Wore. Madonna had specifically requested I include some vintage 50s and early 60s garments to mix with the contemporary designer fashions, and Doris is my "go to" person for vintage. She has an amazing eye and unique sensitivity to vintage.

What are the sunglasses Madonna wears in so many of the shots?
I believe those are D&G. We loved them.

What's with the little lace gloves?
With styling I find it's always about balance -- not over accessorizing, while still being able to create a character. There was a finished, formal quality to the way women dressed in the 50s and 60s. Their outfits were complete with hat, gloves, jewelry and hosiery, and there was a modesty and femininity to the way women dressed. I found that the little lace gloves finished her character perfectly, as they're both demure and provocative.

What's up next for you?
I designed the costumes for Tom Ford's directorial debut, A Single Man, starring Colin Firth and Julianne Moore, which is forthcoming this fall. Right now I'm helping refurbish and create some new looks for Madonna's summer tour extension and I'm getting ready to attend the women's collections in Paris.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Ons vir jou Suid Afrika



Is dit nie te oulik nie??

Delicate



we might kiss
when we are alone
when nobody's watchin'
we might take it home
we might make out
when nobody's there
it's not that we're scared
it's just that it's delicate
so why d'ya fill my sorrow
with the words you've borrowed
from the only place you've known
why d'ya sing hallelujah
if it means nothin' to ya
why d'ya sing with me at all?
we might live
like never before
when there's nothin' to give
how can we ask for more?
we might make love
in some sacred place
that look on your face
is delicate
so why d'ya fill my sorrow
with the words you've borrowed
from the only place you've known
why d'ya sing hallelujah
if it means nothin' to ya
why d'ya sing with me at all?

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Funny Advert...

I Care About You - Snippet from Grey's Anotomy

Words....

"Something you wish you could hear from the person it would mean the most hearing it from."
___________________________________

My Words:

"I wish you knew how important your words are to people.
The spoken and Unspoken.
Out of your mouth comes the power of life and death.
Be careful what you say
and don't forget about what needs to be said.

Your words are powerful."

What If?

What If...
Every day was treated like a new beginning?

Where grudges, bitterness, unforgiveness, and worries died the moment your head hit the pillow. And at the time you had awaken to a new morning your mind would be renewed, not lacking knowledge or wisdom from the past, but building on what has been made from prior situations and circumstances.

Each person you'd come into contact with you'd treat like it had been the first time you'd met them and your first impression persona was at the top of it's game. Being kind, loving, unconditional in terms of your friendship in how things are done to show thanks. What if, we did things without having presumptuous intentions of wanting to be thanked for what we had done.

What if, we shared our gifts just out of love and never had the expectations of wanting to be loved in return, because we had the reassurance of knowing we're already loved regardless of what we do.

What if, our confidence was placed in something bigger then ourselves so that our dreams weren't limited to our own fears and insecurities.

What if, believing was reality?

The Blowers Daughter - from the movie Closer

Monday, February 16, 2009

You my Glasses



My whole life... My whole adult life, I have been with men. And it always felt, you know, fine, good, but... I never... I mean -- I mean, I did, but not... Not like this. This is like needing glasses.
- Uhm, I've blinded you?
- No. When I was a kid, I would get these headaches, and I went to the doctor, and they said that I needed glasses. I didn't understand that. It didn't make sense to me because I could see fine. And then I get the glasses, and I put them on, and I'm in the car on the way home, and suddenly I yell... Because the big green blobs that I had been staring at my whole life, they weren't big green blobs. They were leaves on trees. I could see the leaves. And I didn't even know I was missing the leaves. I didn't even know that leaves existed, and then... Leaves! You... are glasses

Friday, February 13, 2009

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Vir Michelle...


Jy ken my so goed
Jy weet as ek seer het
Jy weet as ek bly is
Jy ken my…

Jy laat my lag
Jy help my altyd
Jy leen my altyd jou skouer
Jy ken my…

Jy ken my ouers
Jy ken my mense
Jy is my vriendin
Jy ken my…

Jy is altyd net jy
Jy, ‘n wonderlike kollega
Jy, ‘n wonderlike mens
En jy, jy ken my…

Barak Obama's Letter to his daughters

Barack Obama has written a letter to his two daughters: Malia Ann and Sasha (a.k.a. Natasha) about his love for them and what he wants for his children (I wish all fathers could be like him).

Here’s an excert:

Dear Malia and Sasha,

I know that you've both had a lot of fun these last two years on the campaign trail, going to picnics and parades and state fairs, eating all sorts of junk food your mother and I probably shouldn't have let you have. But I also know that it hasn't always been easy for you and Mom, and that as excited as you both are about that new puppy, it doesn't make up for all the time we've been apart. I know how much I've missed these past two years, and today I want to tell you a little more about why I decided to take our family on this journey.

When I was a young man, I thought life was all about me—about how I'd make my way in the world, become successful, and get the things I want. But then the two of you came into my world with all your curiosity and mischief and those smiles that never fail to fill my heart and light up my day. And suddenly, all my big plans for myself didn't seem so important anymore. I soon found that the greatest joy in my life was the joy I saw in yours. And I realized that my own life wouldn't count for much unless I was able to ensure that you had every opportunity for happiness and fulfillment in yours. In the end, girls, that's why I ran for President: because of what I want for you and for every child in this nation.

I want all our children to go to schools worthy of their potential—schools that challenge them, inspire them, and instill in them a sense of wonder about the world around them. I want them to have the chance to go to college—even if their parents aren't rich. And I want them to get good jobs: jobs that pay well and give them benefits like health care, jobs that let them spend time with their own kids and retire with dignity.

I want us to push the boundaries of discovery so that you'll live to see new technologies and inventions that improve our lives and make our planet cleaner and safer. And I want us to push our own human boundaries to reach beyond the divides of race and region, gender and religion that keep us from seeing the best in each other.

Sometimes we have to send our young men and women into war and other dangerous situations to protect our country—but when we do, I want to make sure that it is only for a very good reason, that we try our best to settle our differences with others peacefully, and that we do everything possible to keep our servicemen and women safe. And I want every child to understand that the blessings these brave Americans fight for are not free—that with the great privilege of being a citizen of this nation comes great responsibility.

That was the lesson your grandmother tried to teach me when I was your age, reading me the opening lines of the Declaration of Independence and telling me about the men and women who marched for equality because they believed those words put to paper two centuries ago should mean something.

She helped me understand that America is great not because it is perfect but because it can always be made better—and that the unfinished work of perfecting our union falls to each of us. It's a charge we pass on to our children, coming closer with each new generation to what we know America should be.

I hope both of you will take up that work, righting the wrongs that you see and working to give others the chances you've had. Not just because you have an obligation to give something back to this country that has given our family so much—although you do have that obligation. But because you have an obligation to yourself. Because it is only when you hitch your wagon to something larger than yourself that you will realize your true potential.

These are the things I want for you—to grow up in a world with no limits on your dreams and no achievements beyond your reach, and to grow into compassionate, committed women who will help build that world. And I want every child to have the same chances to learn and dream and grow and thrive that you girls have. That's why I've taken our family on this great adventure.

I am so proud of both of you. I love you more than you can ever know. And I am grateful every day for your patience, poise, grace, and humor as we prepare to start our new life together in the White House.


Love, Dad

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Agent Provocateur - Valentine's Day Ad

2009 Mercedes McLaren SLR Stirling Moss


“Based on the SLR Roadster, the Stirling Moss features carbon fiber bodywork wrapping an SLR722-supplied 650-hp supercharged 5.5-liter V8 mated to a five-speed auto. As with the SLR722, the Stirling Moss can reach a top speed of 217 mph and will reach 60 mph in 3.5 seconds.

The roofless Stirling Moss features smaller “swing-doors” with a two-piece tonneau cover that can cover either the entire cockpit or just the passenger side. A retractable air brake, like the one on the Veyron, automatically deploys during hard braking from speeds above 75mph.

The 2009 Mercedes McLaren SLR Stirling Moss is limited to just 75 units. The cost of entry into this exclusive club will run you just north of $1,100,000, putting it just a bit out of our price range. We may not be able to afford it, but we’ll have live shots for you next month from the Detroit Auto Show. Press release below”

Pink & Ellen singing So What

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Skyn van Vriendskap


soms is dit so moeilik
om alles vir jouself te hou
jy voel jy wil dit deel met iemand
‘n persoon wie jy kan vertrou

die eerste een aan wie jy dink
is dan ook gewoonlik hy
maar hoe kan jy hom dan vertel
die drome is oor hy en jy

jy hou maar jou drome vir jouself
al word jou gedagtes ‘n warboel
jy kyk die lewe in die oë
en gee voor dat jy niks voel

jy hoor van hom byna elke dag
en bly steeds vriendelik met hom
jy gee voor hy’s net nog ‘n vriend
dis net jy wat weet jou hart is vermom

en saans as jy alleen is
en die verlange word te erg
weet jy mens kan selfs jou grootste smart
agter die skyn van vriendskap verberg

Friday, January 30, 2009

As hy homself verloor



die donker het sy naam gesteel
hom laat vergeet van more
en hom vreesbevange
laat rondtas in gister

Stille waters diepe grond


Stille waters diepe grond...dis wie ek is...die stil een met die diepe gedagtes oor gewone dinge, mense, plekke en idees. Ek skryf wat ek voel en soos ek voel. Ek is ek en geniet elke oomblik van my geloof, liefde, lewe en alles wat God my gegee het. Vir goeie tye en slegte tye is skryf my uitlaatklep...

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Her morning elegance

You Found Me - The Fray

I found God on the corner of 1st and Amistad
Where the West was all but won
All alone, smoking his last cigarette
I said, "Where've you been?" He said, "Ask anything."

Where were you, when everything was falling apart.
All my days were spent by the telephone that never rang
And all I needed was a call that never came
To the corner of 1st and Amistad

Lost and insecure, you found me, you found me
Lying on the floor, surrounded, surrounded
Why'd you have to wait? Where were you? Where were you?
Just a little late, you found me, you found me.

But in the end everyone ends up alone
Losing her, the only one who's ever known
Who I am, who I'm not and who I wanna to be
No way to know how long she will be next to me

Lost and insecure, you found me, you found me
[ The Fray Lyrics are found on www.songlyrics.com ]
Lying on the floor, surrounded, surrounded
Why'd you have to wait? Where were you? Where were you?
Just a little late, you found me, you found me.

The early morning, the city breaks
And I've been calling for years and years and years
And you never left me no messages
You never sent me no letters
You got some kind of nerve taking all I want

Lost and insecure, you found me, you found me
Lying on the floor, Where were you? Where were you?

Lost and insecure, you found me, you found me
Lying on the floor, surrounded, surrounded
Why'd you have to wait? Where were you? Where were you?
Just a little late, you found me, you found me.

Why'd you have to wait, to find me, to find me?

Verdura Caged Ring


This stunning Verdura Caged Ring in 18k gold and blue topaz makes a serious statement (in the gifting and in the wearing). Priced at $8,100, it's also available in diamond, rock crystal, aquamarine, citrine, amethyst and peridot. To purchase in the UK, visit Obsidian at 13 Duke St, St James, London or call +44–020–9303375. In the US, visit www.verdura.com or call +1 212–758–3388.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Pain

Human Pain


"Human pain does not let go of its grip at one point in time. Rather, it works its way out of our consciousness over time. There is a season of sadness. A season of anger. A season of tranquility. A season of hope."

The Pussification Of The Western Male

The Pussification Of The Western Male
November 4, 2003
11:24 PM CST

We have become a nation of women.

It wasn’t always this way, of course. There was a time when men put their signatures to a document, knowing full well that this single act would result in their execution if captured, and in the forfeiture of their property to the State. Their wives and children would be turned out by the soldiers, and their farms and businesses most probably given to someone who didn’t sign the document.

There was a time when men went to their certain death, with expressions like “You all can go to hell. I’m going to Texas.” (Davy Crockett, to the House of Representatives, before going to the Alamo.)

There was a time when men went to war, sometimes against their own families, so that other men could be free. And there was a time when men went to war because we recognized evil when we saw it, and knew that it had to be stamped out.

There was even a time when a President of the United States threatened to punch a man in the face and kick him in the balls, because the man had the temerity to say bad things about the President’s daughter’s singing.

We’re not like that anymore.

Now, little boys in grade school are suspended for playing cowboys and Indians, cops and crooks, and all the other familiar variations of “good guy vs. bad guy” that helped them learn, at an early age, what it was like to have decent men hunt you down, because you were a lawbreaker.

Now, men are taught that violence is bad—that when a thief breaks into your house, or threatens you in the street, that the proper way to deal with this is to “give him what he wants”, instead of taking a horsewhip to the rascal or shooting him dead where he stands.

Now, men’s fashion includes not a man dressed in a three-piece suit, but a tight sweater worn by a man with breasts.

Now, warning labels are indelibly etched into gun barrels, as though men have somehow forgotten that guns are dangerous things.

Now, men are given Ritalin as little boys, so that their natural aggressiveness, curiosity and restlessness can be controlled, instead of nurtured and directed.

And finally, our President, who happens to have been a qualified fighter pilot, lands on an aircraft carrier wearing a flight suit, and is immediately dismissed with words like “swaggering”, “macho” and the favorite epithet of Euro girly-men, “cowboy”. Of course he was bound to get that reaction—and most especially from the Press in Europe, because the process of male pussification Over There is almost complete.

How did we get to this?

In the first instance, what we have to understand is that America is first and foremost, a culture dominated by one figure: Mother. It wasn’t always so: there was a time when it was Father who ruled the home, worked at his job, and voted.

But in the twentieth century, women became more and more involved in the body politic, and in industry, and in the media—and mostly, this has not been a good thing. When women got the vote, it was inevitable that government was going to become more powerful, more intrusive, and more “protective” (ie. more coddling), because women are hard-wired to treasure security more than uncertainty and danger. It was therefore inevitable that their feminine influence on politics was going to emphasize (lowercase “s") social security.

I am aware of the fury that this statement is going to arouse, and I don’t care a fig.

What I care about is the fact that since the beginning of the twentieth century, there has been a concerted campaign to denigrate men, to reduce them to figures of fun, and to render them impotent, figuratively speaking.

I’m going to illustrate this by talking about TV, because TV is a reliable barometer of our culture.

In the 1950s, the TV Dad was seen as the lovable goofball—perhaps the beginning of the trend—BUT he was still the one who brought home the bacon, and was the main source of discipline (think of the line: “Wait until your father gets home!").

From that, we went to this: the Cheerios TV ad.

Now, for those who haven’t seen this piece of shit, I’m going to go over it, from memory, because it epitomizes everything I hate about the campaign to pussify men. The scene opens at the morning breakfast table, where the two kids are sitting with Dad at the table, while Mom prepares stuff on the kitchen counter. The dialogue goes something like this:

Little girl (note, not little boy): Daddy, why do we eat Cheerios?
Dad: Because they contain fiber, and all sorts of stuff that’s good for the heart. I eat it now, because of that.
LG: Did you always eat stuff that was bad for your heart, Daddy?
Dad (humorously): I did, until I met your mother.
Mother (not humorously): Daddy did a lot of stupid things before he met your mother.

Now, every time I see that TV ad, I have to be restrained from shooting the TV with a .45 Colt. If you want a microcosm of how men have become less than men, this is the perfect example.

What Dad should have replied to Mommy’s little dig: Yes, Sally, that’s true: I did do a lot of stupid things before I met your mother. I even slept with your Aunt Ruth a few times, before I met your mother.

That’s what I would have said, anyway, if my wife had ever attempted to castrate me in front of the kids like that.

But that’s not what men do, of course. What this guy is going to do is smile ruefully, finish his cereal, and then go and fuck his secretary, who doesn’t try to cut his balls off on a daily basis. Then, when the affair is discovered, people are going to rally around the castrating bitch called his wife, and call him all sorts of names. He’ll lose custody of his kids, and they will be brought up by our ultimate modern-day figure of sympathy: The Single Mom.

You know what? Some women deserve to be single moms.

When I first started this website, I think my primary aim was to blow off steam at the stupidity of our society.

Because I have fairly set views on what constitutes right and wrong, I have no difficulty in calling Bill Clinton, for example, a fucking liar and hypocrite.

But most of all, I do this website because I love being a man. Amongst other things, I talk about guns, self-defense, politics, beautiful women, sports, warfare, hunting, and power tools—all the things that being a man entails. All this stuff gives me pleasure.

And it doesn’t take much to see when all the things I love are being threatened: for instance, when Tim Allen’s excellent comedy routine on being a man is reduced to a fucking sitcom called Home Improvement. The show should have been called Man Improvement, because that’s what every single plotline entailed: turning a man into a “better” person, instead of just leaving him alone to work on restoring the vintage sports car in his garage. I stopped watching the show after about four episodes.

("The Man Show” was better, at least for the first season—men leering at chicks, men fucking around with ridiculous games like “pin the bra on the boobies”, men having beer-drinking competitions, and women on trampolines. Excellent stuff, only not strong enough. I don’t watch it anymore, either, because it’s plain that the idea has been subverted by girly-men, and turned into a parody of itself.)

Finally, we come to the TV show which to my mind epitomizes everything bad about what we have become: Queer Eye For The Straight Guy. Playing on the homo Bravo Channel, this piece of excrement has taken over the popular culture by storm (and so far, the only counter has been the wonderful South Park episode which took it apart for the bullshit it is).

I’m sorry, but the premise of the show nauseates me. A bunch of homosexuals trying to “improve” ordinary men into something “better” (ie. more acceptable to women): changing the guy’s clothes, his home decor, his music—for fuck’s sake, what kind of girly-man would allow these simpering butt-bandits to change his life around?

Yes, the men are, by and large, slobs. Big fucking deal. Last time I looked, that’s normal. Men are slobs, and that only changes when women try to civilize them by marriage. That’s the natural order of things.

You know the definition of homosexual men we used in Chicago? “Men with small dogs who own very tidy apartments.”

Real men, on the other hand, have big fucking mean-ass dogs: Rhodesian ridgebacks, bull terriers and Rottweilers, or else working dogs like pointers or retrievers which go hunting with them and slobber all over the furniture.

Women own lapdogs.

Which is why women are trying to get dog-fighting and cock-fighting banned—they’d ban boxing too, if they could—because it’s “mean and cruel”. No shit, Shirley. Hell, I don’t like the idea of fighting dogs, either, but I don’t have a problem with men who do. Dogs and cocks fight. So do men. No wonder we have an affinity for it.

My website has become fairly popular with men, and in the beginning, this really surprised me, because I didn’t think I was doing anything special.

That’s not what I think now. I must have had well over five thousand men write to me to say stuff like “Yes! I agree! I was so angry when I read about [insert atrocity of choice], but I thought I was the only one.”

No, you’re not alone, my friends, and nor am I.

Out there, there is a huge number of men who are sick of it. We’re sick of being made figures of fun and ridicule; we’re sick of having girly-men like journalists, advertising agency execs and movie stars decide on “what is a man”; we’re sick of women treating us like children, and we’re really fucking sick of girly-men politicians who pander to women by passing an ever-increasing raft of Nanny laws and regulations (the legal equivalent of public-school Ritalin), which prevent us from hunting, racing our cars and motorcycles, smoking, flirting with women at the office, getting into fistfights over women, shooting criminals and doing all the fine things which being a man entails.

When Annika Sorenstam was allowed to play in that tournament on the men’s PGA tour, all the men should have refused to play—Vijay Singh was the only one with balls to stand up for a principle, and he was absolutely excoriated for being a “chauvinist”. Bullshit. He wasn’t a chauvinist, he was being a man. All the rest of the players—Woods, Mickelson, the lot—are girls by comparison. And, needless to say, Vijay isn’t an American, nor a European, which is probably why he still has a pair hanging between his legs, and they’re not hanging on the wall as his wife’s trophy.

Fuck this, I’m sick of it.

I don’t see why I should put up with this bullshit any longer—hell, I don’t see why any man should put up with this bullshit any longer.

I don’t see why men should have become feminized, except that we allowed it to happen—and you know why we let it happen? Because it’s goddamned easier to do so. Unfortunately, we’ve allowed it to go too far, and our maleness has become too pussified for words.

At this point, I could have gone two ways: the first would be to say, “...and I don’t know if we’ll get it back. The process has become too entrenched, the cultural zeitgeist of men as girls has become part of the social fabric, and there’s not much we can do about it.”

But I’m not going to do that. To quote John Belushi (who was, incidentally, a real man and not a fucking woman): “Did we quit when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor?”

Well, I’m not going to quit. Fuck that. One of the characteristics of the non-pussified man (and this should strike fear into the hearts of women and girly-men everywhere) is that he never quits just because the odds seem overwhelming. Omaha Beach, guys.

I want a real man as President—not Al Gore, who had to hire a consultant to show him how to be an Alpha male, and french-kiss his wife on live TV to “prove” to the world that he was a man, when we all knew that real men don’t have to do that shit.

And I want the Real Man President to surround himself with other Real Men, like Rumsfeld, and Ashcroft, and yes, Rice (who is more of a Real Man than those asswipes Colin Powell and Norman Mineta).

I want our government to be more like Dad—kind, helpful, but not afraid to punish us when we fuck up, instead of helping us excuse our actions.

I want our government of real men to start rolling back the Nanny State, in all its horrible manifestations of over-protectiveness, intrusiveness and “Mommy Knows Best What’s Good For You” regulations.

I want our culture to become more male—and not the satirical kind of male, like The Man Show, or the cartoonish figures of Stallone, Van Damme or Schwartzenegger. (Note to the Hollywood execs: We absolutely fucking loathe chick movies about feelings and relationships and all that feminine jive. We want more John Waynes, Robert Mitchums, Bruce Willises, and Clint Eastwoods. Never mind that it’s simplistic— we like simple, we are simple, we are men—our lives are uncomplicated, and we like it that way. We Were Soldiers was a great movie, and you know why? Because you could have cut out all the female parts, and it still would have been a great movie, because it was about Real Men. Try cutting out all the female parts in a Woody Allen movie—you’d end up with the opening and closing credits.)

I want our literature to become more male, less female. Men shouldn’t buy “self-help” books unless the subject matter is car maintenance, golf swing improvement or how to disassemble a fucking Browning BAR. We don’t improve ourselves, we improve our stuff.

And finally, I want men everywhere to going back to being Real Men. To open doors for women, to drive fast cars, to smoke cigars after a meal, to get drunk occasionally and, in the words of Col. Jeff Cooper, one of the last of the Real Men: “to ride, shoot straight, and speak the truth.”

In every sense of the word. We know what the word “is” means.

Because that’s all that being a Real Man involves. You don’t have to become a fucking cartoon male, either: I’m not going back to stoning women for adultery like those Muslim assholes do, nor am I suggesting we support that perversion of being a Real Man, gangsta rap artists (those fucking pussies—they wouldn’t last thirty seconds against a couple of genuine tough guys that I know).

Speaking of rap music, do you want to know why more White boys buy that crap than Black boys do? You know why rape is such a problem on college campuses? Why binge drinking is a problem among college freshmen?

It’s a reaction: a reaction against being pussified. And I understand it, completely. Young males are aggressive, they do fight amongst themselves, they are destructive, and all this does happen for a purpose.

Because only the strong men propagate.

And women know it. You want to know why I know this to be true? Because powerful men still attract women. Women, even liberal women, swooned over George Bush in a naval aviator’s uniform. Donald Trump still gets access to some of the most beautiful pussy available, despite looking like a medieval gargoyle. Donald Rumsfeld, if he wanted to, could fuck 90% of all women over 50 if he wanted to, and a goodly portion of younger ones too.

And he won’t. Because Rummy’s been married to the same woman for fifty years, and he wouldn’t toss that away for a quickie. He’s a Real Man. No wonder the Euros hate and fear him.

We’d better get more like him, we’d better become more like him, because if we don’t, men will become a footnote to history.

The end or the Beginning?

Dont we all want to work for someone like this?

I need to Change

How can i change? The only way to change is to consistently work at it. Knowing is the beginning. Knowing more and learning more and achieving more. The minute you stop wanting to know more, that's when you stop growing. And that's when you die. And that's when you nothing

Monday, January 26, 2009

Monday, January 19, 2009

Soen my


Soen my met my slaapspookasem
En jou sluimerspoeg
Verlei my met jou lenige luigelêde lyf
Vry my met jou murgbelaaide pype
Hou my vas en hou my styf

Sien jy my slaapgesusde oë en my droomgevulde mond?
My palm op jou rug se naat, jou kuit teen my sool se voet?
Kyk my moeggesluimerde arms, my rusgekreukelde skouers
Voel my gaapgeplooide, oggendgloeiende goed

Plooitjies papille pupille spleetjies
Holtetjies bultjies rondinkies
Hobbeltjies halfmaantjies knobbeltjies
Groefies skaniertjies skroefies maniertjies
Buigies en voutjies grepies strepies
Haartjies en aartjies en oksels en kuiltjies
En are en lyne en kontoere en gladdes en skewes en soepel en sag
En warm en lenig en… en…. En…. En…
En…

Vers vir Jou


ek bou vir jou ‘n huisie
van sandsteen son en skalie
ek plant vir jou ‘n wilgerboom
wat wolffluitlange skadu’s maak
ek dors vir jou ‘n riviertjie uit die aarde
waarin paddas moederlik grom
ek plaas vir jou ‘n paar vet kuikens
en cuddlesome katjies op die werf
ek brei ‘n voetmatjie om te lê
voor die riempiestoel wat ek vir jou gevleg het
ek vra die wolke
om die blou lug plek-plek melkwit af te werk
ek gooi die damme vol water
sodat ons kinderlik kaal daarin kan baljaar
ek versamel stronke vir jou stofie
sodat ons koffiewater lekker warm kan stoom
ek brei vir jou ‘n matrasveerbedjie
waarop ons nagtelank bymekaar kan doeks
ek sit sterk vensters in die mure
om tokkelossie buite te laat bly

dit alles doen ek net vir jou
omdat ek vreeslik baie van jou hou

Verlange na Iemand Onbekend..


Volg my treurlied oor die see
antwoord my roepstem
wanneer ek in eensaamheid
na jou smag en jou gesig wil sien

deur diepe waters van depressie
het ons gespartel
om dit te ontdek en te bewaar wat
ons s’n is
waarop ons beslag lê in ons drome
en vir ewig onder ons kussings bewaar

in my swaar gemoed draal ’n eensame siel
en in verdriet en pyn is daar net ’n paar
sake wat vir my sin maak en my vertroos
God is naby en jy is ver
ek smag daarna om net weer jou stem te hoor
fluister in my oor en vertel vir my dat alles
pluis is, want woorde van swaarkry en verdriet
is te algemeen en te wyd versprei oor onse
lewens

stuur vir my ’n spierwit duif oor die see
met ’n boodskappie toegedraai in ’n lint
hy sal veilig land en die roofdiere sal hom
nie verslind
ek stuur my liefde oor die see
en van jou kom…

…geen respons

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Marie Claire - Naked Issue 2009



It's that time of the year again when South African celebrities dare to go bare for charity.

"We organise the Naked feature every year to raise funds for a worthy cause," Seton Vermaak, PRO of Associated Magazines, told News24 in Cape Town.

"This year the campaign protests against the high incidence of rape in this country and will raise funds for Rape Crisis," he said.

"The public will get a chance to bid for their favourite portrait and all the proceeds will go to the Rape Crisis/SafeSpace project."

Friday, January 16, 2009

Mickey Rourke's very memorable Golden Globe Speech

...


I don't really want to stop...
Running my hands from your neck to your chest...
I could try hours finding new ways to be awed each minute by you...

Must see movie...Revolutionary Road..



How do you break free without breaking apart?

April and Frank Wheeler are a young, thriving couple living with their two children in a Connecticut suburb in the mid-1950s. Their self-assured exterior masks a creeping frustration at their inability to feel fulfilled in their relationships or careers. Frank is mired in a well-paying but boring office job, and April is a housewife still mourning the demise of her hoped-for acting career. Determined to identify themselves as superior to the mediocre sprawl of suburbanites who surround them, they decide to move to France where they will be better able to develop their true artistic sensibilities, free of the consumerist demands of capitalist America. As their relationship deteriorates into an endless cycle of squabbling, jealousy and recriminations, their trip and their dreams of self-fulfillment are thrown into jeopardy.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Fame vs. Success


Aangename kennis ek is Lorinda Voges, ken jy my?

2008 was ‘n jaar vol aanpassings, groei pyne asook baie uitdagings.
Een van die grootste uitdagings was om die volgende lewensles te leer en te besef dat jy nie jouself in iemand of in enige iets kan verloor nie.
Dis so maklik om verward te raak oor jou identiteit in die industrie wat ek werk.
Dit was ‘n moelike jaar maar ook een van die mees vormste jare wat ek kon beleef.

Ek het geleer mense glo en sien net wat hulle wil. Hulle skets ‘n prentjie in hulle kop van wat reg en verkeerd is sommer om die waarheid eintlik te ken of om hulle self die guns te doen om iemand regtig te leer ken. Ek is baie keer self skuldig aan die slegte kwaliteit.

Ek dink die grootste les wat ek geleer het is dat die sogenaamde bekende mense in die land dood normaal is nes ek en jy. Dit het regtig baie ‘ontmoetings’ met baie bekendes gevat wat vir my die volgende wysheid openbaar het:
Ek gee nie om wie jy is, wat jy doen vir ‘n lewe of wie jy ken nie.
Ek wil by jou weet: Ek wil weet waarmee hou jy jouself besig, wat is jou hartsverlange en of jy die kans sal vat om op die tyd van jou lewe nog jou drome te verwerklik en nie ander mense sin nie?

Kom ons sit die bullshit agter ons en wees eerlik dat met kennismaking of selfs die beeld wat die media en die pers van jou skep, is jou gesig merendeels die beriggaming van wie en wat jy is. Mense kyk daarna en som jou daarvolgens op. Tweedens is dit oor wat jy doen vir ‘n lewe.

Die vermaaklikheids wereld is genadeloos, dit het ek net weer besef. Dit vra jou nie hoe oud jy is, hoe hard jy werk of jy ‘n plek in die limelight verdien nie. Dit gooi jou in die diep kant in en dan moet jy swem of anders verdrink jy.
Ek werk al 5 jaar in die bedryf. Miskien werk ek nie elke dag met egoistiese supersterre nie, maar ek werk met mense wat geld honger is, met dronk varke en seksualiteit elke dag van my lewe.
As ek nie die keuse gemaak het 4 jaar terug om “balls” te kry nie, so ek dalk vandag ook al seker na die bottle gegryp het vir ‘n antwoorde na my soekende vrae na die sin van die lewe.

Ek dink die sterkte wat ek soms binne in my vind het alles te doen met die opvoeding wat ek gehad het. Ek moet bieg. Ek het ‘n baie sterk ma. Sy is ongetwyfeld die sterkste mens wat ek ken.
Sy het kultuur, respek, God en ‘n goeie naam op my afgedwing.
Dis die goed wat my dra as ek voel die besige en soms doellose gejaagd na alles haal my in.
Dit het my geleer om plat op die aarde te bly en altyd ander mense in ag te neem.
Ek is dankbaar vir dit en ek weet ek sal my kinders dieselfde leer eendag (dis nou as ek besluit om te trou)

Ek wonder ook baie. Ek wonder oor of alles wat mens doen in jou beroep regtig die moeite werd is.
Marlyn Monroe het gese: “ A career is wonderful, but you cant curl up with it on a cold night”
Nou sal jy my dalk vra: “ Wat is jou hartsbegeerte Lorinda?”
Moenie nou lag nie: Ek wil net ‘n ma wees. Dis wat my droom was nog altyd.
Maar nou is nie die tyd nie. Ek moet nog eers ‘n pad met myself loop.
En om eerlik te wees, ek het nog nie iemand ontmoet wat ek die titel as “pa-van-my-kinders” wil gee nie.

Kom ons kom terug oor die rede hoekom ek juis besluit het om die lange blog te skryf – ‘fame vs. success”
Egos. Dis ‘n lelik ding.
Mens moet al die sterre se egos altyd streel en kom ek wees eerlik, ek streel niemand nie!
Vir my is jy as ‘n ster, nes ek. ‘n Doodgewone mens!
Meeste van die tyd is dit die sterre met die verskuilde agendas en dan speel hulle victim en blameer die media.
As jy nie in die media se oog wil wees nie, wees dan ‘n doodgewone mens, maar moet hulle nie blameer vir jou problem nie.
Ok, kom ek “pause” gou by die media. Ek verpes sensasie.
Ek verpes oneerlikheid vir die vermaak van ander mense – jy het geen idée nie!
Miskien omdat mense wat in die media al soveel keer ontbloot is vir die verkoop van tydskrifte en koerante sonder om regtig hulle kant van die storie te stel.

2009 gaan ‘n wonderlike jaar wees – dit weet ek.
Ek weet dit want ek weet dat daar goed uit die swaar kom.
Ek weet dat al verstaan ek nie altyd hoekom sekere goed gebeur nie of hoekom as ek iets so graag wil he, dit nie na my pad toe kom nie, ek weet dat daarin ook ‘n lewensles is.
Ek weet dat ten spyte van die beroep waarin ek is, ek myself soms met ander mense moet deel, maar ek nie van myself moet vergeet nie.

So, dis my siening. Wat dink jy?

Respect vs. Fame



People respect you because they feel you've survived hard times and endured, and although you've become famous, you haven't become phony.

W Magazine - Christy Turlington Burns - January 2009






Still super after all these years, Christy Turlington Burns—who turns 40 in January—shows off her iconic beauty in asymmetrical looks with an off-center charm in the January 2009 issue of W Magazine

To be Brad Pitt


To be Brad Pitt is to know the bowels of hotels: the hidden mazes of back entrances, subterranean passages and service elevators daily trudged by housekeepers and room service waiters—and sometimes traveled by a VIP guest who needs secret conveyance to his suite.

For you this summer night - 7 Jan 2009


This summer night is like a perfection of thought....

Trouble


"Expect trouble as an inevitable part of life, and when it comes, hold your head high, look it quarely in the eye and say, 'I will be bigger than you. You cannot defeat me.'"

Kings of Leon - Sex on Fire



Sex on Fire" is the first single of Kings of Leon's fourth studio album Only by the Night. The song gave Kings of Leon their first number one single in Australia, Finland, Ireland and United Kingdom, charting at the top-spot in the UK singles chart on digital downloads alone, before its physical release. It has also gained significant popularity in the United States, reaching #1 on the Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart and #56 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it their highest charting song in their homeland on both charts. Along with all of these achievements, in 2008, the song earned the band their first Grammy nominations; the song was nominated for Best Rock Song and Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group. In addition, the album earned a nomination for Best Rock Album. Channel V Australia named the song as the 3rd biggest hit of 2008.

Name - Goo Goo Dolls



This was the Goo Goo Dolls' first hit.
It is one of my current "all time favorite songs"
Many people have various interpretations of what the real meaning of this song is and why John Rzeznik wrote it.
To me it means the following:
It is about someone that has lost themselves somewhere along the lines.
Perhaps it reflects my current view on "celebrities" in our country.
In "Name", the line "did you get to be a star" stands out to me especially because i feel many people loose their own identity by trying to be the figment of someone else's imagination.

Paul Clark Presents: Black & White