Yourish.com

Cutting straight to the point

Watching and worrying

Posted on October 15th, 2006 at 9:47 pm by Meryl Yourish.

Filed under: Cats

Gracie isn’t getting any better. She is sleeping the sleep of the sick and exhausted, and I am trying to hold on and not bring her into the emergency vet for “observation” overnight (at a cost of $500-600). Sorry, I just can’t afford it, don’t think it’s going to do much for her, and don’t believe it’s the right step, anyway. She can leap on the sofa without any trouble, and yeah, she’s thrown up twice more, but she still purrs when I pet her and can walk around just fine.

So we’re going to tough it out tonight and bring her to the regular vet tomorrow. The X-Ray showed a possible blockage in her stomach. I’ll see what the other vet has to say tomorrow morning.

Poor Gracie. She isn’t even sleeping on her new tissue paper that I brought specially from Max and Rebecca’s party.

I’m finding it almost impossible to pay attention to anything but worrying about Gracie. Bedtime for me soon, too. I was up every few hours last night with a sick cat. Not intentionally—I’m a very light sleeper. Every time I heard her get sick, I’d wake up, go downstairs, check on her, clean up, and go back to bed.

Tired. We’re both tired.

Shire Network News, Robert Spencer edition

Posted on October 15th, 2006 at 6:23 pm by Meryl Yourish.

Filed under: Podcasts

I didn’t make the deadline, but Tom Paine got Robert Spencer to talk about his new book, “The Truth About Mohammed.

I missed the deadline due to being up half the night with a sick cat. Gracie isn’t feeling well, and we made a trip to the emergency vet this morning. She’s currently sleeping off the horrors of the vet, and seems actually on the mend as well. Poor thing. She hasn’t been able to keep down any food or water since Thursday.

Off to the regular vet’s tomorrow, but I think she’s turned a corner.

So go listen to the podcast. It won’t make Gracie feel any better, but it’ll make me feel better.

Ambition shines bright in Iran. Up to a point.

Posted on October 15th, 2006 at 1:51 pm by SnoopyTheGoon.

Filed under: Iran, Religion

Robert Tait of The Observer sometimes produces interesting articles about Iran and its frequently ugly reality of religious and political oppression. This time, however, he has chosen a light and playful approach. Two different persons, both looking for success in his/her own professional area are written up in the article. The first - an inventive shoe-shine expert with his e-mail address and a cell phone.

Rather than wait hopefully for business, Hasankhani cycles across Tehran to where he knows customers are in need of his services. He plies his trade expertly in cafes and restaurants frequented by well-to-do professionals who have come to rely on him to keep their footwear gleaming. Hasankhani’s email address - aliwaxima2000@yahoo.com - and telephone number are proudly emblazoned on his kit box, which also bears the ultimate customer-friendly motto: Have A Nice Day. In a further innovation, he is setting up a website.

While admiring Hasankhani’s business acumen, I can hardly see how it revolutionizes the bleak reality of the country. But I wish him success anyway.

The second protagonist of the article is known much better to the international public, it is the Laleh Seddigh, the first woman to be crowned Iran’s national motor rally champion.

But her success has never been accepted by the traditionalist male-dominated hierarchy of the racing federation, who, in effect, ensured that she would not repeat it by recently barring her from a race at Tehran’s Azadi stadium. Seddigh, however, remains defiant. Certain that right is on her side, she has embarked on a campaign to secure legally binding written permission for any woman to compete against men in motor races. She is also trying to break another taboo - the prohibition on men training women to become rally coaches. That is banned on Islamic grounds, on the basis that unrelated members of the opposite sex should not be alone together in an enclosed space.

No, it is not an opportunity for bashing Islam. Other religions, Judaism included, have their own quirks that treat women not much less unfairly than Islam. However, saying this, at least the West does not adopt this policy on the regime level, as it is practiced in Iran and other Muslim theocracies.

Say Laleh: “We are totally covered. There is no question of breaking Islamic laws.

Dear Laleh, you may be right at that, but here is the bitter truth. Feet, you see, here is your problem. Quite a lot of years (more than 150, I guess) ago and in some other land the mere mention of the word “foot” where a female was concerned would be considered a rudeness. Not to speak or dream about showing a foot or a fragment of it to the general public.

Wrapped in a burqah and at home, raising children - this is how many of your countrymen prefer to see (or, rather, not to see) you and all Persian women. It may take another 150 years to dispose of this taboo, I am afraid.

I wish you all the best and hope you will be able to break the walls some little men are raising around you.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews