Pesach has been going well. Tonight/tomorrow is the last day, which
is a holiday like the first day was. Yesterday Rabbi Symons led a
beit midrash on the "pour out your wrath" part of the haggadah; more
about that later, but it led me to
a
new-to-me haggadah that so far I'm liking a lot. (I borrowed a copy
after the beit midrash.) When I lead my own seder (two years from mow,
I'm guessing?) the odds are good that it will be with this one.
Tangentially-related:
a
short discussion of overly-pediatric seders.
Same season, different religion:
researchers
have found that portion sizes in depictions of the last supper have been
rising for a millennium, though I note the absence of an art historian
on the research team.
Same season, no religion:
I won't repeat most of the links that were circulating on April 1, but
I haven't seen
these new Java
annotations around much. Probably only amusing to programmers, but
very amusing to this one.
Not an April-fool's prank:
xiphias is planning a response to
the Tea Party rally on Boston Common on April 14:
he's holding a tea party.
You know, with fine china and actual tea and people wearing their Sunday
(well, Wednesday) best. It sounds like fun.
Edit (almost forgot!):
things I learned from British folk songs.
From
nancylebov:
Harry Potter and the
Methods of Rationality looks like it'll be a good read. Or, as
siderea put it, Richard Feynman goes to Hogwarts.
Real
Live Preacher's account of a Quaker meeting.
Thanks to
jducoeur for a pointer to
this meta community over
on Dreamwidth.
I remember reading a blog post somewhere about someone who rigged up
a camera to find out what his cat did all day.
Now someone
is selling that. Tempting!
In case you're being too productive, let me help with this cute
flash game (link from
Dani).