Weekend Links

“What on earth would I do if four bears came into my camp? Why, I would die of course.”
― Bill Bryson, A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail

Kittens, I’m incredibly relaxed right now. Jeff and I just got back from a weekend camping at a friend’s family estate (seriously) in the midlands. The friend in question co-owns and manages his own events company and is, as you may imagine, an incredible host. It was the warmest and brightest days we’ve had all year and we could not have asked for a better set up. It was a proper, British affair with meals in the summer garden, dogs everywhere, children ditto in varying states of undress as the weekend progressed, bike rides for those who wanted and badminton for those who didn’t, a bonfire, birdsong, and great food.

Did I mention I was relaxed?

A proper post will show up soon enough. Here is a short batch of links and enjoy the remains of the weekend!

2016-05-07 13.52.32 HDR-2

In our continuing exploration of people leaving various platforms of the internet…thoughts?

Beauty lovers, to ITG. Grace is waiting for you.

Soothing, pretty landscapes. Does what it says on the tin.

...I’m transfixed

A new cartoonist to follow in Instagram.

I loved this piece by the Man Repeller, demanding what’s so great about a minimalist wardrobe anyway? There writes a woman who knows how to revel in her clothing.

 

Weekend Links

“What potent blood hath modest May.”
–  Ralph W. Emerson

This Bank Holiday weekend completely snuck up on me, I actually blanked that it was happening until about Thursday. By which time it was, of course, too late to secure a last minute trip somewhere. Happily, it’s May and that means I’ve got another BH to scheme towards.

In related news, how the heck is it already May?! Where is this year going!

2016-04-27 10.21.06 HDR

The BYU assault coverage continues, thank goodness for journalism.

Alas that I am allergic, I’d take a “Viking cat” in an instant.

Tulips forever.

Mother Nature trumps science via rodents.

I am loving the new Beyonce album, while being keenly aware that it was not made for me. It’s an album that specifically speaks to the black american female experience, personal and broad. So go read some incredibly smart writing about it from incredibly smart women.

It’s not just about the numbers.

Because we can always learn from smart ladies.

Style tips from the Queen of Quirk.

A memo on how French soliders were to treat American soldier of color in WWII. Ugh.

A fascinating question, “When precisely were these ‘good old days’ everyone keeps talking about?”

And finally, h/t to Grace over at Culture Life who dropped this link in response to my query about the term “work/life balance” last week. This seems a better way of thinking of it, but I’m still looking into the subject.

 

 

Weekend Links

“If you care about what you do and work hard at it, there isn’t anything you can’t do if you want to.”
― Jim Henson, It’s Not Easy Being Green: And Other Things to Consider

Another weekend after another busy week, kittens. I ran an event on Wednesday that, while relatively small compared to others I’ve managed, still had the usual affect of events which is to banish all my other To Dos into the void and laugh at my feeble protests.

I am still finding the balance of work with the new role. Behind the scenes, which I don’t talk about much here but perhaps I shall do more of in the future, a lot of what I’m doing is helping my company build some new systems and procedures to either replace out of date ones, or fill some gaps. It’s expansive work, fantastic experience, and I enjoy it because I’m a stereotypical type A. But it’s also uphill almost every step of the way to build infrastructure on the go. Throw in multiple 15-hour days to prep for and execute an event and by Friday I am fried.

On the plus side, despite individual hectic weeks, an overall healthier work/life balance is being restored for both myself and Jeff. Which is a slightly more chipper way of saying he’s forcing my butt back to the gym and we’re both grudgingly recommitted to trying to eat less like slobs. There are downsides, you see.

Here are your links and tell me how your work/life balance is these days. Also, what are your opinions on the phrase “work/life balance,” as I actually dislike it but haven’t found a better term for it than “actual life?”

2016-03-30 08.49.10

Science!

In recent Mormon news, there has been good and badly needed reporting on the Honor Code at Brigham Young University and how it can be and has been misapplied against victims of sexual crime. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Shakespeare anniversaries and installation art. SDS catnip.

Speaking of Shakespeare, SDS nation road trip? The George is seriously about 15 minutes away from where I sit typing this…

Also SDS catnip, archaeology and forensic fashion–with a heaping topping of espionage no less!

Stephen Fry, the king of tech-loving nerds everywhere, posted a piece about people leaving platforms, spaces, and even the whole internet. Worth a read.

CPG Grey also posted a podcast about his own experience of “dialing down” his internet input. It expands on this blog post as well. Clearly I’ve got a topic on my mind.

The rise and fall (and rise, and fall…) of Sex and the City’s narrative: why it mattered, why it failed in the end.

Words I intend to live by after this week: “Sustained exhaustion is not a rite of passage. It’s a mark of stupidity.”

Another detox read after a carb and sugar heavy week (for me at least). Hi, my name is C. and at this moment I suffer from sugar face.

Full disclosure, I found this week’s notable Instagram feed thanks to the fine folks of Pop Culture Happy Hour. I’ve been mesmerized ever since.

Give this man a medal.

And finally, stand back and get in formation: the queen is walking.

 

Weekend Links

“I like to reinvent myself — it’s part of my job.”
― Karl Lagerfeld

Hi piglets. You have not been ignored, unloved, and neglected. Well, two out of three (never unloved), and for that apologies but I had a good excuse: I got promoted two weeks ago and had to spend the majority of my first weekend on the new job working. As a result links and posts are behind the times, but I think you’ll forgive me, yes? The new job is largely an extension of my old but contains new responsibilities and powers which are equal parts exciting and scary. I’m still learning the ins and out of it but I’m really enjoying the progress. Of course, it’s also brought some new challenges, some of them big, that I now have a part in trying to solve–no pressure.

However, like so many aspects of life in the last year and a half, my work has kind of taken over most of my other projects and priorities so on Friday Jeff and I both took a holiday (our first of the new year, yikes) and just spent the day together wandering, talking, and just generally hanging out. Yesterday he golfed while I shopped and caught up with X., my New York based best friend who we are staying with when we go visit (in a matter of weeks!). She has just launched the new Charlie Rose website–go check it out immediately, she did an amazing job–and so we had a lot of career and life talk to catch up on.

The rest of the weekend will be spent in much the same way, with city wandering and Skype dates. The weather is, for now at least, cooperating. Tell me what you’re getting up to this weekend and enjoy your links!

Preview of coming attractions.
Preview of coming attractions.

 

Need a phone case upgrade?

The biggest picture ever taken.

A fascinating read on the complex issues surrounding mental health, priesthood celibacy, and vocation.

Such a strange…is this a scandal?

Outlander is back and the costumes look incredible, and incredibly fun to have made.

Anyone job hunting?

Looking forward to this film tremendously!

Great read on adulthood over at The Atlantic.

History and hygiene. You can still see old bathhouses or signs for them scattered throughout London for much of the same period of history. In fact, huge sections of London didn’t have toilet facilities until well into the 20th century, and then in many places it was communal and shared by several houses, flats, or families. Eek.

Oh yes, I am going to this exhibit.

Weekend Links

“I believe that everyone else my age is an adult whereas I am merely in disguise.”
― Margaret Atwood

We had an almost uniformly lovely weekend. I did some vintage shopping, Jeff reaped the bounty of patient eBay stalking and took his “new” golf clubs out to the driving range he’s discovered right alongside the Thames, and we both did some general house tidying and food prep which resulted in a pleasantly smug, put together feeling. All in all a great success.

Here are your links, enjoy the rest of the weekend!

2016-04-03 11.01.02

 

Investigating the hard topics.

The physics of one of the hardest moves in ballet.

Still interested in this story.

A journalist pens a thoughtful mea culpa.

FiveThirtyEight on women and the election (containing the line which made me fistpump quietly to myself, “This has been a pet peeve of mine in how the media talks about women, as if they’re simply another demographic group, like Latino voters or retirees. Women are a majority of voters, making up a roughly equal share of the electorate in every state.”).

Jenna Lyons on How To Spend It. It’s as if this piece were created just for us, kittens.

Bill Watterson and life wisdom.

And speaking of Bill Watterson, an excellent April Fool’s gift!

Hugely disappointed this exceeds my price point!

Nothing is new.

Southern Food, British Style

“We all like chicken.”
― Malcolm X, The Autobiography of Malcolm X

Sometimes you just get a craving in your bones…for finger-lickin’, deep fried, calorie dense, proper American Southern food.

Then reality asserts itself rudely and you recall that you live in Britain, which is not wholly conducive to the getting of said food. This may or may not trigger a quick series of emotions (irritation, maudlin despair, angsty regret for what you have lost, etc. etc.) culminating in a tiny moment when you consider if the food grass is greener on the other side–of the Atlantic.

Then you remember that The Lockhart exists and calm down because everything is fine again; plus your existential alarm over food was a little unnerving, no?

 photo lockhart1_zpsganrgoey.jpg

It’s tucked away on a little side street, disconcertingly near Selfridges. The upstairs is almost Spartan with a hipster-appropriate exposed brick wall and genuine antiques, but downstairs is a slightly edgier (while still incredibly homey) space for larger parties and entertaining. As a rolicking party of two, we have always been seated up top, which bothers us not a bit. There are fresh flowers, mismatched furniture, constant refills…all the things that I like. Also, while always peopled, it is never crowded and we have never once had an issue getting, or wait for a table.

 photo lockhart3_zpsd54reiin.jpg

Full disclosure, we have only ever been to brunch here, but has been enough to earn our ringing endorsement. We do intend to try their other meals at some point, but in the meantime, they hold one fundamental reason for our Most Important Meal of the Day devotion:

 photo lockhart2_zpsakrbjvry.jpg

Chicken and Waffles.

Although the cornbread cooked on order, served piping hot with bubbling butter, smothered and covered biscuits and gravy, shrimp and grits, pork belly and hash, and more are all worthy of honorable mention. If you happen to be in Marylebone and craving something deep fried, stroll over to Seymour Place and indulge. It’s what gyms are for.

Weekend Links

“When we love, we always strive to become better than we are. When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better too.”
― Paulo Coelho, The Alchemist

Hi, kittens. This week’s post is coming to you early because it it’s a four-day Bank Holiday weekend in the UK, the real first break of the year. Jeff and I were planning to go to Belgium but…ISIS.

So instead we’re doing some day trips around the UK while trying to either get our trip money refunded or at least moved to another date because we would still like to visit Bruges, one of the most charming cities in northern Europe. Apart from anything, I genuinely love Belgium and want some tourist money to flow their way as I expect other people will have done the same thing and rethought or rescheduled travel through the country as a result of the attacks. I also just really want to go back and visit. We can’t let the terrorists win, team.

Setting aside the whole fact of major international tragedy in which my small trip is by far the least important element, we were really looking forward to a break. Jeff has been in the midst of busy season and the first quarter of the year at work for me has been overwhelmingly positive but intense. Time away was and is badly needed.

So! I now ramp up my campaign for a 30th birthday trip to NYC in June. Here are you links, have a good weekend.

2016-03-24 09.07.28

Words cannot express how much I want to see this. Watch the trailers!

I am immeasurably grateful to live in the age of plumbing and wifi…and very conscious that there is a good portion of the world who still doesn’t have either of those things…

London is delightful, never more so than in its eccentricities.

Bite Beauty is one of my favorite lipstick brands (and believe me, I know from lipstick). They just launched their Amuse Bouche collection…I’ve bought four and am waiting for them to arrive without an ounce of sheepishness. This quick profile at Refinery29 is worth a look in!

I’d listen to the crud out of these. Again, most of ’em.

A topic that’s been on my mind the last few months…

The decline of the hat.

Downright gorgeous.

This week in Mormon news, an eye opening article from The Atlantic well worth reading.

And finally, need to find time to try this recipe.

Weekend Links

“Out of clutter, find simplicity.”
― Albert Einstein

Truncated weekend due to a day in the office so here are your links for the weekend, quick and dirty! I’m off to wring the last dregs of delight out of Sunday evening.

2016-02-25 15.40.37-1

I’m a fan of Everlane so this is interesting news.

Fantastic interview at The Lifestyle Edit with a go getting girl!

It’s been a long week. Let’s enjoy some baby elephants who think they are puppies.

That bad of a week, you say? Here, have another cute animal story!

Right up our collective alley, kittens.

House of Cards is back, let’s discuss the footwear of Claire Underwood and its significance.

It was International Women’s Day this week, here’s some photo inspiration and a bonus piece in Esquire by the uniformly fabulous and funny Caitlin Moran. Language and content warning, obviously. It’s Caitlin.

Now that the final episodes of Downton Abbey have aired stateside (gorgeous soap opera…failed utterly to live up to its potential…), have a read about the origins of the “tragic gay suicide” trope and why it’s important to show real diversity of real stories. Because it in turns shows real diversity of outcomes to lives lived.

ROAD TRIP!

With my 30th birthday approaching (fingers crossed we can make a trip to New York work to celebrate!), I really loved this article from The Muse about things you don’t have to have figured out by that date. Wonderfully refreshing and actually useful.

Podcasting and Youtubing are two mediums that I love, admire, and wish I had some more practical knowledge about. I’d love to try creating content in either for many reasons, not least of which is that both are platforms full of a lot of generous creators who share a ton of knowledge about their respective crafts (videography, editing, writing, collaboration, etc.) for free. There are also a lot of examples of creative generosity, one of which happened this week in which a vlogger posted a vid about a project he had been working on the subject of which was unintentionally scooped by CPG Grey, and wondering whether or not it was worth releasing his own work now that someone else had tackled the topic. To which CPG Grey released an open letter vid encouraging him to do so, bolstered by a heartening wave of supportive commentators, and talking honestly about the desire to create, the need to be unique, and the perils of a world where it’s next to impossible to have an original thought to talk about.

I own about half a dozen. Seriously.

Have a read and take a scroll through.

This short video about the world’s oldest family business is surprising, beautiful to watch, and just a little bit heartbreaking.

A Ramen Break

“Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what’s for lunch.”
― Orson Welles

I am not a huge ramen fan…unless it is made by Bone Daddies. The same group behind one of my favourite fun food joints, Flesh and Buns, Bone Daddies recently set up what appears to be a semi-permanent pop up in arches along Old Jamaica Road. Which happens, handily, to be within easy walking distance of us.

 photo bone1_zpsyhmanlkf.jpg

Various sections of train arches throughout London are undergoing some development these days. They’ve always been used as shopfronts of various types, but lately they are serving as venues for markets, restaurants, bars, and concept shops of a slightly more eclectic and upscale style. And not in a snobby way in the slightest. The results have been a lot of dis- or underused areas turning into genuine foodie or lifestyle hubs. We seek them out shamelessly.

 photo bone2_zpsss4tk22w.jpg

Bonus husband objectification, but the real prize…

 photo bone3_zpscpjlfnf5.jpg

…is the food. As usual.

If you’re south of the river, it’s definitely worth a look in!

The Church of Brunch

“Bloodies are the centerpiece of the Sunday Brunch–they are also, perhaps, the #1 Prep mixed drink…..
1. Place ice cubes in a large glass
2. Pour in two fingers of vodka
3. Fill glass almost to top with V-8
4. Season with: 2 drops Tabasco, 4 drops Worcestershire, 1/2 tsp. horseradish, 1 tsp. lime juice
5. Add wedge of lime, stir and drink
6. Repeat as needed”
― Lisa Birnbach, The Official Preppy Handbook

Starting from when I went to university and getting increasingly worse as time went on, Church attendance had pained me for years. There was a particularly memorable length of time where I came home from every single service either in tears or enraged by something that had been said over the pulpit, taught by a teacher or leader, or even just discussed in the classes that follow the main communion service in Mormonism which is the central part of Sunday worship. I started taking breaks from attendance when we still lived in the States, a week here or even a month there, believing that if I gave it some time and space, the next time I went to services would be better. Almost inevitably it was not and often it was worse. A sermon would be preached proclaiming things to be true that I believed deeply to be false. A teacher would cite centuries of Church leadership stating a position I thought fundamentally wrong. Stances I held because I felt them to be right and good were decried as dangerous or even evil. Meanwhile, my own research into history was complicating the many, more simple stories I had been taught about my faith all my life.

This wasn’t a one-time thing, it had lasted the better part of a decade. It was spiritually and emotionally draining, and the cognitive dissonance was strongest on the weekends. I came to dread the Sundays when we did attend services as the results were usually bad, and Sundays when we didn’t I spent at home whipping myself into a mass of Puritan-descended guilt. I felt for years that something was wrong with me for thinking and feeling the way I did and having the questions I had. I felt ashamed that I had not been able to find the same answers within the faith that almost everyone important in my life had, and embarrassed to be struggling with a problem that, as far as anyone else could tell (whichever side of faith divide you fall on) was entirely in my own head. To a lot of outside observers who shared their thoughts on the matter with me, it should have been easy to decide either to stay or to go. It wasn’t.

I'm also making brunch dates with my husband a priority. For obvious reasons.

The last time I attended services was here in London.

In news which is not in the least groundbreaking, Mormonism has a major problem with racism in its history and in ways that affect it right up to the present day. Black men could not be ordained to the lay priesthood until just eight years before I was born, and both men and women of African descent were excluded from the most important parts of worship in Mormon temples–which is, by the way, fundamentally necessary in the LDS view of salvation. Meaning it was a valid theological question whether or not black people even got into heaven, and if they did, in what capacity. There are decades of recorded statements on the matter that black men and women did not qualify to enter heave except as “servants.” Cringe.

The LDS church has been attempting to formally address some of the troubled or troubling aspects of its past through a series of essays over the past few years, and I give it a lot of credit for confronting many of these issues head on using good scholarship and historical citations. It has not always done so. One of these essays concerns the history of what has been come to be called the “Priesthood Ban,” though I find this problematic since women are not ordained to the LDS priesthood at all and as mentioned women were just as excluded from what are considered saving ordinances. In some academic circles the more accurate term of “Racial Ban” has gained traction, and it’s the one I use. This essay goes on to explain that a number of folkloric justifications for the Racial Ban developed in the LDS community over the years (quite true) and that church leaders today disavowed those previous statements and reasoning (this essay was the first disavowal I have ever seen, and is fairly weak, but I’m willing to take the intention in good faith). It’s a long overdue piece of writing, and doesn’t go far enough in clearing up the decades and centuries of racially tinged folklore and official teachings of the church, in my opinion, but it’s a step forward.

2016-02-21 15.22.42

It was after this particular essay had been released that Jeff and I made the decision to give LDS services in London a real shot. We’d only attended church sporadically for the first few months of living here because I was frankly burned out from leaving services crying or ranting, and Jeff was not far behind me in exasperation, though he was much less vocal about it. Nevertheless, it was worth a shot recommitting ourselves to regular attendance, we decided, and so off we went one December Sunday with a renewed sense of dedication and a quiet uptick in hope. Perhaps all the frustrations were mostly our fault and if we shut our mouths more often and tried listening instead, we’d notice the things that bothered us less and the things that uplifted us more.

Plus, we were a bit lonely. Growing up in the military meant that the Mormon congregations we attended were a massive part of my family’s social structure. No matter what country we moved to, we were assured of finding an instant community of people ready to welcome us with open arms. As adults and expats in our own rights now, Jeff and I were missing that community, having found nothing to replace it with. The congregation we were assigned to at the time was in South London and almost entirely made up of first or second generation African or Afro-Caribbean immigrants to the UK. There seemed to be a couple of expats and a lot of people from “somewhere else” as we were so I was hopeful we’d find a group of people with similar experiences to us who would have a lot of wisdom to share.

The day in question, just before Christmas, it so happened that the Sunday school teacher was a visiting white American man who, rather than teaching the lesson topic he had been assigned, decided to expound to the congregation (of, again, almost entirely black members) his feelings about the recently released race essay. They were not entirely positive and the main gist of this speech was that he was puzzled that leaders had “disavowed” the teachings he had always “known” to be truth. I could have felt more sympathy for him if he had not gone on to lecture the members as to why “you people” were not able to be ordained to the priesthood, citing the very folkloric teachings the essay tried to distance itself from as truth, and growing more animated in the defense of those racist theories as he went on.

I sat there for as long as I could but at some point I got up, found the bishop in another part of the church, apologized profusely for what was about to happen, and burst into tears. After first assuring himself that the teacher got back on track to his appointed teaching topic, that kind bishop sat and listened to me as I sobbed for an hour about how for years, every single time I had entered a church building, I had heard a lesson like this. Racist, sexist, politically tinged in a way to make me wince, anti-LGBT in ways that violated my conscience, and so on. I was (and remain) deeply conflicted that as a white, admittedly privileged woman, I had felt offended where clearly people who had far more cause than me to be were not, but as I explained to that patient man, my reaction was not the result of that one hour, but the years proceeding it. Church did not feel safe for me, and I genuinely felt that there was no place for me in the organization I had been raised in. I fundamentally disagreed with too much of it, and as time went on the disagreements and dissent were getting bigger and bigger.

File 28-02-2016, 21 42 02

He listened. He acknowledged the social/political/historical divides I felt (even validated a few of them as being genuinely hard to reconcile with the faith). He didn’t try to cite quotes from leaders or scripture at me as previous bishops I had spoken to on the subject had done. There was genuine love and sincere care in the way he spoke to me; it was the kindest encounter I had had with church leaders in years.

And as I said, it was the last time I attended services, unless staying with family or escorting visiting friends. Jeff and I decided to take another break after this particular Sunday, this one intentional and for as long as we needed; guilt was not allowed. We found other things to do on weekends: museums, walks, markets, exploring the city, and just generally being with one another. It was spiritually restful. A few months later, a spate of high-profile excommunications took place that cemented for both of us that the LDS church was not where we wanted to be nor aligned with what we support and believe. We did not believe several of the key truth claims, we could not in good conscience support the leadership on the many public stances they had taken, and neither of us were comfortable with the idea of raising a family in the structure–particularly daughters. Even to keep the peace with friends and family, there was no point in even going through the motions of attendance or participation. We were done.

These days we attend what I only semi-satirically call, The Church of Brunch. On Sunday mornings we now usually go to one of a handful of venues that do a proper Yank brunch–or occasionally get adventurous and try to find a new joint famed on blogs or social media for its protein and carb heavy concoctions. We linger over food. We debate, argue, joke, talk news, gossip about work, and plan for our future. We’ve had some of the deepest and most meaningful conversations of our marriage over pots of tea and avocado toast (sausages and waffles on his side). We often include friends, growing the new community we are trying to build for ourselves as proverbial strangers in a strange land, but more often we use it as a time to reconnect after long weeks focused on careers.

It’s not a global network or system of belief, and I suspect most people would probably laugh about it if I tried to explain it to them, but the Church of Brunch has done me and us a lot of good. It’s filled a gap and created a safe space in a time slot that was previously dreaded and painful. It’s reliable, uncomplicated, and good in the way that simple, basic things often are. We plan on including future friends, children, and even strangers (we strike up the oddest and best conversations with our co-diners). And it’s delicious. We expect to be devotees for a long time.

*all images from my Instagram