Monday, December 26, 2011

What Christmas Meant

Christmas is two days away, and our thoughts turn—well, our thoughts turn to the Jets and Giants, most likely, and to the confrontation Saturday between the happily married Eli Manning with the reputedly supermodel-distracted Mark Sanchez. The rest of our thoughts, though, turn restlessly toward the day after—toward Christmas and its unsettled meanings. What does the holiday exactly mean these days? What has it ever meant? Bill O’Reilly knows, or thinks he does; a sacred holiday hated by secularists and betrayed, sort of, by materialists. Others among the more proudly atheistic, new or old, take a grimmer view of it, hating its enforced coercive happiness.
Scrooges_third_visitor-John_Leech.jpeg
One thing for sure: Christmas as we understand it—Santa, and the tree and the gifts and the department stores and even the Christmas carol as a distinct form; what might technically be called the whole megillah—is a modern invention, dating back to the long Victorian years, the eighteen-forties to seventies, and saturated with the whole of the era’s fragrant, intoxicating ambiguities. Just a year ago, I spent week after week—the whole holiday, actually—reading Victorian Christmas literature in a cubicle (no, call it a cubby hole, more Victorianly) in the blessed precincts of the New York Public Library, an institution in need of no change. I dipped deep into what the ones who thought up the modern Christmas—the secularized, materialist feast—thought they were about. (I was researching a series of lectures on the modern meanings of winter, which I gave in Canada, though they remain quite invisible, and inaudible, in America.)
There was Dickens to re-read, of course, the great Chaz Boz, so much among us in this two hundredth anniversary of his birth, and his “Christmas Carol,” which, it turns out, tells a more complicated story than we know. There was the meta-story to learn, of how Dickens took it up both as a commercial enterprise, self-publishing the story, and as a reformist tract. And the odd story to absorb of how it was the English reformers of John Stuart Mill’s school who, at first, looked at it dubiously—is just giving away turkeys really good political economy?—while the great reactionary Thomas Carlyle embraced it, because he loved the Total Makeover it proposed for the Victorian heart. For Carlyle as for Dickens, the concepts of reformist liberalism—the gradual, the incremental, the evolutionary—seemed inadequate to cure what was wrong with Scrooge. He needs an epiphany, not a Reform Bill.
(And Carlyle found an epiphany in it. Jane Welsh Carlyle, his formidable wife, wrote that upon finishing “A Christmas Carol ” her husband “was seized with a perfect convulsion of hospitality, and actually insisted on improvising two dinner parties with only a day between.”)
Then one learned how violently and quickly Carlyle rejected Dickens and his idea of Christmas after Carlyle realized that Dickens really meant it all: Dickens, Carlyle wrote in alarm, “thought that men ought to be buttered up and the world made soft and accommodating for them, and all sorts of fellows have turkey for their Christmas dinner. Commanding and controlling and punishing them he would give up without any misgivings in order to coax and soothe and delude them into doing right.” Shocked though he was, he was right: Dickens did think it made more moral and political sense to coax and soothe than to command and control. Men buttered up were men made better. It’s at the heart of his view of the world, and of Christmas.
A lot of fun, too, to see how the great rival among Victorian novelists, Anthony Trollope, was forced by commercial demand to write his own Christmas stories, and so used them to not-too-subtly mock Dickens—Mr. Popular Sentiment, as he calls him in “The Warden.” In one of Trollope’s Christmas stories a woman in a Paris hotel on Christmas Eve is suddenly seized with the Dickensian Christmas spirit and goes, all by herself in the middle of the night, to the hotel kitchen to make a soothing mustard plaster for her husband’s sore throat—only to enter the room of an unmarried gentleman and mistakenly, and scandalously, mustard plaster him. Don’t trust mushy altruistic impulses on Christmas Eve, is Trollope’s lesson; they lead to embarrassment more often than epiphany.
Of all the Christmas Victorian writers, though, the one I read with most pleasure, and who seemed to me most in need of revival, is the most unknown: Benjamin Farjeon, one of the really singular characters of nineteenth-century English literature. Farjeon’s first Christmas stories were written in the eighteen-sixties, far off in New Zealand, where he had emigrated after a London childhood. He sent them to Dickens, and upon Dickens’s encouragement—those were optimistic days—Farjeon took a ship and came right back to England, where he wrote endless numbers of those three-decker novels beloved of the time, with a particular feeling and fame for his Christmas stuff.
What makes Farjeon’s Christmas books so interesting—hallucinatory, in their way—is that Farjeon had been raised in London as an Orthodox Jew. Although he had, as they said then, left the formal practice of the old faith—ironically, or maybe not, his literary heyday was at the height of the premiership of that other utterly Jewish, non-Jewish Jew, Disraeli—Farjeon’s literary Christmas family, his Cratchit family, is called the Silvers, with two daughters named, of all odd Victorian things, Ruth and Rachel. Christmas heroines named Ruth and Rachel Silver! The “tell,” as one might say, is self-evident. But it is left to this apparently assimilated Jewish family to represent the Christmas spirit and Christmas values.
A recent student of those three-decker Victorian novels has compared them to today’s television dramas, since the length was fixed in advance—one hour now, three volumes then—and Farjeon is one of those writers who are the equivalent of show-runners today, admirable, and enviable for the energy of their narrative impulse, the industry of their manufacture, and the intensity of their caricatural gifts, more than for the Jamesian polish of their imagery. Ambiguous he is not, but hypnotically readable he is, and his Christmas stories, particularly the 1871 “Blade-o’-Grass,” are, like the best popular television drama, art in which one recognizes the melodramatic impulse even as one assents to the intensity of the vision achieved.
Blade-o’-Grass, the heroine of Farjeon’s book, is a friendless girl of the streets, nameless except for that nickname earned by her wandering, wind-blown nature. She grows up, has a love affair, and a baby, with a rascal named Tom Beadle—a love rather like Nancy and Bill Sykes, save that, though everyone seems to accept that Blade-o’-Grass is a prostitute, she isn’t. She is just a girl wandering the streets, who can’t do the worthy work of needlepoint or become a seamstress because she doesn’t know how to read or write. One of the many impressive things in the story—it must have been truly shocking in 1871—is that she makes no apologies for her out-of-wedlock relationship with Jonny, despite the urgings of the good people who patronize her to do so. “I love him and he loves me,” she explains to some do-gooders.
The other impressive thing is that Farjeon not only secularizes Christmas, as his master Dickens had already done, but radicalizes it. The moral voice of the book is a self-educated mason, named Robert Truefit. (Subtlety in nomenclature was not Farjeon’s strongest suit.) Truefit is, in effect, the early voice of what would become the British Labour Party: rejecting the violent rhetoric of his more unstable working men confreres, he insists that only a program of reform can alter the circumstances of poverty. He makes a rather prosy, but pointed speech, against the complacent, one-percent Parliaments of his day:
While they legislate, girls like Blade-o’-Grass are springing up around them, and living poisoned lives. And while they legislate, if there be truth in what preachers preach, souls are being dammed by force of circumstance. What should be the aim of those who govern? So to govern as to produce the maximum of human happiness and comfort, and the minimum of human misery. Not to the few—to the many, to all.
What is touching is that it remains entirely a Christmas story, insistently so, not by accident or improvisation but on purpose, full of lovely outdoor December effects. “Something seems to me wanting in Christmas,” the radical Truefit says at one point, “when there is no snow. When it snows, the atmosphere between heaven and earth is bridged by the purity of the happy time.”
It turns out—this is Victorian popular fiction—that Blade-o’-Grass is really the long-lost twin daughter of Ruth Silver, who was adopted, and the story ends with a family reunion and hope for all. But the Christmas lesson that the Silvers teach us, along with Robert Truefit, is that the holiday can reconcile the need for change with the love of comfort. “God help the poor” is what the preachers say, Charles Truefit remarks at one moment, but amends it: “Man help the poor,” he explains, is his religious motto. A hundred and forty years later, it’s still hard to see what more can be said.
So God bless the ghost of the Jewish, Christmas-loving Benjamin Farjeon (an inspiring father, too, apparently: most of his kids became writers, and his daughter Eleanor wrote the poem “Morning Has Broken,” which was performed in the nineteen-seventies as a pop song by the soon-to-be Muslim Cat Stevens). For that matter, God bless us, everyone, particularly those in red and white who will be arriving with gifts on Christmas Eve, and those gallant Rex-led footballers in green and white who will be departing the field in victory earlier that day. 




The Original Source

Assembly is Required for These Kit Homes

This house may look traditional but it's a modular, energy-efficient, kit home.
Photo: Westchester Modular Homes
Despite seemingly endless interest in decorating, landscaping, buying, staging and selling houses, actually building a house is a mysterious process that is mostly left to professionals. But for some homeowners, buying and in some cases assembling, a prefabricated home holds appeal.
A kit home can streamline the process of custom-building a house. While the prices aren’t bargain-basement, kit homes can cost less. Keep in mind that these homes cost more to build than just the sticker price on the kit. Buyers might have to pony up for windows, cabinets, fixtures, contractors, subcontractors and other features and services, in addition to purchasing the land where the house is located. The total cost to build the house, minus cost of land is called the turnkey price.
Slideshow: Kit Homes
Slideshow: Kit Homes
In the first decades of the last century, aspiring homeowners could order their house from a Sears catalog. The tradition is still alive, although not as widespread. Consumers in Sweden, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Germany and Britain can order homes from another major retailer, IKEA, whose BoKlok branch sells terraced houses and apartment buildings.
After so much expansion resulting in a glut of empty McMansions, some home buyers think kit homes could be an answer to their desire to return to simpler, more energy efficient housing —especially because today’s kit homes are often very green. What follows is a selection of prefabricated houses in a range of styles — from modern and futuristic to rustic to historic reproductions — nearly all which have energy efficient and sustainable options.
Check out five of the coolest kit homes:
Luminhaus by Rocio Romero
Kit cost:
approx. $24,000 in 2004
Turnkey cost:
under $100,000, excluding land
Bedrooms:
2
Bathrooms:
1
Square Footage:
1,152
This Luminhaus, located in Virginia, costs under $100,000 to construct.
Photo: Luminhaus.com
Chilean-American architect Rocio Romero brought the modernist prefab to acclaim with her LV Series of energy efficient habitations. The LV models are highly customizable and environmentally friendly. The home arrives as a kit of parts, and should be assembled onsite by a general contractor. Windows are not included, since requirements vary by location; Romero’s website cites estimates for window packages ranging from $15,000 to $30,000. Cabinetry and interior walls and finishes are not included with the kit.
The LV pictured here, Luminhaus, located in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, was the first to be purchased and assembled. Luminhaus serves as a guest house retreat available for rental to nature lovers.

Caroline from Gastineau Log Homes
Kit cost:
$95,000
Turnkey cost:
approx. $275,000
Bedrooms:
3
Bathrooms:
2 full, 1 half
Square Footage:
2,086
This Gastineau-modified Caroline residence is in Missouri.
Photo: Gastineau Log Homes
This particular Gastineau modified Caroline residence is in Eldon, Mo. It has a two-story great room space that includes the living room, kitchen, and dining area, with grand windows. A lofted second story offers views through those windows to the Osage River at the bottom of a bluff. In addition to the 2,086 square feet of living space, there's 1,072 square feet of deck, porch and balcony space.
Gastineau kits consist of the complete exterior (logs, roof, windows, doors, porches, dormers) plus the interior structure (floors, walls, doors). They do not include finished items like cabinets or electrical, plumbing or HVAC systems. The home is built by either the homeowner or builder over the course of six to eight weeks, depending on size. It usually takes about four months to move in after delivery.

weeHouse by Alchemy Architecture
Kit cost:
kits range from $79,000 – $270,000+
Turnkey cost:
pictured house cost $200,000
Bedrooms:
3
Bathrooms:
2
Square Footage:
1,200
weeHouse by Alchemy Architecture says it is built with sustainable materials.
Photo: Scott Ervin & Geoff Warner
The weeHouse line of modular homes from Alchemy Architecture is built to withstand the strains of winds and earthquakes. They’re made with sustainable materials like bamboo flooring and energy efficient features like passive solar design.
Located outside Toronto, this year-round structure is made of one horizontal and one vertical module, each 14 feet wide. It’s constructed from stained pine “corn crib” siding and oxidized copper green painted “Container” siding, red pine interiors, IKEA cabinets and Andersen windows.

K1 by KitHAUS
Kit cost:
$75,000
Turnkey cost:
estimated $85,000
Bedrooms:
1
Bathrooms:
1
Square Footage:
approx. 300
This model K1 by KitHAUS was constructed for a Southern California client.
Photo: kithaus.com
Pictured here is a onetime model K1 aluminum house when it was located at KitHAUS’ former fabrication facility. The California-based modernist company has since relocated facilities, and this module was reconstructed for a client in Southern California.
Typical cost for a K1 module includes all interior and exterior finishes, insulation and electrical, but bathrooms and kitchens cost extra. Typical cost of a build-out after grading is about $4,000 and takes about a week to construct. KitHAUS structures are lightweight, and most are small, so they are well suited for placement in difficult-to-reach locations. They can be used as standalone studios or offices, and are adaptable to off-grid use.

Colonial 1 by Westchester Modular
Kit cost:
$70- $100 per square foot
Turnkey cost:
$110 - $185 per square foot
Bedrooms:
varies
Bathrooms:
varies
Square Footage:
varies
This Colonial 1 by Westchester Modular can be built in 45 days.
Photo: Westchester Modular Homes
The New York-based builder Westchester Modular offers custom homes in colonial, ranch, cape, and other designs. They look like familiar and traditional house styles but are modular, meaning they are built in cubes and pieces in a factory, on assembly lines. The manufacturer includes all the drywall, electric, plumbing, cabinets, sinks, and fixtures. Then the house is delivered to the job site, where it is set in place by a crane on a foundation. Later, a contractor connects it and does all the site work, including driveway and landscaping.
John Colucci, vice president of sales and marketing, says it’s a misconception that modular homes are of lesser quality than conventionally built homes, citing materials he uses like Andersen windows and all-plywood construction. “It can save a customer money because of our purchasing power. I’m building three houses here a week, so I don’t go through middlemen.” There’s also the time advantage gained when an entire home can be built in 45 days.




You can actually play these Angry Birds Christmas Lights

'Tis the season for ridiculous, over-the-top Christmas light shows. But while most are simply fun to watch, this one's fun to play.
Check out the Angry Birds Christmas Lights game, and turn a piggish green with envy:
Using over 20,000 lights, the game is powered by two computers and ten Light-O-Rama 16-channel controllers. Apparently the 'joystick' has a long enough cord to let motorists play without leaving their cars, and they can even tune in to 99.1 FM to hear the game's audio.
[Related: North Korea warns against Christmas lights near border]
That joystick works much like the iOS game, too. The three buttons shoot left, right and center; the longer you hold a button down, the higher the shot goes. Best of all, it's environmentally conscious: each play-through costs less than one cent worth of electricity.
The maniac behind this insanity (posting as 'kumbaric' on Youtube) is somewhat obsessed with decorative holiday lights gaming. Last year brought us Snowball Blaster, while this past Halloween it was Punkin Chunkin'. He's even tackled video games before in the killer 2009 Guitar Hero light show game.
Can we get a Super Mario light show game next year? Please?
Like us on Facebook and follow @yahoogames on Twitter for the latest stories and chances to win free stuff!




Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Fashion show of Plant Life



Colombia held a unique fashion show titled 'Biofashion'.
Fashion show featured a variety of collections made ​​from living plants. 
(Luis Robayo / AFP)


5 Types Creambath by Type of Hair



Basically, the technique is almost similar to the cream bath hair mask. Cream with certain nutrients applied to the hair and scalp, then left to soak. There are many choices of cream bath - carefully first whether the types used are appropriate for your hair type.



ginseng
Suitable for the type of hair loss and brittle.

Ginseng is believed to provide benefits to the hair and stimulates the blood circulation in your scalp to keep hair healthy and strong.

avocado
Suitable for dry and damaged hair.

Avocados contain lots of oils that will protect the hair, melembapkannya, and cover the damaged kutilkula layer on the hair.

Aloe vera
Suitable for normal hair.

Aloe vera contains saponins which have the ability to kill germs. Aloe vera to help moisturize the hair follicles and clean the dirt on the hair.

strawberries
Suitable for hair dyed.

The anti-oxidants contained in strawberries trust is highest among the fruits and other vegetables. Therefore strawberries suitable for those who do the painting of hair, because hair received a lot of harmful chemicals.

hazelnut
Suitable for dull hair and less luminous.

The resulting oil hazelnuts useful as a barrier release agents useful in the hair and scalp. Nutrition moisturizer that penetrates deep into the hair shaft will leave hair black and shiny.