Rachel Marie Stone's Blog, page 11

September 2, 2013

Turn, turn, my wheel!

Turn, turn, my wheel! Turn round and round Without a pause, without a sound:   So spins the flying world away! This clay, well mixed with marl and sand, Follows the motion of my hand; For some must follow, and some command,   Though all are made of clay! Henry Wadsworth Longfellow—Keramos. L. 1. I am on […]
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Published on September 02, 2013 02:00

August 29, 2013

What Are You FOR?

No, no, not what are you for, as in, why are you here–what are you for, as opposed to “what are you against?” In the (sometimes-exhausting) world of social media and blogging–especially in an election season!–it can seem like everyone is always talking about what they are against: what they fear will happen if the […]
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Published on August 29, 2013 05:00

August 28, 2013

Kicking the Outrage Habit in the Blogosphere (with stick-figure cartoons!)

“All our life, so far as it has definite form, is but a mass of habits,” wrote the psychologist William James. I think that may be as true online as it is in real life. We tend to do things in a fairly regular pattern; log onto email first, check the news, browse social media, […]
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Published on August 28, 2013 06:30

August 27, 2013

‘Pregorexia’ and Postpartum Priorities

What does it say about a culture if when a baby’s born, the mom’s tummy size gets as much attention as the baby? The British magazine OK! came under fire earlier this summer for running a feature story on Kate Middleton’s “post-baby weight loss regime.” Even as moms around the world tweeted and blogged their […]
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Published on August 27, 2013 06:00

August 26, 2013

You’ve Got Mail, A Swedish movie about Death, Kissing Dating Goodbye, and Finding Love despite Pride and Prejudice.

My husband and I basically fell in love via AOL instant message conversations that led to daily email missives and then to phone calls and then, you know, to actually hanging out in person. We knew each other in ‘real’ life but I was so afraid of saying something stupid in front of him that […]
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Published on August 26, 2013 03:57

August 23, 2013

My Top 5 Books on The Body

The September print issue of Christianity Today has my recommendations for the ‘top 5′ books on the body. It was really hard to pick only five, but here they are. They’re diverse: some are about sex, some are about food, some are explicitly focused on Christian belief and behavior, some are totally secular. All come […]
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Published on August 23, 2013 05:36

August 22, 2013

“Peace, Be Still,” The Fisherman’s Prayer, and anchors for the soul.

There is a very old prayer–known as the “fisherman’s prayer” or the “seafarer’s prayer”–that goes something like this: “Dear God, be close to me; thy sea is so wide, and my boat is so small.” To me, this prayer captures something of what life itself feels like: the world is big and wide, and not […]
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Published on August 22, 2013 05:11

August 21, 2013

How To Make (Psychological and Emotional) Space to Create.

My children spend more time building with Lego than just about anything else. While they covet and save up for sets like any good little American consumers, they spent most of their time re-mixing those sets (and their thousands of eBay purchased random pieces) into wildly new creations. Seriously, some of the stuff they come […]
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Published on August 21, 2013 02:00

August 19, 2013

The Stunningly Illustrated Children’s Bible That Should Still Be In Print (But Isn’t)

There is an appealing, almost haunting spareness to the Taize Picture Bible (1968) in both word and image. Published in the USA by Fortress Press (mine is a fourth edition, 1978), the “note to readers” says “The guiding editorial policy in this adaptation has been to facilitate understanding by readers of many age levels while […]
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Published on August 19, 2013 06:30

August 16, 2013

Obsessing With (And About) David Rakoff

I identified with the late David Rakoff in a number of ways. Sure, I’m a straight, Christian woman; he was gay and (as far as I can tell) non-believing, but we share a Jewish heritage and what he once called the “Jewish worldview”—the idea that “all joy houses the Newtonian capacity for an equal and […]
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Published on August 16, 2013 08:22