This Essay is to Me...

Posted by: Kava at 3 days ago in

Like many geeks and nerds of my generation I grew up as an avid reader. A lot of this was helped along by my mother choosing to take me to her job at the public library instead of sticking me in daycare when I was small. I went on to major in English, and every room I inhabit somehow ends up covered in teetering, yet somehow still organized in Dewey Decimal, piles of books. Every time a major life change happened to me, I can remember what book I was reading. One of the books I read often when I needed something quiet and comforting, was Anne Fadiman’s Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader.

In it she some how managed to capture, better than I ever could, what makes old books, new books, scribbled in books, text books, books given to you by friends and lovers, books that changed your life, books that gave you a few moments pleasure, and books that made you think, such wonderful and unique objects in a person’s life. If you only ever read one essay in your life, read My Odd Shelf. It is the single greatest piece of non-fiction writing I have ever had the pleasure of discovering.

I came across an interview with Anne Fadiman lately, which is worth reading in whole, but she made an interesting point:
“At the moment, most blogs are terrible. Of course they’re terrible! The form is in its infancy. People who used to write in their journals are now writing in their blogs, and they haven’t yet learned the art of self-editing. But I think that in future, the blog may become what the personal essay was in the past. And I find that a hopeful prospect.”

As well as being an ardent book lover, I also adore technology, and view the Internet as a very positive tool for creativity and education. And I think there is a very good point to be made here. Most blogs are terrible. There is no editing, there is no selection process for what gets published, but among the millions of angsty teenage blogs out in cyberspace, there are a handful of amazing writers who would have no other way to write and be heard. A great example is the blog of Belle de Jour. Belle de Jour, also known as Brooke Magnanti, kept a blog of her life as high class London call girl while she was putting herself through grad school. Magnanti is an amazing writer. Her stories, I’d even call some of her posts essays, were beautiful pieces of writing that without the Internet I would never have had the pleasure of reading. In fact, her blog became so popular she received a book deal as well.

I don’t know what technology will do to the paper and glue book. I can’t imagine a world in which I can’t pick up beloved books given to me by friends, or reread my favorite childhood stories with the exact same covers, stains, and dogged eared pages that marked my first reading. But I do like to think that literature as an art will continue going strong. That with the larger audience now available to the authors’ of every possible interest and genre, given time the blog, too, will become an important literary genre.

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Lessons from WoW

Posted by: Kava at 13 days ago in

The lovely folks over at Blog Azeroth posted an interesting discussion topic this week: What has WoW taught you? Here are a few of my thoughts.

I’ve learned how to work as a team,

And the rewards it can bring.

I’ve learned to enjoy the company of friends,

And enemies.

I’ve learned that no matter how much fun one is having,

Everything changes.

But most importantly I have learned that when there is a big red button in front of you that says, “Do not push this button”, you always push that button.

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New Content and Dancing Bears

Posted by: Kava at 20 days ago in

The problem with real life is how much it gets in the way of more important things; like blogging. This would be a lot easier if I didn’t actually enjoy my rl job. But I digress, new content!

I killed that dragon good. Alright, I healed the other people who killed that dragon good; but still, dead dragon.

Also, I’ve been thinking lately, what makes a guild stand out? What makes one guild excellent, and another terrible? Is it teamwork? Is it skill? No, I think I’ve finally found the answer. The ranking of your guild is directly related to the number of druids in your raid (okay, I may be a little bias):

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Angry Trees and a Shiny Heroic

Posted by: Kava at 35 days ago in

The best part about downing heroic Lady Deathwhisper was not the sense of accomplishment, nor the satisfaction of seeing hours of work coming together, it wasn’t even the awesome achievement.

No, the best part was being one of three angry trees!

Kava along side the indomitable Nightmusic and intrepid Lirpa.

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Non-Warcraft music in Warcraft

Posted by: Kava at 42 days ago in

As much as I love the Warcraft music, I also enjoying playing while listening to other music. When I’m dpsing (it still occasionally happens) I like to listen to fast modern music with strong rhythmic patterns. Heavy, fast rhythms make a lot of sense when I’m starfalling stuff in the face. When I’m healing, I tend towards softer music, either classical or something else slow and melodic. I find the different music helps me get into the different moods that healing and dpsing require. Killing things requires an adrenaline rush to keep you on the edge of your toes. Healing requires patience and calmness, the ability to continue healing the hunter standing in the fire instead of turning around and starfalling /him/ in the face. So I’ve been going through my music lately to figure out what of my own music is the best for different fights and so far my most played seems to be:
Dpsing ICC: Ladytron, Little Boots, t.A.T.u
Dpsing Ulduar: Abney Park, Bond, Apocalyptica, (Nothing screams boss fight like sexy cellists.)
Dpsing ToC: The Baseballs, Run Lola Run, Quake II soundtrack
Healing ICC: Chopin, Clara Schumann
Healing Ulduar: Apocalyptica, (Cello, is there anything it can’t do?) Erik Satie
Healing ToC: Ed Alleyne-Johnson, Bach

I’m curious if other people do the same thing when they’re called on to switch roles often enough. Is there certain kinds of music that raiders find better for one job over another?

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