Rosemerry Writes Wins Liebster Award!

Liebster Award

šŸŽ‰Wow, Rosemerry Writes won the Liebster Award!šŸŽ‰ The Liebster Award’s purpose is to recognize and promote great new blogs (defined as blogs with 200 or fewer followers). You can check out the rules here.

Thank you so much, Lebana, for nominating me!šŸ¤— I enjoy Lebana’s haiku, but so far what I like best about her blog is its authentic voice. I was really inspired by her post ā€œNegative Inspirationā€. That took guts to write, and even more to post for all the world to read. She helped give me the courage to post my own truth. It also made me want to write about some of my own negative inspiration in a future post. Whereas Lebana discussed negative inspiration from her father’s abuse, I plan to discuss the negative inspiration I took from many of the teachers I had. Her recent tanka “True Love is Like Ghosts” made me think and I want to write about the connections her poem brought out in my mind. I admire Lebana’s positivity and faith in a loving God. Her Thoughtful Thursdays always show these qualities. I also admire her for posting regularly and always finding the perfect picture to accompany her writing. That’s no mean feat!

This response has several parts, so I’m separating them with lines for easy reading. Keep reading for some fun Q&A and my nominee list!


Lebana asked:

Q: Where do you live?

A: I live in the beautiful San Francisco Bay Area in California.

Q: What’s the best thing about the area where you live?

A: It’s hard to choose! I love the diverse mix of cultures. The high school I attended had students from over 200 countries, speaking over 50 different languages! As a result, I’m used to pale people being a minority and prefer it that way. We’re not perfect by any means, but I also love the tolerance that comes from such diversity. It’s wonderful to live in a creative and cultural mecca. I’ve had a lot of kooky “only in San Francisco” experiences; you never know what you’ll see around the next corner. There’s a lot of fuel here for a writer.

I love our geographic diversity as well. There are few other places on Earth you can experience the ocean, snowy mountains, redwood forests, wetlands, canyons, and more all within a few miles. Our foothills have a special place in my heart. In the spring they turn so green you feel like you’re in Ireland. Flat land with no hills in sight just feels wrong.

Q: Where is your favorite place in the world?

A: Hmm. I’m going to say the swimming pool. It’s my happy place.

Q: What’s your funniest travel story?

A: I went to Germany on exchange in high school with my best friend, Miles. My brother had previously gone on the same trip, so when we went to Hellbrunn, also known as Wasserspiele, we knew what was coming. “Wasserspiele” means “water play” and Hellbrunn is full of trick fountains and automatons that run on water. We kept it to ourselves so as not to spoil the surprise for the others, though. The tour guide showed our group an outdoor table that the bishop loved to have his guests eat at. It had just rained, so the rest of our group weren’t clued in by puddles in the area. One of our schoolmates, John, was invited to sit at the table along with some other tourists. Miles and I called to him to give us his backpack. John had his CD player and several collectable CDs in it that we knew he didn’t want getting soaked. Of course John didn’t understand why we wanted him to hand over his pack. “Trust us,” we told him. “You really want to give it to us right now.” John finally handed his backpack over. After the tour guide gave a brief spiel, he turned a hidden faucet. Suddenly water spurted up underneath the guests, soaking them! John was really glad he’d listened to us!

If you ever get a chance to visit Hellbrunn, it’s a stop you shouldn’t miss, both fun and memorable. Just wear stuff you don’t mind getting wet. šŸ™‚

Q: What would you say is your biggest accomplishment?

A: I was severely burned during my sophomore year of college. Despite this interruption, I still served as my local sorority’s president and graduated in five years. Less than half of all students graduate within five years. Then I went on to complete my teacher training, though I was hanging on by the skin of my teeth by the end of the year. My health was worsening precipitously, but I still finished and received my dream job offer. It still hurts that I had to say no because my health had become so poor, but I’m very proud of myself.

Q: What makes you happiest?

A: The company of dogs.

Q: How many countries have you visited so far?

A: Three. Unless Texas counts. šŸ˜‰ I’d like to visit Japan and a long list of other countries.

Q: Who is your role model?

A: Longfellow. He was also burned severely and from my research I believe he suffered from the same pain condition I do. Yet he wrote so beautifully.

Q: What can’t you live without?

A: Animals. Especially dogs.

Q: How many posts have you made so far?

hitchikers guide greenieA: Forty-two, not counting this one. (Wow! I amaze myself) Tip of the hat to my fellow Douglas Adams fans. šŸ˜€

Q: What is your message to new bloggers out there?

A: Keep on blogging! Stay true to yourself and blog to express your real point of view. Don’t chase the likes, but cherish them. Be social, but try not to let the social stuff overwhelm you. If you need to put limits on your blog for your own sake, that’s okay.


My Liebster Award Nominees:

Drumroll, please!

Drumroll, please!

  • Blind Injustice:Ā This blog should be a major website. Brendan writes so thoughtfully and incisively about injustice and how we should address it.
  • Mind Matters:Ā I only recently discovered this blog, but I feel Donna Marie’s voice needs amplifying in this time of pervasive malignant narcissism.
  • Queerly Texan:Ā Alyssa is my sister in chronic illness and being LGBTQIA+ (sheesh! Could that acronym get much longer? We need a shorter term, y’all). Since a large portion of my relatives are Texan, I know it can’t be easy being either in Texas. Another very important voice with so much to say.
  • Tina’s Radical Rant:Ā Tina is one of my oldest friends and the secret to our friendship is simple: Tina always speaks her mind. She’s an amazing social justice activist with a focus on LGBTQIA+ and socioeconomic issues.
  • Umm, I can’t find a fifth. Y’all are too popular! šŸ˜‰

Congratulations! Should you accept, please feel free to take your time writing your acceptance post as I know there’s a lot to do! Find out how to accept here.

If I didn’t nominate you, please don’t feel left out. You’re probably too popular to meet the requirements! šŸ˜‰ Please keep reading for more Q&A (I answer most of the questions I’m asking my nominees!), and don’t forget to check out the amazing nominees!


The following questions are for my nominees, but I don’t think it’s fair if I don’t answer them, too. So here goes!

1. How stoked are you? šŸ˜€

2. Why did you start blogging?

I’m pretty opinionated and I wanted to speak up about current issues. I also want to be published and know that having a “social media platform” is considered pretty important these days.

3. What keeps you blogging?

On bad days, it’s my public promise that I’d post on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. On good days it’s because I have something to say or that I want to share with my readers. I’m always coming up with ideas!

4. Which post has been the most difficult for you to write and/or publish so far? Why?

My #MeToo posts were the most difficult for me to write and publish so far. It was retraumatizing to write down all the ugly things that had happened and terrifying to publish since my experiences had taught me to expect more abuse for speaking out. But I thought it was very important to share my story and I’ve needed to for some time.

5. Have you published a post that was unexpectedly popular? Why didn’t you expect it to be popular, and why do you think it was?

My recent post “The End’s in Sight!”Ā is my most popular post so far, much to my surprise! Since my blog nominally focuses on writing and my opinions, I just didn’t expect a post about my cross stitch project nearing completion to get the most likes. “Trump, King of Dulness” also surprised me. In this case, I didn’t expect a post connecting Alexander Pope’s sharp-tongued poetry to current politics. Both are good lessons in why not to chase the likes; you can never predict how readers will react!

6. What’s your theme song?

It varies, but “Houki Boshi” by Younha is often at the top of the list.

For a translation of the lyrics, click here. One of my favorite verses is, in English:

IfĀ perchanceĀ IĀ couldĀ haveĀ becomeĀ aĀ comet
IĀ wouldĀ goĀ flyingĀ throughĀ theĀ sky
NoĀ matterĀ whatĀ kindĀ ofĀ tomorrowĀ comes,Ā thisĀ thoughtĀ isĀ strong
SoĀ myĀ cometĀ isĀ unbreakable

7. Name a poet you enjoy (other than yourself šŸ˜‰) and tell us why.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is an amazing writer. He and I share health issues, and he has written some of my favorite poems. Researching him I learned that he was the first to translate The Divine Comedy into English. The Divine Comedy, along with many of his original poems, speak eloquently of my experiences. He wrote the poem that became one of my favorite Christmas carols, “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day”:

Many sayings we have today, like “two ships passing in the night”, come from his poetry.

8. If you could have one superpower, what would you choose (heroic and villainous are both okay!)?

I know it’s a common one, but I’ve dreamed of flying so often, that would be my first choice.

9. If you were a character in a novel, how would you want to be described?

In sunlight oms hair was dark mauve with copper highlights. Not that om saw much sunlight. Oms pale skin was so translucent he thought he could trace oms entire circulatory system.

10. Who is the voice of your generation? Why?

The Smashing Pumpkins. They just really sum up my teen/college years.

11. You just found out dragons are real. What do you do next?

Prepare to be exceptionally polite. Or run. šŸ˜‰


Not a nominee? (I still ā¤ you! šŸ™‚)Feel free to chime in and answer any of the questions above in the comments. šŸ™‚

It’s NaNoWriMo Time!āœšŸ»

November is National Novel Writing Month, NaNoWriMo for short. You can click on the link above to join in all the fun!

I’m not sure I’ll be doing NaNoWriMo myself this year. I’m at a place where I need to really nail down a lot of background stuff, like the various supernatural entities’ biology and cultures. I have it in my head, but I want to get it all written down so I can easily reference for consistency. I’m also one of those writers who uses science to make the magic as plausible as possible. I base my creatures as much in our known world as I can, down to figuring out the carrying capacity for vampires to ensure their population statistics are reasonable.

NaNoWriMo is based on word count. The goal is to write a 50,000+ word novel by the end of the month. But the background stuff I’m working on doesn’t contribute to my novel’s overall word count. So depending on how quickly that goes, I may not participate this year.

And I think we’ve all learned this last week that I have trouble with energy management. šŸ˜“ Chronic pain and illness make it really hard. But that’s another post.

If you are participating in NaNoWriMo this year, I’d love to cheer you on! Let me know your NaNoWriMo handle and the project you’re working on in the comments so I can find you on the website.

āœ’ļøChoose your weapon carefully… and let the adventure begin!

šŸŗšŸŽƒHappy Halloween!šŸ•·šŸ‘¹

Happy Halloween, dear readers!

I had an encounter this evening that shows the power of a good storyteller. My parents don’t hand out candy. I think it’s a little bah humbug of them, but since it’s their house I play along. We keep the front of the house dark to discourage trick or treaters, but one or two always stop by anyway.

Tonight I opened the door to a maybe-twelve-year-old bride of Dracula. After she’d gushed over Panda Bear and said the traditional ā€œtrick or treatā€, I said, ā€œGoblins ate all our candy. Sorry.ā€

She gasped softly and her eyes went wide. ā€œReally?ā€ she whispered.

I nodded solemnly.

She left totally convinced my candy hoard had been wiped out by goblins. Point to the storyteller. šŸŽƒ

A gorgeous, orange, perfect Halloween sunset.

A gorgeous, orange, perfect Halloween sunset.

I took Panda for a walk this evening (before the above encounter) and was treated to a gorgeous orange sunset, perfect for Halloween Night. I’m so pleased I was able to capture it with the sun right in the pocket.

While we walked I played PokĆ©mon Go. As I suspected, there are more creepy PokĆ©mon out in honor of Halloween, even more than during the rest of the Halloween event. I was stoked to finally get enough candy to evolve my Onix into a Steelix, its special evolution. In fact, tonight was an evolution bonanza! I also caught two witch Pikachu and hatched two Cleffa, who are among my favorite PokĆ©mon. Cleffa’s ears remind me of Princess Leia. šŸ™‚

While I was hunting PokƩmon, I checked out neighborhood decorations. This yard is one of my favorites this year:

My favorite neighborhood yard decorations this season.

My favorite neighborhood yard decorations this season.

I also spotted this cat pumpkin and instantly gave it my Most Creative Pumpkin Award (made up on the spot 😁):

Winner, Most Creative Pumpkin Award 2017.

Winner, Most Creative Pumpkin Award 2017.

I hope you all have a happy and safe All Hallows’ Eve! Enjoy this amazing fan music video combining The Lord of the Rings and ā€œAll Souls Nightā€ by Loreena McKennitt.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhuDlxK04dU

The Ghost in the Shell 2017 live action version's movie poster. Source: filmaffinity.com

Ghost in the Shell Live Action Film Review

The Ghost in the Shell 2017 live action film's poster. Source: filmaffinity.com

The Ghost in the Shell 2017 live action film’s poster.

I’m a big fan ofĀ Masamune Shirow (士郎 正宗),¹ particularly his seminal workĀ Ghost in the Shell in all its incarnations (the original manga series and anime films, series, and OAV), so I was thrilled to hear that it would be getting a live action treatment. I know Scarlett Johansson is an excellent actress and adept at becoming different characters, so I wasn’t too worried about this casting choice. I eagerly rented the live action film from the iTunes Store and settled down to watch.

I almost quit within the first five minutes.

Shiro Masamune’s original plot has been significantly changed and dumbed down. Few of the changes I caught were necessary to convert Ghost in the Shell into a live action version (henceforth LAV). For starters, the LAV renames the main character and rewrites her history. In the original plot the protagonist’s name is Major Motoko Kusanagi (草薙 瓠子), who was the first person to receive a fully cybernetic body (i.e. only her brain remained organic) as a child. She grows up to join Section 9, “aĀ counter-terroristĀ network and anti-crimeĀ unitĀ operating in theĀ JapaneseĀ National Public Safety Commission” ². In the LAV her name is changed to Major Mira Killian and she is often referred to as if “Major” is her name rather than her rank. She is nearly killed immigrating to Japan as an adult or near-adult in a terrorist attack that kills her parents. While she still becomes part of Section 9, she is beholden to the corporation (rather than government) which performed her experimental cyber transplant, creating the basis for part of the LAV’s plot—a plot that doesn’t exist in the original. Section 9 also appears to be a corporate security firm, or at least quasi-corporate, in the LAV rather than a government entity. These are just a few of the major, unnecessary changes that were made.

I don’t recall Shirow ever explicitly stating that Major Kusanagi has a “ghost” anywhere in theĀ GITSĀ canon. It’s implied. The LAV explicitly states this in the first few minutes of the film. I feel this translates into a massive dumbing-down ofĀ GITS’s themes and the warning it has for us. The producers appear to have made a calculation that dumbing-downĀ GITS was necessary in order to bring a LAV to an American audience—the same Americans whose massive fanbase created the opportunity to make it. How insulting!

Speaking of insulting, other critics and fans have accused the LAV of whitewashing because the majority of the main characters aren’t Asian, let alone Japanese. Only two characters (not including extras) are played by Asians. The Hollywood Reporter invited four actresses of Japanese descent to comment on the film.Ā Here’s just a portion of their reactions (first names and credits have been added for clarity:

Ai YoshiharaĀ (The Sea of Trees):Ā Major’s backstory is white people trying to justify the casting.

Atsuko Okatsuka (PULLproject Ensemble):Ā And they f—ed up in the process because now it looks even worse. The text at the beginning of the movie explained that Hanka Robotics is making a being that’s the best of human and the best of robotics. For some reason, the best stuff they make happens to be white. Michael Pitt used to be Hideo.

Keiko Agena (Gilmore Girls):Ā That was the other cringe-worthy moment, when they called each other by their Japanese names. We’re looking at these beautiful white bodies saying these Japanese names, and it hurt my heart a little bit.

Traci Kato-Kiriyama (co-founder of the all-Asian, mostly female Dis/orient/ed Comedy tour):Ā It was supposed to be so touching and intimate, and it felt gross. And kind of laugh-worthy at the same time.

I couldn’t agree more.Ā 

Surprisingly, Mamoru Oshii, director of the original anime, has stated he thinks casting Scarlett Johansson as Kusuanagi is perfect because “her physical form is an entirely assumed one. The name Motoko Kusanagi and her current body are not her original name and body, so there is no basis for saying that an Asian actor must portray her.”³  He’s right that the Major doesn’t appear to be a specific ethnicity in the anime. But the same is true of many anime characters. More damningly, in the manga Kusanagi is depicted with dark, typically Asian-looking hair and slanted eyes, as shown on the right. Oshii also states that GITS is set in future Hong Kong, which the LAV creators said they respected, and which is dead wrong. As the Wikipedia article states, the GITS franchise is “primarily set in the mid-twenty-first century in the fictional Japanese city of Niihama, Niihama PrefectureĀ (ę–°ęµœēœŒę–°ęµœåø‚Ā Niihama-ken Niihama-shi),Ā otherwise known as New Port CityĀ (ćƒ‹ćƒ„ćƒ¼ćƒćƒ¼ćƒˆć‚·ćƒ†ć‚£Ā NyÅ« Pōto Shiti)”.†

Even in the anime, her eyes appear to be Asian, directly undercutting Oshii’s argument. It’s entirely reasonable to believe that Kusanagi’s cyborg body was designed to look Asian, especially once you take into account the ethnic homogeneity preferred by Asian cultures. And in the LAV (spoiler alert), she turns out to be Japanese after all!

The LAV also makes other odd choices. Though its setting is future Hong Kong, the background chatter is Japanese rather than Chinese or the mishmash of Chinese and Japanese spoken by Hong Kong natives. Adding to the confusion, the chief of Section 9,Ā Daisuke AramakiĀ (č’å·» 大輔), speaks Japanese throughout the LAV. (Very poorly enunciated and thus difficult to understand Japanese.) I’m usually all for subtitling rather than changing the language, but the language wasn’t appropriate for the setting (unless we’re to understand that Japan has taken over Hong Kong again, in which case, why not just set it in Japan? The canon is set in Japan anyway!), it was difficult to keep switching between Japanese and English comprehension, and the subtitles were inaccurate.

More mysteries are in the iconic scene where Kusanagi drops from the roof to crash the business meeting. First, the LAV takes two different scenes from the canon—the roof drop and the hacked geisha taking over the official’s cyber brain—and mashes them into one. Secondly, in the canon Kusanagi uses a bungee or rappel cord to anchor her descent. In the LAV she appears to free fall without any safety device. As she falls in the canon, her camouflage renders her invisible. In the LAV she remains visible until the film cuts to inside the teahouse.

This brings me to costuming and the presentation of Kusanagi’s body. The LAV made the odd choice to make the Major’s body armor nearly white (it’s charcoal in the canon). It also looks more like a leotard than functional armor. From what I saw (about half the film), Johansson doesn’t appear to wear either Kusanagi’s formal uniform (see above right for an example from the manga) or her default “corset and thong”— outfit (see above left for an example from the anime). The omission of Kusanagi’s sexy default outfit may be an attempt to downplay her sexuality. The decision to not make Johansson’s bust size match the character’s—there appears to be a three- to four-cup-size difference—likewise desexualized her. In the scene where Killian (remember her name was changed for the LAV) Ā is being repaired after getting blown up, her bust appears almost flat. This scene is also interesting because the framing and the way in which Killian’s body is depicted fits neatly into feminist criticism of the way the media often slices women into sexualized parts.

Obviously there’s a lot to criticize in the LAV. I hope Netflix does a better job with the live action version of Death Note it’s announced, but have strong doubts. (By the way, “A Netflix Original Film” [emphasis mine]? I don’t think so!)

THE BOTTOM LINE:Ā A smiling pile of pooĀ A smiling pile of pooĀ A smiling pile of pooĀ A smiling pile of pooĀ A smiling pile of poo

I give this film five steaming piles of poo. Even the computer graphics eye-candy cannot save this one. Fans should avoid and protest the whitewashing loudly.


¹ Japanese names are Anglicized (Given Name followed by Surname) to maintain consistency within this post.

² “Public Security Section 9.” Wikipedia. August 05, 2017. Accessed August 30, 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Security_Section_9.

³ Rose, Steve. “Ghost in the Shell’s whitewashing: does Hollywood have an Asian problem?” The Guardian. March 31, 2017. Accessed August 29, 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/mar/31/ghost-in-the-shells-whitewashing-does-hollywood-have-an-asian-problem.

† “Ghost in the Shell.” Wikipedia. August 28, 2017. Accessed August 30, 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_in_the_Shell#Setting.

— Shelton, William. “Doing Sexy Right: A Look at Ghost in the Shell’s Major Motoko Kusanagi.” Poor Mans Geek. September 27, 2015. Accessed August 29, 2017. https://poormansgeek.wordpress.com/2015/09/27/doing-sexy-right-a-look-at-ghost-in-the-shells-major-motoko-kusanagi/.