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Saturday, May 20th, 2006 12:59 am
This is Teresa Nielsen-Hayden's fault. She looked at some trends here. I thought I could be sillier than that, and this is one truly goofy result, and this is one that could actually be used in a stupid argument to say something really meaningless about genre fiction. Honestly, I don't see how Google Trends could be used to say anything that wasn't utterly loopy. On another front, well, it rained again today, which is not really that astonishing, but the rainy season is supposed to be over. At least I didn't have to water the yard. On still another front, the inside of the human colon is gorgeous. So pink and sinuous and warm looking, with delicate traceries of red blood vessels. Like a sculpture of some rosy marble, polished, glowing: but also alive and motile. That is, that's what it looks like through an endoscope, when it's alive and unbreached by the surgeon's knife. I've always suspected that, actually. That human organs would be beautiful if we could see them in a context that didn't remind us viscerally of damage and death.
Saturday, May 20th, 2006 12:29 pm (UTC)
Some years back, I had all sorts of tests, most of them disgusting (especially to me, the participant). One day it was endoscopy. First they gave me some vomitous decayed-tasting blue liquid to stifle (overwhelm?) my gag reflex, then the tube went down my throat. They let me have a peek when I asked for it. The next day it was a sigmoidoscopy, which looked into me from the opposite approach. My request was anticipated -- they simply put a second eyepiece on the device, and I got to witness the entire "fantastic voyage," as it were. I only wish they'd put it on video.