Bucket List For A Great Cause #2

In honor of Nicole’s post and elephants everywhere, I’ve decided to make my own bucket list. I’m sure you care where I want to explore. Most of mine are due to pop culture references. C’mon people, it’s for the elephants!

1. Santorini, Greece: My inner pre-teen still wants to be Lena from The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. Have you seen that perfect Greek boy in the perfect blue water?

2. Venice, Italy: William Goldman, the author of The Princess Bride, also wrote a wonderful book called The Silent Gondoliers. “Once upon a time, the gondoliers of Venice possessed the finest voices in all the world. But, alas, few remember those days–and fewer still were ever blessed to hear such glorious singing. No one since has discovered the secret behind the sudden silence of the golden-voiced gondoliers.” Plus, I’m afraid the city will sink before I can see it!

3. Bora Bora: Again with that blue, blue water. An episode I caught of the Kardashians vacationing there actually made me wish for a moment that I was a Kardashian. I hope that feeling never returns.

4. Las Vegas, Nevada: Inspired by every raunchy movie bachelor party, ever. Willing women deserve debauchery, too.

5. The Northern Lights/ Aurora Borealis: This is the physicist’s daughter in me. Do you know how when you are driving in the snow, and the snow flakes are zooming right toward the windshield like the stars do in Star Wars, and it looks amazing? That phenomenon is called optic flow. I will never forget that stupid random fact. Thanks, Dad.

6. Ireland: Admit it, P.S. I Love You 1) made you cry, 2) made you want Gerard Butler/ Jeffrey Morgan, and 3) made you want to literally roll around on those rolling green hills. As a bonus, Artemis Fowl lives there.

7. London, England: Unavoidable, thanks to J.K. Rowling, Roald Dahl, and a thousand other literary friends. I half resent my need to visit here. It is as if I never had a choice otherwise, and those famous, brilliant authors have conspired against me.

8. Toledo, Spain: Just look at the image above. You are mind-drooling at the thought of going there and having a beautiful yet interesting time.

9. India: There is amazing food, history, art, beaches, and everything else you could desire. Entire rock cave temples and preserved abandoned cities await.

10. Angkor Wat, Cambodia: This local hosts the world’s most sacred temples, perfect for quiet contemplation. It is a destination not on the basic tourist list, and would leave anyone with a more unique experience. It would also let me feel like a hardcore archaeological explorer, like Indiana Jones or Lara Croft. Here’s hoping!

Sure, there weren’t many plausibly wild elephants in this list. Your travel doesn’t need to destroy, and your support of the cause can make a difference. Like Nicole said, if you don’t know about the plight of the elephants- educate yourself.

My top 10 bucket list post is a part of Save Elephant Foundation’s blog carnival to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of Elephant Nature Park.



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Is This the Best Way to Immortalize the Mother of British Feminism?

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Mary Wollstonecraft, a major figure in British feminism, has been lighting up the circuits.

Literally.

In an attempt to raise money to erect a statue of Wollstonecraft, a hologram of her image graced a wall of the Palace of Westminster (a.k.a. “the mother of all parliaments”) as part of a campaign known as “Mary on the Green”.

From The Guardian:

Campaigners are aiming to raise £240,000 to pay for the statuary on Newington Green, in north London, near the site of Wollstonecraft’s former home and the school where the radical 18th-century campaigner taught. They also spent two hours handing out leaflets and promoting the fact that 77 supportive MPs have already signed a petition, including Jeremy Corbyn MP, who masterminded the turning out of the lights overlooking the Thames.

Whether or not a statue is the best way to memorialize the Vindication of the Rights of Women author has become significant as it underscores the lack of women literally captured in stone, evidently a worldwide problem.

Of the 5,193 public outdoor sculptures of famous people in the US, for example, only 394, or less than 8%, are of women, compared with 4,799 of men, according to the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Art Inventories Catalog.

Earlier this year, Lynette Long, a Washington area psychologist and founder of Eve (Equal Visibility Everywhere) told the Young Feminists network in the US that this imbalance had a negative impact on young girls and their sense of equality. “Humans tend to trust the nonverbal, and the statues send a very clear nonverbal message. Girls can’t be what they can’t see,” she said.

So why go to all the trouble to get Wollstonecraft’s image out to the masses?  It might be as simple as the fact that statues of women, such as they are, tend to be of a generic nature.  While there’s the odd Abigail Adams or Phillis Wheatley commemoration, in general men rule the stone world.

Oh, and as to why this is making headlines?  It might have something to do with this …

The last time an image of a woman made headlines for its projection on the House of Commons it was a naked Gail Porter to promote a poll to find the world’s sexiest women. At least this time it is to publicise a campaign to honour one of our most radical and important writers.

So, what do you think?



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For those of us immune to his evident appeal as a sex idol (and I count myself in this number … I mean, come on, he’s sixteen), though, the real story is the fact that he was raised by a single mother, achieving stratospheric success from rather …

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Ouch. Tony Blair’s autobiography, A Journey, has been nominated for the award no author wants to win – the Bad Sex. And the nomination is not only a criticism of Blair’s skill at writing, um, bedroom prose, but also of the historical accuracy of the events he writes about in the book – as the Bad Sex Award, for those of you not in the know about this, one of the UK’s most well-known prizes, is dedicated to clumsy erotic scenes in fiction. Double ouch.

The Bad Sex Award is awarded each year from the Literary Review, and celebrates ‘poorly written, redundant or crude passages of a sexual nature.’ The prize, which is awarded at a posh London party, is widely regarded as a …

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