Festival Season is over, and this year the beautiful culmination of EZoo, Gov Ball, and the Meadows ended in Dirty Bird Campout. I've been playing with this piece for a bit, trying to give some voice to the high that comes from the shared festival experience that I've come to love.

5th book club book. 4.17/5.00 Definitely worth reading, unique in it’s focus and characters. I think I may have missed some of the nuances as I’ve never read the Bible. Some very well written passages lent to a good flow and pace. Interesting perspectives on women’s health and their histories. I thought it may have missed an opportunity to expand on Dinah’s experiences raising a child.

Excellent. A spiritual successor to Catcher in the Rye, but more resonate in my mind. I highly suggest everyone puts this on their required reading list, and revisit as often as possible. It's short, nuanced, striking honest, and fulfilling. A masterpiece. 4.96/5.00

I do a bit of a review/analysis, reflecting on what the book has taught me and why I love it so.

 

Get Out is just an excellent movie, worth watching two or three times at least. I highlight a couple interesting things I pick up and offer high praise for it's acting, shots, score, plot, humor, and message. Everyone should watch! [SPOILERS]

Read A Scanner Darkly and watched the movie with friends
Overall, great book, great movie, highly recommended. 4.35 Book, 4.1 movie. Great universe and interesting story. Plus for such a unique blend of sci-fi and poverty/drug addiction. Possibly would require me to reread closer for a deeper understanding and appreciation.

Masculine Stereotypes are weird, and people who pay too much attention to that stuff are boring. Just be yourself, like what you like, no one's judging and it doesn't matter anyway. (Or, just a weird interaction in the city.)

Applying the Theseus' Ship paradox to being holistically healthy, making an argument to taking care of yourself in a novel way. Pretty much the most millennially/hippie dippy shit from a kid who once watched a TedEd talk.

Adulthood changes friendships. In particular, one of my close high school friends and I had our relationship go through some transformations. The transition taught me a lot, particularly about good communication, for which I'm grateful. I try to reflect and share the lessons learned with you