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#peggy ornstein
maaarine · 3 months
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Bibliography: books posted on this blog in 2024
Sara AHMED (2010): The Promise of Happiness
Holly BRIDGES (2014): Reframe Your Thinking Around Autism: How the Polyvagal Theory and Brain Plasticity Help Us Make Sense of Autism
Johann CHAPOUTOT (2024): The Law of Blood: Thinking and Acting as a Nazi
Caroline CRIADO-PEREZ (2019): Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men
Gavin DE BECKER (2000): Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence
Sarah HENDRICKX (2015): Women and Girls with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Understanding Life Experiences from Early Childhood to Old Age
Kate MANNE (2024): Unshrinking: How to Fight Fatphobia
Mario MIKULINCER (1994): Human Learned Helplessness: A Coping Perspective
Jenara NERENBERG (2020): Divergent Mind: Thriving in a World That Wasn’t Designed for
Lucy NEVILLE (2018): Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys: Women and Gay Male Pornography and Erotica
Boys & Sex: Young Men on Hookups, Love, Porn, Consent, and Navigating the New Masculinity (Peggy Ornstein, 2020)
Lucile PEYTAVIN (2021): Le coût de la virilité
Lynn PHILLIPS (2000): Flirting with Danger: Young Women’s Reflections on Sexuality and Domination
Stephen PORGES (2017): The Pocket Guide to the Polyvagal Theory: The Transformative Power of Feeling Safe
Joëlle PROUST (2013): The Philosophy of Metacognition: Mental Agency and Self-Awareness
Manos TSAKIRIS and Helena DE PREESTER (2018): The Interoceptive Mind: From Homeostasis to Awareness
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daniellemohlman · 6 years
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May 2018
I’m resolving to only read books that grab me in the first few pages. On paper, it sounds like an easy resolution, but there are so many books that I should be reading. And I don’t mean “should” like I’ve tasked myself with reading them. I mean “should” like they’re heavy with hype and importance. And instead of slogging through an unhappy reading life, I’ve been leaning harder on the library, falling in love at first chapter, and reading more than I ever have before. At least it feels like that. I’ve been reading happier than I ever have before. That’s probably more accurate. 
Girls & Sex by Peggy Ornstein was excellent and even though I read it for Rushing research I felt like I was reading it for fun. (Which I kind of was. The fun of creating a new play.) The Storied Live of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin was so much fun. I read it in one day on a particularly slow day at work. Leah on the Offbeat by Becky Albertalli was also a ton of fun. I sped through that one as well, not because I wanted to get through it quickly, but because I was so captivated by the characters. (This was a sequel to Simon vs. the Homosapiens Agenda, which I enjoyed, but I love Albertalli’s female characters so much more.) The Way You Make Me Feel by Maurene Goo was delightful and made me hungry for every fictional food truck Goo referenced. 
I also read two ARCs that I loved: When Katie Met Cassidy by Camille Perri, which comes out on June 19, and Florida by Lauren Groff, which was released this week. When Katie Met Cassidy was a delightfully soapy queer love story that hit me in my core and Florida was an exquisite collection of short stories that made me want to take vacations alone and lean into magical realism. 
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platinum-iridium · 4 years
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thanks for tagging, @ajwal2
top 3 ships (right now lol) : zutara (atla), bbrae (teen titans) , braime (asoiaf/got)
last song: vibe - cookiee kawaii
last movie: avengers endgame. i was on a long flight
currently reading: i’m between books rn. just finished the handmaid’s tale by margaret atwood. have cinderella ate my daughter by peggy ornstein ready to go
food craving: nothing right now. i’m well fed
tagging: the girl reading this. if you read the whole thing, you might as well
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twoguysinsearch · 4 years
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Episode 66 - Easter
The newest in our series of episodes in reaction to the effects of the ongoing pandemic was recorded four weeks into the current crisis.  We present additional feedback from listeners, reflections by the hosts about the events of the past month, and, in particular, some long-awaited input from Peggy Bennett about her experiences as a health care worker.  Included in the discussion is a long colloquy between John and Jim over how to interpret current events and what is the appropriate way to view the future. 
Also, and unrelated to the current crisis please watch the documentary, "The Definition Of Insanity", a production sponsored in part by the Matthew Harris Ornstein Foundation.  The link to the trailer is here.
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NEVER COULD BE RELATED TO NERO’S FAMILY EITHER AND MY DOVES ARE NOT MY DOVES ANYMORE FOR TREASON AND  THESE PEOPLE DIED FROM FUCKING WITH ME OR TRYING TO CONSPIRE TO HURT ME OR KILL MY KIDS EVER OR TURN ME INTO SOMEONE ELSE OR KIDNAP ME, AND HURT MANON AND MY EARTH AND OTHER WORLDS AND SOULS!!
February 2002[edit source]
1 – Daniel Pearl, 38, American journalist, beheaded.
2 – Ian Clark Hutchison, 99, British politician.
2 – Paul Baloff, 41, Exodus vocalist.
3 – James Blackwood, 82, American Gospel singer.
3 – Rudolf Fleischmann, 98, German nuclear physicist.
4 – Count Sigvard Bernadotte of Wisborg, 94, Swedish royal.
6 – Max Perutz, 87, founder of molecular biology.
6 – Eken Mine, 66, Japanese voice actor.
7 – Elisa Bridges, 28, Playboy model.
7 – Ellen Demming, 79, American actress.
7 – Jack Fairman, 88, British Formula One driver.
7 – David Gibson-Watt, Baron Gibson-Watt, 83, British politician.
7 – John Taylor, Baron Ingrow, 84, British businessman.
8 – Nick Brignola, 65, American jazz saxophonist.
8 – William T. Dillard, 87, American retailer.
8 – Joachim Hoffmann, 71, German historian.
8 – Ong Teng Cheong, 66, former President of Singapore.
8 – David Pyle, 65, English footballer.
8 – Bob Wooler, 76, British disc jockey.
9 – Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, 71, British royal.
9 – Peggy Taylor, 74, American singer and radio announcer.
10 – John Erickson, 72, British historian.
10 – Ramón Arellano Félix, 37, Mexican drug trafficker.
10 – Jim Spencer, 54, American baseball player.
11 – Frankie Crosetti, 91, American baseball player.
11 – Barry Foster, 74, British actor, heart attack.
12 – Theresa Bernstein, 111, American artist.
12 – William Lee Dwyer, 72, American federal judge.
12 – George Eiferman, 76, bodybuilder, won Mr.Universe in 1962.
12 – John Eriksen, 44, Danish footballer.
13 – Waylon Jennings, 64, country music performer, actor, disc jockey, former member of Buddy Holly's band.
14 – Mick Tucker, 54, drummer for the glam rock band Sweet.
15 – Mike Darr, 25, American baseball player.
15 – Howard K. Smith, 87, TV journalist.
15 – Kevin Smith, 38, played Ares on Xena series.
16 – John W. Gardner, 89, American politician.
16 – Sir Walter Winterbottom, 89, British football manager.
17 – Ross Dowson, 84, Canadian Trotskyist politician.
18 – Gabriel Mariano, 73, Cape Verdean writer.
19 – Billy Hall, 61, American politician.
19 – Virginia Hamilton, 67, award-winning African American children's book author.
21 – A. L. Barker, 83, British author.
21 – Laudomia Bonanni, 94, Italian writer and journalist.
21 – Trevor Hampton, 89, British diver.
21 – John Thaw, 60, British actor, most famous for the detective series Morse and The Sweeney, cancer.
22 – Sir Roden Cutler, 85, Australian diplomat.
22 – Sir Raymond Firth, 100, British anthropologist.
22 – David James, 80, Welsh cricketer.
22 – Chuck Jones, 89, American animator, creator of Wile E. Coyote and The Road Runner, heart failure.
22 – Brendan O'Dowda, 76, Irish tenor.
22 – Jonas Savimbi, 67, Angolan revolutionary, leader of UNITA, multiple gunshot wounds.
24 – Martin Esslin, 83, writer and drama producer.
24 – David Hawkins, 88, American philosopher.
24 – Leo Ornstein, 109, radical composer/pianist.
25 – Afaq Hussain, 62, Pakistani cricketer.
27 – Spike Milligan, 83, Irish actor, comedian and writer.
28 – Mary Stuart, 75, soap opera actress best known for her 35-year starring role on Search for Tomorrow.
28 – John Russell Taylor, 84, Canadian politician.
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etriva · 12 years
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[The Princess line] was a risky move: Disney had never marketed its characters separately from a film's release, and old-timers like Roy Disney considered it heresy to lump together those from different stories. That is why, these days, when the ladies appear on the same item, they never make eye contact. Each stares off in a slightly different direction, as if unaware of the others' presence. Now that I have told you, you'll always notice it.
--Peggy Ornstein, Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture
A quick google image search shows that this is accurate (and just as weird as she says).
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