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GAMBIT: Load Game: Elude http://ow.ly/18Q0oU 1 day 9 hours ago
Elude: a game about depression: http://ow.ly/2yCCU 1 day 10 hours ago
Hey look Ma, I'm a legend! http://ow.ly/2yzoo . Or... something... 1 day 11 hours ago
http://gametrekking.com teetering on the edge of $3000... who will push it over? 2 days 11 hours ago
http://gametrekking.com on Only A Game (http://ow.ly/2xSxD) and International Hobo (http://ow.ly/2xSz6). Thanks Chris Bateman! 2 days 13 hours ago
So is this commercial aimed at kids, at parents, or at people stuck for too long in the boonies of South Korea? http://ow.ly/2wgDk 5 days 19 hours ago

December 2009

Let it Snow

20 Dec 2009
Posted by Marisa
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It's been snowing for so long here in Gunsan that I no longer remember it not snowing.  Yesterday we took a walk out to the park to enjoy the fresh snow, please enjoy some of the pictures we took.

P1080323

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Living Like Weasels

10 Dec 2009
Posted by Jordan
Jordan's picture

I was reading some Parker Palmer today, and something he said reminded me of Annie Dillard's weasel essay, found in Teaching a Stone to Talk. I read the essay again, and seeing as it is the inspiration for our blog's byline, I thought I would go ahead and post it here. It is one of my all-time favorite essays.

Click on the "continue reading" link to see the whole thing.


ANNIE DILLARD

LIVING LIKE WEASELS

A weasel is wild. Who knows what he thinks? He sleeps in his underground den, his tail draped over his nose. Sometimes he lives in his den for two days without leaving. Outside, he stalks rabbits, mice, muskrats, and birds, killing more bodies than he can eat warm, and often dragging the carcasses home. Obedient to instinct, he bites his prey at the neck, either splitting the jugular vein at the throat or crunching the brain at the base of the skull, and he does not let go. One naturalist refused to kill a weasel who was socketed into his hand deeply as a rattlesnake. The man could in no way pry the tiny weasel off, and he had to walk half a mile to water, the weasel dangling from his palm, and soak him off like a stubborn label.

And once, says Ernest Thompson Seton--once, a man shot an eagle out of the sky. He examined the eagle and found the dry skull of a weasel fixed by the jaws to his throat. The supposition is that the eagle had pounced on the weasel and the weasel swiveled and bit as instinct taught him, tooth to neck, and nearly won. I would like to have seen that eagle from the air a few weeks or months before he was shot: was the whole weasel still attached to his feathered throat, a fur pendant? Or did the eagle eat what he could reach, gutting the living weasel with his talons before his breast, bending his beak, cleaning the beautiful airborne bones?

I have been reading about weasels because I saw one last week. I startled a weasel who startled me, and we exchanged a long glance.

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