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The Sex Pyramid Subsisting on a diet drawn from one food group isn't healthy or gratifying. Even eating cupcakes 24/7 eventually would get old! And yet when it comes to feeding our sexual appetite, many of us rely on one mode to sate all of our romantic cravings. Turns out, women who order the same meal at the same restaurant every time, so to speak, are missing out. Engaging in different shagging styles not only prevents boredom in the bedroom, but "it also fulfills your many physical and emotional needs, allows you to express different aspects of your personality and enables you to grow sexually as a couple," explains Ian Kerner, Ph.D., a sex and relationship therapist in New York City. No one is saying you have to install a trapeze in your bedroom or invite the neighbors to join in. But just as following the food pyramid's guidelines will improve your overall diet, integrating different types of sex into your regular routine can recharge your romance. Building your own sex pyramid is easy: It's all about finding the right balance for you. The foundation should be whichever style nourishes you on the deepest level, your second favorite kind will fill the spot immediately above, and so on. Use the following recommendations to guide you, and be sure to take your personal preferences and lifestyle into account. Quickie sex might be closer to the base of a busy mom's pyramid but nearer the top for a single gal. Whatever your individual mix, striving to enjoy each of these types will guarantee that you'll have a healthy, well-rounded and satisfying sex life. Intimate What it is: A leisurely exploration of each other's body that allows you to reestablish your bond; it may or may not include intercourse. The benefits: Having an orgasm may feel good (OK, amazing), but more measured lovemaking fulfills our innate need for emotional closeness. Because feeling in sync is so integral to relationship satisfaction, intimate sex is often at the base of women's sex pyramid. "Feeling connected and conveying your affection for one another requires you to slow down and really tune in to each other," says Trina Read, author of Till Sex Do Us Part: Make Your Married Sex Irresistible (Key Porter Books). "When you race to the finish line, it's easy to lose sight of your partner's physical and emotional needs," Read says. By spending some time between the sheets with no pressure to have an orgasm -- or even intercourse -- you'll appreciate the act and each other more, which is bound to generate some of those warm and fuzzy feelings. The recipe: No matter how long you've known your partner, he still can't read your mind, so communicate what makes you feel connected. (He probably doesn't know how much you miss those marathon make-out sessions -- you have to tell him!) To ensure an affirmative response, "offer some positive reinforcement by saying, 'I loved it when you did such and such…let's try that again!'" says Emily Dubberley, author of The Going Down Guide (St. Martin's Press). In the moment, do whatever you need to do to feel closer: Kiss, laugh, share a secret you've never told anyone. You'll feel so enamored that it won't matter whether it ends with a bang. Adventurous What it is: Anything that's out of the realm of your routine, whether it's a new position, sex in the shower or dressing up in a costume. The benefits: Mixing it up in bed enhances your sexual self-esteem, so adventurous sex will probably fall somewhere in the middle of your sex pyramid. "Doing something different, whether or not it's 'successful,' will increase your confidence and embolden you to step out of your comfort zone more often," Read explains. Shaking things up will likely accelerate your sex drive, too: "When you venture into uncharted territory, it sticks out in your memory," she says. And the more you think about sex, the more frequently you'll want to do it. The recipe: If broaching the topic of, say, trying a new sex toy seems intimidating, you're in good company. "Many women want to experiment with their partners but aren't sure how to bring it up," says Amy Levine, a certified sexuality educator in New York City. Some common concerns: "Women may worry their mate will think he's inadequate, or they're afraid he'll judge them or question where they came up with the idea in the first place," she explains. A relatively painless approach is the old "I just read about [fill in the blank] in a magazine or book. Does that sound fun to you?" Another way to suggest something racy -- write down five things that you'd like to try; ask him to do the same and then compare notes. Anything that appears on both lists gets the green light, and you can approve or consider the other items. One cautionary note: Imagine hooking up with Johnny Depp all you want, but it's generally best to share only those fantasies in which your partner has a starring role. Electric What it is: Fast, furious and strikingly short on foreplay: Let's do this right here and right now! (Otherwise known as a quickie.) The benefits: For a busy woman who juggles work, kids, chores and more, finding time for sex can present a challenge. That's why a quickie can be the perfect solution when you need to sneak some lovin' into a packed calendar. It's also a fun, effective way to show your partner that your relationship is still on the radar, so electric sex might occupy one of the middle tiers of your pyramid. It can inject a little excitement into your life, too: If both of you can step away from your desk in the middle of the day, sneaking out to meet up for an hour or so is exhilarating. "There's no better way to break up an otherwise monotonous day," Levine says. "Once you get back to work, you'll be totally fired up for the rest of the afternoon." The recipe: The beauty of speedy sex is that it doesn't require elaborate forethought. You simply need to carve out a sliver of time in your hectic day. If a lunchtime tryst isn't practical, squeeze in a session before dinner or set your alarm clock 15 minutes early and connect before the kids wake up. Stuck at a boring party? Sneak off to the powder room together to make it a night you'll both never forget. (Remember to lock the door.) Apologetic What it is: You just had a major blowout. Now that it's over, all you want to do is take each other's clothes off so you can kiss and make up. The benefits: No one is encouraging you to pick a fight, but the occasional healthy, nonabusive argument -- wherein both parties expresses their feelings and opinions -- can actually be a bonding experience. What's more, the hormone that's produced during sex, oxytocin (also known as the cuddle hormone), can help facilitate reconciliation. "Making love after a fight helps put you in a much more forgiving mood," Kerner says. "It can create a willingness to resolve things with each other." Ideally, you're not duking it out on a regular basis, so makeup sex tends to be one of the top levels of a woman's sex pyramid. The recipe: When you're steamed at your mate, you don't have to wait to make amends verbally before getting it on. "Having sex is a form of apology in itself," Kerner says. "It's a physical way to express that you love one another and want to work things out." Still, no matter how great the makeup sex is, intercourse alone won't solve whatever issue you were fighting about in the first place, so Kerner recommends sleeping on it and officially resolving things the next morning. Chances are, you will have a clearer head and be able to address the issue from a more peaceful perspective. Besides, it's hard to stay ticked off when you've been spooning all night! Take-charge What it is: You know exactly what you want, and you're not going to stop until you get it. (Whips or cuffs are not necessarily required.) The benefits: Jumping into the driver's seat in the sack can be incredibly empowering. "Taking charge is a great opportunity to express yourself and your desires," explains Kerner, who contends that reaching for the reins can translate into feeling more assertive outside the bedroom. What's more, you virtually ensure you will meet your needs: "You increase your pleasure potential when you accept responsibility for your sexual satisfaction and don't sacrifice your needs to those of your partner," Kerner says. Because being on the bossy side in bed isn't for everyone, take-charge sex often resides toward the top of most women's pyramid. The recipe: Before setting foot in the bedroom, imagine what it would be like to dominate your mate in detail. It's different for every woman -- it may mean being on top or blindfolding him. Share those thoughts with your man to set the mood and get the ball rolling; if you're not inclined to have a conversation, act it out the next time you're in bed. "Having a particular visual image in your head will inspire you to turn your fantasy into a reality," Kerner explains. Go ahead; unleash your inner dominatrix! Solo What it is: No partner, no pressure, only your vivid imagination and perhaps a battery-operated device. The benefits: Masturbation shouldn't be reserved for dry spells or those times when your honey is out of town. If you're in a relationship and have an active sex life, solo sex may not be a top priority, so it may be at the tip of your pyramid. For single ladies, it might be closer to the foundation. But one thing's for sure: Singular sessions have some serious benefits. They not only feel sensational but also can reduce stress, encourage sleep and help you point your partner in the right direction when you do team up. Plus, "the longer women go without an orgasm, the less they want and need it over time," Read says, explaining that orgasms produce testosterone, the same hormone that drives us to want sex in the first place. So the more orgasms you experience, the more you want. Handy equation, isn't it? The recipe: Take advantage of any quiet alone time and curl up with a steamy novel, sexy movie or simply your favorite fantasy. Instead of going straight for the usual hot spots, take the time to explore your stomach, thighs and other less obvious but still erogenous zones. "There may be parts of your body you would never suspect to be erotic that turn out to offer great pleasure," Levine insists. Still wary? Masturbation isn't dirty or wrong, you're not cheating on your partner and you won't become addicted to artificial stimulation like Charlotte on Sex and the City did. It's just one of the many ingredients that make up a delicious, well-balanced sex diet. "The Sex Pyramid - AOL Health." AOL Health - AOL Health. Web. 29 July 2009. /www.aolhealth.com/healthy-living/relationships/sex-pyramid>.

Dearest Monday

My dearest Monday,

We've got to stop meeting like this. I think you need to step up your game and be more like Saturday & Sunday. Let's face it, they are far more fun then you. If you keep this crap up I am removing you from my calendar all together. Tuesday will be my new go to.


Rock Candy

P.S. Those holidays like Memorial and Labor Day, I like those. Keep up the good work.

How to deal with gossip

Mildred, the church gossip, and self-appointed monitor of the church's morals, kept sticking her nose into other people's business. Several members did not approve of her extra curricular activities , but feared her enough to maintain their silence. 

She made a mistake, however, when she accused Frank, a new member, of being an alcoholic after she saw his old pickup
parked in front of the town's only bar one afternoon. .

She emphatically told Frank (and several others)that every one seeing it there WOULD KNOW WHAT HE WAS DOING !

Frank , a man of few words, stared at her for a moment and
just turned and walked away. He didn't explain, defend, or deny. He said nothing..

Later that evening,Frank quietly parked his pickup in front of Mildred's house ...walked home....and left it there all night !!! 

Multiple Choice

It you found me naked and in your shower, would you:

A. Scream

B. Laugh

C. Kiss me

D. Join me

E. Fuck me

F. Say WTF!

E. None of the above

G. Gee whiz, all of the above silly!

Q&A

What was the main subject of your last telephone conversation?
Shop was done fixxing the car

Explain in detail exactly what you were doing four hours ago:
Research paper

Explain what you will be doing in three hours:
Sleeping

How much money did you spend today?
$400 OUCH!

Is your favorite television show still on air?
NCIS when I get to watch it

Could you go out in public looking like you do now?
Uhm sure, no one is out there, LOL!

Is it a boy or girl to text you last?
Girl

Will you be up before 7am tomorrow?
Always

Could you handle a long distance relationship?
Yes

Do you ever turn your cell phone off?
I wish

Has a boy sat on your bed before?
Does my son count?

Did you get a full 8 hours of sleep last night?
Hahahaha...no

Do you like hugs or do you freak when people hug you?
I'm a huggy person for certain

Have you ever punched a hole in the wall?
Yup

Do you laugh at your own jokes?
Some of them.

Has anyone told you they missed you lately?
Nope

Is it harder to be rejected or to reject someone else?
Getting rejected bites

How tall are you?
5'10" and shrinking LOL

When you say you don't care, do you mean it?
Ya

Do you know anyone with the same birthday as you?
Nope

What would happen if you had a kid with the last person you kissed?
Look out world, your in for a hell of a time

Last thing someone bought for you?
A coffee cup

Do you have a secret that you've never told ANYONE?
Yes

Can you recall the last time you liked someone?
Yea

Whats the last song you sang along to with a friend?
Don't recall

Would you ever get a tattoo?
Got ten already

Whats something you can't wait for?
Vacation

Is there someone you can talk to about anything?
Yes

When was the last time you cried?
June 8, 2006

Do you get drunk every weekend?
Nope

Who was the last person you took a picture with?
My boy

Is there someone you want to see?
Yeah

What is something you disliked about your day?
Research paper

Have you told anyone you love them today?
No

Do you like the person you are becoming?
Yes

When was the last time you talked to one of your best friends?
This afternoon

If you could go back in time and change something, would you?
Only if I could smack my younger self on the back of the head; other wise no.

Let's begin with the basics, who's your crush?
No one

Ever kissed someone you regretted?
Yes.

What were you doing at midnight last night?
Sleeping

Last time you were called babe/baby?
Long time ago

Is there anything you wanna tell someone but can't?
Nope

Who was the last person you cried in front of?
Platoon Sgt, my marriage ended while I was in Iraq.

If you could change one thing about your life right now what would it be?
Money.

Name something great that happened today?
Free food

Where did you get the shirt you're wearing right now?
What shirt?

Do you have any siblings?
Yes

Is there one person in your life that can always make you smile?
Of course!

Who was the last person you talked to last night before you went to bed?
Jill

When was the last time you wanted to punch someone in their face?
Long time ago 

If someone liked you right now would you want them to tell you?
Of course.

Do you have a reason to smile right now?
Yup

Which one is your favorite sibling?
My only one

Are you sick?
Nope

Plans for tomorrow?
School

Are you currently reading a book?
For school

Do you sleep with your door open or closed?
Open

Did you ever run through the sprinklers as a little kid?
Yup

Do you hate being the first person to start a conversation?
Nope

JUST A BIKER I saw you hug your purse closer to you in the grocery store line. But you didn't see me put an extra $10.00 in the collection plate last Sunday. I saw you pull your child closer when we passed each other on the sidewalk. But you didn't see me playing Santa at the local mall. I saw you change your mind about going into the restaurant when you saw my bike parked out front. But you didn't see me attending a meeting to raise more money for the hurricane relief. I saw you roll up your window and shake your head when I rode by. But you didn't see me riding behind you when you flicked your cigarette butt out the car window. I saw you frown at me when I smiled at your children. But you didn't see me when I took time off from work to run toys to the homeless. I saw you stare at my long hair. But you didn't see me and my friends cut ten inches off for Locks of Love. I saw you roll your eyes at our leather jackets and gloves. But you didn't see me and my brothers donate our old ones to those that had none. I saw you look in fright at my tattoos. But you didn't see me cry as my children where born or have their names written over my heart. I saw you change lanes while rushing off to go somewhere. But you didn't see me going home to be with my family. I saw you complain about how loud and noisy our bikes can be. But you didn't see me when you were changing the CD and drifted into my lane. I saw you yelling at your kids in the car. But you didn't see me pat my child's hands knowing she was safely seated behind me. I saw you reading the newspaper or map as you drove down the road. But you didn't see me squeeze my wife's leg when she told me to take the next turn. I saw you race down the road in the rain. But you didn't see me get soaked to the skin so my son could have the car to go on his date. I saw you run the yellow light just to save a few minutes of time. But you didn't see me trying to turn right. I saw you cut me off because you needed to be in the lane I was in. But you didn't see me leave the road. I saw you waiting impatiently for my friends to pass you. But you didn't see me because I wasn't there. I saw you go home to your family. But you didn't see me because I died that day you cut me off. I WAS JUST A BIKER.... A person with friends and a family. But you didn't see me.
Historical Views from the Year 5000 We are proud to announce that archaeologists have made a major discovery explaining religious practice in the 1990's, over three thousand years ago! These discoveries help us better understand the myths and traditions which have been handed down over the years, and still survive today within the popular cult of the Goddess Barbi. This tradition is one of the fastest growing groups of modern-day Goddess worship. Archaeologists have discovered that Barbi worship dates back to ancient times. Figures of the Goddess Barbi have been unearthed, preserved in nearly pristine state. It seems that ancient worshippers made their images of Barbi in a material known as plastic. It was known at the time that plastic did not decay to the elements over time and was nearly everlasting! Because of this, it is obvious to our research team that those items made of plastic were held in the highest regard by the ancient culture of the 1990's. They surely wanted to preserve these items for eternity! Research shows that ancient priestesses of Barbi were initiated at a very young age. The initiation ceremony involved a complex litany which lasted several weeks, usually prior to the Winter Solstice. Young daughters would chant at length to their parents, repeating over and over the praises of Barbi, stating their desires for the Goddess to enter their lives. While these chants varied from priestess to priestess, the words "I Want" are common to many of the evocations. Later, after initiation, additional chants focused on a wide variety of magical tools and altar accessories used by the Goddess Barbi in Her temple. Images of the Goddess Barbi show Her in many aspects. For example, She was portrayed as a Solar Deity in Her Malibu Barbi aspect. This explains the modern-day custom of Barbi worshippers donning colored glasses and anointing themselves with special protective lotions to celebrate the Summer Solstice! It is known that ancient religions sometimes masked their Deities within the Saints of ancient Catholicism. Researchers are certain this explains the name used for an ancient west coast village known as Santa Barbara, perhaps a Mecca for Barbi worshippers. Each Barbi figurine also held strange numerical markings, $24.99. This explains the current custom where Barbi worshippers tattoo themselves with this number! It was obviously the number most sacred to the Goddess. The $ symbol was used in many ways by the ancient culture, and was considered both a scourge and salute to religious society. It was also discovered that ancient Barbi had a consort known as Ken. Close examination of plastic Ken figures explain why today's modern Barbi worshippers allow only eunuchs to participate in religious rites, with no other males allowed. Since many fewer Ken figures were found, we can assume that the ancient Barbi worshippers were a matriarchal tradition. Our team of linguistic researchers have determined through study of the ancient language that Ken was renowned in many parts of the world. This explains the origins of ancient places like Kenya, Kentucky and even the variation of Canada. An in-depth study of the Ken mythos also links Him to the ancient clan known as Kennedy. Note the amazing facial similarities! Stories surrounding this ancient Kennedy cult seem to be a unique mixture of the "slain God" stories (similar to the Egyptian Osiris) and the revelry of the Roman Bacchus. This seems to fit all three aspects of the Triple Kennedy myth. Other research shows a related figure, an ancient warrior God known as GI Joe. Since GI Joe had no known female consort, and was also a eunuch, it is obvious that both Joe and Ken competed for the Goddess Barbi. One theory links this to the surviving Oak King/Holly King myths of earlier times. Researchers also uncovered other mythical characters, known as Shakespeare, Einstein, Gandhi, and Ralph Nader. But since the ancient culture held these in much lower relative importance than Barbi, they obviously were mere minor demigods of the era. We are thrilled to have discovered these Old ways, since they shed light upon many unexplained traditions of today. We can use this clear view of history to put our present-day customs in perspective! After this significant success in discovering the ancient Barbi myths, our archaeological efforts have been approved for additional funding to research the ancient Ninja Turtle myths as well. Since many plastic artifacts of the Ninja Turtles have been found in North America, perhaps they are linked to the ancient Native American cultures of Turtle Island? Only time will tell.

Says I found & stole

* No Woman will ever be truly satisfied because... no man will ever have a chocolate penis that ejaculates money * * Sit down, get in, hold on, and scream cuz you like it * *Drink when ur willing, drink when ur able, drink with me and you'll be under the table* * Im the girl next door... that sneaks in to your room every night to tie you up and make you my bitch * *A hard man is good to find... I mean, find a good man and make him hard? No, thats not it either hmm...* *Never trust anything that bleeds for a week and doesnt die.*
ELMAZ ABINADER's ~ Profile of an Arab Daughter THE EVENTS OF SEPTEMBER 11, 2001, produced grief and fear in many people. And they raised questions about how one's country of origin can become important. In spare, imagistic prose, this piece gives us a snapshot of a dutiful and fearful Arab daughter after September 11. Elmaz Abinader (b. 1954) is a memoirist, poet, and performance artist. Her collection of poems, In the Country of My Dreams (1999), won the 2000 Oakland PEN Josephine Miles Award, and she has been awarded a Fulbright Senior Service Scholarship for study in Egypt. "Profile of an Arab Daughter" was first published in the Fall 2001 issue of Ai Jadid: A Review & Record of Arab Culture and Arts. Mother has fallen and fractured her pelvis. She was reaching for a jar in her kitchen and lost her balance. This is not her first fall. She has two artificial hips and was just recovering from the last time her foot gave way -- that time, her toe caught on the edge of the carpet. Every tumble, slip, slide, and collapse, we are called. Each one of my mother's six children tenses a little, not because she has fallen, again, but because we cannot turn back the clock, we cannot avoid these repetitive reminders that my mother is getting older and that one cannot recover from old age; reminders, too, that we are getting older. This time, when she stretched her arm up to the cabinet over the refrigerator, this time, when she tried to reach the peanut butter, it was September 11, 2001. It was just after two jets crashed into the World Trade Center, about the time the towers collapsed and thousands and thousands of people died and thousands went missing, and the nation's and the world's faces knotted from fear or opened in shock or closed in sorrow. So in the midst of this tragedy, we did not know of my mother's fall until later. The silence of the phone gave no hint; no one knew my mother was in the hospital. Instead, my older sister, Selma, and I were desperately trying to reach our youngest sister, Geralyn, in New York, shaking our phones like rattles, hoping for something other than the sound of empty air. We recited her route to work as best we could remember and tried to judge where her husband would be: tower, tunnel, train, bus.... My mother is curled in a ball, my father says, on the downstairs couch, unable to move. The sadness courses in his voice like a slow river. He has driven her again and again to Montgomery County Hospital, fall after fall: up the stairs, over the threshold, losing her balance standing or sitting. At eighty-seven years old, my mother is worn out by her own fragility. Her body sinks in on itself, drying up. Now at ninety pounds, this tiny fortress endured childhood hunger, escape, field labor, emigration, three businesses, five relocations, fifteen pregnancies, nine births, six children. She does not recite these events, as her own mother did, sucked into a tunnel of memory. Her old age confuses her; she did not predict her own feebleness. My mother's voice rattles hollow when she speaks to me. What can we do? People fall. Things fall. My mother tumbled at the same time another jet burst into the Pentagon, dangerously close to where she lives in Maryland. She lay on her side, my father running frantically toward her. She wept into the carpet, scared that she would never get up again. My ninety-one-year-old father pulled her by her armpits, leaned her body against his, and took her to the car. He drove, his vision foggy, to the emergency room. The day of my mother's fall, my parents' grandchildren were sent home to Chevy Chase from their school in Washington, D.C. Alone in the house, my nephew and niece were transfixed by the television. Slow-motion footage of the second tower falling suspended their breathing for a minute. As the children flipped through the news coverage, they spotted their father, my brother Jean, who works for an Arab advocacy institute. He sat at a table with a newscaster and other experts, speaking, calming, trying to make sense of the devastation in discussions laced with words like "backlash," "retaliation," "revenge." My nephew and niece did not hear their father's words. They saw his name below his face, the title of his job, the organization he worked for, all printed clearly against his blue shirt and brown jacket. We aunts and uncles tried to reach them: land lines, cell phones, Internet. Finally the New York sister reaches them. My brother's son asks my sister, "Do you think someone will try to kill my dad?" My mother doesn't know these things as her heels numb, her shoulder electrifies her with spasms, and she shifts and shifts again on the couch, trying to relieve the pain radiating in her hip and lower back. The television flashes at her but she can take the pictures only in small doses, the doses of horror much stronger than the painkillers that don't seem to reach the fire in her body. My father recites the rosary with her, sitting on the edge of the couch, watching her body ripple as she prays. My mother mumbles each decade until the drugs put her to sleep. My mother gave me a picture of herself that she kept in the back of her diary. She is sixteen in the picture and has a closed-mouth smile. Her hair is in tight curls close to her head. Her face is open, her gray eyes bright, even in black and white; her nose is long and slightly hooked, and her cheeks are wide. That is my face, the one I grew into. The one that causes all the trouble. They caution, when you travel, try not to look so ... Arab? Yes, Arab. My mother never considered herself an Arab. "We're Lebanese, descendants of the Phoenicians." Stories of our forefathers include their sailing ships to every continent carrying the wisdom of language, arts, and mathematics around the world. These were our ancestors. PROFILED The first time I was ever stopped at an airport in the United States was on a layover in Denver before a flight to New York. My husband was carrying a laptop, a CD player, a bag of food, and a briefcase. People waited behind us as he unstrapped and untwisted his cases and placed them on the belt. After he walked through the security gate, his belongings tumbled from the scanner onto the little ramp. Every trip we took together through airports, I sucked in my breath as he fumbled with all his equipment. Always highly conscious of the people behind me, always afraid of missing the plane, always aware of how big I was at any given moment, I believed in traveling light. One purse with a book, a notebook and pen, a bottle of water, and some cosmetics. As I followed my husband through the gate, a security guard raised her hand. "Go over there." She pointed to an empty low table against the wall staffed by another security guard. His uniform hung just a little too large on him. Without speaking, he motioned for me to place my purse down and then raised his hand in a halt. He waved, and I obediently took one step back. Two women joined him and proceeded to take my purse apart. As they poured my checkbook, lipstick, pick, wallet, tissues, sunglasses, and makeup case onto the table, I felt a burning in my legs. I have traveled all over the world; I've been inspected, searched, frisked, and scanned -- but here I am in Denver, an airport with pizza stands and coffee shops, the standard newsstands and shoeshine chairs. They turned my purse inside out and x-rayed it. One guard picked every credit card out of my wallet and held it to the light. They flipped through my notebook, shook out my magazines. I stayed in my position, staring with fury. No one else is being asked to stop. What is this about? What could I be transporting from Oakland to New York that should cause all this scrutiny? The man finally asked me for my coat. I handed it over, speechless. Behind me, others beeped through the 20 gates and headed to their flights unchecked. Finally, the man poured my water into the garbage can. He replaced the cap and offered me the empty bottle. Soon they shoved everything toward me and left the table. I glanced down at the contents of my purse lying scattered on the brown Formica. "Is this crazy or what?" I asked my husband. "What the hell was that about?" Later I learned about profiling, the new system that was installed at airport security to stop terrorists. I read about security guards being trained in what a terrorist is likely to look like as they pass through security. But not any kind of terrorists: ones with dark hair, aquiline features, deep eyes. By the end of the article, my entire family was indicted. My mother, whose face I inherited, would never believe I have been profiled over and over. She talks about Arabs as them, the other population in Lebanon, her home country. They are Muhammadans, not Catholic, like us. Them -- despite our common looks, language, music, politics, food, customs. Our sympathy with Palestinians. And on September 11, 2001, when the country grieved the losses in New York and Washington, my mother and father prayed extra rosaries, my mother's lips dry from painkillers, her body limp against the brushed velvet of her sofa. The television reminded her again and again that the world she traveled through so doggedly to make a home for her family was not safe. BRANDED A week after the destruction and devastation in New York and Washington, D.C., one news station took a poll and discovered that most Americans think that Americans of Arab origin should carry identification cards. They think that capturing our faces, pasting them flat on a card with our names and addresses, will somehow lessen the dangers. I do not want to believe this poll. I do not want to believe that suddenly we are all suspects and apart from everyone else, people who need to be feared and named. History is a poor teacher -- tattooed numbers flash across my arm, and internment camps grow in the desert of my imagination. My eyes darken. I try to picture how I would lead my mother and father from their suburban town house to some government office to have their picture taken. "Why are we doing this?" my mother would ask. She has told the story of her mother entering Ellis Island in 1921 and having her name changed by some unschooled clerk. When I take my parents for their Arab IDs, we will have to decide if my mother needs her walker or a cane. They have been in the United States for sixty-three years, they have attended Catholic church every week of their lives, but they speak Arabic and originate from a troubled region. My mother's legs will wobble under her. She will complain to my nearly deaf father that they are Christian. Doesn't anyone understand? Because they don't realize how poor their hearing is, their Arabic will echo all around them. It will echo off the marble pillars of the government building, float through the air, and crash into the walls. "We are Phoenicians," my mother will plead. And she will still say rosaries for the dead, for the missing, for her son whose children worry for his life. In her mind, she, like me, will sail away, following the Phoenicians, carrying wisdom with her, tucked inside the fractures in her pelvis, where she will ache and ache.
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