Facing Your Stress, Misleading Pics, Fingerprint Building, and DIY Projects

The Conscious Lifestyle: Facing Your Stress
An article definitely appropriate for our fast-paced lives.

Pictures Can Be Misleading
Hilarious pictures taken at just the right angle or at just the right time…leads to some “Whoa, wait a minute, is that–” moments.

Unbelievable Fingerprint Building in Thailand
A building built in the shape of a human fingerprint, all the curves and squiggles and everything. How did they even DO that?!

20 Awesome DIY Projects
DIY craziness! Things like a purse made out of soda can tabs, flowers made out of maple leaves and/or pineapples, and a lamp made out of plastic spoons, among others.

Flipping Cards Like Burgers: The Transform Mechanic

One of the more recent mechanics introduced in Magic: the Gathering is the “Transform” effect–if you’ve gotten any cards that have both front and back faces printed with a Magic card, then you’ve seen cards that behave like this. They can seem difficult to learn, but as you’ll see in the following article, there are just a few simple rules:

How Do You Play Transforming Cards?

villageironsmith ironfang

Above, you see Village Ironsmith and Ironfang, which are two sides of the same card. When you have a Transforming card in your deck, you start out by playing the side of the card marked with the “sun” symbol face up. (Note that the “moon” symbol side doesn’t have a mana cost, so you couldn’t just cast it directly onto the battlefield anyway.)

Next, check the rules text of the card to see what conditions would trigger the card to be Transformed. In Village Ironsmith’s case, it’s when no spells were cast last turn. Then the card is flipped over to reveal the moon side of the card–and Ironfang comes into play!

Note that when two or more spells are played while Ironfang is face-up, the card flips back over to be Village Ironsmith again. There are some cards which can transform back and forth during the game, and there are some, like the pair of cards below, which cannot transform back and forth:

cloisteredyouth unholyfiend

Cloistered Youth, seen above at left, can be transformed into Unholy Fiend, but Unholy Fiend cannot transform back into Cloistered Youth. Just watch the rules text when you’re playing a Transforming card, to make sure you’re playing it right!

Other Important Rulings to Know

  • Transforming cards are officially called “double-faced cards” in M:TG lingo. This just refers to the actual card itself, not any game effects.
  • When a double-faced card is in your hand, just pretend the moon side of the card doesn’t exist if someone has to look at your hand, or you have to reveal cards from your hand, etc.
  • When one side of the card is face-up on the battlefield, the other side’s information doesn’t count.
  • If you Enchant or Equip a Transforming card with an item, or if you put any counters on it, those effects stay with the card even when it transforms. (YAY, no wasted spells!)

More Examples of Transforming Cards

The Transform mechanic is not limited to creatures or to certain colors–there are many types and colors of cards that reference Transformation or take part in it! Green gets quite a few Transformers, for instance (no Optimus Prime, unfortunately :P). Plus, artifacts, planeswalkers, and even an instant or two get in on the action, as seen below:

chaliceoflife chaliceofdeath
garrukrelentless garruktheveilcursed
scornedvillager moonscarredwerewolf
moonmist  

For Further Information

Transform Mechanic Article @ Wizards.com
Transform Official Rulings and Knowledge Base @ MTGSalvation Wiki
MagicCards.info (where I retrieved the card images for this post)

Keep Making the Effort for God, Every Day

Philippians 1:9-10
9 And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, 10 so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ.

Here, we see Paul encouraging the Philippian church to keep growing their love as one family of God, to keep strengthening the bonds of Christian fellowship and abiding by the Scriptures, so that they will be “pure and blameless” until the day of Judgment comes.

This seems pretty basic and understandable…until you start digging into what exactly “pure and blameless” means. Does it mean “without sin?” Well, yes. Does it mean “righteous living?” Yes, that too. But does it mean “going around telling others how perfect and sinless your life is, then telling them how wrong and sinful they are?”

In a word: NOPE.

Paul’s words here are not meant to encourage the Philippians to become SELF-righteous, i.e. conceited and haughty about their faith. True, Paul would love for the Philippians to never have a “bad day” in faith, to always be able to “discern what is best” and “be pure and blameless.” But he also encourages them to make their love “abound more and more”–to keep getting better at it every day, in other words. What he’s describing is a Christian life lived in love–lived with the understanding that sin happens to the best of us, and that we can bounce back from sin to serve God better by expending faith-based effort.

These two verses speak of a perfection of faith and love which we will never reach here on Earth–and Paul knows that all too well. But when the “day of Christ” comes, this faith-filled vision will be fulfilled in totality. While we wait for the day of Christ, however, we as Christians must strive to get as close as we can to that ideal, to love as God loves, to behave more like Jesus every day. And that doesn’t mean condemning others–it means demonstrating Christ’s love to others.

“Jumpy” Hover Borders on Image Links: Solved At Last

Over at CSS-Tricks.com, I spied an article that spoke directly to one of my infamous webdesign flaws over the years–making all my image links have a:hover borders.

Why would I call this a “flaw?” Well, unfortunately, when you give anything on a webpage a border under some circumstances and not others, it can create a “jumpy” layout look–for instance, when you hover over image links on my blog, they get a border underneath them, which makes other page content shift a little downwards on the page until you mouse off the image.

This is the “image rollover border” effect, and it can make your page look REALLY amateurish…as I well know. 🙁 It’s been bugging me for years on this blog and all my other sites–I love how the hover border looks on text links, but I hate the way it makes other things on the page “jump” a little!

Making Non-Jumpy Rollover Borders for Images

The CSS-Tricks article does a wonderful job of explaining exactly why all this happens, as well as offering some solutions for how to incorporate a “bordered” hover look for your images without getting layout shifts. Several methods, including negative-margin borders, are suggested and diagrammed for you.

Getting Rid of Image Hover Borders Altogether: Mission Impossible?

But what if you don’t want borders around your images at all? Preferably, I would like my text links to have the border-bottom property on hover, while my image links would be without that dumb-looking border.

So I started looking into how to get rid of the hover border on just my images, thinking it would be pretty easy. All I’d have to do is use a little bit of CSS like so…

img {border: none;}

…and I’d be good, right?

WRONG. Wrong wrong wrong. That didn’t work, and nor did the other iterations I tried, such as:

a:hover img {border: none;}
img a:hover {border: 0px;}

I tried everything I had in my mental CSS toolkit to solve this. No luck. Then I decided to Google it, wondering if I was the only webdesigner who was having this issue. “After all, it’s probably a really simple fix,” I thought.

Turns out, I’m not the only webdesigner who has had difficulty with it, and it is most definitely NOT an easy fix. The only real “fix” for this problem comes in two similar flavors:

Fix #1

Fix #2

Give all your image links a specific CSS class, and reference it every time you have an image link in your document. Get rid of the CSS that creates a hover border entirely.

Fix #1’s CSS

Make a specific CSS class for all the links that will be wrapped around images…

.imglinks a {border: none;}

…and implement it every time you have an image link (place the code in the link tag rather than the image tag):

<a href=”your link here” class=”imglinks”><img src=”your image filename here”></a>

The Problem with Fix #1

If you have a large site, or you run any sort of blog software to make your site, Fix #1 is just not going to be worth your time. You would have to physically go back and edit EACH image link throughout your ENTIRE site to completely implement this fix. I have almost 800 blog articles on this site already, and I can’t imagine going back and editing each of those image links in all those articles to make them not have a hover border anymore.

But if you have a small site or don’t run any blogging software, Fix #1 will work beautifully for you, provided you have the patience to change all your image links.

Fix #2’s CSS

Anywhere you see CSS code like this that would hit any images on your page…

a:hover {border: 1px solid #000000;}

…change it to:

a:hover {border: 0px;}

This will fix all your image links, but it will also take away any borders from your text links as well. It’s a quite ham-handed fix, but it gets rid of “jumpiness” on your page. (Note: Make sure you make your hovered links look different enough from regular text without the borders–different color, etc.)

This is a better option, albeit a less graceful one, for larger sites or sites that run blogging software. For certain, it saves you some gray hairs and gnashing of teeth. XD

For Further Reading

The following forum threads discuss this problem in greater detail, and helped point me toward the fixes I have detailed above:

Remove a:hover for images? @ StackOverflow.com
Getting Rid of a:hover on Images @ Sitepoint.com
CSSBeauty Discussion on A:Hover Borders

Struggling Writer? Here Are Sites That Can Help!

Writing can often feel suspiciously like banging your head against a wall of your own thoughts–thoughts which are unhelpful and keep getting in the way of real creative work. And when you’re struggling through a rough patch of writing, it can feel as if you’re the only writer who has ever gotten stuck like this.

Well, believe me, the Internet is full of writers who have all been there. And what’s more, plenty of them have made websites to help their fellow writers get un-stuck and back on the road to a finished work. See the following sorted list to get restarted on your own writing journey!

Social Networks for Writers

WritersCafe.org
Writing.com

Grammar, Style, and Structure Help

Grammarphobia Blog
Chicago Manual of Style
Banned for Life (about overused cliches)
GrammarBook.com
The Phrase Finder
Grammar Girl
The Word Detective

Fun Online Writing Exercises and Tools

Language is a Virus
Fifteen Minutes of Fiction
WriteForTen
750Words
Wordsmith.org
Libroville (make your own writing website in minutes)

Helpful Articles about the Writing Process

WritingForward
WriteToDone
Vocabula
Daily Writing Tips
The Writing Corner

Contests and Getting Published

WritersDigest
Winning Writers
ForWriters.com
AgentQuery.com
FirstWriter.com

Dokkodo, Top 8 Idiots, Outer Space Pics, and DarkCopy.com

Dokkodo
The precepts of Dokkodo, the Way of Aloneness. Could you live by these (pretty strict) social and emotional rules?

Top 8 Idiots in the Country
Dumb robbers, strange emergency room calls, and more.

Pictures Of (and From) Outer Space
Outer space in all its celestial, ethereal beauty…and Earth, from a space perspective.

DarkCopy.com
A green text on black screen text editor. Ahh, 1989 memories 😀

Pitching City of Heroes to Google: You Can Help!

After the hubbub last fall over the closure of City of Heroes, most people outside the City of Heroes playerbase (and many people in the former playerbase, for that matter) probably think that the #SaveCoH movement is dead.

Not so.

In fact, a relatively new part of the #SaveCoH movement, called “Task Force Hail Mary,” is gathering steam over on the CoHTitan Forums (see details in this forum thread). They are in the process of pitching City of Heroes to Google, following up a tendril of interest from a contact of Mercedes Lackey’s within Google.

Now, before you scoff at your computer screen or utter a cynical “That’ll never work,” please realize that everyone involved knows this is a long shot. But if enough people send letters to Google supporting this idea, perhaps we can make enough waves and draw enough attention to the game to make Google or another company interested in picking it up. After all, what’s the use in rolling over and playing dead when we are most certainly not dead yet?

How You Can Help

What the Task Force Hail Mary needs now is letters–real, paper letters, telling Google how much you enjoyed City of Heroes, how unique a game it is among MMOs, and how it could bring Google positive press and profit (as well as a permanent place of affection in the playerbase’s collective heart). Be heartfelt but also grounded in reality, acknowledging that the company needs to profit from this move just as much as the players need to.

When you have written your letter, send it on to:

Jeson Patel
Engineering Manager
Google Inc
Google Mountain View
1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
Mountain View, CA 94043

This is the original contact within Google who was interested in seeing a City of Heroes pitch. You may also want to send your letter to Jamie Rosenberg, Vice President of Digital Content, using the same mailing address.

A Final Note

Since one of the posts I made about City of Heroes garnered some negative opinions about the game, as well as shaming comments about people who wanted to save the game, I will go ahead and say this: if you don’t care about the #SaveCoH movement or are glad that the game was shut down, then please do not post. Every gamer is allowed his or her opinions, and the #SaveCoH movement is no different. If you believe we are silly for trying this, if you think the game was stupid and isn’t worth saving–we simply don’t want to hear it, and any such derogatory responses will be deleted from the comments. As I said before, we know this is a long shot, but if we do not try, we will indeed be “playing dead” when we are not dead at all.

God Is Calling–Will We Answer?

Isaiah 45:20-23
20 “Gather together and come;
assemble, you fugitives from the nations.
Ignorant are those who carry about idols of wood,
who pray to gods that cannot save.
21 Declare what is to be, present it–
let them take counsel together.
Who foretold this long ago,
who declared it from the distant past?
Was it not I, the Lord?
And there is no God apart from me,
a righteous God and a Savior;
there is none but me.

22 “Turn to me and be saved,
all you ends of the earth;
for I am God, and there is no other.
23 By myself I have sworn,
my mouth has uttered in all integrity
a word that will not be revoked:
Before me every knee will bow;
by me every tongue will swear.

Reading this, it’s almost as if God has left this message on humanity’s answering machine and is just waiting for us to call Him back. He speaks directly (at least, directly through the prophet Isaiah), calling us to “gather together,” to “assemble, to “turn to [Him] and be saved.” This is God as authority figure, God as our Heavenly Father, firmly calling for us to come home where we belong.

Here, we see God referring to the rampant idolatry of Biblical days in no-nonsense words; He treats the many false prophecies about the future in the same way. There is “no God apart from [Him],” He also states–by Himself God swears, to doubly prove how dependable His Word is on these and all other issues. And, at the end of this passage, He promises that “every knee will bow” to Him and “every tongue will swear” by Him, likely on Judgment Day.

This can read as an “angry” statement by God, but I perceive it more as a resolute statement of facts. What is left for us to do is to “declare what is to be”–declare whether we are coming back to God or not. While we worship “gods that cannot save,” like mere “idols of wood,” God waits for us each to make the decision to come back home to Him. He’s laid His terms out there in plain language, which speaks to us just as He spoke to His people in ancient Israel. In fact, He speaks to each of our hearts today…but will we answer?

My Fading Love Affair with Processed Food

As an adult picky eater (and I do mean picky), the simple process of eating has been ridiculously hard most of my life. Thus, when I find the rare food item that I really enjoy (i.e., food that tastes great, has a good texture, and doesn’t make my tummy roar at me later), I tend to stick with it.

But over the last few months, I have observed with distress as my taste buds have slowly turned away from once-favorite foods. The common denominator between all these foods? All of them are processed within an inch of their lives.

The First Sign: Fast Food is No Longer My Friend

At first, I thought I was just reacting to a lower quality of food in my local fast food restaurants. First, the beef at Taco Bell started tasting “off,” as if it had been kept too long in the fridge. Then, the meat on McDonald’s burgers started tasting and feeling like crumbling shoe leather in my mouth. Other food quality issues arose afterwards, and soon I was even pickier than usual at all the local fast-food places.

I thought it was strange, but I tried to work around the “new” rules of my picky taste buds. No more McDonald’s meat, no more ground beef tacos, etc…

But Fast Food is Not the Only Issue

…Unfortunately, the pickiness did not stop there. I began eating less of the American sliced cheese I had loved since childhood, simply because it didn’t really taste like cheese anymore. There was an odd, plastic-y overtone to the taste, which I had never detected before–and it was utterly disgusting. Even switching cheese brands didn’t seem to help. I still liked cheese, most definitely, but the sliced cheese product didn’t suit anymore.

Not to mention that many of my favorite boxed meals from the grocery store started tasting funny. For instance, I used to live on Velveeta shells-n-cheese, yet I began getting sick at the taste–both the cheese and the pasta sometimes tasted like plastic to me. It didn’t seem like just being tired of eating a certain dish, since I try to switch up my food choices as much as possible. It just seemed that certain foods, which all happened to be processed, didn’t taste right anymore.

The Result: One Hungry Tummy

It seemed like all my favorite foods, all my go-to foods when going out to eat, were vanishing off my “favorite” list, one by one. And it was not the biggest list in the world to start out with, because of my lifelong issues with food texture (and a strong gag reflex that gets set off at the slightest thing). When 70% of “adult food” is off-limits because of pickiness, and 95% of what you DO like has suddenly become anathema, what DO you eat?

That was the burning question, and it still is. In desperation, I’ve gone back to peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, basic breads and pastas, or anything that doesn’t have the awful processed taste in such abundance. Yet I still walk around hungry most of the time, as if what I’m eating isn’t providing me with any nourishment.

Most people who look at me would think I eat all the time, to be the size that I am (flirting with 300 pounds at the moment). But instead, I eat significantly LESS than all my skinny, less picky friends, and I simply stay hungry–so much so that I have had low blood sugar attacks due to the reduced food intake. I WANT to eat, but almost nothing appeals to me anymore. And I have begun to suspect that the “plastic” taste and texture which has become so revolting to me is actually the result of processing food for longer shelf life.

Where to Go from Here?

Since my taste buds have apparently shifted allegiances for good, I honestly don’t know what to do with them anymore. Most of my favorite foods date back to childhood, and it’s frankly disconcerting to suddenly dislike foods that I remember loving and indulging in. Not to mention that these foods have sustained me while I avoided all sorts of other “normal” adult food.

Quite simply, I find myself at a loss every time I get hungry, because I have no idea what my taste buds will accept and what they won’t accept. And since I hate wasting money on food that I won’t end up eating, it makes it difficult to try new foods. It feels suspiciously like being caught between a rock and a hard place.

An Odd Side Note: Lettuce is a New Food Friend?

Yet, in the midst of all this loss, I have noticed something strange–I find myself thinking longingly of dishes like dark green Romaine lettuce with ranch dressing. For anyone who knows me, this is WAYYYYYY out of character; I historically have avoided most lettuce because it just tastes like crunchy paper soaked in water. Yet recently, the darker green lettuce types have become more appealing to me, as have spinach (when blended with cheese) and scallions. I also have no idea why this is happening, either, only that it began around the same time processed food began tasting strange to me.

Is This My Body’s Way of Saying “Eat Healthy?”

I honestly don’t know what to make of all this change in my appetite. Has anyone else experienced a sudden negative reaction to processed foods after eating them most of their lives? Or has anyone experienced a sudden positive reaction to lettuce and other “healthy” foods? I’d be glad to hear about it in the comments!