did this really just happen? really?

when bloggers actually have souls

WARNING: this is when i get really angry, nay… disgusted with people. feel free to close your browser now.

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i received an email yesterday from a woman, offering money in return for placing her ad as a link in one of my previously written posts.

i get a lot of these. all bloggers do. and typically i just delete them and move on. this email, however, struck me as odd because she referenced the post in which she wanted to place her ad.

she specifically requested this post i had written back in february. i’ll let you take a minute to read the post to understand why my curiosity was peaked when learning that someone wanted to place an ad link in that particular post.

odd, no? who requests and ad link be placed in a post like that?

so, i wrote her back and simply asked for specific details.

this was her response…

The link would be to www.types-of-nurses.com/forensic-nursing

And we’d like it on this post http://www.mybottlesup.com/2011/02/create-the-mold-of-a-rape-victim/

All you would have to do is edit the second paragraph to read: “..i’ve sat with them in emergency rooms while a forensic nurse collected evidence, and i’ve sat with them in SARC…”

Then make the words “forensic nurse” link to our site

And that’s it. As soon as the link is in place we can immediately pay you via PayPal. Let me know if you are interested and if we can work something out. Thanks!

to say i was flabbergasted does not even touch it. i was astounded. disgusted. enraged. i was hurt and disappointed.

i told paul about the brief email exchange i had with this woman, and as he shook his head in disbelief, i let my anger out. i said nasty things, cursed humanity, and told paul where i would like to see this woman go. i was so mad that i cried. i got up off the couch, went to the bathroom, and cried.

how dare she! how dare anyone! what is wrong with people?!?!

but i made sure to write her back first…

Dear __________,

No. There is no amount of money anyone could PayPal me to place ads for forensic nursing programs in my posts regarding rape and sexual assault.

Nic

i know just as well as the next person does that the blog world can get ugly sometimes. i know that there are bloggers deemed as “sell outs” for accepting money for posts, ads, etc. ya know what though? i also know that people need to make a damn living. bloggers need to put food on the table just as much as anyone else does.

have i “sold out” and accepted payment for posts? sure. will i continue to? possibly. if the opportunity is the right opportunity.

and yeah, there are times when i cringe at certain offers, the inner starving artist inside of me yelling DON’T GIVE IN TO THE MAN!!!

but there are times when i feel overjoyed and grateful for opportunities (paid and unpaid) that are offered to me as a blogger.

what you won’t see me do is accept any form of payment for placing an ad link in a post i have written about rape and sexual assault.

isn’t the subject taboo enough? isn’t there enough controversy surrounding abuse, rape, and sex crimes? what do you think offering bloggers money for ad links in rape-related posts will do? get you more clicks? traffic to your site? no. it won’t. all it will do is make the association between consumerism and sexual abuse.

use that money that you were going to paypal me and give it to a sexual assault response center. donate it to the Joyful Heart Foundation and work to end the backlog on rape kits.

don’t offer that money to someone who wrote a post months ago in the hopes of being heard and making a change. that’s just insulting, and makes you look like an asshole.

nipplebreasts and other things

i can’t tell which are larger, my pregnant nipples or my pregnant breasts. this godforsaken first trimester is almost over (HURRY UP TIME, GAH!) and i’m already into my maternity/nursing bras.

i’ve never understood it when guys get all excited because they’ve knocked up their woman AND ZOMG THE PREGNANT BOOBS ARE AMAZING. really, they’re not. i mean, sure they’re HUGE, so if you’re all “bigger is better,” then ok fine… but keep in mind, big can be a bit scary at times, especially when you can’t figure out which is which, the breast or the nipple.

THAT WHOLE THING IS THE NIPPLE?!?!?

yes, yes it is. ::waggles eyebrows:: wanna get it on?

i fear the size of my nipplebreasts 6 months from now. FEAR. i’ve tried to think of a fruit that they may resemble by that point in time, and i can’t come up with one. this is probably because no fruit exists that large. trees cannot hold fruit that large from its limbs. it will die.

as is my self esteem. dying. slowly.

anyway, this week i did much babbling, over at ‘being pregnant’ so you should scope it out. we discussed all kinds of fun stuff, like the super powers of the pregnant woman’s nose. i taught the internet something new about how cool my dog is (pretend like you didn’t already know). and i couldn’t not share a story that my friend told me a few nights ago about her husband wigging out about their alien spawn. then i wrapped things up nicely with a little ribbon of love when i told you about jackson’s latest tantrum of awesomeness that makes me wonder how young he will be when he sees the shrink.

LOOKIN’ GOOD JACKSONVILLE

HOLY SHIT, IS THIS A BLOG POST?!?!? LIKE, A REAL ONE?!?!? ONE THAT DOESN’T JUST CONSIST OF CUTE PICS OF MY KID TO DISTRACT YOU FROM THE LACK OF CONTENT?!?!? I BELIEVE IT IS!!!

so i just spent the last hour and 15 minutes watching the old woman who runs the local laundromat. her name is ms. sharon and she looked as though she needed a hug, and a meal that did not come out of a vending machine.

one of the washing machines was leaking, and little old ms. sharon came over to investigate and then proceeded to beat the shit out of it until it started to work again.

no, i’m not kidding. not even a little bit.

to my left was ms. sharon kicking a washing machine’s ass in her knee socks and slippers, and to my right was a cross dresser who rocked an afro like i have never seen before.

it’s magical here, y’all. straight up magical.

i was at a laundromat because we are currently lacking our washer and dryer as well as the rest of our belongings. as it turns out, though we are in our lovely new home, our shit is still on a truck… that has to make 2 stops before reuniting with us.

and thus, a chunk of my afternoon today was spent at the laundromat.

but we’re here! we’re back in good ol’ j’ville and it feels like we never really left, except for the fact that when we left here to go to maryland, jackson was 9 months old and he is now nearly 3 1/2. aside from that little tidbit, TOTALLY feels like we never left.

went to my new vagina doctor today, who is splendid and has a way with a speculum. (i’m just sayin… ladies, you know when an ob/obgyn knows how to work a speculum. YOU CAN’T FEEL IT. that is key. if any doctors or doctors-in-training are reading this blog, work on developing that skill. your patients will thank you AND MEAN IT.)

the jelly bean is good. i’m rockin’ a solid 9 week old bump that closely resembles the bump i had when i was 4 months pregnant with jackson. really, i just look like i have a large food baby. pics to come once i retrieve my camera gear as well as some underpants.

i got to drink the amazing orange sugar delight of a beverage that you’re given when you take your glucose test TODAY. and yes, i get to do it again between 18-20 weeks. why did i get to do it today? because i’m special, that’s why! since paul and i make rather big humans, they wanted to check my sugar levels at this stage in the pregnancy. i dunno… i just do as i’m told.

so, what have we learned so far today? glucose beverages are yucky. i’m carrying a food baby consisting of pizza subs, ben and jerry’s, and a few gallons of milk. we’re in our new house that lacks everything except for air mattresses and fold-out chairs and suitcases.

oh!!! and i’ve been babbling… so if you’re wondering about the status of my boobs, click here. if you want to tell me about how you broke the “i’m pregnant” news to your kid(s), click here. if you have ideas on how i can create a room that jackson and the jelly bean will be sharing, click here. and, if you think you’re the only pregnant person who checks the toilet paper every time you wipe, click here. you’ll feel better.

oh, and here’s a cute pic of jackson to distract you. he’s welcoming you all to our house… just don’t come now. we have no furniture. or food. or anything really.

Hindsight

I originally wrote this post to run over at Band Back Together, which it will tomorrow, along with many others who will share their memories and honor 9/11 in their own way.

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Paul and I had been together for 3 years when 9/11 took place. Long distance relationships are hard, but we did it all through college and grad school (flight school for him). I’d like to think it made us stronger over the years.

A lot of things have made us stronger over the 12 + years that we have been together.

I woke up that Tuesday morning, a junior in college, searching for a clean pair of jeans to wear to a composition class that I was already late for. I lived with 3 other girls, 1 of whom was already in class, the other two were making coffee and watching Matt Lauer.

My bedroom was in the back of the apartment. I had the smallest bedroom, because I was the last roommate to join in on the living arrangements. I had more privacy but much less space. My dresser had to go out in the hallway so I could have room to walk in my room.

When I went in the hallway that morning to get my jeans, I heard one of my roommates repeating “ohmygod. ohmygod. ohmygod.” Granted, my roommate had a tendency to be a bit dramatic, but the tone of her voice concerned me. I’ve received enough middle-of-the-night phone calls with bad news to know what her tone meant as she said, “ohmygod” over and over again.

Zipping up my jeans, I made my way into the kitchen, which opened up to our living room, our main communal space. One roommate was watching the coffee drip into the pot, while the other roommate (the “ohmygod” roommate) sat on the couch with a box of Kleenex and an empty mug.

Not much was being said on tv at that time. The first tower had been hit. Everyone was stunned, shocked, confused. I curled up on the couch next to my roommate and we held hands. I didn’t ask any questions because what I saw on the television was more than my brain was able to compute at that moment. So we just sat with each other, hand in hand, with tears running down our cheeks.

My roommate who had been waiting for the next pot of coffee, sniffled and wiped her face before coming over to us on the couch and filling up all of our mugs. She then left for class.

It was shortly after she began her walk to class that the second tower was hit. Our gasps were audible. Loud even. As we sat on the couch, nearly in one another’s laps, we cried hard together. The phone in our apartment started to ring, but neither of us answered it. It was like we were waiting for a third plane.

I had not seen the first tower get hit at 8:52 that morning, but I witnessed the second tower being hit on live tv, and as I watched people leap from windows of the towers to their death, I felt physically ill with helplessness.

People tell you that there’s always something you can do. Something that can be done… whether it’s to right a wrong or fix something that has been broken. I grew up being taught to keep trying. There’s always something that can be done. But on this day, there was nothing. Absolutely nothing that any of us could do at that moment in time. And that is a horrific feeling.

I called my mom as my roommate and I kept our eyes glued to the television, waiting to see what would happen next. I remember worrying about my dad who travels during the work week. I could never keep track of what major city he was in when. Thankfully my dad not in NYC that day and was safe.

I emailed Paul as soon as I saw that the Pentagon had been hit. Our long distance relationship and the sheer horror of that morning had my anxiety through the roof. While I was at school in Auburn, Alabama, Paul was in school in Maryland, at the US Naval Academy.

For a while, my thoughts bounced back and forth from watching the live coverage on tv, witnessing the gravity of what was taking place in NYC, and then panicking that Paul’s safety was in jeopardy being at a military academy. After the Pentagon was hit, I worried for him in ways that my heart was not prepared for as a 20 year old kid.

Eventually Paul was able to call me from a payphone. He reassured me that he was safe. The Academy had been on lock-down and all gates were barricaded with armed guards. The reality of what was happening that day finally hit during that phone call with him.

The terror that I had witnessed that morning while sitting on the couch with my roommate had been brought directly into my life when the Pentagon was hit and the love of my life was a mere 45 minutes away, in Annapolis.

My heart broke for the families who searched for missing loved ones… families forced to bury those who were much too young to be taken. My soul grew with pride when I later heard of the sacrifices made by the passengers on United 93. And my body ached to hug Paul and tangibly feel that he was safe.

As paralyzing as that day was 10 years ago, I credit 9/11 for solidifying in my heart who I was meant to spend the rest of my life with. I suppose sometimes it literally takes a world tragedy to make you realize what you want out of life.

wherein i piss myself at anderson cooper’s report on piss-capades

dear internet, who needs stories about lingerie being sold for little girls when you have the fantastically wonderful giggles of anderson cooper to keep you company?

never mind the fact that anderson cooper is attempting to report on the tinkle-on-the-plane episode of gerard depardieu. because that’s just hysterical in and of itself.

behold the makings of a wonderful day, and thank you anderson cooper. your giggles complete me.

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