corpse pose
Article link is behind WaPo’s paywall, but I’ve shared it as a gift link, so it should be accessible. And what a gift it is.
Article link is behind WaPo’s paywall, but I’ve shared it as a gift link, so it should be accessible. And what a gift it is.
... the group of seven yogis in a class held Wednesday inside a cafe in Lincolnshire, England, were finally in shavasana, a position at the end of a yoga class — sometimes called corpse pose — where people sink into a meditative state by lying on their backs.For 30 minutes, they resembled corpses as the instructor, Millie Laws, 22, banged on a shamanic drum inside a room lit only by the golden glow of candlelight. The scene was meant to be relaxing — but for a couple walking their dog outside the building, it resembled something far more sinister.“They reported to the police that they’d seen somebody walking around in a room lit up with candles and what looked like dead people lying all over the floor,” Laws told The Washington Post. “The couple thought it was some sort of ritual mass killing.”
A teacher-turned-governor willing to use their line item veto pen as a middle finger directed at their opposition-stacked legislature is a grand thing: Tony Evers extends increases for public schools in perpetuity | The Guardian
Sharing this only because I'm deeply disturbed that WaPo deems NXIVM "cultlike" in the opening when it's clearly, beyond any shadow of a doubt, a cult: Allison Mack released from prison early in NXIVM case | WaPo
Yet another reason why I remain and will remain a lifelong proponent of amassing a personal, physical library: Disney Deletes Streaming Movie That Only Released In May 2023 | Kotaku
Mycelium & orange peels were used to create these visually appealing + sustainable partitions | Yanko Design
Fantastic document: THE AMAZING WORLD OF SUPERMAN: HOW A COMIC MAGAZINE IS CREATED | Tom Brevoort
This is one beautiful home: Wabi-sabi philosophy guides design of accessible coastal home in Australia | Dezeen
Another one of those series whose last issue has been in the long and/or shortboxes since my collecting phase (90-96) and joined by the first three issues only over the last couple of weeks of this one. Patience – if that's the right word for it – is rewarded, however, as this brutal, stunning work – Wrightson's art, especially with Bill Wray’s colors, is insane here: this Gotham breathes exhaust fumes and decay – is now one of my favorite Batman stories, a prescient and searing breaking of the Bat and the placing Gotham under martial law long before Bane and an earthquake got around to it – didn't realize how much Nolan and co based DARK KNIGHT RISES around this, swapping Deacon Blackfire with Bane and mixing in DARK KNIGHT RETURNS, KNIGHTFALL, and NO MAN'S LAND, to set it all aflame.
It's been an experience to read THE CULT as I've been listening to the audiobook of Steven Hassan's excellent COMBATTING CULT MIND CONTROL – I have a deep-rooted and long-standing fascination with cults, their destructive effects, and the methods by which good actors can help those who have fallen victim to undue influence (something I'll write about soonish) back to their authentic selves – (whilst mowing various lawns) and witnessing Blackfire's mental breaking and Patti-Hearsting of Batman in the first issues through starvation, sleep deprivation, drugs, and other forms of mental (and physical) torture and manipulation (while the love-bombing is missing, Hassan's BITE model is on full display here), demonstrating, in particularly vivid form, that the stigma faced by ex-cult members is unfounded at best and as destructive as the cult itself at worst: a weak mind has nothing to do with falling victim to a cult as even one of the most disciplined and developed minds in all of literature is susceptible to dirty tricks and mental rape by con men, authoritarian demagogues, and power-hungry zealots. Particularly moved by how, even after all is said and done and Gotham saved (or as saved as Gotham can get), the effects of the experience still weigh heavily on the Bat. Wish those had been explored further and maintained as part of continuity.
THE CULT is also notable, from a comics perspective, for featuring one of my favorite stories with Jason Todd as Robin – made even more so that it's written by the writer who killed him not long after: this Jason has the potential to be as great as Batman, which makes his death and subsequent revival and transformation into the Red Hood that much more tragic.
So good and so vastly underrated; my complete reading list, from 2013 to the present, lives here.