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Showing posts from March, 2009

Micro-Worriers?

They are just like microbes. Only difference between these people and the uni-celled organisms is that it's easier to spot them with their pensive eyebrows, frowned chins, and a smile-less "sky is going to fall on my head any minute" look on their faces. Try opening up a small talk about a rainbow, they'll be thinking about muddy rains. If you say flowers, they're already sneezing with fear of pollen. While me and you think of beautiful waterfalls, these people would be scared to death of the falling rocks. Ok, we can collectively sigh at these dreary word associations, but it goes on and on.....Chocolates gives headaches, travelling would definitely involve airplane crashes, a walk on the seaside will lead to a topic on tsunamis. By the way, don't even think of cracking silly jokes to cheer up because they'll start gagging over them. Pathetic, huh? So, in a honest appeal to restore sanity to the world, let's ask these paranoids to please stop worrying

The Mysterious Melanin

Ok, so even when we were roaming around as Hominids a.k.a hairless monkeys, our skin has been black. This was supposed to be useful to prevent us from harmful UV rays in Africa, the "dark continent" (not bad, huh) from where everyone of us on planet earth originate. That's old news. Then, as we evolved and moved around to colder places like Europe and Asia, we didn't have much use of our melanin pigment and so we started developing lighter skin. Adaptation, of course. Somewhere down the history lane, we also started getting an absurd notion of darker skin being seen as being of lowest social value, and lighter skin of highest. No one knows why, but we all know that this paranoia has been the root cause of the evil "racism". What's most fascinating (maybe only to me) is that apparently how we tend to choose our mates is also connected to our skin color. Natural selection, bingo. Peter Frost's 2005 Fair Women, Dark Men, U. of Washington sociologist Pie