tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post3110864309533654858..comments2024-03-29T06:03:45.545-07:00Comments on One Cʘsmos: I'll Show You Mine If You Show Me YoursGagdad Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comBlogger119125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-2765183870390545342010-07-18T23:43:14.559-07:002010-07-18T23:43:14.559-07:00Plus, all those "Trespassers will be violated...Plus, all those "Trespassers will be violated, I mean, prosecuted" signs make for some interesting contemplation.<br /><br />I know, it's not that funny. See what I gotta put up with?USS Ben USN (Ret)https://www.blogger.com/profile/07492369604790651538noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-49646371129492858562010-07-18T23:36:55.265-07:002010-07-18T23:36:55.265-07:00"Speaking to myself, here..."
I speak t..."Speaking to myself, here..."<br /><br />I speak to myself all the time wondering if anyone is listening. <br />I mean, I know where I live but it's amazing how often I'm out to lunch, so to speak.USS Ben USN (Ret)https://www.blogger.com/profile/07492369604790651538noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-2367114386614883132010-07-18T19:51:21.789-07:002010-07-18T19:51:21.789-07:00Bob... "But when the left gets ahold of these...Bob... "But when the left gets ahold of these concepts, things go down hill in a hurry -- for example, with the dharma bums of the 1950s who used the "emptiness" of Zen as a pretext for sociopathy."<br /><br />It has been my experience, and this a very recent discovery for me, that such terminologies and even flash/peak insights or revelations of emptiness can be used as a defense mechanism of an already fractured and dissociated ego. It is like the ability to 'witness all that arises' gives license to keep depersonalizing from the raging internal battle that is happening within. Of course, then it simply manifests itself in ones' external life: there is no running from what is already in place--the only pathway is authentic suffering of it and eventual integration. <br /><br />If emptiness is what one wants, then they should step into a monastery and devote their life to it full time, but if you want to be in the world and utilize the ego among a living breathing culture, then brother (and sister), you better recognize that there is such a thing as relative truth, personal responsibility, and psychological-emotional wounding.<br /><br />Unless one prefers a life that is spiraling out of control, harmful to others, and is as self absorbed as a two year old playing with his wee-wee.<br /><br />Speaking to myself, here...Jason T.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14461929156658839789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-64954153798236505832010-07-18T17:17:49.631-07:002010-07-18T17:17:49.631-07:00"Coming In On A Wing and A Prayer" was t..."Coming In On A Wing and A Prayer" was the No. ! song in the country the day I was born, so now that my seniority has been established....listen UP, after all it is "World Listening Day." 0(*.*)0<br /><br />Recently, I've been going through my Dad's college yearbooks and my Mom's scrapbooks and from what I can tell, the The Greatest Generation was great for many reasons but perhaps it's their music that made them so. My jaw dropped open when I turned over a faded postcard and read:<br /><br />"You are cordially invited to the V.M.I Concert Tea Dance, (with) Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra featuring <br />Connie Haines and Frank Sinatra<br />with the Pied Pipers, April 26, 1941. Admission: $1.00 Single, $1.50 Couple." WHAAAA??<br /><br />Eight months later, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and everyone smacked by that awful reality joined together in supreme cooperation to defend life and liberty. One of the grand things FDR did was create the USO. Their traveling music shows to various installations around the world was a huge morale booster for the military personnel.<br /><br />The No. 1 songs in 1943 were:<br /><br />All Or Nothing At All - Frank Sinatra w/ Harry James<br /><br />As Time Goes By - Rudy Vallee<br /><br />Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition - Kay Kyser<br /><br />Taking A Chance On Love - Benny Goodman<br /><br />That Old Black Magic - The Glen Miller Orchestra<br /><br />When the Lights Go On Again (All Over the World) - Vaughn Monroe<br /><br />When I was a teeny bopper, it was all Elvis, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Everly Brothers all the time, then Dylan and Kristoferson and Emily Lou Harris w/o the electronics. I still enjoy revisiting the old Rock em & Roll em tunes, but my heart belongs to the War Songs.Mizz Ehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325435271880036807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-68243404002513676372010-07-18T13:41:10.772-07:002010-07-18T13:41:10.772-07:00Yes. Maybe that's it. The best of a band like ...Yes. Maybe that's it. The best of a band like Radiohead has *some* light to it and it is often enough. And it is really the balance between the two aspects of existence. I tend to shy away from music that is all dark (i.e. "there is no dark side of the moon, in fact it's all dark") as well as music that tends to be all "light" ...both types lack a fundamentally aspect of Reality.Jackhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06708393262849661076noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-41413195991761113892010-07-18T13:38:14.886-07:002010-07-18T13:38:14.886-07:00First, Hi. Another lurker here, lured in by this ...First, Hi. Another lurker here, lured in by this challenge. I would’ve posted within the first 100 comments but for all the ruthless, ruthless winnowing (most painfully of all Beatles, a true gem by Joe Simon and “I Wanna Take You Higher” by Sly & Family) that took a little time. But I’ve got it down to five, so here goes:<br /><br />1. Telstar, by the Tornados. The best musical tribute ever composed for the king of all wild horses sweeping majestically across the great rolling western plains. Or so my imagination had it for months, maybe years, until a cousin – merely my age but more attuned to the actual times we lived in and better informed generally – explained to me with some amusement that Telstar was the name of a satellite. Not a horse. “Tel” was short for “television” and “star” had nothing to do in this case with distinctive, maybe magical facial markings. <br /><br />2. Sweet Thang, by Loretta Lynn and Ernest Tubb. Country music was the music of grownups when and where I was a kid and this smash hit (among all the grownups I knew outside of those teaching school) was full of all sorts of adult mysteries I was intent at the time on getting to the bottom of. Yeah, I could feel the appeal, but too much of the story was going right over my head. Sandbox? And why is it bad to blink more than twice? Mom, can you help me out here? <br /><br />3. I’m Gonna Make You Love Me. The Temptations and the Supremes. Oh, just, sigh. Nothing in the ‘60s said Tomorrow like Motown. And nothing promised glorious, glamorous, beautiful blue sky, forever summer Tomorrow like this marriage of the best with the best. I was in Jr. high and nothing was more in the bag than the most fabulous future the world had ever seen.<br /><br />4. At Folsom Prison, by Johnny Cash. We finally got a car that had 8-track(!) and this was one of the first tapes my parents purchased. The longest trips we took (to visit my aunt, uncle and cousins at one after another Air Force base farther and farther down south) were all over-night, when it was cooler and you could make the best time. Even with the ever increasing demands from myself and my sibs for more rock, less country, I don’t think any 8-track or (later) cassette ever logged more mileage with less whining in any of our station wagons than this one.<br /><br />5. Don’t Fence Me In. Willie Nelson and Leon Russell teamed up to cover, a bit lackadaisically, this and a bunch of other standards on “One for the Road” in 1979. I was driving my father home from what would be his last doctor’s appointment when it came on the radio and he, unexpectedly, almost unimaginably by that time but entirely whole-heartedly, joined in at full volume. It was audacious, hilarious, and the perfect affirmation that he was, even then, exactly who and what he’d always been. I joined in as best I could, through all the laughing and trying to hold the car on the road. I guess you would have had to have been there, and where we had been for some years. I’ll never forget it. <br /><br />Thanks, Bob, for a great post, an excuse for this trip down memory lane and all the good work generally!Linda Morganhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09756416859669804729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-64780141003248286402010-07-18T13:26:33.317-07:002010-07-18T13:26:33.317-07:00In all seriousness, I think there is a place for &...In all seriousness, I think there is a place for "nihilism," so long as it is in a dialectic with its opposite, like how you need catabolism (tearing down) and anabolism (building up) to have metabolism. Just as a biology of pure catabolism is death, so too is a philosophy of pure nihilism.<br /><br />For example, Christianity makes ample room for "nihilism" in the form of apophatic theology. This "unKnowing" of God is actually a kind of higher knowing, not a non-knowing per se. But when the left gets ahold of these concepts, things go down hill in a hurry -- for example, with the dharma bums of the 1950s who used the "emptiness" of Zen as a pretext for sociopathy.Gagdad Bobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-54583302465201176692010-07-18T13:16:00.289-07:002010-07-18T13:16:00.289-07:00I remember when nihilism used to be about somethin...I remember when nihilism used to be <i>about</i> something....Gagdad Bobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-23596658349449701642010-07-18T13:10:41.347-07:002010-07-18T13:10:41.347-07:00I think Van makes a very useful point. Sometimes t...I think Van makes a very useful point. Sometimes there just seems to be a darkness emanating from certain music. I have many friends who listen to what may be categorized as indie rock/post-punk music. I find it very challenging to listen to on what seems to be a spiritual level.<br /><br />It is no coincidence that these same friends tend towards lefty/pomo/agnosticism/Atheism/etc. There seems to be a core of nihilism in such music. Something in me blocks it out as inhuman, even anti-human. <br /><br />A band like Radiohead skirts that line for me. It seems their music has a longing for transcendence but just one which never arrives. It's a short step from there to simply skipping the whole "longing for transcendence" part of the equation. It is telling to me that Radiohead supposedly refers to themselves jokingly as "Punk Floyd".<br /><br />I had to stop listening to the band as innovative as they could be because there was just a darkness, a void, in their music.<br /><br />Rock music can easily devolve into nihilism. Any thoughts as to why? What are the unspoken assumptions of much rock music that encourages this? What does it say about the culture at large?Jackhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06708393262849661076noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-52938768190161395952010-07-18T12:53:10.597-07:002010-07-18T12:53:10.597-07:00I hadn't heard about the dancing, but I knew t...I hadn't heard about the dancing, but I knew they could hear their mother's voice and other sounds. Just for clarity, when I said "sound and music are probably experienced first in utero," I meant prior to the other senses. When all that you see, smell, taste and touch are more or less unchanging (I would guess; maybe I'm completely wrong on that score), external sounds are the first things we experience that are distinctive and perhaps obviously external to ourselves. First music, then light...juliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15975754287030568726noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-18329405568745237742010-07-18T12:49:26.552-07:002010-07-18T12:49:26.552-07:00Having been raised on classic rock, progressive ro...Having been raised on classic rock, progressive rock, and heavy metal (Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Rush, Jethro Tull, Metallica, Dream Theater, Tool, Black Sabbath) anything that was remotely popish was taboo in my neck of the woods. Of course, my mother was a lover of Motown, and that influenced me heavily, so my tastes eventually diverged from the cultural norm--transcended and included, if I might borrow a term from...somebody.<br /><br />Anyway, here are my albums/songs that transport me to a certain time and place:<br /><br />1.) Journey's Greatest Hits - This whole album takes me back to summer nights as a kid in south St. Louis, smells of bbq and Bud/Busch beer wafting in the air. Thunder storms gathering, my very first crush (I was 12, she was 16, and I still am in love with her), and driving down Lindbergh Blvd. on Saturday night; all this comes rushing back whenever I here "Separate Ways" or "Who's Crying Now."<br /><br />2.Pearl Jam's "Ten" - Mom away, my brother and all of his friends getting high and drunk in the basement, playing ping-pong and basement hockey. Yes, I am a hoosier, indeed.<br /><br />3. Boyz II Men - "I'll Make Love To You," "End Of The Road," and "It's so Hard To Say Goodbye" -These were some of the first songs that took me into a place of heartfelt LOVE while listening to music. Sometimes I would just sit in the dark and listen to them over and over sobbing at how beautiful they are. When I here them today I still get that special feeling, like they were my first loves.<br /><br />4. Say Hello 2 Heaven by Temple of the Dog - If you have not heard this song, you are missing out. Special place in my heart that I can't put into words. Definitely NOT a guilty pleasure, but still brings me to another place.<br /><br />http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyVTdY2BI3g<br /><br />5. OK, the ultimate guilty pleasure songs that played prominent roles in my life: Father Figure by George Michael, Dirty Diana by Michael Jackson, and Stan by Eminem.<br /><br />Word, G.<br /><br />Oh yeah, I wrote a top ten all time favorite song list on my blog if anyone is interested.<br /><br />http://evolutionaryartist.blogspot.com/Jason T.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14461929156658839789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-8979250175329875442010-07-18T12:39:39.657-07:002010-07-18T12:39:39.657-07:00BTW, there's plenty of research showing that b...BTW, there's plenty of research showing that babies can recognize their mother's voice in the womb, and that they also dance to music.Gagdad Bobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-70152111649151986162010-07-18T12:36:36.761-07:002010-07-18T12:36:36.761-07:00here's a
bonafide classic
1st link: the so...here's a <br /><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mb3iPP-tHdA" rel="nofollow">bonafide</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Whiter_Shade_Of_Pale" rel="nofollow">classic</a> <br /><br />1st link: the song<br />2nd: its history---dont miss<br />'Authorship lawsuit' sec.gehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02015936407999495181noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-79513831534885843432010-07-18T12:34:50.807-07:002010-07-18T12:34:50.807-07:00They say that architecture is just frozen music......They say that architecture is just frozen music....Gagdad Bobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-77244287264982006992010-07-18T12:27:14.950-07:002010-07-18T12:27:14.950-07:00Speaking of gardens and beginnings and the primacy...Speaking of gardens and beginnings and the primacy of music over other forms of art/creativity, I was thinking more last night about how sound and music are probably experienced first in utero, and somehow was drawn back to Genesis, which among other things could be said to describe how people are formed in the womb. It occurred to me that music never comes up; first there is light, then separation, then everything else. <br /><br />But of course, even before all of that, out of the void, there was no light until God <i>Said</i>. Can anyone doubt that what he said was music?juliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15975754287030568726noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-22556294624759017512010-07-18T12:17:09.141-07:002010-07-18T12:17:09.141-07:00John,
Off to walk in a garden with my father's...John,<br /><i>Off to walk in a garden with my father's widow.</i><br /><br />The flipside of my morning, spent curled up on a couch listening about a garden with my husband's son. I hope yours is as ordinarily transcendent as mine.<br /><br />Timeless ways to remember the Sabbath.juliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15975754287030568726noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-82211303151243861482010-07-18T12:12:34.887-07:002010-07-18T12:12:34.887-07:00Beatle George was all about gardening as well. Ap...Beatle George was <a href="http://www.georgeharrison.com/garden/introduction/" rel="nofollow">all about gardening</a> as well. Apparently, he much preferred it to music.Gagdad Bobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14249005793605006679noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-50359805025004769682010-07-18T12:07:45.394-07:002010-07-18T12:07:45.394-07:00Van, and Julie's response, We were typing at ...Van, and Julie's response, We were typing at the same time:<br /><br />Horticulture, to heal the anger, calm the heart: bleed the poison, get rid of rock, stand on a Rock.<br /><br />Van, "the music itself, the associations to it, can be downright destructive – all the more so because it is also something your enjoy listening to. Yes? There is a dark side to music, and modern music is especially suited to transmitting it."<br /><br /> Off to walk in a garden with my father's widow.<br /> love, JohnJohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11816128268464995920noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-66027067624421884412010-07-18T11:58:40.299-07:002010-07-18T11:58:40.299-07:00Well,
I thought this was to be quirky,
Thought...Well,<br /> I thought this was to be quirky,<br /> Thought I would be too sane,<br /> and, then,<br /> I read all the comments -<br /> not something I do all the time:<br />I AM A LOT OLDER than most of you,<br /> maybe all of you , combined, dunno<br /><br /> Thanks for all the names: I recognize many of the modern and older faith references. By the time I began to find my way out of rural Virginia, to go beyond my father's Heavy 78s, I was looking for more meat. Rock is a poison.<br />Jazz an other drug.<br /> Palestrina. Gregorian. Heart stuff, to join me.<br />SAL says, "So, I thought: what really stirs your mystic chords of memory?<br />Instant answer: Horticulture."<br /> Amen<br /> The clippers separate wayward twigs, before the organism grows the wrong wqay. The shearing metal sound, as I squeeze the rubber-cushioned handles, and the plant bleeds. And my song is in His garden.<br /><br /> JohnJohnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11816128268464995920noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-18019899222108250212010-07-18T11:52:52.807-07:002010-07-18T11:52:52.807-07:00Some of my favorite 'take-me-away' tunes:
...Some of my favorite 'take-me-away' tunes:<br /><br />Hot Rats - Zappa. Hated it at first, then finally 'got' it and became part of my permanent soundtrack.<br /><br />Will To Live - Neil Young in his salmon suit.<br /><br />When I Was A Boy (entire album) - Jane Siberry. My God, the voice.<br /><br />I Will Arise - Jimmy Webb who for once avoids treacle and makes transcendent magic.<br /><br />Globe of Frogs - Robyn Hitchcock, master of tuneful macabre.robinstarfishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15665546554663005609noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-64858181571157647312010-07-18T11:39:42.028-07:002010-07-18T11:39:42.028-07:00Van,
Do other’s not experience it as viscerally as...Van,<br /><i>Do other’s not experience it as viscerally as I did? do? I find that hard to believe.</i><br /><br />No, I think you're right about that. There are a whole host of songs that I cringe to hear when they come up, mainly tunes that at some point or another I found, if not moving, at least amusing. Usually darkly so. <br /><br />I don't necessarily consider them deconstructive, though - without then, there's no now, and I find it valuable to bear in mind the paths I've traveled to get here. I can't be then again, but if nothing else it helps me to remember to be patient with those who are still then, now.juliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15975754287030568726noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-60341565458632376782010-07-18T11:30:43.090-07:002010-07-18T11:30:43.090-07:00Sal - unusual, yes. Weird, no. Whatever brings you...Sal - unusual, yes. Weird, no. Whatever brings you back to the Garden, imho...juliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15975754287030568726noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-30317302035298832542010-07-18T11:28:33.937-07:002010-07-18T11:28:33.937-07:00Susannah said “there is some music that can be def...Susannah said “there is some music that can be definitively described as "hell."<br /><br />I don’t think you’re so off base with that. I’d even, in some ways, aimed GE’s “Hell is other people’s music” to in some cases “Hell is your old music”… or at least a doorway to it. <br /><br />Leaving aside the obvious candidates from my list, ‘The Wall’ and Ozzy, and the easy quips and slams to the rest of the lists that leaves open, isn’t there more than a little substance to that? Seems to me that there’s more to it than meets the ear.<br /><br />I’d written a comment here, and a post about how the intro’s to sermon’s, which I once rolled my eyes at, served the purpose of throwing up conceptual scaffolding for the purpose of preparing for and making the persons frame of mind able to support the spiritual message to come. There are many ways in which music, <i>especially</i> music which you have strong and deep memories – not just a slide show pictures, but memories of feelings, thoughts, pleasures and desires – intimately tied to, where playing that music is in some cases an anti-scaffolding to the conceptual structure you (I) might have made for your life today.<br /><br />Is that not true? I see much of talk of how music can be all nifty & spiritual, but that is not all it is, and in many ways if not the music itself, the associations to it, can be downright destructive – all the more so because it is also something your enjoy listening to. Yes? There is a dark side to music, and modern music is especially suited to transmitting it.<br /><br />That list I put up here was seriously mentally and spiritually wrenching to listen to as I found the links to the clips and listened to a few seconds or the full songs… some of those associations are severely incompatible with my life today and what I believe, and were so before I first came to OC, and are even more so today… so what gives? Some of you have been musicians for probably much longer than I was, and some seem to be having more success than we ever did, but… even in our small delimited world, we were ‘Rock Stars’, and from a few of the crew who went on to some real measure of success, I know that the small scale ‘Star status’ we had, was, well, small scale, in comparison to album selling, major venue playing level of ‘Star Status’. Now being a ‘Rock Star’ may not relate to most peoples experience and interaction with music, but it isn’t irrelevant – that imagery <i>was</i>, and IS, to one degree or another, the <i>point</i> of rock music… how does that square with you today?<br /><br />I really. do. Not. Listen. To. Rock on the radio, and not so much because I do or don’t like current styles – some of it I do – but because of what I know it means… at least to me. Do other’s not experience it as viscerally as I did? do? I find that hard to believe. But I can barely hear such music without imagining playing it, who could sing which parts best, how to deliver particular phrases… how much stage room I know I’d need on some parts (to clue the singer so they’d be less likely to have their skull bashed in by a bass headstock swinging around like a baseball bat)… and the crowd, setting, mood, etc, etc, etc. <br /><br />And even beyond, or beneath the performance aspects, the <i>music</i> is there, driving it all.<br /><br />Isn’t it?<br /><br />If I listen to music today, it’s classical. Or some very few jazz selections, and those because I have no experience or associations of them beyond the music, but that’s in small doses too, because there is an underlying theme of the music and it is still there, even without the lifestyle associations. I literally cannot imagine that it’s not.<br /><br />And I can’t go there. Not for long. Integration IS the watchword, and so much of modern music (defining ‘modern’ as 1920’s through to today) is something I experience as very dis-integrating.<br /><br />So. In the interests of chiming in with “the willingness to make an embarrassing disclosure”, and perhaps lessen the starkness of mine, whatcha think?<br /><br />Honestly, wv:<br />prairVan Harveyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08470413719262297062noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-34779059508111675822010-07-18T11:21:55.363-07:002010-07-18T11:21:55.363-07:00*The Little White Cloud That Cried, J. Ray
*{about...*The Little White Cloud That Cried, J. Ray<br />*{about a deck of cards, belief} ? Tex Ritter<br />*{any-, everything} Mario Lanza<br />*The Okeh Laughing Record, ....<br />*Thirty Thousand Pounds of Bananas<br />*I'm So Lonesome I Could..H Wms<br />Morning on Mockingbird Hill, ?Johnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11816128268464995920noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8580258.post-22297484507845530442010-07-18T11:14:14.033-07:002010-07-18T11:14:14.033-07:00Timely-
Felt I totally flunked this exercise b/c I...Timely-<br />Felt I totally flunked this exercise b/c I'm really not all that musical. As you can tell.<br /><br />So, I thought: what <i>really</i> stirs your mystic chords of memory?<br />Instant answer: Horticulture.<br /><br />And OC is the only place I'd feel not stupid saying that...<br />So, not music so much, but the beauty of the created world, a specific type of tree, shrub or flower can recall a time, place or person.Salhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13201226644704622876noreply@blogger.com