The Lo Zone

A groovy place in cyberspace run by author Lolita Files. Come on in. Bring some Pepsi.

 
Lo Fun Fact #1
"Lolita Files" is my real name. It is not a pen name, as incredible as that may seem. There are plenty of Files family members and people who have known me for years capable of validating this. As for the "Lolita" part, my mother named me after the movie based on Nabokov's book, although she saw or read neither. To this day, she has no idea what a "Lolita" is.
Lo Fun Fact #2
I love fried chicken and fabulous shoes. If you ever want to get on my good side, send Popeye's or Mr. Chicken (my favorite spot in Cleveland) and a pair of Christian Louboutins.
Lo Fun Fact #3
Never show up unannounced or without a Pepsi (preferably Pepsi Jazz Caramel Cream). Better yet, how about not show up at all?
Lo Fun Fact #4
I hate the telephone. Don't get mad if I don't call you. I don't call anyone. Don't call me asking why I don't call. Just don't call, okay?
Lo Fun Fact #5
I love the internet!!! I love communicating through the internet!!! You can e-mail me and odds are I'll e-mail you right back (if I'm not in the middle of a major project). Makes up for my hangup about the phone, doesn't it? See, I'm not so bad after all!!!
Lo Fun Fact #6
I can't stand IMing. Please don't IM me. You will get the cold shoulder. I don't like giving people the cold shoulder, so please don't put me in that position.
Lo Fun Fact #7
I have four five six wonderful, slap-happy dogs, a bird (some kind of dove/pigeon mix), and a cat, all of whom I love to pieces. If you meet me and ask me about my dogs, bird, and cat, we'll be instant friends. If you meet me and ask me why the f*ck I have four five six dogs, a bird, and a cat, see the above fun fact for how I will respond.
Apocalypse Right Now.
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Apparently, the end's not coming fast enough for some folks.

[...] mega-church pastors recently met in Inglewood to polish strategies for using global communications and aircraft to transport missionaries to fulfill the Great Commission: to make every person on Earth aware of Jesus' message. Doing so, they believe, will bring about the end, perhaps within two decades.
But wait...it's not just Christians. Seems everybody's getting in on wanting to get it all over with.
In Iran, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has a far different vision. As mayor of Tehran in 2004, he spent millions on improvements to make the city more welcoming for the return of a Muslim messiah known as the Mahdi, according to a recent report by the American Foreign Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank.

To the majority of Shiites, the Mahdi was the last of the prophet Muhammad's true heirs, his 12 righteous descendants chosen by God to lead the faithful.

Ahmadinejad hopes to welcome the Mahdi to Tehran within two years.
Hold on. The party's just getting started.
[...] some Jewish groups in Jerusalem hope to clear the path for their own messiah by rebuilding a temple on a site now occupied by one of Islam's holiest shrines.

Artisans have re-created priestly robes of white linen, gem-studded breastplates, silver trumpets and solid-gold menorahs to be used in the Holy Temple — along with two 6½-ton marble cornerstones for the building's foundation.
And let's not forget those lovely red heifers...
Then there is Clyde Lott, a Mississippi revivalist preacher and cattle rancher. He is trying to raise a unique herd of red heifers to satisfy an obscure injunction in the Book of Numbers: the sacrifice of a blemish-free red heifer for purification rituals needed to pave the way for the messiah.

So far, only one of his cows has been verified by rabbis as worthy, meaning they failed to turn up even three white or black hairs on the animal's body.
Better to be safe than sorry.

LATimes.com: 'End Times' Religious Groups Want Apocalypse Soon
posted by Lo @ 10:41 AM  
5 Comments:
  • At June 22, 2006 1:42 PM, Blogger Matt said…

    God help us...er...kill us...whatever it is God does, that is. I may drive those in religious camps to mouth foaming, but I've been a staunch atheist from my teen years. An atheist must remain staunch as one is constantly put under pressure to "see the light". My mother is currently on her deathbed, hence my recent absence from the site. A good friend of mine asked, "Wouldn't you like to believe she's going to a better place?" I answered, "I would like to believe a great many things, that will never make them so." It's also funny that the same people in this country that laugh about the ridiculous idea of a virgin-laden Muslim heaven is, have their own ridiculous ideas of paradise that they hold as given truths.

    So it's unnerving to know that the majority of humans on this planet, those who make global policy, don't really mind global warming, they wouldn't really care if a nuke went off in downtown L.A., etc., as it fits into their dogma of "end days". Isn't there another planet, with rational beings, I could relocate to?

     
  • At June 22, 2006 2:22 PM, Blogger Lo said…

    So sorry to hear about your mother, Matt. We've missed you here. My thoughts and my prayers are with you and her. You don't have to believe in prayer. As long as the prayer does, that's all that matters.

    As for faith in God (whoever that may be based on one's faith)---you either have it or you don't. It's a knowing, a feeling, and often, actual and ocular proof. There are plenty of people who were born into religions or made to go to church as kids and do it as adults because they think or are told that's what they're supposed to do. But if they don't believe and their heart isn't in it, all the church-going and praying in the world won't make it so. It just becomes empty gestures and empty words.

    I, personally, have had too many obvious examples of God's presence in my life, so I believe. And I definitely wasn't one of those raised in the church. My situations were personal, specific, and glaring---much to conspicuous for me to miss or misinterpret. That doesn't make me holier-than-thou on any level (me??? ha!!!). But I believe. I know.

    As for how the end will come, I don't spend my time thinking about that. I figure God gave me a life for me to live it, not to sit around planning my (and the world's) big exit, hoping for hot hunky virgins on the other side. (Wait...women don't get virgins in heaven, do we? That's not fair!!! Hmmm, maybe it is. I wouldn't want someone I'd have to teach anything. That wouldn't be heaven. That would definitely be hell.)

    I firmly believe you can't force faith, beliefs, and religion on people. If anything, that kind of pressure either drives people away or drives them mad (madness manifests in many forms). Once people gain a sense of self and independence, they reach their own conclusions anyway (if they live in a place where they are allowed such freedoms). If someone wants to walk in the direction of my faith and asks for my support in that, I offer my hand and my own personal testimonials. I'll never be the one brow-beating folks over the head about my God, trying to force it on them. But I do always talk about my God. I can't not do it. The hand of God is as evident in my life as this extra chunk of meat on my thighs I've been trying to kickbox away for the past few weeks.

    Amen.

     
  • At June 22, 2006 5:20 PM, Blogger Lance said…

    matt, sorry to hear about your mom. cherish these days with her and continue to show and tell her you love her. my thoughts and prayers are with you too.

    peace & blessings...

     
  • At June 22, 2006 5:52 PM, Blogger Matt said…

    Thanks guys. I've been with mom a great deal lately but she's no longer there. She's been on a respirator for about four months now and only getting worse by the day. So this next week is probably going to hold the worst event of my life as of yet. However, after having lived in Ethiopia for years I have seen true human devastation on a grotesque scale. Globally, I'd say mom had a great 66 years and a family that loved her more than anything. With the knowledge that 30,000 children die on this planet every day of preventable disease and malnourishment, I'd say we Americans are pretty damned lucky in the scheme of things.

    Doesn't make it any easier.

    Thanks again...much love.

     
  • At June 24, 2006 8:51 PM, Blogger Lance said…

    wow. that's deep brother matt. never viewed life in that capacity before. someone once told me, to really comprehend the value of life you should visit africa.

    soon. maybe soon.

     
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About Me

Name: Lolita Files

Home: Wonderland, Midwest Central, United States

About Me: I'm the author of six novels. My novella, "Three For The Road," included in the three-novella anthology, You Only Get Better, was published in March 2007.

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