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The Church of the Negative Christ
"If it's provable we can kill it."
Why I Love my Wife
Or, Why I Love my Wife
Published on December 27, 2006 By
EmperorofIceCream
In
Misc
Everyone in JU (at least, those who have been here awhile) knows little whip. Everyone. And everyone who knows her in JU has an opinion about her, whether 'good' or 'bad'. She has her favorite victims, her good JU buddies, and the rest to amuse her, the vast sea of anonymous, mediocre, second-rate bloggers whom everyone ignores. And all who have, in any way, encountered her have an opinion about her.
Allow me to tell you the truth. The very worst you can imagine of her, the cruellest and most vicious thing, the most terrible thing you can associate with the term 'being human', is true of her. Her cruelty is absolute and knows no limits. And yet she can be terribly solicitous and sympathetic - so long as you do whatever she tells you to do in order to remedy whatever situation she is willing to sympathize with you over.
Why do I love her? Because her cleverest cruelties are always supremely witty. Because her cruellest observations make me howl with laughter. Because she is, consummately, a woman, and women are far more terrible, sophisticated, and savage in their humor than are men. And this is a thing worthy of the greatest love and respect on the part of men: a) because women in general swoon when a man acknowledges the fact of this cruelty; and
most women are too simple to realize that some men are capable of exploiting their understanding of their own cruelty to their own advantage.
My wife is at once the most knowing and the most innocent of individuals. It's innocence allied to curiosity that makes me howl with laughter when we sit at the table in the kitchen in the evening after I get back from work and bullshit back and forth. She makes me laugh more than anyone else I've ever known. And she has the invaluable gift of being able to make me laugh at myself, of being able to cut me down to my proper size, without ever being insulting or arrogant or over-bearing. She makes me see myself - and laugh. Which cannot ever be anything but a good thing.
There is no denying that she's strange. But neither is there any denying that I am strange, or that how we are strange together intermeshes in interesting and provocative ways.
I think that's what I love about her most. That she's willing to accept the many ways in which I am strange, and willing to build a successful life around them without any demand that I change. She is how she is: and she is willing to accord the same privilege of being to anyone who is willing to take up the challenge of actually being what they are.
Everyone, including the most devoted of lovers, wants you to change to the point where they can recognise themselves in you. Not Sabrina. Instead, like me, she demands that you be absolutely yourself - even if doing so requires that you be at war with each other every evening. Better to be at war with each other than to live in the deathly peace of complacency. Of self-satisfied 'understanding'.
Why do I love her? Because she makes me laugh more than anyone else ever has.
My wife is a remarkable woman.
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Comments (Page 1)
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1
EmperorofIceCream
on Dec 27, 2006
If you say something bad about Sabrina on this thread I
guarantee
that I will blacklist you. Try me, motherfucker. Try me.
2
EmperorofIceCream
on Dec 27, 2006
To: All
Let me say it again. Don't be mean to my wife on
my
thread.
3
Tova7
on Dec 27, 2006
I think every woman should be married to a man who believes she's remarkable.
I am glad LW is married to one.
4
foreverserenity
on Dec 27, 2006
I think every woman should be married to a man who believes she's remarkable.I am glad LW is married to one.
Ditto!
A beautiful tribute and well-deserved!
5
Shovelheat
on Dec 27, 2006
Try me, motherfucker. Try me.
Heh, wished I had a nickle for every time I've heard
that
particular taunt.
Yes, your (may I say...our?) Sabrina is a remarkable woman. Funny, but I've never seen what's to NOT like about her -I mean, she calls 'em as she sees 'em and if she does occasionaly fucks up she admits it.
You're a fortunate man for being in the position to call her
wife
and I am a fortunate man to be in the position to call her
friend
-even if it
is
a long distance internet pass-time thing and we will in most likely hood never, ever meet.
But a friend all the same.
(and I can't tell you the times she's cracked me up too and usually when I've needed it the most! And that attribute is solid gold indeed)
6
jennifer1
on Dec 28, 2006
She is lucky to have a man that loves and understands her the way you do, your love for her is obvious YRH. Be good to one another.
7
Texas Wahine
on Dec 28, 2006
I love your wife, too.
Very sweet article. I'm jealous.
8
Xythe
on Dec 28, 2006
I like both of you guys, and think you're both pretty remakable
9
Xythe
on Dec 28, 2006
PS. Did you have to use the Blacklist feature yet?
10
foreverserenity
on Dec 28, 2006
Sugar Dumplin', my Hunny Bunny
I sometimes forget your hubby is practically a Yardy....I call mine these all the time! [not that those terms are particularly Jamaican but we do use them all the time.]
11
jennifer1
on Dec 29, 2006
two choices - see below
a gang member and thug
Yardie gangs from Jamaica operate in the UK
Four men have been jailed for life at the Old Bailey for their part in a Yardie turf war murder at a London sports centre.
The four killers were members of a gang known as the Lock City Crew.
They had launched a revenge attack to defend their "territory" against a rival gang from Brixton.
The scene that followed was more reminiscent of the Wild West than north London on a Saturday afternoon
Prosecutor Richard Horwell
The shooting, at the Bridge Park leisure centre, north west London, left 29-year-old Dion Holmes dying from a bullet wound through his heart.
The four killers - Winston "Escobar" Harris, 38, and Stephen "Beamer" Murray, 26, both from Kensal Green, Jermaine "My Lord" Hamilton, 22, from Kilburn and Leonard Cole, 27, from Finsbury Park, all north London - had all denied murdering Mr Holmes on 1 May last year.
A fifth man, David Lewis, 49, from Wembley, was cleared of murder, manslaughter and a firearms offence and was freed.
He had denied the offences.
'Mission of revenge and retribution'
The gang had turned the centre, near Wembley stadium, into their headquarters, keeping arms, ammunition and drugs there.
The four men are all Jamaican and had stayed in Britain longer than they were allowed either before the murder or since their arrest.
Judge Peter Beaumont made no recommendations for their deportation at the end of their sentence.
He said he was "quite satisfied" all factors determining their future status in the UK would be considered by the Home Secretary at the time "without any assistance from me."
At the start of the month-long trial Richard Horwell, prosecuting, said: "Even in these days of seemingly increasing violence, the circumstances of Mr Holmes's death were remarkable.
"He was shot by one of the armed gang who descended on the sports complex on a mission of revenge and retribution.
'Lack of respect'
"Their desire for revenge was based on what appears to be, of all things, a parking incident earlier that day."
The gang had at their disposal a variety of weapons from handguns to a sawn-off pump action shotgun, said Mr Horwell.
They believed, after the parking incident outside the complex, that the other group had shown "a certain lack of respect to them and their territory".
They picked up a sports bag containing the firearms and went to the centre.
"The scene that followed was more reminiscent of the Wild West than north London on a Saturday afternoon," said Mr Horwell.
One of the gang locked the doors preventing people from leaving and shots were fired both from the sawn-off shotgun and a handgun, he added.
Asked to park properly
Mr Horwell said the earlier parking incident involved a woman parking outside the entrance of the complex, not in a parking bay.
When she was asked to park properly, an argument followed.
The woman later returned with her husband and abuse and insults were thrown before they left.
When some members of the Lock City Crew arrived at the complex and discovered what had happened "on their territory, they became excitable".
Gerry Davis, Director of Community Development at Brent Council said after the case that immediate action had been taken "to ensure the safety of staff and the public".
This included £100,000 to increase security at Bridge Park.
OR
A man of love - according to this poem
Chanje Kunda
Yardy Men
Dreaded fear of Jamaican men
So cool so calm so collected
Strutting their attitude
Like peacocks strut their feathers
With their baggy jeans
and their tight arses
string vests
showing bare chests
Their hair in dreads
or cane rows
and their sparkling gold
teeth
Full lips glimmering with
fresh kisses
the darkest eyes lustily
lookin, just lookin
Their furious fucking
Hastily undressing
Trembling women
For their manhood sake
Girls open up like flowers
in the heat of them
exposing their womanhood
in the deepest part of themselves
Then day breaks
and they are gone
So many flowers to taste
No time to waste
take your pick it depends which way you spell it.............
12
foreverserenity
on Dec 29, 2006
two choices - see below
a gang member and thug
Yardie gangs from Jamaica operate in the UK
ERRRR...nope, wrong, this is what the media and the police and those who are in gangs who are actually not true Jamaicans call themselves that. Anyone who is a true Jamaican, or hangs around Jamaicans, and not just those who call themself that so as to get props would know that a Yardy is someone who hails from the country of birth of an islander, .
A Yardy, as referred to by Jamaicans to each other affectionately as a means of identification, is someone who is from where they are from and understands the culture, the speech, the food and everything Jamaican, or Barbadan or Trinidadian.
The bad connotations come from what the news media and people who were born abroad but associated with islanders, whether by birth or otherwise have made the word into a 'bad' one. So, the gang inference is not from 'us' it's from the news media and the police themselves and as I said, those that do the deeds they do and wanted to give themselves a name.
I've read Simon's blogs where he mentions he has been around Jamaicans when he was younger and lived the life and knew the language, etc. When I saw the term Sugar
Dumplin, that's one we use quite often and I don't hear it from Americans in general and Honey Bunny as well. Maybe the latter more than the previous.
It's unfortunate that Ms. Newshound as to always look at things the way she does. Yes, I know that there are people who are very bad, from my country out there, who act like they are idiots, and there are so many who take on the persona of a Jamaican so people don't mess with them because we have the reps of not taking shit from no one, I've been around a few of those who always get called out because a true Jamaican doesn't have to show how tough they are. I could go on and on, but I'll stop here Sabrina. I just wanted to clarify that. I referred to Simon as a almost Yardy, with much affection and nothing else.
13
EmperorofIceCream
on Dec 29, 2006
To: foreverserenity
My mother is a sexually promiscuous woman, or was in her younger days. Her tastes always, after her relationship with my father came to an end, ran to Black men and Jamaicans in particular. Because of her I can say that I have never met a man of Jamaican descent that I could not respect - and by no means were these honest, law-abiding men. They were however all
good
men and honest, in their own way.
I will take your comment about my relationship to the Yardies as a compliment. Since Yardies make the Mafia look like humanitarians. I'm not at all sure what it is about Jamaicans generally that makes me like them so much - other than that, when they run to the bad they're
really
,
really
bad, and at the same time completely honest about their motivations. Jamaicans are good people. They also know how to cook, and brew beer. That's enough for me. That, and the memory of the Jamaican kids I knew at school, who always had the best ganga, and the best dub reggae, straight from the Island on bootleg tapes.
14
EmperorofIceCream
on Dec 29, 2006
As to the rest of you:
Y'all can call her what you want, because the simple fact remains that she's mine. Just so long as, on
my
thread, you're polite about it.
15
foreverserenity
on Dec 30, 2006
because the simple fact remains that she's mine
Yes she is! : )
when they run to the bad they're really, really bad, and at the same time completely honest about their motivations. Jamaicans are good people. They also know how to cook, and brew beer
Yes, they are!
So 'yardy' is the jamaican equivalent of 'homie' (home boy) then. Now I get it, lol.
Exactly Whip!
I will say, though, I enjoyed the poem
It was wasn't it?!
She does seem to dig and dig until she finds something awful, doesn't she?
It's her MO.
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