fimmtudagur, október 28, 2004

horsí hors
fríða litla krúsímúsí var ða senda mér þennan líka ótrúlega öfluga og sniðuga kór. mikið væri maður nú til í það stundum að geta bara slökkt á sumum röddum með einum músarsmell... segi ekki meir.

kór... minnir mig á drauminn sem mig dreymdi í nótt... svakalegur

hress og kát og nýkomin úr ræktinni eins og sést.
ennþá kátara er þó hið staðfesta og naglfasta DEIT sem ég, miss tót, á við ungfrú sigríði geirsdóttur á sunnudaginn.
só sorrí hljómsveit listaháskólans, ef þið eruð búin að plana æfingu þá... ég var að bóka daginn í annað!
HMOOOAH HO HO HO HO
in a perfect world

Bonobos use sex to appease, to bond, to make up after a fight, to ease tensions, to cement alliances. Humans generally wait until after a nice meal to make love; bonobos do it beorehand, to alleviate the stress and competitiveness often seen among animals when they encounter a source of food.

The species is best characterized as female-centered and egalitarian and as one that substitutes sex for aggression. Whereas in most other species sexual behavior is a fairly distinct category, in the bonobo it is part and parcel of social relations--and not just between males and females. Bonobos engage in sex in virtually every partner combination (although such contact among close family members may be suppressed).

Lest this all sound like a nonstop Caligulean orgy, Dr. Frans de Waal, a primatologist at Emory University in Atlanta who is the author of "Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape," emphasizes otherwise. "Sex is there, it's pervasive, it's critical, and bonobo society would collapse without it," he said in an interview. "But it's not what people think it is. It's not driven by orgasm or seeking release. Nor is it often reproductively driven. Sex for a bonobo is casual, it's quick and once you're used to watching it, it begins to look like any other social interaction."