26 August 2015

Notes - badly / anger risen / Merlyn

         Coming on mid-afternoon. You were busy with errands in the morning but took out for a pleasant lunch at Sharonville’s Max and Erma’s. Presently, on the way home from lunch you are stopped at Kroger’s on Mason-Montgomery for odds and ends. You are surprised on how badly you feel for the woman newscaster and cameraman killed on live television this morning. – Amorella

         1408 hours. I caught it on BBC before they censored the actual shooting and screams. This was an innocent young investigator/interviewer who woke up for a day of work and didn’t come home. I know this happens to people all the time but there was a rawness about the scene that was unnerving. I thought she said, “I’ve been shot.” The shots continued, eight total I guess. I didn’t count them. It is just sad. Her friend and cameraman was shot also.

         You are home and have had a nap. Carol is still napping. Post. - Amorella


         1792 hours. There is a dynamic juxtaposition between one’s modesty and one’s will. Merlyn partakes another soul to encourage his quiet debate between his humility and his will. Merlyn’s heart will not be broken into two pieces let alone a thousand. I will not allow it. – rho

         You have changed the script, boy, and it is not to my liking. – Amorella

         1731 hours. I have changed the script, but I have not changed the outcome. Merlyn must walk with humility.

         Are you saying this is a Necessity? – Amorella

         1735 hours. It is a Necessity to allow his human dignity, even as a spirit, as a ghost.

         A ghost has dignity? – Amorella

         1738 hours. In here a ghost has nothing else but a foundation of dignity based on humility.

         You are arrogant. – Amorella

         1740 hours. Pray tell. I am angry. I have no choice. This Merlyn is my character. These dreams of his are but to right the keel be he a ghost or not. He will remain dead righted up to face what he will, to face Necessity dead on and to tell Mr. Necessity a joke or two to wet the humor of the setting. The Dead will learn to smile in the deepest of ironies or no, one way or another. – rho

         Post, you arrogant angry little boy. – Amorella

         1747 hours. I am real whether you are or not, Amorella. No one changes my story, Angel or no. It is my story, and in here it is a story I tell to an Angel, fiction or not. - rho

        Later in the evening. You have seven hundred and twenty-nine words of Dead Ten – the first draft is complete and must be mastered. Post. – Amorella

         2233 hours. I am relieved these bookish words have boundaries. It needs work, which I can provide tomorrow. I let Merlyn be what I cannot be. 

25 August 2015

Notes - not finished / spirit is free / loss of words

         0844 hours. It is four months before Christmas, amazing how fast the year goes by.

         The years can jar the mind, but seldom the heart. – Amorella

         0846 hours. It is interesting the differences in the two; however, we would not be human without their compliment.

         The soul appears indifferent to time and space but the heart and mind both recognise space though they define it differently. – Amorella

         0850 hours. In context I can see these are three different pieces of the puzzle, so to speak. It is reasonable to see these non-material aspects definable. We make them definable; we make them nouns.

         What part of speech would you have them? – Amorella

         0853 hours. This is where we are constricted by our languages. If they were something else they could not so easily be comprehended and accepted even though they are non-material-whatsoevers. We do define each through our humanity. We compress them into something that may be broader than the universe we live in. They do not take up space. I can see this from both sides and I am back to the soul and wisdom. One of my favorite assignments was an essay question: explain the differences between wisdom and knowledge. This was a spur of the moment assignments where they had no access to a dictionary. One of my problems with the assignment is to first define wisdom and knowledge. I don’t know that the dictionary is all that helpful in context.

** **
wisdom - noun

the quality of having experience, knowledge, and good judgment; the quality of being wise.

• the soundness of an action or decision with regard to the application of experience, knowledge, and good judgment: some questioned the wisdom of building the dam so close to an active volcano.

• the body of knowledge and principles that develops within a specified society or period: the traditional farming wisdom of India.

Phrases:

in someone's wisdom used ironically to suggest that an action is not well judged: in their wisdom they decided to dispense with him.

Origin: Old English wīsdōm.

***
knowledge noun

1 facts, information, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject: a thirst for knowledge | her considerable knowledge of antiques.

• what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information: the transmission of knowledge.

• Philosophy true, justified belief; certain understanding, as opposed to opinion.

2 awareness or familiarity gained by experience of a fact or situation: the program had been developed without his knowledge | he denied all knowledge of the overnight incidents.

Phrases:

come to one's knowledge become known to one.
to (the best of) my knowledge 1 so far as I know: the text is free of factual errors. to the best of my knowledge. 2 as I know for certain.

Origin: Middle English (originally as a verb in the sense ‘acknowledge, recognize,’ later as a noun): from an Old English compound based on cnāwan.

Selected and edited from Oxford/American software

** **

         0923 hours. In the experience of living it seems to me that for survival’s sake knowledge is more important. The wisdom if one survives the ordeal would come later. Of course wisdom if available would help in making the choices to survive both as an individual, a group or a species for that matter.

         Post. – Amorella

         0927 hours. I am not finished with this subject.

         Nor will you ever be, boy. - Amorella


         You had a snack lunch as Carol is having her hair done. You tried a couple of movies rated MA on Netflix but they were not what you were looking for. You found Terminator (1984) and are watching it. – Amorella

         1421 hours. I had forgotten how entertaining this film is, even today. Wow. Here’s Carol. 1422

         You drove to AAA and picked up a trip tick to the South Carolina wedding site -- some bridge construction in Tennessee. Carol is on page 73 of Reich’s Bones to Ashes. You are two hundred and some words from completing Dead Ten. Let’s get to it. – Amorella

         1631 hours. Two souls meet in four Turns. One says its name is Venerable (Venerable Bede popped to mind). It seems to me another Latin word would work here, another equal-like adjective used as a proper noun, so to speak. Maybe I’m off base here.

         Venerable is a good word here, but let’s use it for open soul. Merlyn’s old soul we’ll call Foretoken. – Amorella

         1639 hours. It means a sign of something to come, but in this case the sign will have come and gone. This is oddly humorous in context. Venerable has a sense of being greatly revered as it is from the Latin, venerari. I like that Venerable sounds more dominant than Foretoken, at least to my ears.

         This is not about which soul has more power, boy. Venerable, in this case, is open to more wisdom than Foretoken. Carol is ready for home.  – Amorella

         Carol is watching her Hallmark “Cove” story. You looked up venerari to find the Latin dictionary’s meaning is 1. adore, revere, do homage to, honor, venerate; 2, beg, pray, entreat; 3, worship. To be more exact in context in “Dead Ten, GMG2” the meaning is: [a handler].

** **
entreat - verb

2 [ with obj. ] archaic treat (someone) in a specified manner: the King, I fear, hath ill entreated her.

entreatment noun

Origin: late Middle English (in the sense ‘treat, act toward (someone)’; formerly also as intreat): from Old French entraitier, based on traitier ‘to treat,’ from Latin tractare ‘to handle.’

[Amorella adds: The soul, Venerable, is a handler]

Selected and edited from Oxford/American software

** **

         1836 hours. I like this very much, Amorella. Venerable in this context is an excellent name for open soul.

         This is the way your naked human spirit sees it, boy. Thus, this is the way it plays out. – Amorella

         1838 hours. According to Amorella my spirit writes. This is most humbling and also most cool, that is, this is most exonerating for my simple spirit.

         Your spirit is free to write, orndorff. Post. – Amorella

         2056 hours. We watched NBC News, then most of “Masterpiece Mystery – P.D. James’s Death Comes to Pemberley, Part I” until Carol grew tired of being stationary. We are enjoying the three part adaptation of the book.

** **

Death Comes to Pemberley is a British novel by P.D. James that continues Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice with a murder mystery.

Plot summary

The novel begins in October, 1803, six years after the events in Pride and Prejudice which resulted in the marriage of Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy and Miss Elizabeth Bennet. The Prologue and Book One introduce the main characters, summarize the histories of the Bennet and Darcy families, and introduce a murder. The remainder of the novel is about the mystery and its solution.

Adaptation

A serial of three sixty-minute episodes, also titled Death Comes to Pemberly, written by Juliette Towhidi was made . . . for BBC One. It was telecast in the UK over three nights from 26 December 2013 as part of BBC's Christmas schedule and stars Anna Maxwell as Elizabeth, Matthew Rhys as Mr Darcy, Jenna Coleman as Lydia, Matthew Goode as Mr. Wickham and Trevor Eve as Sir Selwyn Hardcastle.

Selected and edited from Wikipedia

** **

         2110 hours. It has taken a good while getting started but by the conclusion of the first hour interest was peaking. We like a good murder mystery, particularly now that there are three suspects of the murder, at least that is my belief. Neither of us has read her books.

         2143 hours. Is this right, Amorella, that Venerable replies to Foretoken, “Merlyn’s modesty”?

         It is. – Amorella

         ** **
modesty noun

the quality or state of being unassuming or moderate in the estimation of one's abilities: with typical modesty he insisted on sharing the credit with others.

• the quality of being relatively moderate, limited, or small in amount, rate, or level: the modesty of his political aspirations.

• behavior, manner, or appearance intended to avoid impropriety or indecency: modesty forbade her to undress in front of so many people.

Selected and edited from Oxford/American software

         ** **

         2158 hours. What trick is here that Merlyn must unknowingly take on another soul to protect his heartanmind from modesty?

         It will break his heart in a thousand pieces, boy. – Amorella

         2201 hours. I cannot believe this.

         It has happened. Post. – Amorella

         2202 hours. I find this very troubling.

         Of course you do. You are presently at a loss of words because of it. Post. – Amorella




24 August 2015

Notes - 23rd a birthday / 24th a school house / ironic humor

23 August 2015

         Mid-morning. You and Carol were up early, had breakfast and read the Sunday paper. You called Kim and wished her a happy birthday. Owen and Brennan are both enjoying their Fall schedules, though Brennan told Kim (the first day) he missed riding into school without Owen. You are tired and ready for a nap before exercises. Later, dude. – Amorella                    

24 August 2015

         You forgot you had a short piece yesterday thus you didn’t upload. Include today as a heart matter. – Amorella

         0830 hours. Carol has her physical therapy within the hour. Later this morning we pick up the Toyota (happy day). I am curious to see how it looks newly painted. I need a short nap to move on with the day. It is cooler but that triggers the arthritis particularly in the lower back and hip joints. This is not a complaint; just a fact of life. I have nothing to complain about. I need a hot soaking bath before the nap – better than taking pain pills.

         You picked up the car and it appears brand new on the outside. The damage repair, paint and painting restoration came to seven thousand, five hundred and some dollars. Quite a bit more than you were expecting. State Farm took care of all but the two hundred and fifty dollar deductable, which you paid Joseph Collision Restoration Center.

         Lunch at Penn Station and now you are at the far north lot of Pine Hill Lakes Park, facing west and sitting in the shade of the trees on the hill. Carol is asleep. Let’s go to Dead Ten. – Amorella

         1437 hours. I finished a short paragraph but don’t know where to go from here. I have forgotten what we are doing. Carol is on page 10 of Kathy Reichs’ novel, Bones to Ashes. – I had to return to the 16 August post to gather selections of notes that deal with Dead 10. I have 15 pages of notes as to where I am and a bit about where Dead 10 may be heading. I will have to refresh.

         One of the points is that Merlyn is about to have an exchange of souls. – Amorella

         1457 hours. Why is that? People don’t have an exchange of soul of soul for another every day.

         How do you know this, boy? – Amorella

         1500 hours. I wouldn’t be practical.

         What if each heartanmind is but a schoolhouse for the soul?

         1501 hours. That would make everyone useful-in-purpose. That’s an interesting thought, Amorella.

         Carol is ready to leave. Later, boy. – Amorella

         You were running errands and looking for two-pound ankle weights for Carol but had no luck and several stores. - Amorella

         1759 hours. We wasted a couple of hours with people at one store assuring us that another store would have the weights. All we found were three and five-pound Velcro held weights. The physical therapist said two pounds. We are home and we are both tired.


         Post. - Amorella

         You had leftovers for supper (stuffed green peppers) and watched NBC News, PBS’s “Doc Martin” (one of Fritz’s favorites) then Carol went to bed. You watched Sunday night’s “The Last Ship” and “Falling Skies”. You have some errands already up for tomorrow. – Amorella

         2218 hours. In an earlier post you said: “This open soul is far older than the one Merlyn has; as old as Adam, one might say. – Amorella “ I responded by going off into Moby Dick. How can a soul be of any age as it is deemed immortal?

         You see what you are doing – referencing the open soul to humankind criteria. The soul does not revolve, so to speak, around humankind, if anything it would be the other way around, but it isn’t even that, not in these fictions, boy. – Amorella

         2226 hours. It is not about age, it is about a soul’s experiences in life. Is this assumption on a better track?

         An soul can become wiser by being open. – Amorella

         2229 hours. Doug and Nancy sent me a good quote about wisdom today or yesterday. It was today’s quotation:
" No man was ever wise by chance. "
Lucius Annaeus Seneca

         It is such a wonderful quotation. One of the best they have ever sent me. I love good quotations. I remember loving them from the time I read my mother’s Bartlett’s Quotations. It was a pre-World War II edition. I read it in the summer between seventh and eighth grade if I remember rightly. I still have the copy in the basement.

         How else would a soul acquire wisdom without ‘reading’ a heartanmind, at least in these books? – Amorella

         2240 hours. At least it gives our species a greater purpose, that is, one beyond ourselves.

         You see, your spirit does have hope, boy, whether you are fully aware of it or not. – Amorella

         2241 hours. I have my doubts – more so because you bring this up. Throw the boy a bone and he’ll pick it up – this kind of doubt. Sartre always said self-deception is the worst kind (or something to that effect).

         These books are fiction and authentically written; how can you be more self-deceptive than that, young man? – Amorella

         2248 hours. You throw in ironic humor – that which I love best. You are a marvel, Amorella. You are so kind and angelic-like to my deepest heart.

         Post, boy. Get a good night’s sleep. - Amorella

22 August 2015

Notes - most cool, neat stuff / to deny this

        Mid-morning. The lawnmowers were out earlier. The windows are open to the fresh Fall-like air and blue California-like skies. The day in southwest Ohio is quite pleasant – a good day for playing championship tennis less than two miles away as the crow flies. You and Carol had your breakfasts and read the Saturday paper. It actually feels like a weekend, something you rarely not after more than a decade of full retirement. Toyota called about four-twenty yesterday to say the car is ready. You did not have the time or inclination to get over there during the Friday rush hour traffic. So, Monday you will pick up the car wondering if you will remember how to drive it. – Amorella

         0949 hours. It has been fun driving the Honda to and from the Lewis Center area a few times – remembering why we bought the 2005 Accord EX six in the first place. – Checked my email and not much news this morning. Time for a nap then my exercises.

         After noon local time. You completed your forty minutes of exercises after the nap. Carol will have errands and lunch out after she’s dressed for going places. You are looking for a quiet afternoon. One of the joys of older age – spending ten minutes looking for a Kroger bag with essentials like toothpaste and mouthwash in it and then finding it right where it is supposed to be in plain sight in the bathroom. How Carol could miss this is beyond you. You spent ten minutes looking all over the rest of the house for a misplaced Kroger bag and it was in the bathroom with her the whole time. What do you say to this, boy? – Amorella

         1252 hours. It would be funnier if I hadn’t spent all that time looking for something I spotted the second I looked in the bathroom to tell her I couldn’t find it. What could I do but laugh. It happens to me too. How can the eyes gloss over something you are looking for and not see it? It happens. Actually, it is nothing new. It has happened our entire lives, but I think we are more sensitive to it now. Lost and found has a lot of meaning for everyone.

         You are at Kroger’s on Mason-Montgomery Road after a late lunch at Potbelly’s. After dropping off the few groceries you are to Pine Hill Lakes Park to read/write under the shade of the hill in the far north lot. – Amorella

         1445 hours. I feel ready to finish up Dead Ten today. I am liking the different sense and tone of Merlyn’s words. I am wondering why I am angry with my soul. These writing lend me insight sometimes as I realize/know all these words and situations must be explained or shown or told via my birth language and basic cultural background even if you were more than my imagination there would be no choice. I wonder if one was angry enough at one’s soul that it would leave and allow another soul to put up with the cantankerous heartanmind? That’s my thinking. (1452)

         You are home, sitting in the shade of the front porch seemingly not angry at anyone, including yourself at the moment. – Amorella

         1521 hours. A lawn mower is running across the street, Carol is reading the new Money magazine and she says she has moved 17 times in her life and that the average American has moved 11 times. She just bought the magazine today because Money listed Mason as number 17 out of the top 50 small towns in the United States this year. It is not as good as a year or two ago, but then that was another magazine survey (I think). Little Mason (1970’s) – who would have thought. It was a little town out in the sticks that had United Telephone Company. It was long distance to call to Cincinnati Bell. Everyone had a soft water machine because the local water contains far too many minerals. In the mid-nineties we began getting our water from Cincinnati and the Ohio River rather than the large aquifer just north of town.

** **
“Giant aquifer: Drinking from the sea beneath our feet”

Although it may surprise some residents, many in southwest Ohio drink from an aquifer that holds trillions of gallons of water.

 Michael D. Clark, mclark@enquirerDOTcom 4:07 p.m. EDT May 10, 2015

Beneath thousands of Southwest Ohioians' feet is a "sea" from which they drink.

When 360,000 residents turn on their kitchen sink taps, they are drawing water from one of America's largest aquifers.

The internationally acclaimed water they are swallowing is sometimes months or even decades in the making, having been filtered down into a 1.5 trillion gallon Great Miami aquifer lying deep below Butler County and nine other area counties.

This week, Hamilton's City Council will honor the city's water plant in a special ceremony celebrating its recent international award for best-tasting water.
But this is also an ominous time of year for the aquifer.

Each spring, local water experts monitor the aquifer because of what millions of homeowners, businesses and farmers do to their grass lawns and crops.

They use too much fertilizer, says Tim McLelland, ground water consortium manager with the Hamilton Water Plant.

"Every spring we see a spike in nitrogen levels, most of it from rain runoff from area lawns," McLelland said.

University of Cincinnati professor Dion Dionysiou says that constant monitoring of the aquifer is key to protecting it from fertilizer runoff and industrial pollutants.

"We have to make sure we protect it, because it's a very rare resource in the world," says Dionysiou, a professor of environmental engineering and science. "Typically aquifers have better water quality than surface water sources like the Ohio River or lakes."

Fortunately, the massive aquifer has so far handled the annual pollutant spike, diluting the nitrogen and other chemicals and staying below minimum safe drinking water levels, he says.

That 360,000 Butler and northern Hamilton county residents drink from an ancient, glacially formed aquifer is news to most households, McLelland said.

"A lot of people don't realize this is a hidden natural resource," he said. "The aquifer is millions of years old, hundreds of feet deep and a lot of this water travels for miles underground" fed by rain water drainage and thousands of miles of rivers – primarily the Great Miami River – and streams flowing southward from west central and southwest Ohio.

"We're pretty lucky to have a large filtration system before it ever even makes it to a lot of the drinking water plants in the region," McLelland said.

Internationally acclaimed water

That natural, underground filtration makes the Hamilton Water Plant's job easier, and its water processing has produced international awards.

In February – for the third time since 2009 – Hamilton's water won a gold medal in the 25th annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting contest. But John Berry, a Hamilton resident for six decades, says the awards only confirm what residents have known for years from their own taste buds.

"We have the best water around, and the aquifer is a godsend," Berry said. "Every time I have people visiting me from out of town, they comment on how great the water is here compared to where they come from."

Denise Quinn likes to treat millions of gallons of aquifer water in a very special way for her job: She uses it to make beer. The vice president and brewery plant manager for the MillerCoors brewery in Butler County's city of Trenton says the expansive plant, which has 33 acres under a roof, chose its location to better tap into the Great Miami Aquifer.

"It's incredibly important for us," said Quinn, whose brewery is MillerCoors' second largest in America, employing 550 workers, and the largest in Southwest Ohio.

MillerCoors uses three wells on its site to tap into the aquifer, Quinn said. Like other area industries, she said, the company is mindful that the underwater source remains an asset only as long as its replenishment process is keep environmentally clean. That includes not drawing too much water too quickly.

An average day sees about 62 million gallons of water used from the aquifer's estimated 1.2 trillion gallons.

Quinn declined to give company details but says the brewery in recent years "has made significant reductions in water usage."

Not over tapping the aquifer, which can lead to increased concentrations of pollutants, is key to preserving it, says UC professor Dionysiou.

"It's a groundwater replenishment system that renews itself," he says. "We have concerns about keeping its quality so we have to monitor it, and we have to make sure we protect it."

Aquifer facts

The Great Miami Aquifer is fed by groundwater drainage and 6,600 miles of rivers in western and west-central Ohio that includes drainage and streams in Southwest Ohio counties of Preble, Montgomery, Butler, Warren and western Hamilton County that flows southward underground toward the Ohio River.

A leftover from the glacial water deposits millions of years ago, the aquifer is not a single contiguous, underwater sea, say water experts who monitor it. Rather, they say the best way to picture it is to imagine it as semi-liquid mix of water, sand and gravel with a consistency much like a gigantic bowl of soggy cereal.

In general the aquifer is centered under the 170-mile long Great Miami River, it's main source of replenishment, with its deepest underground tributaries extending about two to three miles east and west of the river, covering about 39,000 square miles.

As one of America's largest aquifers, it holds about 1.5 trillion gallons of water that is naturally filtered as it meanders downward through top soil and underlying layers of earth to the aquifer's semi-solid layers. Depending on its location in the aquifer area, water can take months or decades to accumulate before wells bring it to the surface for treatment before flowing to area households.

Wells near the Great Miami River and large streams can yield more than 2,000 gallons of water per minute. Much of the aquifer's water maintains at temperature of 56 degrees.

It is the principal drinking water for 1.6 million people and for about 360,000 residents in western and central Butler County and parts of northern Hamilton County.

The Ohio River is the primary source for drinking water elsewhere in Southwest Ohio.


Hamilton's international award-winning tap water

In February, international judges of American and foreign city tap water declared Southwest Ohio's city of Hamilton as having the "Best Tasting Tap Water in the World."

The 25th Annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting, was the second time Hamilton's water, which is drawn from the Great Miami River Aquifer, grabbed the top award in the last five years.

The Butler County city's water bested a domestic and international group of cities that included former gold medalists: Clearbrook, British Columbia (three-time champion); Emporia, Kansas (2013) and Greenwood, British Columbia (2012).

Hamilton also won a silver medal in 2009 as the "best tasting tap water in the U.S." And the city's water earned "best of the best" honors from the Ohio Section of the American Water Works Association in 2012 and 2014.

Selected and edited from -- cincinnatiDOTcom

** **
         1547 hours. I decided to check; it turns out this Southwest Ohio aquifer is a bit larger than I expected. All I remember is that it contains a lot of minerals, i.e. the drinking water in old Mason was very hard – 26 grains or thereabout, that’s the reason most people had water softeners. We don't need them with Cincinnati water from the Ohio River.

         Such matters attract your attention but mostly it goes back to being on the moraine of the last Great Wisconsin ice sheet, which was supposedly a mile high above your house. – Amorella

         1554 hours. I like to remember stuff like that. It gives me a perspective of time and place when I did not exist. Imagine, I look up and envision ice about a mile thick. Most cool. Neat stuff.


         Post. - Amorella

         1615 hours. This is not doing much to get Dead 10 completed.

         You are sitting enjoying your time on the front porch. This is what your Grandfather Orndorff used to do when he was your age. – Amorella

         1616 hours. True, enough I have a picture of him on the front porch at 103 West Walnut Street in Westerville in those days. He was the best grandfather I could have ever asked for. I loved him very much, still do. He used to tell me stories about the Indians living nearby along Alum Creek north of Westerville when he was a kid. He liked to hunt and fish and so did they. – According to the 1890 U. S. Census there were 14 civilized Native Americans living in Franklin County at the time and Delaware County possibly had 9 or less. (What would I do without the Internet? What a blessing.) As far as I know the only Native American Popo had an autograph of was Jim Thorpe. (1634)

         2210 hours. Carol made a good tasty supper of stuffed peppers; then, we watched the news and a PBS show called “Mountain Music” and a mystery titled “Father Brown” on Channel 14 (Oxford, Ohio).

         You had a good day even though you didn’t work on Dead Ten. Let that be a lesson to you, boy. – Amorella

         2215 hours. This is a lesson I am learning to understand. The spirit is where it is, and it is not always in the fingertips.

         The heartansoulanmind does not exist in physical time and space, that’s the point, my friend, and neither do I, the Amorella.

         2221 hours. I cannot verify such a claim, but from my perspective it is difficult to doubt. You are at the very least, a part of my own spiritual nature. To deny this would to be dishonest. - rho


         Post. - Amorella