07
Oct 05

asides for – 10/07/2005

Scientists Finding Out What Losing Sleep Does to a Body “A large, new study, for example, provides the latest in a flurry of evidence suggesting that the nation’s obesity epidemic is being driven, at least in part, by a corresponding decrease in the average number of hours that Americans are sleeping, possibly by disrupting hormones that regulate appetite. The analysis of a nationally representative sample of nearly 10,000 adults found that those between the ages of 32 and 49 who sleep less than seven hours a night are significantly more likely to be obese.”

20 of your unusual words “So far as I’m aware, no other language has anything equivalent to the Icelandic ‘setja upp gestaspjot’, a verbal phrase denoting the action taken by a cat when cleaning itself, with its body curled tightly in a circle and one back leg sticking directly up in the air. Literally it means ‘put up a guest-spear’ and when a cat was seen doing this it was supposed to indicate that visitors would be turning up.”

Vonnegut, on politics, presidents and librarians “The America I loved,” he writes, “still exists in the front desks of public libraries.”

China to Develop Its Own DVD Format “Up to 80 percent of DVD players are made in China, but makers have to cough up around 40 percent of the cost of each player to license holders, according to Chinese reports.” Good leverage.


07
Oct 05

Grotto dreams

This morning I dreamt I was walking in a dark cavernous grotto littered with classical columns and marble debris. The stone cavern walls and marble debris surrounding the grotto had a blood red glow to it, the light dappled by the water. The large lake in the center glowed like an illuminated swimming pool. If you looked into the water, you could see various tiny humanoid shapes swimming in the distant depths sillouetted against the glow coming from the bottom. I walked to the edge where a merman waited, his upper half raised out of the water with his fish half undulating in the water. He was more like Glaucus than a typical merman, in fact I called him something like Glaucon or Glauca. He talked about someone named J., Jay, or Jesus. While we were talking two scaley humanoid monsters sprang out of the water and tried to pull me under from the rocky shelf where I was kneeling. While I was fighting them off, I pulled a capsule out of nowhere and cracked it open then poured the contents over the monsters. It was something caustic like holy water or acid because it burned them and forced them to let go of me. It must have been scary because I woke up and told myself about the dream so I would have a memory of it later.


06
Oct 05

Document fraud

I currently work for a marketing company where we end up doing a lot of print and web production. We’re listed in the yellow pages, so we get phone calls from the public regularly. Today a woman called with an interesting request. She wanted to know if we could produce a university diploma and transcripts. Incredulous, I asked if she worked for the university in question, thinking maybe she meant some sort of design for a university’s diploma and printed collateral. She replied that she needed it for “novelty purposes”. Riiiiiiight. I said, “We don’t do stuff like that” then I hung up. I wish I had caller ID so I could publicly shame her. What a moron.

Every time someone applies for a job, their credentials should be checked thoroughly. I imagine that people fabricate and lie about this sort of thing all the time. We need to have more documentary proof in general because you cannot trust anyone when they tell you what they’ve done. Many people inflate their own experience and abilities and others just flat lie.

If I ever hire anyone I will want to see proof of work. I will call their employer, their references, and I will Google them. Then I will do a background check for good measure.


06
Oct 05

Rebellion and conspiracy

I finished “Foucault’s Pendulum” this morning. Something that resonated with me is the notion that the associative, connective impulse to see conspiracy all around has less to do with reality (what is that?) and more to do with an essential personal desire to blame something. It is a need to find causes rather than an attempt to accept or understand what is understandable. It’s difficult for me to explain, so I need to think about it more. Peppered throughout the book are quotations from all sorts of places like this one from Karl Popper:

“The conspiracy theory of society comes from abandoning God and then asking: ‘Who is in his place?”

It reminds me of when I first started blogging regularly in 2000 when I was around 22-23. I was very paranoid and obsessed about the various conspiracies threatening to turn the world into a black iron prison, figuratively speaking. It was an unhappy time mostly because of the sense of powerlessness and victimization. Powerlessness in the face of a desire for control and autonomy. I’ve realized that this was one of the growing pains in coming out of the last stages of my adolescence. For so long I defined myself in terms of negation, “I am A because A is the opposite of B and I don’t want to be B because I associate that with some sort of pain or injury”, but beyond that I had no idea who I was. In many ways, I am just now finding that out.

The above quotation makes sense if you think about it in another way. God can represent the child’s view of his parents, the inscrutable creators who are responsible for everything. As we mature, we have to necessarily abandon our parents (God) in order to become complete and whole individuals. Assassinated as powerful symbols our mothers and fathers regain their humanity. Everything that we blame them for has to be resolved because until then you cannot take on the responsibility for your own existence.

“Instead of killing and dying in order to produce the being that we are not, we have to live and let live in order to create what we are.” – Albert Camus

Are feelings of paranoia and rebelliousness related to unresolved emotions? After all, what is rebellion but the expression of negation? Where does the desire spring from? Rebellion is not the same as disinterest or disregard. Rebellion requires an idea or authority to push against. It cannot exist without it’s opponent.

Continue reading →


05
Oct 05

asides

Snake bursts after gobbling gator An unusual clash between a 6-foot (1.8m) alligator and a 13-foot (3.9m) python has left two of the deadliest predators dead in Florida’s swamps.

Intro go anywhere disposable scrabble game.

I/O Brush: The World as the Palette: I/O Brush is a new drawing tool to explore colors, textures, and movements found in everyday materials by “picking up” and drawing with them.

10 Foods You Should NEVER Eat! What’s so bad about Bugles? The highly saturated coconut oil that General Mills fries them in –oil that’s about twice as saturated as lard.

A first look at GIMP 2.4

AMERICAN DIASPORA “the above map was based on more than 40,000 postings on Internet “safe lists” by Katrina survivors. ePodunk analyzed messages containing both the person’s hometown and the location after fleeing the storm. Pass your cursor over points on the map to see city names and to click to information about the community.”

Watched 40-year Old Virgin last night. Laughed. So. Hard.


05
Oct 05

A Selection of Proverbs

Some to inspire you, hopefully.

  • When the student is ready, the master appears. – Buddhist Proverb
  • A hero is one who knows how to hang on one minute longer. – Norwegian Proverb
  • Coffee should be black as hell, strong as death, and as sweet as love. – Turkish proverb
  • Fall seven times, stand up eight. – Japanese Proverb
  • All things good to know are difficult to learn. – Greek Proverb
  • Eating while seated makes one of large size; eating while standing makes one strong. – Hindu Proverb
  • The hammer shatters glass but forges steel. – Russian Proverb
  • Listen to all, plucking a feather from every passing goose, but follow no one absolutely. – Chinese Proverb

04
Oct 05

asides

Eureka – 29 is perfect age for a big idea RESEARCHERS investigating the achievements of thousands of innovators have established that 29 is the age at which you are most likely to have your first big, original idea. The age represents the optimum combination of education and energy levels required for great ideas to emerge, according to the study. Courtesy of Business Opportunities Weblog.

Korean creativity. Cute.

The 29 Healthiest Foods on the Planet

General Zod for president in 2008. ” When I first came to your planet and demanded your homes, property and very lives, I didn’t know you were already doing so, willingly, with your own government. I can win no tribute from a bankrupted nation populated by feeble flag-waving plebians. In 2008 I shall restore your dignity and make you servants worthy of my rule. This new government shall become a tool of my oppression. Instead of hidden agendas and waffling policies, I offer you direct candor and brutal certainty. I only ask for your tribute, your lives, and your vote.”

Sharon Stone comes to the defense of Kate Moss. “If you are in here and haven’t made a mistake, I’d like to meet you because I’ve been waiting for Jesus — and today would be the day,” Stone said to loud laughter.” Even Pat O’Brien got better treatment than this.


04
Oct 05

Self-experimentation

Soon I will be a morning person. My goal is to start getting up at 5:30 in the morning every morning, including Saturday and Sunday. I did so for the last two days. It got a lot easier when I moved my alarm clock about ten feet from bed, so I would have to actually walk over and turn it around to shut it off. Last night, I went to bed about 10:30pm and when I got up I still felt sleepy. The first thing I did when I woke up was to eat a bowl of shredded wheat. Then I grabbed an apple out of the icebox and went for a walk. After I walked for an hour I came home and showered and dressed. Around 8am I succumbed to sleepiness and sank into an hour long torpor while fully dressed. I guess that means I need to go to bed earlier. Tonight, I will try to go to bed around 9:30pm to see if that helps. I’m sure the problem is that I had a sleep deficit from the previous day.


04
Oct 05

Personal alchemy

Can you transmute your suffering? How much control do you have over your level of happiness or satisfaction? An interesting yet unsurprising series of conclusions from the Times Online: So what do you have to do to find happiness?

Great writers from Freud — “the intention that man should be happy is not included in the plan of Creation” — to Philip Larkin — “man hands on misery to man” — have painted happiness as an elusive butterfly. But ordinary people believe they are happier than average (an obvious impossibility) and that they’ll be even happier in 10 years’ time. If true, it would be good news because research shows that happier people are healthier, more successful, harder-working, caring and more socially engaged. Misery makes people self-obsessed and inactive.

Are they happier because they are harder-working, caring, and more socially-engaged? I think it’s the lack of these things that causes misery rather than the other way around.

One thing makes a striking difference. When two American psychologists studied hundreds of students and focused on the top 10% “very happy” people, they found they spent the least time alone and the most time socialising. Psychologists know that increasing the number of social contacts a miserable person has is the best way of cheering them up. When Jean-Paul Sartre wrote “hell is other people”, the arch-pessimist of existentialist angst was wrong.

On the idea of “learned-helplessness”.

As a psychology graduate working in animal- behaviour labs, Seligman discovered “learned helplessness” and became a big name. Dogs who experience electric shocks that they cannot avoid by their actions simply give up trying. They will passively endure later shocks that they could easily escape. Seligman went on to apply this to humans, with “learned helplessness” as a model for depression. People who feel battered by unsolvable problems learn to be helpless; they become passive, slower to learn, anxious and sad. This idea revolutionised behavioural psychology and therapy by suggesting the need to challenge depressed people’s beliefs and thought patterns, not just their behaviour.

On the six core virtues:

Their holy grail is the classification of strengths and virtues. After a solemn consultation of great works such as the samurai code, the Bhagavad-Gita and the writings of Confucius, Aristotle and Aquinas, Seligman’s happiness scouts discovered six core virtues recognised in all cultures: wisdom, courage, humanity, justice, temperance and transcendence. They have subdivided these into 24 strengths, including humour and honesty.

On emotional stimulus in different areas of the brain. Does this mean that joy is a higher form of thought?

What is it about the structure of the brain that underlies our bias towards negative thinking? And is there a biology of joy? At Iowa University, neuroscientists studied what happens when people are shown pleasant and unpleasant pictures. When subjects see landscapes or dolphins playing, part of the frontal lobe of the brain becomes active. But when they are shown unpleasant images — a bird covered in oil, or a dead soldier with part of his face missing — the response comes from more primitive parts of the brain.

Psychoanalysis versus cognitive therapy:

The tragic legacy of Freud is that many are “unduly embittered about their past, and unduly passive about their future”, says Seligman. His colleague Aaron Beck developed cognitive therapy after becoming disillusioned with his Freudian training in the 1950s. Beck found that as depressed patients talked “cathartically” about past wounds and losses, some people began to unravel. Occasionally this led to suicide attempts, some of which were fatal. There was very little evidence that psychoanalysis worked.

Cognitive therapy places less emphasis on the past. It works by challenging a person’s thinking about the present and setting goals for the future. Another newcomer, brief solution-focused therapy, discourages talk about “problems” and helps clients identify strengths and resources to make positive changes in their lives.


03
Oct 05

asides

VIA and Mini-box Announce the VoomPC. Now you can put a computer in your car for that mobile wifi hotspot you’ve been planning.

Live dogs used cruelly as shark bait.

Free WordPress hosting with Blogsome. Get your feet wet.