Our Own Worst Enemy

From Jonathan Mead comes the question “why do we avoid doing what we love:”

When we create, we come alive; we’re making love to life. We use our unique talents, perception and skills and make the intangible tangible. Most of us generally know what we want in life. For every person, the answer to what brings us joy will be unique. For some it’s playing guitar or dancing. For others it’s writing, hiking, spending time with family, photography, or drawing.

So if we know what makes us feel alive, why do we resist it? Why do we avoid doing what we love to do?

[Motivation and Self Improvement | PickTheBrain]

I know that I experience this way more than I should . . . Knowing that I always feel better about myself and the world when I’m writing regularly and playing my guitar and making music, but somehow not doing those things enough or as often as I ought to. And maybe that’s the key, or at least one of the keys: I feel that I ought to be doing those things, that they are somehow an obligation instead of a pleasure, a fun and challenging opportunity. I think some of Mead’s explanations are overly simple, but he does provide a good starting place to begin thinking about why we might block our creative and/or joyful selves from emerging more fully or often.


How to Build a Universe That Doesn’t Fall Apart Two Days Later

I’m not sure I have anything to say about this, but while Philip K. Dick was kinda crazy, sometimes crazy is kinda right:

The basic tool for the manipulation of reality is the manipulation of words. If you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use the words. George Orwell made this clear in his novel 1984. But another way to control the minds of people is to control their perceptions. If you can get them to see the world as you do, they will think as you do. Comprehension follows perception. How do you get them to see the reality you see? After all, it is only one reality out of many. Images are a basic constituent: pictures. This is why the power of TV to influence young minds is so staggeringly vast. Words and pictures are synchronized. The possibility of total control of the viewer exists, especially the young viewer. TV viewing is a kind of sleep-learning. An EEG of a person watching TV shows that after about half an hour the brain decides that nothing is happening, and it goes into a hypnoidal twilight state, emitting alpha waves. This is because there is such little eye motion. In addition, much of the information is graphic and therefore passes into the right hemisphere of the brain, rather than being processed by the left, where the conscious personality is located. Recent experiments indicate that much of what we see on the TV screen is received on a subliminal basis. We only imagine that we consciously see what is there. The bulk of the messages elude our attention; literally, after a few hours of TV watching, we do not know what we have seen. Our memories are spurious, like our memories of dreams; the blank are filled in retrospectively. And falsified. We have participated unknowingly in the creation of a spurious reality, and then we have obligingly fed it to ourselves. We have colluded in our own doom.

[From How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later]


Hillary Clinton Supporters Do Not Vote McCain

Umm . . .

They’re mad as hell, and Hillary Clinton’s supporters aren’t going to take it anymore.

Some Clintonites are so mad about Barack Obama’s Tuesday victory that they’ve launched a web site to build support to launch a lobbying group to support Republican John McCain.

“We’re going to run campaign ads to defeat Obama,” says Ed Hale, a 63-year-old rancher and a Clinton supporter from Wellington, Texas. “We have doctors, lawyers, CPAs, the blue bloods, and then we have rednecks like me. It’s a very diversified organization.”

[From Angry Clinton Supporters Start Rallying for McCain Online | Threat Level from Wired.com]

Can we all just agree that this is bullshit and anyone who is a real Democrat, anyone who is a real Hillary supporter is not going to deliberately hand this country over to a madman who has no respect for the constitution and who thinks women are too dumb to make equal pay for equal work and who believes it’s just dandy to torture people as long as it’s done by the intelligence community and not the army and who doesn’t want to support veterans and their ability to go to college?

So let’s all just agree that any of these so-called Hillary for McCain supporters are most likely asshole Republican’s who are attempting to spread fear, uncertainty and doubt. If you believe in what Hillary Clinton believes in then you will NOT vote for McCain.

Ok? Ok.

Media outlets who simply accept the statements that these people are Clinton supporters are playing directly into a politics of lies and deceit. Yes, I’m looking at you Wired.

Lore Tells The Truth Once Again

Alt Text: Secrets of the 7 Basic Blog Posts

According to some people, there are only 36 basic story plots that just get reused. Others say there are merely 20. Some people even say there’s only one plot, but they probably just watch too many Michael Bay movies. I like the theory that there are only seven plots. It’s a nice round number, and the plots are vague enough that you can shoehorn anything from Citizen Kane to a cereal commercial into them. In the spirit of oversimplifying things so that you can smugly shove human endeavors into pre-labeled slots, I’d like to present my own, contemporary take on this premise: the Seven Basic Blog Posts.

Go, read, recognize the truth of our sad, self-referential virtual existence. Then laugh, and link to it on your own blog!

You’ll feel better, I promise.

Links to Make You a Smarter, Better Person

That’s a lot of gas:

If traffic-timing systems were updated using conventional methods, the US could cut fuel consumption by up to 10 percent – about 17 billion gallons a year, the National Transportation Operations Coalition found in its 2007 traffic-signal report card. (Emissions also would be by cut more by than 20 percent.) If Park’s hyper-efficient micro-model traffic-timing method were widely applied, another 1 billion to 2.5 billion gallons could be saved. (Link)

Women & Math, two great tastes that taste great together:

The researchers, noted, however, that the math gap wasn’t consistent between countries. For example, it was nearly twice as large as the average in Turkey, while Icelandic girls outscored males by roughly 2 percent. The general pattern of these differences suggested to the authors that the performance differences correlated with the status of women. The authors of the study built a composite score that reflected the gender equality of the countries based on the World Economic Forum’s Gender Gap Index, data extracted from the World Values Surveys, measures of female political participation, and measures of the economic significance of females. Scandinavian countries such as Norway and Sweden score very high on gender equality measures; in these nations, the gender gap on math performance is extremely small. In contrast, nations at the other end of the spectrum, such as Turkey and Korea, had the largest gender gap. The correlations between gender equality and math scores held up under a statistical test designed to catch spurious associations. The authors even checked out the possibility of genetic effects not linked to the Y chromosome by examining whether genetic similarity between various European populations could account for these differences, but they found that it could not. (Link)

Sell you? We’re not trying to sell you anything! Really. Truly.

The current issue of Advertising Age profiles Bridge Worldwide, a Cincinnati-based online advertising firm that specializes in what it calls “marketing with meaning.”For ConAgra, Bridge designed the “Start Making Choices” website, which “conveys nutrition, exercise and other well-being tips from cardiologist James Rippe … as it weaves in messages and sponsorship from the company’s Healthy Choice, Eggbeaters, Hunt’s Orville Redenbacher and Pam brands.” To promote Abbott Laboratories‘ Glucerna brand products for diabetics, the firm created a “Diabetes Control for Life” program that offers food and health tips. Bridge says the program helps “participants lose weight and have better blood-sugar management,” while their “Glucerna product consumption increases ninefold.” (Link)

Watch as governments lick the boots of the Entertainment Industry! Marvel at the Destruction of Personal Rights!! Gasp at the Idiocy of Those in Power!!!

The U.S. is exporting to the rest of the world a level of naked, sweaty terror about piracy that goes beyond legitimate concerns about, say, massive counterfeiting operations or phony prescription drugs, and truly does threaten the individual rights of consumers and their media. And they’ve now convinced other countries to plot some secret worldwide agreement that will potentially judge all of us as criminals without any sort of trial and without our input at all. That’s unacceptable. (Link)

See, you’re a better person already! I like you so much more than when you first started reading this post. In fact, don’t tell the other readers, but the truth is, I like you the best.