What’s for Dinner?

I’m trying to be healthier in my food choices, and more frugal in my spending choices. I recently purchased Absolute Fitness1 for my iPhone and have been tracking my nutrition and caloric intakes (along with my very sporadic and very low level of exercise right now—I know, I know, I’m working on it). Simply taking the time to record what I’m eating and drinking, not to mention looking at the calories and HUGE amount of sodium that I’m consuming each day, has helped me focus on changing my eating habits. Not all at once and not 100%, but when faced with a choice, I’m finding myself tending more toward the healthy choice.

As a consequence, I’m trying to buy less pre-packaged foods and buy more bulk items and vegetables; and I’m starting to cook more often. By cook I mean something more than putting pasta in water and then, when done, putting pasta sauce from a jar on the pasta. Last week I made a slight variation on this recipe from 101 Cookbooks, and I’ve been sauteing kale and onions to mix with diced tomatoes and (yes from a jar) pasta sauce to top my pasta (which is a trick I credit to Joya, although she more often used spinach). Tonight I made this dish: photo.jpg

Sautéed brussel sprouts, lima beans and corn (would you call that a “succotash?”) over a bed of mashed parsnips. Simple and moderately tasty, though it needed some more spices . . . oh, and I just realized I should have given it a squeeze of lemon.

What did you have for dinner?

  1. I have mixed feelings about this program. I’m making it work for me, but it definitely has some major shortcomings, not the least of which is a rather limited database []

Maybe Steve Jobs Was Right

For over a year, I’ve bemoaned the fact that Apple’s iWork suite doesn’t perform auto-saves considering that nearly every other office suite or stand-alone word processing program offers this feature. Maybe I was wrong and Steve Jobs was right. I’ve been working with Office 2007 at my temp job to put together reports that combine text and a significant number of images. And every so often, as I’m working, the program stops responding while it creates an automatic back-up and I wait for the back-up to finish. The wait isn’t long, mind you, but enough to stop my work flow and annoy the heck out of me. So I’m reconsidering my stance on the whole auto-save situation. In the end, I think I still wish iWork offered the option and, instead of timed back-ups, performed them whenever there was no activity happening in the document (I think that’s how Scrivener and some other programs handle the process). However, I can sort of see the logic of not including this feature in iWork. I still think its a flawed logic, but I will probably complain less about the lack of auto-save than before.

Robot Sex (and other Signs of the Future)

200901132009.jpg I don’t know about you, but I am starting to feel like we are living in the future. Maybe it’s my age (40 years is stalking me like a lion stalking a goat), or maybe it’s because 2010 just seemed so far away and futurey when I was a child, but 2010 signifies the future to me, even though it’s less than a year away. Here are some links that prove the future has just about caught up with us.

Carbon Nanotubes

How would you like to wear your Facebook connection on your skin, or have a tattoo that moves and changes color? “E-skin” is on the way and how cool is that? Check out this article on IO9 about research into transparent circuits. (Link)

Also from IO9:

A group of researchers in France and Italy have published a paper today in Nature Nanotechnology that carbon nanotubes can act as neural workarounds in the brain, forming tight contacts with the already-existing nerve cells and conducting electricity between them exactly the way neurons do with each other. (Link)

True, nanotechnology lags far behind our imagination of what such technology might someday do, but stories like these show that we are definitely making progress toward a world where we build ourselves and our materials in ways radically different than what we have ever known.

The End is Nigh

Of course, one of the signs that the future is upon us is the end of civilization as we know it, so we may not reach our nanotech potential if the sun knocks out our electrical systems and sends the world spiraling back into the (literal) dark ages. Even our iPhones will be useless. *shudder* (Link)

Bodies Fabricated & Altered

This is a still from a new animated movie called Metropia that looks amazing. You can see a gallery of stills at Twitch. The bodies in the movie, while not proportioned the same as a “natural” body, are uncannily real. How soon will we have avatars that are visually indistinguishable from life? Based on this work, not very long at all.

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The trope of body modification has a long history in science fiction literature and while we aren’t quite at the level of designing our skin to change color with our moods, or interfacing with computers directly, or altering our bodies to survive environments without protection (like the deep sea or extreme cold or the vacuum of space), the body mod sub-culture is certainly pushes the boundaries of what we consider “human.” The video might actually be disturbing to some, but I think it’s fascinating and a clear sign that we are living in a future that allows us to sculpt our bodies in interesting ways.


Replicators

How cool was replicator technology in Star Trek? Nearly as cool as transporter technology. We may not be able to order an Earl Grey tea alongside Jean Luc Picard quite yet, but the beginnings of being able to simply fabricate objects instead of buying them. Need a coffee table—which I happen to need at the moment—just plug in a pre-loaded design or modify it to your specifications on your computer, send it to your in-house, 3-d printer and you’ve got yourself a piece of furniture to set you feet up on and write blog posts. Boing Boing links to a talk given at the Chaos Computer Congress that will get you up to speed on where we are and where we are heading with this technology. (Link)

Robot Sex

Then there is robot sex. Need I say more? (Link)

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Those are just a few instances that, when I came across them, I said to myself, “Self, the future is now.” Have you found something that strikes you as utterly futuristic but immanently now? Drop a comment to share with the class.

Jonathan Carroll: Or, A Swift Metaphysical Boot to the Gut

Do not finish reading Jonathan Carroll’s books right before bed.

You won’t go to sleep easily. Not because he writes horror—although After Silence is horrifying in ways both strange and mundane—but because in the last words you read, in those final sentences before the blankness of the end-pages, you will encounter profound questions about what it means to be human and you will get a swirling, heavy-empty feeling in the pit of your stomach just above your gut that feels like you’ve been kicked hard by a very tough truth. You’ll be kept up, brought fully awake and thinking about your life, your choices, your loves and your losses and just how weak we are, each and every one of us. Sleep will recede from your brain like an ebb tide, leaving a wet beach full of detritus and debris and the empty foam promises.

It’s 12:51 AM as I write these words. I am yawning and tired, and will probably not finish this entry tonight, but there was no way to avoid putting down some of my reactions after finishing After Silence:

profound distress awe love fear isolation

The novel ends not because the story is over, but because the wounds it has produced are so great, so terrifying, that we cannot look directly at the bone and gristle revealed beyond the lacerated flesh of the characters.

~~~

I got to sleep around 2 AM last night after I wrote the preceding thoughts. Ironically, I’d been planning on starting an entry about Jonathan Carroll after reading his book The Wooden Sea. So before I go on with some further thoughts about After Silence, let me back up a moment . . .

The excitement you feel when finding an author whose work reverberates with you is not a jump-up-and-down kind of excitement but rather a feeling of deep joy, like when the moon smiles or the ocean sings and a part of you inside says, simply, “yes.” You may get jump-up-and-down excited later, especially when you want to share your remarkable find with others around you—Ohmygod you have to read Neil Gaiman (or John Crowley, or Alan Moore’s The Watchmen, or Tom Robbins, Jonathan Lethem, or Paul Auster, or . . . etc.,)—but the moment when you find an author whose work you truly and passionately love is a quiet and awe-inspiring moment.1 Sometimes the moment happens within pages of first encountering an author. Sometimes it takes paragraphs or whole books to realize that yes, this is a writer for me.

I greatly enjoyed the first Jonathan Carroll book I read, White Apples. He reminded me a bit of Tom Robbins, but less frenetic. Just as twisted and impish, but less flashy. His characters felt more rooted in the everyday than Robbins’ characters, even as Carroll put them into just a equally odd situations. I knew I wanted to read more, but wasn’t emotionally floored by the novel. Still, I asked for several of his books for Christmas and received The Wooden Sea from my grandfather and grandmother. Again, an enjoyable book with moments of delightful humor and compelling clarity about the human condition. I was going along, enjoying the oddities of time travel and aliens and three-legged dogs and the general air of mystery and surrealism when all of a sudden I hit the last ten or so pages and BAM the book suddenly took on a weight to it that brought me falling back into my own going-on-forty-body and an awareness of the terrible responsibility each of us has for the running of our lives. This is one of those books where the end truly does justify the means. Suddenly, what seemed frivolous in the earlier sections took on a profound meaning. The following quote distills the book down to its purest essence, but is empty without each and every other word that precedes and follows it. However, as soon as I read these words, I knew I was going to share them here.

Not know thyself, know thy selves. All the yous, all the years, the days of Magda and Pauline, and orange cowboy boots and when you believed penises grew back inside a man at forty years old.

We look at who we were, once upon a time, and see that person as stupid or amusing, but never essential. Like flipping through old snapshots of ourselves wearing funny hats or big lapels. How silly I was back then, how naive.

And how wrong to think that! Because now when you are incapable of doing it, those yous still know how to fly, find the way into a forest or out of a library. Only they can see the lizards and fill holes that need to be filled.

Out of context, this means little, but in context, the words floored me, making what happened in the following pages both necessary and heart-breaking. This was the moment that I recognized that Carroll’s work was important to me and that it spoke to my heart, my blood and the very bones of me. So I was eager, after getting my new library card at the Rochambeau branch of the Providence Public Library, to get more of his work and checked out After Silence on Saturday afternoon. Yes, for those of you who are counting, I read it in two days. Kicked the emotional hell out of me as well. I’m not going to go into the story details, but this is a much darker book than White Apples or The Wooden Sea. The fantastical elements that I’d grown accustomed to in his previous books was missing, and the revelations were of death and sin and failure. I had to re-read the ending pages three times to comprehend them, not because Carroll’s writing was confusing, but because I simply couldn’t comprehend the abyss into which the narrator had fallen. I think the last time I had such a visceral reaction to a novel was Paul Auster’s The Book of Illusions, which I wrote about back in October of 2007. In fact, I’m going to plagiarize myself when I say that you should totally read Jonathan Carroll, but don’t expect to read his works lightly. I know the next time I start one of his novels, I will approach it with a great deal of care and respect as well as excitement and joy.

And if I’m in striking distance of the end I will not be reading it right before bed.

Unless, of course, I just can’t help myself . . .

      JC-AS-B.GIF

  1. Seriously though, you totally should read all of those authors I mentioned and damn it, but I just realized that they are all men. So add to that list Joanna Russ, Ursula K. LeGuin, Julia Kristeva, Sherri S. Tepper, and Margaret Atwood. []