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Sunday, 14 June 2009

  • Who are you?  Who do you want to be?  Who do you believe you were meant to be (not it that wishy-washy, perfect person, if-I-were-only-then-all-my-problems-would-go-away-sense either)? 

    This guy knows who he is


    What I know about me is that for the longest time I was searching for who I was.  I didn't understand that I was already here because I kept picking up baggage from my past, as well as, projections of the future, and dragging all that weight and expectation around with me all the time.  I was afraid of making mistakes, embarrassing myself, which was stupid because that behaviour was pretending that the inevitable was never going to happen.  And once I came to the understanding that I don't need anyone's permission to be who I am, or like what I like, I graduated to thinking I needed to find my Voice.  That while I knew that I was here, that I was still in need of development, that I was incomplete and that I needed to work on myself before anything Good would be created by me.  And so I created nothing until I was satisfied with myself.  Which, again, was stupid. 

    I think I've got this stupid thing down, man.

    Anyway, I love this video.  It reminds me that I know somewhere in me is a crazy dancer person.  I know this because I've been the crazy dancer person before.  I knew I was crazy.  I knew I was a dancer.  And I didn't care.  This video reminds me that I have moved aside a little too much and let someone else be a crazy dancer person, and I have become that person who says that looks fun and joins into someone elses idea.  It reminds me that way too often, I am the person on the grass who never gets up from the grass. 

    And you know what?  This guy didn't do anything big.  He just danced his crazy little thing.  And that's how everyone does it.  They dance their crazy little thing.  And if they keep dancing, then everyone joins in and has fun and does something.  And if they keep doing these crazy things, then who knows... we might actually do something more.  Like end starvation.  Or teach the world to read.  Or live in a way where people matter more than stuff. 

Saturday, 30 May 2009

  • I sitting here listening to Pink Floyd when I damn well know I shouldn't.  Their music just sends me to odd places.  I never had needed drugs.  At my new job, the people I work with find it amazing that I don't have the urge to get out of the building at lunch.  We spend our day at the bench for hours, wrapping our brain around the nuances of viral infection.  I find it tiring.  I go to work exhausted some days, most days.  Yet, I don't need to go to the cafeteria to get away.  I think Terry Brooks said it best when he was talking about what it was like to be writer, he said that he really isn't all there.  As in, he spends large portions of his mental energy in his brain, creating, thinking, developing his craft, and only half paying attention to the people and places around him.  I can't say that I'm doing anything nearly that focused, but I can relate to the physical state.  I can be in the building and not in the building at the exact same moment.  I am concerned that this state comes with alarming frequency. 

    I could go on about my mental state of late.  I won't bore you with the pointlessness.  The short, polite version is that I'm at a job where I know I need to learn things, where I know I will be moving on eventually and in such a manner to leave science entirely, and where I am grateful to have it considering the chaotic American dream we all have now.  I have found some sort of peace with it all.  I have staved off the restlessness-- for now. 

    I've quit the volunteer job that I've had for three years and loved.  Today was my last day.   The day started with a death that I never got the story of.  (bad preposition, bad).  It ended with everyone so busy that I slipped of without much notice.  No one knew it was my last day. 

    I had to do it because I came to realize that I had a hard time wanting to be there.  When I realized that my life was shifting in a new direction (or more to the point, I got my head out of my ass and looked around), that particular job no longer aligned.  That sounds so business-psych, but it's a reasonable description.  The work was no longer serving me and so I was no longer really serving it.  I did my best still.  I enjoyed the people and the patients, but I could no longer see the point, even though I had come to a trusted, respected, responsible position.  I had to end it.  I had promised to work through the year; the past Me would have fulfilled that out of obligation.  The person I am now, can't.  I put off the resignation letter until the last possible moment.

    And now I sit here contemplating... what?  I have a relatively free summer ahead.  I have projects to do, both personal and family.  I cleaned out one of the two remaining boxes I dragged from my mother's house.  I found old pictures and minor things that hold a remembrance for me.  Things I couldn't put into the dumpster.  I feel like I'm on the edge of a vista, that there should be a glorious view ahead of me, except that the valley is filled with fog.  I do know what my plans are.  I have steps to take.  But I also find that my most pressing project is still me.  That I have to find my voice, or maybe not find it as much as use it.  Develop it. 

    This is leading me into the topics that I could rant on about.  Topics where I have a voice and I don't use it: gay marriage, the current economy, the selfishness of the general population in regard to consumerism, convenience, and individualism to the point of absurdity, my overuse of the the word "of", the suburban life myth, the pointless fascination with celebrity, fame, fortune, my stomach and its fat deposit that my wii fit claims is 11 pounds.  Gah, I could go on. 

    But I don't.  I have a therapist and I have to save something for her.  Instead I will tell you that I have written a story.  It is stark because as I wrote it, I realized that there was really only one point to tell and that was the story of him and her.  There are no names, there is no physical descriptions.  There is nothing beyond what is important and that is why she is there again and the things they say to each other.  Even that is kept to few specific words.  I think that is how life should be.  Stripped to only the important points.  More importantly, that's what I want.  That's what I'm going after (that and better word choice in writing, maybe a smaller butt). 



Thursday, 05 February 2009

  • Thoughts to note...

    While I have crystallized the contents of my brain yet, I have been able to come up with an extensive question list.  These questions are the surrounding thoughts that hover above my head a most times.  Some reflect the changing time and culture.  Some reflect my lack of identity (a singular, persistent idea that I try to be Zen about).  Most, if not all are the circular concepts of belief and ideas on the scale of human existence rather than an individual.  I'm thinking it would be nice right about now for some university to pay me a stipend while I do dissertation research to figure all of this out (assuming that there is an answer).
    • What is belief?
    • What is the rate of change of ideas? (e.g. how much time did it take for the global population to believe/accept that the world is round rather than flat?)
    • How does language and communication affect the rate?
    • How does influence affect belief?
    • How does influence affect the rate of change of ideas?
    • How to define influence and also classify between levels of influence (e.g. individual vs community vs global)
    • What types of influence are there?  Characterize.
    • What are beliefs based on?
    • What are the degrees of belief? (e.g. deep beliefs vs shallow beliefs, personal/private vs public/intellectual acceptance of facts)
    • How does the degree affect the act of believing?
    • What is required for belief?
    • How does literature/art play a role in the change of ideas?
    • Are there any physiological (neurological?) components to belief? (Keep separate from basic physiological response)
    • How does form of transmission (current and past) affect the rate of change?
    • What affects how long a belief is held? (linked to what beliefs are based on and the degrees of belief)
    So I think that about covers it.  I touched on psychology, sociology, anthropology, art, literature, biology, and philosophy.  Although looking at the list, I think now, I may have at least two dissertations on my hands. 


Friday, 30 January 2009

  • I'm here but not here, as it seems to be these days.  I could give the usual round of excuse/reasons but why bother?  It isn't that you aren't important or that my need to put my ideas out there isn't important.  The problem seems to be my inability to crystalize anything in my head.  I work and come home, all the time my brain has these concepts and ideas.  Part of this absence is to blame on work, just not the superficial part in that it takes up my time.  Deeper than that is how I have different, higher expectations laid on me and that has forced my brain to actually think again.  Many times before this I have said how my brain is not my friend.  It spends its time getting me diverted on ego trips or ego falls based on events that haven't actually happened.  When I realized what it was trying to do, the onslaught became worse even as I became stronger and developed self understanding.  Yet, it got what it wanted because I was still looking inward instead of living outward.  Of course, now that it has something functional to do in interpreting and analyzing data, perhaps it was just bored before.  Now it thinks about things like: what is the transmission rate of ideas, what does it take to believe, how does communication methods and language affect belief and ideas?  And I find that I want to know the answer to these things. 

    There is a problem with this though.  The ideas that I have are still at the conceptual stage.  Complicating that is they are tied into issues of lifestyle and habits.  The more that I start thinking about these ideas and the problems that we have as a culture (I apologize for being so vague here.  I'm still trying to make sense of all this to myself), the more I realize that I can't be all cerebral about it and count myself outside of the problem.  So, I now question myself and my habits and what can be done.  I am ever the believer that for work to get done of any kind, it must start from the inside out.  And in order for any of that to happen, I need to sharpen the brain.  It works now more toward what I suppose is its intended purpose (rather than accost me with anxiety and doubt, hurray!), but I find that atrophy over years has caused damage.  Sloppy thinking, acceptance of what information I get without looking at it to see what it really means, or worse, what it hides, are habits that need to go.  To that end I've bought Unspeak by Stephen Poole, a book I've long since wanted to read, and a book on critical thinking processes, among many others I have in a pile on a variety of topics, though not all are so heavy weighted.

    What does it all mean?  I have no idea.  I sense a shift, much like I did last year.  At that time, what I sensed was Change coming at full force.  I have been grateful to be given that warning and was able to act on if for all the things that happened.  (Don't be foolish and think I had a crystal ball, I didn't.  But that intuition gave me the grace I needed to be able to turn the bow into the wave).  Now, I think, is the continuation.  Change doesn't happen without reason.  I believe that last years changes are leading to a reordering of things now.  I don't know what those things are, but I do sense that work is required this time around rather than fluidity before.  I am doing my best to prepare for it.

Friday, 12 December 2008

  • I should have bought the lottery ticket

    Today was a good to great day, not that my life is terribly interesting.  Lately, I have been so stressed and the anxiety sensitivity that I get from being sick is an aggravant, and the caffeine loaded pills I had to take to function against a sinus headache with the cold weather system sitting over us isn't helping.  I have many nights since Thanksgiving up and wide awake.  Not the I'm alert, conscious kind of awake, but the I could get up and drywall the garage and oh didn't we want to regrout and seal the bathroom tile kind of awake.  My husband doesn't sleep well if I am not in bed, nor can he sleep with the TV on or light on.  That effectively ruled out reading, movies, TV (although for the record, I know that I should watch TV if I'm trying to get back to sleep.  TV is a stimulant.  /digression).  So I'm awake at various points of the evening having a conversation with my brain.  They go something like this:

    Me: crap.  Can't sleep.  OK.  Must focus on breathing.
    Brain: Breathing.  OK.  inoutinoutinout.  You know this reminds me that I need to do more yoga, or exercise.
    M:  Yeah, whatever.  Breathing.
    B:  But I had this great idea for a new schedule.  But that would have to work around writing.
    M:  No writing.  I have other things to do first, like work and sleep.  Go away.
    B:  OK, but speaking of work the secret santa thing isn't going so well, is it?  And then there's the lab presentation. Here the brain cheerfully wanders off into endless details and I get sucked in.
    M (looking at clock): half hour.  This sucks.  Ok back to breathing.
    B: but if we could just solve this problem we could sleep.
    Sucked in again. 
    M: no back to breathing.  inoutinoutinout. 

    This goes on forever.  Elizabeth Gilbert writes about this exact conversation better than I did.  And in the months of self discovery leading up to these recent days, I understand that I can't trust my brain.  Generally it lies to me wholesale.  When it does tell the truth, it does so only to get me sucked in so that it can lie to some more.  I've decided that my brain is better used at places like work, where analytical thinking is needed and useful.  It does me no good for most other situations and, therefore, I have decided to limit it's participation.  It has other ideas however.

    So this morning, at the ripe hour of 4am, it started in again.  So instead of trying to distract it, or repress it, I figured you want to be up, we'll be up.  Over the next hour, the presentation that is due next month just flowed out of me and onto the paper.  All the little scraps of information fell into place and the picture clarified.  The outline was effortless on my part.  By the time I finished, I was on time for getting my morning started. 

    At work, I was able to be able to go over all of my outline with my boss and he agreed that I had it all put together, with only minor modifications.  And the next experiments were sketched out.  And I was able to go over my mid year review.  That gave me the feedback I needed to feel more secure in that I was working out for him and meeting expectations. 

    I left work, was able to find the secret santa gift I was looking for, try on the dress I ordered from Ann Taylor Loft (it fit), and found another game for my husband to consider for game day.  I haven't had a day like this in a long time.  Does wonders for the sanity, I tell you.

Chessgirl

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    • Country: United States
    • State: Illinois
    • Gender: Female
    • Member Since: 5/1/2003

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