The future never happens the way we imagine

Looking back at this 2045 conference in 2045 is about as entertaining a picosecond as it gets in the futurists’ party lounge these days.

In other words, would you say that your email and texts are as unable to interpret and respond to emotional social context as a person on the autism spectrum?  In what situation are they identical and thus the avatar of one is the same as the other?

Plate of shrimp, the prequel

What are the chances that two nights ago I tripped over my copy of “The Saga of the Sour Toe” by Capt. Dick Stevenson, edited by Dieter Reinmuth, and then today this story pops up in the news?

All I can say is thank goodness the universe was exists purely to create me and entertain me.

Otherwise, I’d go mad (no, don’t tell me I’m mad — let it be your secret you can keep from me!).

Viral Video Vini Vici Vino Vincent Vickie, via Wiki

The colonists looked everywhere but in each other’s eyes.

Despite their knowledge, their scientific curiosity and their access to the ISSA Net database, none of them was quite willing to talk about the elephant in the room:

When the only source of protein, the flesh of a recently-deceased colonist, was known to contain stage-4 cancer, was it edible?

On so many levels — emotional, ethical, practical, moral.

Back on Earth, body parts recycled for food had entered the fictional mainstream eons ago, the food made flesh (or was that the other way around?) long before Martian colonisation became a buzzword, let alone a reality.

On Mars, though, there was not the sophisticated equipment to separate healthy flesh from diseased flesh.

Malnutrition and scurvy had swept through some of the outer settlements.

Colony No. 1 was not supposed to suffer the fate of poor planning and execution.

Burying the dead was no longer an option, had been argued and regulated out of existence several generations back.

The colonists put the decision off a day.

Sure, they were rational beings but mourning the dead was still an active part of their subculture.  Give themselves a day to grieve before making this important decision, they told each other without saying a word by leaving the lab where a dear friend, colleague and family member lay motionless, eternally unresponsive.

Learning and doing

Reminder to self no. 1000000.

While the noise of a television channel blares, filling the silence of an automobile repair shop, I review last night’s thoughts.

My wife pays for dancing lessons in order to put me in a showcase at Madison Ballroom. Thus, the dance instructors ensure they involve my wife in the choreography practice sessions (even though she is not in the showcase) so she will not fall behind. Yet, she and I never dance very often at local clubs or ballrooms.

I am comfortable in the presence of my wife but I am not desirous of dancing with her.

I find I do not feel validated as a man by her, mainly because she does not desire to make herself look physically attractive for me.

It becomes a descending cycle of loss of physical contact between us.

After 27 years of marriage and 40 years of knowing each other, the familiarity of this cycle has become the norm between us.

I continue reducing my weight anyway, a mild form of physical discipline nowhere near the old military workouts of old.

Discipline in all areas of my life may improve in response.

It’s the big picture on which I focus, allowing personal thoughts to pass through this blog seamlessly.