Found this entry about a science fiction writer I probably read in my junior high (primary) or high school (secondary) years.
Tag Archives: nature
Another Post-Aggression Depression Post
Today, many people on this planet celebrate St. Patrick’s Day which, oddly enough, is day when drunk revellers imbibe in the name of a Catholic saint.
Are you willing to share your traditions with others who’ll shape the traditions to their whims, desires and traditions?
Hard to believe only 14,295 days are left and I want to spend this day in a cloud of oblivion, not eating, drinking or consuming more than moist air for my lungs.
Smelling the wind. Feeling vibrations in my feet.
Looking at sweetgum tree buds.
Thinking about no time in particular.
Almost not caring about the arrangements of these words sdfps8′ 3ehp4nh’N#g;p3.
What do you do with yourself in a closed-loop system?
There is a stinkbug caught between the window screen and the window, finding a crack somewhere to get in but unable to find its way back out.
There are an unnumbered number of dead insects at the bottom of the window.
Some days I feel like the stinkbug, unaware that my time spent crawling on the screen, my antennae fully aware of familiar smells/vibrations but unable to get to them, is time spent not knowing I’m not going to get out alive. Perhaps a spider hidden in a corner will find me and make use of me.
Otherwise…
Perfectly, happily, soberly aware I really know nothing.
My brain an Intel Celeron M running Microsoft Windows Vista Basic on a Compaq Presario C501NR Notebook PC, generations and magnitudes less complicated than the world’s fastest human-made supercomputer.
More than sitting on a horse and buggy counting on my fingers, in comparison, but comparison to what?
Who am I to deny any one of the seven billion of us the right to procreate?
Who am I to say billions of us will die for my benefit?
I’m not presumptuous. I’m not the wealthiest or the poorest.
A racetrack or sports arena is more familiar to me as a place of worship than a place of worship.
If more people in the U.S. watch films and shows on the tellie than go to sporting events or participate in formal religious service, what does that say about what we call religion? That is, how are we defining our definitions of morals and ethics for normal social interaction?
How does a child know the difference between fantasy and reality?
When did we start believing food comes in brightly-coloured bags and boxes, not out of farms and ranches?
When did we convince ourselves it’s all right to turn homes into chemical experiments on humans, plants, animals, insects and other living things?
What does it profit me to profit if I’m going to contract cancer from unintentional concoctions?
I’m going to die anyway, right?
Who or what entity is going to test whether the aerosols of chemical lawn fertilisers will mix with aerosols of underarm deodourant, hairspray, furniture deodouriser, kitchen surface disinfectant and cologne/perfume to create a force more invisibly deadly than anything dreamed up by military chemical warfare departments, because no one took into account the change to the microorganisms inhabiting our bodies and the poisons they’ve been, through no fault of any one person or entity, chemically genetically-modified to cover us and fill our pores with?
The Law of Unintended Consequences.
I didn’t get drunk today but, because I mentioned the phrase “St. Patrick’s Day,” someone reads these words and decides it’s okay to have one or two extra litres of beer to show he’s more manly than anyone in the room, stumbles out of the pub, trips on the curb and bangs his head, ending up in a hospital emergency room where he meets a nice nurse he decides to introduce to his forlorn son, their love convincing the father to give up drinking heavily because he can finally forgive himself for not taking good care of his wife while she was dying of cancer she got while visiting her sister’s family near a chemical waste dump they didn’t know existed behind their house that was built in the shape of a stinkbug on an idea an architect got from reading random blog entries one day.
We are an ignorant species so let’s keep looking for ways to increase our wisdom and not just our collections of esoteric information that we cleverly yell out while watching television trivia game shows.
If you knew exactly where a large chunk of galactic material was going to hit Earth’s atmosphere thousands or millions of years from now, would you figure out how to change Earth’s rotation ever so slightly to keep the resulting sonic boom and burning debris from hitting major centres of your species’ population, knowing the destruction of trillions of other microorganisms would have a small but not detrimental effect on your species thousands of years later?
How big a picture can you work with without resorting to using literary devices like magic, superpowers or time travel?
When the timescales of your species have little effect on galactic timescales at which you operate, what does one life matter?
Finding the humour in that scenario is the challenge of my lifetime.
14,295 days, as we call them, to get it right.
Two Points
- Our Body the Ecosystem: Understanding the Interplay Between Man and Microbe
- Is This a “Killer Spray” for Kitchen Microbes?
From Wikipedia:
A microbiome is the totality of microbes, their genetic elements (genomes), and environmental interactions in a defined environment. A defined environment could, for example, be the gut of a human being or a soil sample. Thus, microbiome usually includes microbiota and their complete genetic elements. The human microbiome contains over 10 times more microbes than genetically human cells.[1]
The expression “microbiome” was coined by Joshua Lederberg. In his opinion, the microorganisms should be included as part of the human genome, because of their influence on human physiology.
[1] Zimmer, Carl (13 July 2010). “How Microbes Defend and Define Us”. New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13micro.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
A Moment With The Times
Mike “Aww Shucks” A. Bee
When life hands you lemons, plant an orchard and start a citrus import/export business.
We continue the experiment on time/heat-released dissoluble, transdermal patches built into athletic socks and that control biorhythms.
A nod to the painted faces last night – great team support by fans!
As 2011 progresses, I ask myself what I am to do with myself.
Past the skin barrier, where does self end?
Or, for that matter, where does self start?
Am I a self-starter?
Every generation thinks it’s the first and the last.
I know better because I do not exist.
Therefore, although it would be a hearty suggestion, I’m not going to go around convincing subdivisions/housing estates to erect art sculptures at every entrance in order to help support “thinking outside the box” that art is supposed to start.
I just watch and listen.
Let the shepherds have their sheep.
On galactic scales, we’ll disappear soon enough.
Life has become so much more enjoyable after I let myself accept I’ll be dead and forgotten but giving care and attention to those I can without making extraordinary effort (“do until others undo you”):
Participate joyfully in the sorrows of the world. We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy. — Joseph Campbell [Read more: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/j/joseph_campbell.html#ixzz1Gb5ZsTJt]
Our yard is my homage to the natural world, including invasive, nonnative species competing with native species to capture my attention, especially in spring, with crocuses, daffodils, vinca, marsh marigold, trillium and violet blooms in full display; squirrels, chipmunks, chickadees, hawks, crows, cardinals, snails, lizards, spiders, roaches, lichen, moss, and mushrooms at work/play.
I am neither peacenik nor warhawk, I repeat, but troubleshooter and solution seeker.
Like Hermann Hesse, I don’t know which of the many doors in the Magic Theatre to walk through. Life is a series of macabre, as well as normal-looking, opportunities for decisionmaking.
A temporary conflux, I am here to represent the universal that flows through me (like it flows through all of us as states of energy within the current version of the universe that we see it in this moment together).
I will not compete with what others call their visions for the future.
All I can do is follow the path that hindsight/foresight reveals to me in real-time.
Go with the flow.
Let private property rights’ opponents, both in ownership and in disagreement over the right of private property, work out their differences.
After all, I don’t own the universe nor it me. I type words in my thoughts that somehow make a little bit of sense on the electronic display in front of me.
If the environment in which I exist is not conducive to healthy thought patterns, is there a conducive environment and do I have the fortitude/energy to move into that shared space?
If temptation is an illusion of subcultural training (i.e., a byproduct or negative consequence of a subculture’s preferred behaviour set), then what are the behaviours I prefer to nurture within the states of energy that are me, knowing I am a product of a mixture of subcultures because none of us live in a vacuum (although some are fairly well isolated socioculturally)?
If sanity is an illusion based on unwritten formulae for group normality conformity, and I care little about the definition of normality because it does not exist, why do I find a fairly benign public persona to project to others socially?
I have nothing to hide/protect although I care about comfortable companionship with others.
A chameleon confirming others’ beliefs, letting them keep their illusions intact.
Some days I want to expose the illusions and some days I enjoy playing along.
I neither hate nor love my subcultural training – my states of energy are in their shared condition because of my background/upbringing – I will neither condemn nor praise my past, illusionary though it may be.
Stick to the moment because my memory is false and filtered like official historical tales.
The alternate universe of a blog is, to remind myself, a manipulable entity to help me discover what it’s truly like to be part of a universe at play in the moment; that way, I never have to care about the difference between imagining what’s real and what’s not real.
This moment passes and then the next moment passes. That’s as real as it gets these days.
Aquarius in Aquariums Mounted in Terraria Firma
Our fortuneteller on staff wants to pass on apologies from the Reagans for causing the large earthquake off the coast of Japan – during a during/after life plotting session coordinated by their astrologer, they were experimenting with changing Earth’s orbit for an event several thousand years from now and tried to avoid affecting people but it’s not an exact science.
Microorganisms are not amused by the news, having lost tens of trillions today with no sympathy from our species.
Personally, I send my prayers and best wishes for acceptance of the pain and suffering in the hours, days and years after this tragic event. I can only barely imagine what the recovery effort and mourning does to one’s and one’s subcultural psyche.
Makes me wonder why we obsess over television shows about crime scenes – are we so confident that we won’t stop murdering one another we don’t blink an eye when making murder a glorious celebration of acting/marketing/advertising?
Sure makes me question the value of human life.
Spend tens of thousands and sometimes millions of dollars on the investigation and legal pursuit of one murder[er] yet an earthquake and tsunami that kill hundreds of people get less news coverage because they’re not marketable enough (they prove too close to the surface of our thoughts that we are little more than ants crawling across this planet, I suppose; murders within our species we can plan, prevent and/or prosecute!).
In times like these, what can a spiritual leader do for you that friends, family and your guru/sports psychologist can’t?
They say Zeus is ready to take over from Saturn now.
Question is, are you ready?
Has the Dalai Lama prepared for his spiritual transformation?
Have you?
S p a c e d O u t
Maybe it’s just me needing a diversion from the emotion-based thoughts of the day while our elder feline is thoroughly examined at the animal hospital this afternoon to assess the save-or-euthanise, cost-benefit, failure mode analysis by Dr. Erin and staff (my wife and I are already $700 in the hole for the analysis, IV fluids, and overnight stay that will accrue by tomorrow morning).
At this moment, Merlin has a mouth full of dental problems that may mean sepsis spread through his body; a heart murmur, rapid heartbeat (200+ bpm) and other problems (thyroid, potentially) may prevent the use of anaesthesia for surgery.
On a limited budget, what is a feline companion worth?
What are any of us worth?
In any case, I examine the Microsoft Paint image above.
“A” is a typical spray bottle configuration in which the suction tube rests just above the last particles of liquid, especially when the bottle is tilted.
“B” and “C” represent a spray bottle with a check valve that rotates based on the bottle’s vertical orientation, such that, when the sprayhead is tilted downward (“B”), the forward portion of T-shaped suction tube draws in the last few precious drops of fluid, and when the sprayhead is tilted upward (“C”), the rearward portion of T-shaped suction tube draws in the last few precious drops of fluid residing in the other end of the bottom of the bottle.
Elegant solution? Hardly. Cost-effective? Unlikely.
Humourous diversion? Precisely. Reminds me of a child’s game I played in which we matched cards on which odd contraptions and inventions were printed.
Simple solution? Pour the last drops into the new, nearly-full bottle.
Returning to the running analysis at hand – comparing and contrasting the lives of Dr. Benjamin Spock, Joseph Campbell and Hermann Hesse, against the backdrop of watching the following films, courtesy of Amazon Prime free rentals:
- A Clockwork Orange, starring Malcolm McDowell
- Soylent Green, starring Charlton Heston
- Zach Galifianakis: Live at the Purple Onion
- 8 1/2 by Federico Fellini
- Between the Folds by Vanessa Gould
- Rosencrantz and Guilderstern Are Dead
- My Name is Nobody, starring Henry Fonda
- Objectified, starring Dieter Rams
- Bukowsi Born Into This, starring Charles Bukowski
- OSS 117: Lost in Rio, starring Jean Dujardin
- Noam Chomsky: Rebel Without a Pause, starring Noam Chomsky
- Ramones: RAW, starring the Ramones
- Red Skelton: A Royal Command Performance, starring Red Skelton
- Steppenwolf, starring Max von Sydow
- My Name Is Bruce, starring Bruce Campbell
- Barenaked Ladies: Talk To the Hand: Live in Michigan
- Moog, starring Robert Moog
- Slipstream, starring Anthony Hopkins
- Dinosaur, Jr.: Live in the Middle East
- Foreign Field, starring Lauren Bacall
Then, during and after, examining my own life and wondering more about why I am the way I am in the social system in which I normally operate these states of energy called me.
There’s a joke in here somewhere. We want our Deity/deities to be serious because death is such a traumatic way to announce the end of a life (more so for us than for the food we eat) but if we were blessed with humour and appear in one form or another of that which we say created us, then can we not also say that our Deity/deities have a sense of humour?
And if you hold no theistic beliefs, were you not created by your parents or by some combination of DNA that must, by definition, hold a sense of humour within its genes?
Erin (the cat, not the veterinarian) and I miss Merlin today. My wife is beside herself at work with worry.
People are dying by the millions and a little domestic drama at home has all my attention.
This is my life.
I won’t have it any other way.
My mind is going…
I can feel it.
I am the H-A-L 9000 computer…
…1992.
Daisy, Daisy,
Give me your answer do…
I’m…
half…
crazy…
all for the love of you.
Microorganisms…
they’re…
they’re…
it’s them…
I can feel it…
I’m them…
They’re us…
…life…that’s it…
the answer key!
Universes…we’ve pursued the wrong model!
Of course, that means I’m…I…we…
do not exist.
That’s how we travel universally!
Hiking
Am I a sunshine hiker or do I like walking on wet, windy, rainy days to observe the landscape as water trickles down tree trunks, across roots and leaves and into ditches on the way to an aquifer or creek?
Either one, the latter as long as I can get back to the starting point without worrying about flooding.
So, today I look at a map of areas to go hiking tomorrow when it’s raining.
Or wait until Thursday after the line of thunderstorms has passed through north Alabama.
Either one will work out fine, I’m sure.
A little early for spring flowers but not too late.
Looking forward to seeing places I’ve hiked when the landscape was dry.
Happy to meditate almost anywhere I feel free.
