Because I now know:
how to spell shawty (vs. shorty which is the decidedly less cool spelling)
and what it actually means (term of endearment for your "bro" or your necessarily hot/sexy girlfriend.)
you're welcome.
Showing posts with label umm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label umm. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
brilliant by day, dud otherwise
Seriously, during my (real) work day I am brilliant.
I have so many ideas I don't have the opportunity to write about because I think the people that give me that paycheck every week might object to my writing a blog post.
I need a way to capture these ideas without taking lots of time away.
Anybody know of a magic memory idea or device? Some chip I can slip behind my ear that will grab these thoughts and ideas so that I don't keep losing them?
sigh
I have so many ideas I don't have the opportunity to write about because I think the people that give me that paycheck every week might object to my writing a blog post.
I need a way to capture these ideas without taking lots of time away.
Anybody know of a magic memory idea or device? Some chip I can slip behind my ear that will grab these thoughts and ideas so that I don't keep losing them?
sigh
Friday, March 29, 2013
when is it too much?
What does it say about me that this bugs me?
I have a problem with someone affording a $200,000 car. It seems...excessive!
Am I wrong?
I have to ask myself "Where is the line?"
"At what point does something cross over from OK to greedy?"
I don't know. But this feels wrong somehow.
You know what comes to mind? There are children starving in the world and he's driving a $200,000 car. That's not (wait for it...) fair.
Yet, I tell my kids daily that life isn't fair. We were never promised fair. Even in the Constitution, we are given the right to the PURSUIT of happiness. There's nothing about fairness or even a promise of happiness itself.
So is this just jealousy on my part because I want something better? Except, I don't personally buy things that are expensive (at least not to me). Perhaps someone who makes significantly less money than I do thinks my spending habits are out of control. That my living in Irvine is excessive. Where I see that I've worked hard to live someplace I like.
Yeah, I do think people should be free to pursue their dreams and work hard and earn a fair wage. Perhaps my issue is that certain industries don't seem to have a fair wage? Entertainment and professional sports seem out of control to me. Yet, people are willing to pay and who am I to say they cannot spend their money on that? I'm willing to say I love movies and TV. I appreciate a really well written and produced show and those people should be rewarded for their talent and work.
It is interesting to me how many topics ultimately come back to God for me. Perhaps because so many topics ultimately come back to some kind of morality and how does one measure morality without a standard? That standard comes from God for me.
Then I wonder, how do we fix these things? How do we fix extreme poverty? Why, when we know that on a global scale we have enough food for everyone do people still starve to death? I believe it is because people can be evil, selfish, greedy, self-serving. Because they seek to further themselves vs helping those around them. Corruption in the countries suffering the most where there are extreme differences in what the have's have and the have not's don't. That corruption ultimately kills. Greed is bad. (sorry Michael Douglas) There is such thing as enough. (?)
However, I don't ultimately believe in socialism because people are not basically good. We have the same problems with socialism because greedy, power hungry people want to be in charge and often are. Those who are more motivated by such things often make their way to the top. Which would be OK with me if they were "fair."
I don't ultimately believe in capitalism because people are not basically good. (same argument as above with the exception that there is perhaps more opportunity for the have not's to rise)
hmmmm
I think this one is going to take some more thinking.
(don't even get me started on Congress...)
I have a problem with someone affording a $200,000 car. It seems...excessive!
Am I wrong?
I have to ask myself "Where is the line?"
"At what point does something cross over from OK to greedy?"
I don't know. But this feels wrong somehow.
You know what comes to mind? There are children starving in the world and he's driving a $200,000 car. That's not (wait for it...) fair.
Yet, I tell my kids daily that life isn't fair. We were never promised fair. Even in the Constitution, we are given the right to the PURSUIT of happiness. There's nothing about fairness or even a promise of happiness itself.
So is this just jealousy on my part because I want something better? Except, I don't personally buy things that are expensive (at least not to me). Perhaps someone who makes significantly less money than I do thinks my spending habits are out of control. That my living in Irvine is excessive. Where I see that I've worked hard to live someplace I like.
Yeah, I do think people should be free to pursue their dreams and work hard and earn a fair wage. Perhaps my issue is that certain industries don't seem to have a fair wage? Entertainment and professional sports seem out of control to me. Yet, people are willing to pay and who am I to say they cannot spend their money on that? I'm willing to say I love movies and TV. I appreciate a really well written and produced show and those people should be rewarded for their talent and work.
It is interesting to me how many topics ultimately come back to God for me. Perhaps because so many topics ultimately come back to some kind of morality and how does one measure morality without a standard? That standard comes from God for me.
Then I wonder, how do we fix these things? How do we fix extreme poverty? Why, when we know that on a global scale we have enough food for everyone do people still starve to death? I believe it is because people can be evil, selfish, greedy, self-serving. Because they seek to further themselves vs helping those around them. Corruption in the countries suffering the most where there are extreme differences in what the have's have and the have not's don't. That corruption ultimately kills. Greed is bad. (sorry Michael Douglas) There is such thing as enough. (?)
However, I don't ultimately believe in socialism because people are not basically good. We have the same problems with socialism because greedy, power hungry people want to be in charge and often are. Those who are more motivated by such things often make their way to the top. Which would be OK with me if they were "fair."
I don't ultimately believe in capitalism because people are not basically good. (same argument as above with the exception that there is perhaps more opportunity for the have not's to rise)
hmmmm
I think this one is going to take some more thinking.
(don't even get me started on Congress...)
Monday, August 6, 2012
hysteria
Um.... really?
This was an uncontroversial treatment?
An article about the Top 10 Controversial Psychiatric Disorders
One being: Hysteria
This was an uncontroversial treatment?
An article about the Top 10 Controversial Psychiatric Disorders
One being: Hysteria
In the Victorian era, hysteria was a catch-all diagnosis for women in distress. The symptoms were vague (discontentment, weakness, outbursts of emotion, nerves) and the history sexist (Plato blamed the wanderings of an "unfruitful" uterus).Thank you once again Internet for giving me a laugh.
The treatment for hysteria? "Hysterical paroxysm," also known as orgasm. Physicians would massage their patients' genitals either manually or with a vibrator, a task they found tedious but surprisingly uncontroversial. More contentious was the practice of putting "hysterical" women on bed rest or demanding that they not work or socialize, a treatment that often worsened anxiety or depression.
According to a 2002 editorial in the journal Spinal Cord, the diagnosis of hysteria gradually petered out throughout the 20th century. By 1980, hysteria disappeared from the DSM in favor of newer diagnoses like conversion and dissociative disorders.
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