Browsing the archives for the Wisdom I Have Learned category

Trees Are Blooming Again in Balboa Park

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Health, The Earth, United States, Wisdom I Have Learned

The title says it all.

Wouldn’t you prefer to be sitting here?

 

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Or standing here?

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(if you like one click on it for a bigger view)

This shows how it’s done:

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And then there’s these:

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TO SEE LOTS MORE

Lemon Cures Callous

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Health, Heavy Lifting, Wisdom I Have Learned

For 30+ years, no make it 40 or 50, I’ve had a callous on the bottom of my left foot. I think it’s there because that foot stopped growing after I had polio as a child. That foot is about a size smaller than the right foot, yet I always buy shoes to fit both feet, so it’s sliding around inside a shoe that’s too big for it. Needless to say this callous has become the bane of my life, and it’s probably too late to start buying shoes to fit the foot. Over the years, especially the past twenty or so, I’ve tried everything I heard about to try to cure the callous. Doctors have made attempts… sometimes. Generally they look at me with that “well he’s gonna die soon enough from something so why spend a lot of money and effort on this?” look.

Somewhere recently – I don’t recall whether I was doing an active search or just stumbled into it – I ran into a suggestion (I think it was somewhere in www.ehow.com) that a slice of lemon can reduce the pain in a corn. Callouses are like corns, I thought; so, why not give the lemon a try? The past week or so I’ve gone to bed with a slice of lemon, ensconced in a gauze pad held on with copious adhesive tape and sheltered in a plastic sandwich bag, by all of that firmly attached to the callous on the bottom of my foot. In the morning when I remove it, sometimes some old skin wants to come off – I know “TMI – sometimes not, but all in all the callous is less bothersome. It’s still there, and it still hurts a bit, but it’s better than it has been IN YEARS.

Pointers for Packing

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Wisdom I Have Learned
Me: Before a trip I make a list of what I want to have with me 12:42 PM
Me: Albert Einstein said he got E=MCsquared By riding a light beam I do the same by 12:49 PM
Me: :-) imagining what I will be doing each day 12:50 PM
Me: and what I will be using TO DO IT – my “light beam” 12:54 PM
Me: imagining where i’m going each day what i’m wearing n whether i’m planning to pack it… 12:56 PM

Watch Only If You Like Drama

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Humor, Wisdom I Have Learned

Romney Candidacy Last Hurrah of the White Race

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Thoughts, United States, Wisdom I Have Learned

Mitt Romney’s run for president is the “last hurrah” of the white race in this country. Many whites will be voting for him for this reason, so perhaps they will have a four- or eight-year hurrah. Many whites don’t recognize the USA anymore; minority persons, including women, seem to be running everything. This is especially true for older whites. Even the younger whites, who were Obama supporters in the last election and who now support the Occupy movements, feel sure the Republicans will not help them realize the “American Dream,” as they begin to doubt whether Obama will deliver it to them. They are beginning to doubt whether they should continue to throw in their lot with those who vote Democratic because they see the Democratic Party as the source of assistance that they need and have even come to rely on.

The older whites yearn for qualification tests for voters, perhaps not as Draconic as the Republicans are supporting in some states, but something like the original requirement that a voter had to be a property or land owner. They certainly wish the voters they think the Democrats drag to the polls had some idea who their local and federal representatives were, what the three branches of the US government are and what country the Declaration of Independence was aimed at.

As a member of the shrinking white race should I follow the allure of the “last hurrah”? How bad can he be? Based on past actions he’ll probably come over to support all the global warming, improving education etc. causes I am for…

Cold Remedy

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Wisdom I Have Learned

To be taken during the first few days of cold symptoms. Slice one finger of raw ginger into nickel-size pieces and boil for twenty minutes. Strain and drink the liquid as tea, possibly adding a bit of honey for increased healing properties plus taste. Do this several times a day as you can.

A former Korean Buddhist monk told me this remedy. Thank you, Matthew, wherever you are!

 

Cure for Hiccups

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Wisdom I Have Learned

One teaspoon of sugar – or even Sweet & Low or equivalent – gulped down in one swallow. From my Aunt Mary  Malone (everyone needs an Aunt Mary), I think.

Remembered Quotation

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bio, Heavy Lifting, Sayings, Wisdom I Have Learned

My barber reminded me yesterday of a quotation I had told him many years ago that he says he has repeated to many customers over the years when they mention problems they are facing. The quotation came from Monsignor John Sheridan, Pastor Emeritus of Our Lady of Malibu Church, in Malibu, California.

Hello Cloudberry Good-bye S3BackupSystem

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backup, Heavy Lifting, Tech Support, Wisdom I Have Learned

Last week I installed a trial version of Cloudberry Backup to evaluate it compared to the S3BackupSystem that I’ve been struggling to use since 2009. I’ve run it 3 times so far to backup all my important files including about 15,000 photos from my Gallery2 photo gallery, and it has worked very well. After each backup I’ve done some tweaking of files to backup, especially when I notice it’s “wanting” to backup cache files that no longer exist.

In attempting to describe my experience I just realized I never have looked at the welcome page: Inserting a copy of it here reminds me that much as I advise others to read user guides and manuals I tend to brute-force install new hardware and software. Luckily this has installed very well. Glancing at this Welcome Page I will certainly use one or more of the pre-defined backups.

Since I use the “brute-force” method of installation it took me a while to become familiar with the Storage page, and Cloudberry has other packages that help even more in reviewing what the backups have stored, but I still found this helpful:

Because my brute-force approach to package installation didn’t lead me to select the “Operation Type” option on the History page:
It took me a while to realize all the information (log) about a backup process that was available. The example I chose to show above is for “Restore” since I’ve done no restore and consequently will not be displaying any personal information. I have by the way used the storage page as well as Cloudberry Explorer to verify that files have actually been backed up to the Amazon AWS cloud that I am using.

To get back to S3BackupSystem for a moment I have tried mightily over the time I’ve had it installed on my computer, but I had one problem after another – leading me to consider myself a self-appointed beta site. Recently as a backup fails it has caused my computer to pound/throb loudly (speaker is set rather high) which can’t be pleasing the neighbors, especially when it has happened during a backup scheduled to run during the wee hours of the morning. So, it’s good-bye to the friendly folks in Estonia and hello to Cloudberry!

Damn You! Teilhard and Brian

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bio, The Universe, Thoughts, Wisdom I Have Learned

Brian Cox, in his Science Channel series, Wonders of the Universe, and, I assume his book by the same name, that to date I have not read, started this whole train of thought that is practically plaguing me – occupying much of my waking brain space, when I’m not concerning myself with whether the United States of America can survive the Republicans of this decade or with how to make a buck to augment my savings as I appear to continue being alive. Brian started it with what I recall his statement being that nothing in the universe dies. Everything that was there in the beginning (when? 13.5 billions years ago?) is still there (where?). You, me, whatever you’re looking at as you read this, are made up of atoms, and any and all atoms are made up of differing numbers of the same particles, primarily protons and electrons with some neutrons thrown in to complicate discussions. We’re all made of the same basic protons and electrons – how boring and plain Jane vanilla, no? You and a rock are not so different from each other. Oh, the structure is different for you and the rock as well as the different numbers of different atoms that compose the two of you, but it’s ultimately boring old protons and neutrons probably with a lot of neutrons thrown in. So again you, me, the rock and even the virus that gave you a head cold last winter are made up of the same particles.

Let me digress for a moment and talk about the good old hydrogen atom – one proton and one electron, Atomic Number 1 – how boring can that be. Oh, and then there’s the space questions, but that’s sort of off the subject. Humor me, though. Let’s get that out of the way. Here’s my favorite discussion of this. One I think I made up is if the proton in a hydrogen atom were the size of a soccer ball, an area the size of a soccer field would be required to allow its one electron room to revolve around it. And then there’s the helium atom – should be simple – but two protons and two electrons, Atomic Number 2, but oh my golly, two neutrons. And that’s only the beginning of the complexity. You’re made up of a lot of carbon atoms, but that’s not too bad, Atomic Number 6: six protons, six electrons, AND six neutrons. Let’s say, for discussion purposes, the rock has traces of gold in it. Wow! Gold, Atomic Number 79, has 79 protons and 79 electrons, but it also has 118 neutrons for reasons, I don’t understand, so let’s forget about it. If I had a point, it was that the carbon in you and the gold in the rock are both made from atoms made up of protons, electrons and neutrons – the same atomic (structure not boom) particles that are the building blocks of the universe – to trivialize a deep, deep fact. One thought Brian has thrown in that haunts me about here is that sometime in the past the atoms that comprise you may have made up a rock, and, who knows, you may be on your way to becoming a rock in the not too distant future. Back to Brian’s statement that nothing in the Universe dies, so does that lead to the concept of life (we’re implying “conscious” life) after death?

How has Teihard worked his way into the thoughts bouncing off the walls inside my brain? He did his dirty work in a book entitled, The Phenomenon of Man, a book I’ve been carrying around in tree extract (paper) form since college days, and that I’ve tried to read probably at least 3 other times. If you’re any good in French here’s a link to it in French that I think is still good. After the prior attempts I’ve made to read and understand it the point of the book I’d tell persons would be that mankind will one day reach an “Omega Point” in the Noosphere at which time we will all share some kind of super-consciousness. In my later readings I suspected he was unconsciously predicting the Internet: we would all be knowing and pondering the same things at the same time, knowing that we were doing so.

This time I read Teilhard in Kindle form. That allowed me to highlight any obtuse term (and there are lots of them) he used and have a dictionary definition brought up immediately. Also, I could highlight passages or make notes without soiling the pages of my dogeared paper copy.

What got me back to Teilhard and what got me this time as I read was following the stages of the story of the Universe and more particularly the stages of the story of the Earth. One of the first things that jumped out at me from Teilhard’s pages this time was that life simultaneously and as a microscopic and innumerable occurrence appeared ONCE AND ONCE ONLY. This newly appeared life was formed from the same basic particles that compose us and the rocks.. What’s troubling is when Teilhard says, and I can’t pinpoint exactly where and how he says it, life appeared only once made up of the same particles that make up everything in the Universe, yet nothing appears in the Universe that was not always germinally present, so life was somehow always present and potential in the Universe. Teilhard follows the development of life in his book to where it leads to the development of consciousness (in man). And, as he said about the origin of life, Teilhard also says about the appearance of consciousness that it was always present from the beginning of the Universe. Along with Brian’s statement that nothing in the Universe dies, Teilhard is saying nothing is new. Anything that did not seem to be there before did not appear from nothing; it was always (more than) potentially there.

So, where do these two gurus of the Cosmos, Brian and Teilhard, leave me? Nothing that composes me will die – not the particles that make up my body, ah but how about the consciousness that I exhibit and know I have? The stuff that makes up my body was always in the Universe and the consciousness that illumines my thoughts and enables me to put this into words is not new; it was a part of the Universe from the moment of the Big Bang, if not before. Am I immortal? Is some part of me immortal other than the atomic particles that compose my body and enable my thoughts? I want a scientific-philosophical answer, not a religious answer.