Pages

Positive thinking’s negative results

Dr Wood suggests that positive self-statements cause negative moods in people with low self-esteem because they conflict with those people’s views of themselves.

[Continue reading... Words of wisdom | The Economist]

You will…

encouragingwords_00.jpg

Image [booooooom]

Daily Routines

How do you organise your daily routine?

W. H. Auden. Perhaps the finest writer ever to use speed systematically, however, was W. H. Auden. He swallowed Benzedrine every morning for twenty years, from 1938 onward, balancing its effect with the barbiturate Seconal when he wanted to sleep. (He also kept a glass of vodka by the bed, to swig if he woke up during the night.) He took a pragmatic attitude toward amphetamines, regarding them as a “labor-saving device” in the “mental kitchen,” with the important proviso that “these mechanisms are very crude, liable to injure the cook, and constantly breaking down.””

Winston Churchill. Churchill’s daily routine changed little during these years. He awoke about 7:30 a.m. and remained in bed for a substantial breakfast and reading of mail and all the national newspapers. For the next couple of hours, still in bed, he worked, dictating to his secretaries.

At 11:00 a.m., he arose, bathed, and perhaps took a walk around the garden, and took a weak whisky and soda to his study.

At 1:00 p.m. he joined guests and family for a three-course lunch. Clementine drank claret, Winston champagne, preferable Pol Roger served at a specific temperature, port brandy and cigars. When lunch ended, about 3:30 p.m. he returned to his study to work, or supervised work on his estate, or played cards or backgammon with Clementine.

At 5:00 p.m., after another weak whisky and soda, he went to be for an hour and a half. He said this siesta, a habit gained in Cuba, allowed him to work 1 1/2 days in every 24 hours. At 6:30 p.m. he awoke, bathed again, and dressed for dinner at 8:00 p.m.

Dinner was the focal-point and highlight of Churchill’s day. Table talk, dominated by Churchill, was as important as the meal. Sometimes, depending on the company, drinks and cigars extended the event well past midnight. The guests retired, Churchill returned to his study for another hour or so of work.

Read more | Daily Routines

The underworked American

Child’s play… The underworked American

Pissed off enough to fix the bug himself

Via Hacker News | A user was annoyed enough to crack the software and fix the bug himself

Japan’s Grass-eaters

Japan’s Generation XX are known as the “grass-eaters”

Microbe that eats plastic

A 16 year old boy discovers a microbe that eats plastic…

The preliminary results were encouraging, so he kept at it, selecting out the most effective strains and interbreeding them. After several weeks of tweaking and optimizing temperatures Burd was achieved a 43 % degradation of plastic in six weeks, an almost inconceivable accomplishment.

[Continue reading | Boy discovers microbe that eats plastic | MNN - Mother Nature Network]

Potpourri

Did I say I found a bunch of things on NOTCOT today? Check out some of the animated graphics on this site… maxim zhestkov | design . direction, the “Barbie football” here and this little beach front “pavilion” which could easily do me for a home.

mm_beach-pavilion_moorhead-moorhead-plusmood-01-550x366.jpg

Image [+Mood]

Common Phobias – A Field Guide

Next up via NOTCOT, “A Field Guide to Common North American Phobias” this cute series of illustrations by Julia Icenogle

Picture 1.png

Image [Julia Icenogle]

What you are?

A few interesting things via NOTCOT today starting with mark menjivar who has been investigating the insides of people’s fridges, and who hasn’t looked into a friends fridge and made a few mental notes on their character?

My fridge, in it’s present state, contains exactly one item less than this one…

_YAWYE_3.jpg

Unfortunately Mark’s website is one of those “arty” photographers sites that break any kind of linking so you’ll have to dig around, look under the portfolio section in “you are what you eat”.

Image [mark menjivar]