For the hoard!

Today has been meh.

The usual crap. Sleep, eat, fuck around online. Letting the days go by, water flowing under.

Managed to get all the way through an episode of Hoarding : Buried Alive. I tried before, but it was so depressing and upsetting that I gave up halfway through and watched something else.

But a few days later, it occurred to me that I might have jumped ship at the most depressing point of the show, and if I had just stuck with it and watched the whole thing, I might have gotten to a happy ending.

So I made a mental note to try to tough it out next time, and sure enough, even though it was very intensely bad for a while, the show ended happily with the hoarder in a clean, decent house.

And this lady was the most horrifying kind of hoarder (outside end-stage pet hoarders, I suppose…), and that is the filthy hoarder. No neat clean stacks of newspapers or even just piles of nicknacks or old clothing or other objects to which one might have a sentimental attachment.

Nope. Just garbage everywhere. Rotting. Cockroaches living the good life (for them). Thank God television can’t convey smell. It was just unthinkably awful, and I am saying that as a slobby guy myself.

I mean, look around this bedroom that is the center of my so-called life and there are books and other bits of reading material everywhere. Partly that is due to lack of bookshelves, but mostly it had to do with indifference. They seem fine where they are.

But I almost never eat in my room, and that is because I do not want to introduce anything that rots into this space. Clutter is one thing. Filth is another. Clutter does not bother me (perhaps I have clutter blindness?) but filth freaks me the hell out.

Anyhow, the lady had it really, really bad. But there was a ray of hope in her delusional state : her defenses has a critical weakness. She just kept saying she was a lazy housekeeper or that she just hated housework.. that she had just “let it get away from her” and “never caught up”.

Mind you, this is a woman who had eggs from 2003 in her fridge. Her bedroom was one huge pile of read and discarded romance novels. Everywhere you looked there was garbage, or things turned into garbage by years of neglect and roaches.

But still, if her delusional structure, the one she used to protect herself from realizing just how bad things had gotten, was that she was just too lazy and did not like housework, then she had no defense when the people connected with the show arrived to do all the work for her.

And so as horrible and life-threatening her home’s condition was (they found the mummified remains of a copperhead, a quite poisonous snake, in her bedroom. It probably came in looking for the roaches.), her hoarding was a lot more treatable than for those people who are sure they will eventually use every single thing in their hoard, or for whom every single piece of seeming garbage has a story and a memory attached.

So the clean-out team did not encounter too much resistance. I was fully expecting her to have a massive freak-out once things started actually leaving, but she took it quite well.

And by the end of the episode, her house was spotless and roomy and quite lovely, actually. She had a lovely big half-circular kitchen window that I especially liked. Great view of the back yard, accented with a light yellow stripe that made the whole thing more sunshiney.

As I have mentioned before, I find hoarding fascinating. And obviously I am not alone in that, given the number of shows devoted to it.

Partly it is because it is so sad, so tragic, so very wrought with pathos (and so very… visual) that it cannot help but to tug at your heartstrings. Or mine, at least. I suppose another sort of person might just say “That person is gross. ” and just abandon them as impossibly icky and weird.

But I feel for these people. They did not set out to be how they are, and their hoarding is a response to depression that I can well understand.

Every hoarder is also a compulsive shopper. They buy things because buying things makes them feel better for a little while. Their hoard is therefore often simply the byproduct of their continuing to constantly buy things and get that feeling of acquisition.

What makes them hoarders and not just compulsive shoppers is their inability to let things go. If it was just an addiction to buying things, once the thing was bought, they would lose interest in it and could give it away or throw it out, even.

But no, that would require admitting that their purchases are basically meaningless, and hoarders need that feeling that their purchases serve some purpose.

Everything they buy is something they are sure they will use… eventually. And that gives them the good feeling of having increased their wealth. They have made a valid and useful material acquisition. They have new things that will come in handy some day. That gives them a good feeling, and they are so deeply addicted to that feeling that they will not just do but believe anything that they have to in order to keep those good feelings coming.

That is part of what makes their stories so compelling, because they seem like extreme, cautionary examples of the very acquisition based society in which we all live.

Feel bad? Buy something! It doesn’t matter what it is, a Slurpee or a sedan, a hot dog or a house, a trip to the mall or a trip around the world.

The solution is always acquisition first and foremost. People of even modest income have enough in excess of their basic needs (housing, food, clothing, etc) that they don’t really know what to do with it. So it goes into buying things they do not need simply for the pleasure of buying them. Especially women.

So in a way, we are a hoarder society. Even someone as poor as me looks around and wonders how he ended up with all this goddamned STUFF sometimes.

The difference with me is that I am not terribly attached to most of it. I could sell or give away at least half of these books and never miss them.

Then again, who knows what kind of a hoard I would have if I had more money?

And how big is YOUR hoard?

Well, that was fun

Now that it is done, I realize that it was kind of nice having three days when I did not have to figure out what to write that day. Working from notes taken during VancouFur 2013 was surprisingly fun, and a pleasant little second vacation from having to cogitate up some content every day.

That also makes me realize that my typical feeling that my usual blogging is not worth very much may not be entirely true. Certainly, it takes a lot of creativity to come up with more things to write about every day. That has to count for something.

And of course, it’s all very good exercise for my writing muscles. It keeps them toned and tuned. It might not work them really hard compared to the sort of workout that writing actual fiction does, but what the heck, it still beats doing nothing with my so-called life.

Still, I feel slightly intimidated by having to fill up all those one thousand words off the cuff today, so it is good that I also have some links to share in order to help span the gap.

For instance, we have this cat, who came up with a novel way to irritate its humans into doing its bidding.

Oh, you little devil, you figured out how to knock on the door.

And I can totally imagine how this kitty figured this out. I know cats well, and I know they have a distinctive posture they assume when taking care of their more intimate cleansing, and I could easily see how a cat might be doing that while waiting for a human to come along and let them in. If they were being especially intense in their cleansing, a paw might well accidentally rap against the door loud enough for the humans inside to hear.

Someone opens the door to see what that noise was, and boom, kitty is inside.

But far more than that… kitty has finally managed to hack the system and find a way to make that damnable frustrating door open at will! Before this innovation, all the cat could do was meow at the door piteously and hope someone hears.

But now… kitty has the power! You knock, and they come! Sure, they seem kind of pissed off when they do, but that never lasts, and meanwhile, you are inside.

I think the only way to train the cat out of this obnoxious (but effective) behaviour would be to greet it with a bucket of water every time it “knocked”.

Then there is this little literary experiment from the pages of The Review Review (ha ha ha) called The New Yorker Rejects Itself.

Here;s the skinny : the writer of the article and literary experimenter, David Cameron, took a story that had been published in the New Yorker (widely recognized as the most chic place in the English speaking world to be published), gave it a new title and a fictional author, and sent it out to various publications both big and small to see if it would get accepted elsewhere.

After all, if it’s good enough for The New Yorker, it must be good enough for everywhere else, right?

But, shockingly (not really), it got rejected en masse. Not only did it not get accepted for publication anywhere (at which point Cameron would have instantly withdrawn it, otherwise he would have been guilty of plagiarism), it did not get so much as a nibble.

And if this surprises you, I applaud your innocence, but it does not surprise me at all.

We writer would like to think that somehow, the publishing world is a straightforward meritocracy, a nice neat ladder where the better the story is, the more you will get paid for it and the tonier the publication will be, and that is it.

But as Cameron admits himself at the end of the article, such naive assumptions deny the truth of the slush pile. The first gatekeepers of publication are low-paid, overworked first readers whose impossible job is to pick the few things worth passing up the food chain for the real editors to consider out of the mounds and mounds of submissions even a small press journal or tiny home press magazine gets.

See, the thing about the Internet is that it is full of very helpful lists of every damn publication out there, and that insures that every publication gets way more submissions than it can handle.

So to presume that the lowly human beings who have to go through hundreds of submissions, many mind-numbingly awful, can do this and maintain perfect objectivity is ridiculous.

This is reinforced by the fact that first readers are not judged by the objective criterion of literature, but by how many things which get published that they personally pass up the food chain.

And this is not a light judgment. It determines not just whether they get promoted but often whether or not they even get to keep their jobs. A first reader who does not find things the real editor likes risks getting replaced by someone who might.

And yes, that is all pretty depressing for those of us who want to get through those gates into the golden world of being published authors.

It means that no matter how excellent our story is, it still has to be lucky enough to land in front of the right first reader at the right time when they are in the right mood to like it, and contain nothing that will immediately piss them off and make them reject your story out of hand.

It makes it a numbers game, rather like job hunting. You have to send a lot of stories to a lot of places before you stand a chance of winning the publication lottery.

And the thing is, it still has to be good. A good story might only buy you a ticket, but without a ticket, you have no chance at winning at all.

This is what make self-publishing so appealing to me.

Vancoufur 2013 Con Report : Sunday, March 3

9:00 AM : Another sleepless night. I am awake but unsteady. I get it, Life. I should have remembered to bring my damned sleeping pills. Lesson learned. Now can you stop punishing me with headaches and nausea and the feeling that my eyeballs are backed with sandpaper? Because this is definitely not going to help me have fun. Thanks a whole big bunch.

10:00 AM : We bid a fond final farewell to our charming and unpretentious little room at the Accent Inn in Burnaby. It was far from luxurious, but it was comfortable, and I value that far above snob appeal any day. Bye bye, Room 278! You were not our home for very long, but you were still home, and I will always remember you fondly.

10:15 AM : I hit the Story Editing panel late. (Woops, sorry Carthage!)Unsurprisingly, Carthage brought his father, the professional journalist, to this one too. I must say, I really admire the guy’s willingness to enter our weird little world and parley with us. Shows he has the true courage of a journalist, willing to go where the story is, to reserve judgment till he has enough information, and to try to understand things on their own terms.

The story editing panel, in which we (but mostly Carthage’s dad) scrutinized some examples of prose and did some basic editing of it, was both fruitful and humbling. I feel like I learned a lot about what is necessary and what is not in prose, but at the same time, of course, I could not help feeling that my prose sucks and I need to work way harder on my writing.

I knew that was the likely fallout of attending the panel, though, and I somewhat assuaged my ego bruises with the knowledge that it is the other half of writing where I excel. That does not let me off the hook for getting better at the first half of it, what one might call the technical half, but it does mean that technical flaws in my writing do not doom it completely.

Also, I want to hand out massive props for the furry writer (sorry, but I forgot your name) who offered up one of his own short stories for scrutiny by the panel. That took a lot of courage. I am not sure I would have been brave enough to do it myself, if asked.

12:00 PM : I hook up with Joe, Julian, Carthage, and my dear friend Marzipan (not the one from Homestar Runner!) for the brunch buffet at the convention hotel restaurant. One of the best things about any convention is seeing the people you only see once a year at said convention, and I am very happy to see Marzipan. Isn’t it sad how people drift apart over the years?

Also worth noting : I am very pleased with myself at my self-control at the brunch buffet. I eat mostly salad, fresh fruit, and of course, BACON. Unlimited bacon is half the reason I go to a brunch buffet. I completely avoid all the tempting carb-laden options like hash browns and I limit myself to only one croissant. (Croissants are eighty percent of the other of half of why I go to brunch buffets. I have been known to go to a brunch buffet and end up eating nothing but fruit, bacon, and croissants.)

Even when I go to the dessert table, I come back with mostly fruit, plus some sort of nougat/fondant square that was surprisingly terrible. Tasted like the inside of one of those ultra cheap candy Easter eggs you find at dollar stores. Gack.

And that is all I had. (Well, plus two Nanaimo bars. I’m not made of stone! And they are just so damned good. And probably doubled my blood sugar all by themselves.)

2:oo PM : I attend a Multimedia Industry panel run by a fellow who goes by the name of Rocko, like Rocko from the show Undergrads, of which he is a big fan. He works in the animation industry as a sort of virtual puppetmaker. He gets the rough sketches of characters from the artists and turns them into models in Flash that the animators will in turn animate.

His job sounds fascinating and I learned a lot about how modern animated shows are made as opposed to the classical method with which I am passingly familiar.

However, his command of English is somewhat poor and his accent is very thick, and so the panel is easily as frustrating as it is informative. I am highly sensitive to language and so dealing with someone like that is very tiring and stressful for me.

I am not knocking the guy. The fact that he speaks any English at all in addition to his native tongue puts him ahead of me in language skill.

But us writer types are more intimately connected with language than most, and dealing with someone with poor command of it on multiple levels stresses us out.

4:00 PM : Laden with the exotic wares of this strange and intoxicating new realm, Joe, Julian and I once more brave the long and dusty trail back to the familiar streets and byways of Richmond, where we will tell our tales of mysterious far off lands and bold adventures.

5:00 PM : At long last, we are back home in Richmond, and with plenty of time to meet up with Felicity, have a quick supper, and relax for the evening.

As always, the end of a convention is bittersweet. You value all the fun you had, but you are sad that it is over now. It’s rather like the day after Christmas in that respect.

Luckily, soon the rhythms and routines of daily life sweep you back into their soothingly familiar tempo, and your sadness about the convention ending is replaced by fond memories, and the feeling of looking forward to the next one even more than you did this one.

And to be honest, I am really looking forward to finally getting some sleep.

Vancoufur 2013 Con Report : Saturday, March 2

9 AM : Officially awake after a sleepless night of watching TV and cursing myself for having forgotten my sleeping pills back in Richmond. See, my sleeping pills work great. They do not force you to sleep, they just make it a lot easier to get there and (the most important thing for me) they help you stay asleep even if you are a restless type like myself. But they have one little drawback : no pills, no sleep. This should make the rest of the convention fun.

10 AM : Allowed into the Dealer’s Room after a brief detention by officials. Apparently when they say it opens at 10 AM, they really mean it. Not one minute earlier. Lots of fun things that I can’t afford in there, including caffeinated soap. I kid you not. Soap with caffeine in it. I express doubts as to the efficacy of supercutaneous caffeine application to the vendor. He concurs, but notes that their soaps also smell very nice. And they do!

11:00 AM : I check out the Hangout Room. To my surprise and delight, it is full of video games. IRL Events are there, and they have a ton of video game consoles, old school and new, set up to play. I get to try out the Wii U, and enjoy playing New Super Mario Brothers. The level of detail and the vividness of the colors make for a gorgeous and very rich visual experience. Plus, of course, it’s quite fun.

But even better than that, I end up participating in a card game called Cards Against Humanity. It’s like someone combined Apples To Apples, Match Game, Madlibs, and Satan’s thesaurus to make a game designed to produce and reward the most depraved and hilarious answers possible.

It’s perfect for me, and I laugh like hell the whole time. What fun!

1:00 PM : Hanging out with my friend William Graham in the lobby, chatting about science and watching the fursuiters go by in the fursuit parade. (A fursuit is like an animal-themed mascot costume. ) There must have been at least fifty of them. Vancouver has a very active and thriving fursuit community. I loved seeing them all.

3 PM : I eagerly participate in a Harlem Shake video shoot. Despite misgivings about the final product due to a cluster of snafus, it does turn out fairly well. You can find it here if you would like to check it out yourself : http://youtu.be/oBk0F1QK0YI. I am the very fat fellow in the suspenders and glasses with long hair, a beard, and absolutely no shame.

3:30 PM : I attend a Furry Media Relations panel hosted by my friend Carthage with (surprise!) his father as a guest commentator. Being a professional journalist, he ends up being our official representative of “the media”. This is a somewhat perilous role, as we of the Furry ilk tend to be pretty touchy about how the media portrays us. It always hurts to be misunderstood, and our little world is far too strange and outre for the mainstream media to possibly “get”, and so on those rare occasions when we are noticed, we tend to be portrayed as nothing but a bunch of hilariously deviant perverts with a thing for Bugs Bunny. And we are so much more than that.

Despite this tension, the panel generates a lot of really interesting discussion about how The World Outside portrays our World Within, and a lot of fruitful insights as to the causes of our poor image are gleaned. We discuss articles done about us in the popular press, mentions in popular culture, and a Certain Episode Of CSI That Shall Remain Nameless. We talk about how much of our bad rep comes from the mainstream world’s inability and unwillingness to understand us, how much of it we bring upon ourselves with indiscreet behaviour and poor media relations, and how much any of it really matters. After all, it’s not like they are rounding us up and putting us into camps.

All in all, an excellent discussion.

5:10 PM : With nothing in particular to grab our attention, Joe, Julian and I go back to our room, Room 278, at the Accent Inn to chill a while before going out to hunt up some dinner. The room continues to be comfortable and cozy. We chat, relax, and ponder our next move.

6:30 PM : Having been thwarted by extremely long lines at both the Sushi Garden and White Spot, we are forced to retreat all the way back to our hotel again and end up eating at ABC Country Kitchen for the second night in a row. There’s nothing wrong with ABC, in fact, we often eat at the one here in Richmond. But part of the fun of being away from home is eating someplace new, and so I am kind of disappointed to be back at ABC yet again. But oh well, that is what happens when you and an entire convention of hungry furries are all looking for supper at the same time. Next time I will either just plan on eating later, after the rush, or pack a lunch.

8:30 PM : Back to Chez Nous (alias our hotel room) for a little rest and relaxation before we head back to the convention for Bad Movie Night.

10:00 PM : Oops! We fell asleep. All that good ABC Country Kitchen food must have done it to us. Joe and Julian head off to the convention anyhow. I decide to stay in the room and try to catch up on the sleep that has eluded me so far.

10:45 PM : Bad idea. I am unable to get back to sleep, so instead of having fun at Bad Movie Night, I end up just listlessly watching television in our hotel room with only the rubber duck for company. (He’s cute but he’s no conversationalist.) I end up feeling lonely and depressed. Not one of my better calls, trying to stay back to sleep. Conventions are the opposite of sleep!

Oh well, there is always tomorrow. We all make bad decisions sometimes.

Vancoufur 2013 Con Report : Friday, March 1

(After two weeks of forgetting to do this, then remembering, then forgetting again, I am finally getting around to writing the convention report that I was totally going to write the day after we got back. )



2:00 PM : My roommates and good friends Joe Devoy, Julian Castle, and I, our meager worldly possessions stowed in the trunk of Joe’s car, embark upon the long and dangerous journey to far-flung and exotic Burnaby with our hearts filled with optimism and hope for our new (three day) lives in this strange new land.

3:36 PM : Hardened but heartened by our journey, our hardy troupe arrives at the Accent Inn at Burnaby, and does all the little unpacking and sorting things necessary to settle in to our temporary domicile. The room is distinctly “motel” and seems like the sort of place a vacationer in the great travel boom of the 50’s might have stayed, microwave aside. I feel quite comfortable there. We are quite amused by the little touches of personality, though, such as a “do not disturb” sign that reads “Don’t even think about coming in here!” and a rather well dressed rubber ducky in the bathroom. He made bath time oh so fun!

4:20 PM : We arrive at the convention hotel, which is not the Accent Inn but the Executive Inn. (Next year, we will know to book our room earlier). After negotiating strange Burnaby roads and even stranger Burnaby parking, the free shuttle bus from the Accent Inn to the Executive is starting to look more attractive.

4:50 PM : The pre-convention hurdles have finally all been cleared. Made the road trip, got settled into our motel style hotel, drove the fix strange blocks to the Executive Inn, got registered as an official convention going creature, and now I can catch my breath, browse the convention swag, and say hi to some of my furry friends as they go by. We’re off to a great start!

6:35 PM : My first panel – Introduction to 3D Printing, as hosted by Loial of OtterSoft.ca . A very interesting introduction to 3D printing (formerly known as “rapid prototyping”) in general, and Loial’s own 3D printer, designed and built himself, in particular. The real show-stopping moment was when he showed us all how his printer was so fast and accurate that it could even print while sitting on its side. Amazing!

7:45 PM : Our beloved editrix Felicity Walker, while not a convention attendee, has graciously decided to drive all the way from Richmond to Burnaby to have dinner with Joe, Julian, and I at the ABC Country Kitchen restaurant next to the Accent Inn. Good food and great conversation with friends. Life is truly good.

10:00 PM : I attend my second ever “Eye of Argon” reading. For those unfamiliar with this crime against prose, “Eye of Argon” is a Conan-style fantasy novella published way back in 1970 which is considered by many to be one of the worst written anythings ever. It is a juggernaut of literary horror, an absolute monolith of malapropisms, terrible imagery, bizarre word choices, appalling sentence structure, scatter-shot spelling, and logic that would melt an android’s brain into twitching, sparking slag. It is not just bad, it’s legendarily bad, the sort of bad that cannot come from mere incompetence alone but which can only rise from a kind of perverse anti-talent that drives people to continue when all sense and reasons would tell them that they have no idea what they are doing and should really stop and have a bit of a nap.

The readings, therefore, are freaking hilarious events. The rule is simple. People are seated in a circle and take turns reading the story aloud. You turn ends when you laugh, or when you have read for five minutes. Not many people make it to the five minute mark. I made it within fifteen seconds but the darn thing wrung a derisive “heh” out of me at the last moment.

Obviously, what with all the laughing and the inevitable digressions into existential crisis caused by wondering just what the hell is going on and what on God’s green Earth the author was thinking, it takes a long time to get through all of it, and when you do, you really feel like you have had the same sort of shared terrible experience that turns men into soldiers in times of war.

1:00 AM: I do something entirely out of character and go to the ballroom while the dance music is blaring. I do this to support my friend Graham Mitchell, who is doing his very first ever DJ gig as his alias DJ Silvermink. Normally, I shun anything even remotely resembling a dance club like the Amish shun buttons. Dance clubs are not good environments for those of us who do not like loud noises and crowding and whose charms are largely based around personality and verbal skills.

But I figured, what the heck, it is good to do things outside of your comfort zone sometimes just to stretch yourself a little bit. And I wanted to show support for my friend Silvermink.

And you know, it was not that bad. I didn’t dance (when I dance, people are reminded of the hippos from Fantasia, so no thanks), but I relaxed and enjoyed the groove for a while.

But then, at about 35 minutes in, I suddenly just got up and left. I don’t even recall making the decision. I just left, as though I had reached some saturation point and left entirely by reflex, like a lemming obeying a sudden urge to migrate.

This does not reflect on Silvermink’s DJ skills in any way, though. I just do not like dance music. The priorities of people who want to dance are not those of people who want to just listen to the music, and I find all that oontz oontz and repetition just too damn boring to keep my interest.

2:00 AM : Joe, Julian and I regroup and head back to our cozy room at the Accent Inn for a well earned good night’s sleep.

Friday Science Oingoboingo, March 15, 2013

Hey there science fans! It is the Ides of March, and while it would be far outside the proper use of a science column to tell you to beware some arbitrary date invented by Shakespeare, it still could not hurt anything to avoid all rotundas today, especially if you have been kind of a dick to your friends recently.

Might want to avoid Caesar salads too. It would be terrible for your death to make the news as “Persons Dies Choking On A Crouton On The Ides of March!”

Got plenty of scientastic stuff to share with you wonderful people this week, so let’s dig in!

First off, let’s start small with this rather clever little device.

Being someone who really hates the heat (and vice versa… to be honest, the heat started it), I find evaporative cooling very interesting. It seems like it turns humidity into a good thing for fighting heat, instead of something that makes heat a million times worse.

Trust me, I have had plenty of both dry heat and the humid kind. Dry is way better.

But what really impressed me about this fellow’s gadget was that he looked at one of those plastic room deodorant cases and realized that would be ideal for holding the wet sponge.

Something designed to let air go through it that is cheap and easy to work with. Genius. Then all you need is a computer fan and a sponge you have cut down to the right size, and a little water.

I bet you could make a mint mass-producing a slicker, more consumer-friendly model.

Let’s go one size up, and talk teeth. Specifically, growing brand new ones as an adult.

The method is crude and frankly a little horrifying so far (poor mice 🙁 ) but the science is there for it to be a possibility in the future, and I find that very interesting.

We might see a future where a lot of the complicated dental work that we do today is replaced by a simple procedure where they take out the bad tooth and then stimulate your mouth to grow a new tooth instead.

This might mean that in the future, dentists have a lot less work, or at least that their work is simpler and requires less specialized training.

Imagine a future without dentures! Old people with perfectly healthy, new, fresh, straight teeth, able to eat whatever they like and to heck with Fixodent and all its ilk.

Sounds great. A little creepy, but still, pretty great!

Next up in scale we have that always relevant subject, exercise.

Some researchers in Australia claim to have found the world’s most efficient fat-burning exercise regimen.

Now by “efficient”, they mean “the most fat burned for the least amount of pain”, which just shows that these are fitness researchers who have their priorities straight.

Here is how it works : you do three 20 minute sessions on the exercise bike a week. During these sessions, you pedal like crazy for eight seconds, then pedal at a slower rate for twelve, then repeat fifty nine more times or so.

This makes your body release loads of fat-burning chemicals while keeping your muscles from building up lactic acids, which are the main thing that make you feel tired.

This supposedly means that for an hour’s worth of exercise a week, you will get the same results as if you jogged for five or six hours a week.

Sounds sort of annoying to do, but I imagine it’s fine once you get used to it.

Moving up another notch on our scales of ten, let’s talk about a worldwide internet for robots.

First off, let’s get this out of the way : HELLO SKYNET!

Are we done now? Good.

It’s called Rapyuta, and idea is that robots worldwide would use wireless Internet access to plus in to a database of existing solutions for the sorts of problems robots might face, or if they have just solved a problem themselves, upload that database to the system.

That way, instead of every robot starting from scratch and having to reinvent the wheel every time it comes across a problem that is not in its own local database, robots all over the world can share solutions and the state of robot intelligence can advance far, far more rapidly.

In essence, it gives robots culture. And given that robots have computers for brains, that is a culture that can advance incredibly fast.

Finally for today, we have this large scale simulation of just what it is like in the local neighborhood of our little old Solar System.

And just look at all those stars with planets around them. All those marvelous possibilities!

As we have learned in this column before, evidence is piling up that having planets is the normal thing for suns and having none is the distinct outlier, which means that you can pick any star in the night sky and say “Yup. There’s planets there. ”

The video illustrates that point in a marvelously perspective enriching way by starting with Earth and then zooming out while keeping our friendly yellow sun centered at all time.

It has that Powers of Ten feeling of majesty and scope, and really makes a little naked beach ape sitting at a computer on this little clod of dirt feel both inspired and humbled.

FYI, the video was made using the Hayden Platentarium’s Digital Universe, which is the world’s most comprehensive and accurate simulation of the universe.

I would really love to play around with that for a little while.

“Plot a course to Omicron Beta, Ensign Ro. Maximum warp. ”

Then play the TNG theme while you watch the universe go by.

Well that is it for this week, loyal science fans! Meet me back here next week and I swear I will once more have my pockets full of marvelous things for us to gape and wonder about.

Until then, true believers thinkers, keep your minds open, your standards high, and your hearts ready to be filled with the wonder of the true magic of this wonderful and amazing Universe!

Something to say

Wow, I am just plain lost tonight. No idea what to write about. Tabula rasa. Blank slate. Nothing.

So welcome to my totally winging it, even more so than usual. My brain tank is totally empty. Honestly, I don’t feel like writing at all. I feel like just fucking around playing video games and being silly online.

But well, being a grownup starts with realizing that doing things you do not feel like doing is not the worst thing in the world and that it doesn’t mean you have lost some imaginary battle with authority or that you should be angry at the very idea of something besides mindless self-indulgence.

It just means that you have decided that the rewards of doing what you do not feel like doing justify doing it anyhow. And you are an adult pretty much in direct proportion to the degree to which you can internalize this lesson, this truth, this possibility.

I feel like I am just starting on that journey in many ways. I have squandered a decade and more of my life letting depression call the shots and thus avoid having to deal with the adult truths of the world.

Depression is a powerful tool for never really growing up.

Nobody truly makes it all the way, though. There will always be that inner child within us who wants everything now and doesn’t want to do anything but eat ice cream and play video games and who will never really accept the need to do things which are boring or scary or hard.

You can see this in people’s dreams. I am of a generation that was universally taught that we are very special unique snowflakes who can grow up to do whatever it is we really like doing for a living, thus neatly negating the very idea of working for a living.

Love science? Be a scientist! Love singing? Be a rock star! Love sports? Be a pro athlete! You can be whatever you want to be if you just try hard enough! And then you will be able to have fun all day and get paid for it, too!

And the people telling us this meant well. They really did. They wanted to give us permission to dream and to believe that adulthood was going to be great and gave us a reason to work hard in school and keep looking forward to the future.

But it was a bad long term plan. In the short term, it works great. Kids love the message and it makes them happy. Adults feel like they are preparing the kids to go out there and take on that world. They could be forgiven, in fact, for feeling like they are giving their kids the kind of hope and motivation that they wish they had gotten themselves.

Certainly, from the point of view of a baby boomer raised by Depression-era Greatest Generation parents who taught them to keep their head down, get a practical education, and become a corporate drone or a civil service cog,someone who might just feel like their own dreams were taken away from them and who wonder what might have been had they just been giving room to fly, it sound fantastic.

But here’s the thing : life is work. No matter what your dreams are, once you leave the comforting arms of academia where everything is graded and tested and taught, you are going to have to do a lot of things you do not feel like in order to get anywhere.

And that means doing a lot of things that will make your inner child throw a shit fit. Stuff that is boring, gross, scary, hard, and not even necessarily guaranteed to be worth it. And that is going to just keep going till the day you die. Even retirement will only relieve you of some of it.

Even if you happen to be lucky enough to have the right combination of drive, personality, and talent to get your dream job, there will still be bills that need paying, houses that need cleaning, errands to run, clothes to wash, and so on.

And even if you are rich enough to pay others to do these things for you, it will still be your responsibility to see that they get done. And even if you are a rock star supermodel, there will still be times when you just plain do not feel like doing that concert or photo shoot, but you will have to do it anyhow. That is life.

Life is work.

There is just no way around it.

So instead of selling our kids the notion that some day they can get a job doing whatever it is they like doing best and it will be almost like not working at all, I think we would be far better off teaching our kids how to work and get things done. And most importantly, how to do it themselves, because they want the results, not just because someone in authority is forcing them to do it.

Because one thing is guaranteed : if authority forces you to do something, the moment that authority is gone you will not only never do that thing again, you will enjoy not doing it.

And people can get stuck like that for their entire lives. They can die old still stubbornly refusing to do whatever it was they were forced to do as children, and loving every minute that they get away with not doing it, no matter how silly that might seem to an adult observer.

And we definitely need to teach our kids that it is perfectly fine not to grow up to be what you wanted to be when you were a kid. That it is perfectly fine to have a boring, unglamorous, mundane job and that it does not mean you are a loser or that you just did not try hard enough.

The world has only so many job openings for astronauts, rock stars, supermodels, and firemen.

The rest of us are going to have to settle.

And there is nothing wrong with that.

Hmmm. Guess I had something to say after all.

Truly terrible things

Today’s post is dedicated to those things which truly, truly suck.

Now don’t worry… we will get to the things which suck in an entertaining and endearing way eventually.

But first, I am going to rant about some ads I hate. Starting with this crime against all that is decent and wholesome and good.

Good God, but that is disgusting. Look, I love black. Black is a great color (or lack thereof). I have two black shirts that I absolutely love. I have absolutely nothing against black.

But that ad make me ill. That black paint just plain looks disgusting. It looks like tar, or ink, or the evil monster from Skin of Evil.

And so to me, that whole ad is a nightmare of people enthusiastically, joyously even, smearing a disgusting substance over all available surfaces and making them far, far worse.

And all with an air of celebration verging on the orgasmic. Yay, today is the day we take our charming and colorful village and ruin it by smearing Satan’s sooty semen all over the damn place.

I mean, that one chick acts like smearing the sweat from a chimney sweep’s taint all over her face is her greatest burn unit bukkake fantasy… and then she smears that shit all over an innocent piano’s keys!

I get what you were going for, Guinness. I even agree that the idea sounds good on paper. I can totally see how this came to be.

But the final product is just plain horrifying, and that is why I hate, hate, hate that ad.

I think we all need these as a kind of palate cleanser right now.

There. That’s what you could have based your ad around. Granted, Mick and the lads would probably have charged you up the yingyang for the rights to the song, but that sure beats associating the beverage you are selling with nausea.

But that is merely aesthetic crime. For the ad that absolutely made my blood boil, we have to turn to the realm of medical products.

Unfortunately, I cannot find the commercial online so I will be forced to describe it to you like this was freaking radio or something.

The ad is for Otrivin Sea Water and Aloe Nasal Spray, and to sell the idea that the best thing for clearing your stuffy nose is sea water, the commercial begins with your classic fisherman type (grey hair and beard, yellow raincoat, on a boat, hauling up a net) saying something like “My breathing is fine!”, then another clip with some chick who is also evidently in a seaside location saying “Of course I can breath freely. What kind of question is that?”

(Really wish I had been able to video the stupid commercial online. WTF, Otrivin?)

So clearly, what they are saying in the ad is that people who live near the ocean, and hence breathe sea water all the time, never get a stuffy nose.

And speaking as someone who grew up six blocks from the Atlantic and has suffered from stuffy nose and sinus problems his entire fucking life, this really pisses me off.

I mean seriously, people. I probably inhaled a Great Lake’s worth of sea water in my life in Summerside, and it sure as hell did not keep me from getting stuffy noses so bad it made me practically faint from the sheer deformation of blood flow caused by very full sinus cavities.

It’s like they reached into my mind and discovered an extraordinarily potent and completed unexpected way to piss me right off.

And I can’t be the only one. A lot of people live on the East and West coasts, people. And a lot of people have sinus problems.

And you just pissed every single one of us off!

OK, OK. Calm down. Clear blue ocean, clear blue ocean. Now for the fun stuff.

First, thanks to the miracle that is Cracked.com lists. I recently discovered this gem from the annals of the marvelously cracktastically bad : Shooby “The Human Horn” Taylor.

Here;s the description from the Cracked.com article :

Shooby “The Human Horn” Taylor (1929-2003) was a scat singer who fancied his vocal improvisation a reasonable imitation of jazz brass. In reality, his scatting sounded less like a trumpet and more like an Ewok applying for a homeowner’s loan.

Now I think that is entirely unfair. That’s not at all what he sounds like. He sounds more like someone who forgot how to talk but doesn’t know it yet, or like a child in that pre-verbal stage when they are in between babbling and actual words.

Don’t believe me? Here’s a sample.

(Also, mad mad props to whoever took the time and effort to write out the “lyrics” to this gem. It adds so much to the sublime absurdity of it all. You are definitely my kind of weirdo.)

Apparently, Shooby Taylor was so convinced of his talent that he kept on going even though absolutely nobody else liked him and he often got kicked out of jazz clubs for being awful.

Sadly, this legend died in 2003, so we cannot convince him to contribute his song stylings to, say, an “Autotune the News” type project where he gives us his impressions of the day’s events.

Clearly, he made art that is too bad to ignore, which, coincidentally, the motto of the last stop on our tour of the terrible today, the Museum of Bad Art.

Now this is an actual real world museum. not just a Lileks-esque website. It has three locations and is quite earnest (and hilarious) about its mission to preserve and display the kind of art that is not merely bad, but bad enough that it achieves a kind of perverse majesty.

So obviously, this is exactly the place for an irony steeped lover of all things earnestly terrible like myself and my Gen X cohorts.

I mean, check this out :

When one of their paintings was stolen, the museum offered a reward to anyone with information regarding its whereabouts. The reward was $6.50. They also installed a fake camera in the museum after the theft with a sign stating, “Warning: This gallery is protected by a fake security camera.”

Yup. These are clearly my kind of people.

Church without God

Contradiction in terms, right? Maybe not.

I recently came across this article about the rise of atheist churches, and it really got me thinking.

First, full disclosure time, I am secretly a hyper-intelligent octopus. (Well, no, but could you imagine?)

The disclosure is that I have had the idea of nontheistic churches for quite a long time. It just grew naturally out of my curiosity about just what a church is, what people do there, and what exactly it is they are getting out of it.

Because you see, as many of you already know, I am a complete outsider when it comes to religion. I was raised without it, and have never had a religion in my life. One might call me a natural atheist, although I prefer the term nontheist as it is less confrontational and carries less baggage.

So when I first read the article, my feelings were mixed.

Most of me was happy that people were doing what I felt needed to be done in order to truly begin the process of overcoming religion. Namely, offering an alternative, something that fulfills all the functions of a religion without demanding faith in a bunch of fairy tales and an angry yet benevolent sky monarch.

But a little part of me was disappointed. Another of my brilliant ideas being executed by someone else! I swear, I was totally going to do that…. some day. Eventually. Maybe. At the very least, I was going to write about it and hope someone else picked up the slack!

OK, confessional closed, on to the subject at hand.

A lot of people are going to ask “Without God, what is the point of a church?” In fact, some people have such a negative association with the word “church” that they will reject the notion of a nontheistic church out of hand.

And that is, of course, their right. Much cruelty and madness has be foisted upon innocent children in the name of religion, and those scars run deep.

But my contention is that what people get out of going to church every holy day has very little to do with religion and a great deal more to do with community, and that, in fact, religion has hijacked community and claimed its positive effects as its own.

That warm feeling you get from singing psalms and doing rituals together? That’s God, and we own Him, so you had better do what we say or we will cut you off.

Oh, and we will also be the social hub of your community, so that all the good feelings you get from other social activities like picnics and meetings will also bear our seal. The happiness you get from spending an afternoon in the company of your little community? That’s God, and we own Him.

Troubled? Why, just come to one of our representatives and talk it out. That good feeling you get from someone listening to your troubles and offering kindly advice? That’s God. And we own Him.

But it isn’t God at all, it’s just the human need for community and empathy. You could remove the Bible, God, and all the rest from the weekly service and it would be just as effective at making people happy without asking them to break their brains and obey.

So I am glad that people are out there doing this. Their efforts are small now, but I feel that this movement or something quite like it is the wave of the future and that the churches of the new millennium will be born from such simple roots.

Right now, traditional religion is largely the domain of the old. Obviously, this cannot continue, and their children and their children’s children will have to find or create something new.

They will also have to go get the baby we all have thrown out with the bathwater when we threw away the good parts of religion along with all the badness.

One point of contention : I would not define my new church as atheist or agnostic. That is not inclusive enough. You want people to come there and feel safe, accepted, unjudged. I would simple make it so that God is not included in the church but those who believe in God are not excluded from the religion.

That way, you can accept people who have a lot of doubts about their religion and their relationship with God, but who are nowhere near ready to just chuck the whole thing yet.

And maybe through your nontheistic church, they will someday find the courage to make that final break with their faith. And maybe not. You might, in fact, help them find their way back to God. So be it.

But people are desperate for solace, and you do not create solace for them by putting up walls. You do it by letting people in, and giving a place to call home.

So why call it a church at all? Why not call it a social club, or a fellowship, or a regular meeting of the Grumpy God Hater’s Society?

Because only by calling it a church can we emphasize that church and religion are not the same thing, and make sure that we are replicating everything that a church gives people without the necessity of enforcing obedience through some silly old book written by cranky patriarchs.

There are functions that a social club simply cannot replicate. I want people to have a church to go to, I just want to to be a church that does not ask for faith or in any way put itself in opposition to reason, science, and humanitarianism.

So bring on the soup kitchens, the group singing of songs, talks about shared values, counseling services, and all the rest. People need all of these.

And if we can do this, we can truly pry the fingers of religion off the throats (and minds) of the people and replace it with something safer, saner, and better suited to the realities of the world.

Only with nontheistic churches can we create a post-religious world.

I, for one, am eager to start that process ASAP.

Another dormant day

Another day where I slept a lot. And yup, the afternoon sleep was where things got all sweaty and intense and confusing and draining and so on. Ho hum.

Agreed to go to Overeaters Anonymous for the second time with Felicity tomorrow night. Rather proud of that, actually, because when she asked, I successfully rushed myself and agreed to it out loud and without equivocation before I could think about it too much and wimp out.

And once I am verbally committed to something, the momentum is heavily on the side of doing it. I always keep my word unless rendered physically incapable of it, and I hate to disappoint people (largely due to how much I hate disappointment myself), and so once it is out there and said, I will do it.

Thus, in a way, I rig the game against my social anxiety. Sure, my social anxiety would really prefer that I stay home and avoid exposing myself to a bunch of older ladies with whom I have almost nothing in common and whose program seems only partly applicable to myself at best.

But I will be there to support Felicity, and to force myself to expose myself to “normal people” (so to speak) and thereby defeat my irrational fear of exposure to regular folk.

It is natural, of course, to prefer the company of your own kind. Birds of a feather and all that. Everyone has their own sort of people, the kind of people they feel relaxed and comfortable around, and there is nothing wrong with that.

But when it gets to the point of a paralytic fear of having to talk with people who are not part of your group, when you strenuously avoid all situations where you might have to make “small talk”, when your life is frozen by fear of social exposure to even the mildest potential for awkwardness, well then you know you have a serious freaking problem.

And as with all phobias, the only reliable cure is exposure. Phobias reside in far too deep and primal a part of our psyches to be curable by talk therapy alone. The neuroses that have taken up residence in the phobia’s shadow might be treatable via talk therapy, and that can in turn give the impression that the phobia itself is being treated.

But in truth, the only way to dig out those deep, deep roots is to expose yourself to your phobic trigger. Only exposure can break the cycle of fear that fuels a phobia, where the fear generated by exposure to the phobic trigger is so intense that it reinforces the idea of the phobic trigger as something to be feared all by itself.

After all, if every time you see something, something terrible happens, it is the most natural thing in the world to come to fear that thing… even if the “something terrible” is just your own fear.

Our deep animal minds are not capable of making that kind of distinction between inner events and outer ones. To our subjective, pre-ego separation minds, there is no difference. All experiences are equally real and valid.

And honestly, that system is a lot more powerful than our higher human functions. That is why telling someone that their problems are “all in their heads” is so utterly futile.

All of our experiences are “all in our heads”. Knowing something is subjective to us does not help one bit because from the point of view of our consciousness, so is everything else, to a certain extent.

And as powerful a tool as our reasoning brain can be, in the final equation of human existence, emotion is always far more important.

We intellectuals invent massive complicated intellectual structures to try to cover up that fact and pretend that we can conquer our emotional selves with intellect and will, and hence avoid ever having to deal with our emotions at all.

But it’s a sham, a delusion, a poor man’s parlor trick, a game we play against ourselves just to avoid having to do any real growing up.

You are far better off just making peace with your emotional self, accepting that it and not your “logic” or your “knowledge” are the real you, and that everything you think you know about yourself is just a theory you have constructed to protect your weak and fragile ego.

After all, you would still be you even if your IQ was normal, despite what you might think. But nobody is anybody without their emotional responses.

Now I am not saying it is easy to give up your intellectual shields in favor of simple and plain emotion. The angry wizard that lives in the heart of every intellectual rages like a thunderstorm at the notion of facing the world without all his spells and illusions, feeling that without them, he is nothing.

But when all you have is fanciful dreams and colorful illusions, you are nothing anyhow. No amount of fantasy or illusion can make you any more than just another idle dreamer, wasting their lives in a world of their own imagining rather than putting their toys away and getting out into the real world, dealing with real things that insist on existing outside your mental control, and maybe accomplishing something.

I am entirely guilty of this, and of pretending that I can solve my problems with reality without actually deal with reality. Like all I need is therapy and thought and I can solve all my problems and then I will magically become really eager to deal directly with reality and go out there and kick some ass.

Well, that is just not how it works. You can’t just attend the class, you have to do the homework too, otherwise you are not learning jack shit.

And that is why I will be going to Overeaters Anonymous tomorrow night, even though I don’t want to.

The definition of adulthood is doing things you don’t feel like doing because you want the results.