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Gecko from our wood pile

  • Jul. 18th, 2009 at 4:34 PM
Gecko

Gecko from our wood pile in Perth, Australia.

Wikihistory by Desmond Warzel

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 5:16 PM

I’m loving this story called Wikihistory, by Desmond Warzel. It’s a hilarious and clever tale, told entirely through posts on a forum called, “International Association of Time Travelers”. 

It’s also short, so go enjoy it now!



originally at pluvio.us, comment here or there

A brief and meta photo essay

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 8:04 PM
"It's been some time since the world has seen my handsome mug. I should take a picture!"

Because you can't handle this much of me without a warning )

Do Me a Favor

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 4:25 PM
Get Your hands on a mirror.

Look at yourself.

No really. Look at yourself.

Now look past yourself.

I'm sure you're beautiful today. And you will be tomorrow. And you will be next week. Remember that past the freckles and laugh lines you are so beautiful and the physical aspects are just superfluous icing on your tasty cake.

Like Leather

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 2:42 PM
Look more than one entry!

Moving on.

I was planning on spending the day working and at the beach. But I got a call from the fancy Leather Showroom about an emergency day job. I love the leather showroom, and it's really one of my favorite places to work. Essentially I get to do some internet things while selling some of the best leather in the world. And honestly I needed the money, and everyone works on their birthday. No whining, I was kind of excited.

When I got in I noticed one thing. Lis, the showroom manager, had Tori Amos playing. Nikki told her that I was a huge Tori fan and that I was coming in on my birthday before I headed off to the concert tonight. Lis made an entire playlist of Tori for the showroom and told me to just sit back and relax.

Obviously I am beloved by God. Now if someone would just hire me...

PUZZLE #96 & a contest

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 5:58 AM
ACROSS LITE PUZZLE: [ CHARACTER STUDY] PROGRAM: [Across Lite] PROGRAM: [Java] PRINTOUT PUZZLE: [ CHARACTER STUDY] PROGRAM: [Adobe Acrobat] Contest time here at the BEQ headquarters. Fill in the grid then send me your answer to the question posed in...


ARE WE SERIOUS?!

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 11:30 AM
Okay, so I know I have a lot of updating to do. But this si a drive by post before I start actually getting up and getting prepared for my birthday weekend and such.

I woke up today to birthday well wishes which included one from a  girl I have known since kindergarten. She says like most of my highschool friends, that she's married with a kid. Then she says she loves Twilight and named her baby after Bella Swan.


WHAT THE HELL. WHY?! WHY .

Even so, I'm glad he wasn't a proselytizer.

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 1:10 PM
This happened a while ago, but I'm trying to get back into blogging mode, so.

Commuting on the train to work, I generally see people with three types of books: best-seller-type novels, puzzle books, and devotionals. The three types of readers engage in very different behavior too. The novel-readers are as likely as not to just be carrying their book, not reading it. The puzzlers are intently filling in grids or circling words. And the devotional readers tend to be the most deeply engaged, reading closely, marking passages or making marginal notes.

On this particular day, I happened to notice an old man with a small paperback, engaged in classic devotional-reader activity—in fact, either this wasn't his first time marking up the book, or he was using two colors of pen. I would have given him no more thought, but something about the book looked...off, somehow. Not like the usual daily devotionals I've seen.

So I craned my neck discreetly, and found that the book he was pouring himself into...was this one.

That old man doesn't know it, but he made my day.

The perks of being married to a programmer

  • Jul. 16th, 2009 at 9:03 PM

One of the annoying things about doing an elimination diet, or trying to find out any useful information from your day to day routines, is that to do so you have to be fairly religious about writing everything down. EVERYTHING. This can get really old after awhile, yet it’s so important, especially when you’re trying to track down things like anxiety triggers – stuff that impacts my life in a major way.

Enter my programming god of a husband: Greg.

About a week ago, I said something like, “Man, it would be so useful if I could just record what I eat on my iPhone, or when I take a pill, or when I have a panic attack. I’m tired of lugging around this notebook.”

He got that look in his eye, the one that means he’s thinking he can make me really happy (I love this look, it always ends with him inventing something crazy and wonderful), and said, “Like maybe something where you could put in an event and then it would stick it on a calendar? You know, I could do that. I could make something would enter an event on, say, a Google calendar.”

And so he did.

Right now it doesn’t have a name or an icon: we just call it “Event Tracker” – it’s the white icon down at the bottom:

event_tracker

What it does is going to, for lack of a more mature phrase: rock my world.

  • I can set up events with any text I want. Right now I’m using an initial system. For example, “A: FB PA”, means, “Anxiety: Full Blown Panic Attack”. I’ve created events for exercise, for example, “E: Stat. Bike (10m)”, means, Exercise: rode stationary bike for 10 minutes.
  • Every time an event occurs, I just tap the button, and the information is put on a private Google calendar he set up, called “Hollie’s Events”.
  • Greg is also planning on creating an Apple Script that will pull the data off the calendar into a list. By comparing lists, I’ll be able to answer questions like, “Is it true I’m more anxious at different times in my cycle? Is exercise triggering anxiety or is it something I’m eating on the days I’m exercising?”

Over time, I’ll be able to see trends a lot faster, and I’ll have a lot more data, since this is so easy to use and I won’t skip days because I’m tired and forgot to log what I did or what I ate. The data will also be more accurate, since it will have the date and time, and not lame notes by me, like, “I think this is what I ate, I can’t quite remember”. Basically, I’ll get better information while being able to obsess a lot less about tracking. Win-win!

The longer I write this blog and read about nutrition, the more interested I become in the idea that diet is the way that we can stay healthy into old age. The key to longevity, as far as I can tell, is to avoid heart disease in cancer. Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women, in the United States. Cancer is second. It’s very likely that a significant percentage of people reading this blog will eventually die from one of these two. The older I get, the more intent I become on not being a heart disease or cancer statistic.

When last we left, I was reading a new book about a diet based in low-fat veganism, and I was commenting on how ridiculous I think the Atkins diet is. When the author of a diet book advises you to eat all the bacon you want and then dies from a fall, overweight, with heart disease and high blood pressure, it should go without saying that this isn’t a diet you want to try.

But what about Paleo diets? They aren’t “low carb” in the Atkins sense of the phrase, they’re a whole different story, chock full of fruits, vegetables, nuts, and grass-fed meat. As someone who loves anthropology, the story is fascinating. Paleo diet proponents claim that we aren’t evolved to eat grains, and a diet stocked with them (refined grains are obviously out, but they’re talking about whole grains, too), leads to disease.

The Paleo Diet

The low-fat vegan diet proponents (T. Colin Campbell, Dean Ornish, Joel Furhman, John McDougall), whose books I’ve read and studied, are all medical doctors with multiple articles among them. Their diets have been the subject of numerous studies. Ornish and Furhman have both reversed heart disease, and I recently read that McDougall’s specialty is bringing women back to health from breast cancer.

The Paleo Diet - Loren CordainThe Paleo diet proponents are still new to me, but the most popular writer seems to be Loren Cordain, who wrote The Paleo Diet. He’s frequently referred to as “Dr. Cordain”, but my search to uncover what his doctorate is in has been unsuccessful so far. In his book he calls himself an avid researcher of “health, nutrition, and fitness”.

Paleo dieters are all over the web now, and they’ve brought a lot to the discussion. Put “Paleo Diet” into Google, and you’ll find a wealth of links to sort through. Both the low-fat vegans and the Paleo proponents are very concerned with heart disease – the statistics they quote match up throughout my books, and both sides claim that their diet will keep you from developing it. The low-fat vegan proponents claim (and have proven, in several studies), and their diet will even reverse it.

The general Paleo viewpoint, from my reading:

  • The genes of modern humans haven’t changed significantly from their stone-age counterparts.
  • These stone age people were short-lived only because of trauma (injuries, falls, etc), and were otherwise extremely healthy; “Arthritis, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, stroke, depression, schizophrenia and cancer are absolute rarities for them.” (1)
  • In modern hunter-gatherer societies…..”10-20% of the population is 60 years of age or older. These elderly people have been shown to be generally free of the signs and symptoms of chronic disease (obesity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels) that universally afflict the elderly in western societies.” (2)
  • These paleolithic humans at a diet composed of meat, fruits, vegetables, and nuts, and that is what we should be eating today.
  • Grains, beans, and potatoes, are all toxic when raw and retain some of that toxicity when cooked. They’re also low in nutrients and have a high glycemic index. (1) Replacing them with fruits and vegetables is the healthiest alternative. Incidentally, raw food advocates say the same thing.

Paleo dieters claim that by eating this way, they’ve recovered their health and lost weight.

Where To Go From Here?

I’d hoped to write all day, picking pieces out from both sides of the debate, but my life is just too busy with other things right now, including teaching myself how to cook (let’s get some more recipes on here!), finding out what the weird smell is in my office, teaching my daughter to read, and getting our household ready to move back to Seattle in a few months.

INSTEAD, what I’ve decided to do is to just pull out conversation points on all this as I go along, post them, and see where we end up.

On the Dangers of Becoming a Google Scientist

One of the Paleo blogs I really enjoy is Son of Grok. In a post on 7/14/09, called Where Has the Motivation Gone? , he said:

Another thing that kills me is all the Google Scientists around. I don’t mean scientists employed by Google, I instead mean the guy who Googles a topic, does a bit of reading on it and suddenly thinks he is the Sir Isaac Newton of the topic. Also in this group are the micro-nutrient micro-analyzers and the people who try to way over science the approach in my opinion.

I don’t want either myself or this blog to ever assume it has all the answers. I love learning, I love reading, and I love sleuthing out information. I don’t know where I’ll end up, but whatever I end up doing the most of, I never want to give the impression that someone doing it differently is, by definition, doing it wrong. No matter what anyone says, I deeply believe that every BODY is different, that what works for one person isn’t going to work for every person. If anything, I think that’s the missing ingredient in all this. What if A LOT OF THINGS are right? What if it isn’t just one thing?

Isn’t that more exciting than one side having all the answers?

Questions? Comments?

Do you have questions you want answers to? Are you befuddled by any of this stuff? Or do you feel like you have answers you want to share? Comment away! I’ll make a list and address everything in future posts.

Links on this page:
(1) Introduction to the Paleolithic Diet, by Dr. Ben Balzer, family physician
(2) The Paleo Diet – FAQ – Loren Cordain’s website

Inspired by the news

  • Jul. 17th, 2009 at 9:53 AM
WQXR played back hum, jazz song 'Take Five'.

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