phil scott wrote
> This is a theory, not well formed..
As always.
> but a result of recent experiences... two specifially.
> Im learning high end CAD 'Solids Modeling'.. its considered a steep
> learning curve, compounded by idiocy spliced into those technical
> develpments rendering it arcane, buggy, or non functional in key
> aspects, as the vendor tries to cover with lies.. spin, convoluted
> back door fixes and... horseshit.
> so Im learning..and am about half good with the software now... for
> instance could draw you a car engine showing the internals and cut
> away sections of it etc. it would take me too long and it wouldnt be
> set up for parts production on computer controlled machines (as is
> done today), but it would be a pretty picture.. so thats where Im at.
> Ive noticed that after a particularly fruitful learning curve I loose
> other functions for a while until the new input has time to integrate...
> it seems to be done at night, or over a few nights, then I find
> myself more capable than ever...and my lost functions returned
> (for example knowing how to woik my PDA).
Thats just the Altzheimers...
> I thnk that is what sleep is for actually.. down time with no sensory input..
> so the brain can collate and integrate what it was involved with earlier.
> ***
> then a more extreme occurance... I was in a starbucks doing some
> CAD work and had this wave of crapolla descend on me and an
> urge to leave but I didnt want to drop what i was about to finish
> so stayed...I noticed a philipino group a table away jabbering in
> tagalog, and decided i could tolerate that for a few more minutes.
> but it was irritating as hell, way more than usual.
> On the way out I eyeballed the group, well dressed,well groomed
> talking in moderate tones... it should not have been that distractive...
> I took a closer look at the loudest person, and notice her with dry
> ratty looking hair, an absolutely shrill voice, and jabbering 40 miles
> a second.. so extreme I apparently couldnt even compute on it... and
> it must have been disturbed as well.. it sure as hell had disturbed me.
> that night for the first time years I couldnt go to sleep, my brain
> was trying to make sense of some things before I dropped off..
> and nothing would add up, it was a closed loop of trying to sort
> out something, no doubt CAD related... and I think that chaos
> from that shrill jabbering woman.. entirely uncomputable...
> it would not reconcile.
Or the mental state that made sleep difficult also reacted badly to that woman.
> **
> Im fine more or less this morning, I will give it a rest for a day however...
> I think the phenomena is culture wide, and more so in some than
> others, you can see it in the modes of speach.. loud screeching
> jabber precludes coherent thought on more complex or meaningful
> issues... the chaos does not collate. such cultures remain retarded..
> the people improving when they get away from them in many cases,
> but not others of course.
Or thats just your racism talking.
> **
> and I see this in engineering, and professional offices... none of it racial,
> but chaos of baloney, back ground noise, trivia mixed with complex
> learning... I think its turned our brains to mush like Rush Limbaugh...
Its only those with 'brains' that are already mush that take any notice of that
drug addict fool.
> **
> a cure... avoid the chaos, seek peace, learn in peace, give yourself a few
> days between learning sessions, or visits with der relatives etc to recover....
Makes a hell of a lot more sense to have a decent place to work
that doesnt involved the sort of shit thats inevitable with Starbucks.
> our usual notion of a two week vacation to
> recover I noticed decades ago is insufficient.
If you organise you life properly, you dont need to 'recover' at all.
> I spend months in Honolllu chasing women before I even
> began to unwind from my time in LA... I notice the 2 week
> tourists had not recovered, they just bough hawaiian shirts.
> We are underestimating the time we need for sleep, and the damage
> chaos does to our lives and health personally, and collectively as a nation.
I dont.
> You can see these vast differences in driving cross country...
> once you get out of a city by more than 30 or 40 miles the
> people change dramatically..for the healthier in most aspects.
In fact the health stats show the exact opposite.
Nice theory, pity about the real world.
phil scott wrote:
>> phil scott wrote
>>
> ...
Never ever could bullshit its way out of a wet paper bag.
In article
wrote:
> phil scott wrote:
> >> phil scott wrote
> >>
> >
> > ...
>
> Never ever could bullshit its way out of a wet paper bag.
Not everyone has the misfortune to be an
aussie
>Nice theory, pity about the real world.
If this poor schizophrenic sot can sit at the keyboard and type
such drivel he simply is not drinking enough whisky, IMO. Well, it works
for me, at any rate....
--
Running on single malt in U.S.A.
USDA zone 9b