Axis Mundi X discussion
Lucky Guesses Maybe More Than Luck
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that would be cool. download our secret information we don't even know we have?? oh I'm so incorporating that into my novel.

Maybe we have photographic memories and we record all that we come in contact with. A helper or a device might assist in the absorption and configuration of needed data. A thumb drive maybe?

Sadly, this works for my throwing things as well. If I aim at something with concentration it will hit a mile away, but if I sorta half-look at my target and just randomly throw it will hit dead on. This has been tested numerous times on my hubby with crumpled up balls of tin foil or erasers, and once with a green pepper at my bro-in-law (he deserved it). Think there is some kind of pattern here? LOL
it's that whole zen thing, sherrie. there are books written about such things. the most famous of which is "Golfing in the Kingdom". It's that way with me and bowling as well. Lots of sports people talk about it. Being in the Zone.
We did some testing around it in my graduate program. The difference between performing under timing and without. Using our intuition vs linear mind. Not very surprisingly I function better when I am in kairos time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kairos
We did some testing around it in my graduate program. The difference between performing under timing and without. Using our intuition vs linear mind. Not very surprisingly I function better when I am in kairos time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kairos

Ooh, Kairos. That's awesome! That may have to be my new word for the day.

I love that!
I know... we have the ability to change our own brains, if we can figure out how to do it. I keep staring at my broccoli trying to make my brain think its chocolate. So far, no luck tho.

I spent the first few weeks of motherhood watching Joseph Campbell's lectures on video... I don't remember what the series was called, but there was hours of it. It totally saved my life. I was so incredibly bored as a new mother (I know that sounds horrible, but there is nothing less intellectual than caring for an infant). Watching those tapes while I breast fed my daughter fed my brain in ways that were crucial.
I suppose those tapes were partially responsible for my decision later on to go back to college. So he gets a lot of credit in my book.
I suppose those tapes were partially responsible for my decision later on to go back to college. So he gets a lot of credit in my book.

That was one of my first exposures to him as well, and I loved that series. It really changed my world.

I get through laundry by watching my husband do it. (He gets through cooking by watching me do it.) I get through cleaning by putting $ in an envelope. I weed by writing a monthly check. In a way, things get easier when you get old.
It was definitely the Power of Myth that he was lecturing about, Sherrie... but it wasn't the one with Bill Moyers interviewing him. It was just him giving lectures and showing slides at some woman's college on the east coast. Brown or something.
Love the History of the English Language. Especially the part in the Appalachians. Har, Flar, Over thar. Hee!!
Love the History of the English Language. Especially the part in the Appalachians. Har, Flar, Over thar. Hee!!

Maybe we should all write a compendium of Intellectual Housekeeping.
Step One to Intellectuals Keeping House: Resist setting fire to your home in order to avoid doing dishes and laundry.
omg, I'm exactly the same way. Sometimes in order to clean I have to redecorate. Drives my daughter insane. She hates change. But now that we've moved into this new place I have only been rearranging the livingroom furniture. Everything else stays where I put it the first time. Last time I moved furniture I told her next time she could arrange it where she wants it. Of course it has stayed where it is now... that's how much she hates change. LOL
I have been tempted to set my stuff on fire more than once. In fact, one place I lived many years ago I started chucking the dirty dishes out the back door into the compost heap if they were too nasty to deal with. HA HA HA HA. I'm such a total oakie.
I have been tempted to set my stuff on fire more than once. In fact, one place I lived many years ago I started chucking the dirty dishes out the back door into the compost heap if they were too nasty to deal with. HA HA HA HA. I'm such a total oakie.

Why is it sooo hard to get motivated to clean stuff out? I know I'll feel much better when I do.
When I got married the first thing I told my hubby was I am NOT a Domestic Goddess. And, I've held to that pretty damn well. ;)

That is sage perspective indeed Ruth. I keep trying to figure out why I thought I needed to hang onto the stuff I have in a storage Pod that I haven't needed for the past 4 years. Maybe I didn't actually need to hang onto it after all.

Step Two to Intellectuals Keeping House: Ignoring the dust-bunnies does not make them go away & makes you have sneezing fits. I'm totally allergic to dust but can't seem to even remember to dust enough that it counts as ignoring. Maybe I'm in denial.
I always wanted to design and build a self cleaning home with water proof walls and floors and run off gutters and drains, and then a sprinkler system. Once every few days you could put away your stuff into water proof drawers and turn on the cleaning system which would just spray down the entire house. No need to vaccume and dust.
I realize this is probably impractical, but it makes me feel better to imagine it.
I realize this is probably impractical, but it makes me feel better to imagine it.


Isn't that close to Idiot Savant? I think I relate.

I have, however, regretted getting rid of this. I thought it was too big for this small house. But there's a huge empty wall that looks across the room toward the ocean and this would have been perfect.

It's 6 x 10 feet, muslin and acrylic on unstretched canvas.

Gorgeous Ruth!!!! Oh I LOVE that!!!! Reminds me of something my daughter did when she was five in our bathroom. She painted squares of cotton gauze with watercolor paints and stuck them to the bathroom mirror with water like a giant quilt. It was wild. I like yours better though, cuz it's that lovely color of sea foam.
Larry, you can blow smoke up my ass any time you want.
I'm brilliant all the time, Bunny. Especially when I'm screwing up brilliantly. Or being a brilliant asshole. If I were developmentally disabled, I'd be the most brilliant retard in the state home.
::::trips over her own feet and falls down the stairs::::
Larry, you can blow smoke up my ass any time you want.
I'm brilliant all the time, Bunny. Especially when I'm screwing up brilliantly. Or being a brilliant asshole. If I were developmentally disabled, I'd be the most brilliant retard in the state home.
::::trips over her own feet and falls down the stairs::::
"In the hit movie Slumdog Millionaire, the star answers game show questions correctly based on his life experiences. At least one right answer, however, is a lucky guess. But maybe the guess wasn’t so lucky. Maybe his brain actually knew the answer—even though he didn’t realize it.
That’s what scientists at Northwestern University are saying about so called lucky guesses. They published their research online in the journal Nature Neuroscience.
Study participants were shown brightly colored pictures. They had to memorize half. While viewing the other half, they had to concentrate on remembering a spoken number. So they were distracted. Later, they were quizzed on all the images. Surprisingly, they were more successful at remembering those images that they only paid half a mind to. Not only that, but they were more accurate when they said they were just guessing. The researchers say their visual systems stored memories quite accurately, even when the participants weren’t paying attention. And that what we call intuition, some of those gut feelings we get, may often be based on good information."
I have long suspected this... pretty cool that it's now being proven!