Virtual coffee

Caffeine is most definitely a drug, albeit one that is apparently not terrible for you. Within twenty minutes after I drink my morning cup of coffee, my mood generally becomes one of elation, and I feel that I can accomplish anything I set my mind to.

This felling gradually fades over the course of the day. But while it lasts, it is awesome.

I also find that the chemical effects of a good aerobic workout are similar. And rhe combination of the two is unbeatable.

So my question for the day is this: Can a similar effect be achieved by entirely non-chemical means?

With proper training, can we will ourselves, using only our mind, to this sort of positive mental state? If so, that would be pretty darned awesome.

Blackout

Recently I experienced a blackout. All of the power in our neighborhood went out for about a day.

At first it seemed incredibly inconvenient. You can’t use the electric stove, the washing machine, the dishwasher.

Lights don’t work at night, and you can’t charge your phone or your computer. The entire modern world seems to disappear before your eyes.

But after a while, I started to see the up side. Life gets simpler. You no longer run to the computer or to Netflix for distraction.

Natural light can be quite beautiful once you embrace it. Not being able to run to the computer for entertainment can be downright refreshing. Going to bed at an earlier hour actually feels great.

Eventually the power came back on and the lights were restored, along with all the modern comforts and conveniences. But somewhere in my mind, I miss that brief journey back to a simpler and more uncomplicated time.

Hammering

There is an old saying that a great way to make someone feel good is to start hitting them on the foot with a hammer. The reasoning is that after you stop, the lack of pain will feel sooooooo good.

The stock market seems to be following that pattern. Consider the recent shenanigans of the U.S. president and the people around him who are pretending that he is not insane.

His actions in Iran suggest that he is working very hard to destroy the world’s economy. But now there is a temporary truce.

Mostly this means that the U.S. is not currently bombing little schoolgirls and other innocent people into oblivion, and therefore that the price of oil is no longer going through the roof. The peace may not last, but it’s something.

The stock market is acting exactly the way that you would if you were no longer being hit on the foot with a hammer. The sheer sense of relief is causing the market to soar.

I guess this is a good thing. But maybe it would have been better if there had been no hammering in the first place.

Some things that are true

We look young in old photos
But we don’t look old in young photos

We drive on a parkway
But we park on a driveway

How can something be flammable
When it is also inflammable?

Nothing is better than having it all
Yet having it all is better than nothing

How can all of these things be true?

In the immortal words of Jules Feiffer:
We find that out, we find out everything.

Frustrating

Imagine that you are committed to avoiding the topic of an inconvenient scandal. You are so committed, in fact, that you are willing to go to war to change the subject.

You are willing to spend trillions of dollars and wreck the world’s economy, to bomb thousands of innocent people out of existence, even to destroy an entire civilization. Just so that people will talk about something else for a change.

Then your wife, of all people, gets people talking about the scandal again. After all of your hard work.

Wouldn’t you find that frustrating?

Today I asked the students

Today I asked the students in my VR class what they would want for future virtual reality or mixed reality devices. A lively discussion ensued, and they had many cool ideas.

But one theme emerged above all else: What they really want is not more power, but rather more social integration. They would rather have a true mixed reality device that looks like an ordinary pair of glasses, even if the graphical display is not perfect, than an ever more powerful yet clunky headset.

That makes sense to me as well. Technology that is actually used by millions of people is better than technology that is only used by a chosen few.

Doctored image

If I understand correctly, after our president criticized the pope for the cardinal sin of having empathy, The president then posted an AI generated image of himself.

When he was asked why the image seemed to portray him as Jesus Christ, he responded that he thought it was portraying him as a doctor. Which raises some interesting questions, when you look at the image itself.

Does he sincerely believe that this is how medicine is practiced? When you go to your doctor, does the doctor put on biblical robes and place one hand over your head to magically cure you?

If the president of the United States has a deep ignorance of how medicine works to the point where he doesn’t even have a 5-year-old’s knowledge of the subject, should he be running a country? Should he be commanding armed forces?

Should he be trusted with something as tricky as tying his own shoes? I leave it to you to decide these things for yourself.

Funeral

Today I attended a funeral of a wonderful person who was taken from this world much too soon. Of course it was immensely sad, but it was more than that.

What came through above all else was the deep love that so many people have for this person. It was an affirmation of the beautiful impact that a well lived life can have on others.

At a time when there is so much sadness in our world, this is a good thing to be reminded of.

The First Lady will now clarify

Contrary to mean-spirited attempts to defame my reputation…

Rosalynn Carter (1977): …I had nothing to do with the Son of Sam murders. I don’t even know David Berkowitz.

Eleanor Roosevelt (1934): …I did not participate in the Lindbergh kidnapping. Any correspondence between myself and Bruno Hauptmann is pure coincidence.

Martha Washington (1796): …I was nowhere near that cherry tree.